—- REDCLIFF REVIEW

REDCLIFF--Alberta’s Sunshine

ne ae —— a we -

Younes. . REDCLIFF, ALBERTA, FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1913. Nonienst?

A

lors aud mayor, a chief of police and , . LOOK ON THIS PICTURE one constable, tudigiityste, sanitary, RATEPAYERS AND REDCLIFF PANITORIUM Geo. Mi. Gibson . _ lightingand license inspectors, scaven- a ly Which shows the Advancement ger, poundmaster, building inspector COUNCIL MEETING Ladies’ and Gentlemen's rane ga That H and town engineer, a doctor (possibly ke b Suits and 0 t bs jae Been Made by another one coming), postmaster and DOSS ane Uvercoats -Caereecem Redcliff in Just Three a handsome school with four resident Several Matters of Im- Lot 8 35, 36, 87, aS, Block 26, pair 81,800 Years. teachers. This school will shortly be portance Taken. Up by- | The Onder of Owls Wilt meet every Cleaned and Pressed ‘‘ 16 i“ U7, 18, ait iste $450. enlarged to double its size to meet the th c il d Thursday evening in Crowe's Hall on 28, 20. 90, 31, 99. 88 Block “a - Looking into th ti t al éducational demands, numbers of a ssid si Serr ack ce niet = ao Maree ae Gleanings Redeliff, each $350.00. | caieg oking into the past is not always! opijdren now beiug shut out for want isposed f. ive a sinoker in the near future. bay > one of the most pleasant: diversions, | ¥¢ aecomodation. yn stores and other P bd | Specialty LET ME HANDLE YOUR LISTINGS but when it comes ‘to taking the past!) jcinesses we have a lavas. dobhit: Rah The Salvation Army is holding | Shop.on Fifth street near the C. P, Phone 58 with the present in respect to @neW |) ent—drug store, six eight up-to-| An important. meeting of the rate- parle 6 in Redcliff now. This is a R, Depot. REDCLIFE pS A town in this wonderful Western | gate pestiurants. with several more Payers was Called at Maple Hall on sure “ign of a coming city and we may A. E. MASTERS, Prop. - LTA. Canada, the comparison is not only | jyiding: hardware store, half dozen | Tuesday night and the Town Council look for the brass band and big drum interesting but instructive. Redcliff general stores, first-class bakery, two decided to hold their deferred meeting next. pene —— M4 is x name to conjure with and it only, meatmarkets, two milliney establish- mtg) the previous evening the Visitors at Hotel Redcliff—Mr. and REI . ‘Take It to seems but yesterday when her depot! » ents, a couple of tailors, two shoe- | 8m time so that matters concerning Mrs. GH. Mitchell of Cal » Rok D, CAREY & was a box car and her name had just) pakers, fine blacksmith shop, three the welfare of the town might have a ‘vans s t a ms "a yids .. eo , BROWN’S been placed on the map. barbers, two pool rooms, with three | erough good chance of being dis- sulhes cs con WN, Sek, ane H Re. LONERGAN We wholive day after day in our] more building, one up-to-date hotel, cussed. Wright of anGnireal,. . ei. Contractors and Build HE WILL FIX IT fine little city don’t notice to the same} two more large ones in course of erec- William Hall occupied the chair of ; anuers a OWE Bg : extent the changes which aro occur-| tion; one Chinese laundry, with an- the people's meeting and in a few] Poundmaster Swanston is on the ‘s j Watch and Jewellery a ing in the same measure as the per-| other Celestial coming in, the field words. explained the object of their | jookout for sixty head of horses which Estimates Given on Brick and Repairing and Engraving son who goes away for a spell and} shortly. coming together. Mr. Hall said that are said to be making in this direction Carpenter Work ere then drops back, His expressions of | In course of erection—police station the people of the lower end of the} from somewhere in the neighborhood : Full Line. of Watches, Clocks } wonderment at the changes in the! and fire hall, Social and Commercial | town wanted to have their interests | of Brooks. and Jewellery always | makeup of the place van only be ap-| Club and Masonic Temple. The town {looked after and the feeling of 74 PRR sii Bacay is P. O. Box 48 on Hand. | ciated by himself and ‘his absolute | ig well supplied with rooming houses | Ta@tepayers m the south end was; that | 4A meeting of the Kece neognite Corner of Broadway Pour pear he he ‘would not have hand healt we Maiteaned real set offices ifthe matter was clearly placed be-| Football. Club will be held at the REDCLIFF, ALBERTA wt a ted Sota believed it a genuine declaration of| are already operating around Broad- | fore a Mayor and pred: he was Nidgabed eee en panes wie: rrr wy aw a fact. : vay, with one or two bobbing u sure the interests of these ratepayers | Monday night a o'clock. wish- %oo% Me toate ate ate ste ate teste ste cto ate ctoatocte x When the present proprietor of hncik every morning. Waie oa would be protected now and in thej ing to join are requested to be present. . Soeeeae xh Pasta Re dec Sestetenteseeatontonirstes Tue Review threw in his lot with| dotted over the prairie likea minature | future, The Chairman then said that i z Redcliff‘some seventeen months ago! army bivonac. the peoples’ meeting would give Way Mrs. Andy Patterson, Mrs. Oliver ea a u e ¢ ; he had the curiosity to count the} In churches, the Presbyterian de- to the town fathers and the Coiineil | Austin and a Pag toloores a . Sd ; building in the village and his census| nommation are the pioneers, having took the floor. Mayor Danelz, Coun- ene remo FE ue = ¥y totalled 68 with a population of about} had a regular chureh for two years. ge Lavell, Crooks, McLachlan, Ai Meudévons; ma ia os aaa FOR YO “° 850. To-day there are between three |The English Church hold regular |“ eLean and Hodge were present, vente UR MONEY Psy and four hundred buildings of all de-| services, while the Roman Catholic Councilor Sinclair being absent, y ee ee ya nominations, from the huge rolling! residents occasionally hold mass, A} The following applications were! \ayor Danelz was a busy man dur. AND THEN SOME. & i mill, measuring 360 by 110 feet, down | volunteer fire brigade has just been | received for the position pf Town En- ing the water break down and report : t : to the small shack of the lonesome | formed, also cricket, football, baseball} ginecr: J.D, Askwith, assistant en-| goes that he was not only on the spot t Lots 37 and 38 4 \ bachelor with its 12x10 space and its|and lawn tennis clubs, Fraternal fgincer of Prince Albert, Sask.; EAD. bor the leakage at all times, but took ~. In Block 47 $1 ,650. y 6 i population is not one unit less than| orders .having resident lodges are | Faust and William Jackson, After ®) his coat off and turned to bailing out| % une: 49 oe Be eighteen hundred. Masonic, Oda Fellows, Sons of Eng-|short discussion Councillor’ Lavell! the juice. na Leite $1 600 & iz - In 1912 the assessment of thé town | Jand, Independent Order of Foresters |moved and Councillor McLachlin : ock 107 . 5 a p } & was $640,000, This year the figures | and Owl. seconded that Mr. Askwith receive} Andy Learmonth’s little girl, who It i : read over three million and fifty-eight} A thorough water and gas system] the appointment, the wiatter of sdlary.| was bitten by a vicious dog last week, Np he Ages want some good close-in Lots at reasonable BY thousand ars : are in the town’s equipment and what | to be arranged ‘between himself and} has completely recovered or nearly so priees and on easy payments, see us, We've got them. %& & Seventeen moriths ago the only in-| we said at first we say again “Look on the Town Council, - Jinasmuch as. the.little lady insisted on Are you from Missouri ? . & - dustries in operation werethe Redeliff | this picture and that.” The compari-|" The next business was the appoint- going to school last Monday. We ; : ee ag Brick and Coal Company and the son of yesterday and to-day is noth-| ment of Superintendent of Water} wish we could get over our “dog THE RX - 3 ae flour mill, owned by Mayor Danelz, | ing shortof marvellous and the slogan) Works and this appointment fell to | bites” so easy. _ SHIPLEY INVESTMENT Co & ae sie ia in ph cg: Saar whieh will ever: yi a - J.H. Gibbs at a salary of $100 per Tina'ae Satiiea. th : ashes : , concerns. aré.in - be shouted thro’ t eng and | month, HE REVIEW man vis! @ mov- : ; epeaton ee e ‘rollin; wl and breadth of the land is “Keep Your The bids for the conerete 1 nasth of ing picture show at the lower end on AEE STREET Phone Al, Call 2. REDCLI FF a nearing compl@Orijapye <4) iedctiff.” . re the 300,0004gallon stand pipe were next tubday bight and found | Pear eee eee eee ego aon 40-40 the 5 Ho Sir Se Pern eo Ho eee ee eee e >

room ata premium. Messrs,

ing & Shortt sure put on a fine show, the pictures being exceptionally clear, the niusic Al, not to speak of the ex- treme comfort of the cosy hall.

~ and six. to whom the town has given valuable sites and concessions are just about to be started. The capital in- volved in these companies will run easily to the three million dollar

aan ter oat a eens NRT SSR SA A OS enema

ae

: opened and the tenders -were as. fol Buys a Lot and lows: . Crossley Brothers, $1,886; Reid

; & Carey, $1,810; Hansen & Winter, Starts Building. $1,820; William Hall, $1,700; Lange

e) : Norton, of North Construction Co,, $1,946; Lussier Con- Mr anines : struction Co,, $1,600, . Lussier’s tender

The football club played their first Vy Ded game last Saturday, the teams being North and South, A nice friendly i | tussel was enjoyed and the result was| 4 \ \ y ' a draw, no goals being scored. The Y . A, \ team will go to Medicine Hat to- : morrow to engage in a friendly match with their big neighbors, ,

Ihave secured the services of a first-class tailor, cleaner and presser of Ladies and Gents garments, All kinds of fitting, altering, repairing at.

y/ T. A. HICKS’

, cf pa ad J. HM. Gibbs submitted figures, but Taking the general contour of the | DY : ; on receiving the appointment of village, or rather town now, past and | he had nd. intention of invest-| Water Works Superintendent with-

present, what-do we find?—splendid|ing, but after a visit to the | drew. MY : residences ig pio ee ae several manufacturing estab-| A letter was read from a large flour as stores, etc., rapidly being /erec lishments now inoperation and | milling company requestiug informa.

4 had

‘Tommy Wood, associated with Mr. Clark in operating the fine new

e by first-class contractors,ot whom the si

@ eae as the pick within the past | under construction, he became ee moma se - restaurant in the Landis block, is . Men’s Furnishing Store ; twelve months. Rediff has. been|so favorably impressed that he ta F concessions If) Ome globe trotter. Tommy went off att ;

& they should decide to locatein Redcliff. oA hi Give Us a Trial.

i tea in in sw trl purchae a bunnes on] ay bang can ean Hin ce he ii ek seed orted, and the results in tthiy "| Government City o an in aranteed. 5 Runtatiliaes opdabs tes toon fifth street within a few hours, | dustry in this particular line of flow record (iise'snd got baek’to-thia'town

and inside 24 hours had a busi-| milling. the question. was left inl his Monday. noon. We have no authority ness block under construction, | 287d to investigate. for saying that Mr Wood brought a

; An tion, we might refer to Messrs. Mc-| Mr. Norton has become a gen-| oo aay asain page a ee with him, put hecertainly Lachlin & MoLean, two young Scotch-| uine Redcliff. booster, and has) y,. Young, of Buffalo, N. Y., regard- ep = bed ya resi “aus men, who came to Redeliff two years | made several other investments | ing the eréction ofen shoe factory, Se Levees Soe eee jo pcre ie bg wih bl The| since his arrival here. whereby the town agrees to give the} Redcliff on a Sunday is taking on iwQ men upon See: SOM.” crate ty only one of the many promoter a free site of twenty-five |allthe appearance of a wicked eon- she was good, and they have made acres, water at: fi ts 1 ches

i that have occurred » Water at: five cents per 1,000} tinental city. Four bran of ath- good, and today they are closing up|instances ul 1 rivil

2 ho have) ene Fe Privileges fiee for #| letics were in full swing on the veldt

their present contracts and making | here recently, of men who ha period of ten years. Mr, Young }last Sunday, cricket, lawn tennis, es arrangements for an sein ted trip to| came here and investigated the | ayiéos to commence the erection of | baseball aed football. The boys.en- the land of lakes, their bith place. possibilities of Redeliff. his plant within thirty days and to | joying these games looked like small r 4 Now in April, 1913, the picture employ at the outset at least 75 men. | battallions of mosquitoes scattered Redcliff presents is a -remarkable| Church of England services Sunday The Council authorized the signing of | over the prairie. Hundreds of auto- i change from 1911, “What we have| next. Holy communion at the resi-| the agreement forthwith; mobiles were joy riding and there is we'll hold,” as the old bull dog quota-| dence of Mr. and Mrs. Chadwick at) Mayor Danelx next reported that he |mo doubt little Redcliff is making a

Among our building contractors, without wishing to make any distinc-

Lt Seay

ote" Three Ext uy ' Any of which will make you Quick Money. Lots 27 und 28 in Block 106, Price $38,500. * 15 and 16 * 51 pair. $2,800. 29 and 30 26 pair $1,550, meee at

See Us for other Bargains.on Inside Property.

pee

: tion goes, and the pictures (and they | sa, m. and evening sermon in Maple | was now in negotiation with a large | great big noise these days.

i , ave moving pictures at that) we see) Hall at 7.30 p, m. “Everybody wel | jeather wt As aN tlle cy. . . eI r Birch & Branan 3rd Street

i er ; show us a town council of six council- whose representative has, lately been | D.C. Mackay. met with an accident 4

's in the town looking for a favorable | Wednesday afternoon while taking a PPPP PPI PIP PP PIP ~

i . site. ‘This gentleman has picked on |load of mattresses from a car to

E ; | apetlcus four, which is located in the | Barbers’: store and when unloading | HF 2

: Protect Your Home southeast part of the ,town, along the | same the high wind dislodged several E D ( L| F F H F { G H T S ry . viver bank, and is so satisfied with his|of the beds on top of the load and

Mi me investigations that he has returned |Mackay, who was then aloft, was . ;

rt East to recommend to his directors tically blown to the ground, .

f Against Loss by Fire er ieddeieceiae ks tsctas to eos cwmegien oor saan eos EAL OPPORTUNITY Leen nn nnn EEE nnn cliff should be confirmed, The firma the tendons of the foot. Mr. MacKay : ¢ - ee

: I represent some of the Strongest and Best ¢) Companies doing business in Canada, and write

kinds

How About These Prices | QIN DESIRABLE LOTS Lots 23 24, Bloek 75, Pair $3,300, Regular Terms Lot 24, Block 26, $750.00, Regular Terms. ts 29, 30, Block 89, $2000 Pair. Regular Terms inane a te

- A, J. NICHOLSON ©

will employ 250 men and when estab-| was conveyed home by Tom Clare in

lished will be the largest manufactory | auto and is now confined to his bed,

operating in the town, being quite unable to put his foot to In closing a most interesting meet- | the ground.

ing, Mayor Danelz suggested that the —_— Y PRESBYTERIAN CHUROH,

ratepayers should elect’ a comnritte to deal with matters concerning the}, Public worshipat 1 o'clock in the

common good of the people of Red- | forenoon in the church and at 7.30 in cliff, and such committee could at all | the Empress Theatre, The subject of times confer with the Town Council|the forenoon discourse will be when matters of importance could be | “Jehoiakim’s Folly,” and of the even- discussed to the mutual advantage of | ing, ‘Pravellers to a Promised Land.” all concerned, ‘The meeting then | Mr: Robson will render “Now the Day adjourned, Is Over,” and the quartette may sing. : one Sabbath School at 2,80 and Bible class My, aud Mrs, David Broadfoot and at 8.80 in the “linn oh 8 loc.

Master Buster Brown Broadfoot went. |" : ry to Calgary Monday night and i, The Ladies’ Aid arave, tao bn the turned Wednesday night, "| ehureh om, Whureday erin Y

The Subdivision That ; - Overlooks REDCLIFF. te

LOTS $50.00 EACH for a few days only. WILL DOUBLE IN 30 DAYS.

M.B. Broom &Co.

M. B. BROOM. _ B.A. MEIXNER,

o a

"naman

' DRUGGED AND. ROBBED IN. PARIS

——COCKSHUTT DRILLS

ARE, OF PROVED SUPERIORITY

Meets Stranger Who Volunteers to Show Him Sights of the City Paris, France. A_ curious - story

was told to the Paris police by a

young Canadian, James Huntly, or

Henily, of Winnipeg.

Mf. Huntly is a real estate agent by profession. After a short stay in London he arrived, he sajd, at the Gare St.- Lazare, in Paris; on his way to Ni¢e. He intended to remain only one day here. He says that he put his luggage in the cloakroom at the station, got a check for it and went for a stroll, :

Opposite Cook's, on the Place de V'Opera, ‘he. -was accosted by a guide, who offered to show him Paris. He agreed, and got into a taxicab with the man. After showing him several

, points of interest the guide proposed

Washes and dyes at to show him the Apache quarter, and

one operation, giv- pa drove with him to a house in a slum.

ing remarkably He does not know where it was.

clean, bright, fas “VS aRer The guide took him into a room on

colors, Dyes cotton, i the first floor furnished with a few

wool, silk or mix- chairs, a table and a cupboard—no- m4 thing else. The $200 guide opened the cupboard and offered Mr. Huntly

3 a drink which he accepted,

15e at your dealer's As soon as he had emptied his

or postp'd with b’ks glass he fell asleép and knows nothing

let “How to Dye" 5 105 of what bau gered him till he bate

up late in the afternoon on & chair from fF. L BENEDICT & C0. Montreal 4 the Madeleine Church. His pock- etbook had disappeared. There were, he says, twenty ten-dollar bills in it, séveral papers and the check for his trunk. The trunk had been taken

a ; ; Pos ] t ivel VY as ee cloakroom, presumably

The charity organization of the t h Cc b e S if British Embassy sent Mr. Huntly

7 back to London and he. will be repa- f ] triated.

Because they act so gently (no purging or gtiping) yet so thoroughly

NA:DRU-CO LAXATIVES

ars best for the children as well as

the grown-ups, 25e. a Lex at

your druggist’s,

Nationa! rug and Chemeal Co. of Cennde, Limited 162

PARKLING WATER, cool and sweet, refreshes the farmer who

r builds a Concrete Well or Tank

HE FARMER, above all others, appreciates good water, He drinks more water than the ¢ity man. The city-dweller is dependent upon the public water-supply for the purity of his water, while the farmer can have his own private source of water; and thus be sure that it is pure

se and. healthful.

AN vay $ foun a better drink than cool water, properly collected and stored. But in order to keep water fresh and pure, a tank or well casing that will keep out every possible impurity must be used. [7

Ze 4

CONCRETE IS THE IDEAL MATERIAL FOR TANKS AND WELL-CASINGS.

\ De eee rte are, cccting. your ge from see; c of all HERE are scores of other uses for concrete on your farm —on every farm, If Py i ae wipe or « 4 is easily cleaned inside. ‘Lime you would like to know of them, write for ourbook, ‘What the Farmer Can and water, instead of causing it to decay, actually make it stronger. Do With Concrete.’"* The book is absolutely free.

UR Farmers’ Information De- Address Publicity Manager

partment will help you to decide W HEN you go to bay cement

how to build anything, from a porch- be sure that this label is on

step to a silo. The service is free— Canada Cement ‘Company IN her dl athe fe geod gt

you know you are getling the

Keeping Pace With it

don't have t ise t oO U r I say, can you tell ‘me how far it is eid When hk dues aukine Indira. 506_ Limited : fesaa thet 3 he owe ng rhe. Yastic jpobed ak the bah oak eco beans a se9 HERALD BLDG., MONTREAL cee ee ael@jatsavs footsore traveller, scratched his head - thoughtfully, and then replied: Y

Oh, about three miles, I should

Victor and Vanquished

Past stall after stall went the rich Fal Y merchant, followed by a fogtman in smart livery. - It was the atnual vil lage bazaar, and the rich man had been roped in by force of cireumstances.

Ah, Mr. Fitzbrendon, said a really sweet and charming lady at one of the stalls, and what are you going to buy? Dear old auntie and I are run- ning this table, and we have home- made cakes, aprons, penwipers, and—

Yes, said F; and I'll buy just one of

GiAN RED ay. RMANY —— ; = Sari pia gottulest ogling WINNIPEG DRUGGIST ENDORSES SANOL REMEDIES

SANOL AND SANOL’S ANTI-DIA- BETES EFFECT WONDERFUL CURES

| think. C a a | And the traveller’, continued his 7 journey with renewed energy. >| } buy.

An hour or so later he met another | tion, hoping to hear now that he was TRY ‘near hig journey’s end, But instead,

| What is Considered Grave Situation is Discussed by Her Statesmen in Secret

Brussels, Germany.—The Belgian chamber of deputies has discussed at a secret sitting vital questions of na-

| tional defense.

When it was proposed that a secret sitting should be held, several mem- bers announced that they would not maintain secrecy, and tulmultuous

each. But do you sell kisses at your scenes occurred, Baron de Broque- Be ane V ' retell premier oe war minister,

, certainly! came the réady reply. 1 Fi a according to the ministerial organ, Le One guinea each. Te eee ee Patriot stated: The minister for

Right! ‘replied the autocrat, Then R E Cc A U Ss E foreign affairs and myself are on a lll take a couple—and good measure volcano. If you do not promige to please. your * keep our communications secret we

Aunt; remarked’ the fair and dainty ‘justin Rae bide sccchietane tthe or ned shall be eompelied to withold them.

It does not Bove or Streak the clothes

| rustic to whom he repeated his ques- jafter the subject tad been carefully Below is given a copy of a letter T considered, he was told that he was from a prominent Winnipeg Druggist. : This is but typical of the many we re- ceive, advising of the great demand for SANOL and SANOL’'S ANTI-DIA- BETES, and the miany cures these sterling remedies effect. The Sanol Manufacturing Co.,, Winnipeg,

Dear Sirs,—

In regard to the sale of SANOL and SANOL’S ANTI-VIABRBTES I might say I have been handling the goods for about three months, | was obliged to put in SANOL'S ANTI- DIABETES to supply one of my cus- tomers, who now is completely cured - and whom, I believe, has sent a testi- monial to your- office. Another cus- tomer ordered SANOL and I was This gentleman

bottles to his i F Up this time I had never really taken much interest in the preparations, but when customer after customer would come in and tell us about what SAN- OL had done for them I came to the ce it would be worth my wh tting behind SANOL and re- cor naing it to my customers. This E have done, and I havé. heard

exactly three miles away.

With a sigh, therefore, he set out once more and walked on and on; then on and on again, until at last he met yet another rustic, who cheered him with this consolation:

Three miles from the top of that hill. will see you there.

Good! replied the pedestrian. If I hurry a bit, I shall be able to hold my own against it.

THE SECRET OF “a GRLSH BEAUTY PURITY )iamertencnim FLOUR fie

damsel, forward, please, Two kisses Guarantees that secrecy would be as there is no set for this gentleman! is Cae “Kina” observed were obtained and the sec- For a moment the man of means ; ret sitting was held. Stringent pre- and money was nonplussed, but only cautions were taken and parliament- for a moment. Then he turned to ary gpeguesened yl meg ne this servitor: —— even to rooms adjacent to the cham- James, he said coolly, just take thi ARs bye teks aes «ne ber. e

purchase, please. . tet ny - Miss A se coat pick: It % clear that the premier has been

- danske: it || Steatly impressed by the German mili- A Medical Need Supplied. —When a Si tary measures at Elsenborn and other medicine is found that not only acts Gane places on the Belgian frontier. At

a _ Mansfacturedby || Elsenborn there is the vast maneuver- <a More B Every parent of a growing girl and| UPOm the stomach, but is 60, compan Ti Rts ttt Mt Kecharacse Ge, J| Ing camp of the Coblenz army corps.|| Of, and recommending It to my cus. ore Brea pass un-!] Blue lever used.” Mrs. W. . F i OL and recommending it to my cus more Dreé every young woman who looks after altered through the stomach to find|| Switzer, Brandon, Man. —_ cane rom Aix-la-Chapelle a military rail-|] tomers. This I have done, and I

have heard nothing but words of praise for SANOL and SANOL'S ANTI-DIABETES, I am, Yours truly, Austin’s Drug Store,

¥,. J. Hamlyn, Mgr. The original of this letter, with

many others of like nature, may

seen wy) our Files at any time. SANOL is the “RELIABLE CURE" for Gall Stones, Kidney Trouble, Kid- ney Stones, Bladder. Stones, Gravel, Lumba: ; and all fiessme arising. r 0)

only remedy which has a record of complete cures of Diabetes. Price

herself, should be constantly on the] action in the bowels, then there is way of great strategic importance runs watch tae of impoverished] ,yaijable a purgative and a cleanser| = aa separ ~_ se ——- with the blood rls in their teens should) or great effectiveness. Parmelee's|, ay b on oe er, At. Welsives. a not be pale, languid and constantly) vegetable Pills are of this character An Inspiring Model oo apd Rite west to Malmedy, fatigued. Nature intended them to} nq are the best of all pills. During} Little Johnnie, having in his pos-| Close to the Belgian frontier. | A new | be bright, energetic and active. The|ine years that they have been in use| session a couple of bantam hens,| line connects Malmedy with the Bel-| happiness of a lifetime depends upon} they have established themseives as| Which laid very small eggs, suddenly ee care er town of Stavelot and | giving the blood the help it needs at) 9 other pill has done. hit ona plan. Going the next -morn-| 4 lways to nenseete and Liege. - this time, when girls are too frequent- on ing to the fowl-run, Johnnie's father |. ° t 7 ye ine of the chamber ly allowed to overstudy, overwork or] ‘pho case had reached a critical stage| Was surprised to find an ostrich egg| Paron ce Lr pduay re said that the de- suffer from lack of exercise.’ * and even the judge seemed to awak-| tied to one end of the beams, and ~ FEET oe arn G: Leese. (he. The symptoms of impoverished] o, to a live interest in the proceed-| above it a card, with the words: Keep| Suture el ctated \G —— foreign blood are unmistakable. They are ings, for the most important witness] Your eye on this and do your best. Atacand Abe Soe welcome an languidness, pale, sallow complexion,| was’ about to be cross-examined. ms ae ‘i a Be, gian aay: Al- shortness of breath. t palpita:| “go you are the lady’s maid? began| Good friend, if fate should but bestow | (i008) o imation tae tion, it is tion of the heart, particularly on going| «ye relentless barrister, Upon, we'll say, a man like you, . rtual +A certain that an increase will up. stairs, poor appetite, dizziness and| "Yes, sir, The problems I have mentioned, oh! ._ ine ie. ths 0 headaches, and a tendency to faint.| and where were you at 7 o'clock] What would you do? What would) ,, According to the Dernlere Heure, These symptoms of course are not all) 51 the evening in question? you do? ete pone nd Semanal St found in every case, but the more) y was in my lady's room, sir, A agen yee Enoe alitnes tected swe , that the victim has of them the greater) wor what purpose? St. Petérsburg. —F. Holmes, of] ine south mad eost of re massed to progress has the trouble made and the| y was‘tressing my lady's hair, sir. | Lavendon, Bucks, who is 73 years old, @ ncknaaas toate haem ay op ag: 24 SOG Arnel more imperative is the necessity to] ne barrister leaned forward and| has sung bass in the local chapel choir | SS! it Dehooved te country to be in ‘CONVENT OR FORTUNE at once begin to check it, through the] gnoke very slowly and impressively.|for fifty years. He has also|) P‘erritory was respected. egrity of use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, which} Now think, he said. I want you to| worked for more than forty years on |” ge ; Woman's Fortune Depends on Choice How's THIS Between the Two

bring bac kthe glo wof age €0-| be very careful in answering this ques-| one farm, £3 | paige Boy yee ‘allten | tion: Was or was not your mistress Cardiff.—A farm t We offer One Hundred Dollars Rewara ' London, Wagland.—Sir Ashburn-

f.—A farm servant named) ror any case of Catarrh that cannot be | ham Clements, one of the executors of Frederick Davies was washed off the by Hall's Catarrh Cure, Ah

That Fellow Feeling ._ Outside a busy fishmonger’s stood a large ice cart. The driver was in- side the shop, but on a block of ice sat-a small boy, with comfort writ large upon his face.

"Bre gitoutofit! yelled he man, all in one word, as be suddenly appeared from the shop.

Then the small boy lifted his face,

» now charged with sadness. :

Wus you ever a boy? he asked un- grammatically.

Of course I was, came the reply, but—

And did you ever stop away from school?

Yes— e

And when you got home did yer farver ever get bic belt and—

Then it dawned on the big and bur- ly ice-man.

You. stop just where you are, my lite man, the said genially, JI quite understand.

For sale at all Leading Druggists. Send for Free Literature.

THE SANOL MANUFACTURING Co., Limited WINNIPEG, MAN.

case of Mies Jeanie Fraser, Hamilton, s ry Get. citere prost of ths, Phe ong ee ee

With so thorough a preparation at| spor about. el 7" SEER ETM cured the will of Lord burnham, stated s eighteen months I was Only One “BROMO QUININE!" cliff by a wave at Gower, South| . J. CHENEY & CO., 7% 4 . se lg Barings. We) Powders the] in a very bad state of health and) That 1s LAXATIVE BROMO. QUININE. | Wales, and drowned. ; Wi, the pidemleied, hare katep oct Dotti, Lady soe dines ane s her children t0) thoroughly rm down. "I had no ap-/ 10k for the signature of Hs W. GROVE. 3. "Cheney for the last 36 yeara and. be: | OW Child, Lady Mary Catherine Ash-

ures 'o| ‘“) iN ——

suffer from the ravages of worms is unwise and culpably careless, A child subjected to the. attacks of worms is always unhealthy and will be stunted in its growth, It is a merci- ful act to rid it of these destructive parasites, especially when it can™ be done without difficulty.

a | lieve him perfectly honest in all busi burnham, has not yet come to any transactions: and | Rnancially able: ty carry decision as to whether she will con- ¥ rm, : WALDING RINNAN® & wine tinue = Hfe * Fe Convent of the ,. Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Sacred He pean. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,| If she takes the vow..ehe is pre-

: ° acting directly upon the blood and muec-| cluded by Lord Ashburnham’s will

A Good Thing || s.xeesieseesry Teteniale | trom taheriting his real and personal Sold ‘by all drugeists. *lestate. ‘The will has been provision-

, amily Pills for constipa-|ally sworn at under $1,260,000. She

petite and suffered from most of the symptoms of anaemia, I went to a local doctor and received treatment from him for three months, and al- though I took bottle after bottle. of medicine I was steadily growing worse, and I got so down-hearted and de- pressed that I felt I would hever get

n O m Two Days, 26c.

His Opinion of Them An heirloom, explained the farmer, is something that has been handed down from father to'son and in some cases is greatly prized. I'd prize these heirlooms I'm wear-|| yo have a

Take Halls

better. At this time I read the cage 6 The Tempter ~*\ ing, remarked the youngster, a good seal has four years in which to decide, be- : of a young lady whose symptoms were " jelipntinnemanicideaminy If you will marry me, said the ard-| simijar to my own, who had been cur- eg if they wasn't so long in Clear Horizon | ‘The Agent—Then we'll consider Lard oa novice at the convent. Her pow Biogen ¥ you shall have your own! eq by Dr, Williams’ Pink Pills, and I that settled. oe ee haben disk acne How dare you! she hissed. You Sand 3 Bags payee y Minard’s Liniment for sale everywhere. at both ends of the day, The Actor—But—er—what about! speciat permission of the mother sut-

; the contract? Waiting for an Answer A digh of : The Agent—Oh, that’s all right. A

verbal contract will do. We asked some months ago whether The Actor—Laddie, listen. The

n,

gener sees me eit wo % adh oa P t lat time I had a verbal contract J pression that the celluloid drove out Os rew a verbal salary,

the paper. We well remember the paper collar and the paper dicky. Cool Burgess used te sing of" Hilde- brand Montrose:

perior allowed to leave the convent,~ and she is now travelling,’ mento

Chief Constable From the Ranks

London.—Detective Superintendent Herbert Allen has been appointed chief constable of Leicester at a sal- ary of $3000 a year. Mr. Allen serv. | ed through the ranks of the local po- lice force.

know I am advocating votes for wo- men, and insist on walking.

had improved and I was feeling more encouraged. I continued the use of

Pills for a time longer and my health was fully restored.” *

These Pills are sold by all medi- cine dealers or may be had by mail at 60 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams’ Medi- cine Go., Brockville, Ont.

etn

John, do you practice regularly on the plano while I am away at busi-

ess? ; } | ; : | Sy r Yes, father, replied the boy, " } Every day?

; Yes, father, N F ¥ How long did yoirpractice today?

Three hours.

And how long yesterday?

Two and a half hours.

Well, 1 am glad to tiear that you're} so regular. :

Yes, father. .

And the next time you practice be }sure and unlock the piano. Here is }the key, I locked the instrument laet week and I have been carrying the key in My pocket ever since.

ee eee Waiter—Have you tried our turtle soup, sir? Fi Diner—Yes, I have tried it and my

decision is that the turtle proved an COMIC PAPERS GAVE BOGUS

BISHOP AWAY

ed He parts his hair with extreme care Toasties Pobed as Oriental Prelate at Meetings

And chalks his paper collars. of a Fraudulent Bank But the paper collar, once worn,|| for breakfast and again at the even- Paris, France.—To impress the was an accomplished fact, something || ing meal opens and closes the day || shareholders of the Auxtlaiue Inte: tae unemalad tl amie eel] ee pos areca reny Peg = aig Roge 3 civil war period can be cleansed. os ag | eased ap W canon ths eve The steel collar was at regular inter- Toasties are bits of hard, white || robe, gave him an imposing amethyst \als refreshed by use of a tooth|| Indian Corn, first carefully cooked, || ping’ to wear and invested him with brush. then rolled thin and crinkly, and |! the title of bishop of Antioch, During sex: a gtemmaremrenrsictt: tonnes to a delicate, appetizing |) the meeting the bishop's episcopal bake aegis office and’ wae doins on : no npe alg nae Brathins be could Eg the Snioratian, of Not a hand touches the food in As a Mailer of fact, the blshop was ee mart ate “a other bg ing || manufacture, and itis ready to hired to wear his clothes at so much Recea lease. Me vonmeeban ital] Cor caale ei areca? DOCkNP ak Be Reha, aoe" eesti bat ak Home Sweet Home. His friends were pind it “aa ign Ne: the Sane of one of- the por bd isttle surprised at the selection, but . uisitive sharghold t a was heartily applauded Btep- oa sult the m Ly, a Pe pling forward, he sald: I am glad you Post Toasties taste deliciously Sidon hed” been vending Geist ie like Home Sweet Home, and let me|| 8000 and are richly nourishing, ~ proceedings. He was surprised to box or @lx boxes tor $2.60, }| astic burial ground of Peterborough,| say that the company | represent is find that the bulky portfolio contained and have been placed in Peterborough | selling homes on terms to suit every- = a number of very Parisian comic jour- Cathedral. They are said to the| body within 40 minutes’ ride of the a 5 . nals. He made inquiries and a po- coffins of the twin ehfldren o glelty. Everybody ought to have aj| Made by Pure Food Factories of 1) 10) investigation followed Canute who Were drowned in Whittle-| home. If you don't want to live in|} C@24dlan Postum Cereal Company, |) ny. founder of the bank’ has bee. ers sey Mere as they were crossing to| one of these houses yourself, it's the Lid., Wiadsor, Ont, arrented and bis partuer is now ta | be educated at Peterborough Abbey, | chance of your life for an investment -

St. Petersburg.—Two tiny coffins have recently been found in the .mon-

ita the CLEANLST, SIMPLEST, ond DEST HOME DYE, one can buy--Why you don't even have to

*

PAO he me ae’ *

S

‘The

she Found a Friend In Need

By CLARISSA MACKIE

The orchestra wailed into silence as ethe curtain’ dropped for the last time. ‘The audience ristled and chattered -and.elbowed its way oubemid the bang of chairs :

Behind the scenes the chorus girls “were sleepily discarding their gorgeous waiment and slipping into commonplace street clothes. “By ones and twos and threes they disuppéared down the nar- stow, dimly lighted hall that led to the wtreet. Ora

Last of all went Anne Shaw, & new

girl with dtagging feet. She was tired and homesick and hungry, and the stage amapager had.reprimanded her for the Jistiéss manner of her dancing. She would not*receive her first week's sal- sary for five long days, and her wretch- edly shabby little,purse-was empty. A -dreary hall ‘bedroom at the top of three ‘flights confronted her. ws

How she ted it'all! Butit was too date now retreat fromthe position «she had taken in defiance of the wishes wot her , She was proud and had assured them that she would come

preceded her murmured Pres. || ently they found to np ae opposite sides of a email table in a de-| Women at One Time Wore Fleets of

New Girl ||

MONSTER HEADDRESSES.. |

Vessels tn Their Hair.

Marte Antoinette had a passion for extraordinary headdresses. One struc- ture that she invented was forty-five inches in height and was composed. of many yards of gauze and ribbon. From

the folds sprang bunches of rosea; and alert air about him that belied bis mid-| the entire edifice was surmounted by a

die aged gray hair; watched her keen-| waying plume of white feathers, : It is

64 crimson through the gauze veil that ly, knowing all the while that she recorded that when Maria Theresa re- | |

‘was wrapped about her hat. The man, big and handsome, with a youthful,

shy and il! at ease and that her in-| ceived a portrait of her daughter wear-

stinctive frugality kept her eyes away| ing’ this headdress she exclaimed:

from the higher priced articles of food. | «This ig po daughter of mine! It is the “L will order if you will permit me,") portrait of an actress!”

he said gently. ' The Duchess de Chartres, determined

“If you will, please,” she said grate-! to surpass the queen, designed a head-

fully, not lifting ber eyes. dress two inches higher. It was made He ordered a steak with its hearty | up of many plumes waving at the top

accompaniments. and a pot of tea,’ of a tower, Two waxen figures, repre-|?mases, Victor Hugo and several others |

which was obviously not for himself. | senting the little Comte de Beaujolais “I’m not—I've never been out to stp-| (the Lrother of Louis Philippe) in his per like this before,” said the girl, with murse’s arms, were worn as ornaments. stdden emphasis, her eyes still on the Beside them a parrot picked at a plate printed card in her hind. “Of course not. 1

know that,” be tetarned, with @ mel-| On different parts of the tower were

‘low little laugh that ended abruptly. | the initials of the duchesse’s busband, |

“The same old story, | suppose—tired of | her father and ber father-in-law, made the village tife and hoping to win fame! from her own hair. and fortune on the stage.” At this time France and England Anne shook her bead slowly, and he were at war. In a naval engagement could see the quiver of ber red lips, the French frigate Licorne struck her “Then I'll bet you're the stage struck fag, but the Belle Poule, another daughter of a millionaire, and now, French vessel, crippled the Hector, an you're sorry because you ran away) English man-of-war. As the French- from home, where they have three men were about to board two English square meals a day even if you have to! vessels bore down to their consort’s eat ‘em off gold plate and have a butler) assistance, and the Belle Poule sailed hanging around your chair.” away. The English fleet returned to “You are all wrong,” she said, witha Plymouth with two prizes, the Licorne ‘note of impatience in her voice. | and a French lugger. “There is nothing romantic about it| ‘The French, although they had lost a whatever. It's all horribly sordid. I've frigate, proclaimed a victory. The lived in New York all my life, and I've queen and her women wore headdress- worked in an office for three years.) es that represented the Belle Poule un- My father is a butcher, and I have a’ der full sail plowing a sea of green

of cherries, and the wax figure of a} Anybody would, black boy reclined at the nursé’s feet. |

THE LITERARY RIVALS.

A Serio-Comle Scene Between Victor Hugo and the Two Oumases. It is perhaps only natural that Mr,

Victor Hugo, annoyed by the extrava- |

gant eulogies of the poet that his pred- ecessdts bad written, should lay ®& nized his nationality. go0d deal of stress on the great French-| Journeys" Mr. Perctval Pollard records

man's faults and failings. Of these the

ehléf was undoubtedly vanity. Victor

Hugo was inordinately vain—vain at one moment with a superb assurance that almost dignified vanity Itself, at| another with an uneasy jealousy at once petty and absurd.

Some years ago in a review of the) work of the two Dumases, father and, son, an anecdote was related that well | illustrates this trait. Both of the Du-|

were chatting together when a foreign gentleman was. presented, who made an excellent impression’ on every one untilthe. moment of his departure. As- he bowed in taking leave he addressed

himself to the most celebrated mem.- |

bers of the group and assured them of his pride and satisfaction in baving) met “the greatest poet, the greatest ro- mancer and the greatest dramatist of France.” :

“A little unthinking of our friend to address his parting compliment entire ly to me, was it not?” remarked Victor Hugo complacently.

The others looked at each other, and he caught the look.

“The dramatist—that was you, then, you think, Dumas?" he inquired of Du-

mas the younger in an ominous voice, Then a thought even more appalling oo curred to him, and without waiting for a reply he turned to Dumas the elder, “The romancer, monsieur—the ro. mancer! Do I understand you to sup-

pose that by ‘the greatest romancer’ it!

THEIR MOTHER TONGUE.

and the American. 3 An American in London; living ina

acquaintance how it was that every one in the house immediately recog- in “Vagabond

the couversation,

The Englishman looked at our Amér fean friend for a moment and tlien ventured this definite explanation:

“Oh, of course, don't you see, they would know you, you see, like a shot. I mean to say, you sea that it's quite odds on, don't you see, that you are, that you are, you see! Bh?”

The American chewed on this a little and then remarked, apropos of noth- ing:

“Say, ain't it a fine thing we speak the same language? Yes, sir! That's what keeps the two countries so close together—the language. Still, as I was saying, 1 can't make up my mind

whether it’s.my feet or my language. | I'd like to have a real heart to heart

talk with you about some of these lit- tle details of the language that binds us together, tongues across the sea, as it were. Come and have lunch with me at the Cecil.”

“Quite sorry! I just went and bad a bone an hour ago.”

“Beg pardon?”

“Oh, I mean to say, of course, don't you see, I had a grilled bone at the club.”

“Well, there’s another thing Id like to talk to you about when you have time some day. That's the exact defini. tion of the week end. I've noticed that when your lawyer or stockbroker, and so forth, sayg he’s going away for the week end it means that he’s leav- ing Thursday evening and not show-

THe wore: TOWOUES | WHAT IS SOLUBLE?

_A. B. Davidson, the latest biographer of| private hotel, inquired of an English | Everything In the Universe fs,

Say the Scientists.

| GLASS DISSOLVES IN WATER.

And if a Bar of Gold Be Placed Upon a Bar of Lead’ Each In Time Will Ab- sorb Particles of the Other—Solid Matter a Mass of Whirling Atoms.

What is soluble? Sugar in water? That's easy, although you have to be born in Kentucky to perform the trick in the minut julep trade,

Is glass soluble In water? Offfand Wwe say no. We are wrong. It is. You can try it yourself, .

‘Take an ordinary eight ounce water glass, a glass that holds eight ouaces, grind it up to a powder and pour the powder into another glass full of water and stir it up. Then analyze it, or, if this is above you, take it around the corner to a man who can, and be will tell you, and with truth, that the wa- ter In that glass bad actually dissolved 38 per cent of the glass powder.

Glass is soluble, nearly as soluble as bichloride of mercury,

Everything is soluble in water. Furthermore, everything in the uni- verse is soluble in everything else in the universe. That is what they are telling us now, and the men who tell us can perform an astonishing experl- ment right before your eyes to make you more than half believe them.

They take a bar of gold and a bar of lead. They lay one bar on top of the other, ‘Then they sit around and smoke

was you who was designated? Reply, tag up again votil ‘Tuesday morning. cigars and wait, say a year. Then they

world.” Her voice shook dangerously. “I’ve always had plenty to eat and ev- erything comfor to wear. We live in a fat, but everything was so deadly commonplace and dull 1 thought things on the stage w be different. It looks so from the front.” _ ~"’

“Of course it does. That's what we aim to make it. You've been foolish, but you're mighty lucky to get back your good sense befure it’s too late. If your father is a butcher you needn't pine to be a theatrical star or ¢ven the daughter of a millionaire, because at the present high price of meat you can outtop ‘em alll” He laughed heartily at his own joke, and Anne smiled faintly. :

“Eat your supper, quick now, be- cause I'm going to take you home to your folks. Where do they live?” “Qn the east side, but I couldn't give up my place without seeing the manager. He has engaged me, you know.” els

For the first time since their en- counter sbe lifted her eyes to his || amused face. “Oh!” she gasped con-

fusedly, ~ | “Yes, it's nobody else!” nodded the manager kindly. “If you'd had courage to look at me before you would have ) recognized me. You have my permis- sion to leave at once, and we will call this’—he waved the dinner check gay- ly—“we will call this part of your wages. That preserves your independ- ence, eh?” '

“Yes, and ihank you so much, and can [ go home at once?” sbe asked

eagerly, : -

“Not until after you've finished your supper,” he admonished her. “It’s a reflection on the profession for you to return home half starved. If you'll give me your name and address I'll send you the rest of your salary.”

After he had noted it in a little book that he tucked away in his pocket his glance. was attracted by the pale face of a young man who was staring an- grily at them from the sidewalk out- side the open door,

“There's a young man in the case, too, I'll be Bound,” be said as the '| walter flew away with the money he | had laid beside the check. :

He was unprepared for the swift blush that crimsoned her lovely face and the tears that filled ber startled eyes. “Yes,” she said unsteadily, “you've been so kind to me that I don't mind telling you: that there is some- body. He follows me from the theater every night to see that | reach the boarding house safely. He is so angry with me that he won't speak to me.”

“Works in an office, too, eh?” be ven- tured.

~while at the sume time it unfortunately esharpened her healthy young appetite.

54 @ Bssel—

“THE MAN LEANED FORWARD AND PEERED INTO HER FRIGHTENED PACE.

_A coffee cake and a glass of water do

wthe doorway and spoke. “You're late,” che said reproachfully. “I've been walt- ‘ing fifteen minutes,” and then, before whe could utter a. word of explanation -or protest, with a quick movement he ‘hustled her into a waiting taxicab, “followed her, and instantly they were ‘rolling over. the asphait,. while the ‘Jighted street swept past them on ei- ather side like streams of fire,

“I'm afraid you've made a mistake,” seaid the new girl hurriedly. - , ' “The deuce | have!” The man lean- -ed forward and peered into ber fright- “The passing lights revealed -@ mist of dusky hair framing a smal! ‘featured, pensive oval, out of which «shone a pair of soft black eyes. As he «drew back she dropped the white chif- ‘fon veil over her face again.

“I thought you were Margery Sare,” the said impatiently, . “I'm sorry, but you did not give me sa chance to explain,” she said in her dow, sweet voice. “I think Miss Sare

E

sister and a mother, the dearest in the! gauze in pursuit of the Eyglish frigate.

' "went bome ‘at once. Something was |-

sald about a telegram containing bad

‘news. If you will set me down”— -“Of course 1 will take you home,” be

“Where to?”

‘theatrical boarding houses. aather walk, if you please. I—I have an errand.”

“At this time of night? Something to veat You girls are always bungry.”

She nodded wearily,

The manager arose from his chair. “Well, he’s waiting at the door for you now,” he said cvolly, “so if you'll just introduce me so that I can tell htm that I have discharged you from the company—why, be cap take you home in the taxi, and I'l! catch another cab.”

Anne stumbled eagerly to her feet and looked teward the door. Her bap-

ve ; ret othe beckon severa) times before he ieft the eer "| out wight here, please!" | sigewatk and slowly approached them. @he cried eagerly, “Will you take me home. Jim?" she Be sigpaled the chauffeur to stop, asked . after she had Introduced ut something in her tone caused bim | the manager, “1 was tired and homesick pre ite aun to where three | and half starved. I°was golng to pawn ed balls swung over a lighted en- | this locket with yout picture im it whea ener edna at L er was . the p Mfg Sasa pd 7 ay F , you." ‘rst, Jim's band flew out to meet the ee tended palm of the manager, and that genial gentleman had seen them

monsieur!” he demanded. His brow! was thunderous, and the company held their breath, but the elder Dumas, who | never found himself at a loss, answer ed with an easy laugh:

“But certainly it was I, and the dramatist was my son. How should it be otherwise?’ You did not invite the gentleman to dine, and I did. You are not a cook—a good cook, a veritable prince among cooking amateurs—and | am! His compliments, such as they are, are for us, bis prospective hosts. But they are only payment In advance for the salade marseillaise of peppers stuffed with minced crab meat which I have promised to prepate for him and which I invite you to share also.”

The great and only Hugo shrugged a tolerantly contemptuous shoulder.

“No; I have had enough of the so- clety of this gentleman who speaks from the stomach, not the head,” he stated grandly. “You may appreciate it, Dumas, but I do not. It is true—I am not a cook.”

This construction was known as the “colffure Belle Poule.”

The wife of an English officer living in Paris deemed the headdress an in- sult to the English navy and deter- mined to resent it. At the. next public occasion therefore she appeared carry- ing on her head five English line of battle ships, a French frigate and a lugger. An arrangement of silk and gauze represented Plymouth harbor, which the English ships, with their prizes, were entering. Each vessel car- ried a streamer that bore its name, and on the edifice at the back the word ‘“Plymouth” appeared in glittering beads.

The audacity of the spirited Bnglish- woman struck every one dumb except the chief of police, who invited her te cross the frontier at her earliest con: venience.—Youth's Companion.

MEANING OF “POTLUCK,”

One Plunge of the Ladle, and Take What You Get.

‘The real origin of the word “pot- luck” is unknown to most of the peo- ple who use it. In Limoges, France, however, one runs into potluck itself. In a certain corner of that quaint city of jostling roofs thére is still segregat- ed, much as if in a ghetto, a Saracen population, probably a remnant of the wave of Saracens that swept over Eu- rope hundreds of years ago. Here they live in their crooked, narrow streets, following old customs banded down from generation to generation. There are many butcher shops in the quarter, and outside ef each steams a great pot of soup over a glowing brazier. In each pot stands a ladie as ancient as the pot.

Whena r comes with a penny, in goes’ the ladle and comes up full of savory broth and chunks of meat, odds and.ends that the butcher has had left over. And what comes up the cus- tomer has to take, One can imagine bow anxiously the bungry urchin or the mother of seven must eye the in- exorable ladle and how a pretty girl might get another draw from’ the butcher's boy. : i.

A Cheap Marine Telescope.

Make an oblong narrow box out of four pleces of quarter inch board about two feet ldng by sixteen inches wide, and fit a piece of clear, clean glass across one end, held in place by brass headed tacks driven into the wood and overlapping the glass. Fill all the cracks with sealing wax to keep out the light. Then plunge the glass end two or three inches into the water and look through the open end. -This simple marine telescope is made on the principle of the more elaborate glasses through which to look at the famous gardens under the sea near the Catalina islands.—Christian Herald,

Soaking Salt Fish, There is a wrong as well as a right way to freshen salt mackerel and other salt fish. Those who are familiar with evaporation processes know that salt falls to the bottom, Now, if you’ place your mackerel with the skin side down in the pan the salt falls to the skip and remains there. If placed with the flesh side down the salt falls to the bottom of the pan, and the mackerel is freshened by the soaking in’ water,

At any rate, “to take potluck” means | as it should be, to take what you get and say nothing, whether the pot is in Limoges or in The Scholar,

the flat of the man who eagerly invites a friend of bis youth to dinner.—New York Sun,

Dr. Evans, a witty member of the parliament at Melbourne, was an old man, and the other members jokingly spoke of him as belonging to the era of Queen Anne.

Onee while making a speech he re ferred to Queen Anne and was greeted with cries of “Did .you know her?" “What was she like?”

_ “Yes, sir.” retorted the doctor, “1 did know her. The scholar is contemporary with all time.”

Gives Warning of a Storm,

In the bay of Biscay frequently dur- ing the autumn and winter in calm weather a heavy sea gets up and rolls in op the coast four and twenty hours before the gale which causes it arrives and of which it is the prelude. In this case the wave action, generated on the other side of the Atlantic by the wind, travels at « much greater rate than that of the body of disturbed air and thus gives warning of the coming storm,

Going te an Expert.

When the butcher answered the tele- phone the shrill voice of a little girl greeted him:

“Hello! Is this Mr. Wilson?”

“Yes, Bessie,” be auswered kindly “What can I do for you?” ~

“Oh, Mr. Wilson, please tell me where grandpa’s liver is! The folks are out and I've got to put a hot Gannel oo it, and 1 don’t know where it ts,"— Ladies’ Home Journal,

So Unreasonable.

“She's been very busy telling me how to rear my baby.”

“Well?”

“But she got into a perfect panic when | asked her to take care of the child for a couple of days. You know I was suddenly called out of town.”— Wasbington Herald.

A Frank Admission. “I suppose you are interested in re- form," said the. conscientious citizen. “No,” replied Marmer Corntossel; “1

Putting it Up to Him.

“Patience is a virtue,” said the maa, philosophically,

“True,” replied bis wife, who thought he ought to be earning more money, “And Uli proyide the patiente for this approve of it. But | can't say that it’s | family if you'll only provide the bus generally expressed in a way that | tle”"—Detrolt free Press. makes it as interesting as the contin. | . —_—-—___——_. ued stories.” Washington Star, Borrowing Trouble.

“Ever since his wife has brought suit for divorce be has looked terribly wor- ried.”

“He oughtn’t to worry; she'll prob-

Would He? Casbleigh—You wouldn't marry Miss’ Roxy for her money, would you, Up- son? Upson Downes—How else can 1 | ably get it.”—Houston Post. get itt-Londop Answers. ewer - A judicious silence is always better ‘ie who despises small things never | than truth spoken without charity.— becomes rich. Danish Proverb, | Be salen, :

a cheat aieeninantes

There goes a boy from B-ton; I can tell him by his clothes.” .

“From where?"

“B-ton,” repeated the Yankee. “Ac- cents on the ‘ton,’ doesn’t it?”

“No; don’t you see, it’s just Eton.”

“Oh, rimes with ‘meetin’,’ eh, drop- ping the ‘g’ carefully at the same time as the voice and otherwise concealing the alphabet as much as possible? Well, well!” and the American pulled up his horse. “Ain't it great we speak the same languagé?” Set ae ald

THE EMPEROR’S STAR. ee It Simply Had to Be Put on the Cross on the Church Spire,

Emperor William is the busiest man in Germany. He revises or approves all decisions in public matters, supervises all art and architecture and lectures everybody. In illustration of the def- erence paid to his wishes in even the smallest details, they tell in Berlin, writes Mr, Samuel G. Blythe in Bvery- body's Magazine, the story of the star above the cross on the spire of the Em- peror William Memorial church.

Of course the kaiser insisted on re- vising the plans of the church, The architect brought the plans to bim, and the kaiser scratched out what he did not like and made such additions as he fancied before he gave them the impe- rial O, K. The church was built. There was to. be a big gilt cross on the spire, and it appeared in its proper place. But, much to the general aston- ishment, when the cross was put up a large, many pointed star was raised above it on a heavy rod. The Berliners could not understand the star, They inquired. The architect said the kaiser had added the star to the plans,

The plans were examined. Then it was found that in revising them the kaiser had let fall a drop of ink from his pen, which hit the paper just above the cross, The architect studied a long time over this blot of ink. There could be no appeal, no inquiries. He finally decided that the blot of ink signified a star above the cross, and he put the star there, making it to correspond as nearly as possible with the outline of the blot. The star Is still there.

The First Hinge.

The first binge was probably that of the oyster. The thorny oyster of the Pacific coast bas its two shells joined together by a hinge as good as any found ip any hardware shop of the eountry. There are other hinges found in nature, but that of the oyster reach- es the bighest perfection. We bave made little advance upon this device in all of our years of patenting and ip- venting.—St. Nicholas.

__ An Expert.

“I oever bave any trouble with my gowns.”

_ “How is that?”

“You see, my husband belongs to the fire department.”

“Well?”

“And be can hook me up in forty-five seconds.”—Wasbington Herald,

She Had. ,

“Have you any unmarried daugtite Mrs. De Willoughby?” asked the visi- tor. 4

“Oh, yes, Mr. Vanderbloom. My daughter Minnie was unmarried last week by Judge Cuttem,” replied the lady.—Harper's.

A Query.

Fair Patron—The papers say you han- die mall bere by the ton. Postmaster— Yes, indeed, Wair Patron—Well, my fiance is going away for a couple of days. What kind of a special rate will you give me per ton?—-Woman'’s Home Companion.

Good For an Occasional Bouquet. “He offers me a platoule friendship.” “Lake it,” advised her girl chum,

“antil something better comes along.” —Louisville Courier-Journal

take the two bars and analyze them chemically. In the gold bar they find léad. In the lead bar they find-gold. Gold and lead are soluble in each other.

If you haven't time to wait a year to find out, the trick can be performed in much shorter time, All that bas to be done is to raise the temperature of the two bars to a very ordinary heat—say 800 or 400 degrees F. With this added heat the same results are reached over- night. Traces of gold are found all the way fHrough the lead bar and vice versa. d

The theory is that all substances, whetber gold or butter or leatber, are really composed of the smallest kind of small particles—about the size of the particles making up tbe tail of the late lamented comet, Which were described as the elemental essence of nothing- ness, These particles, which are as much bigger than an atom as a moun- tain compared to a mouse, are in mo- tion, revolving round each other faster than thought, much the same as the planets revolve round. the sun. 4

If our microscopes were big enough a chunk of gold would appear to our eyes much the same as a fly hopper full of flies (the kind of hoppers they, keep in the cheese department of @ country grocery store in August). The particles are buzzing and jumping much the same as these flies,

When a bar of gold comes in contact with a bar of lead their respective re- volving buzzing particles get together and get acquainted. They go explor- ing and are lost, and before long, in- stead of having a bar of pure lead and a bar of pure gold we have two bars of alloyed metals, :

This discovery has upset all sorts of scientific calculations. If everything is soluble in everything else—and scien- tists can go on duplicating the gold- lead example withot end—how can anything exist in a pure state? It can’t. Chemists dispense chemicals under the label "C. P.” or “chemically pure,” but if a Dr. Wiley got after them, on the strict letter of the new theory he would send them al! to jail, because the chances are that all alleged pure chem- icals have absorbed a little of every- thing they came in contact with in the process of their manufacture,

Analytical chemists of this day have to take iuto account the amount of glass any given solution contains, when they are testing that solution in test a tube. Otherwise their results wouldn't count for auything, i

This discovery suggests an explana- tion of that mysterious element in out- door life, scent. How can a hound trace bis quarry? Everything a man touches dissolves a little of him. When his foot falis on the ground he leaves a trace of himself. ln warm weather or in wet weather he leaves a bigger trace thai In cold or dry weather, A hound follows a damp trail, Usually his sense of smell |s not acute enough tg follow a dry trail.

The suggestion that a fugitive pur sued by a bloodhound actually dis solves a few particles of bimseif every time his foot touches the ground, just as though he were « lump of sugar im water, sounds fanciful, but it is ap- pearing more and more reasonable im the light of recent researches.—F. L Anderson in Chicago Record-Herald.

His Mistake,

“On my way to chureb I picked op @ button and put ii in my change pock- et, where | bad u qiarter.”

“Gracious, my dear! Aad you drop ped it into the collection basket by mistake?"

“No, confound it! 1 put in the quar ter.”"—Judge, ~

Calm Before Storm. “Why this bush iy the house, thig elaborate tiptoeing uvout?” "Ssh! Mother is getting ready to ask fatber for a little extra money.”— Pittsburgh Post,

it thou tabont time toto thy affairs te will allay and arrange all things. Apob- lodorus,

aes oo a

iil

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Business Posts for Men From British

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London, England.—A bureau o itil brains, or, as it ie formerally styled a 7 | \ \

‘Business Appointments Bureau,’ is H 1 /

now. being. formed to conduct a cam- \)

4 1 paign in favor of a more bracing and dv AS. iN {}

Vigorous life on the part of our edu- » ih

' By E. R. Punshon

Ward, Lock & Co., Limited London, Melbourne & Toronto

cated young men.

H. B) Morgan; of Messrs: W. H. Smith & Son, whose article on The Dignity of Business; was recently quoted in the Daily Mail, supports the scheme in an article in the Review of Reviews. The bureau, he poinis out, will bring home to educated young men the specific place in business that théy are fitted to fill; it will convince business men of the necessity for fresh brains as.well as fresh methods; and it will act in co-operation with ex-

(Continued) CHAPTER V. A Poet at Home To many who have never read and who probably never will read, a line of his writings, the features of the

Mm ANI

a |

il Ny fn gel! a M Nl

> appointments, boards sim- !

poet and critic, Wilton Mayne, have our Treatment for the Drink Habit. Write for full information, ex ceesnenuana bring qualined ap- HK , .

been made familiar by the numerous i ~ plicants for business posts into touch TT HANH é portraits that have appeared of him THE NEAL INSTITUTE: C0 LIMITED et puftatie bodinésd houses

in the various journals and periodicals ) by The iineata contends Mr. Morgan

of the day. ‘These as a rule do him 405 Broadway, 2244 Smith Street, _ 820 Thirteenth Ave., W. ehould have éommand-of all the talent

less than justice, for they show. @ Winnipeg Regina ~ Calgary available from public schools and uni-

form and fedtures essentially come ihonplace—a ‘round little man with a » tubby face, he has ay described by | : " t h enny paper— s . : vad cleo at bis, gha@ograph, ey in | pression almost pathetic in one by na-

yersities.

The Unexpected Happened Mrs. Mulligatawny needed a change

imself /Dature so strong and self-reliant. It aren, ot air. The doctor was emphatic on| ZY Don't walt till you have ; might ‘make ane aaerigtion oon as| Was as-though this vigorous soul bad ARE YOU USING this point. Her husband, however.| % aught one of those nasty colds—fortify yourself : apt as it's certainly unflattering. But |t last come into contact with some-

being unable to go with her, she went / against them by taking a course of alone, retiring as usual to her favorite

Pie ake aaanion after her arrival Na-Dru-Co Tasteless

te know him better, to meet him and | thing stronger than itself and@ad been > enjoy a talk with him, always seemed | thrown back again as much bewildered : somehow to change entirely one’s| 48 bruised. le °

-| Bad news, no sleep, no food, mut- she suddenly discovered that she had Preparation of wae. ror when he (alked. ‘une slow jtered Mayne to himself; his quick ; come. away without her watch. Think- é . . movements of the round: little body | SYMpathy, as intuitive as.a woman's, % . ing, .therefore, that she must have Cod Liver. uld grow dignified and even grace-/at once aroused.; Ho,turned hurried-| dropped it on the thick’ carpet in the :

4 from thelr wheer intensity of feel-| ly to a massive sideboard secured by dining-room, she forthwith wired to This “bullder-up’’ is rich In the medicinal

; an unusually strong letter lock, ‘This : » » and nutritive properties of the best peri eet peed ge oP ge gh he opened iad drew out a spirit stand, The Jam of Absolute at m8 Kaew. ‘t you find anyfhing Norwegian Cod Liver Oil—without the f ious] rk @ hue that they |.also locked and then gave a sharp ex- - 4 onthe carpet in the dining-room. este... 1t hive cobtaine of so curiously dark a hué y [10100 eo Ot asnopanse 66 be: GAw Purity ! lett Extract of Malt, Extract of Wild Cher ; often seemed quite black, would glow f the’ bottles it held; was In due course, she received a letter and valuable Shin . and sparkle till the visitor could under-| that one o ; wh az in reply: i tone up the whole system and partl- stand something of the influence that | empty and the weyers en Ay y, JU T LIKE Dear -Madam,—-I was to let you| { t culatly otvasigthen the Le ho this man exertised in English liter-| Thorold,he cried ager Sy dy tl —— know it I found anything on the din- we and Bedeehial Tybee, ature—an influence which the scanty | this béats all. My hey! a" Ra MOTHER ing-room carpet. This is what I . In SOc, and $1.00 bottles, at ff ie. bulk of his work, and the still scantier | 80ing at such a rate thay Mer ry bots se found this morning—three champagne]. J vy your druggist’s. ig’ Cli] ph oo aw f % number of his readers, hardly seemed | to suspect Monday. So I put f * ee a corks, eighteen cigar ends, five cigar. bad : , to justify. der double lock and key, and-T'ill be MADE eite ends, thirty-six burnt matches, YY “4. NATIONAL DRUG AND There are two men in Wilton Mayne peg Pat 5 nig 3 pon ey wor ; endee 2 wind iu 1 d / egg the well-mown editor of the Weekly * } But Mrs. Mulligatawny not rea y y ‘i Review had once said. There's the| Monday, but how he manages to get Canbe had from your y

further. And when her husband re- turned home from the office that even- ing he found his faithful spouse awalt-| ing him. +

it I can’t imagine. .Upon my word he added, while for a moment his Grocer

over with a strange suggestion of fur- = . tive cunning, I think I shall have to Packed in Gold Lined keep the rascal dill T find out. Pails

f= mover a a a mm an cnn med

Frank murdered? The house burnt down? But my dear Thorold, the po- lice; there are the police?

The police know nothing, Thorold answered, in the same harsh tone; they will know nothing. i

Mayne sat back in his chair and was silent. The news of Frank Thorold’s death had touched him profoundly, the tidings of the burning of the house bewildered him—and there was some thing in Thorold's grim manner and

ordinary, average, every-day man and there is the poet, the man of genius, who only seems to come to the top when something happens to stir him up. « t

Some people would have added that there was a third personality under Wilton Mayne’s skin—that of the prempt, comfortable, shrewd man of

* business; and these.might have cer- tainly urged that he looked that part to perfection as he sat this morning in his pleasant rooms in George Street, Piccadilly, busy with his morning's correspondence .

Differing from other men of letters in many ways, Wilton Mayne differed a. cof all in the fact thet) Well he sald abruptly, I went to that ity. Yet he certainly could not help prsarren es yg aed yon ica being both pleased nt gratified by a Krank there? : the reception accor o his recen book of ade, which hnd not only been| ¥°: geht deererag hy ho Phen fierce eyes that suggested other very well reviewed but had actually|— With a bullet Earocen jean at? cried | Povents. achieved.a certain sale, Better than| ..O> ™y God Ate feet and iooking|, 2 J@ ohiefly, Thorold continued, to that to Wilton Mayne’s mind was the Mayne, leaping grt re ge “eg sang ask for your help in concealing what fact that to a great extent it had been| Very Pale and Giaturbenl, | SN ny | Das happened that Ihave come to you. understood, abd that it was being die-| POOF Frank—why, is But, cried Mayne, do you mean to cussed with seriousness and compre-|~ let poor Frank's murderers escape all hension. Almost every ‘morning punishment? Why, it’s your duty to there was some letter from some un- bring them to justice; why, as wick- known correspondent to: prove that the ed, as dangerous a gang as exist in message of the book had. not been the world and they have murdered lost. your own brother, and you talk of let-

Above all things, he meditated ling them go free? : aloud, poetry must justify itself, since I do not, answered Thorold quietly, otherwise it can have no right to ex- and Mayne gave him a look still more

ee

Kaa PTE | A Matter of Tact Gloom prevailed in the domestic circle—a gloom horrible and depress- ing. -Mr. Lorn pai et se a a bad temper, and as Mrs. wn knew, there ine only one way of curing it— Belgians or Prussians to rouse him thoroughly, for when| Brusgels, “Germany.—Germany~ has miserable himself, he always.accused| begun _ negotiations witn Belgium other people of being miserable. He] (states La Meuse, of Liego) with a did-on this occasion. view to settling the status of More- Jane, he grumped at last, you're as snet-Neutre, the small neutral state on dull as an old owl! Sulking, I suppose pl nk Ra Hogg tag aoe Fre " i soit J refused to buy you that new lage -of- Mo Pha says Magi ore At No, sighed his wife; 1 wasn't think- rites Be tad wish to come under. Bel- ing about it, As a matter of fact, I aye. ; have been turning out some old letters The pope ane have the right to de- and—oh, it's nothing of importance. | cide w vcr - bt ede mili- Only.a fit of the blues. tary service for Pru or for . Bel- What. letters? gium, and whether they will accept Loveletters x Sa Pn pa of the Prussian or the lan co! Some I wrote to you, I suppose. This state hae EEE EES > a iy about ; aattian be om eee: san on in 1400 acres. Monaco, the smallest] A sailor who had Janded after a received before | met you. | Its of H®| sovereign principality of Europe, has | long voyage, and having been paid off, eonsequenct. get, : an area of about 5100 acres. . | called a cab, threw his Iu: e inside xo POR? : and jumped on top himself. _ ; Beg pardon, sir, said the astonished cabman, but you should get inside and put your boxes on top, Steer the craft ahead, jarvey. Pas- sengers always go on deck and lug-

1400 ACRE ESTATE Forbidden Knowledge

Little Jack, aged five, had accon- panied his mother on a trip to the City. They made the journey by tramear

People to Decide Whether to Become

wilful personality.

Drink this, my dear fellow, ‘said Wilton Mayne in his soft voice of gen- tle sympathy, and then tell me what has hap d.

‘Thor took the glass but only touched his lips with the contents, and put it down on the table near him.

Presently the conductor eame round to collect the fares and.on. approach- ing little Jack, of course asked the us ual question: .

How old is the boy?

The mother informed him; then he passed on to the next passenger, But the lad who was the subject of the inquiry, sat quite still apparently pon- dering over something, until at last, concluding that full information had . 4 not been given, he called loudly to the conductor, now at ‘the other ‘end of the car:

And mother's thirty-five.

No, it was not suicide, returned Thorold in the same harsh tone, not suicide, for the shot bad been fired at a distance.

Not suicide repeated Mayne in a dazed tone, but—but— His face was, pale as death, his voice trembled. Thorold, Thorold, he said, what are

Praises: this Asthma Remedy.—A grateful: user of Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Asthma Remeuy finds it the only re- medy that will give relief, though for thirteen years he had sought other

think it’s perfectly wonderful how you

can make such accurate deductions. % Mr, Holmes—Quite simple, ma'am

I've been-compariag the thumb-prints

on the plates.

and that’s all there is to it! ; Father—You mean that is the be: ginning of all there is to it!

His valet had just @htered the (TO be Continued> room, He was a singularly tall and powerful-looking fellow with a scowl- ing, evil face and narrow eyes in which cunning and ferocity seemed to mingle in equal proportions. His thick

—_—"_—_— GIFT OF 72 AIRSHIPS_

take sr Number eereins % niet

th A es— ite Parties

lips and yellow skin told that he was yourself off ere Bro JOUY Was ae eptlcinna bbe north side family. She is not excit-

‘of Be ook Ase 4y a fact also shown by| Pack and pe off ga Oy F +e Paris, France.—Some months Ag0| able nor given to hysterics. She'jm-

his curling hair, of which he was in- Til call in pollen, a i. see re Serupener “eereen’ one as being calm and serene, : to me for a character, either, Mon-| and private people wubserib But on her way to work she moment-

plentifully annointed with odorous day disappeared pecere Ane ene ofl p = i che ceep wear 18 tae arily lost all such qualities.

hair-oil, It was perhaps to his negro | t2¢ little poet's invective, oT? warn form, of aeroplanes. Suddenly she’ rushed into the mid-

ined: Tike be awed sins his 3 returned to Thorold, panting w An official letter published by the| gig of the ‘street screaming and

ficently white yy | even teeth oenl | hig anger. The villian, he said, but] National Committee, whieh received] shrieking. She threw her coat from

Mr. Thorold’s below, sir he sald, thank heaven, I am rid of him now.} subscriptions and had the aeroplanes! per and continued to scream, hie attitude’ and volee perfectly re-|1t® & relief to be rid of him. Upon) built, was published recently. She must be crazy! exclaimed a spectful, and yet about him a kind of my soul, I don't know why I kept} Seventy-two aeroplanes, all fitted woman who came out of her house. siibdund. Lomolenes aaa: tansinrisy, him ¢o long, but it’s a relief to be| with the latest military requirements, | ¢, see what the trouble was. while bis bold eyes. Toved, up and| 7%, of him-now. Upon my word, I) were the fruite of the subscription. |” she's having « fit, sald another. down the room with an almost brutal | Deldeve the fellow The Journal presented three mono-} ut neither was right. The cause curlosty Shall T show bim up, sir? | 70 sways gave mo the ides of know:/-plancs, each of which carries. (wo Pas’) of the commotion was @ mouse. which

Of course, of course, you know I am ing something, some profound and| sengers; the Petit Parisien presented} qaq crawled into Irene’s coat pocket expecting him, said Mayne impatient- awful secret, he repeated musingly,| three, and most of the other newspa-| for a little snooze. ly. He turned in his chair, thrust-| 2% he flung himself down in the near-| pers in Paris presented one or more. ing away the papers with which he est chair, and ae it ow lyst STRENGTH had been occupied. Show Mr. Thor- troubled him, he ary ais : old up at once, Monday, be said again. | to’ himself in apparent ose yer ; —_ Without-Overloading the Stomach

‘The valet. withdrew, and Mayne| %% the news, Ket 4 pa a rig looked after him with a troubled/ Be bad received with fo muOh, Ag frow i ;

Wtaait net wa ef Bhat tallow, me |. BOPoIA gid Bot apeak or take, any said; he annoys me—bis manner is| BOtce of this Interiude, but ees Me moet. insolent—upon my soul, I be- gtilt'as before beh er ai . Neve he frightens me. Yes; 1 will Of exhausted in moana siowsy certainly get tid of him at once, | Mayne seemed to Femeniver, i me P cannot Same wae 4 have kept him ma changed an ° .

3 so long. Ah, Thorold, my dear fel- 7 " i low, 1 am delighted to eee a, t Jast. But Thorold, fe eats, this te $48 He sprang up eagerly as rold| le news, terrible news: vame with slow and heavy steps into the room, but his words of weleome died on his lips and the smile faded from his face, as he saw how grim and ghastly the other looked, " he said softly, what has happened— Frank? Without replying, Thorold dropped heavily into a chair, bis whole man- ner indicative of a weakness and de-

7

y Nas " ( help. Years of needless suffering | £2&¢ im the hold, was the reply from

seieiek imation wants uch te his YeTuat it wae murder pyepe —e ear aa Wiesemouten a mean— se a INARDS “LINIMENT aes ie Lied haga! by using this won: the top: }

: eyes as he laid down the letter from wered; but who is it that is ning; ‘That I shall take their punishment|for Croup; found nothing equal to it; eos ~ Shagaaae 4 pec oo gy Fit sinne ee

- recently bereaved widow. he had just | ®t the door .,| into my own hands, ‘Thorold answered. | sure cure. oes Tl cit. pe: dan tint Sherlocking

; n reading. I hope that my book| ,, Mayne made one alet| U2¢ 8, how ¢ ees 4 CHAS, E. SHARP. | ost anywhere. Mr. Holmes—I notice that you have a proving its right to live. Well, Mon-| 4. ; : 4 4 Hawkshaw, N.B., Sept. 1st, 1905. a new kitchenmaid. : kK day, whatds it? he add ith a sharp- ; Poor Fyank : Son—Well, I've married her, dad,|, Mrs. Borden-Lodge—} have. But I Es “a1ess his voice seldom t on. Break mother's

a

Drover’s $100,000 Fortune - London.—A drover naméd Rawlings died from excitement at Peterborough, after cOngratulating George Wilkinson another drover, on inheriting a for- tune of $100,000,

Out of my house, he shouted, as ed retreat,

Monday beat a hurri Irene Flew the, Track a

Irene is.a highly valmed cook in aj}.

Clergyman. Found Star; Awarded

London.—The Rev. T. H. Espin, of Tow Law, Durham, js to be award- ed the: Jackson-Gwilt medal of the Royal Astronomical Society for his discovery of a new star im Lacerta in 1911 and his speoetroscopic work.

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ordinately proud, And which he ‘kept

ear

Prejudiced Source

Won't you marry me, dear, plead- ed the actor, after his fourth divorce.

Why, I kind of like you, Billy, said the actress, but I've heard so much about you, I feel—

My dear, harshly intorrupted the actor, you must not belleve all those old wives’ tales.

1 RS eet RN it eR Ht

—_—

aS lilt "awh Gonadal e

Complete in itself, Mother Graves’ Worm Exterminator does not require the assistance of any other mediciné to make it effective. It does not fail to do its work.

Relative of High Prussian Official in Sore Trouble Berlin, Germany, -- The Berliner Tageblatt confirms a report that a Prussian officer, a relative of one of the highest officers in the Prussian vigor for the day. ° army, has been arrested on suspicion uch depends on the start a man| of Bigh treason, presumably in the gets each day, as to how he may.ex-| form of espionage. pect to accomplish the work-on hand.|, He was arrested on February 3 at He can't. be alert, with a heavy,| the instance of the imperial depart- fried-meat-and-potatoes breakfast re- ig 9 wee fae se ry ee a e . Bas sosenn tan wae ctr acess ere brass oad A Western business man tried to| to amoun seven bunds an find some food combination that would| Marks. During his five days of ar not overload the stomach in the morn- jen “ah ty ao h = re Many a well-rounded phrase isn’t on|taurant three times a week to keep ye +38 A 7 Ss would produce energy. |r cy 4s observed with regard to the Anh sane) her from complaining of overwork “For years I was unable to find a| 2ature of the charge. . breakfast food that had _ nutrition s enough to sustain a business map As a young woman attired in a neat without over-loading his stomach,| blue suit entered a Street car a man causing indigestion and kindred ail-| with his head buried in a newspaper, never know, answered Thorold slowly.| ments. | arose and offered his seat, With a As for what | have done, I bave burn-| “Being a very busy and also a very| curt nod the young woman accep-ed, ‘ouse where the murder| nervous man, 1 decided to give up| avd as soon as she had composed her- breakfast altogether. But luckily 1| self she became interested in the con was induced to try Grape Nuts. “| tente of her shopping bag. In spite “gince that morning I have been a| of his apparent abstraction, the man new man; can work ‘without tiring, my} with the pemepener watched her for hi =H see and my nerves strong|a moment, Then speaking hurriedly |: for some avenge hig q ;

years I met : ; : ; Hill and “he advised me 10 loko ; | But—-but—burnt down the house?| 1 find four teaspoonfule of Grape- « PUAS. I have been taking og | The gomewhat timid and nervous little) Nutg with one of sugar and a small intervals during the ear t of the could only etare in blank amaze-| quantity of cold milk, is delicious as present winter, and up- Bias Gok t. Ob, what’a man, he muttered) the cereal part of the morning meal, no return of my old trouble—in fact | ¥consclously echoing the escaped! and invigorates me for the day's busi- {cel better than I have for years rod | conviet Green. My dear Thorold, 4 ness.” Name given by Canadian

ran peor. SeIRI te, <

Bobby was saying his prayers in a very low voice.

1 can't, hear you dear, his. mother whispered.

I wasn't talking to you, replied Beb- by, firmly. e

The business man, especially, needs food in the morning that will not over- load the stomach but give mental

\

Minard'’s Liniment Cures Dandruff, i cenenaniennemnmetttdammessted . It's a good plan to believe only halt you hear--and forget two thirds of that.

Guarding a Treasure f We have a jewel of a cook. - That's fine.

Yes. Only we have to eat at a res

What have ; ou ctgne? ae a sharply; poor Frank, nk, Bu what have you done, Thorold? What have you done? Does your mother

FEE OF LUMBAG®

Mr. H. A, Jukes of Winn of heaby harps Brakes saens

what I have to do-—I have to preserve Frank's honor, let our mother think he has my | ty, some accident, and

I your pardon, what is it?— what you say?

The young woman lifted her eyes, and seeing that she was addressed, answered coolly: J said nothing, sir.

Beg , beg pardon, was the ab-

will keep well! No chain is stronger than its weakest link, No man is stronger than bis stomach, With Fe ptomach disordered a train of diseases fellow.

think that my old enemy hes v Postum Co,, Windsor, Ont. Read) se answer, 1 thought you ag Spe A PRIN ae Siac", valatemne pear area em ees 500. & box, 50, Sample free if ville,” in pkgs. A 4 mh os aA ii : * zon write Nat: Drug. and Chemical “There's a Reason.” Good friend, if fate should but bestow 2,

' Ever read the above letter? Aj] Upon, we'll day, a man like Stay new one appears from time to time. | The problems I haye mentioned, oh! ‘They- are genuine, truc, and full. off . What would you dot What woul human Interest. you do? . >

«erge facie Thorold

, at - . ree Re $ o] ; | ry > y * * R ; y Px r , eed Bae ae at ; is l u ; ae : ayes ee by : org ut Seon. Mera ake shea REVIEW, ARIDAY, APRIL 25; 1913 |. . na : et > iG vis ts BY-LAW. HODseacc cee a first time this 14th day ot | year of our Lord one thousand wine} BY-LAW NO. ......,, ‘)place used, tor council. méctings for |ter three weeks from the isth day ot ele April , 1013," * q hundred and thirteen, ' “hthe purpose of appointing persons to April, that being the date upon which “A Bl-LAW TO (AUTHORIZE THE es 2 Cc. DANELz, | BETWEEN: : A BY-LAY OF THE TOWN OF attend at the polling place and at the |this notice is fitst published in the

THE MUNICIPAL CORPORA-| REDCLIFF to create a debt of '$6,000| f#al summing Np of votes by the Re- TION OF DHE. TOWN OF RBD-/|for the erection of a combined Fite turning Officer on behalt of the per CLIFF, in’ the Province Of Alberta, | Hii) and’ Police Station: sons interested in promoting or op- * he®Bnatter calied the Town, . posing this by-law respectively.

Redcliff Review, Redeliff, and upon the 6th day of May, 1913, the Voting thereon. will be held between he hours of 10 o’clock a, m, and 7 o'clock

ISSUE OF DEBENTURES OF THE} ye * \#. Mayor,

TOWN OF REDCLIFF TOTHE AN-| > eal

OUNT OF FIFTY-FOUR THOUSAND | Read a second.time this 14th day of

SIX HUNDRED DQLLARS 6964,600)) April, 1913. SS Sag shh Ay Ot the First Part! WHEREAS it is deemed desirable} 22 The Returning Officer shall at-~)p, m. at the hall across the “street FOR THE PURPOSE OF PURCHAS- 4 no “B.C, DANELZ, ° and and expedient to erect a combine tend at the place used for council /from the Redeliff Hotel. ING SITES. FOR THE, LOCATION oF | »Mayor,|. >THE HAMMOND STOOKER COM-| Fire Hall and Police Station in> “the| Meetings at 10 o'clock in'the forenoon FP. F, WOODCOCK, FACTORINS. ee P. F. WoopDCcooK, PAXy, LIMITED, of Redelitfyafore- | Town of Redclift at the dutinidted on’ the 7th day ‘of May, 1913, to sum Secretary-Treagurer~ \ i é Secretary-Treastirer.| said, hetetnafter called the Com- | cost of $6,000.00... , || Upethe number Of votes given LOt Ov | een nnn ERIE Faw ~ AND WHEREAS it. is,intended to against this by-law. BY-LAW NO

Ot the Second Part: |, DONE AND’ PASSED BY THD ssue debentures to the amount of MUNICIPAL COUNCIL. OF THE

WHEREAS the Company has made | $6,000.00 by the sale of which to real- , . application to the town fof ¢ertaim|ize the money necdssapyfor the said Poe Ue eouldee I COURT Concessions in respect of a _ factory | purpose, making the same to extend ARSEMELIED. which it proposes to eréct “in the | over a period of twenty (20) years for Penoo®. sree hroe Chin 1th any Town of Redcliff, in the Province of |the issue of same. ee ON ds Alberta, for the manufacture Bf stook- AND WHBERBAS it will be neges- » a. Pathe herent ers “and such other manufactories a8 | .4+y to raise by special-rate in each | ¥. Ww DODO: wa sage froth I risen tene ut {reat for the. period of twenty (20) 1" Rend a second time,this 14th day atthe Nigger Rael cieats u any Beeetning —_ the year 1918] of April, 1913. jand ending with the year 1932 they* ®. C. DANBLZ, Mayor. iengpaaian Wak ectiocrastinnset Bx aig (the, 8m of three hundred dnd: sixty F, F, WOODCOCK, factory within forty-tive (45) days dollars ($860.00) for the ‘purpose of Secretary-Treaaurer. paying interest on the said debt at * SR from the date hereof ara wit have the ‘same in, operation within four months froin the date heréof and will

WHERBAS it is desirable and’ ex-| 4 : - pedient to acquire by purchase lands- ae - ae may jr in the’ vidiiity of the MaRIGAMP MI pet eee oe ee ety OS the Town of~Redelift for jndustriat tue peorenee me-tnw We pane She Sam,

; of Fifty-four thousand six hundred purposts, dollars, (354,600)-for the purpose éf AND WHEREAS In order thereto it purchasing ‘sites for the location of will be necessary to borrow the 8um | factories, which” has been. introduced of $54,600.00 to issue dpbentures of}and may be finallf./ passed (in the the ‘said) Town of Redeliff therefor, /eyent of the: assent of the burgesses bearing interest atcthe-rate of 5 pet /being obtained. thereto) .after three centum per annum payable yearly,| weeks. from the 18th day of ‘April, which ig the amouit of the debt in-|that being the date upon Which’ this tended‘to be created by this by-law; |notice ia first published jn the Red- AND WHEREAS the amount of the |cliff Review, Redcliff, and upon tie whole rateable property of the Town |6th day of May, 1918; th® voting of Reddiff according to the lagt re- |®hereon will be held between thi vised asbssment | roll thereof is house of W o'clock a. m, and 7 o'clock $640,000.00 and no part of-eitter prin; p. m.,.at the hall across Nhe street cipal or interest is in arreate; + from the Redeliff Hotel. * AND WHEREAS it is desirable to - F. F. WOODCOeK, make the principal of the-said debt ., Secretary-Treasurer under this byslaw>repayable by twen- ty equal consecutive annual instal- ments, together wil interest-annual- ly upon al) sums 0} -principle money whiclf shall from time to. time Le gant unpaid. ~ AND WHEREAS it will be neces- sary to raige annually~in each year . for the period of twenty. years during the currency of the debentures to be oan 7 ‘issued under this by-law*a sum. suffi-| WHEREAS the Hanimond Stooker cient > pay the several instalments | Co ys Limited, are desirous of lo- of principat and interest remaining | cating -and establishing a facto unpaid from time to time on the-said | within the Téwn of Redcliff on 2 debentures, * terms and. conditions specifically de- - NOW THEREFORE, THR MUNICT- scribed’ and enumerated. in the agree- Pat COUNCIL OF THE TOWN ‘QF | ment annexed hereto pnd marked REVCLIFF BNACTS AS FOLLOWS: ‘Schedule A.’ The sum of $54,600.00 shall be “AND, WHEREAS it is agreed that expended by the Town. of*Redcliff in| the said agreement shall be erecuted "purchasing sixty-five (65) actes of EJ akapacee ‘the. ae Towh ly 4 the the north east quarter of Section nine | Mayor (9) in Township thirteen’ (13) and] of upon the ety agree!

fis is hereby given

BY-LAW OF THE TOWN OF RED- CLIFF to authorize the Mayor ahd Secretary-Treasurer of the Town of Redcliff to execute an agreement with thé Knechtel Furniture Company, Limited,

« ses meme the Knechtel Furniture Comr Lithited, are désirous of | locatin mg “end establishing a factory within the Town of Redcliff on the terms and conditions specifically ~de- scribed and enumerated in the_agree- ment,

AND WHEREAS it is agreed that the said agreement shall be executed on behalf of the said Town by the Mayor and Secretary-Treasurer there- of upon the said agreement being rat- ified by the majority, of the ratepay- ers of the said. Town who may vote on the said by-law when submitted.

NOW THEREFORE THE MUNICI- PAL COUNCIL OF THE TOWN OF REDCLIFF ENACTS AS FOLLOWS:

1, That the votes of the electors duly qualified to vote on this by-law shall be taken On the'6th day of May, . D, 1913, between the hours of 10 o'Mock in the forenoon“and 7 o'clock n tle afterfioon in the hall in the. building across the street from ‘the Redcliff Hotel in the Town of 'Red- cliff and that William Henderson shall be the Returning Officer.*

2.. On the 6th day of May, A. D, *|1913, at the hour of 10 o’elock in the forenoon the Mf&yor shall attend ag the place .used for councfl meetings , for’ the purpose of: appointing per- sons to attend at the ‘polling booth and ut the final summing? up of votes by the Returning Officer on behalf of the persons promoting or opposing this by-law respectively.

8. The Returning Officer shall at- tend at the place used for council meetings at 10 o'clock in the forenoon on the 7th day of May, A.. D. 1913, to

sum up the™ “fumber of votes given .

for or against this by-law. ~

4. Theat the Mayas and Secretary- Treasurer of the Town of Redcliff ~ are hereby authorized to affix the seal of the Town to the agreement set forth in“the Schedule “A” hereto and to care the same on behalf

the rate of Bix Bie! per centum, per} “PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given annum, _|that the foregoing is a trué copy of employ therein at least thi (a0) | ANP WHEREAS tt will be neces~ the proposed By-lgw ito raise the sum ment Wher the Wabje phat) bet pera. sary to raise-annually by special rate} of gix thousand dollars ($6,000). for Sin for paying the said debt “the sum of|the erection of a combined police AND WHEREAS ‘the Town is. will- per 20 station and fire hall in the Town of ing to gtant fo the Company ce Bia AND WHERBAS the said two sums Redclift, Alberta, which has been in-, eontessions in co niideration: of its so required to be raised annually by troduced . and which may be finally’ lodating ite factory at Rettetitt ao, special rate for paying the said debt| passed (in the. event. of the assent sald, i and interest make a total of $660.00. pane Sete being ‘trom the 40th ‘AND WHERBAS the amount of the} to) after three weeks from the 18th shsunensrit oat “Aan Bins whole rateable property in the Town day of April, that being the date ‘up: precsieen, the patties Reteto’Yio- hereby of Redelift according to the last re- {On whieh this notice is first publish- miutadlip eaboe: ne’ Tolwei vised ‘assessment roll. of the sala ed in the Redcliff Review, Redcliff, 1, ‘The Company covenants; ufider- | TOWN ie $640,000.00. and upon the Gth day of May, 1913, ‘Gixen Gnd agrece that it will within] ~AND WHEREAS there is an exist- the voting thereon will be held be- forty-five (by days from the date ing aehaptnre & debt of the said Town: coat som bot of ‘y 2 wes * Ri hereof commence the;ereetion” of a | Of $70, ae oe a . ‘a howe ~ ra factory for the manufagture of stook- | NOW THEREFORE THE MNS re . ecuvonre. ‘ers, upon a factory site in the Jn- RAL COUNCIL OF THE TOWN. OF Be as T tect oe dustrial Limits, of the Town ‘of Red-|REDCLIFF IN COUNCIL, ASSEM- ee ed cliff béibg a portion of the north-east | BLED enacts as follows: * quarfer of Section nine (9) “tn Town- 1. This by-law shall come into _ BY- LAW N NO. A BY-LAW OF oF THE TOWN OF

hip thirteen (18) afd Range six (6) /force and’ take effect on the 6th day

west of the Fourth Meridian, in i of May, 1913,

Province of Alberta, and whl: 2, A debt \s hereby: created and REDCLIFF to autherize the Mayor plete thé same in a/proper and a intended to be created for the“ pur-{ and Secretary-Treasurer of the Town manlixe manner within four months | pose aforesaid in and for the sum of | Redcliff to execyte an agreement | from the date hereof, the re: $6,000.00 and the same shall be pay<[ on a Steel Works of Shef-

eld, ; My

>

: ~ BY.LAW NO. Leos

Mace or

A BY-LAW. OF THE TOWN OF REDCLIFF : to: authorize the Mayor arid ca: srl aera of the Town of Redcliff to execute an agreement with the Hammond Stooker Company, Limited;

-Range~six (6) west -of the Fourth | ified by the majority of the rate completed fo copt at able in twenty (20) years from the 2 Meridian in the province of Alberta,|of the said Town who may 'v usand dollars ($25 ‘0 6th day of May,) 1913, namely, on the ere from the ‘Redcliff Realty “Company, the ‘said By-law wher Submitted. J iveret the lahd: 6th day of May in the,'year 1933. Limited, for industrial purposes and |. THE. M 2. The Company further covenants, 3.- There shall be issued any num- for the purpose of raising the said} PAL yet an eegehnge OF THE TO ndertakes and agrees that immed-| 10. of debentures to be made for such sum debentures of the said/Town ‘of REDCLIFF ENACTS_AS FOLLOWS: ° tely upon the completion of tW@ said} sums of money as may qbe required Redcliff to the said sumof $54,600.00 1, That the votes of the electdrs factory that it will rtrd Sere. for the purpose aforesaid, payable” in in the whole shall be issued‘ in sums dilly qualified to vote on this _By- oe atten’ continue Xe. m inthe ‘said. golf coin, for not less than one hun- of-not less than one hundred dollars | shall be fon on the 5th day of, factory at least” rit 0) “men, dred ($100 PP tol are curreney- and

($100.00) each, and each of the said} A.D. 1913,.betweeri the ‘hours of 16]; % Bae Town hereby covendnts; un- nat sxoséding- fh the whole the salt debentures shall be dated on the day 'elock im the forenoon aud 779'cloc dertakes and agrees that whet and} ..7, of 36,000.00, afid the~sald: deben-|,. yehalt, of the said Town by ‘the cine shal] be duly prepared, execut-| gyor and Secretary-Treasurer there~

of its issue and shall be payable tn |i. “in the half ii the| son tory ag art twenty equal consecutive ampual “across the street from the comple z mainte (go [ed and sold for the purpose Beira of upon ‘the said agreement being rat- ‘pg : ified by the majority. of the ratepay-

stalments together with’ "\hateik a Redclitt, Hotel. in thé Town of Redciitt|} nin Monet days, and thirty (30). : The said debentures shall be injors of the said Town who may vote

“nually upan all sums of” Wiliam Hendergon shall be men are continuously employed there- |:

Beit < Bq ne that Bereta Sec. : in, it will convey ‘to the Company . s F the form prescribed by—the Town? onthe gaid by-law. when su ritted.

ed tobe] NOW THHREFORE THE M etNIC

money which shall from time to " remain unpaid, at the Imperial B \site, consisting“of 20.} brdisanes. 496: phall:e pad ne faa ection nin’ (9) in. Township |?" rly executed Vy being sianed by} PAL, COUNCIL OF THE TOWN OF (13) and Range six (6) wést |™° rerof] REDCLIFF ENACTS AS FOLLOWS:

soe ispaien in oe Pree ; 1, That ¢he votes of the electors 5 duly qualified to vote on this by-law

- &, ‘The said debentures shall bear | ghaji taken on the 6th day of

WHPREAS the Alga Steel Works, of Sheffield, England, are desirous of locating and establishing a factory within the Town of Redcliff on the terms and conditions specifically de- scfibed and enumerated in the-agree-

ment. AND WAEREAS At is agreed that ‘the said agreement shall-be executed

pees to of he Siaare of the Town of Redeliff who may vote at the time and place above speci- fied. ie ee

_ DONE AND -PASSED, IN éounct.

‘the 6th day of May, 1913, being A.'D, 1918, between the hours.of keto nthe on which this by- w takes envi’ \in- the forenoon and i doriis:a. B we ie aac ver ff * and shall ‘a promise to 6'clock ‘in the afternoon in the ee » x law to sign the same, ee ° je peteaieels authe we Asben: |i ‘ataig md the street ms i ppt ‘tho aa eel 3. The said débentures otel fh the Town Of} oad @ second time this 14th day ?

- tabateet. atthe eth st ve N. §

‘pipe wa’

?, of April, A. D. 1918. ye comme: oo. = RR, WOODCOCK,

PUBLIC NOTICE. is: hereby , given that-the foregoing is a true copy of

pe n the) for the purpose of: Read coth persons

jneerent which oso Aa Cousens le to attend at ‘the booths and. grant certain Rep ae, Shaadi Bak “fat the final ee dane Miceenn and ora and toufirm Treasurer 0} car iious 9 each | the Returning Officer on behalf of qgveement “hearing. ate the

5 [yea mg saree after er the date of the} the “persons pramoting or opposing |

4. During the pet sed) th this by-law, reppective y on

debentures, ». there shall be Pais _ nually by” a special Baw sof pee fT

on all the rateable property in the lor the rate payers i!

said Muni ty in the game man i by on ha at the time + as the o general muni Vana

taxes, a sum sufficient to’ meet the DONE AND keno e DAN. ‘CouNciL,

affiual instalment of principal and in- iath day of April, Av D, 19138.

terest payable In:eanh year In reapect). este gk Oot: ‘day of pany hal neglect gr: refuge to pay

3 |such amount as may be found-to be vont 1 a

of the said debertures, ,

BLZ, Mayor. due for water for thirty (30) “days | 1932 by #pegial sufficient there-| hereby authorized to affix the seal DOOCK, after du ne rovided, } of on A te Padeeioe rty i the}of the Town to the agreement set er. . And the the « ‘ot Redclift the 10 owing sums | forth In yhies Pray seven execute the voting thereon. wil be held be- | of $380.00 to pay interest ‘aid Town as soon as the & ‘Jtween the bauis Bf 10 o'clock &. m. debentures..nt the rats | Miad-aad arent to by the’ 4s land 7 o'clock p. m. at the hall across

of the iti Sy ie [te street from the Redclitt Hotel.

a pa ev ied if els eagmned COUNCIL acid a rhascueelagnanaal

the foregoing 1s : ate tah 8 ot ont D,, 1918. pita: ie pan org Rotel. In} ine. Mii madolist, to ba de hares a fizot time thts a4th day of |“ ‘ken ow #0 Gow MA DISCOY.

the Town of Hedelitfy by the Return= cessions and to ratify and confirm | jive eee April, ba. e In Paris the ladies have entirely

ob the part as eget bi ga have’ heen na se rats, which is hew discovery.

28th day of March, 1913, made be-

tween the ‘Municipal ‘corporation of

the Town of Redeliff, 0 f the one part,

and the Knechtel’ Paraltare Company ,

of the other part, Which Has been in-

troduced’ and Which may be finally

passed in the event-of the assent of

the burgesses being obtained there-

to> after three weeks from the 18th y of April, that beink the date up-

on which this notice is first, publish,

ed in the Redcliff Review, Redcliff,

and upon the 6th day of May, 191%

: Town fails to supply ‘ora |

ot |failure of aes 6, ‘The said ‘tebonture mid tnrétest water-sy aap pa ecsan: shall bo Rado parante et th ‘ond {ts eontrol, ‘And provided wed: h oftthe Imperial Bank of om

ther that the ‘Town shall be. released |* 11 eg é

: il Covenant to supply water, to}.

“| the. Company’ hereufider if the Com-

4.) Phat the Mayor. with the year|Treasurer of the pee 4) Redclitf ar

¢ 6, Yrne votes | " the said town shali~be by-law at the following t place,that je pay: of May A‘~D., 1913, thé hour of 10 rete I the forenoon

oe

;

.

BY-LAW NO.

A BY-LAW GF THE TOWN REDCLIFF to authorize the Mayor and Secretary-Treasurer of the Town of Redcliff to execute an agréement with Messfp Plewes and Brittain.

WHERBAS the said Plewes' and Britgain ‘are desirous of focating and establishing a factory, within the town of Redeliff on the terms and condi- tions specifically described. and enu- merated in the agreement.

AND WHEREAS it is agreed that the said agreement shall be execut- ed on behalf of the said Town by the Mayor and Secretary-Treasurer ‘there- of upon the said agreement being ratified by the majority ef the rate- payers of the said Town who may vote oh the said by-law when sub- mitted.

NOW THEREFORE THE MUNICI- PAL C@UNCIL OF THE TOWN OF REDCLIFF ENACTS AS FOLLOWS:

1. That the votes of the electors duly quaiified, to vote on this by-law shall be taken“on the 6th day of May, A. D. 1913, between the hours of 10 o'clock in the forenoon and 7 in the afternoon in the bail in the building across the street from the Redcliff Hotel in the Town of Red- cliff and that William Henderson shall be the Returning fficer.

2. On the 5th day of May, A. D., 1913, at the hour of 10°o'clock-in the forenoon the Mayor shall attend at the place used for council meetings for the purpose of appointing per sons to attend at the polling booth and at the final summing up of votes by the Returning “Officer On be- half of the persons promoting or op- posing this by-law respectively.

3..The Returning Officer shall at- tend at the place used for council meetings at 10 o’clock in the fore- noon on the 7th. day of May, As D:

#1913, to sum up. the number of votes : egiven for or against this by-law.

4. That the Mayor and Secretary- Treasurer of the Town of Redcliff are herby , authorized to affix the seal of the Town to the agreement set forth in Schedule “A” hereto and to éxecute the same on behalf of the ‘said Town as soon as the same-4s. rat- ified and agreed to by the votes of the majority of the rate payers of the Town of Redclitf who’ may vote at the time and place above specified.

DONE AND PASSED IN COUNCIL this. 14th day of-April, A. D, 1913.

Read a first time this 14th day of

. & C. DANELZ, Mayer, “. “FF. WoopcocK, _ . Secretary-Treasurer. Read-a second time this 14th day of April; 1913, z E. C, DANELZ, Mayor, F, F. WOODCOCK,

Secretary-Treasurer,,

PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that the foregoing is a true copy of the proposed By-law to grant certain concessions and to ratify and confirm certain agreement bearing date the 13th day of February, 1913, made be- tween the municipal corporation of the Town of Redcliff, of the one part and Messrs Plewes and Brittain of the other part, which has been in- troduvted and which may be finally passed in the event of the asséht of the burgesses being obtained thereto after three weeks from the 18th day

“April, that being the date upon ich this notice is first published ne the Redcliff Review, Redcliff, 5 upon the “6th. day of May, 1913, the voting thereon will be held between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m.. and 7 o'clock p, m. at the hall across the street from the Redcliff Hotel. - ' BUF. woopne Secretary-Treasurer.

any article intended to felieve the Pres of qumentty is not tly won. * be continued proof But for three generations, and throughout

t the world, endur- ing and gro ng “fame and favor have ~

BEECHAM’ S PILLS

peepane they have proved to the best corrective and

prevent of ppd bon a itions o ¥ liver, kid. ~ first

neys and ye gives Pas relief and “lw

provement

ae will show 4 the.

show hy. al tomes

OF}

o'clock’

‘but fas must > value.

i

STOP THE FIRE WASTE

Important Campaign Launched Look Ing to the Prevention of Fires The Canadian Manufacturers’ As

fociation inaugurated a Fire Preyen-

‘ion Canipaign last month at a meetin

in Toronto. The

Franklin H, Wentworth of Boston, the

pecretary f the Nuatjohal Fire PPOteo-

tion Associstion, ‘This is a subject which interests every citizen of Can- ada. We can all contribute our quota to the efforts beifig made to reduce the fire loss. Manufacturers are fully alive to_the importance of the ques- tion and are leaving no stone unturned to reduce the-annual waste. The campaign Will make sor better build-

Ifigs and cheaper factory products and

will minimize the danger of injury and

loss of life among all Classes,

The Fire Waste in Europe averagos 88 cents per capita. In the United States and Canada it averages. $3.00 per capita or $30,000 per hour, or $50C per minute.

Who pays this loss? The tioutanns Ogmpanies? No! They are only the Insurance ‘ax. Collectors.

You wonder why you find’ it difMfeuit to compete in yonr protected niarket with European producers. ‘Dne reason fs that your Insurdtite Tax 1s 990% more than that of your Buropean com* petitor. .How can this handicap be overcome? Certainly not by the effort of one thoughtful person in a com munity, of tioughtless people, ‘but by an educational propaganda. that will bring home to the mind of every in- flividual that he {fs being taxed for not only his own but his: neighbor's carelessness, *

STs As A

SAVINGS DEt DEPOSITS

porary to Each Depot Depositor Highest In ‘Protected Countries

~ One of the ailicoat ti tests of prosperity pt a country fs the savings bank de- posits of its” People, Agriculture is the basic’industry, and if agricultural conditions are not sound, it will be reflected in the savings of the people. ¢ Phe following table shows the gmount on deposit in the savings banks of Great Britain. and foreign coun- tries: Per

Capita

Austria .......1905 1,098,266,165 197 Belguim ....,-1906 166,789,160 . 68 France ......,1905-7 074,372,850 79 Ttaly .:...,25,1906 616,183,030 92 Netherlands ..1905 92,551,665 58 Russia ....... 1905 - 969,694,235 171 Bweden ...... 1906 © 196,312,455 98 Norway ...2.,1908.~ 112,069,3c) 185 Denmark ...7.1906 231,787,465 171

United States. 1907 °8;791,306,835

It will. be seén that the savings de- posits in the Unifed States are more than double those in any vther coun- try. . Those countries in, which ‘the average savi>gs to each depositor ex- -eeeds "$100 haye enjoyed tariff protec- tion to some extent: In the United States, where tariff walls are. built high, the average to ‘each depositor in the savings banks was $441. The average in the Netherlands, - where fhe protectionist has Lad a hard fight ‘and has not always won, is low. While the tariff is not_the only. consideration in relation io savings, the above figures show that where protection has been stable the average savings has been

? 3 - : - ead, "BUTTER AND EGGS: ~

Alberta Should and Could be Export ters inatqne se of importers aS

Wamonton claims ee the distinction of having within its confines the largest gram in the Dominion of Canada. ton City Dairy, of which

W. W. Prevey.is president, reer an of 1,140,600 pounds of butter

the twelve months ended oe. 22.

vi

E 2 iF & : & a

rE [

a a : :

speaker Was Mf),

United King.. -1907 $1,048,268,360 9 84

| the chin so thet the collar |

wat to Olt your

Company Manners, a

To begit with, there should de no such thing as. “cofpany manners,’ True. courtesy springs from the. heart and it 4s oly selttshness that miter some of us Invariably tirh n smiling face to a stranger and feserve our scowls and bad tempers for our tear est and denrest. tis as Inportiut that children should efirly. be fnstract ‘ed if Manners ns_that they should read: and write. If young people are tingly) to be deferential to their elders, Co be polite and generous to their playtel lows, and are instructed io all theennl! courtesies of life they STH hive hwo given something which wil! help then greatly to achieve steress iW caf years, WO matter what their jositig But children sre great Imitators, sud it is impossible to teuih then these things ifthe father and mother xe Wor cour teous to each other, .

Consideration. for others” As the Key nota of all good mazners, andthe dns or woman Who lacks this. Inportartt quality can never hope to tive any

thing ‘but the most frapsprirent ser ot”

“company manners:” hildrere shale be taught to ent quietly, to tnke sou from the side of @ xpoon without mk ing a disagreenhle noise, to brénk reir bread with their fingers and butter tt on the plate, never on the tablecloth or the palm of the lund; never to bite fruit at the table. but to, MET with a silver knife and porter” the pieces tu the mouth with fhe fingers or a fork During the process. of Masticntionshy

motith should: tie ‘kept tightty closed | and ‘naturally child should never ty

allowed to talk with the anouth ful! The head should never be bent te.drin' from a tumbler or cup, but the exip oy. glass should be lifted tothe mouth Vu a-child should be cautioned vot te fit

a saucer from the table when entiny.

from it. After all, the great yoine i

with both young und old to anke the | | everyday. manners so. g00d what she

“company manners” can be left to take care of themselves, > yo

+e. Birth Announcements. Many people do not like tlie iden of

announcing the birth of a child in the new sys Florence Howe (ini! hey argue Cat Woot 9 alter to

Interest the

7 j P-xaettea oder tn os {

knocker with a white kid glove ax an ‘announcement of the bappy event, A ‘pretty modern...method in to have baby’s name, without ‘any prefix, writ ten or engraved, on a tiny card. ‘This

fastened to the visiting card of the

mother with a small bow -of white tibbon and. sent to relatives” an friends througli the ‘mail. ¢

On receiving sucth an announcement |

friends call and inquire after the health of mother and child. jeaving cards for the former, Some persons leave them for the baby also, but this seems ratber absurd. © Instead of call: ing oné may aeng-a note of congratu: lation or write a -little mesange of” felicitation on one’s card,

‘Gifts may be sent at this time. or later, when the christening takes place, as may ve preferred, sc,

“Goods Form tf Dress, ra

Few women know™>how.to” put on their clothes.. This sounds like a very startling statement, but let us stop and think over the matter quietly,

How frequently we sée women with dainty, well made and even well, cut blouses, and yet how appreciate the beauty of the garment. and why? Because the blouse {s pot pulled down tightly at the waist tine and fastesed fn place either by books and. loops or safety gn ‘Then, .too, the ‘collar |s probably carefully boned so thatit will fit the snugly, Mach woman pbould. atudy e shape of ber own neek (not some one else's) and fin ind just where the bones ust be placed

ip order to maite'¢we collar Ot well | A still better plan is to take apiece | ‘lof heavy paper and cut a pattera-for

the eotlar which exactly fits the throat and then bave every collar mnade from

hen, let it atang-ip the back. x

4 ee

The Art of A Gracefully.

1 wish that athe weber gs thcatrons receiving of fayors or gifts. eng ou ever think how really isnited

abilities of most persons along th line? oe; ‘Many of ns can give beautifully, We cau say tbe pretty phrases, writes °

«

we pei ill at Mak an” wometines very tactless, Learn to revelve as well as to give,

se hsaat if you cannot gecept, s

: ane ‘the wrap and placed-over black.

“Turn a tumbler over ve and

‘Jjust-| To back of the ears and in the mtdle of-

~~

HOW TO. CLEAN FURS

Fur pT do ‘show dirt as much as fabrics} but if they.are worn A great deal, dust and-daripness cause an accumulftion of dirt Found the roots of the hairs, The olf that re- mains in the skin holds ft, «

To clean the garmenté, Idy it fat on a table and ‘tifh if with moistened, sawdust hardwood preferred or cornmeal; fen beat it thoroughly with a snvall sti¢k, Do not- hang the garment’up to beat it, nor strike hard enough to iijure the skin,

When you have rubbed and beaten it well, so that yeu have broken up and loosened the caked accumulation give.the garment a good shaking hang it in the wind. Do not hang ite m the sun, nor in sity warn inte, for that dri¢s and injures the skin. When you take ‘the garment in, re- peat the shaking process, ami-if neces- sary the rubbing and beating as Well, The method described is that used by a professional cleaner,

ing Full-Length Wrap -

ale beautiful: tic may be made up]

elyet, broadcloth or-any coat ma- | ‘that |@nds ifself to the style.’

The feature of the fashion shown—:

a very new notion--is the. onesided

trimmings which - may be lace, bro- |}

‘caded silk, velvet, fur'or anything else:

= the ale izes, with, and sets off

‘ts torquoisé blue, A hey nent” “of. rating lace, dyed. to

satin to throw the pattern bepaisang: the Hains.

he 2

~ HOMELY HINTS

- To Preserve a Lemon * Stand a lemon on a flat surfate. Ne vp keep for weeks provided ‘the pat ler is not removed: / ras _Oatnieal Beautifies

eep a dish of oatmeal on the toilet ors and Tub it freely on the hands after ne: hi, "This eragereny bo softens the. preventing om becoming T and rough iio’ ant to .the air.

into Pitas’

-

ae Books stains take fi quantity of oxalic acid, d with oe po |-with a camel pencil, and-

a eae aR fais

Soe pr Brushes

A little flour well rubbed into the. bristles of hair brushes is an excel- medium, the brush af-

rage will supers

_| a $10,000 policy tor himself and at. bis

| delphiia, are second basemen,

| vore, Mora und Rescher ate-the out- |’

"| Boston, and Wolter, New York, right | féid. Ruth of Chicago is the onty in:

ie ie \ Timely Top Yoon:

| of the {yet drawn the predicted $400,000,000

| But even so they are proving their

-|tich Froebel. The proposal to erect _}tn Washington a shaft-io memory of

gegttil ‘Bngland, while the

Tle hoe Mut be bas earned it the few weeks if bd reads the

‘}means of shah tvo. --Cbirago K@cord | : .

‘from books, ;

with dlotting ,

bak | cage Tater Ocean. Re

.

DAMES AND _DAUGHTERS.

Miss’ Mary ect ot the Brooklyn navy yard cuts the patterns for all the flags mate thefe, She has been making fags for the government-for mbre fhan,| thirty years. 5 :

Mis® Cornelia Rentlep Sage, appoint: | ed Mirector pro tém. of the famous Al- bright art gallery in Bulfalé on the @oath' of the director of the museum, hes been remarkably sutcessful. and her position 1s new permanent,

Senora de “Cueva, wife of the frst secretary of ‘the Mexteati embissy at Washington, sings old Spanish and Mexican ballads with much feeling. She not only has a yotce of inusnual Tange, but is a composer of note.

Miss Julia ©. Lathrop of ‘Chicago, an |}. associate of Jane Addams in the work | f at Hull House, a member of the [ill- nols board of charity and A graduate and trostee of Vassar college, has ‘been, appointed by Presiderit Taft as chief of the new childres's bureau in the de- partment. of commerce and labor. | 9 Every sie should realize

Mrs. Kdgar. f."Luckenbach, one of that the skin of her baby is so the seventeen graduates at the fecent tender that the secretions of exerciges of the Woman's Law college the body often lead to rashes, of New York university, is the wife of eruptions, etc., atl of which may & millionaire steamship man. . Sire hae be removed by Zam-Buk. Scores, gained,quite a reputatio# as a yachts- of restless, crying Labies, upon woman and. bas won severa) trophies examination, are found to be

it suffsring from some fofm of skin we snch ty sie oan a irritation or heat.’ Don?t let

the little _ suffer when Zam- ; Sheree, ates Bult will cure! ad Fly Catches. Ss a 475 Aloxindet Avenue, SREP oP my © have proved the The Pittsburgh club last fairtnsurea i iit

ann Be to y sores

Pitcher Mérty_0'1" oole for its own ben-

efit for $25,000. Recently O'Toole took

dren's ‘s Ao “Som broke

ailiho pret bey babys etematd Reon pd reparations used,they refute

Piper il him to. St. Boniface hospiial

oe ‘ho reinaived there for two we. ke.

own expetise. \@ Atthe se o' that beter ae was no. bi the ty

and we too’ home, I wi In the National league infielders pre then advil to try Zam: Buk pnd obiained dominate as “lead off” men—namely, auuanlys

er of tho first few appll-

: Sen ae te yirg,and I con-

Evers, Chicago; Huggins, St. Louts; thewarorthe bale, A litle Sweeney, Boston, and Kuabe, Phila. ta

neo resulted in a comp! while

E>Cocker, of Yorkton, Sask. ;says: ‘' My Byrne of Pittsburgh plays third. . De Hee tay thhad a bad idiots panetlen bi over

her little-ch! A few applications ef Zam-Buk healed the sore in such a perfect manner that nO wcar Was left-bebind,”

of siniilar. cases: could be -quoted,

Zam-bak isabsolutely pare ceuibinnporancd anise fats, no mineral oring matter, no spt cwig Tt isu eal balm for’

felders who tend off.) |

* Of the eight “ead off” is: In ‘the American league seven are outfielders _=Buteher or Gfaney, Clev > Vite," it, and Lord or Strumk, Mhiladel: phia, feft field; Milan, Washington, und ‘Shotten, St. Louis, center field; een af

» Yam Buk cures eoretia, rashes, ringworm, _phanmeaanda te sourvy heat ie oad cuts, burns, r sores, ait #il akin infrries ae ise x. all deneyte ae trl ator or Zam:Buk Co, Toronto, for price. Don’ sige ceubcned of using darmtal imisations §

Gelder i honeted eS

r PP he

Sie ‘decrease of 10 per per cert’ tn. Pourth| - of July casualties in New York city in two years 14 a eonvincing vindication “safe and sane” celebration policy.—New York ‘Tribune. =

The postal savings banks hare not.

from -hiding—only about $16,200,000. -

worth, —New York World. Ip ts not too early to have tn this country a suitable memortal of Fried- °

‘the world's great educator should win

Fern fare, a

“The new repabile of Chine wants to cs w $300,

unt of ‘Turkish territory -without

tan’t--New York World. i;

Be! aga ore that they have five” a + Bs in

juctantly- forced ir besects :

land's form aot perecnees

respects superior to our. own.-Obi0_

ba na oat 5 TORRE ay

> Pert Personals. | famay's aalary \_said 1o Be - Na : : i ia ‘The only Bistae Powder | | made in Canada that has

all its ingredients plainly printed on the Jebel. =I

ben tear News.

to the latest” estimates, lowe D, Rockefeller’s interest in the- Standard Oi! com is Worth $220. 000,000. We believe be bas other

. " | For economy we: recom- ff

mend the one es cans.

Herald. Andrew Carnegie ea Elihu Root te— the wisest ian op earth. Bilnu prob- ably, wart ee, 1,0f the consequenges

Ib. young womb tbe bs5 the country. —Hotiade!

Wide wate up to the prie of meat . the a ap Miseht will” come downto you.—Phliadeiphia- Record.” Uncle Sam has discovered the solu - tion of ig cost of bigh Hering probiens “Rat the Kuglish sparrow!" says un agricultural! department butietin. Chi

Beet prices bave broken all twenty

rs

BREET es

Sie

iY

< gables and small fruit, . Durlog the |

HERD are more reasons than one for making podltry a prominent

part of the farm program. With |

@80 to 500 chickens on a place many fens of compost can be made, which fH be worth hundreds of dollars in Pertilizing the garden and fleld crops.

j It is necessary to keep a poultry |

house and yard liberally supplied with goad dust or some other light soll. The @oor under the roosts should have a fresh supply of this earth twice a week er oftencr. It serves as an absorbent for the droppings, produces a rich com- post rery fast and destroys lice. |

As a dust beap is one of the first es- eentials aronnd a poultry plant this @lean, fine earth comes into play there a@iso. Dust which chickens use for their baths does not need to be chang: ed more frequently than two or three times In A season, When it becomes @irty it should become part of the

@onrpost.

» This fertilizer is valuable enongh #0 at it ought to receive some care, and with several bundred chickens the an- gud} accumulation will fill a good sized phod. it needs to be plowed in liber- ally every season, being of special val- we inthe production“of flowers, rege-

months ‘when it is accumulating it seeds to be tightly covered In a shed or pit to prevent the loss of nitrogen. When the roosting platforms or the floors of a poultry house are cleaned, for every 100 pounds of dirt and ma- wure thrown into the compost heap sd0-ten pounds of salts of potassium e@nd ten pounds of sawdust. If the lat-

~ Plan a system of crop rotation that will buitd up your soil and

larger crops and allow @ wider margin for profit.

WHEN DRAINAGE PAID.

Brought 450 Bushels of Corn and Add- ed $1,000 to Land's. Value.

Four bundyed and. tifty bushels, of -eorn from eight acres that were almost > worthless two years ago is the yield

Mort: Van Buskirk. of Kincaid, Kan,

reccived this year. Bere ts the story: |

Mr, Van Buskirk wrote two years ago to 4. B, Walker, state drainage and ir- rigation engineer’ at the. Kansas Agri- eultural college, ax-4ng what be should do with an eight acre piece of swampy Invd covered with willows: This land sever bad produced anything.

Drainage did it

Mr. Walker/advised bim to drain the |. Jand, and be. did. he land was planted |.

| 008

“PAY

By C. C. BOWSFIELD

© OD ene t- 000-020

ter cannot be procured the fertilizer will need to be closely covered to pre-

to hold the chemical.

The use of a\good fertilizer may be | depended on to add 50 to 100 per cent to the productiveness of a plot of ground, and hetice no line of activity

aration of compost. While on this subject I wish to urge | the importance of baving well rotted manure if the plowing is not done un- til spring. It is useless to plow into the ground a lot of half rotted straw | just before seeding time. If the plow- ing is done in.the fall a coarse manure ; -has time to rot and nourish the soil before the crops are started. Common barpyard fertilizer is of great value to |,feld crops if it has not lost its nutri- | tive qualities by long exposure to the elements. Tt needs to rot in a compost heap for several months if it is going | {nto the ground immediately before

seeding grain or vegetables. It is best |

to devote the fertilizer prodneed from

the poultry honse entirely. to the gar-

den, while that coming from the live

stock stables may properly go to the elds.

Not only Is poultry house fertilizer the most valuable that the farm pro- duces, but it is free from weeds, and this is a strong polnt in its favor. ,Much of the manure which farmers nse, especially that baaled from towns,

Js full of the seeds of noxious weeds, |

the growth of which causes a great deal of work besides damaging field

| @ | He who farms just a Hittle bet- ter than he did last year is on the way toward the perfect way ‘of doing things on the farm.

| SHEEP IMPROVE THE SOIL.

| Will Help Greatly to Solve Problem of Maintaining Fertility.

The one great big problem in this country is ‘that of maintaining soll fertility, and, taking everything into consideration, thé sbeep is abont the most valuable of all the farm animals as a natural means of keeping up the earning power of the fields. -

‘No better fertilizer is known than ‘sheep manure. I have noticed that | wherever you see a farm where sheep

have been kept fora number of years you will Gnd the soil in,an excellent | state of fertility, says a Warm Progress

, WOMEN As GAMBLERS.

serve the nitrogen. ‘The sawdust helps |

on the farm pays better than the prep- |

, | He Was Perfect In Figure and Scrupu~- \ }

hi a ta

nT A WA

They Are Noted #t Monte Carle For Coolness and Luck. The women gamblers at Monte Carlo ' are by no means the excitable, bysteri- cal and unscrupulous players that bave been described to'ns, Many are on- | scripulons and dishonest, but they are usually calmer than the men. There are women who will pick up your wih- hings under your very nose, asserts the London Chronicle, and if you pro- 1 test the croupier will probably pay the movey again rather than bave a dis turbance. There are other Women who will sit beside a man and openly claim a part of bis winnings, and {f the man | War is bad enough under the best of is wise be will surrender to the extor- climatic conditions, but when war and tion rather than disturb the domestic | biiterly cold and icy weather mix the bliss. But, as a rule, the women gam- | suffering is woefully intensified. And | | ble with equanimity, and how extraor- | yet there has hardly ever been a Euro- | dinarlly lucky they are, to be sure! pean war on a big scale in which Gen- Women have wonderful lick, While eral Jack Frost has not taken a hand. men work out elaborate “systems” and | Go*back a century. Righteen bun- sit frowning over figures, the mysteries) gred and twelve was the year when of which would take a very Napoleon) Napoleon made up his mind to Invade) of financé to elucidate, and then play) Russia. Before starting be was care- | —and lose, women simply plank mofey ; tui to inquire of the experts at what | on the number they aro “sure is going | gate winter usually set in in southern , to win,” and they do wint Russia. They told him the middle of | It is not at all an uncommon thing te December. see a woman sitting against the wall,| It was on June 24 that he invaded her husband by ber. side, waiting to) Russia with 600,000 men, and he reach: | put pleces on at her command, While ed Moscow on Sept. 14. That night he trots to and from the tables, telling. fre broke out, and within Ove days the her what numbers tnrned up last, fuss: | city was burned to the ground. Byen 4ng and.fuming and worrying what to, then he remained until Oct. 18 before do next, she calmly surveys the figures ‘commencing his retreat. “she bas jotted down, gives him another |* In the last week of October began |

Campaigns In Europe.

ARMIES WRECKED BY FROST.

In Most of the Great Conflicte For a Century Past loy Weather Has Play- | ed a Prominent Part—Napoleon’s Disastrous Invasion of Russia.

| “pleee” at the psychological moment to the worst frost which Europe had -

put on, and her big velvet embroidered , known for three generations, The) bag grows wider ion circumference ev- i Thames froze from its source to the” ery hour. The five franc “piece” is sea, The Seine, the Rhine, the Dan- even beavier and clumsler to carry than’ ube, were all leebound. On the Adri- our “crown” piece. But she is so thor- | atic, off Venice, was seen the amazing oughly used to it In quantities that she sight of flonting ice floes. The Darda- does not mind at all, but says, “The | nelles and nearby waters were frozen. | heavier the better!” Jack Frost's icy finger lay heavy even | The games at the casino are perfect- upon North Africa.’ Drift ice appear ly fair, says the writer. When there ed in the Nile, and there were snow: is trouble, and trouble is very rare, it storms in Tripoll and Morocco. | fs due to the players and rot to the! As for Napoleon's huge army, it was | game, ‘and 1 am sorry to ‘say that almost wiped out. Four hundred thou- _ when there Is anything wrong tt is gen-! sand men perished. ‘They froze to erally a case of ‘cherchez la femate,’* @eath in battalions as they bivouack- } : “J ed, and bien bo last, on Dec. 6, Na- f if: poleon reached German soil, out of his ANDREW JOHNSON. | whole vast host but 130,000 men were UEP ‘| left alive. 'Durfng the winter of 1853-4 the lously Neat In Dress, Turks were battling for dear life along Andrew Johuson yas one of the neat- the Danvbe against hordes of Rus- | est men in his dress and person | have ; giane ‘n the following September 25,- | lever known, During bis three years 900 British troops, a similar number | in Nashville, In particular, he dressed | of French and 8,000 Turks were !and- iv, black broadcloth frock coat nd) ed in the Crimea. . | waistcoat and black doeskin trousers Agiin came a terrible winter, and and wore a silk hat, This bad been | ¢rom ihe west of Ireland rigbt across his attire for thirty years, and for most | {nto Asia frost fell heavy on land and of that time, whether as governor of | geq. In London it froze for six weeks Tennessee, member. of congress or! withouta break, From Jan, 14 to Feb. United States senator, he had made all! 24 (he thermometér was below freezing of his own clotbes, He was so scrupu- | every night In the Crimea the cold

lous linen that he invariably) was fearful, and the English army, dis- pom ‘gil of it daily and sometines | gracefully catered for, suffered horrl- oftener,

: m bly. In all the British forces lost 20,- He was matchleasty perfect in Ogure, ; 056 men, and of these only 12 per cent about five feet ten, had handsome | fell in battle, ‘The rest were destroyed

| i} | | |

}

face, dark bushy hair and small hands | rotten commissariat. | and feet, The most marked feature, In 1870 came the biggest war of the about him was bis eyes, which were latter half of the nineteenth century,

Bitter Cold as a Factor In the’

greatest heroism in the face of peril, |

| trenchments at

broad shoulders, fine forehead, superb by cold and disease, aggravated by a’

fo corn and ylelded 460 bushels, Otber eorn in -that..neighborhood, averaged from ten to forty, bushels to the acre, The cost of draining. the land was $125. | Mr. Van Buskirk values bis corn at |.

dae th, (A

| small, and, although such eyes are not

usually attractive, bis were black, |

| sparkling and absolutely beautiful. |

He was not a gamester at anything nd could play only indifferently at checkers, In 1802 he explained to me

that ie had never visited a theater be- |

the titanle conflict between France and Germany. By Oct. 20 there were 850,- 000 German troops in France, Paris was besieged, and there began (he four months’ investment, with furlous fgbt- ing on both sides. \ 5

Again Jack Frost came to the ald of

Y

ADMIRED HIS BRAVERY.

tion by the Enemy. Mere boys bare often shown the | both on and off the battlefield, How many know the story of ibe little Brit ! ish bugler who accompanied Colonel

Rennle’s column in the disastrous ad:

vance against General Jackson's In- New Orleans a bun- dred years ago?

A witbering fire of cannon and mus ketry greeted the British t oops as they charged the American redoubt--a fire that for deadly accuracy bas rare- ly been equaled,

Phe young bugler at once climbed

+ | A Nervy British Boy end His Recep: |

{ ' '

inte a small tree and straddled a limb, | From this conspicuous position he con- 1

tinued to sound the vibrant call to the charge. Cannon balls and bullets killed scores of men beneath him and even tore Away branches of the tree ia which he sat. But above the thunder

ketry and all the din of strife the shrill

little fellow's lungs, rose unceasing.

of the artillery, the ratt)ing of mus: |

| music, blown with all the power of the |

Colonel Rennie and most of the regi- |

mental officers fell, mortally wounded; the shattered ranks began to fall back. But the bugler still blew the charge with undiminished vigor,

At last, when the British bad en- tirely abandoned the field, one of the American soldiers ran out from the lines, took the youngster prisoner and brought him into camp. Great was the boy’s. astonishment when, instead of treating him roughly, according to his expectations, the warm hearted south- ern soldiers, who had observed his gal- lantry with admiration, actually ¢m- braced bim, Officers and men vied with each other fn acts of kindness to- ward this brave young Briton,— Youth's Companion,

ELEPHANTS AS WORKERS.

Without. Them. Burma's Teakwood Trade Would Languish.

Since 1886 the export of teakwood from. Burma bas increased enormous- ly; but, despite the phenomenally high price of the wood, it would not be profitable to work it, even in these days, without the elephant. trade the Burmese elephants, massive animals whose strength is almost un-

: limited, are seen at their best as beasts

of burden, From the time when the forest

afeas

BY 2%;

ve

bev SamuenW Puevis.D.D.

PAVL—BOOK LOVER.

“Give attendance reading.” «

Texts, wo’

1 Tim. fi), 14 “Bring the books.“~11 Tim. fv, 14

This’ man Paul was a tentmoker plus something, else—he was a book jover.. He had a few ueaks=po “five foot shelf,” just a few wrapped up in his cloak. 1 would M&e in this year of grace 1913 to have thfe first century book lover select my “hundred best books.” Here's a man who orce had been caught up into the very heavens. peard things unlawful for a man to

utter, yet he wants books He had seen the Lord, yet he asks for buvks. And for why? Because, to use the old but deathless phrase of Milton, “a good book is tho precious lifeblood of a master spirit.” If Paul couldn't meet men in the fesh while he was in prison ne could meet their spirits. He had sat at Gamaliel’s feet, a Mark Hopkins and a Garfield on a log, and that wase great university for two, But the lar- ger une is open to all, “The true ul versity of these days," said Carlyle, “is a collection of books.” Tuition ix small; curriculum is large, Jt bas been sald that every day one should talk with

his mental superior, Here's the chance. The great men of all ages chat with ue in our room—historians, musicians, po- ets, philosophers. They talk their best, too—best diction, best grammar, best

atyle, best thought. A Serpent Among the Flowers. “The companion of Xols sball per- ish,” says Scripture. 1 do not know

| what it would say of bad book com-

' panions.

vicious books.

|

In this | TCS

'

are’ purchased, before the trees are,

felled, to the hour of export on the ocean going vessels at the port on the Indian ocean the elephant is the main worker. Far away in tbe malarial swamps and almost impenetrable jun- gles this majestic beast first tramps

down a passage through the under-)

growth. - Then, guided by bis Indian keeper's prong, the elephant com-

mences his ardQous labor of dragging |

the felled trees to the river, whence they are conveyed by raft down coun- try to the sawmills. . ‘bese enormous trees, untrimmed and cumbrous, are sometimes dragged up and down the jungle and mountain forest pathways en route to the river with rare precision. At the mills again the work of packing and stack- ing is done exclusively by elephants, When the trees are sawed into lengths the elephants do ibe piling, bringing the huge planks from the :heds and arrangivg them in an orderly, manner

Poultry House Ventilater, Poultry houses ‘are often unsatis- factory solely because they are badly ventilated, Of course it is out of the question always to tearthem down and build anew or to install. an ex- pensive system of ventilation, 80 *i some form of ventilator may be the best device to adopt, In the Il- lustration ts shown a force draft ventilator bullt bike a re ROVEL VENTILATOR: volving stovepipe ehimpey top, Lhe wing with the ar row on top turns the top so the open- ing n always faces the wind. Some of the wind passes through this opening and out of the top at b. ‘It thas ere- ates a draft up the flue ¢ and thus yentilates the poultry house below. | American Agriculturist. /

Here's a Good Combination.

Ip this bunt for the profit dollar keep ap eye on the combination of epst- lage and clover or alfalfa hay. There fs no other comblyation of feed like tt for results in milk. A farmer could take these two pieces of forage and witb good cows and no in he could eome out at the end of the year with a foir profit. Of course a few ponnds of grain feed a day is a good investment. ~Hoard’s Dairyman.

, —_—e—

Plant Many Trees. In an article in the Woman's Home

| and dewberry vines into wool, mul(ton | office of the city editor.

| vate and add some manure to the soll,

‘cause in his youth be lacked the op- portunity and always afterward would ‘| rather. st and work or go to bed than 6 bis time at a playhouse. |__| He looked on all kinds of gambling as | wrong, never knew one card or one | domino from another and, was never at | @ horse race, He had been to a few | ! cirenses and minstrel shows and liked | them —Recollection of His Secretary, Majo Truman, in Century. |

Too Many Pianos. M. de S,,. art crite, Is traveling !a)

aihatins wire ‘qouD Ex HORS." Italy, On the train be consults the an- H

nual showing various locations to correspondent. Blaborate sol! testing | Mlorence, Be reads, “Casanuniero— is not necessary before sheep mavure |} via—1 plano.” “Ob, me," he says, “I

fs applied to a Geld, It will help (be | do not want any plavo tn ! best dirt, and it will make good suit} He continues-to read, Ne tinds) ovt of land that has been worn out | houses of two, three, four pianos. He and given over to pasture, | does not find apy that are onprovided | . The help it gives the soll is given | with these. Be is desperate. He de | quickly and economically./ It ts the | clares the superabundance of these In- , one kind of fertilizer that any farmer | struments disgusts bim witb Blorence. | ean manufacture on bis own acres, no’ | ‘Then some one explains to bim that | matter how poor and worn they are ln the word plano, In Itolign, siguities the | the beginning. ; | foor or story of a house.—Cri de Paris, | A flock of sheep will take an old , field overrun by sprouts and briers Had a Complaint. aud they will turn sassafras bushes ; The angry citizen puffed into the

and soil atuff quicker than any viber | “gee here, sir,”, be yelled, “what 60, animal could change them into a war | yoy mean by publishing my resignation |

ketable product, | from my political office In tbis way?” «eas tenis Mig gave the story out yourself, Orchard and Garden. didn’t yout” saked the editor. oneeder “Ot course I did,” replied t angry

Late falland winter pears should not citizen. “Bot your fool pape: prints it be allowed to bang on the trees too onder the bead of Public improve long, for some of them become hard ' ments."—Cincinopat! Enquirer. - and grainy in texture avd not fit to ent.

Prune out old canes of raspberries aud @lackberties und burn them. Thin the hills to three or four shoots. Culti-

A Forlorn Hope, Mandy—What fob yo’ been golv’ to. de postoffice so reg’lat? Are yo’ corre spoudin’ wif some other femule? Ras- | tus—Nope, bot since Ab been a-readin’ |

Parsnips for table use, will possess @ | 1” 4) papers ‘bout dese "'snsclence

ihe house.” ,

| of £122 ($610).

the Germans. “A long spell of intense cold made life almost impossible fer the half starred French, while the | Hard on the Lawyer.

Germats, who had the whole ovate | Sir William Jones was receiving ® to draw on, besides thelr own excellent yisit from Mr, Day, a man of some commissarint, suffered very little, By note at that time. During a conversa: January the city was in such a terrible: tion Sir William moved a book from its

conditien that it surr | place, and a large spider dropped to The date of the last great war before ‘the ground.

that of 1012 In which Turkey wis en-| “Kill that spider, Day! Kill that gnged was 1877. The Turks were at- spider!” cried tue great scholar. tacked by an enormously superior force | “No,” said Mr. Day, “1 will mot kul

in numbered piles.—Argonaut.

of Mussians, with the czar bimself In that spider, Jones. I don't know that

command Osman Pa ., with 40,000 | have a right to kill that spider. Sup- men, hurried inland to Plevna, a vil-' pose now that you were going down lage which stood upon a hill, and there to Westminster hall In your carriage hastily entranched himself, ‘The Tus: | and some superior being, who might slans bad 100,000 men, but Osman and pave as much power over you as you bia, dauntless band defented them in , haye over ibis spider, should call out: four successive battles. ‘KIN that lawyer! Kill that lawyer! In Noveinber ‘winter: set in three | How should you like that, Jones? And weeks cariier than usurt. The Turks 1 am sure (hat to most people a lawyer had no winter clothing and little to | jg a more noxious creature than a ent bat maize porridge and horsefesh, | spider.” They suffered fearfully, Ag last, on - Dee. 9, they determined to break out. Why te it? There were onty 30,000 left, but their | That a legless man can “put bis foot rush was so tremendous (bat they ear- | in ity’ ried three Jines of Russian tresicbes be-| ‘phat persons who are “consumed by fore they were surrounded and forced curiosity” still survive? by enormoysiy superior pumbers to, ‘Phat frequently a sinking surrender uncondiiionally.— London An- | ysed to meet a floating debt? sewers. 7 That straining the volce js not the ; F proper way to make it clearey? Napoleon's Piano. | Phat we speak of a stream running A curious footnote to bistory is found | qyy when ihe only way it can run Is iu G1, de St. M. Watson's book, “A wei? Polish Exhe With Napoleon,” to the | ‘That wives sbould expect thelr hus effect that the emperor's evenings At pands to foot the bills without kicking? St. Helena were golaced with mone | That we talk of some one “golng from a plano whieh was imported from | siraight to the devil” when he has to Kugland at a cost to Napgleon himself pe crooked to go there?—Boston ‘Tran- The musician was per goript. haps Mme. Rertrand. At any rate, the ——_—_———_—_ piavo was bequeathed to ber and was 4 ish removed by her from the Island after ' a ve Tee Bt en distin

Napoleon's death. | guish one person from another, which

fund is

Companion on “The Priendly Summer | mych milder and sweeter favor if cov-

Yrees" the author, Frank A. Waugh, ered with some sort of refuse right | Sostuly git @ ietan frome dat | what married us.--Life,

professor of horticulture in the Agri- i) to remai cultural College of Massachusetts, lays ! one aia pb pets Proeniy

the general rule that only 0n€ |) Wien the ground freezes apply @ tno ray ined | rer of el enpented anno gro ty, He asparagus rows," which will keep (the

Disillusioned.

The young man was Oguring out ‘ways and means. “They say two can , i live as cheaply as one.”

“Do not delude yourself, Ferdinand,” said the girl. “For one thing, | sball positively have to have e separate car.”

funds" Ab kind o thought might ustab

z Papa Introduced Them. ( Teacher—Do you know, ‘Tommie, |

give one man a higher place and an- other a lower, are just two.

First of all, perseyerance—the ability to keep everlastingly at it, and second, imagination or vision—the wbility to see beyond the present and to under stand tbat (be work at hand reaches

| ground from freezing deeply and pro- }

7 ah. vide pleaty of fertillty for next sum- ' =} mor's growth. Roof or No Roof on Silo? ! silage {a concerned Belgian endive is a salad plont which

ota onuta fhe sila Talo and i some sale on the clty market. snow 40 not hurt the silage. For the | 7be plants are removing the sage tom ta cg ea, ey u

J id 7 a flavor, all better to bave « so0t—Hoard’s Dalry text aver, al

and slender, 996 eed. _bave a that’ hive , 900,000, ie ever took @ yaestion Ip

when shingles Grst came tuto use? |

TommienI think when 1 was between | o™lsrtlle Courter-Journal, | sore oe Ee ios dig ieee / Typhoid Carrier

‘As many as 10 per cent of patients valescing from typhoid fever ere nown to L, typhoid carricrs, who

st ee 4 i, Paraphr + el Hokus—Olé Gotrox died worth $5,- |

' bis life, Pokus—Ah! Gone to big Gret |. Ronson serves when pressed, but hon- rest, eh?~New Fork Times, pat fnstinet comes 8 volunteer, Pope

beyond the present moment and go is worth while.—St. Nicholas,

¢ * 9 Naturally, ' Youth—Can you tell me which is Mr. Ponsonby. Iady—The mon with the gray bair talking to those ladies over

may start fresb infections at anytime to. =; am Ale, Ponsonby's wife.

Youth—1. know you ere, ‘That's why | asked you, oa | thought you'd be sure to know,.~ London Pune

We forbid the sale of. co- caine, opium joints are raided, the pure food law compels the label to tell what per cent of aicoho! is used, hut we allow an unrestraived trade in Criminal stories are on the newsstand in which law is rep- resented to be an oppressive institu. tion and those who break it are he- The mother warns her “pre: cious” not to go with those common boys from “ihe bill,” but her boy as- sociates with a lower class than (hat. “Billy the Bandit” secretly Insinuates tales of robbery, oaths and indecent innuendoes from the story book lonned by a schoolmate, His sister reads one that she hides under the mattrosy at night. ‘That flashy girl at the oflice got it from a drummer,. It Is caatse and reyolting. Every sation is sug- gestive. I{s stock in trade is intrizue, lust, domestic infidelity and divorce, After the book’s returned the memory remains, Its filthy fingers leave a scar imbedded in the sou!. “Here's the-sme!! of blood still, and all the perfomes of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand,” says Lady Macbeth.

A book is immoral if it commends Im-

mora! actions—not If it tells evil only, but if it paints evil to look like good.

Do Small Interests Make Sinai Men?

er and the inquisitive visitor? “With what do you mix your colors?” With’ bras!” The recipe’s as good for readers as for painters. One needs brains In reading. ‘Twenty minutes a day with a newspaper may make @

wise man; sixty minutes may make —_

a fool, The sehoolgir} who: mukes fudge her lunch ‘is poorly nourished physically. If she makes the “best seller” her staple mental diet she with be starved another way. We Amert- cans are greedy readers of whipped cream. Mterature. We want. diitle. scrappy, piquant magazine articles that have neliber intelectual gragp nor se- rions mora) purpose. The editor whe would give us mental fodder that re- quired vigorous mental aasimilation would lose bis job. This generation is impatient with “Adaw Bede and “Les Miserables,” with their great tn- terpretation of life. There Is reading that stultifies the spirit and dwarfs the mind. Such reading is not an ex- cuse: for thought, but ap exeusé for thinking. One good bses that makes you think is worth a thousand thot merely lore you oa from «ghapter te chapter lo reach an Wesativfying eop- clusion. : Vines of Engaddi,

“If you are extravagant in anyihing let it be im fertilizer,” says, the depart ment ‘of agriculture to young formers, “It bringd back big returns.’ (ood! I like that! Empty much of your purse into your head. Invest in knowledge. “I don’t have tinie.’ Then siey home frow the dance or card party and read a book, You may learn something! Read Arnold Benneit’s “How to Live on Twenty-four flours a Day" or Kéa- ward Griggs’ “Use of the Margin.” Heed Paul's injunction, “Give attend- ance to rending.” ‘here's a whole world of wholesome reading oon. foe you. Head the bistory of your own country or that ef your ferbears across ihe sea. Buy an elementary book on vatural history or natural acience, A primer ou astronomy will enlarge your sky line mightily, Lhe earth, alr and sky are ful! of wonders, Get a book of travel, visit the remote corners of the earth. Every great man in (he world has been influenced by biography. Read the lives of Washington, Lincole and Garfield. , Fiction? Surely. Eliot, Haw- thorne, Jan Maclaren or Ralph Com - nor. And poetry—Shakespeare, Whit- tier, Longfellow and Bryant, . But where I mention one name ten others clamor, And the Bible—every Bnglish author is saturated with it. The beauty, and purity of Lincoln's language, some that will live forevet'as models, are due to his study of the Bilile. Vorty per cent of the allusions used tn Mugints literature are from this romori | mine Get the habit

t ' . ' . . . . . : {

- fo introduce his name upon my page.

CONCEALED PUNS,

James Russell Lowell Cleverly Hid One In a Review.

QUAINT HUMOR IN A SNEEZE.

(The Story That ts Told of the Witty

LIFE IN MACEDONIA.

tt le Very Much In the Open, With Lit- tle or No Privacy.

“We arose early one February morn-

ing and left our fairly clean botel in

| Neapolis for four hours of travel over

Cleric, Sydney Smith, and the Wager |

He Won While In the Pulpit—A Buried Pun by Nathaniel Hawthorne.

Horace BH. Scudder in some reminis- cences of James Russell Lowell point-

ed out that the poet critic even in his |

puberest essays would sometimes hide away a jest for the delectation of spe cially discerning readers. Thus in a review of Richard Grant White's edl-

the modern road near the Via Mgnatia, which should take us to ancient Philip- pi. Our vehicle was a somewhat dilap- idated hack, such as Americans are famillar with at almost every consid- erable railway station, but a surpris- ingly comfortable cdifteyance for this part of the world. Rattling down some steep, roughly paved streets, we came to the center of the old Neapolis, pass- ed near the great Roman aquedéct and ascended another steep street on the other side of the market place.

Barly as it was, we found that the people of Kavalla were up and doing.

The stalls of the fruit men were at- |

tractive with oranges, pomegranates, lemons and dates. The vegetable deal-

tion of Shakespeare, Lowell remarked ) ers displayed a tempting array of cauli-

incidentally:

“To every commentator Who has fwantonly tampered with the: text or obscured It with his inky cloud of para- phrase we feel inclined to apply the quadrisyllabie name oi the brother of ‘Agis, king of Sparta.” |

Professor Felton of Harvard, we are | told, was the first to remember or dis- cover that the name of Agis’ brother was Eudamidas.

A more opaque mystification is con- tuined in a passage in the first chapter of Nathaniel Hawthorne's “Our Old fHiome"—opaque only because be pur-

ly seéks to conceal every clew to the fact that a pun is buried beneath the surface.

The chapter is headed “Consular Ex- periences.” Speaking of the lights and shadows of the cousul's office at Liver- poul, where he was stationed during | the presidency of Franklin Pierce, Huwthorne dwells with special pleas- ure on the visits of a young Bnglish friend, “a scholar and literary amateur,

flowers, cabbages, onions, okra, leeks and potatoes.

As in all eastern cities, there was no" privacy. The cook was preparing his breakfast on the sidewalk, the shoe- maker was plying his awl, the tailor his needle, and thé blacksmith was shoeing his horses almost in the very street.—Christian Herald.

A MOTHER'S TRIBUTE.

Pathetic Ceremony at Night on an At. lantic Ocean Liner.

Strange, perhaps, to us, but very touching, is the tender, intimate solici- tude of the Latin races for their dead —“I ‘nostri morti,” as the Italians are wont to call those whom they have lost. There is a simple pathos in the incident that was related by a passen- ger on one of the great transatlantic mail boats.

A few days before the steamer sail- ed from Havre its captain received a letter from a peasant woman of Indre- et-Loire. In it she explained that her

between whom and myself there sprang | oniy gon had been a cook on the Titan-

up an affectionate and, I trust, not) so and had gone down with the vessel.

transitory regard.”

This friend used to come and sit or fétand by the Hawthorne fireside, “with such kind endurance of the many rough republicanisms wherewith I as- sailed him and such frank and amiable assertion of all sorts of English preju- dices and mistakes, that I understood | his countrymen infinitely the better for him and was almost prepared to love the intensest Englishman of them all for his sake. It would gratify my cher- fished remembrance of this dear friend if I could remind ‘him without offend- ing him, or letting the public know it,

Bright was the illumination of my dusky little apartment as often as he made his appearance there.”

} he casual reader never suspects (that Hawthorne bas deftly accomplish- ed his purpose. It does not occur to him that Bright, the apparent adjective fhat so cunningly begins a sentence and therefore achieves the right to a— capital initial, may be alternatively | read as a proper noun. a

} Henry A. Bright was, in fact, Haw- |

thorne’s only intimate friend in Liver- pool. He was a man of wealth and po- sition in that town, a dilettante who

manual, (Blower Garden.” ‘With Hawthorne he

(would frequently call upon the local bookseller, Henry Young, making use of a little nook in the rear of the shop to examine and discuss the recent pub- Hications. This came to be known as lawthorne's corner.

| Where is a story told about Sydney Smith that represents him as carrying

@ concealed pun into’ the pulpit with | bistory of the country—in fact, long | ter palace from Wolsey.

gines ceased to puise, and the little

She was sending, she wrote, a cross which she begged him to drop into the sea at the spot where the disaster oc- curred. ;

The cross came in due time, a simple cross of wood, fashioned rudely enough by the mother’s fingers, and one night, as the great. vessel neared Newfound- land; for the space of a minute her en-

wooden cross, weighted with lead, sank beneath the waves of the Atlantic.— Paris Cor. Philadelphia Telegraph,

: Stevenson on Invalidism, Robert Louis.Stevenson, himself the

most heroié of invalids, would have

agreed with Sir George Birdwood tn

THE MAKING OF WORDS.

Curious Origin of Gome of Our Most Common Expressions.

In the “Romance of Words,” a pub- lication by an English author, much space is devoted to “aphesis,” which means a gradual or unintentional loss of ab unaccented rowel at the begin- ning of a word. This kind of word shrinkage Is more common than one might suppose. :

Sometimes the middle syllable of a word will be slurred to the point of extinction. From ,Mary.. Magdalene, tearful and penitent, comes the word maudiin. Sacristan’is contracted into sexton; the old French word paralysie becomes palsy; hydropisie becomes dropsy, and the word procurator be- comes proctor in English. Bethlehem Hospital For Lunatics, established in London, came to be telescoped into bediam, much as Cholmondeley came | to be Ohumley and Majoribanks Marshbanks, Peel is for appeal, mend for amend, lone for alone, fender, whether before a fireplace or outside a | ship, is for defender; fence for defense,

taint for attaint.

The word peach, commonly regarded

' as English thief slang, goes back to | the time of Shakespeare and is relat- ed to impeach, though used to indicate

informing against an accomplice. The!

word cad is for Scotch caddie, once an errand boy, now familiar in connection with golf., Caddie is from the French word cadet, meaning a junior or young. er brother.—Indianapolis News.

SURGERY ON THE SKULL.

The Operation of Trepanning Was Common tn Ancient Times,

While the medical profession is agreed. that some rough form of sur- gery must have existed from very an- cient times, it has always been a mat- ter of wonder that so complex and deli- cate an operation as trepanning should also be one. of the oldest.

There is authentic record of this op- eration dating back to the time of Hip- pocrates, who wrote treatises on frac- tures, dislocations and wounds of the head, wherein he described the method of procedure to be followed in the case of.a fractured skull. His idea was to cut awi a piece of bone so that the pressuré on the brain might be relieved.

The annals of this era also show that

at a time when modern anaesthetics were unknown, must have been, to say the least, painful,

According to Holmes, the operation of removing pieces of bone was per- formed long before historic times.. The effects on the skull are easily seen after death and are visible as long as the | bones are preserved. From inspection of certain skulls of the later stone age

a file was used for this purpose, which, |

his contempt for the valetudinarian. | jn ancient Britain there has been de- “To forego all the issues of living in a rived the conclusion that some of these

a hundred times over, and for ten years at a stretch! As if it were not to die in one’s own lifetime, and with- out even the sad immunities of death! As if it were not to die, and yet be patient spectators of our own pitiable change! The permanent possibility is preserved, but the sensations carefully

| held at arm’s length, as if one Kept a

It is better to lose health thrift than to waste it It is better to live and be done with it than to die daily in the sickroom.”— London Chronicle.

California's Petroleum, Petroleum was produced in a small way in Califoroia very early in the

him. The most familiar version is that | before it was invaded by the army of

which Lord Houghton used to tell. {When settied at his small living in Workshire, Sydney willingly assisted

gold seekers. Mr, O, Morrell, a drug- gist in San Francisco, is commonly credited with being the first to attempt

his brethren in that neighborhood in | the distillation of kerosene from crude

their clerical duties.

On one occasion ;. hetroleum, This was in 1857,’ but sev-

he. dined with the incumbent on the | eral years prior to that Andreus Pico

preceding Saturday. The evening

passed in great hilarity, the squire, | Which he obtained in

made illuminating oil from petroleum |:

the Newhall "re-

Kershaw by name, being conspicuous | gion in Los Angeles county. This oll

by his loud enjoyment of the visitor's gokes.

» “I am very glad that I have amused ou,” said Sydney Smith at parting, “but you must not laugh at my sermon tomorrow.”

wag burned, so it is said, in lamps in the mission San Fernando.—Argonaut.

Not Stationary. A carpenter who had been engaged to build a cabinet for paper, envelopes

“I should hope I know the difference | and other office supplies in a local com- between bere and a church,” remarked | mission house was busy at his task

the squire a little taftly perhaps. i “I’m not so sure of that.”

“I'll bet you a guinea on it.” , “ake you,” said the divine.

» Next day the preacher ascended the.| worker.

steps of the pulpit apparently suffering from a severe cold, with his handker- ehief to his face, and at once sneezed out the name “Kershaw!” several! times fo various intonations. This ingenious

when one of the bookkeepers inquired: “Is that going to be a stationery cab- ,

inet

“No. 1 don’t think so,” replied the “At least 1 have instructions to put casters on it.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer.

; Her Portrait. The painstaking artist, anxious to

assumption of the readiness with which | Please, remarked to prospective . cus- @ man would recognize bis own name | tomer: .

fin sounds unintelligible to the ears of

“I can paint you a portrait of your

others proved accurate. The poor | Wife which will be a speaking like- squire burst into guffaw, to the scan- | 2¢8s.”

dal of the congregation. The minister

“H'm. Couldn't you do it in what

after looking at bim with stern re-, they call still life?’-Lippincott's.

proach proceeded with his Wiscourse

nd won the bet. Another version makes the victim f Sydney's jest a certain Sir Archi-

ld Macdonald, equerry to the Duke.

; A Fellow Feeling.

Rector~1 hope you didn’t fad my lecture dry last night?

Old Garge—Well, zur, I wouldy’t go

of Sussex. Sir Archibald said to the | eo far as to say that, zur, but when

prelate, who was then a canon at 8t

Paul's cathedral:

| “1 will come some Sunday to hear

you preach.” :

| “If you do | shall name you from the

pulpit.” was the reply.

| Undaunted by this threat, Sir Archi- id went.to St. Paul's. :

you stops in the middle to ’ave a swig, though it was only water, I sees to me self, “’Bar, ‘earl’—London Tatler. ~-.

All Stars.

Wiseguy—1 want a dramatic sketch

with forty heroines in it. Sketch Writ er-—Forty heroines? Wiseguy—Yes,

| Sydney entered the pulpit, looked sir. We have forty young ladies in our

ard at the baronet and was seized dramatic club, and they all want to

with s wonderful fit of sneezing.

) “Archie, Archie, Ar-chie!” was bow it sounded in Sir Archibald’s ears, and he could not belp a sudden laugh of ecoguition.—William 8. Walsh in Bos-

fon Post.

play the lead.—New Orleans Times Democrat.

-Parlor with a regulated temperature,” |-had undergone the. operation, which’ he writes, “as if that were not to die

must have been performed with a stone implement.—Harper's Weekly.

Origin of St. James’ Palace.

Henry VIII. when he built St. James’ palace designed it for a country resi- dence to take the place of the manor of Lennington, where he had been in the habit of .gojhg for a change of air. He pulled down the hospital dedicated to St. James the Less and on its site,

as Holinshed tells us, “built a goodly |

manor and made a faire parke for his greater comoditie and pleasure.” The palace stood in the midst of fields well stocked with game, and these were inclosed as its private demesne. Dven while residing here Henry held his court first at Westminster and then at ‘Whitehall! after he had taken: the lat- It was pot until 1697, when Whitehall. was de- stroyed by fire, that St James’ pal- ace became the London residence of monarchs.—London Standard.

An Odd Legacy, Thomas Jefferson, the founder of the Jefferson family of actors, was remem-

bered curiously in the will of. Weston, |.

who was himself an esteemed member of Garrick’s company. _Weston's will contained this item: “I bave played under the manage- ment of Mr. Jefferson at Richmond and | received from him every politeness. 1 therefore leave him all my stock of prudence, it being the only good qual- ity 1 think he stands in need ot.”

Wellington and Waterloo. Heine, in speaking of Wellington’s good luck at Waterloo, says: -“This man has the bad fortune to meet with ' good fortune when the greatest man of the world is unfortunate. We see in him the victory of stupidity over genius —Arthur Wellington triumphant when Napoleon Bonaparte was overwhelmed. Wellington and Napoleon! It is a won- derful phenomenon that the human mind can at the same time think of both these names.”

Good Excuse,

“Why do you keep me waiting on?

this corner two hours?” demanded the irate busband. “You said you were merely going to step in to see how | Mrs. Gabble was.” “Well, she ingisted on telling me.”— Washington Herald.

His Preference.

“Ob, for the wings of a dove!” cried the poet with the unbarbered hair. “Order what you like,” answered the prosaic person with a clean shave, “but tell the waiter to bring me the breast of a chicken.""—Cleveland Plain Dealer.

Inquisitive. Willie— Paw, do you know every- thing? Paw--Yes, my son. Why do

SECONDHAND ORANGE SKINS,! QUEER WAYS OF THE ARAB

Sweepings of English Theaters Are ; Sold to the Jammakers, ,

Now and then one sees in the bina |

lish papers advertisements announcing that So-and-so has a large stock of orange skins for sale. As a matter of recommendation as to quality the ad- vertisement toncludes with the state- ment that they are from such and such a music ball

There Is a big business tn second- hand orange skins, lemon peel, etc., on the other side of the Atlantic. Most of them are bought by makers of jams and marmalade. This was brought out when there Was an investigation of the preserving industry in England.

In certain portions of the theaters and musit halls of London and other large British cities the seats are not reserved. Admittance to the pit is generally sixpence, Once a person leaves his seat it is immediately grab- bed by some one else. In order to get a good seat one must come early. One grows hungry as the hours go by be- fore the performance ends. The fa- vorite sustenance of those who sit in these cheap seats is oranges.

They consume them in large quanti- ties and throw the skins on the floor. After each performance the skins are carefully gathered up and sold to deal- ers.—New York Sun.

FROZEN BY FISH POWER.

Truthful Tale’ About Making Ice Cream In Nova Scotia,

Not. all the fish prevaricators live in the United States, according to the Mariner’s Advocate. An editor recent- ly received the following letter:

“I have read an interesting account of singing fish in your paper. It re- called to me the memory of a rather remarkable fish we have in Nova Scotia. It is known as the ‘frost fish,’ because it may be frozen like a lump of ice, but if placed in water in that condition it soon thaws out and swims around as vigorously as ever. The na- tives make use of this property te make ice cream. The fish is caught, frozén and placed in the cream. In thawing out it freezes the cream, and its movements at the same time beat the mixture, making it smooth.”

Taking them by and large, from Moosehead lake to Puget sound and from the upper Mississippi to the gulf, we have some very capable and in- dustrious fish liars In this country. But we hand the reel and rod over to Nova Scotia. We have talent in this country, but Nova Scotia is the abode of genius. ; : é

The Apostle of Greenland,

The conversion of the Hskimo in that remote and bledk dependency of Den- mark, Greenland, was agitated a8 early as 1710 by Hans Egade, who has be-

come historic as the apostie of Green- ;

land. In that year he published as a pamphlet “A Proposition For Green- land’s Conversion and Enlightenment.”

This was welcomed with no great’

warmth by the clergy and was violent- ly opposed by mercantile interests. In four years he had succeeded to such an extent that he founded a 1

college for missionaries in Copenhagen. May 8, 1721, he sailed for Greenland with a small party of mission workers. He was greatly disappointed to find that the Norse colony, left for many years to its own resources, had wholly vanished. He turned, therefore, all his

efforts to the conversion of the Eskimo- success, becom- |

and met with marked ing bishop in 1740. In this office and its trying duties he was succeeded by bis son, Paul.—New York Sun.

The Harmony of Colors.

The principle that the sensation of white results from the equal excite ment, of’ sensations produced by the three fundamental radiations is de- duced naturally from an analysis of the ‘rules of the harmony of colors. Colored lights do not’focus at the sanie point Therefore the eye must seize different distances at the same time in order to see when different colored surfaces touch, The difference of re- frangibility of the different colored rays causes some colors to stand out and others to stand back. Red is the most “fiyiig’ or “tapering” of the col- ors, a red object always appearing to be farther away than a blue object, though it is seen on the same plane and in the same light.—Harper's,

Manufacturing the Truth,

A gentleman was staying at an Eng- lish country house, when, hearing a great clatter below one morning, he looked out and saw a couple of grooms holding one of the servant’ maids on a horse, which they led with dificulty once round the yard. He asked them what it all meant.

“Well, you see, sir,” said they, ‘we're going to take the horse to market to be sold, and we want to be able to say that he has carried a lady.”

Didn't Care For the Money.

“You advertised for a young lady to be married in a cage of lions.” ;

“That's right, Fifty plunks, Where's your young man?”

“Don't you provide the man? What do you suppose was my object in go- ing into this affair?”—Pittsburgh Post

Too Bright.

“Didn't you win anything ip your sult for damages?”

“No.”

“Why didn't you engage a bright lawyer to take your part?”

“I did, but he took my all.”-—Phila- delphia Press. :

if The and most les- Patience is the strongest of strong you agk? Willie—Well, does the spur! son is oe ee drinks, for it kills the giamt despair. | of the moment cause time to fy ?—Cin- esteem of ourselves.—Thomas a Jerrold. . clonati Eoguirer, +p ¥ : : .

Hie Methods of Life and His Contempt _ For Womankind.

An Arab om entering a house re- moves his shoes, but not bis hat. He mounts his horse upon the right side, while his wife milks the cow on the left side. In writing a letter he puts nearly all the compliments on the out- aide. His bead must be wrapped up warm, even in the summer, while his fect may well énough go naked in win- ter. Every article of merchandise which

is liquid he weighs, bat he measures | wheat, barley and a few other articles, He reads and writes from right to left. He eats scarcely anything for break- fast, about as much for dinner, but after the work day is done he sits down to a hot meal swimming in oil or, better yet, boiled butter,

His sons ¢at with him, but the fe- males of his house wait till his lord- ship has done. He rides a donkey oop traveling, his wife walking be-

hind. He laughs at the idea of walk-

ing in the street with his wife or of even vacating his seat for a woman.

If he be an artisan he does work sit-

ting, perhaps using his feet to hold | what his hands are engaged upon.

He drinks cold water with a spoon, but never bathes in it unless his home be on the seashore. He is rarely seen drunk, is deficient in affection for his | kindred, has ‘ittle curiosity and no im- } itation, no wish to improve his mind.— Everyday Life.

—_—

FEEDS THE BRUTES.

| Lendon’s. Restaurant That Caters to

Domestic Animals Only.

One of the most interesting restau- rants in the world is one in which the | only diners are domestic animals. The | | restaurant is in Westminster, London. |

| The sign on the window reads: st | RESTAURANT FOR DOMESTIC AN-

IMALS. ENGLISH MEAT ONLY. FRESH TWICE DAILY.

The restaurant is arranged so that the domestic animals which patronize it may be perfectly comfortable while

they are getting their meals. Those po

that wish to do so may sit down while:

eating.. The women who serye the. | diners are very fond of animals and. know the wants of each particular cus- | tomer. One of the regular callers at the restaurant, a dog, prefers having his meals in private, so instead of eat- ing his luncheon in the restaurant he walks from his-home to the place ev-| ery day, buys his luncheon and carries | it home. He pays his own bill at the end of each week, carrying the money tied in a little wallet around bis neck. |

Cats, canary birds, goldfish, parrots, monkeys, squirrels and goats are also provided for in the restaurant. There is a branch of the establishment at 123 York road, Battersea.—New York Her ald. x

‘Clogs. against which the Lancashire mili girls are rebelling, were at one time worn by women of all classes. | The more refined variety of the clog | had a-thin wooden sole, which was cut transversely in two pieces, attach- ed to each ‘Dainty

brass © an nances gave a finish to the article, |

old ‘to : “that. ome to the United States from these’ outiand- ish regions beyond the seas, where folks use the Roman system of numer- ation. Just imagine a kid gofug to school there and being given this kind of problem: MDVIX is divided by Cl how many times? Or, X multiplied by VII minus XIX equals how much? Or, CIV and MVI and DXIX minus MO equals— Say, arithmetic is going to look like a simple one and one are two for me after this!"—New York Tribune,

The Real Villain,

“Are you the villain in this troupe?" asked the baggageman who was han dling theatrical trunks, Sid

“No,” replied the youth witb black, curly hair, “I used to bef but the real villain is the treasurer of the company, and by this time he must be about 500 miles on his way to somewhere else,” ~ Washington Star.

| Educating the Heathen,

| “Brother Hardesty, can't you make your contribution for the education of the heathen a little larger than usual this year?”

“De. Goodman, I’m more than dov- bling it. I have just started that youngest boy of mine to college.”— Chicago Tribune. /

Not the Right Way.

your house?’ of min nit “Too much of both.” salt. pepper. If one likes it quite “How's that?’ ~~ ' acid half as much lemon as or “My wife is always pouring ds much as the butter will can be water on my plans or keeping me in | used. Beat thoroughly and serve. hot water.” : Egg With Coffee.

oh Srens Tele | en 2 aes fe Gane # a gn gaa A great patient, coffee is very much thinker. Waggs Indeed} ished and also allowed, the two can be Yes; he thinks he can served by beating together alas: crea" grado halftone cope The fault is always as great as he of. boiling coffee, stirring continually, Chai commstes te--Ftanek Storia | ond OM up with Ret milk oF cognm,. is

, i)

Steak and Mushroom Pudding. » Steak and mushroom pudding ts a good winter dish and is both appetiz- ing and satisfying. Cut tender rump steak into thin slices, and these again

into. medium sized squares. Cut thin slices of ham or bacon into still smai- er squares, Spread the steak out on a floured board, place a piece of the ham or bacon on .edth square and sprinkle with a spiced seasoning made of two smal] teaspoonfuls of salt, one-half tea- spoonful of black pepper and a salt- spoonful of mixed spice; then roll ap tightly. Line a buttered baking dish with pie crust and fill with alternate layers of meat rolls and mushrooms which have been peeled and cut in \bieces.. Pour in some good brown stock .well flavored with vegetables, Cover with pie crust, pressing the edges firm- ly together after having moistened them with cold water. Place a piece of buttered paper over the pudding, then put on the cloth and steam stead- fly for four hours,

A New Fudge.

Marshmallowed fudge is sure to be liked by children, so for your little party make this confection at bome. place one cupful of cream and two ‘cupfuls of powdered sugar in a sauce- pan and stir gently to avoid sticking

r burning until the mixture begins to ‘boil, At this point add one-quarter pound of chocolate and keep stirring until all is melted. Allow all to boil for about ten minutes, or until the soft boil stage is reached. Then put in a bit of butter (about one and one-half inch cube) and stir until thoroughly mixed, F :

Take the pan from the fire and beat ‘quickly-for six minutes longer, then ur into a buttered pan containing marshmallows, nuts and candied cit-

These are scattered through the fudge. Some prefer candied cherries cut into halves to the citron, but it is all a matter of taste. eM . pats _

A Novel Soup.

Almond and celery soup makes a de- licious Juncheon dish. You must cut a bunch of celery into small pieces and put over the fire with one quart of cold water, six peppercorns, two bay leaves, a little. onion juice, a slice of lemon, salt to taste, and a stick of cinnamon.

Cook all together for apn hour, strain and put over the stove again.

When heated stir in a cupful of cream or rich milk and’ a teaspoonful each of flour and batter, blended. Mix ‘smoothly and then add about one-quar- ter of a cupful of blanched almonds pounded to a paste. Allow the whole to boil just for a second and then serve, : :

_ Chocolate Whipped Cream Pie.

Beat separately whites and yolks of

four eggs, pour yolks into whites, add one cupful sugar, one-half cupful po- tato flour, one-half teaspoonful soda and one teaspoonful: cream of tartar,

' fold the dry ingredients into eggs very ashington

carefully. Bake in two W: pie tins.

OCream.— Make sirup of one table- spoonful cocoa, two of sugar, fwo-of water by cooking until smooth, Let cool slightly and pour into one cupful heavy cream. When thoroughly cold whip as plain cream. Flavor with va- Prd lhe iat nee onde ead

* Irish Moss Lemonade,

This is an excellent drink for those suffering from cold or sore throat.

Soak one-quarter cupful of Irish moss over night and pick over very carefully before cooking. Wash in

free

Maitre d’Hote! Butter,

For use with beefsteak try prepar- ing this famous butter in the follow- ing way: Have ready two large table- spoonfuls

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TH REVIEW, REDCLIPE, ALBE

A a a A aT —— ee 1 - taste - - a All Out of Town PATRIOTISM EVOKED BY STIR: SHIPPING FEVER

Full of hope and energy, the young t _ RING PLAY Influenga, pink eye, epizootic distemper, ond all nose dna

reporter was sent to the surburbs . throat diseases cured, and all others, no matter how “ex- 1

to write an account of a fire that was|fs the most délicate fabric In the its Author Embracéd by Men and Wo posed,” kept from having any of these diseases with alleged to be raging there. ‘world, You may chusd it pekmanent| _'Ten of am Emotional Audience SEUGh Gitch Gale & coun, One Wattle Eparibtnee t 00 oc.

As a matter of fact the fire was 80) harm by using poisonous minéral oint- Paris, France .—There was a great Best thing. Gere comes ne, bot le guaranteed to do fo. small that it had been put out in three| ments for the little rashes and erup-) scene after the first. performance of $1 a bottle $6 and. $11 a dozen bottles. Druiggiste and and a quarter minutes, and the fire) tions that. every baby suffers from the new play ‘Servir, by M. Henri harness shops. Distributore—-ALL WHOLESALE DRUG-

brigade Aad gone home long ago. occasionally. Don't take any| Layendan, at. the Theatre Sarah Bert |, Stull, the reporter was as persever-|chances. Use Zam-Buk, jhe baby's harit, M. Guitry, the famous actof, ing as he was inexperienced, so he ap-| best balm. snapped up the play while the Comed: proached the house cheerlly and) Zam-Buk s made from fine herbal ie Francaise was doubting whether it knocked upon the door. extracts, and ‘is free from any barm- could produce It. The bilack-head Mr. Yaights in? he asked hopefulf@#Mjul poisonous cdloring matter. Like ed author of ‘the play was embraced | of the handmaiden who answered. his) the grasses and the flowers, nature has| bY men ahd women alike after the | summons, colored it green. Jt is nature's own| performance and tears were running No, came the reply; he's out. healer! down many cheeks. ; Mrs. Yaights? Most otntmente and salyes have, as}, ‘Servit’ gives violent expression to} No, she's out also. their foundation, various animal ols} the hew spirit of patriotic fervor that) Well, said the cub reporter, we were| and fats, Zam-Buk does not contain} HAs "been growing In "France (for Bey: | informed that you have a fire here, and| one atom of animal substance.’ Most eral years, especially ip the yout I've come to report— ointments and salves are too. coatse Beneration, and e's rene ioe Oh, that’s out too! snapped the} to be absorbed by the tender delicate a aaeecnt. joy -4 Lee + be na, | maiden, as she gently closed the door.| skin of a baby, and remain on the " mc se th mows = e t the! PTSD A AE BESTT ION skin an irritating mass, Just put a of. a parable the overcoming 0 e) little Zam-Buk on baby’s skin, and see antimilitarism which was rife in| how soon it is absorbed, showing con- pattie few years ago by love of sro meen te oe pores of the skin} "the two chief charactérs—or rather Use nothing but Zam-Buk for baby’s types, kor Shey pre a, moun: skin troubles and wash. with Zam- prccee OF Opposing. sentiment——are gn Buk Soap. old colonel, played by M. Guitty, aa Zam-Buk should also be used for rod ok Peano _ ~ a ahi cuts, burns, scalds, eczema, piles, ul-| Tetirement uncer the age Hmit, f& cers, etc. All druggists and stores that he must still serve his country. sell “at 0c box, or post free from He was so devoted that he even sought Zam-Buk Co., Toronto, for price. Re- an unpleasant way of showing it and

_| became a spy. In that capacity he hive harmful substitutes and imita discovers that a very powerful explos:

ive has been Invented by his son. The son is a pacifist. He hates war and tells his.men that they ought’

SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists, Goshen, Indiana, U.S.A,

The Housekeeper

WHO WOULD MAKE WASH-DAY EASIER, CAN DO 80 BY USING

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Eddy's indurated Tubs allow the water to retain heat longer” and never rust, Being made in one seamless piece cannot splinter and so the danger of snagged fingers and torn clothes is eliminated,

Used in conjunction with

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Washday Loses Half Its Terrors

AGED PEOPLE

cannot properly masticate solid foods and digestion is often upset—they do not receive the needed nourishment to make Strength and preserve health, but if aged people everywhere could only realize the strength-sue- taining nourishment in Scott's Emalsion they would take it after every meal,

It possesses tlie nourishing ele- ments of cod liver oil, the vital yowers of the hypophosphites of a =, ad and _ curative qualities of glycerine, allso perfect! combined that nature immediately appropriates gro to midges atrength-- nourish the organs build the body. It relieves rheuma- tism and ailments due to declining years. It adds to the span of life, Refuse substitutes for SCOTT'S, -

Scott & Bowne, Toronto, Ontario 12-68

Minard’s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia.

In the sixth grade at Irving school the teacher was questioning a boy about Napoleon's disastrous invasion of Russia and the subsequent retreat from Moscow.

What did the French do then? she asked.

They ran away, said the boy.

Yes, that is what they did, said the teacher, but ran away is hardly the correct phrase to use. What should you have said. .

They beat it! he exclaimed, proud- ly.

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Tom—Did Miss Roxley entertain your proposal? .

Jack—On the contrary, my proposal seemed to entertain her.

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G y

approves the cause. He uses all the humanitarian. arguments that used, to be heard in France, and is so. carried away by his enthusiasm that he, is determined to make no use of his Inv) vention. He has ‘proved fts forced by blowing up an island