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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-07-13, Page 4e-erveraer. Tee +, tg, Tfl Llearl nrsnrirtaLf Thursday, July ijth 1916 1. Imieseew.Unt. Agent tawartutee, Fire and. 14fe auereuteed. 41nly 9w et the laintion villeige end fitim L U ter. Lueicsow Lodge meets every Friday *tr Clock in their Bg1Itiatop- etreete. Allbrechren cordially invited.. '-:491go /AT. .eirmstronc me,jat -149te; ie4ext Roe. See. At U. }toyer ra. secy.,- Dr. it4161:04 OW lalfght Lodge meets every whitredikt night on er before the tuli moon, in tee Noutonie Halt. Ilevelgek street tmeicsow. W. M.. F. T. Aripstrene.;,$. W. ILL a; J. W.W.J. Devisee; dove W. W • W. Y. Court Sherwood. No. M. Leeknew, swat* ayelyertit Monday of the month In ittinetmdfenovallall, Yisitlinichrethern eocdially intited. W Stand. i.lidet Itetecori Itobt. tireham• Ms, ersta. Mole. 4i:tension, Treed. Re Ata'14o 4 ,At O. U. W. Leeknow Lodge, No. 13. meets sear ett Monday oferteit month, in there_Oita,' .fellowe'• Rail, Master worknurn, ;Mae- Diarmid; Fin. Secy. Maeinteshilte& Secf.:*009. Vett-en:00as. • Aloe. Boss. , ,.,nerttal Eurknout fortdititi Pablishoel avory Tburaday morning atlAcknow. Ontario. Subscription 41.001X,Ir7e4fl' in 4011110Ce. A. Db. 1114egiNZIRsi Pronieter end Editor. THURSDAY, TILT 1 Otli, 1910. cflig WO. 14/4444tilii 1441411011TAR. Apart -front tho etgady vineing of the ituNians in the' Ea$t 4ark •the British and rrencli in the West, the War sea. eation of Qui week was: the arrival at rtaltiraorel Maryland, of ta. big Oernain inereheat submarine. The vessel $ao :to be of about 2,00p, toes:,end she carried argo of 750 tonsQ dYestafts•and dings, the manufeetury pf Whieli :the .qerrea.es 1u a menepoly, and Which, w"ng to the 'British; :blockade, 'have great17 adrifanced.i.n thie eon+, «S. I), S. Odle° up restrain Button Block, Teeswatee. epee 1s1. attentIon tepold pletes, crowning and. bridgework. visits Wroxeter 1st. and eel: Wednesday of otter mouth; Gerrie Thur. , , Cr. NEWTON,: El.. Bee Wt. -0 Oillee • Allin Bleck, IMcknow, Ont.. An modern • inethode used. , hest materials. ennished. Crown and Bridge work, Relnless extract- ion by the use of the latest aline est en safest remedY SORN0Foltel. Newest thingin _tweed's:1 teeth. Alerolure'elatesil eon oroexeble tirnen,tr, lifgh-priced, have many , at these chemicals become that the taiga. , of tnislaihniarine likely 18 Mitch more ✓ iable thou if it consisted altogether of gold. • „. submar.ine„a,ppears to ',MVO been sent over as a buinuell enter- rise--nlenufacturerS of 'thegoas she CENTRAL STRATFORD, ONT. YOU CAN SECURE A, POSITION fi you take e. cotirse with us. The tleman d upon no for trained, help, is Many times the eumber graduating. etudents are entering :eacii, week. Von mays enter at any thne. Write et once for our .free catalogue, • 0. A. McLAGPILArill, Principal CREAM WANTED IATB want cream and will Pay the highest market prices for good cream. SuMnier Creamery and: Cheese Factory Patrons, baying. cream dtfring the winter 'months would do well to ship to As. We weigh, sample and test each can tit cream carefully that wereeeive, and return a statement ot same each time. We furnish two cans, pay • express charges • and issue cheques fa main twice. each lent:Intl:1'. • Write us arid give us a. trial. It will cost you nothing and we guarantee you .satisfaction. For Maher particulars write or send for calla and give us a trial. The Sesiordi Creamery, Sealant; Oat. ANDTRUNKkAILWAY SYSTEM Attractive Trips TO r Muskoka Lakes Lake of Baja Georgian Bay Algonquin Park French River liawartha Lakes Magalietaivaie-River- , ,TeMagami, etc. , Round trip tourist tickets now On sale from certain stations in Ontario at very low sates, with liberal stop -overs. e axrled.WiShing to take; adtantage of th'e prevailing highprices on this Side of the ;Atlantic. • Tbe vessel'ia said to carry only two emall ginta fOr defence and notorpedo.es, so that she will not be regarded as s war vessel by, the • United States, and therefore will be .allowed -to --come-.-and go when'she may. The captain of this Slibinaripe, in a bombastic interview given at Baltimore, stated that other merchant submarines *mild follow this :one and that a -regular line would be operated, thus disposing of Britain's Volta boast of being Mistress :of the Sea* • T • While due credit May be accorded the• °emend for , sending this submarine. across the Ocean; the feat should nett be regarded as one whiai others could not accomplish. British and French enb- marines could cross.the.Atlantic at any tune had they need of doing so. They, however, can navigate the oceans on the surface, which is a much more eeonomie eat and safer way of earring merchan- • dise. Bylestablishing ihis line oi sub- marine merchantmen the-Genneneshow not only their enterprise but their help- lessuesti in, the face of -the Britisgblock- ade. If they enderteke to make much �t its enterprises at home, as they doubtless' willethe people may vender • whet has becoine of the great Gerinan: vietorY in the battle of Jiitland; whew the British navy was aim -posed to have been•defeated. . Like the captureof the •Aphain and the sending of her to an UnitedStates port some months.age, this sending Over of a merchant submarine:is largely apiece of skilful advertising intending to im- press the world -with- the":cleverness of • the Gerinaria, and to encourage the people at home. But great things need not be expected from the line of subinarine merchantmen. soy time iu deehliag that Lloyd George should succeed Kitchener. * he temporarily took the War Office biniself, but everybody kaew that this was but a makeshift until the right maa should appear or be available. No Suoiker is it annouuced that the Irish question litls beou sOlvccl &ban it ks also announced that 1119yd George is appointed 5iinister of War. It is a big job in war time, but in everything he A WHAT CATARRH 1$ It has been said that every ,Ibia peiSellflaS .ata-rit. in .sottie form. • Science has .shown di at nasal:catarrh often: indicates o. general WeAUOSS -et the body; .and. Weal treatments in the forin of snuffs and vopora do If any good, , , • TO: mud eaterrli: ion-4mM treat..its oma try• yarg :htma vith. Mg. :oil -food in. Scott's litaulaion which la g has- Tot nudertohen- Mr, Liori, -George., ractlicinat food. and a W4;1400.4404 free hoe mden, conspicuous 'mimes's,. au d 'we 41"4 4' 14.431416-4 .4"404' 'AY it .- ...T - may be sure that be will proiiicott.tkeeretieerouto.'Oete ve 0,•, worthy Successor torrreu the , great, I4ord. cbener. . Ana Should Mr. Asquith retire from the premiership befere or after the war,: is oyer, and ilia Abend party remain in" power, no One would be thought nf as prime minister but Lloyd George. Arid yilio would better bve earned la REPORT ON THE LAST • NORTH: SEA BATTLE • ' • „ After asCertaning all the facts MO far trs this ie possible regarding the great sea fight off the coast of Ilenmerk, ..;C9ina 1011100 hee'lliadea part.4 • on' the. battle to gip British Adolintity-Di3part. mentThxs .e . • k . repoit ide1y s De, pv story of the battle so fee as the travth can be; itti: bertaitiecl, and it -certainly 'Makes toBrit ens, .a, you:, pleasing • contrast with the Germanstory which vas hurried to the World. • Admiral Mlle° thinks there is good reason for believing - that the Germans lost Seventeen ships, and. that, a •etirober of others were badly damaged. • The German story told that the British had lost about sixteen'ships,while the Ger- mane lost only three or four. In our own papers of June erd., the list of ships lost by the Brit's); looked quite long and formidable as compared with the loses then admitted by the Germans. Admiral Jellico'S report puts :quite another face on the Whole matter. He puts.the German loss at seventeen ships -two being battle shipsof the Dread- naught type, and two battle ,cruisers, a Dreadnaught cruiser, small 'Cruiser?, de- stroyers and a fiubmarine. - , - TO the Germans tliese losses were far. _greater than the British losses are le the British navy. Yet1-6r abet& a. week the monster lie of a German victory- was passed. off Upon the world, and the likli- • hood is that that is the story still believ- ed by the German .peenle. , • PROGRESS OP THE WAR Mitskoka":Ettoress - The tinieunt, of :freight Which. ean 'be. Leave Toronto 12.01 p.m. daily except Sunday,' and 2.0$ a.m.' daily, for Mus- koka Wharf. Connecticins_are made at Muskoka Wharf for Muskoka Lakes. Sunday, and 2.05 a.m., daily for'Hunts- ville,except for mints on Lake of tayseelquip- ,' meet the fittest. ' • Full particulars on application toagents. 0.-MATITINVAgent, Liacknow. „Phone 2 carried in that way is not great. Seven huridrect_tons iitay nein considerable quantity, bub vessels which can carry • only that.emount are not used on- the - surface, because they aix, too f.Olptil. ' Ocean freighters carry' from two thou- sand to thirty thousand tons. •!SUNSHINE SERI/IONS Iteerfui Guidance to a Rappier.Realthier Life ' By the phito•ooher-"Physicbut ' 1GEORGE F. BUTLER, A. M., M. D. If there 'IS any .possibler,es: cepticen to this •rule as 'applied :to humeri strength And, develoi:4 trteitt; it IS With the -young and growlog. chlld. Reeriveseesure- feltIne ,even With proper food le noirer advfnabto, thwitig any. stage of lire; `. people, after . . . the activities -of 'life have In a measure '.pasiett by, should use especial care • in: relation to 40d,, ,alr, and exercise. The. latter atiould be .performed out :of 'choke, and because of • the, pleasant associations attending employment practleahle la mod- eration and ter ' the *love of It. iPreper: and needful Morals*. stimulate:4-00*We and digestion and arabioa the aged person to eat toihre, in lieu of living to 'Sat, or going throUgh. the cere- mony 'of taking food at regular • Interval* regardless of the de- mand ef the' system. But very tiette.foo'd. 'iltran • If Of proper ttniality can be digested and as- iihnilated by the aged except .contIntsoue *wiliest activity la. tont no. An •excellent lute for oeupten,or advanced, life is, first, to never' take teed except Opt. - :tit. demands It, se -condi never *at 'Until appetite Is fully ekes; 'Bed. WhiIe this Ade lo geed for Ale it 1* especially derrleable for theat Who have perused the fritiddlit trate, Peet Of life, And ite Ohttervantio, AVM ,lifeeeet *jug- glshneae of the liver end Conse- quent hypinefirotrileide bitteh the, ,enjoyment el" life. Th.observant. ef proper- hy- giene. lt •of s ciI Mpertatico to theriet lb' the Asventtro to the end that their Wet dars. may baspsntIn Peattlutalf tett • • TwmAN.wito Dons THINGS "If there is a hard or almost., imposs- ible job te ao, give it to Lloyd. George" appears' tO bectort of motto with the British Cabinet. • . When the ariny Was in, a -desperate plight for Munitions, when' men in, the factories were on stiike' or threatening 4ostrikuLIoydGeorge Was taken -from his very heavy task of •fitiancing,the War, and put in charge Of the production of munitions. • Of this he , evidently • made a..success. Nearly, four thousand rnuni- tion factories have been brought: Under goveinment control, and the army, now dotible in numbers what it was when Lloyd George took hold, nasein ample supply of genii and shells, ;mostly. pro- duced at, home. . . • . This treieendoek task Wie nearing tompletiok-wheetheirmbre in Ireland becatue ssribus that,It looked as theugh net eyen: a temporary arrange - merit could be Made between the rival factions, teen until the war is Pver. But something had to be done and Lloyd Ge9ree Vas taken off the muni- tions job and asked to r'ecencile the rival' parties in Ireland. • It apPeate to . have • For iiearly two weeks now limit from all the War Irontbas been 'MAO encour- , aging for the Allies:- Following one more desperate effort by, the -.Germans upon Verdun, in,which, they gained.sonie ground only to losedt again in a day or 'tun-, the British and Freneli; ai:a Paint midwaybetween Verdun and Ypres, eperimenced a heevy attack' upon the German fortified line. Atter .several days of attillery fire, infantry attacks were made, on Saturday, June let, which easily _ceptured the first line of GerMan trenches; and in many placea gm:second: The iection attacked is about twenty miles in length-, and 'along progress was made,. The -French were particularly successful' and went clear through the first series of painful trenches, taking many prisoners and gees, in an advance of about five miles. The British. were less suceeSsful and succeeded in advanc- ing only about half that distance. They, however, also teok thouserids of Prison- ers and hundreds of guns. Within a .w-eelc more Than 14,000 unwohnded prisoners were reported -the ' French haVing 8 006 and the Briti4. 6,000. while t: . the French took more than 200 cannon: beeperate efforts ot the Gertgans utterly failed -to win back, the .ground Agit to them. 'Toall appearance it is • the in- tention of the Allies to hold this ground. These, gain a are not large in compari seri With what has to bedonelbut if we think of Our side losing a like number of Men and guns, we ;appreciate the meaeure 'of the British mid French suc- cess. The work of breaking ;up the lines which' the Germans have had two y.ears to strengthen. Will necessarily be sloe; and costl ' . '• On the Eastern front the ,ittissiaris have been makingmuch greater progress againet the Austrians. :and Germans., They . have completely demoralized a large section of, the Austrian artily, cap: tured a quarter million prisoners, ,and killed and . wounded as many more: Their gains in territory is counted in the hundreds el square miles. ; Unfortunate- ly territory won in that 'reran is not r where a mouth; age thethed hrolten 7So if has been a be time fortliaTeu. tons,all prima -losing everYwhere and gaining nothing, • .The Russian PrOgretie against, the Turks, Senth 01 the ,lilack .:$01 aPPearetelleVeeleweti drevo. ,liow. ever, what littlo. is being dello there, is by the RtleSienk. `4/' . • • - been ticklish work, but ae is,seeet, egreteenearly o. im portent ,9.:14 thi same amount . won on the west. The western front .is nuens fseamiounced, which, if not entire ee: • . . , 4 much nearer the large centree and Vital ly sfaetory to ooth parties, is at least 'parts of the enemies' country Iacceptable, arid accepted ,The-!batt1eof Velsinn stfl.6.5iitinuea, LlOyd bed" veiled strategy' tridereakeu after fourtind a half 'months '-failnre this to -all -others i'mpossible task wheal by the Germans. The struggle there, throngli thettragic death Of Int& Kit. however, hoe,' for two weeks, been over - theme the biggest job in the country shadowed by -the Movement first of the that of Minister of 'War, 'became vacant' RrissianS and then d the British and And at once everybody thought of 1.10d rrench,: Geer& tia the best matt to take Kitehen- At the same timethat the British, er's place; Ilat George was busy with rrilich and itnatianillave been winning the Irish tpiestion: Palmer ,Asquith, from the enemy, the Italians hare ben howevet does not tiPpest to have lost diijitig the Attstrians ant, a th'eif ORM- ) 'WIRT THEY WENT, (Daily Advertiser) ' The secret of the wild rusk of men to sc&nIP Bord130 is .O14," It was difffeiilt fer a time to understand WhY officers mid inen ilakti.x.fd be bundled. up, Withone con, sideration for:their battalion -or doniestle affairsat a time when the railways were not ready to handle the inovenient, and London camp depleted in a few hours, with tile teselt that 'the country lost Scopes Of good soldiers, and it • feeling' of , • , resentment and a sense Of initnit/ee vies :created in the minds of hundreds. mere. ' Prier.to his intending departure for• England,Sir Sam - Hughes, deeicled..Lte hold a review at Camp Borden on Tues- day. He did not realize that he was going to do thisuntil. a few, daysago; and then he commenced t�WOUdel whether Camp Borden, With the, troops then enceinpaci there, 'could produce a: review worthy Of Canada's Minister Of nilhitial It wad true that .he bad review-;:' ed the. 'troops at Lencion and 'ether • On tario cainps tefeiv days ago, and he was aware,. if he is capable ofjudgieg, what: - perfected. vt as ilheirs. Therefore it cold not have. been for thebenefit of the troeps that he erdeired. thein to ,Camp Borden. They.were not anziodtt teleave, and they -felt that they wereesbabbily. 6640. The ordei Was given in 'order that the vanity of $it Sam tItigheit might 'be.gratified: He:wanted all the riOnip and displeY that Could be Producedwest of Toreette in ceder that he inight feel greeter• ' thee elsTerc at his spectieli+s. ' lie cared not tor themilitart disadeanteges of playing .tricks .with the nen and:their cenneetnil„ "ties, nor did he give a thought LO the herslineSs of his action in • tearing :men fsoin their families .without leave and without warn i ng. . His pomposity caused hundreds 'and - hundreds of Men to deny the authority over 'their smile and _bodies.: of such a .strutter as Hughes. • They tOok "French leave" by the hundred.. One of the finest battalions ever raised in Canada, which . . was to leavei.iondon Saturday, had only a corporal's guard answer the roll When Saturday rjorning carne. They felt that while they weretreated fairly, the milie tiny authorities werejheir masters, but when there Was e display 9( what they: regarded as'Prussianism, they asserted. themselves as Canadians and, rightly or wrongly, they went to 8mA-heir families. The great. majority of them returned in time to depart for Camp Borden; but the diserganizing effect ofHughes' conduct will never be, altogether remedied. • Net, ai unworthy action has been Chalked' against the eleven battalions in.training in this city 'since they came here. 'Under the guidaece Of an , 'officer whoin they. trusted and respected, their down -town hmt , been perfect They • were ready to obey the last word.of their officers, .But . when .Sir 'Sam, Hughes. tried to make of them.so Many Chattels to be Used to niake a Roman:holiday for ti great bounder, theydeclined to agree. •.Nodoubt the matchless minister will rap put some great oaths when he hears of tt. But in the end -be will have had his grand reviete,althengh the 'pen sleep on stump, and so long as his "bounce". is served, that is all thetrmatterS. attend, d. anti .may soon cease to exist unfoss revised by church union, are Veil* AlletWeilt 'Sham • and Malcolm Obesley Enterprise, acquire the habit et health, by using 'Revell Orderlies, the Modern laxative. 1Se. mid 25e. Sold only at Resell thi• g Stcres.-j. G. ierniatrong. • Theinatt Limb, a Brant Township farm= Wing. near NIP.ilfrerfen, died nt nialiozx� on July th, titter two weeks' ii.10 WAS 08 years of age "ape belonged to .one ot the •olde40 families ot the township, go leaves a. widow and two sons, Q110 QU the farin,and on other 41.! engineer in the West .TVST i 'tiOLLIRWATION, --iteNtrditi" anirient Which oceurred. over ,in Oulross •SOme 'weeks • ago and *Well WM* people tbeeglo. *AO & ,Germen .CalPhretion el the death ot Eitehener, a party writing to the Miltiniay Gazette :had the, following; "There are half a dozen Wignant farmers on the 8th Concession of Quires% X few ,weeks ago they assembled atto home et George Staler and gav&iliM• a • 'Musa- wariniag, with thifessistance o1. ft, keg' of beer. Living in the Steilier 'resi- dence at the seine time.. "Were Mrs. ‘yrItlioph7frotr In? 4;01;1o01 rehnevantai;h. felker uagnhc; e 'eit t ebianped thatri g 11bNii di 8 ab;°,tcheed el:Q.:1(3;6111:ns- meat that she has been Unwell since The case was.taken to court and the bousewarmers were eaoh fined $6 and costs, amounting in all to $62:50. The • Teeswater trevvs; in reporting the case, refereed to tbsefarrners a "Germans", 411cl-the-London Free ft • ess to rgatbled- the report as ter leave. the impression that the Whole. affair , was a german plot of some kind. One of the 'Ger mans", • 'however, 'happens . to tie an Irishman and the other a are all 'Cana- • dian' born and well -to do citizente :and 'resent the tiym applied to them. The whole affair Was intended as an innce bit of amusemetiteind the partic-- ipants are certain that a.spitefril spirit, rather than a settee of injuries reeeieed, caused the Oak to be aired in oourt.'. 1 - BRUCE COUNTY. .MEWS .1 . The directors. �f the Ontario Salt & Soda Co, at Kincardine have:dent. • to go lin With the exte nsion to tbe • plant at Kincardine.- • 'The new -process • wiithe installed at once, but the dairy' plant will not be put in for:awhile. • . Mrs:John Newman; formerly Miss Eisie Hell, a the 10th Con. Culross, died in..the „general qospital, fteginti, Sask., on Juiie gOth. 'Mrs: Newnian had been ill for zevertal monthsee tier motherand beother, John, had, -gene west on her account. ' • •• HJSCARD EGG -EATERS • No flock of chickens will prove profitable if' they, are •consumers of their own prodnets. Egg eating is a vice Which has ruined 'a great many flocks of laying hens. See that your • hone havEraetessio plenty of grit and lime and are 'given -plenty or pretein- •content feeds Bran, middlings, meat, milk, alfalfa leates, 'vegetables • and sprouted grains .are all valuable in supplying the geed of protein and succulent 'feeds. . One broken or soft-shelled egg Will • - often start an entire flock in • the: 'habit of eating eggs. Furnish plenty of -attractive nests-Ao avoid crowding. It IS best to have nests secluded and darkened and rather high up. Some 'such device as filling an' eggshell with ground mustard paste or red 'pepper will often' break up the habit, but un- less they sire exceptionally • valuable • birds, confirrned' egg -eaters should be -dittaided. Cnoncni53 MAY Cvesn.- 'Country elnitchea, like the country .b1aciramithr shop andcountry-botel, have .ser, their day and generation well, and it 10°6 as though the disappearance of the two latter *arid the adVerit Of the horseless car and quicker transportation on good reads, that the country chuich. es wflJ, in many placers pass quietlY away too. four churches in thetleigh. borilood tf Ciieslei that are vsrsell. THE USEFUL TOAD CAPITAL, AND RESERVE': §8,800,009 06 orn'uoites 1Cung.tin - A (lenepti Nuking 611011066 Ttlinsacied Circular Letters of Credit. • Bank Money Qrders • SAVINGS I3ANK DEPARTAWNT Interest allOWCti at highest current at T., S. RID, Manager. e 111.~M.age, a CANA7)A '..Priee..C.Ospiefe.. $075..60 t!ob: 04tawA ..,,,C.otada's''Bigges.t..Cai Value . , 'DOES IT RIDE EASY HAS IT POWER IS IT ECONOMICAL. IS IT EASILY STEERED DOES itHOLD THE ROAR • rti buy the Ligeveolet youare getti-ig,„ a 'car that .1bolts like a $ woo. car alldf. that rides like a ooci car for $67E. I ASK AN OWNER 'IwirC:7 V.;M•111'- GEO. 11. SMITH '4ENT LUCKNOW 'Medicinal Substances Found In Secrei Hone of Loathed Greettirea • The toad has always been Jooke4 -.- • Upon as, locithseate, even. 'Pots:Mous. Yet ..modern Medical reseairch. is .0x., Arecting from toadskins remedieS of the • greatest value, and •the benpficent possibilities' of theSe. Secretion*, have. by no means been Mchausted. Quack remedies have long been made from the skins of toads, and.. the Chinese still use such an extract, • called "sen- sci," as a cure for dropsy. A- well known remedy, 'among' the New Ede lend colonists for sprains and rheu- matism was 4 toad ointment made. as follows: Four good4tiZed :live toads; put' into boiling water and nook very soft; then • take them out and boil the water down to hall's Pint, and add -fresh churned:, unsalted- butter, 1 • pound, and shrener together; at the last add thietyre Of arnica,. 2 ounces. The natitea.' of Brazil:make an• r .. • row peison from the creamy setretion • of the skin glands of a giant trotrical • toad, a pciison so powerful. that it killa • big. Mune . in a few nitneetite. ' From this. secretion • • Is also obtained a blood, pressure raising' medicine -in- valuable to the ',Specialist and the 'sur- geon, ' But , the Most valuable .and startling part of this- toad coectetiett Is the isolation of. a 'beautiful crystal- line Substance to which toadslOn owes its Curative powers for drepey,- Weems, strange that after a century's ridictile of . a toad Areatment for dropsy as a 'mere . •grandmother's rettiedy we should, pow find a;genuine. • ly Scientific eonfirreatien'of the prac- tice. It may be nble:cted, that all varietieti of toads do notnkite the same secretion as !the. giant ,toad from the Amtizon. but It has been ,found that another, crystalline substance, of very !miler properties, is -found skin of the common ,European toad... • • , Water Supplying Tree . • , . The rain tree of Colombia Measures about tO feet high whenteret•itteitifie and about 3 feet In diameter at the base. °It absorbs an immense quantity of moisture from the :atmosphere. vibleh It concentrates, and subsequent. ly Benda ',forth from -its leaves' and branches in 'a showr, in some in- stances so abundantly thatfrthe ground in its Vicinity Is converted 'into a quagmire. It possesses this Curious property, In its greatest degree In 'the, summer, precitely when the rivers are at their lowest' and . water moat scarce. • Deemer -of Insectir Beware of flies, mOttutilthen, all vett- mitt. liege them eff yotirself and your food. They are disease. cOnveyors. Lew ground fed by summer mina will breed mosanitoes by the billion. A tittle kerosene oit poured on cueh waters forme a film that prevetts tho ming Mosquitoes from getting out and kille theta, A. fey, t Oittis worth ofeti thug used may 'insure comfort 4gist out henti, It is not as easy to acquire the saving habit as to learn Yextrava; gance. The incentive to econo • jfllzc is_park very_ OpenLa_ Savings -Account at the Rink of Hamilton. Interest allowed on.de- • posits of One Dollar and upward. LUOKNOW BRANCH dapital Aputhorlzed $5,000,000 J. A. GLENNIE Manager. capital aid:up . $3,somoso Surplus - - - . $3,475.000 COOL 81-10ES for liot Weather ortiething Cool for the Feet .is Now i9 Dematicl We have a beautiful line of Pumps and Strap Shppers. in Viei Kid and Patent,' at prices from 1.75 up to $5 50. • „ • , We have a full line of Women's, Mis'ses' and Children's Outing • • Shoes. 'Barefoot Sandals for the kiddies:- just the thing for vacation. , • , - 1 r Sei-etir Ladie41 High Cut, Kid BO, ‘Tlassic•Make," ilifte ACKERT & •RATHWELL. "A GOOD SHOE STORE poi*, ALL „THE FAMILY" ' bitaresiefstrieMd~w4sakPlrawdf$04.#6,044011$04410%04~1.1144 1 'WEDDING BELLS. K ILYA TRICE --ISTOTII EDS Froth the Ogema (Sask.) Advocate: -- A. very pretV wedding was -soleinnized at the hiene of 11Irh and Mrs. George Stothers, Key West, when their daugh- ter, Mies Etta, wee United in holY That- eimony With E. A. Kilpatrick, in Sho presence of their most intimate frienela At twelve o'clock noon to the strains of :tire Wedding March, played by Miss Re Stothers, of Brandon, the bride -entered leaning on die arm of her father, and WOW. Ti. Comer Performed the Ceremony. The charming bilde was attired in white silk inarcinisette,, wearing the greotp's gift( a handsome pearl necklace, and carrying a beautiful large bouquet of bride's roses rind sweet peas . Rah, the little sistkr of thelnide„ acted as flower girl. After the ceremony the guests sat down to a sineptimea repast, and many were the congratulations and toasts 16 the hs.ppiness of the bride and groom, The brifje..W118 the recipient et .1ft/1y handsome end,toatly-giftseshowieg-'-thee high.esteem in which she hi' held by her •large:circle of friend's. 'Mr and Mrs. Kilpatrick, left on the 3 o'eloek tr tin in: spend their honeymoon at Ilatiff and other -western pointa of interest,: the bride wearing a travelling suit of , navy bine taffeta, with grey hat and gloiies, Tha 'Advptate Nita their many fried, in extendmg congratulatioas • and beat. wishes for a tininoth voyade over tho homy See of life, . . (DEFEND. theHOMEl Every wonuto knows the discomfort of of dusting --bet few real ize its dangers. Dust consists of very SIM!!l particles -of vertter-esome of theih.finely-ground mineral stibitences,tied the rest flaky atoms 01 dried vegetable and animal matter. As it is blown thrbakb the air, it -colleen; germs and microbes of every description and from all sorts theta ()lumen:ma little organisms, onto Fliers -anti carpets. Here it remains. a white„: constantly him -easing from More dusfialling on it, nud the mi- "crobes grow 1 n tinniber. , -*long comes Cbroont-the•heavter dirt is set -pt alcing, but the fine, gray, microbe -laden ciust is thrown up in cleudd, to settle on tables, clinic* wittdow-letlgea, picture 1raillei4 and every other place that a minute par tide can find a resting.place. As it 11 itS; it carries gernts of many dideases along which- are, breathed into the lungs oi the wallah who is doing thc swer pi fig, and of :children and every- body elsc in the house. 'When people are in a very good phyliical., condition, these disease germ siire 'filially ettecensfellyretested eeeett, ewhen ileum ti 0-wOleatir Or -child gets a little "rntedowli" or Mit of sorts, the body 110 Ionizer hat POwet to retider microbes harmleall, and then it is that dust germe carry the great- est danger of steknear or death. Use Diistbane Athea you sweep LUCKNOV1 HARDWARE sfs COAL - 20 -4 c�.1 blilliiillOVOR00, , 4014.1