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Exeter Times, 1915-7-1, Page 3FROM ERIN'S GREED ISLE NEWS BY MAIL FROM IRE- LAND'S SHORES. Happenings in• the Emerald Interest to Irish- men. Isle of Dr. Keelan, of Dunlea, has tendered his resignation to the Ardee Guar- dians after thirty-one years' service. The Lord Lieutenant of Ireland re- cently knighted the Lord Mayor of Belfast, 1Vir. Crawford McCullagh. A man named James O'Flynn was at Dublin sentenced to 14 days' im- prison ent for defacing 'a recruiting poster` At Strabane Sessions, Patrick Mc- Donnell, a violinist, was sentenced to prison for twoo months for discourag- ing recruiting. Intelligence has reached Dublin that Mr. C. R3 Faussett, the well-known Irish cricketer and athlete, has been killed in action. The death has occurred in Dublin of Mr. James Mullett, who was in- dicted in 1883 in connection with the Irish National "Invincibles," Private Joe Lau, 2nd Royal Irish Rifles, has arrived at the home of his widowed. mother, Downpatrick, having lost his right leg in the Aisne. Mr. Lear McDermott, • Dublin,for- mer editor of "Irish Freedom," was arrested at Tuam at a meeting held under the auspices of the 'Irish Vol- unteers. An influential meeting under the presidency df- Lord Bandon, Lord Lieutenant of Cork, was held at Corlc to protest against the Government's drink proposals. Aid nA.. tremendous public meeting in furtherance of the recruiting cam- paign was held outside the Customs House, Dublin, presided over by Mr. S. W. Maddock. J. J. Walsh, a councillor of Cork Corporation, was arrested at Mallow while on his way from Bradford to Cork. He was charged with making anti -recruiting speeches. A fatal gun accident occurred at River View, Loughill, County Limer- ick, when Mr. Patrick Purtell O'Shaughnessy was found dead with a discharged gun lying near him. The serious illness of His Grace the Archbishop of Dublin is announced. He was seized with a sudden attack of hemorrhage of the brain at the rec- tory, Bangor, County Down. Second Lieutenant Cecil J. T. Black, Royal Marines, youngest son of Mr. Win. Black, J.B., High Sheriff of County Monoghan, has been killed in action in the Dardanelles. Edward FitzGerald, of Clonmel, aged 73, a veteran of the Indian Mu- tiny and Afghan War, has died in a Clonmel hospital and was buried with military honors in St. Patrick's ceme- tery. A fieraa outbreak of fire occurred in ,Lower Abbey Street, Dublin, the result of which the Works of A. Arm srong & Co., were totally destroyed, 'and damage amounting to $150,000 was caused. It THE BRITISH EMPIRE. To Whom It Is Indebted For Its Phenomenal Expansion. When we look at the map of the world, we understand that the big red splashes represent continents, countries, islands innuenerabie, which own allegiance to King George. Who built this great Empire? One of the greatest builders was Captain Cook. Cook was the Yorkshire sailor - man who practically made the Em- pire a present of Australia, New Zea- land, andthe thousand and one isles and atolls of the Pacific. Of course, "there were others," as poor Teddy Payne used to say; but Australians look upon Cook as their "only be- getter." It is improbable that King George would to -day be Emperor of India had there never been a Robert Clive, a young fellow who forsook the clerk's desk for the battlefield. When he went to India he found a few trad- ing stations, but he left an Empire. If we turn to America two names spring to our lips, the founder of Vir- ginia and the conquerer of Canada. For two centuries it was a toss-up which should be top -dog in North America, France or England. If priority of settlement counts,. Britain had first call, for, Raleigh founded the colony oVirginia in the days of :Good Queen Bess, its name being meant as a compliment to that strong- minded woinan. But the French were verysolidly settled In Canada, .it seemed, when Wolfe so brilliantly captured Queboc, the Gibraltar of the St. Lawrence. There have been many find ' men connected with the development of Britishinfluence and power in Africa. Egypt was won in an hour's fight at Tel-el-Kebir by Wolseley; we owe the Soudan to Gordon and Kitchener; and the mast of Africa under the British 4g, firstly, to that mission- ary -traveller, Livingstone, and sec- ondly, to that organizing genius and man of business, Cecil Rhodes. To that little handful of, Hien, then, reliably the British Empire is chief - 1 • indebted for its phenomenal ex- anslon.—London Answers. 4. Exceptions. , "Do you believe that all's fair in /eve and war?" "I used to, but I don't any more." "I suppose the horrors of war 41µree changed your opinion," I "No, it isn't that, I lied to my wife THE DAWN OF YOUNG WOMANHOOD Girls upon the threshold of woman- hood often drift intoa decline in spite of all care ' and attention, Even strong and lively girls become weak, depressed, irritable and listless. It is the dawn, of womanhood—a crisis in the life of every girl—and prompt measures should be taken to keep the blood pure and rich withthe red tint of health. If the body is not in a healthy condition at this critical stage, grave disorders may result, and future life become a burden. Deadly con- sumption •often follows this crisis in the lives of young women. Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills have saved thousands of young girls from what might have been life-long invalidism or early death. They are a blood -builder of unequalled merit, strengthening weak nerves and producing a liberal supply of rich, red blood, which every girl needs to sustain her strength. Over and over again Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have proved their value to women and girls whose health was failing. Miss Jennie Gereau, St. Jer- ome, Que., says: "At the age of eighteen my health was completely shattered; I was suffering from. anaemia with all its attendant evils. The trouble forced me to leave school. I suffered from headaches, wastired and breathless at the least exertion. I had no appetite, and my face and lips were' literally bloodless. A good friend advised the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and thanks to this great medicine I am again enjoying good health, with a good appetite, good color and a spirit, of energy." Every anaemic girl can be made well and strong through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. SWISS GREAT AID TO KAISER. Factories Furnishing Material Des- tined for German Use. That the Germans are utilizing to the fullest every available neutral source for supplies of war equipment is made evident by reports that the leading machinery and electrical houses in eastern Switzerland are working to full capacity in furnishing material destined for German use. The German -Swiss shops have en- joyed up to the time that Italy en- tered the war free communication with the outside world, and raw material of all descriptions has freely entered Switzerland by Genoa, and thence reached Zurich over the St. Gothard route. Italy has now blocked exit by way of the St,. Gothard and Simplon of all trains carrying equipment which might in any way be of service to the German forces. Furthermore, Italy is commandeering such shipments which .might enter into projectile or engine parts. It is understood that for some time the Swiss plants were receiving ore shipments from Spain via Genoa and that much of the ore came from mines in Spain controlled by Krupp steel works on the Rhine are largely fed by ore shipments which come from Spain and navigate the Rhine. This supply by way of the Rhine has been shut off, and Germany is now dependent upon ore received largely from Austrian sources. The ship- ments of Swedish ore into Germany is still maintained, it is said, to some extent, and since the occupation of Northern France by German troops, the Germans have been able to ob- tain additional ore shipments from Douai district. The Rhenish coal mines are supplying the German steel works with sufficient coal, and no trouble is being experienced as yet in that direction. The Swiss shops are practically independent of coal, since they have recourse to electric current developed by the water power of the "Alps._ Every available machine shop in Germany is being worked, and has been worked for months to full capa- city. The majority of the skilled men at the machine tool and locomotive works have not been called into active service with their regiments, but are performing service, instead, at the benches. All these men so detailed in the shops wear their uniforms, and are rated as working for the State. GUARD BABY'S HEALTH IN THE SUMMER The summer months are the most dangerous to children. The complaints of that season, which are cholera in- fantum, colic, diarrhoea and dysentry, come on so quickly that often a little one is beyond aid before the mother realizes he i§ ill. The mother must be ori her guard to prevent these troubles, on if they do come on sud- denly, to cure them. No, other medi- eine is of such aid to niptilers during hot weather as is Baby's Qivn 'tab- lets. They regulate the stomach , and bowels and are ebsolutely stale, Sold by medicine dealers or by Mail at 25 ,pets a box from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. '14 Black Hand Business. •. Mrs. Exe•--"My husband get a let- ter to -day saying something dreadil would flaapsinal ypers i n lie didn"'t st, end the writer .4 Mrs, Wye -,“My husb.and gets dun- ned for his milli, tab." l G inalal lu thet Vnet0,,Ici yami�4 put end to tend *Mei aveteh 4,000 aklid she caught mo at it."WOO NQkIANO WILL ENTER WAR 13RITISII[ ARMY WILL HELP HER INVADE GERMANY, Since the Invasion of Belgium Hol- land Has Made Steady Pre- paration for War. In Paris I met an American friend of many years' residence in. Holland. He had just come from The Hague He said "Dutch anger is red ;hot Politicians won't be able to keep, the lid on much longer," An Englishman who bad just come with important despatches from Lon- don, said: "Watch the Dutch!" The positiveness of , this laconic method of giving no information was getting on my nerves. I devised all sorts of excuses to talk again and again with the Dutch Minister, writes John Martin, an American journalist. In one conversation he incidentally remarked: "Yes, we are stating offi- cially that we have but 250,000 men mobilized, but in reality we now have 400,000 on the frontier." That was enough. I determined to leave for Rotterdam on "personal business"' as soon as I could get the forty different types of passports ne- cessary to leave Paris, to cross the Channel, to get into and out of Lon- don: and to run over to Rotterdam. It was a long and tedious journey, but it was worth it. Everywhere in Rotterdam I found an air of suppressed feeling and of intense activity. The Beurs Station was packed. The Grotto Barket was crowded with people and produce. At Utrecht the old Rhine and the Vecht (the two rivers by means of which the Rhine empties into the sea) and the two great canals were all crowded with commerce boats sunk to the waterline. I met Von Hoorn, who simply re- marked: "We emarked:"We are ready." Holland is a beehive. All the ports, Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague, Leiden, Schieden, Delft, and Hoorn show an activity never before seen 4n Dutch cities. All western Holland is one gigantic storehouse filled with everything ne- cessary for the support of the Dutch people; with a surplus sufficient to meet the needs of an army during a nine months' campaign. All eastern and southern Holland is one great armed camp from the most north-eastern boundaries, op- posite Emden in Germany to Bergen - op -Zoom, north of Antwerp. large division is stationed at Feiden, with great supply l quarters at Zwolle, can move along three railway lines into Germany and also by water down the Rhine in the direction of Munsted and' Wesel and on toward the great Krupp Works at Essen, only a few miles further south and east. The Krupp Works .are strong- ly fortified but it is not necessary to take them. If the lines of communi- cation between Essen and the west- ern army are severed, that is suffi- cient Meanwhile the central army divi- sions are stationed at Arnhem, at the , Junction of two railway lines, and on the bank of the Rhine„ at Nijmengen and at Venloo, and Roermond. These divisions can move east and south by river and railway,'and sever the railway communications between Es- sen and Aix-la-Chapelle, British Army Ready. While Holland is 'a small country, it is long and narrow; the eastern frontier bordering Germany is two hundred and thirty-six miles long. !The frontier from which an advance 1 can be made into Belgium is over sixty miles long. The central army can move in two sections, one down the Rhine, past Wesel and Ruhrort, and the other from Arnhem to Crefeld by railroad. Both the Rhine and the railway in- tersect the German railway between Essen and Aix-la-Chapelle. To the movement of this central army there could be but little 'opposition. There is not a single German fort along the entire Dutch frontier. If the Germans attempted to with- draw any portion of their army fight- ing in Belgium and France, the French, Belgians, and English would have the opportunity they Have long been waiting for; and if the Ger- man armies were not withdrawn to prevent the Dutch invasion, the Dutch army, in 'two days, even with- out forced marches, could cut the four railway lines running from Essen, Cologne and Coblenz to Belgium and Luxemburg and two million German soldiers, all of those in the western army, with the exception of those in Alsace-Lorraine, would be cut off from their source of supplies. The western Germany army would then find itself with the English, French, and Belgians in front of it and the Dutch behind it. And not only the Dutch behind it, but 700,000 English also. The massing of great numbers of English troops in the east of England during the last few months has not been for the protec- tion of the English coast, but to be ready to aid the Dutch should Hol- land olland decide to move. From the east coast quick transportation to Holland is possible, and then—a rapid cam- paign from Holland's eastern border into Germany and toward Bremen, Hanover, and Berlin. Ready for War. Holland has imported during the last eight months many times the amount and manufactured materials she usually imports during a similar length of time. It has been supposed in Norway, in Sweden, and in America that this surplus of mater- ials was being secretly sent to Ger- many. While it is true that a large quan- tity of copper, cotton, wheat and medical supplies have found their way down the Scheldt and down the Rhine, yet the portion which has crossed the border into Germany is indeed small compared with the amount that has been placed in stor- age within Holland itself. Not only has Holland prepared as far as supplies are concerned, but earthworks and trench fortiflcatipns have been constructed along the west bank of the Meuse from Mook to Roermond a distance of fifty miles, and on the east bank of the Meuse from Roermond to Maestricht, a dis- tance of twenty-five miles. But even Germany is realizing that Holland is conserving within her own limits much of the produce which Germany expected to have passed on to her. It is for this reason that the German Admiralty gave instructions in December to the German -American friends in America to ship supplies to Bremen rather than to Rotterdam and Amsterdam. It is for this same reason that the . German Admiralty Office gave orders to its submarines to sink neutral supply ships coming to Holland either from Norway or Sweden or from America. Germany finally realized that if those products of Norway and Swe- den were specially intended for her- self they would have been shipped from the various ports in southern Sweden directly to ports in northern Germany, under the convoy of Ger- man cruisers controlling the Baltic Sea. .. Holland has arranged four great centres of supplies, one for a north- ern army, one for an eastern army, one for a central army, and one for a! southern army. Then there are great general supply centres at Am- sterdam, Leiden, Delft, Schieden and Rotterdam. And what can f1olland do? Can Pierce Germany. The northern army can move east from Groningen along the railway line toward Oldenburg, Bremen and Hamburg, In this way, any German. forces at Emden and Wilhelms- haven will be kept engaged so that they cannot; be sent south to interfere with the intended activities of the eastern and central armies. The southern :army can remain in - trenched all the way from Bergen- ep,-Zoon to Endhaven, while the left Wing of this army can move from behind the trenches at Maestricht and descend upon Liege, both by rail- way and along the Meuse, thus pre- venting Geriininy from sending ,her troops from Belgium to interfere with the action of the central army. In this way the southern army would Menace all railway communications between Liege and Germany. FRENCH FOREIGN LEGION. • Have Lost a Great Number of Men In the War. A London despatch says the French Foreign Legion has been doing bril- liant work in the fighting north of Arras. The casualties in the legion have been very heavy, and a letter re- ceived in London from a wounded member states that in his company of 250 men only 60 are left. The letter says: "The legion had the honor of being chosen to be the first out of the trenches and to take the German lines with the bayonet. This was at a point between Souchez and Carency. Pre- vious to the attack, there was a terri- ble bombardment of the German posi- tion. "French guns of all calibres were firing together fortwo hours without interruption. It was like an earth- quake. Suddenly, punctually at ten o'clock in the morning, the firing ceased, and the `Charge' was sounded. "We were out of the trenches like Iightning. It was wonderful. We were like a storm. In ten minutes we had won the first line of German trenches. But there was no stopping us. We kept it up hammer and tongs for an hour and a half, taking three lines of the enemy's trenches and driving the enemy in front of us. "By this time all the officers of our company were either killed or wound- ed, so a sergeant took command, and We entrenched ourselves as best we could, but finally had to retire about a hundred yards. "Here I got two wounds. Four in every five of our men were either killed or wounded in that fierce charge." .k Four Times, Three. "Waiter," he suggested mildly. "I want three eggs, and boil them four minutes," But the cook, having only one in the:place, boiled it twelve minutes. Which proves the value of higher mathematics. The oaStern army of which a very ED. 7. ISSUE 27—'15. A Nova Scotia Case of Interest to All Women Halifax Sends Out a Message of Help to Many People, Halifax, N,S., December 15,—When interviewed at her home at 194 Argyle St„ Mrs, Haverstock was quite willing to talk of her peculiarly unfortunate. case. "I was always `blue' and de- pressed, felt weak, languid and utterly unfit for any work. My stomach was so disordered that I had no appetite. What I did eat disagreed. I suffered greatly from dizziness and sick head- ache and feared a nerous breakdown. Upon my druggist's recommendation I used Dr, Hamilton's Pills; I felt better at once. -Every day I improved. In six weeks I was a well woman, cured' completely after differ- ent physicians had failed to help me. It is for this reason that I strongly urge sufferers with stomach or diges- tive troubles to use Dr. Hamilton's. Pills." Dr. Hamilton's Pills strengthen the stomach, improve digestion, strength- en the nerves and restore debilitated systems to health. By cleansing the blood of long-standing impurities, by bringing the system to a high point of vigor, they effectually chase away weariness, depression and disease. Good for young or old for men, for women, for children. All dealers sell Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. • WHERE EVERYBODY HELPS. By Prof. Creelman, Ontario Agricul- tural College. Statistics go to prove that the most successful farmers are those who keep their sons and daughters at home and interested in some phase of the work. One's own folks, of course, take a greater interest in the building up of the farm and the farm home than can be expected of mere hired help. Also a man or woman can plan work and carry it out better where home folk only are engaged in the transaction. Then why not make a special ef- fort this year to interest everyone in the old homestead? It . niay not be the glamor of the city that steals our young people, but rather the desire to earn wages and save money of their very own -wages or a life partner- ship might do. Times are very bad in cities now. Perhaps your boy or girl would come back if you offered a partnership in your business. Perhaps a good farm- er in your locality has been spoiled by trying to run a street car or shovel snow in some large "town. Perhaps your girl is tired, so tired, of trying to make an honest living, working for people who have no personal interest in her welfare. Offer her a ten -dollar - a -month -and -board chance to live with those she loves best, and then plan a poultry or dairy bee campaign to get the money back. I have not much confidence in the cry "Back to the land" when it ap- plies to men and women without ru- ral experience. I. haveevery con- fidence however, in .farm boys and girls coming home to familiar work. If you have no boy or' girl to bring back, just stop to think of some neighbor's child whose parents are perhaps dead. Write to such a one, and I am greatly mistaken if you will not find such a response as you never anticipated. Young Canadians are proud and independent. They will suffer in si- lence and pretty nearly starve before asking help—but many a one writes me now that he or she would gladly return to the country if some definite arrangement could be entered into of a business sort, whereby the business could be run as a partnership and where hard work would be rewarded with adequate remuneration. Oh, if we could keep our young people on the farm and bring back all who would come we should soon solve the problem of increased pro- duction. INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY Wanted capital to develop one of the most valuable natural resources in the Dominion, unlimited quantity of raw material to be manufactured into a commodity for which there is an al- most unlimited demand. If you have one hundred to five hundred dollars or more to invest where your investment will be well secured, then write for particulars and prospectus which will convince you of the absolutely sure and large returns. Address P.O. Box 102, Hamilton, Ont. Monkeys That Roar Like Lions. There are few countries where there are as many interesting and unusual animals as in the jungles and forests of Panama. The strangest of these are "the black howlers." These are monkeys, and they re- semble other monkeys but they roar like lions. They frighten hunters away as much as do genuine lions. When there are a half dozen of them or more together the noises they make are almost deafening. Ti is they who frequently make a queer, booming and roaring howl that resounds from one end of the jungle to the other, Rivals of these are the noisy parrots that shout in the morn- ing until the jungle fairly rings with their tumult. There are also the grotesque toucans which at times vie with the parrots, the calling of the parrakeets and the peculiar Chorus - like call of the c lac alaca orild turkey. At night mysterious n io res are heard everywhere from unknown sources, but the strangest of these are the strange monkeys, lsaincod'o Liniment Muss Dlylttltexia. Always Harvest -time, Not all of us, probably, understood, a statement that Britain might soon be expecting cargoes of wheat from the Argentine, because we are so accustomed to our own August har- vest -time. But the harvests of the world are spread practically ever every month in the year, and that is whythe sup- ply of wheat is continuous. The har- vest in Australia, New Zealand, and the ,Argentine, is reaped in January. Eastern India and Upper Egypt reap. theirs in February and March. The German harvest is also ahead of ours being, inl favorable conditions, reap- ed in July,. Not all have realized that part of • the far-reaching war plans of the Germans was to declare war when everything had been "safely gathered in," and the laborers free to be called up for another "harvest," Turkey, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Southern France, and the vast wheat - growing tracts of the United States (Georgia, Louisiana, Alabama, Vir- ginia, Kentucky, Kansas) gather their harvests in June. Other parts are ripe in July. Canada has two har- vest months—July in Upper Canada, August in Lower Canada. Northern Russia's harvest is ready in September, or even as late as Octo- ber, as is Scotland, Norway, and Sweden. The Burmah harvest is in December; that of . South Africa in November. Texas and Florida have May harvests. Belgium, Holland, Denmark, and important Manitoba, are, like our- selves, August reapers. • Corns Applied in Cured fSom srggnlehed uicktoes can be coned by Putnam's Ex- tractor in 24 Ihsin's. "Putnam's" s" sootiie8 way that drawing paia, eases +tant- thy, makes the feet feel good at once. 'Get a 25c. bottle of "Putnam's today. Unexpected Chicken. A stranger arriving in a small town hailed a passing resident and in- quired, "Can you direct me to a place where they take boarders?" "Hemmandhaws keeps 'em," the man replied. "Is that a pretty good place?" "Fair to .middlin':' "Have chicken very often for din- ner?" "Reg'lar and unexpected." "What do you mean by regular and unexpected?" "They have chicken reg'lar every Sunday— "( see"— "And they also have it when an automobile unexpectedly kills one in the road." 5 Seconds Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Dear Sirs,—This fall I got thrown on a fence and hurt my chest very bad, so I could not work and it hurt me to breathe. I tried all kinds of Liniments and they did me no good. One bottle of MINARD'S LINI- 11iENT, warned on flannels and ap- plied on my breast, cured me com- pletely. C. H. COSSABOOM. Rossway, Digby Co., N.S. Best Hour for Work. It is a curious fact in psychology that nobody can stay at the same mental and physical level for twenty- four hours together. In the morning you are more matter-of-fact, for in- stance, than later in the day. It is in the morning that the best brain work is done—brain work of the sort that requires industry and clear thinking. And it is about eleven in the morning that our body reaches its highest point of energy. In other words, you are stronger, though almost imperceptibly, at eleven in the morning than at three in the afternoon. You reach that highest point twice in the day, for about five in the afternoon the muscu- lar energy has risen again. But from five onward it declines steadily all through the evening, and on till be- tween two and three o'clock in the morning. ns3nard'e Liniment Cures target in Cows Forests sometimes take fire through the branches of trees being rubbed together by the violence of the wind, and thus producing the friction ne- cessary to ignite them. "La Marseillaise" obtained its name from the fact that it was first sung in Paris by a band of revolu- tionaries hailing from Marseilles. FOR EVERY SPGR SAND RECEEATIO SOLD BY AZT, GOOD NUM DEALERS' WORN HY EVERY 141Ehlwatt Or= rAmlg,T No Terror. "Have you thought of the expense of living if you marry my daughter? Have you considered the bills? • "Bills have no terror for me, sir," "They haven't? Why not?" "Nobody will trust me, sir." Minard's Liniment: Cures Colds, Eto. The Usual Fate. "I suppose the seeds you planted are coming up fast?" "Yes, indeed. Almost as fast as our neighbor's chickens can work." ;, LOW FARES TO THE CALIFORNIA EX. POSITIONS VIA CHICAGO & NORTH- WESTERN RV. Four splendid daily trains from the New Passenger Terminal, Chicago to San Pram. cisco, Los Angeles and San Diego. Choice of Scenic and Direct Routes through the ' best of the West. Something to see al11. the way. Double track. Antomatio ileo -1 trio (safety signals all the way. Let us 1 plan your trip and furnish folders and full particulars. B. H. Bennett. G.L. 46 Yong, Bt., Toronto, Ontario, Sewed Up. "How did you get that stitch in your side?" "Oh, I got hemmed in a crowd." YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU Try, MurIne EyeAemedy for ted, Weak, Watery Eyes andG anulejtEidi jelidq; No smarting'.. just ys Cota ort.<VVrito;or Book of the Eye bymailFree. Muria-9E4name ".Co.,Chicago. In the sixteenth century dictionaries were chained in the schoolhouses as Bibles were in the churches, by rea- son of their costliness and rarity. ffiinard's Liniment Cures Distemper. The ten countries with the Iargest populations are, in the order named, China, India, Russia, the United , States, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, France, Italy and Austria. 1 FARMS FOR RENT. -FP LOOKLNG FOR A FARM. CONSULT me. I have over Two Hundred on my list, located in the best sections of On. ' tario. All sizes. H. W. Dawson, Brampton.. NEWSPAPERS POE SAME. PROFIT-MAILING NEWS AND JO$ Offices for sale in good Ontario towns. The most useful and interesting of all businesses. Full information on application to Wilson Publishing Com- WOOL. PACT OOL, WOOL, WOOL. SELL DIREOT 0 and get the top prices. 35 cents for tub washed wool, 25 cents unwashed, Large or small lots bought. Check sent same day shipment received. Tarshis & Sons, 92 Wellington, Montreal. RECORDS. ALL BILTIiT•S'B: GRAMOPHONE RE- CORDS. 10 -in. double aide, 60o. each, Send $1 for special introductory offer of two records (four selections), including 11.M. Irish Guards Band. Catalogue free. Guardsman Record Agency, 210 Board of Trade, Montreal. MISCELLANEOUS. A i ANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC., R.J internal and external, cured with- , out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Belluian Medical Co., Limited, Collingwood. Ont. "Americi, Sancud 4 Cyclo MrirIne Motor" . Cyrle, 4 CYllndor 10 t o i�. P. Hipl,ad yuan Ity ellent apa,aIon. ot• bratlan Conlrola like the tint blee , es cutins, $ntromoly - p};•n " o .,,, eaonomIIn,t on foal, .ad et slepdard opal 1,001.0 boat buider, septal loon reauog8 RM to oat pendL, Oon ay5nnment. y Are.M.' S. KeaMarH irFs. co. stoi, � othoit, filth, r Y nL'..:!CT.".1!hM-TtS.srFrlk„ • ax Paddles, eels ions, Oars, Seats,' dugs, and all Canoe and Skiff The Peterborough Canoe C Limited. PET SEllOC O QI, ONT. "Darer. ern" V , 1i93tom e_ Motor ac at reigilt Prepaid ' to any Railway Station in, ntario. Length 15 Ft., Boam 3 Pt. 9. In., Depth' 1 rt. 6 In, ANY MOTOR FI$'l , ,Specification No. 2B g"Iving engine prices on request. Get our quotattone sib "The 'Penetang Line" Oommeraal and Pleasure Launches, kto' l boats and Canoes: , THE GIDLEY BOAT CO., LIMITED, PENETANG, CAN. .. 00