HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1915-7-29, Page 7GERIVIAN OFFICERS'
DARING ESCAPE
FROM INTERNMENTCAMP ,ter
LOFTIIOUSE l.'a4RK.
Effected Escape Through Clever Ruse
and Crossed to Europe as
Stowaways,
A remarkable story of an enemy
prisoner's escape—beginning like a
chapter of "Monte Cristo" and end-
ing with the narrator's safe arrival
i
., n a safe corner of the Continent, is
told in Stockholm.
June 2nd the London Daily
Chrroiicle published the following an-
nouncement:—
Two German prisoners who es-
caped from the internment camp at
Lofthouse Park (between Wakefield
and Leeds), on Friday, May 28th, are
still at large.
The two men are Frederick N.
Wiener, who was transferred to Loft -
house Park from Edinburgh Castle
on April 29th; and Alfred Klapproth,
formerly an officer on a Hamburg -
America liner, and a German naval
reservist.
Wiener is 35 years of age, stands
5ft. 1lin,, is dark, and speaks English
fluently with an American accent.
The other is 30, 5ft, 8in.' in height,
stout of build, and speaks English
imperfectly..
A Clever Ruse.
Reuter's Amsterdam correspondent
!supplies the following interesting
• version of Wiener's adventures as
given by himself:—
The
imself:—The Frankfurter Zeitung quotes
yeeefrom the Aftonblad of Stockholm an
account from Lieut. F. N. Wiener, an
Austrian officer, of his experiences in
escaping from the internment at
Wakefield.
Lieut. Wiener, who had settled in
America, was on his way to Austria
when captured by a British warship
and brought to Kirkwall, being sub-
sequently interned in Wakefield with
a German naval officer of the name
of Alfred Klapproth.
These two officers decided to at-
tempt to escape together. Their first
plan, to dig a subterranean passage
to freedom, had to be abandoned, as
it took up too much time, so they re-
sorted to other tactics. They order-
ed sporting costumes from the camp
tailor in order to appear as British as
possible. They were also able to pro-
cure gold to the extent of £30.
Then they asked to see the censor
knowing that he would not be in his
house at the time.
Talked His Way to Freedom.
From the censor's office (says Wie-
ner) we went to the guard -room, and
I was able, thanks to my perfect
command of English, to give the im-
pression, that we were British officers.
A fern generalities a,out military
matters to the men on duty complete-
ly dispelled any lingering suspicion
they may hare had, and we succeeded
•)1''` in escaping without molestation, after
climbing a park wall about eight me-
tres high.
Our first objective was Leeds, the
nearest big town. There we bought
two first-class tickets to Manchester,
without, however, making use of them,
but travelling instead by third-class to
Liverpool. Of course, we were in-
dustriously searched for in Manches-
ter, and thus gained invaluable time,
We went to London from Liverpool,
but did not venture to stay at an
hotel, fearing discovery. We spent
a. week_ living over nights in restau-
rants, night cafes and dancing sa-
loons.
From English to French.
Meanwhile, we read with much sat-
isfaction reports of our escape in the
papers. As my description in these
reports stated that I spoke English,
with an American accent, we now
spoke only French, and gave our-
selves out to be Frenchmen. Inci-
dentally we dropped the commander
of the camp a postcard stating that
we were no longer speaking "Am-
erican," but French.
After various vain attempts to se-
cure passage on a cargo boat, we
were finally able to steal on board
the Danish steamer Tomsk, where we
hid in one of the holds, crushed be-
tween bales and boxes, without food
or drink. We spent four dreadful
days and nights until we reached Co-
penhagen, where we again made pas-
sing acquaintance with a prison. My
companion has already gone to Ger-
sen ny, and I propose going on to Aus-
tria as soon as I am able to complete
certain personal affairs,
►;2
Restrained Applause.
A noted humorous lecturer, who
was invited to deliver an address to
an audience of convicts in a Western
penitentiary, noticed that the audi-
tors laughed heartily, but did not ap-
plaud.
After the lecture the warden of the.
instittiegin ventured an apology,
"They didn't seem very apprecia-
tive, did they?" he asked,
"I thought they seemed to enjoy
it very much," the lecturer replied.
"But they might have clapped a
little," the warden remarked, "instead
of just sitting there with their hands.
folded."
"Well, well!" the lecturer laughed,
"I noticed that they sit with their
hands folded, nut I thought they
were all .manacled."
4s.
Le recent years Germany's birth-
rate
irthrate has been falling three times as
rapidly as Britain's.
V
SUMMER COMPLAINTS
KILL LU1'LE ONES
At the first sign of illness during
the hot weather give the little ones.
Baby's Own Tablets, or in a few
hours he may be beyond cure. These
Tablets will prevent summercorn-
plaints if given occasionally to th
well child and will promptly cur
these troubles , if they come on sled
denly. Baby's Own Tablets shoul
always be kept in every home wher
there are young children. There f
no other medicine as good and th
mother has the guarantee of a goy
ernment analyst that they are abso
lutely safe. The Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 2
cents a box from The Dr. Williams.
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
44
PIE CULTURE.
(By Peter McArthur,)
An article published some days ago
in which I mentioned the fact that the
cherry pie was at one time considered
the supreme test of a housewife, or
rather, the test by which it might be
discovered whether a girl was com-
petent to be a housewife, has brought
me a good story from Dr. Hugh Mac -
Callum, of London, According to him
the cherry pie plays a much wider
part than I suggested in the life of
the New England States. He says:
"At a medical banquet which I
once attended our great Dr. Osler, of
Oxford, stated that Dr. Weir Mitchell,
of Philadelphia, had once put his cul-
ture to the final test. Dr. Mitchell,
who was present, nodded gravely.
"'He gave me a piece of cherry pie
to eat and watched me while I ate it.'
"Once more Dr. Mitchell nodded.
"'And,' continued Dr. Osler, `I ate
it to his entire satisfaction.'
"Dr. Mitchell applauded enthusiasti-
cally."
Naturally the assembled medical
men wanted to find out how a cherry
pie should be eaten for the test was
one that any of them might be obliged
to face at any time.
"All we could learn," said Dr. Mac -
Callum, "was that he ate it with a
spoon and that he rejected the pits."
This information contains the possi-
bilities of much further discussion. It
will be news to the eaters of factory
made pies and even to housekeepers
who are making their own cherry pies
during this cherry season, that the
cherries should always be used with
their pits. Also the writers of books
of deportment must record the fact
that in the case of the cherry pie the
fork must give place to the spoon. But
the most important fact is that no
matter how a cherry pie is eaten it is
the best pie that is made.
EMBRACE ON BATTLEFIELD
Relatives Who Were Enemies Figured
in Moving Incident.
STEIBER, MASTER
SPY OF GERMANY
MAN WHO, BUILT UI' ,INTELLIG-
ENCE DEPARTMENT.
e Stieber First Claimed .to Be So-
cialist to Betray Rio
d Friends,
e
$ In 1818 at Merseberg, in, Prussia,
e was born the man who if not the Fath-
- er of the Prussian spy system, at any
rate was its chief organizer and its
developer to the point at which im
5
provement seems impossible, writes
A moving incident is related by an
Italian soldier in a letter home. He
writes:—
"The
rites:-"The other day, before the morn-
ing mists had cleared, one of our pat -
rolls found themselves opposite a
trench containing about 20 Austrians.
Our men, eight in number, charged
with the bayonet, and taking the en-
emy unaware, put them to flight.
"Six were taken prisoners, and an-
other tried to hide. One of our men
saw him, and gave chase. The Aus-
trian fired at his pursuer, who fired
back.
"At last the Italian came up with
the fugitive and sprang on him to
take him prisoner. They pitched into
one another for some minutes, and
then the Austrian surrendered.
The two men looked at one an-
other, and suddenly rushed into one.
another's arms again, and kissed each
other like long -lost brothers.
It turned out they were brothers-in-
law from the frontier district. The
Austrian had married the Italian's
sister. They were horrified when
they found they had been shooting
at one another, but delighted that
neither had been sucessful.
Getting Back.
"My cook left this morning merely
because I asked her to get dinner
for a few friends of mine."
"I hired her, my dear, and I don't
mind giving you a chance to get back
at her. Bring your friends over to
my house for dinner."
CHANGE THE VIBRATION
It Makes for Health.
A man tried leaving off meat, po-
tatoes, coffee, etc., and adopted a
breakfast of fruit, Grape -Nuts with f
cream, some crisp toast and a cup of f
Postuln. i
His health began to improve at
once for the reason that a meat eater
will reach a place once in a while
where his system seems to become
clogged and the machinery doesn't
work smoothly.
A change of this kind puts aside
food that is slow to digest and takes
up food and drink of the highest
value, already partly digested and
capable of being quickly changed into
good, rich blood and strong tissue.
A most valuable feature of
t e Grapes
p
Nuts is the natural mineral elements
(phosphate of potash, etc.,) grown in
the grains from which it is made.
These elements are absolutely nee
cessary for the well-balanced re- t
building of body, brain and nerves. t
A few days' use of Grape -Nuts will p
show one a way to physical and d
mental strength well worth the trial. f
Look in pkgs. for the little book,
"The Road to Wellville," "There's a
Reason."
Mr. Morley Acklonz.
The parents of Stieber were of the
middle class and in easy circum-
stances, and they apparently destin-
ed their son for the Prussian bar, for
he became an unsuccessful lawyer.
In 1847 we find him attached as le-
gal adviser to a factory in Silesia
owned by two brothers named Schoef-
fer. Silesia was in those days the
breeding ground of socialism, and the
Schoeffer factory was honeycombed
with the new doctrines,
Stieb"er was on the lookout for
some way of advancing himself in
the social scale, and he not only man-
aged to marry the daughter of one of
his employers but he induced the
other to join the Socialist brother-
hood of which he himself had already
become a member with the idea of
penetrating its secrets and methods
for the information of the Berlin
police.
Incited by Stieber, Herr Schoeffer
became such an ardent recruit and s
violent in his utterances that he- wa
arrested and imprisoned for urgin
Silesia to revolt.
Having thus shown the authorities
by causing the arrest of one of hi
own relatives, that he was a suitabl
instrument for their purposes, Stieb
er was rewarded by being called t
Berlin and attached to the secret po-
lice with the express commission of
breaking up the Socialist organiza-
tion in the capital.
• The enthusiastic letters of intro-
duction which he brought with him
from the various revolutionary
bodies in Silesia insured his welcome
among the Socialists of Berlin, and
he speedily became an influential and
trusted Socialist leader, on one oc-
casion heading a great procession of
Socialist societies through the streets.
Presented to King.
It was on this occasion that he was
presented to King Frederick William
He notes in his memoirs that the
King was uneasy at the appearance
of such numbers of Socialists, and
that he reassured the monarch by tell-
ing him that every precaution had
been taken for his safety.
Whether the fact of their leader
having spoken to royalty made the
Socialists suspicious of his good
faith or whether in other ways some
whisper of his duplicity came to
their ears is not certain, but. it is a
fact that from this time on he was
frowned upon by the Socialist clubs
and that he was shortly afterwards
taken into the King's personal ser-
vice and made a "polizeirat," or po-
lice councillor.
In this position his business was
no longer to orate to deluded crowds
and preach the abolition of police and
monarchy, but to keep a close watch
on the police officials of the kingdom
and report to the King personally on
their activities and loyalty. This
business of spying upon spies suited
him so well that when the chief of
police complained to the King of Stie-
ber's interference and accused him of
being a traitor Frederick William
bluntly told the official that he trust-
ed Stieber more than any one in the
Kingdom.
Shortly afterward Stieber was ga-
zetted
a
zetted official head of the Secret
Service and set about organizing that
army of civil spies, as apart from the
regular police system, which by 1870
had grown to the number of 35,000.
His emissaries covered the court it-
self, the Government officers, banking
and commercial houses throughout
the kingdom, as well as all persons
who were in any way connected with
foreign countries.
By 1860 his system of observation
had been extended beyond the bor-
ders of Prussia to Austria, Bohemia,
France, Luxemburg and Saxony.
Stieber's particular duty in his
new position was to supply the Prus-
sian army headquarters with topo-
graphical, social and military infor-
mation, about Bohemia, which Bis-
marck had marked out as the route
which the Prussian armies were to
ollow in their invasion of Austria,
or which he was even then prepare
ng, although the two countries were
I
acting together as close
friends and allies.
Build Great System.
Stieber disguised himself as a
pedlar and, taking a pack full of sta-
tuettes of the saints and pornographic
pictures, he travelled for over two
ears along the routes which the Prus-
sian armies marched in 1866 to Sad -
eve, minutely reaping the country
nd collecting so much valuable mili-
ary detail that even Von Moltke was
d . When
stone ed the war ended
tieber 'became a Privy Councillor of
russia and National Minister of
olice.
The war of 1866 thus insured the
triumph of the spy master and, led
o the permanent adoption of the
rinciples for which the stood as ear-
inal institutions on which, in the
uture, both the military and civil
overnors of Prussia were to rely.
Not content with his other multi-
farious activities Steiber also under.
0
a
t
a
S
P
P
g
0
s
g'
s
e
0
took to attend to the French news-
paper press during the war of 1870
and in the two years preceding.
Through l3ismarck he aplied for
and obtained a subvention worth
$75,000 annually for the purpose of
making important French papers
"talk Prussian » and by 1870 he
claimed 'to control nearly a hundred
writers in Paris and Provincial dailies
and weeklies.
When the invasion of France was
an assured success Stieber took up.
his quarters in Versailles near the
King of Prussias and organized a mob
of his spies and agents, withdrawn
from the already conquered districts,
into a crowd who used to line the
streets and cheer the Ring of Prussia
whenever he made his appearance in
public, thus putting an artistic finish
to his work by creating the impres-
sion in France that William I, was
being acciairlied daily by enthusiastic
Frenchmen,
Stieber did not cease his activities
for the Prussianization of Europe
with. the colossal coup of 1870-71. He
remained Bismarck's closest intimate
and by 1880 had worked out a scheme
for the military organization of the
Empire, of which the effects are still
felt.
Stieber died in 1892, wealthy, fear-
ed and theoretically respected.
The results of his system are com-
ing to light daily. When the invad-
ing army of 700,000 Germans entered,
Brussels last year and proceeded at
once to distribute themselves in and
around the city without confusion or
delay the world aplauded the military
genius of Von Kluck, whereas it
should have paid its compliments to
Stieber's successor, Herr Steinhauer,
and his agents who, as long as two
years before the svent, had marked
down the hotels in which the staff of-
ficers were to be lodged.
HEAD OF ORDNANCE DEPT.
British Officer in Charge of Ordn-
ance Dept. Has Cousin in the
German .Army.
Canadians have been amazed to
learn since the war began the great
number of Germans and people of
German descent who have succeeded
in getting into high places in the old
land. Many of them are doubtless
loyal to the Union Jack, but it was
not long after the war started, before
the British public began to insist that
people bearing German names had
to get out of public positions, whether
proven guilty of disloyalty or not.
Better be sure than sorry. Prince
Louis of Battenburg, who was First
Sea Lord of the Admiralty, was the
first to go. Sir Edgar Speyer, a Privy
Councillor, was another for whom
things became so hot that he had to
leave for the States. Lord Haldane
was forced to retire from the Cabinet
because he had been a great admirer
of Germany, which he declared was
his "spiritual home." I. T. Lincoln
was the Anglicized name of an Aus-
trian who became a member of Par-
liament, and then betrayed his trust,
flying to America a short time ago to
avoid arrest. And the list might be
greatly extended.
The other day a despatch read that
Lloyd George had determined that
General Sir Stanley Von Donop, mas-
ter -general of ordnance, had to go.
This was accompanied by the rather
startling statement that Kitchener
General Sir Stanley von Donop.
and Von Donop were great friends,
and that the latter's retirement would
involve the former's. Who is this
man with the German name at whose
door has been placed the blame for
the British army's scandalous defici-
ency in shells, ammunition, and
guns?
Sir Stanley has the misfortune to
belong to an old German family, One
of its most conspicuous members is
Stanley's cousin, the Prussian gener-
al, Hans von Donop, for several years
grand master of the household to the
Kaiser's brother-in-law, Prince Fred-
erick Leopold of Prussia, inspector -
general of the cavalry ,of the Ger-
man army. General Hans von Don-
op, since the beginning of the present
war, has been commanding a division
of German cavalry in France,
General Sir Stanley von Donop is
a son of the late Vice -Admiral von
Donop of the British navy, is a bro-
ther of Lieut, -Col. Pelham von Don -
op, chief Government inspector of
railroads, and joined the Royal Ar-
tillery 25 years ago, the only active
service which he has seen having
been in the Boer war. Before be-
coming master -general of the ord-
nance he was for several years di-
rector of artillery at the War Depart-
hent.
$1,000 REWARD
FOR A OAgE OF JN RRABLE CON-
3TIPA!"rQI'
To any person who cannot be cure
of Constipation by Dr.' Ilamilto.
Pills, the above reward will be paids
No medicine gives such.lastin
satisfaction or effects awl' marve
lour cures as. Dr. Hamilton's Pills.
Relief instantly follows • their use,
That blinding headache goes forever,
that feverish feeling in the skin is
soothed away, bilious fits and stomach
disorders are stopped.
Don't be nervous about using Dr.
Hamilton's Pills; they are mild
enough for a. child to use; yet certai
and effective in action in the mos
chronic cases. Get a 25c. box to -day;
they bring and keep robust good
health.
ONTARIO DAIRY PRODUCTS.
A model dairy farm for the pur-
poses of demonstrating rotation and
the value of alfalfa and corn for en-
silage will be . one of the features
of the Ontario Government dairy ex-
hibit at the National Exhibition, To-
ronto. Mr. Geo. A. Putnam plans
to locate the model farm in the south-
west wing of the building and nearby
will be another innovation, an exhibit
showing the value of concentrated
foods.
He expects to have an unusually
large and representativ ing of
Ontario dairy products intends
making the exhibit as practical and
instructive as possible. In this work
he will have the assistance of several
Government officials, who will be en-
gaged in making a number of demon-
strations, including the sediment test,
cow testing, care and testing of milk
and cream.
The Niagara Fall ofmilk will again
be a feature, the flow showing the
production of milk in the Province,
and the proportions into which the
total is divided for. cheese and but-
ter -making, city consumption, etc.
It has again been decided to dis-
tribute samples of Cheddar cheese
and to demonstrate in a practical way
the relative food value of dairy pro-
ducts.
The great success of the Quebec
contingent in the butter section a
year ago has stimulated the spirit of
emulation among the people of the
adjoining province and this year there
has been a large increase in the num-
ber of requests for entry forms from
the dairy schools all over Quebec.
THE NEEDS OF THE RED CROSS.
Harvesting the Crop.
According to C. B. R..advices there
is likely to be a shortage of farm la-
bar in the west in the fall, There
are already over 10(1,000 of our Can-
d adian young men under arms, and
n,the Ivor may demand }Wore. 'Milli.gration is, of course, at a standstill,
" It will be impossible to get men from
the east, where men are scarce, and in
I- any case the west does not waist men
who, after the harvest, 'would be a
burden.on the people,
The question is, •where will the men
came from? The press is advising the
farmers to hire men now and to hire
them for a year in advance. There
is, indeed, talk of a famine of un-
skilled labor in the fall. Many thou-
sand of l
s men, not merely from Can-
t oda, but the States, have left for
Europe, since the war started. Where
will the men come from, and particu-
larly- in view of the added acreage,
which will mean more labor, as there
3s fully 30 per cent, of increase under
cultivation? The States expects the
largest crop in its history; and ex-
perts in the west insist that our crop,.
if the favorable conditions are main-
tained, will be the largest that we
have produced. It is now the ques-
tion of labor that is agitating the
minds of the farmers, Several towns
and municipalities have suspended
their programme of public ,work in
order that all the laborers possible
should be on the land for the harvest.
The Red Cross need is like the
widow's cruse of oil—it is inex-
haustible. Fully to meet that need
would require a purse like the wid-
ow's cruse. Such a purse is a fin-
ancial miracle, but the Red Cross
must ask the Canadian people to per-
form that miracle.
Every time you read a report of a
battle do you realize that it means
a fresh addition to the task of the
Red Cross ?
Do you know that every bullet fir-
ed is only one more drip in the Red
Cross cruse of inexhaustible obliga-
tion ?
If the Government, when its Gener-
al Staff demanded fresh supplies of
munitions, replied: "Why do you want
more shells?" would you think the
Government insane? When the Red
Cross asks for more supplies do you
not realize how much it needs them?
The need of the army is for shells,
and still more shells.
The need of the Red Cross is above
all for money, money, and still more
money.
Every dollar you give to the Red
Cross is a bandage which ties up
some wound, and there are as many
wounds to bind up as you have dol-
lars to give.
Send your subscriptions to the of-
fice of the Treasurer, 77 King Street
East, Toronto.
Minard's Liniment Cures [target in Cows
Not Seen in Daytime.
A farmer worked his harvest hands
from 4 o'clock in the morning until
9 o'clock at night. A man looking
for work hollered to a hand over in
the big wheat field, asking him if he
could get a job. He was advised to
-ask at the house.
"How do I get there?" the appli-
cant asked.
"You go down this field," said the
haggard laborer, "turn down the road
to the barn, turn to the left and fol-
low the lane."
"What color is the house painted ?"
asked the applicant, doubtfully.
"I don't know," said the harvest
hand. "I ain't never seen it in day-
light yet."
You can't hurt some men unless
you hit them on the pocket book.
)14
Porns Applied in
5 Seconds
C u re Sore, blis�terdng feet
x "DI ni corn piniclied
toes cat be cured
ex-
p by Putnam'• rs.
li tractor is 24 houru.
"Putnsm's" soothes
Away that drawing pain, eases instant-
ly, makesthe feet feed good at once.
Get a 250. bottle of "Putnam' today.
Generous Bay of Fundy.
Some of the finest grindstones in
the world come from the bottom of
the Bay of Fundy. The stonecutters
there have a simple method of mov-
ing them to the shore. Workmen
quarry the stone from the solid rock
when the tide is out, and fasten them
to a large flat-bottomed boat.
The tides in the Bay of Fundy are
the highest in the world, they rise
from fifty to seventy feet, and rush
in with great swiftness. The tide
lifts the flatboat with the stones at-
tached; the workmen bring the boat
ashore and remove the stones at their
leisure when the tide is out.
d•
The Substitute for Vodka.
Elimination of vodka from Russia
has evidently started that immense
nation tea -drinking. In February
last the New York "Journal of Com-
merce" stated that the quotations
were 8c to IOc a pound higher than
they were a year previously, and that
the Russians were buying all the
India-Ceylons available. The price
has been advancing ever since.
Unselfish.
Doctor—Is your wife strong-mind-
ed enough to see that you positively
refrain from eating sweets ?
Patient—Sure, doctor! She's got
spunk enough to make me pass up
the candy and pastry and all that as
long as she's allowed to eat it her-
self.
Minaret's Liniment Cures Distemper.
And He Cleared.
Builder—I've just caught that man
Brown hanging about smoking dur-
ing working hours, so I gave him
his four days' wages and told him
to clear out.
Foreman—Good heavens, guv'norI
That chap was only looking for a
jobs
Minara's Liniment Cures Colds, Etc.
Why Cows Give More Milk.
Cattle used to be bred chiefly for
work. Therefore the cows did not
give much milk. Breeds improve the
thing for which they are selected.
In 1790 the work cows of Germany
gave an average of a pint and a half
a day. Interest in milk increased, and
by 1800 the average yield was a quart
and a half. Breeding went on milk -
ward, and in 1810 the German cows
averaged two quarts of milk each per
day. In 1820 three, in 1830 four—
and there the gain stopped for thirty
years. But in 1860 the production
had increased to six quarts, and by
1870 to eight.
The brain is divided into two parts.
If you are right-handed you think
with the left side of your brain, while
if you are left-handed you think with
the right side of it.
Tao
SHOES
for every
Sport
and
e jreat ori
. ALTA
S.
y Qe Dealers
Wariz4r every. rend.Bep
of the idiffrib:
FARMS FOR RENT,
IF LOOKING FOR A FARM, ()Ok7817LT
ase. 1 have over Two Hundred on 013'
Let, (located in the best sections of On.
tario. All sizes, H. W. Dawson, Brampton.
AGENTS WANTED.
19Af oLAUCTILAN MADB $57 LAST
Y.L ween. House to house canvassing.
Wonderful cellars. 3ither sex. Craigs
Brothers, Niagara Falls, Ont,
NEWSPAPERS E.03 SALE.
p ROFIT-MAKING NEWS .AND JOB
JL Offices for sale in gond Ontario
towns. The most useful and interesting
of all businesses. Full information on
application to Wilson Publishing Coru-
FARMS FOR SALE.
J ARMS FOR . SALE IN ` THE
County of Norfolk. Good choice,
Prices ranging from $30.00 to $100,00
per acre. Terms reasonable. Apply
R. W. Bartmann, Lynedoch, Ont.
DOGS SOB SALE.
Rl AD, OR BLACK
AND WILM
.fes$5nipuies$$$20, en 1Airedales,malet
females $15. St. Bernards, males 30.
These are the best breeds for Canada.
An pedigreed stock. Suitable for chil-
dren dren or guard for the home. F.
Stewart, Oakworth Kennels, St. Nicholas
Building, Montreal.
MISCELLANEOUS.
CANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ET0.
internal and external, cured with-
out pain by our home treatment. Write
us before too late. Dr. Bellxuan Medical
Co.. Limited. Collingwood, Ont.
'Amnici. 8,sa 4 Cycle M.rin. Moto►"
4OrcI*t r'pi�o ,to8 16P..0 nah},jI� e
Aka the linpat Motor CNtay enptoe.
economical on Net. t7sad a Mande owl
o1oo.ievmiaDer `sec� w ¢ton g'iuf
KEIMAtN MIB. CO. CCM wLD7 Irell7Mtd.,
That's All.
"What were you doing in that
pawn shop, Jim?"
"Ob, merely passing away the
time."
ffiinard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.
Reversed.
"How long have they been mar-
ried?"
"About five years."
"Did she make him a good wife?"
"No; but she made him an awfully
good husband."
This is to certify that fourteen
years ago I got the cords of my
left wrist nearly severed, and was
for about nine months that I had
no use of my hand, and tried other
Liniments, also doctors, and was
receiving no benefit. By a persua-
sion from a friend I got MINARD'S
LINIMENT and used one bottle which
completely cured me, and have been
using MINARD'S LINIMENT in my
family ever since and find it the same
as when I first used it, and would
never be without it.
ISAAC E. MANN.
Should be Off Duty.
A sentry, an Irishman, was on post
duty for the first time at night, when
the officer of the day approached. He
called:
"Who comes there?"
"Officer of the day," was the re-
ply.
"Then what are yez doin' out at
night?" asked the sentry.
You will find relief in Zam-Bak I
It eases the burning; stinging
pain, stops bleeding and brings
ease. Perseverance, with Zan„
Bok, means cure: Why not prove
this ? au Thba+ ,stores.—;
ED. 7.
ISSUE 31—'15.
"O vers,t orn r" V ilo,Itorn $550
Motor aocgr
Freight Prepaid to any Railway Station in
Ontario, Length 15 Ft., Beam 3 Ft. 9 In.,
Depth 1 Ft, 6 In. ANY 1110TOII FITS,
.Specification No. 213 eying engine prices on request. Get our quotations
On—"The Penetang Line" Commnerddal and PIea,sure Iraunehec, Row
boats and Canoes.
THE GI/DUI?' BOAT CO., LIMITED,'PENETANG, CAN.