HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1919-2-20, Page 2The incomparable Tea -Pot results
always obtainable fromaniniusion,
has given it a prestige possessed
by no other tea sn sale.
‘,.
Ojth'draw rd out.e1asSes an other teas.
"This is no idle ciabi
115600
rirst Aid For The Lunele-Box, Meet people alease their shoes, and
In
or other, lunch boxes 'are neeessityi
so get lese service than they sheald.
tearly every home, at eoine time
arid the vexing problem has worried Ainsas•M‘evacasluitlie'sb;Ileteaegonlicieeja
itilOsn 02he
many a housewaiee, when tae man1shoos and glove, she cannot afford
of the house necels tie carry hie hulh to wear shchhY artliaes aha eau
th.s problem is not much different help it•
froemtors
nLbe ine,ontherotiegali t
'liehthe one presented by the chile For blaek shoes a bottle of polish,
hetheehieltdoef- ta,eleeset,tlaenda
olvaseline, a pair of shoe
bit of old cloth are a
work the man is doing and to furnish neceesaey equipment. As soon ea. the
:
IsoPhiv the eesielenetrisiThefneVdsthat on the shoe trees Bo that cleRSeS and
willshoes ore talteu off they should bo put
, be made fter the things e-ou intend to are worn agirle or as often as neces-
him with the
snuchit,ablenaliedoixttlionntiti'nllt?she •Wrinkle3 aZe 'Seraightened oat wInle
the shoe is still warm:- Before they
k toiona;,;1,Otztientfu.
i
PART I. 1 walked to the wiadew to hide the t•ears . ioulr bh:ss„ubstaTlnietiaimaallei'tsi salrY, a little. of the vasetine shelled be
send in th
une.a box sCi
The rt le of the train had dietU that were slowlY following one an-, 1 .•
away, allin th the smoke of it still 1 other down her eheeks, She tried to ,
anaple to hold a geed sized lunch. na rubbe.d into the warfe.ce of the kid or
loather to keen them soft and pitiable,
imeg over the dietant curi,e in the I sa-allow the lamp in her throat, come'.
tacit:. On the platform Eithel Graf-. scious an the time of eiletiou.s and ale,: children like to change the style and, and the edges of the soles and heels
color of their boxes
passing between the. occasionally set should. be 'blackened neatly. Cis -
ton stereo! lativeeeng the duty road, 1Pielous glances
1;01, women behind her batik.. The eilt ; that good firm cardboard hoexes win eazionally the shoe theelf may need
"This is encouraging," elle said • ,
b
enee was rokbtheoun
en y young girl: answer very nicety.
hereetO. "Stat,lon closed -for reettirs, i polishing, hat the frequent treatment
evh,?,..m Ethel had met itit the statien. 1 It is WeIl to keep on hand plenty of of vaseline -win , re- t. e *eking end
1 hope," with a diedainful glance at ! pe Nen 1,.... . , ,
tate Capidated buildine. estatioell e long guess= Mrs; Bugge," she se a niain aheta
as Jeeste Palmer s k -e sboPladt - iyayieeiii 1;.S•-aTe PaapPte to fade oft hadlY on
r n k' .•
al) ins. Colored lengthen the life of the leather.
master nowhere to be foaled; net a. 1
soul in sight. How mean! I've gateetita.,.firet .it woultintt be fete for me to . the thins . ell d give
th stay here in this broiling sun and now„ , lootagapileirL t altete l..elail !km;
ee it, anteee-evell, maybe I'd better:. ...
nce do anealung about a hat
If the shoe as wet it should he dried
at a distance from tb.e fire, so as not
to harden a crackle the leathee.
-
EIGIIT HUN SPIES
SNOT AT TOWER
_ _.--reite-egentagreig
turally an unpleasant subjectr. but
none the lose interesting. After the
seeret trial and cOndemnation to death
the soy was taken to the Tower, there
to await the dread summons in the
early hours .of the morning, • Taken
TERMS OF Ibi e .
from his cell by a party of military
MANY ARE UNDERGOINC LONG
pRisoNmENT peiouthicre,intline cisupatearaelagsie sotretittiTot‘overa,
There, facing him, about ten Nees
distant was a firing party, usually
eight men, from the battalion of
guards on duty at the time.
•
'In the poesession of a ' sergeant- Bared Chest the Target.
News.
major of the British Military Foot The preliminaries were soon ar- . ,
i when the war broke out,
i'It was on July 301 he said, "that
Police is a particularly made leather ranged, The Spy was p... .
heed in the
strap -or rather, a series of straps- was hared to receive the b11e o •
tightly strapped to it. Theni ittiscIlitelet , .
chair and his .
body and limbs were the government of which I wan the
should retire eight or ten kilometres
chief decided that the French troops
en lishmen evhose country he held°
I requested Paul .Cambon (French
NvIT°hnagtedWas his last look at, the world.
a. mbassador , in, London) t by wire to
A handkerchief eves tightly bound
iniorm Sir Edward Grey of the
around his eyes by the sergeant -
Were Tricked by British Secret Ser-
vice by the Use of False
FRAKE'SOURIT'...
TO PR -EVENT.
onDje,RED ltROOPS TO R TMIRE•
ON rULY SO, 1914
rte,,-eiatiore. by Former Premier
Vivioni Prove Tlutt Republie
Was Not the Aggreatior.
Ou July 30, 1014, the Feetech Gat-
e/emelt-it ordered its troope to retire
eieht 01, ten kilometres (five to six
mike) .fgoin the feontier, having
heard that the German troops were! *
inov•ing toward A, Rene Vivianit
former Premier, declared in the ..
Chamber of Deputies recently in the
eourse of diselosures concerning the
terigin of the war which never before
have been made public, says a Paris
despatch. M. 'was Premier
for which Madame Tussaud's doubt- g from the frontier. On the same lday
less would pay a large sum of money,
says a London despatch.
It, is the strap with 'which German
keep watch aver teat re -wee. " !other necessary as parallel.; paper. When it is dry it should be ixeated . . .
clammed to death were fastmed in a • measure taken.
-.11 realisethat
spies caught in this country and con -
special chair at the Tower' of London major of the 'military police. .The
The com-ersation gave Ethel anA thermos bottle meets the problem with the vasel.ine promptitt.
' to ' s L' ' 'Eng -land,' I said, al
e, t oacla ,e amidovens oes ate no Prior bang hot. Ike a wise man, .1311g PartY1 leaning on their rifles, ,e
Fiance is firm, it 1.9 not she who
, any way." She eat& to the railliner,! • the sergeant -major h d the stoodup an
ann as e sag , •
d. brought then up to the t
taking measures of aggressicea Al -
hatbox tin. the Eimsaille train comes " - •
• - - thine -s add much to the otherrise cold en regular attentdon. For most e .a 'al) A loW instruction from the officer m
command to aim at the heart, a sharp
the sergeant -major stood .clear
upon her battle line the government
though Germany h.
f the French Republic intends to
here," she went on reileetively, "alle, "but I have a" lovehei hat that I shoulte. cream soups hot and these fitelt to. keep in order if they are give
made to his own design and paid for as moved her troops
in. And not even a place to sit down!
gclea. "I don't want to interfere in • of keeping coffe lett Colored • whitele t clif
"I suppose I eeuld leave the trank.
,start on a sgarea fee. e sta. ' n . like to sell; and al this young lady has ,, meat, .
- • Where a thermos bottle is not of these at is desinable to have a bet-
ina,ster, but I don't waire to leave tame:dee-tied not to take one of these, h
s -La; available for the hot drinies a good tie of cleaning d-
-il interview with Ethel at the station, to use for desserts, baked beans, eus- fluid esatiaahelly inten
hatbox. Three hats, at twenty dol- might like to see it. It's at the stew, .1.
Paper And the laughed i's 'she; A shy -fit, similar to the one thee,
• for the purpose. color. A. little toap and water, or
thought of the good-humered way in had entharraased her daring ha brief i Inolna ual a_ elam c are nice
' 'd p re • ups
whie.h her father W,gealat take. her t.
task for her ex .t•eavagrame. 'now took complete pcsses.sion of the : tards and many things which cannot
She deeided -co watt, but waiting •
. , sent without a dish.
, g ee - eaten girl. Her blush deepened, she c.ast!be
tars apiece, and not paid for yet. Poor leavy bottle may he made to answer ed to clean without destroring the
-eon b -at I can eas.ily •get it."
it with his oa-n money. It is to him order, 'Fire!" a burst of flame, and
t the crack of eight rifles had ended the demonstrate that France as well as
a priceless relic of the great war. 1
aome of the spies s 'cm eir exe- Russia bears no responsibility for the
attack.' "
the overboomed German navy, hardly - •
career of another of Germany's tools.
t d th
Germany's vaunted spy system, like
Th reminiseenses of the momen-
realized expectations. There were, it
gasoline used away from the fire, are
is true, a great many spies in Eng- elation stoically; others again made a
perfectly clean It should be dressed land, both before and. after the war,Ilast despairing fight and went to their
i death shrieking d then'
an cursing
caused the -deputies to arise and cheer
haus days o the last of July, 1914,
often. useful alsot When the shoe is
yeah a tan, brawn, gray, or bronze acting en behalf of. the Kaiser. Most the former Premier. M. Vivian/ con -
be and of them came originally from South
was e.to
Maker,
naively do-een her eyes as leefore and edged' For sandwiches malty kinds of • ea:, e, as
with the July sail beatir,g
• nervously toward the door.American st,ates.
dawn upon her. bread and filling beD f I attention ' • t the heels
s may e used. Day- care II givea
"Well, I declare, Alviral" The British Secret Service resemble
Sadder .v ehe heard foctatepe on the
e . sPoke 1113' old bread will cut to better advantage end the edges of the shoes.
-.harp' "I d'd its
ther aide of the platfor.m.
Lae a i and make ;better sandwiches than /real
, "Oh, please wait a. memelatr ehe never saw you act e-3 nneeh arid. is mach better for the digestion.
goosel If you can't speak, Ill ansel
cried, as she .mught sight ef a, yonag ain te The bread should be cut abenit one a
hureyeng away. f -e ." Th
• , • e
Shoes test longer if they are not g ei
worn every day, but one pair altern- work as silently and effectively, and
.that the leather the necessary reticence observed as
HUN HAD FOUND PICTURE
Curious Story of Photograph of Pte.
Lanchetti's Family.
Lan -
The gat' paaseefi,
ehesheti p.ainfully, Eth-
el, she veld., ePerhap.s you better1 quarter of an inch thiek in oblongs, may "rest." Rtibbers which have to its doings contributed very meter- Nearly four years ago Mrs. Lan -
girl
and except for a moment:ire- glance get the hate We can talk it over." , rounds, diamonds and even heart begun to break at the heel should he laity to the disconnitime felt by the 'chetti, of Toronto, sent, a postcard
kept her eyee fixed noon the ground. I ,.In a few minutes a rice ty ear -1 shapes to tend a little change to the taken at once to a r ' i' man. A German Gavernment owing to the rills- group photograph of herself, her hes-
e-ea w'r ,-v. 4lie e.vklion. nage drew up. at the door and Ethan eiconge Grownams as well as the perfectly good heel ce-Paan be made • if leading information which "fell" into band and two ds.ughters to her son,
German hands.
Mythical Barrage in Channel.
As a matter of fact, the Naval
Intelligence Depastment, under Rear
meeeee es? Do ye,e anew anythene ales:gee nom in with her hatbox in, eaggeen enjoy
ageal her arms: She had footed the car- finding odd -shaped attention is given in time, and that,
L._. t a
abora the teaine?" Ethel •4 i sandwiches with unknown finings and too, at small: cost.
breathlessly. but eexascioue at the reage weetaag for her at the station
kes only a lea- minutes longer to
same time of the girt's. betautiful, iong and, depending on the meney to pay,' it ta
LUCKY BREACH OF THE LAW
eyelashes and -r-cut. ateritetive ProsPeetive sale for money to payI cut them,
•rearea-eii, a hieli net even her shabby the driver, had hired it at once. I In packing the lunch, place the
at- -things to be eaten last in the box first
and faded eleihing teuld, put wholly One by one she brought out the
out of mind. 'tractive bats and tried them on the; and the things -which naturally would
".No. I never tske Sh0.111. repiied head of the diffident eount.ry girl. The be wanted first on the top of the boi.
the kirl, ersevering the laet question .at one, a creation oi virile silk mull Too many things in. the box is not
., ,
tinued:
"Could we risk a murderous war
upon the chancameeting of patrols?
We desired to proclaim high before
the world that if France were forced
to fight she would do so for right
and justice, and not take advantage
of any equivocation.
"The withdrawal was carried out
without meeting any obstacle either
Batt. in England, then on his way to technical or military. Had we met
Pte. Frank Lanchette with the 75th
with • an observation from General
France. He was wounded on Aug. Toffee to the effect that the measure
......_ and now lies in hospital England
in might endanger the fate of the coun-
4 last year after much hard fighting
4: Admiral Hall, acting in conjunction try we should not have hesitated, but
with the censor's department, provid- 1 the 7. t 1 th
English Woman Photographer Got, . slowly recovering from wounds in the
•
led false information to the Germans,
. Pte. Lanchetti was born in. London o .-
fr ntier No objection came from the .
would have kept . e a a ci on. e
250 for Her Offence. back. His father has gone to see him.
The following story is told of how, agtinstance being the mythical Strait / general."
riret; eue at -re ie.:nee .. r.,. e . e., on g 1,01 .
E 1.ae ' and is now but 24 years of
..- V • good. Better have three thinge to- an hotogra her broke the law1 of Dover submarine barrage revealed n
. age. Deputy Criticizes Retirement. .
_
mmmedi With of relief Ethel turn- i "How -how much' is it9"
asked than to have to repeat to-morrew. U-boats: ! Nearly all Germany'e SIAS ill this ' '
I ceiveci from No. 519400, B. Luns.0 a questions by Deputy Fernand Enger-
• M Viviani's speech was in reply to
she moved liervously away. I was "real becoming." The other day Mrs. Lanchetti re-
anttaner admitted t at it 'jay and a eceriplete change to -morrow and thus helped to bag, a number of iby Sir Roger ReYes.
station master?" ehe aekee. anxious -1 Ethel caeit e. glance at the neh 1°-daY ole h d f th 1' i' ff t- t 1 cete the lair of a information by Post. But thanks to ,
en a ast or e ere tr s in Bo n Geinnanv the picture a
a.nd, who slrarply criticized the aban-
onmen o en- .
t f the t klemetre zo ie
eel towe.rd the rr.an. "Are. you the' Alvira In preparing the desserts for din- The ..e.dmiealty had been baffled in country att,empted tch! lanyard then.
Ti b
aon,o bo with the Canadian
he, can tell yen a11 e,bent. them." And - Even the e
oop
1Y. faded calico gtwr foul shabby shoes, tle deesert cups foe the lunches tett!.'
"ouli of submarines eghich were the astutenees o fthe censor s staff it,
-That's the way theu've got nte1and hesitated. morrow. Make enough more to fill oPerating off Land's End and he the was rarely these letters, even ai-
d:ern in the ecninany's leoles." I "I will sell for five dollars," she the -m and tet them aside all ready for Bristol Channel. • 1though Written in. invisible ink, went
H claimed that it was a technical
thrie the train for Eirnsville gets and I -I paid somewhat more than. T h . While -seending a holiday on the undet-eeted.
"Then win yea please eell me what :said at last. "It is perfeetlY new: paekiag in the morning
ry to make t_ lunch none a hap- coese t ns eionian was unwe eine m- • .
e - • -v.' e• • I An snies were not arrested inemedi-
'keret" [that for it," she added, in sudden. fear' one for the ebeent ones by addir-g duced to offend against Dora (e'he ' ately they were detected. The British
service," - • -'d eete al-
oggiit to have got off at Lapthem, tail Pete- emo e w en s e too contents of the lunch box. This is ed by a. picturesque spot on the coast, lowed them to send and receive letters
train for Elratealle from here! You 1, mated, after all; and yet a pang ofti zest and interest in the unexpected Defence. of the Realm Au). Attract-
"Eleneville? Why, there's no tram; that the sale might not be consume:
back he wrote that he had got the
she, had sent to her son. On the
mistake, because the mineral . valley
picture from a "Fritz" and had for- of Briey was within range of the
weeded it to the family addresi on French guns, and had it been, bom-
the back. • herded intensively for three or four
• It apparently had been lost on the . days, the German iron -ore deposits
been des -
battlefield by Pte. Lanehetti, picked ' and faeteries would have
inferior position regarding minerals. a
Lunen.
but it reser- up by the Goanan and recueued by
•
troyed and Germany placed in an
her an es back, and changed tars there. i mone,y from the thin, heed -hand,: easily accemptished by edding one --with p beatitiful stretch of sea, bound- • -11 t f etion,
' the
;rough work. heed the privilege of opening
'Ethel set down on her trank with -; which had loet all its girlishness froin new feature or dish each day, some- ed on each side by a projection of
"Tae oney thing for you te tio noweil The doiver of the carriage look ala after day the seine hard -boiled -egg- a photograph Of the scene. The neha-
' alterations likely to be of more use
correspondence both ways and making Winnipeg war gaterne want un -
The
deapairisigt- groan. thing different and not repeating day rugged rocks, she determined to take
Ike man went cn, ins to hire a etesin!,up as she appeared. "Say, miss," he cold -meat -and -bread variety too often tive a -as left at a local chemist's Sop naturalized oiemy aliens returned to
"lion °lighter hurried. rit +/lie the allies than to Germany. the lands Teem which they migrated.
to drive yeu heels. Lapham. Pli, clrawled, -; met with he the average lunch box. for develoinnent. She was asked to I. It is didicult to estimate the value -
go dea-a to the eh:age and seni a 'any use. gomg to Laiyhtem now. You've', I is wise t•o keep a propel- balenee return in a few dam and when she'. the information obtained by this
This, the Deputy thought, would have
brought about an end of the war in
six months.
Former Premier Viviani replied
that the abandorunent of the Briey
-valley in the event of war had bee -a
decided upon by the general staff in:
january, 1914.
On August 2, General Joffre, learn-
ing that seventeen violations of the
French frontier had been committed,
telegraphed to Premier Viviani as
follows :
"The interdiction against crossing
the line indicated is lifted, but for
national reasons of diplomatic and.
moral order it is indispensable to
leave to the Germans the entire. res-
ponsibility for hostilities. Consequent-
ly our troops will merely 'hold the
enemy back- and throw him epon the
trontier without pursuing him lie-
-yond." , •
M. Viviani, amid tense silence, con-
tinued:
"Then war was declared. The Presi-
dent of the republic wrote a letter to
King George, which was published in .
the press at that time, but the reply
of the King is still unpublished. II*
reads: ,
" admire the limitation which.
France willingly imposed upon her-
self and which so vitally concerns
lier military defense.' "
oiler to keep r.rie here just- now_ ;ain't 3L. LO. before to -morrow morn- agair called, the chemist had many method. The Hun, wth his profound
• of foods in the lunch. For e.xample
ed Ethel az he terned away. thrtahing her prase in her hand.,! a eimple fruit dessert; or if the sand- inquiries to make from her about. the • disrespect for British finesee, probab- ;
locelit-e- of the photogranh and her ly neva will believe that Britain
"Thank you ery muele!" murmur- ingt" if th.e sandevith filling is of meat, plan -
"It v. -as kind ,eit hien to offer te do !Ethel eank on the dooreep and stared, evich.is a sweet filled one, use the cue- could be guilty of such astuteness. ;
it," she thaught, as she watehed. the at the man aglatate 1tard pudding, gelatine desserts, baked ob'ect in taking it. She -Kee told
1 It is certein that Germany obtained
figure of the station master trudging' "Come right along with us" said; towaita few days longer.
man up. There ain't anything parti-; lost yer train by half an hour. There!.
beans or something more hearty foe 1 I very little that was useful from her
down the dusty road, arid the race- 1 the woman who had helped Al ma int. the other deeh, •
In. the meentime -a communication
his trouble. I proved to be her aunt. T'ney hadi airived from the Admiralty, request_ ! spies ie England. From the outbreak
the ports. were too carefully
crecrhearet the eerie -era a,maenatatc. and all ready to close, slip into the big her presence at Whitehall, and ., of war
tin pgompted a wish to pay him for; the purchase of the hat, and wino I When the knell is planned, -packed
She took out her parse, in order to permit aet much leakage.
have the mone,y ready when he sheraid through the open window. and no -w: corr.ors a, few nuts, sirrol enclosing a railway pass. Surprised guarded to
The wild stales, of wireless tele -
return., and opened it. A guzzled came mit on the stepea "You can . ealteel or a few piece's -03i %akeluldecly cir at the invitation, she deeided to
graphy and signalling to sea had little
expression tame him her face, end, came as wen as riot, and there isn't' maple sugar to L'Ioli oft, wit.h.„ Thee i breat:e. leer holiday and proceed to
quickly changed te one cf anedety. I a. beardtrer house or a ' hotel in the 1 make the a -hole complete. 1 London. e ers calledon le ,
She f t 21 or no substance in fact: the rialto of
1 The following little tab.le' of F" --e chemiet and was then astonished to , t - - •
letection were too great
Up and datin the east and south-
mene after enother rati emptied Bo, half an hour later Ethel was • -
Aids for the luneh box may he cut oljulb, learn that ha photoeraphic plate bad :
t .
e west coasts of England were, how-
, une es. otaings of impeding trouble dawned
built right on the sea with large cop -
Hee game to gime\ elle and an the.' chamber of -the little weather -worn .
' five-dol,a- bh"- that lied e-Tvea. . Judd homestead, where Alvir' a. ertd, for referenee in planning the family
(To be con6'.nued.) upon leer. tett t e .. eraira ey s .... .
h k 1 . i. he was
i • pa o
d mes twinkling brightly for
ing were game. Not_ a penny --zee!, 1 Bread for sandwiches: 'Wheat, closely questioned, an 1 oi
miles out at sea. And the man-
Catiastias•
.5Dtna,zizsCLAAcHthIcie,10.7eith ents
the purse suth re fat look that mime' her alert hired alone.
nriehied' 1 --.e.----- I brown, nut, nut brown, oatmeal, •rye she had eommitted a bee e
• a -h of the , many
e• la ar was often a German, .
,
her, She was at least a hundeele
A -feeling of beiplessuese catne over; ENTeuteemes
, NEI. `HUSH BOAT'
1 Fillings for sandwiches: .Minced, t ith'
•:,. raisin. ' Defence of the Realm regulations.; g ,
i - • a : Eight Getman spies were executed .
miles frean Eiinsville, pennileas amor a . no wee however. greatly relieve ,
• in this • u itr 7 while m n lore er
1 e Al ham. beef hash, bologn.a, veal e,alads,; and astonished when the ofrenale co I e, s. y ei t 0
She hearriedly opened one compart-ivillage,"
b en sent to the Aounralty. Fore- .
" " t'• 1 I t I
everythir,g on the tae of. her trenleleoenfortably ezicableshed in the north mounteti on cardboard and hung up b eeei, many , . ;
STOCKS
11.M. ConnoHy &Co
Members Montreal ateck
Exchange.
105,1 06 TRANSPORTATION
BUILDING,
BONDS
e laSrhey
Ictorial oF
GREAT
ar
taw strangers. anaitee even. ea tett' Limee Cruiser Not Quite Comp e(e a, en -Weeping lona, lerin$ of penal servi-
graph for hatp. She could not pay.: When War Ended. I leaked beans, minted egg, -
epple and thanked her for having rendered
!Lade. For obvious reasons the names
the driver W.11.0 was corning for Iter;', ,celery salad, tuna salad, olives .ande,"great service'. to the State.
these spots in the of many never were revealed. The
nor even if he should be tot •
I -here is tow lying at C:ydebank, green pepper- .
brovm sugar, peartutt "Do you get
Imeerial Govermnent conthated to
take her to Lephern free, -roilsnesriy completed, a rennekable 'hush' butter, jelly, jam. 1 t t" e wa Ited "P •
marmalade, p
be any betta off thete. - What th7V are . communicate with them, blissfully un -
I haat of the British Navy which, ace. molasses, lettuce and sated dressing' haps you don't im ei , .
that tacit agents had gone to
i •
"Wait!" the exclatened suaderey, cording to the shipping paper Fair, raisins and eoen el -ell dein.° je7d"'„ Well eve don't mind telling you they i aware
at . a bourne from which not even a Ger
-
half aloud. "Wheie was it Cousin Plar, is something notable i nthe his- ardneed chicken ••• P' ' 1 n sa ''. 'I indic'ate German submarines lying The 13ritish ecret
is IS the Hood, a batt?,e, erueser bananas, eaisins. . 1. bagged the lot." What was the actual
l the bottom of the creek, and we have . man, sPY „returns,
when he wae in eteilege and lest all, Th• • e er-lic• seivice landly o.cted as the spy's de -
Jim borrowed money on his erateh` tory of naval ar hit -ee .. Fruits: Oranges, apples, figs, dates,
svotteit itim so and said he haft, dist, ei extraordinary size, speed atad gun.. Cakes: Cup cakes, spice, einilamoni fate of the U-boats reinains to be PutY.
The execution of these spies is na-
his limner -the time Aunt CI "semi ,,,,
g.raeed ehe /amity mate? The pawnia pewer, and which would, says Fair- rolls, raised doughnut.s, sugar cookies i told in the official narrative, but it
broker's! Peehaps I ean find tine." I play, "have inaugurated new methods coffee cake, ginger males, grahan'il natty be stated that the take WaS one ,----eg-e-gener- _
a ,of the best of the war.
•
runniing, and stoPPed at the first. mans eleat we are still far ahead of oatmeal cookies, chocolate cookies. 1 it appeared that the emetic:tiler spot
Down the road she started, half . of naval fighting and shown the Ger_ crackers, crearn puffs, ginger h. ead,
bane she crane to, whiela bemuse of , them itCnavai construction," Soups: Cream. of pe,a, aeam eele! hied been repeatedly photographed,
w. a &splay of showile- trimmed bats in' The prospect of an early tamine,- ery, bean, chicken with rite, cream of but the eesults were never satisfac-
eaeed up on this great -ve-eol but in Pud.tlings: Gelatine with fruit, leread aided by a favorable light
,"snapped'!
n hostilities caused work o e corn, cleat tomato thickened. tory until the woman photeograaiha,
the windave the rightly bulged, was, Ito
d k t b
the
There were three VKftlneTi in the shopl when she entered. Two, on.c of order to make room for nierchanti with raiains, rice, tapiocarchopolate. Ithe bidden enemies. She was reward -
9e .,
'whom was behind the countete were 1 shipping the Hood has been nearly1 Other desserts: Cup castarcli, * ed ' the f ii.t0 li'eh s
elderly. The other evaz the young1 compietae and is IIOW Mei. of the fit ket, baked apples, canned fruit,jt111-1 m sum o ao , w t wa
giri whom .the heel seen a little while. tine, basin. - D '
e rinks: Milk, chocolate, buttermilk,1 Cross. and `')0 was sent to the vigie
1 promptly handed over to the lied
before at the station, Fairplay Pays the eieetel "t- ti ' r 'coff'e , a, ee . ,
"-Good reorningl" began Ethel h • tood - '-- lb Tit'C' " P:" ; I lant chemist,
ul-, s to he the fines' eombinatt n. e'' Extram 'f' —
eele.diet„
an yrs. -a -will you tell' sie n d ''' * •L .• ' .• " i
me where e can, and a pa areameinil ,C% se ee , guepower and light armor balls, nuts, candy, sweet 'chocolate
bars, seedlees 'raisins, eatery.
At !nit Sound other VOilee the young Ye'' lirean'd nf and farther ahead of
eittt animal quieitiv and droropcd the! the present 'ineeh boatst-the Cotiea- Recipee for any of the above will
alfetrimmed hat fhat the held m het' gevs eliges--then these 'were of the he sent hlt mail if request ;is aosoin-
. .
3 ,,A v.,),141..t.ir, as,-xott one of the older bank the Hood ieenis to fill all the mailing- saw a point where the artist had
"'rats" and the Artist.
A portrait of Admiral Jellicoe at
the Sea Power Exhibition in London
Mi. { Lion and Tigtr, As shl lies at Clyde- panted wite suffientit 'postage for ;arnoluep inof floalrue!ejLeirteetse.ritiTchisert; tertaloinIcae
ietelis money on a-ate:nes and things," by the Lusitenia, and a war vessel ae ' 1-1 i g
Prolor g' tg Shoe Serioce. stumbled. He has put the Admiral
into the uniform of an Admiral of the
woneen, 'A pawnbroker -a man who epate which was at one time occupied
toPeateil Ethel "rye lost .itili -the_ long as the tueltartia-to eattt nothiag Unless you are an illvlana arid have Fleet, the highest rank of all. It is
ertentcY 1 had with Me Ind mY tIcteettr of her other features -es st..orootlip,g little tee for substantial foot cover- curious that no one pointed Out the
.
ings, your time bill: probably aniounte blunder until these Iowa -deck experts
to a good deal, and you are more than catno along.
AnXitniSv now that 911004 1%.V4. gene
*Wham..
eiliei added, by way of expacriaaon. notable ia the history of naval arehi-
"I'm happy to say there isn't any teeture.n
melt place as that in this town," saii4 .........,.4...„.___
the proprietor of the shop, with an I 0 man
Oileetie fell on the group, Ethel 'a hape z'eor Mind. • .- --, . en . -
ill y sixty is partly
Vie of seventy.
VirN.ssoil
1. 80811114ikYwarat to get alI the wear. We have always sailed the eta like
oesibie for 1eer expenditure, . _ gentlenteee-Mr. Itta .Mempheraon.
BY MAJOR W. S. VULLACE, rfl.A.(ox.)
Lecturer In Modern History in TarontoUniversity.
-r..argo Handsome Voltune„over 400 (took column
pages, equal to about 500 miners, pages. Pictures
on ovary page. Nearly it00 Official Photos, besides
Beautiful Colored Plates, One doublepage. la most
effective colors, showing centotniagwi heavy gun
battery, worth about half the price of the book.
A@ENTS WANTED IT:Fegifjv'Ms,L","•74
time to lose. Th'e elegant ccloredltle'tescrandlti.p.eriar
Canadian official photos sell this batik on sight.
THIS IS DIFFERENT to any other war
hook an the market, therefore competition nli. Send
500.m:tiling expenses of elaborate IVUVking OU 01
end full in:arm:lions imnirciialely.
Tit! J,1„ NICHOLS CO. Lirolfetl, TORONTO
We have purchased from the
IMPERIAL MUNITIONS . BOARD
A large number of Studebaker Gere, which wore woad by the
The Royal Air Force
• These ilich.tde
TOURING CARS, I3USSES, COVERED
DELIVERY CARS, LIGHT TRUCES
Also e huinber of.
INDIAN MOTOR CYCLES wail SIDE CARS,
TRAILERS: also it iarge number ot
TIRES atd MOTOR CV.CLE p•Arias,
Theeo Oars and tiyelee have been kept in firetglase condition by
the Military Authorittee, We nee offerleg these Vohiclou nt o Price
that will clear theta out in a very died ewe of time, They May be
stet at the old !Royal Air rows tola,rage, 164 Dupont litrect, nail any
oommunleatious may be addreaatd to
D. L. WItINTYRE
164 OUPONT
ONTO.
The world war was precipitated
;Italy 28. 1914, when A.ustria-Hungary
declared war on Sabia, On August
1, Germany declared war on Russia
and invaded Luxemburg. On Algust
3, four days after the. French troops
withdrew Iran their frontier, as en -
flounced by M. Viviani, Germany de-
clared war on France.
Jellicoe's Mission.
It is stated that Lord Jellicoe's
visit to Australia, "to review the
whole naval position," is part of the
British Eatipire Federation plan. The
future of the Pacific and the Indian
Oceans, strategically speaking, is of
the utmost importance. Eueopeans
have not denoted much attention to
it, but naval men have seen a long
WaY into the future, and the outcome
is the dispatch Of Lord jellitoe, -who
is in the feat rank of naval strate-
gists, to study the problem on the
spot with tho Australasion statesmen.
Graat ships and powerful glitz
eb000 do n•ot Make the might of a
nation on iffiu the, but the high coma
age and devotion of thet, iuttion'p3 VI%
-Lloyd George,