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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1912-12-26, Page 3a}'-, 7eeolniiea,nrt r+•YtCt+p*44,+,k'tt +4'r +a.. +t++ti++t" w40+t++++_ 1►+++t +i+4000#04O+t►t4:', ++++t++t++++i+ttet+.080tO0/A+f4OtvA#1NA•AtA't+Q+t4tt++414+++++fiv t++.1 t+t+t+t4++t+"• r. ma. ■ ill anada te++++a44"++'siA*As4aAAo++a#44.4esfeSe►pa e, 000AA i000AN000010++iii>tiff+f4M1it►+OAO tYOOAOiAAtA044iiiititti+Viiiiit• iWiitO+t++►ii 4+iiiiNiOtOte1AA00 A0+••••,•A+►t10Ai0A0000AiAOA00000 O•••+••OAAOAOoo}NOootv7vtmJ001 A4 iiiii?+ +tt`iA. Captain And 22 Men Perish In Wreck Off New- foundland Five Survivors Bring News. 'COAST ',W AS INACCESSIBLE Furness Liner, Bound From Halifax to St. John's, Nfld., Is Wrecked In Gale and Men Go Ashore, But Are Unable to Scale Cliffs and Are Forced Back to the Wreck— acing upset. 'i'umoung out nastttq,-co avoid being sucked back by the under- tow, the mate and his four men drag- ged their boat up the beach out of reach of the sea and made their way back along the cliff to where their steamer lay, the wind and sea in -the Meantime had increased. The emb- ers broke conttnually over the decks of the vessel, which was grinding heavily on the jagged rocks. Hedley and his men searched in vain. for some path by which the cliff might be scaled or the crew of the Florence helped. The coast in that vicinity was uninhabited. The Lew. fishermen's tufts were deserted for the winter and Hedley had to take refuge for the night in one of these•abantlotl- ed shacks. At daybreak Saturday Hedley found that the wind had been 'steadily increasing. Hurrying back to the point off which the Florence lay, he could see no sign of the steamer. Considerable of her cargo of lumber was floating along the shore, but no boats were visible. After the five survivors had made a long but fruitless search along the shore for some trace of their ship-. mates,,titey started for St. Shotts, the' nearest inhabited place, several miles distant. Two of them were so exhaust- ed from the cold ancl exposure that they had to be assisted by their com- rades. These two were left at St. Shotts to recuperate, while the others pushed on to Trepassey, whence they sent word of the disaster to this city. They are not expected to 'arrive here before' the middle of the week, Besides Mate Hedley, the. survivors • are: Seamen W. Wight, C. Malm- quist, E. Taylor and T. Snedding. The steamer Florence was built in Sunderland England, in 1889. She was 293.5 fed long, 10.9 beam, with_. a depth of 26.9 feet. Only Five Men Saved: ST. JOHN'S, Nfld., Dec. 23,—Capt. Barr and 21 of the 27 members of the crew of the Furness Line steamer Florence, from Halifax, N.S., for St. John's, Post their lives in the wreck of the vessel'on the ledges west of Bt. Shotts' during a northnyest gale last Friday. Five exhausted survivors, who reached land in a boat, brought the news to Trepassey last night. The steamer carried no passengers. Capt. Barr of the steamer and all his men reached shore after the vessel struck,' but the lofty, inaccessible cliffs of St. Shotts prevented their escape. n * ilii. uth- ice upi backed5 bigtide,. O<, The west gale, ade it impossible to re- main there, and all hands were oblig- d to put back to the,ship, which was pounding heavily. Capt. Barr felt confide_3 that the wind would go down, but Second, Mate J. Hedley volunteered to take four men in one of the ship's boats and seek a more favorable landing place further along the coast. In the heavy seas then running the captain was unwi.iling to risk more lives, and gave his consent to the second mate's ex- pedition with reluctance. With great difticulty Iiedley' pilot- ed his small boat along the coast until he saw a break in the rugged line of cliffs. Pointing the nose of the boat directly into the surf he avoided the outlying rocks and on the crest of a great breaker ran his craft in without Why The Girls fight Shy Of Domestic Service Thele are the reasons wily girls do not 'like do' :eatic service. ac- cording to Commissioner of cers- es Hermaln Robinson ode N sW York. "Every girl who works likes 5cn- •days off.Sefndae is tee day aaer-, vont meet work hardest. ' Servants can have no callers or at legit callers are 'frreweed upon bythe employers. Yn: apartment houses ;he se t vent cant' of :neve her acquaintances or relatives call upon ter. "Aservan•t's work never ends. 'She has tnotfreedom; no time o her own, "Girls in fadtories can sing to- gether sometimes whiLeat work and flock together socially at night but aservantt is afwaes len• s', nee. writ', immigrant girl or'green' girl want,' to be with hee rel a'ives er friends as much as possible, and at leant to spend her evenings with ;hem. At don e, br. eervice sh: gets', L.omesick. "Employers give no consider , non toftho soreel ,nscincts of thou' ser - Santa They helrive that Bra\ tents have trio business having social in- stincts. • ` "Hout,e,hold service i'•toe menial and undignified a4 girt laeiacork k t•nywhore ciao ady. She may ,be a salleslady or 'hold aposition with affirm (even Helm works in• a flaetorye batt en a iiirineehold -fLero is only ono lady and she the employer. Tho servant. is just , a servant ' • WATCH YOUR HAIR LADIES Eternal Vigilance is the Price of •Oakvilleritiren.s carried a og-las* 10esft`iblish a Park Core missinn rand 'Municipal Club.' DON'T NEGLECT YOUR WATCH A WATCH is a delicate piece. et machinery. chines It calls for essectention than most machinery, but trnust be 'cleaned and oiled ,GCca&uoall) to keep perfect bine. t. With aroter care a Walthtnt 'Watch will keep perfect- time for a lifetime. It will pay yen well to let us clean your W nt h M cVery r2 or 19 months. ING out, wild bells, to the wild s13 Che flying cloud, the frosty light. Che. year to dying in the night— Ring 'OUt, ightRi'ng•out, wild bells, and let him dte. Ring out the old, rtng to 'the new; Ring, happy' belts, across the snow. Che year, to going; let htm go— Ring out the false, ring in the true. Ring out the grief that saps the mind for those that here we see no more; Ring out the feud of itch and poor; Ring in redress to all manhtnd. Ring out a slowly dying cause And ancient forms of party strife ; Ring to the nobler modes of life, ?lith sweeter manners, purer laws. Ring' out the want, the care, the sin, the faithless coldness of the times; Ring out, ring out, .my mournful rhymes, But ,ring the fatter minstrel th. Brantford Rioters. Attacked The I'oiice Ring out false pride to place and blood, the civic slander and the spite ; Ring to the love of truth and right; Ring in the common love of goo. Ring out old shapes of foul disease; Ring out the narrowing lust of gold; Ring out the thousand wars of old; Ring in the thousand years of peace. Ring in the valiant man and free, the larger heart, the kindlier hand; Ring out the darkness of the land; Ring in the Christ that is to be. Luxuriant and Radiant Bair IIF dandruff germs are devouring the annurishm,ent that belongs to the hair, it will soon begin Mien Furthermore ilt w:11 lost iia lift- and lustre and wi,l beecine dui!, ''aded and even trrae if yo'i have any signs of dan •rufi go right tasour druggist to -lay and get a tottle of 1. AR.rSIAN Sage Tine del'ghtful hair tori.: is g iaraailied by'W. S Il iiol mes to frill dandruff germs, clean 'he. head et ft`''•hy dandruff, stop falling hair and i'chnng scalp and pre - eel u - he color and hearty or money back. And i` docs tush what itis guaranteed to'do and :fiat's why its sales are so enormous the counter eve-. PAR"SIAI1 Sire is the favorite of refined women. 1.:se bottle proves its. superiority. WHEN THE PEOPLE REFUSE TO PAY. Ever since Rig Jeen signed 'he ldagna Cherta 'the people hive teen dis,overing new rights and asaertiing there, Long ago the people learned hew togelewhat -bey . wanted—by the simple ex- pedient of "reius nes ,to pee In trip datys when ki:•gs played ''war" with one another the pe tele could always putt a maiden end' to th'elute by arefus:tng ':o p,iy,"' •t e -clay teller' ,mer, piny tbe great game df business, they nave' to depend' on the people, eves es did 'these krises of long ago When the people stop' iiyneent, the came ends .'r' high importance is "The right to klrow" as applied to modern commerce The people have dottnd thew went n "reason why" trey buy 'e awoke to'this fact ,bis a abort •e idle ag ', when a rew mann- '".arturers began to, tell us acme ... ;of 'the thiings, they thought we should kinow about their goods, Teey were the pidneer advertisers. Soup the wet id discovered malt it bard' ewe ap- pailte for facts. A'nd in the read- justment of things for the proper sa'tisf iition of this appetite, we have developed' anew science—its came is "Ads crtising:' Now Anal we have teemed aod thereway of Lolling ;'0:5w demand to know isy it11.e erercisi'" o'f a power that has clever 'failed—' he refusal to 'tiny un` cess sa"Sskfie!d—tbe people: have et .up a'noty order of things. The manufacturers and merchan s are telling us everything eve want to l now—throllgh,Advertising. When we,buy soap, we must know 'Whose soap?" 'How is itmade I" What are. its rout a ties? 'What are i.ta RAISING CALVES FOR THE DAIRY f0 er We have raised calves every year for twenty-five years;' and we have never bad an epidemic of scours among them, although our neighbors all around have some years lost all their calves, writes H. M. Matin. in Simball's Dairy Farmer. while this may have been wholly luck, we are not Inclined to attribute it to that, as our luck in general le not of that kind. We are more inclined to attribute it to the food and care of the cow while' carrying the calf and to careful feed- ing afterward. The barns are well ventilated, the cows get outdoor exercise lu a yard on pleasant days all through the win- ter, and the bay and roughage are free from mustiness. The cows are re- quired to go dry for six weeks and are fed bran through this tine. It requires nerve to take tbe feed away from a cow that is giving a good pailful of milk In order to dry her 1 uses?" . 'Wher.im docs r, excel?" '1 t'liu Advertising teals us. • t.10 the W R CO 1 e! 1 [ , withePerythtngwe qt- S' C came i .Ieiveler teed optician.- (,buv-40.0d,' clothes., ' furniture Issuer of the as s a cit es pianos, autolrobiles 'tire will have t t b t these things -,or rs grazers the Ayrshires are prob- y unequaled, having been obliged get their living 1n the sparse, y pastures of southwestern Scot - d. In their native land.. they. are ustomed 10 Living on pasture in mmer, and in winter cut straw. ts and a little' grain are fed,. so y are not dainty feeders, says C. Austin 1n Country GenUe- n. Furthermore, the Ayrshire w makes good use of all food con- med. The Ayrshire bull shown ewith Is' Lessneseock'e First oice, grand champion at the Ohio te fair-of'1912. He. it owned by F, Converse•& Co., New York. we will refuse 'to pati, We the public 1, :rave esea'ect a1ew world 'tierce. Woven i` "Advetltising," Marriage Licenses. THE STATION IS BESIEGED As Result of Arrest of a Bad Indian a Mob of Hoodlums Assail con- stables and Are Charged With Batons—Ringleader • Is Arrested -Mayor Hartman Finally Dis- ers the Unrul Mob BRANTFORD, Dec. 23.—A turbulent mob attacked the police station here an Saturday night in a riot which lasted two hours and finally culminat- ed in the release on baii"of Charles Walling, an ex -bartender, alleged to have been one of the ringleaders of the riot. •The trouble was precipitated when Sanford Maracle, a bad Indian, was arrested, although Constables Stewart and Stanley were nearly wres- tled into the canal by the -Indian and the lawless element which surrounded the officers. A crowd .pf several hundred followed the party to the police station, where the police later came out and charged with batons in an effort to effect a Duni waiting was arrested,and the crowd later demanded his release, Walling finally got out at 12.30 a.m. after revolvers had been fired and the. police station battered in. Several of'. the officers had narrow escapes from missies hurled through the windows. Eighteen prisoners, chiefly disorder-_ lies, were in the lock-up wondering if the mob would reaoh the iron doors between them and freedom. The police appealed to the firemen to turn the water on the mob, but Mayor Hartman refused to give his consent to this procedure. Fire Chief Lewis and Mayor Hart- man appeared on the scene. Both ad- dressed the crowd,, the mayor stating that he did not want to find it neces- - saiy'to read the Riot Act. The episode, it is believed, will strengthen the police commissioners in their contention that more men are required for the city. The department in general has re- cently been' subjected to attacks by a local pamphlet issued weekly, and this has seemingly had the effect of aroasi:ng the passion of the lawless element against the force. Aldermanic charges of police extravagance amongst the police board have not break-np. It was during this melee helped matters any. isseseowise@safa••WI!•••••Aa,• 1 i ' SHAW'S e , • sCU-o0.LS. 'a • • • Toronito Cataria Include the 6 Gahan Outlook is More lleassurmga French' Premier Believes Confer- ence Makes ,4iFor Peace FHCL-BE1OS ]RY BUT NERVY Central Business College, the 0_ o Centr•ti 'I'elegrapb reed Trail ja • read Seehool, and Jour 'Cuty • • Branch Business Schools. All I • provide excellent cru'ereot • leadinlg to good salaried prat- 0 • tions. Free catalog'te r on • ft retitle/Pt• Write for :it. W H. • Shaw, President. 'Heed office • • Yong. and Gerrard f•treeto e a ' Toronto, Old, • ••••s••s•••••••ess•••s ioe• Building to House John Bull's Private Library—Blue Books on Every Subject Business Change Having purchased "'he genereal ;store and stock of Mr. Roet,Olark et Cdntstance, we aeein a 1•'•sit:on 'o supply the people of the tur- iouin,dirg country with geode at close cut prio_s in alt lines. , We -have bought largely in pee - 1 aratiotn of the Chri'st'mas trade, If you will call and sac tar stock, we :rink itw.11 ii,terest you; We are in a position to fey cur nstomers the Highest market price for all kin 'a nt produce. Live .-nd ,'reasen fowl br ught to be deliver- ed at :ou store every Thursuav morning, Our Motto --"A Square Deal for Everyone. Wishing' - you all A Merry f hriste; e and a Happy t nd Prosperous Nen, Year. LONDON, Dec. 23.—The et kis of the John Bull's bluebooks factory is peace conference will be reached at the session to -day. If the Turks de- going to move into more modern and cede to waive their demand forthe re- spacious quarters. John Bull has been victntling of Adrianople the allies will publishing bluebooks which is the present their terms for peace. The name given to all government reports conference can then' proeee d to discussion of its real business. The opening of another chapter of warfare is a step which the allies dc not invite, but for which they profess to he fully prepared. While suspicion exists that the Turks have been spar- ring to gain time since the conference assembled ten days ago, the consen- sua of op en is that the Turkish irovernm wi,iT aoogniz`e -the situa- tion and conclude peace, and that the political situation in Constantinople dietatee that course. The advice which tlfe principal powers have been giving to turkey is in the direction of peace. The Bulgarians declare £had it the Fdb-Lor d•. W T5 l aridi f none of t eW dY '3—o era ceptable mediation, the allies are •ready to respme:the war immediately with fresh, ardor, greater vigor and a deeper , feeling •.that they will achieve ultimate victory, because, as they themselves express it, they "are fight. ins not onlyfor the independence of the Balkans, but for western civiliea- tiara against the traditional eastern enemy." Servia's Port. PARIS, Dee. 23,—Premier- Poin- care, in the Chamber of Deputies on Saturday, explained that the port on the Adriatic to be allowed Servia will be free and neutral. It is to be corn noted with Servia by an internationa1 railway under the control of the pow- ers, and Servia is to: have liberty, to transport all merchandise, including mnnitions of war. She will pay no customutiee, He Icentinued: Tina European w Euelts wish to assure to Servia certain ,indispensable guaran• tees so that she may live and breathe." • Premier Poincare expressed satia- faction with the agreement over the Adriatio outlet for Servia, expressing the opinion that it "eliminates one of the principal causes for European discord." There was, he said, no ground for the. fears on the, part of some French- men that England at times pursued an•etiolated policy which did not eon. form. with the policy of France. He said: "England acted openly ,and loyally." To Hold Adrianople. •f In Britain, though some of them are white and others red—for over 160 years now, and in that time he has issued neatly 400,000 of them. The complete collection weighs over 2,000 on so 1t was stated by the blue- green too nine) their gigestion wet ae• come impaired. Usually a dose of salts and short rations fora day will s fell the linseed and calve correct this, meal are touch less likely to bel0me de; rangeti t ,.. •3lik, .; '4 *' wives need water to do well. it may be given them separately or when milk is abort mimed with the milk, but water tbey should have. It is reeves salty to the well being of alt animals. For calves that 'do' not put on flesh and look thrifty charcoal is an excel' lent regulator' and corrective. Mixed witb seite bey will eat it readily, and a tablespoonful two or three times a week is healthful for thenen. We believe most in tbe virtues of tbe linseed meal. Tears ago, before; we, be• gar to feed it, we Used to have calves scour and get tithe, and It would ret gtih'e lots of fussing with feed sari medicine before we got them growing agate, We have fed grain mixtures of various Winds, bit nothing ever gate the satisfaction that the linseed meal bus. In feeding separated pillk die art feeding n ration Srum Alai the fat bus all been removed, tend the remain• der of the tuiltt is proportionately rital er in the elements It contains, as it: volume has been lessened by the with drawai%pf the cream. Linseed meal is rich ip' fattening propertlea, and •tbe addition of water to the milk will bring the whole to more nearly a normal bili nee. Another important factor in ,- lsiUg good calves i to keep thew warm and dry, A calf that lies down on 0au10 cold floors er,-on wet, 0llhy heckling will hot thrive, and scold's are often .51,0, l by ibis tnsend of by irupropee feed,, If it naps to raise a calf at alllt pays to raise it well. particularly 1husr• designed for (Thiry use. off, but she wilt do enough better when she freshens to, more than make it up, and it"is seldom one gets ii good calf 1f the cow is milked con tenuously. If the cow is all right the calf 1s given . its . mother's milk for three' days, then halt separated Milk and half new iniac far a few days, longer. As soon as we begin to feed. all slciminilk we add n tablespoonful of, linseed meal to each ration, in- creasing this ag the calf.grows' older until half a pint is fed. Manyfeeders feeding a number' of elves will glve'alt the same amount. c 'e seldom got a man who will feed n will .... way,and a new masa t any other almost invariably get the smaller and weaker calves to scouring. Feed until ins to look full and tic the calf beg What 1 be a full .ration for more. ,R hat w vu d Due would overload ilia stomach of no- n -. nher. Not all have the same coiacity.: ,fy more than all the pwplo, and it t , book maker -in -chief, who added that this weight was far too heavy a bur- den for tee walls and floors of the ,_,. Many growing girls in school emic-3 ion: and unnatural ads to se Nourishment, law of but when ion gest do not no NT EMULSION SCOTT mss jest l1 n >5+. "t..' sco cele-Ndnriz or business are frill—delicate— anemic—lack rail—delicate— an ack energy and`\am- bit have thin blood. It is all and Unless checked le serious and chronic ills., not drugs, is the reason to build strength appetite is poor and foods iritis o di weak, ordinary nourish ---then SCOTT'S E N is necessary. T'S EMULSION'over- co t such eonditi•ons; its tissue material enters the blood without di- gestive takes effort andn it rich. It tones the whole' system and starts action of the healthy cells throughout the body. Y ten Imitations are of .tm offered but to get results f ` you taunt get SCOTT'S. tl & Bownc, Toronto, Ontario Tr f2 -•Ge HALL & CO. CONSTANCE lleadquaricrs F(lt Walking and Ri:liing Oliver plows 1. H. C. Gasoline Engines McCormick Machinery Pumps and Windmills. ALL KINAND EDXFERTIOF NG.AIRS CALL ON rather rickety old eighteenth century MRCP Chile building where the 'bluebook -making i lnduslf. flourished for just 1 I bentury. - •• This building, which is known of- 11 Corner of Princes and Albert tidally as his majesty's stationery of- etree ls. flee is in Pri.+ce'a etreett w neer; I - 'pr"{ cram vs "b ieY• he new home is near Wpterloo $terttoa, It costs John Bull over $5,000,000 a year to probably whichrint his bluebooks, the dullestre ding orea tls, There are exceptions, of course, a lot of stories of real life as dramatic as novelist ever invented having first been told between the covers of these sober reports of various' branches of the British Government. Divers! Subject ,,r The one bluebook in a'taousand-that makes good reading is the report; of Some British commander in Asia or Africa' on the results, of a punitive or other expedition into an unknown or dangerous region, the annual -report of one of his' majestys administrators in odd corners of the empire, with picturesque accounts of their duties and of the ways of the natives; or that of one of the consuls in an ob- scure part of the Emp15e; The subjects these government re- ports colter range from foreign rela- tiohl to flies (these la t.er in their capacity as disease=eawriets). There are bluebooks on boiler explosions, oil beetles, and on the disease of lilac trees. Bluebooks, of course, can be bought by anybody who has the strange taste to want to read them, the lowest price for a single copy being one cent. The meet expensive bluebook ever issued will cost you $606 if you core to invest in jt; It gives a complete account of the round -the -world voyage of H. M. S. Challenger- which began in 1873 and eneded in 1876. A lot of leading lights of the world of science were on board :and the mighty deep and its CONSTANTINOPLE, Dec. 23.—The Cabinet yesterday discussed the peace , denizens and vegetation were submit: negotiations and forwarded fresh in -,1 ted by them. to careful Study. When *actions by wire to:the delegates at i the voyage was over men of science London. It is believed is some quer- I of many nationa were asked to write ters that Turkey is about to invoke the,on the results of the expedition and good offices of the powers to promote geek articles otall bluebooks, included in the pug= an agreement,•. 50 The military feeling continues 1 Retied o in pa prints. finely The illustratedlusof strongly in favor of reopening hostili- with c p ties rather than surrender Adrianople. ' probably will remain a record. Reinforeemerts arrive almost daily 1 Why• They Are Published ' important orders for guns and war ppblished every year, most of them stores have been placed abroad. having been naked for by members of The military powers favor remain- parliament. That is the usual genesis Ing o t the defensive during the winter Qf, a bluebook. When one of the n>;cnt- snd assuming the offensive in the lief. of the House of Commons has a spring. While this s the r,' spirit un- Bnoy, to know what any particular doubtedly endangers the stability of apartment of His Majesty's govern the Cabinet,' it is not shared by the :alit is doing, he stake to have a sober- d dcitizens h are' mosteta activities laid on the table from Syria, and Kurdestan. Several On an average 3,000 bluebooks are WINTER TERM FROM JAN. 61h Ce:ttralBusinessCoflege Stratford, Ont. Does nitre fn. its et ;dente and graduates than dJes oth- er similar sc."Jods. Ccurses are. up-to-da'e and, instructors are experiencel:3, Ore dueles are pleased in goad positions rhe three applieatioia re- ceived to -day yoffer average sala"y of $ti,3 per r,r,srcm. Three Departmen s, Commer- cial, Shorthand, Tele„ raphy. Write for liee catalogue at once. D. A. McLachlan, Principal. SEEING INTO SPACE Distance to Which the Modern Tele- scope can Penetrate ,l 'With his forty -foot reflector.Sir Wil,, - Item Herschel perceived stare whose. light, he concluded;• had occupied' 2,000;000 years in reaching the earth:I His belief that he had seen further into space than' any other human be,1 lig 'before him ie pronounced a just., ''one by that noted aetronomer, Dr. T. J. J. See.. The' visual power of Her= sellers telescope fa somewhat sur passed by modern instruments, and Much additional power is given to. the modern instrument by the use of photography. But on the other hand account has now to be taken of the extinction of light by cosnifcal dust: in space. Neglecting this, Hp -ached alightly' overeeti'mated the distance to which his telescope could penetrate. WitbI the greatest modern., instruments arid'; the nee of photography, it certain,' Dr. See says *that stairs at a dlatenoe of over 2,000,000 -fight years can now be observed. It 'Ie very probable that; the most 'up-to-date• instruments can penetrate' to a depth of about 6,000,000 light years, min a , who for the conclusion of peace. Doig t re- ef House: Then it is the business. , anxious Greeks Occupy Gonitza. f the chief of the said department prepare a report which, after the ATHENS, Dec. 23.—It is mi -off': used it, generally le prepare has discs g H t Greek treops have idl the alackand the difficult Morava G after bluebook, Turks In Mi.tylene Surrender. wane, paper: or a red ,book, All, tt ATHENS, Dec. 23.—Th Turkish sots of 'parliament are published in a m:' in''Mit lene has surrendered. bluebook 'form, Certain government r Y Y Seventeen hundred prisoners ere em- ,departments,. like the admiralty and barked. Saturday on Greek transports. tine war office, issue their r•eportsf Consul Incident is Closed. bluebooks_, automatically, and a eW h from ;records, such as the reports of mill* `Ir ade ,e Dee: at shades 're tart operations' aro "presontod to, c u I Belgrade ays that the S b command of the h Houses Y bot mien 117: ae n1, c n Saturday arc a c Afternoon 1't 1 t 1 tel o visited the e1 otrian. Mins on his Sovereign, d x ir'ess the sin own Stiitintive, an, expressed military olfieers in the affair at Pris- rcnd,' in which Censwf.• Procheaka figured. 'Pocket Testament League The growth of the Pocket Testir went League, which has for its ob- ject not merely the carrying of the jec Bible, but a more faithful service, to b , chow to the world that the Bible is the secret of all success' in individual and national life, and to increase the effectiveness of church work and de- velop the spirituality of every, mem her, has been rapid. The work only commenced in Canada le May, 101.1 but to -day there''are`30,090 member's while the branches number 500. In Water 'Tested An English etltotnobile, builder ivht caters. to coloileal "trade encloeee hi r ,tole in wail rb $p 'nd c Magnetos a ' a, tight cbifipartmen''ts an'PPtests his "051 by, rubnling them- thvouj h water,