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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1918-10-03, Page 41,4 11111 ag 'Pour eleteirtIlmn abtant t . 3.urz JO's`*NT, Proprietor • A,. G, SUI',% Manager /apt •.S'ET'TEI !; 3E' t 1014 • ewe. Moe Tule Wi)n Tiff'. Fete SAT, - 1 2 2• 4', b 0 7 • $ , 9 .10 11. 12 13 l.d`. r 10 P 10 17 18 19 ,20 21 22 23- 24 25 20 '47 28 29. 39 31 TrI,LIKS AY, SEPT. 20th, 1918. t6 f " T •e:IV.Ieitibers of the Chicago wheat pit lave decided to hold daily prayer. , We. bet it tvpn't be the ;first ` time ,,they have made people say their prayers when they got badly tangled, in wheat. . , ' Save Til It Helps Patches til; war -tine, are often an evi- deuce of patriotism,. 'There are'many people who praise God froin wha.sill blessings flow and then pro- ' eee 1 to -waste them. Saving •brings , Its. .own reward _cern- : pounded.' •J ._. • - •.The Teutonic peoples have built up a jgreat military 'machine and are trained and forced to deny, themselves. In the allied nations the denial le left, Iargely to the individuals. „t ' The measureof•our love of freedom is ;your willingness td deny yourself so that the strength of the nation for war effort will be increased. • Self=denial must take,the form of money saving—thrift. • Every time 'you buy "a thing you do not need you interfere with Canada's war work.. Everydollar:,yotispend on things • • . not strictly necessary is a dollar not mere- ly, wasted. but used .to employ labour on • • things that itave'nothing to do with our : efforts to win the war fe r freedom. Stop the reckless spending. The man • •who : saves for • his country • helps 1.1411self,; :.,,• Those who do not lfigtht •must save. . Dent administer your finances on a • • •. •come=easy, go-easyplan: Save.. A dollar saved over here helps the • boys "over there;". , . • • d .In England they says ":A shilling wast- - ed stabs•a'Soldier in the back." t ; Pareslmony to promote your country's welfare: is now a virtue: indeed it is ex- petted of you. Saye for victory. POTS, ATTENTION! " 'The Dominion Press News and Feature Committee of the Victory Loan • 1918 . organization announcesa poem contest in connection with the Coming campaign, • Canadians with poetical talent are invited to submit offerings not exceeding 200 words, .which will be judged largely on • , their effectiveness as publicity designed to ;persttadeCanadians to buy Victory Bonds. A prize of a $50,00 bond of the new issue will 'be awarded for the best poem sub- mitted The next best 24 will be award- • • ed special mention and $5,00 will be paid for those which the committee decides to use in the course of the campaign. Pro- ' •-' feasor. M. W. Wallace of the Toronto University and the editor of Victory Loan Nationai, Press News and Feature Service „•, . will be the judges. The committee offers to supply inform- `::•iftion..concerning the urgency of the • • 'situation necessitating the coming loan, , . te.ail contestants who may apply to the cointnittee'e office, 18 King Street West, Toronto. The contest closes on October 15th, and ' • awards will be announced a few days tater, Wroxeter • _ , Mr,.akid.Mrs, John Wren of Sunder- '. • land, visited the latter's parents Mr, and Mrs. Geo. Wearring last week. • 'Mrs. Brethatler left on 'Tuesday for .eieSt. Louis, Mo., where she will 'seed a • few nnontiss with •h er sister Mrs. Edgar_ , • -'M,-Schealdt, • elehe Harvest Thanksgftrfng services in St. Janice Church last Sunday were very' Y • K'4al° attended, the singing was; good and the church beautifully decorated. •: •,.", Me. Thos. Musgrove wha is in the employ of the Waterous Engine Works, ••Brantford, bas been home for a couple of , wee s vacatiori.ane 'returned to work on Monday. • Rev. Mr. Stride, who has not been en- joying good health, Underwent an oiler- dtion.for throat trouble in St. Joseph's Hospital, London, last week. We are • pleased to learn he is progressing favour- -Ably. • • CREAM WANTED " Our sorviee is prompt and remittance _ sure ••Our prices are the highest on the - . market consistent With honest testing • Ship your cream "direct" to us and • -•save an •agent's eometission. The conirissapp comes out of the produe:'r, The mare it cost to get the creast to its destination the less the producer is sure to get. We supply Bans, pay all oxpress chargee and remit twice a month. .Write for prices and cans. Mt— Worth hr Creamery Co Seaford), '. Ont • . r' .,ql nillllq uIdn 111 i fj1 WINULIAM A . A OI An. Advertisement by Charles Dickens CHARLES DICKENS is one of the world's great teachers.. whathehas to Here is in one of his books: say "My other piece 9f advice, Copperfield," said Mr. Micawber, "vou know. Annual income £20, annual expenditure £19. 19, 6—result, happiness. Annual income £20, annual expenditure £20. 0. 6—result, misery. The blossom is blighted, the leaf is withered, the God of Day goes down upon the dreary scene, and and in short you are forever floored. As I am." The saving of a part of one's in- come was always a good policy. - Prudent men and women have always maintained a margin of saving. But to -day we must go 'farther in our efforts to save than ever before. To -day it is a matter of the gravest importance teat each Canadian , seek .ways and d means to economize by cutting down ex- penditures for unnecessary things, saving the money he spends on things he "could do without, so that when the Nation needs to borrow money he will be in a posi- tion to do his full duty. There is war -shortening work wait- ing for every dollar that can be saved. F Charles Dickens were writing to Canadians to -day he would probably give us advice to this effect: "My other piece of advice, Canadians, you know. No matter what percentage of your .annual 'income you have pre- viously saved, your efforts to -day should be to save more. The advantage of so doing is threefold: -.By the practice of economy you conserve the material and labor which must be devoted to the grim task before us; you cultivate the f»•iceless habit of thrift; you. gather more and more money tolendto the Nation for the prosecution of the war to a guide and certain Victory." • 41 Published under the authority of the }Minister of Finance of -Canada iili6A711/0111ii .".• ---iwv��,-IWid, 161u611314. 4i4i,ti.. ruu: I:Li id, THE D;EViL HAS RESIGNED 2115 Cause of the ;it i 4:Rice Riots ..e.ssel.e..e.s...e.:seasteaseseseaseeess .14+44 Fo•R more than two months, ,. orotic i s of Tokio, Osaka tkiL and other large cities of Japan . have devoted most of their attention to tlw rice .market. Their methods have beef. similar to those. of tlio most unscrupulous members of the New York Produce Exchange in "bulling„ and "bearing" grain. nice stands so high in popular esteem in Japan that it is almost considered a sacred cereal. Annual uncertainty about the rice crop is the fundamen- tal economic problem of the nation. Rice forms the chief part of the three daily meals of the Japanese. The peoples of every civilized country on the earth have lied the cost of living increased since the beginning of the world war. Rico became an article of specula- tion in Japan, much as did wheat and other foodstuffs in Canada. In Korea, the rice exchange at Cheniuplo clos- ed early in July, but speculation at Tokio and Osaka continued to force a gradual advance. A sturdy effort was made by Mr. Oka, Director of the Commercial and Industrial Affairs Bureau, to prevent ")toarding," and consequent "cornering" of the mar- ket, when rice approached 82.50 a bushel; but the effect was to increase speculation. On July 12, rice for July delivery advanced to 27,29 yen (about 813,64) per koku of 4,962 busltels. This made its cost approxi - mutely $2.68 per bushel, an almost prohibitive price to the poor, A "bear" movement slightly help- ed to check the rise; but the specu- lators then turned to "futures" and Lid up September rice to 24.80 yen per koku. The market sagged for a few days, ultimately deelining 80 points at Osaka;• but on July 17, the Produce Exchanges in other large cities of Japan, such as Nagoya, Ku - wane, and Shimonoseki, also develop- ed booms, and free buying advanced the standard price 1,30 yen per koku, said by a Japanese paper to be the largest jump ever made in the rine market in one day, Third grade Iiyunet rice later .reached 32.40 yen (816.20) per five bushels. • What Wall street would call a "bear panic" then developed and ne- cessitated intervention by the police. "Holders refused to sell even at the faiiiine price, in anticipation of a higher figure," says the Advertiser. "Veteran dealers were shocked at the situation, some of them asserting that the market was killing the peo- ple." Retail dealers were asking one yen (50 cents) for 2.6 sho (a sho, about 3 pints), - quantity that be- fore the war sold at 13 cents in Can- adian money! Kobe and Tsu ex- changes dosed their doors on account of confusion in making settlements, Al Osaka all parties consented to the adjustment of accounts by arbitra- tion. - Expla=cations by the speculators were of the Wall street kind. A ty- phoon had been reported somewhere in the Empire and was credited by the rice gamblers with vast destruct - •tion of the rice fields, whereas official investigation by Mr. Ito, head of the Agricultural Crop Section, showed that the damage had been eery slight. The wheat crop was likewise report- ed much decreased, although it had not been injured in any way. These grossly untrue statements were sup- = plemented by the announcement of mobilization of an army :or Siberia. Although the Japanese Govern- Ment, in anticipation of a Siberian t'ampaigu, had purchased, and had in storage, several months of . rice supply for the army and naves an- nouncement of that fact did not steady the market. Propaganda of the most extravagant character watt, circulated in the interest of gambl- ing narikin, despite the earnest ef- forts of the Government -to maintain public confidence, Another sharp advance in the rice .. I .,• I II et Neitszche, Treitscke and later Bernhardi, WANTONLY DESTROY ALL THIN,*S whose teaching inflamed the youths of This letter was written by Louis Syber- Germany, who in good time would be kop, of Creston, Ia., and first published in willing and loyal subjects and eager to the St. Paul Dispatch, Sept, 28, 1917 spill their blood and pull your chestnuts, It was subsequently reproduced in the yours and mine; the spell his been perfect Vancouver Sun, and is again reproduced —you cast your ambitious eyes toward this week in compliance with the wishes the Mediterranean, Egypt, India and the of many subscribers, who have heard of it Dardanelles, and you began your great but have not yet had an opportunity of railway to Bagdad, but the ambitious reading it. archduke and his more ambitious wife The Infernal Region, June 28, 1917.— stood in your way. To William von Hohenzollern, King of It was then that I sowed the seed in Prussia, Emperorof all Germany and your heart that blossomed into the as - Envoy Extraordinary of Almighty God. sassination of the duke and his wife, and My Dear Wilhelm—I can call you by that all hell smiled When it saw how cleverly familiar name, for I have always been you saddled the crime on Serbia. I saw very close to you, much closer than you you set sails for the fjords of Norway, and could ever know, I knew you would prove an alibi. In the days of Rome I created a rough- LIRE NOBLE GRANnr: ATHICR neck known in history as Nero; he was a How cleverly_ done, so much like your vulgar character and suited my purpose noble grandfather, who also secured an at that particular time. In these modern assassin to remove old King Frederick of days a classic demon and efficient super- Denmark, and later robbed that country criminal was needed, and, as I know the of two provinces that gave Germany an Hohenzollern blood, I picked you as my special instrument to place on earth an Murder is dirty work, but it takes a opportunity to become a naval power. annex of hell. Hohenzollern to make a way and get by. I gave you abnormal ambition, like- Your opportunity was at hand; you set wise an oversupply of egotist;,, that you the world on fire and bells of hell were might not discover your own failings; I ringing; your rape of Belgium caused twisted your mind to that of a mad man much joy, it was the beginning, the with certain normal tendencies to carry foundation of a perfect hell on earth. the you by as a most dangerous character destruction of noble cathedrals and other placed in power; I gave you the power of infinite works of art was hailed with joy a hypnotist and a certain magnetic force its -the infernal regions. that you might sway your people. •Your treachery toward neutral nations I am responsible for the deformed arm hastened a universal upheaval, the thing that hangs helpless on your left, for your I most desired. crippled condition embitters your life and Your undersea warfare is a master destroys all noble impulses that might stroke, from the smallest mackerel pot to use meanxiety,but your otherwiseca Yo the great Lusitania you show no favorites; strong sword arm is driven by your ambi- as a war lord you stand supreme, for you e u noconsideration have no mercy, o have Y, Y I placed in your soul a deep hatred for all , things English, for of all nations on earth breast as theyg o down into the deep I hate England most; Wherever England g order out of together, only to be torn apart and plants her flag she brings t leisurely devoured by sharks down among chaos and the hated Cross folloiirs the the corals. tion that squelches all sentiment and pity; You have taken millions of dollars from innocent victims and called indemnity; you have lived fat on the land usurped and sent the real owners away to starv- ation. You have strayed away from all legalized war methods and introduced a code of your own You have killed and robbed the people of friendly nations and destroyed their property., You are a liar, a hypocrite and a bluffer of the highest magnitude, You are a pal of mine and yet you pose as a personal friend of God. Ah, William, you are a wonder. You wantonly' destroy all things in your path and leave nothing for coming generations. I was amazed when I saw you form a partnership with the impossible Turk, the chronic killer of Christians, and you a devout worshipper in the Lutheran church, I confess, William, you are a puz- zle at times. A Mohammedam army, commanded by German officers, assisting -one another in massacring Christians is a new line of warfare: When a Prussian offic. r can witness a `nude woman being -disemboweled by a swarthy Turk, com- mitting a double murder with one cut of his sabre, and calmly stood by and see a house full of innocent Armenians locked up, and the house saturated with oil and fired, and then my teachings did not stop with you, but have been extended to the whole German nation. 1 confess my Satanic soul grew sick and there and then I knew the pupil had be- come the master I am a back number, and, my dear Wilhelm, I abdicate in your favour. The great key of hell will be turned over to you. The gavel that has struck the doom of damned souls since time began is yours. done; I am satisfied with whatI have that my abdication its your favor is for the very hest interests of hell in the fut- ure I am at your ,majesty's service. Af- fectionately and sincerely. LUCIFER 11. SATAN tnarket occurred on July 24, despite the conservatism of the oldest brok- ers, most of whom believed the high water mark had been reached. Hold- ers in the provinces continued to be chary of selling the best grades, which they quoted at 34.50 yen per koku. Protected by the tariff on for- eign rice and low interest for loans, the farmers continued to hold on for even higher quotations. On the ex- changes some caution developed in the "spot!' market when the visible supply of rice was announced to have decreased to 298,270 melte, Excitement on- the Tokio Produce Exchange was extraordinary. The Department of Agriculture. and Come coerce had a representative on the floor to investigate, and was aided by detectives from the Metropolitan Police. As a result, one of the vet- eran dealers was summoned before the Minister and "cautioned to be mindful of the nation's interests in such anxious times." Some decline followed; ,and, on July 24, heavy gales of "spot '= rice caused July to close at 30.10 yen; August at 29.20 yen, and September at 27.66 yen per koku. Such was the situatign es made known by mail, • It should be emphasized here that the relations between the court and Japanese people are of the warmest character. The sympathy of His Ma- jesty the Emperor. for the sufferings of the masses is shown by his prompt gift of three million yen ($1,500,- 000) from his private purse to re- nuke some of the Neve distress. Tr monarchs of Europe, the Emperor of Japan is not rich. As a contempor- ary es o i isthe bless n s r as Hs t a y says, , clean poverty.' buraday, Oct, ,3rd, 1918 east vv4wan>r sh . +0110'0N 40 "' �' 1,*****101010101e S. 8, ltlu .8 was favoured with good weather for their School Fein which. was held cm Friday afternoon Sept. 27th. The pupils took a very active, interest ani there was a gond display of exhibits. The entries included Vegetables, flowers, Cole . lection r ion ak Grains.. Leaves etc , Iipplgs Stewing, Knitting, Baking, etc. Mass Uetberington and Miss Annie Currie were Judges. A program was given and there wad also some outdoor .per's, The pupils and teacher appreciated very numb itae interests shown by the visitors. re111P1 110MANOFF MYSTEWr', Various l,'er�sioiis of flow Late Curr \•1 as Iilled. All the materials for the myth Or legend of Nieholas II. are at hand. When lite Czeeho-Slovaks captured Yekatt:rinburg they searched for the ex -Czar's body, but Pound no traces of et, so one of theft• officer's reports to Ambassador Francia. The rumor most generally credited at Yeka.ter- inburg was that the body had been taken to the deepest. pit in a coal utittte toed there destroyed. That is. enough. Nicholas will take his place with + Louis XVII., Nero, Marshal, Ney, and all the other historic char- acters who never died. For the next' forty years at least he will be seen one day in Siang, the next in lelissis- sipgi, a day or two later in South Africa, and for half a century or more after that old men will confide on their deathbeds the fact that the schoolmaster or the telegraph oper- ator, the farmhand, who died in their towns some years before was the ex-' Czar. "Tho late Dauphin," as Hue- kleberr•y Firin's King described him, welcomes Nicholas to a journey as lengthy as that of the Wandering Sew. • The version of Nicholas' death which the Czecho-Slovaks sent to Ambassador Francis is very different from the Bolshevist version, which; represented him as collapsing in the face of ° a firing squad, This new version represents that the Red Guards refused to kill the ex -Czar, that a Lettish firing party was su}ti- moned and that it in turn refused to fire, and that thereupon the Soviet Commandant, a sailor, "drew his own revolter and shot Nicholas dead." If this is true the Bolshevist account was inteated to give some appear- ance of eegularity to a plain assassin- ation. The officer who made the re- port to. the Ambassador, however,_ merely gave the new version. as the best account he could get. Evidently'. Yekaterinburg knows little about it; evidently, too, the actors in the crime will front time to time issue various 'and conflicting memoirs telling irre- concilable stories and the world may never learn how, in truth, the Czar died.—N. Y, Times. Airplanes at 'the Front. The airplanes which are doing so much to help win the war are of many types. Each variety of avia- tion exploits at the front requires its own machine, and as many different tasks are performed by the •Allied aces, the types of'plane in use are numerous Here is.,_a description of the..five airplanes most commonly used by the Allied air forces: (1) Cotnbet machines: Small, fast, single-ses-ter lighters, used Tor scout- ing purposes. They usually have -et wing spread of from 20 to 25 feet, a speed of from 125 to, 135 miles per hour; carrying' capacity 450 pounds, and a clir:tbix:g eeee:l. ei 10,000 feet . in from 8 to 12 minutes, (2) Reconnaissance and photo- graph: Ewes pilirbir:e:., used for artillery s )ottinv, u:wl, t.,ai.iag anis general reconnoitering;, The wing spread is usually from' 40 to 60 feet; speed from 80 to 100 miles per hour, carrying c. pac ty f: call l;ov ie 900 pounds, They are two or three seat- ers and have a climbing speed of 10,000 feet in 12 to 25 minutes. (3) elembers: Similar to the re- connaiseanee ,machine, but larger. '['hey vary from 45 to 90 feet in wing spread and carry franc two to twelve persons in addition to their bombs and fuel, Their speed is from. 75 to 100 miles per hour; their radius of operations from 600 to 1,000 milts and their climbing speed 7,000 feet in 30 minutes. (4) Battleplene: A two or three - passenger plane driven by one or two t't,gints end equipped with machine guns and sometimes cannon. It makes from 75 to 85 miles per hour. (5). For naval work, hying beets end hydro -airplanes of various sizes are used, On account or the weight of their ltulls, or pontoons, these comp, re favorably with the recen- t/els H.rcc' unteliine, travelling 90 to 100 i.ilies per hour, They are used for coast patrol work and naval ob- servation purposes, and can carry 2,000 pounds, Wealth of the 'Underworld. It is only within very recent years that man has begun to draw largely upon the mineral resources of the earth. in the last fifteen years lie Ilan takers out more ;roti than in all the previous history of mankind. In the last thirteen years he has mined more copper than was produe- ed in all previous ages. In the. last eleven years he hits drawn more petroleum from the earth's bowels than its alt the years since the world began. Where other minerals are eon- eerned, the record is somewhat siml- n Butthemisfortune lies the i lar, fact that we are exhausting. these re., :-sources with such rapidity that a toy from now there ma be centuriesr Y c i comparatively little o them left, ' In the Iast twenty year`s we have dug as nrueh goal out of our own ter- - as all previous lristory yielded; -but every ton taken out diminishes the available stock, which can Bever bo replaced, JI: av Jae. vjw . ar, 4' Jv: ♦r ij. Values . in Women's Weir 'Jr: wid . w:t q ! H. E. ISARI F JTZ vi> „e • Agency for the Popular. New Idea Patterns isyiTCiJ+:Jii►li►i�!..:iJTGJ:.►I.: !.4» 4»', ar o-il4» 4»iJ�y►i�►1w:.<io:► iii,�,fr 1. q> ae> v1 its vis vin > ." ies.a> * ass Things You Will Need in the FaII NovetherStyks Now Redj Wee Coat 8eE3 Ladles' Wet fe2i;2 Ls+:les' Seitt 6919 • `Your garment should -be aui de horn New •4' i fit ' n " e4 Style, exactness of fit ar..i it3,�,.- p::ce are all combined in tl e7-.1 patterns. Each pattern has a seam t and a most heipfril cuttinu uxw 3rarn, *4710 dr .fd > ar* ,�O err ere • 01, ATv Jf>rt arr ew ew Summer done— • •,mac. and the mind of the ,i• gird housekeeper tul'ns J•! 4 to getting her home 4A> ay. and family ready for the new and cooler .> ►ail i• i ♦Tr `rC Don't forget that • ot11' counters, our assistants, are here •• • rjed ready to help you'. 1� Pull stocks --Prompt je and courteous ser- ire vice- -Ri ;bt Prices. '3I' ar .• r See the 'Pali num- ii: bet' of the Neer Idea i Quarterly just out. • i:; ars This smart attract- • °1$ i ve style book on :;e 4iI sale at our Nevt7�e Idea Mattern De -%1$ ar pal'tment. • v�► an ii: Cotyle and Inspect our Excellent 1 A tri, ��w 4 J:G .j. v�> vi> J:G gee• • 'I HE FIELDS OF FLANDERS Over the fields of Flanders, The mailed fist laid its Wrath, To blight with utter ruin The people in its path One knock upon the portal— "A highway, or ye die!" And all the world but Austria Thrilled with the proud reply! "Across the fields of Flanders But one broad highway runs. And he who treads it tramples first, The life blood of her sons! "From God, who made the nations We hold our native land Since Caesar's swords fell blunted Before our fathers' stand!" Then rose that little nation And stayed the foe's advance-- Safe were the shores of England And saved the life of France. But on the fields of Flanders, The withering tempest fell, The mercy of the Teuton That rises straight from hell!. What need of legal parley, Of shifting fault or blame? The deed they did is nameless, Save by its own foul name! And till the race that wrought it . Pays to the last degree And till the race that suffered Stands forth, forever free. God keeps us from forgetting That fateful August day, When Belgnim's soul arose in. flame '1'o show the world the way. • Clor'f to Mr and Mrs J Hicks and children of Toronto, are at present visiting relatives in and around town. Mrs. McMillan and baby daughter of Listowel. are the guests of her parents. Mr. and Mrs Richard eteeratli, this week. Miss Margaret Young of Orange Hill, has taketi a position in the millinery de - pertinent of Stephens & Ashton's store. Miss Hazel Hamilton returned on Sat- urday from Toronto where she underwent h ii r t her heats w i We t us ie an operation. W for the baby clinging to its mothers a pn T . y t~ be mue,h improved. The Methodist Sunday School will hold their annual Rally. Services next Sunday afternoon in the basement of the church. A special program is being prepal•ed Mrs, 'r 0. ,Johnston and Mre (Rev.} Kere attended the Winghatn District, W. M S. Convention in 'recswater last week. They report a fine gathering of workers and excellent papers and addresses throughout. We are please. to note that Mrs. Johnston was again elected Organ- izer. obtaining (seventy two of the eighty votes cast. The illustrated lecture given in the town hall on Wednesday evening of last week was fairly well ettentled but not sv. well as it would have been had it been better advertised. Capt C. G. Coles le an Able And forceful 'speaker and the lecture wet illustrated by lantern views by Rev Mr. Sleeman, At the end of the (program a branch of the British Naval League 1 wee formed. Union Jack; under her rule wild tribes; I have seen the fields of Poland; now ., .... ,...,ss fit for prowling beasts only; practical citizens; she is the great civilizer no merry children in Poland now; they all 8P'Time l ltrift t of the globe and I IIATE I1;CR. succumbed to frost and starvation. I Si maw) 80177, Angie Wan= drifted down into Galicia, where 'formerly become tillers of the coil and in due time Too Transparent. New Bishop (addressing large audience) --Ont my dear 'people, would that I had a. window in my bosom, so that you aee the emotions oi' my heart! Voice from the Back Wouldn't a. "pane" In. the atontaelt d0,. rati''norf .i to was come and wit[o v • r Y a t , and .......,..., ,. moreover, she was Scotch. like mourned 1 planted in your soul a cruel hatred for Jews and Gentiles lived happily together; Macintosh, her late husband, for eighteen DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN your another because SUE was English 1 found but ruin and ashes; 1 felt a months, and then from a crowd of suitors and left racy -good friend Bismarck to fan curious pride itt .my pupil, for it was chose honest, homely Maclatyre for her the flame 1 had kindled, Recent history above my expectation. second. proves how well our work • was done. It 1 was in Belgium when you drove the "I'in no guid enough for ye, dear!" broke your royal mother's heart, but I peaceful population before you like cattle he whispered. "What for did ye choose gained my purpose. • into slavery; you separated man and wife. me oot o' sae moray?" The inherited disease of the Iioben• and forced them to hard labor hi the "Ah, weel, ye see, your name's Macin- zollerne killed your father, just as it will trenches 1 have seen the most fiendish tyre," kill you, and you became the ruler of rape committed on young women and "Yes, but--" began the bewildered Germany and a tool of mine sooner then those who were forced into maternity suitor. I expected. were cursing the father of their offspring, "An' ye ken," finished the widow, "all To assist you and farther hasten my end I began to doubt if my inferno was my linen's marked '1VfacI.' - that vliy, work, I oat you three evil splrtts. really pap to date. Doodad." CHIROPRACTIC Chiibpractid Drugless'healing anent ;surly locale and removes the cause o. ,liee.tee,: allowing nature tol'restore�//''jjhealth J. A. PDX D.C..' D.O. t Osteopathy 1'.Icctrieity Member I ime metes.' Physi,'ntns Ae.socia tion of Canada. —Phone 191— Bose 9 Bost, Boitlieui+'s laonide The old home of Rosa Esnhe, French painter, is being by Mine, Arnie Elizabeth I•tlunipke, to whom it was bequeathed, as a hos- pital for the manual training of dis- ci e is-ableFrench soldiers. Boyoti(I' Rcc011eetigra, Restaurant Keeper—I want yogi to paint me the picture of a nice dab of roast beef. Poor Artttst •You'll have to turn - filo model. I've forgotten what mat beef looks like. Xiacee In the lehillpphted. Sut h :t variety of races are reore- et ntc•.I in the Philippine Itslantle ,hitt Ii4nauajee ars spokon. • Keep Caote's Inside During Cold Nights. The season for cold nights will be here all too soon, in this northern di- , mate. While it is true that keeping the cows inside means more labor in cleaning the stable and more diffi- culty in keeping the cows clean, the extra fertilizing material collected in this way will probably pay for the extra labor. If this does not, the extra supply of milk received by keeping the cows in a comfortable stable at times when the temperature drops below freezing -point, will do so. Experience shows that cold has a ,tery marked effect in lessening the milk flow, particularly for cows that have been milking for some time, when the natural tendency is for the cow to dry up and during, which time every means should be adopted to keep the cow milking. Cows should • milk at least ten months of the year. ` Leaving cows out of doors on cold nights, after they have been milking for six or eight months, makes a greater tendency for these cows to go dry. Where cows are kept inside, the stuble should be cleaned regularly and some absorbent material like sawdust, shavings, , chaff, or cut - straw, should be scattered along the passages, on the platform, and in the gutter. This helps very much in cleaning the stable and in keeping the cows clean. Another advantage of stabling on frosty nights, is that it prevents the cows eating frozen feed, which is gen- erally considered to be injuriot+s to ' milk cows. They may be kept in the stable or yard until after the pasture thaws, and In this way the animals• are protected against digestive* trou- bles, and conditions are more favor- able for maintaining the health and milk -flow of the .animals. ---• prof, H. H, Dean, O. A. College, Guelph. Prevent Great Farm Loss. If, through better ear', aura man- agement, the average life of Cann machines could be increased by a sin- gle year what a tremendous :saving would be effected. The amount a farmer loses each year through neg- lect of his machinery would pay for the erection of a plain weather-proof shed that would keep them in good condition.—Prof. John Evans, 0. A. College, Guelph. Iiia Hundred Iritish Cooped Up. Writes The Ilagut' correspondent of the London lJnily Mail: Two Dutchman from nteidericli (Duisburg) have told e that lastt ennday they attended a meeting or- ganized by the local Socialists, none but Germane being allowed in. Al- tlion gli Dutelt, they entered with the throng. There were nearly 1,000 pt's tient. The speakers declared that (xer- teeny had had enough of victory, swage' of woti,'A',L enough of can- . ta.i fodder, enough of train meet (alt eeprr-s:tittn applied to hospital train winch tome ineer anti t its emit). The spcaltt'izi palette! Gt'r- ',artny's tut nye in the ' '.a, etet t.;lors, • alt the trout,it5 the wee had #;'-',.filth on the country send .&.sting vet that no •sort 01, re:psu1f acne table could avert catat;trapltee ittiorniante .old lnp then ; f the 'itttt-vyx, Nuel t'' ,t'k: -there et* 600 llrithla its lr,.tir.Irrl, which they aro allow-. d to l.'.1, .rely ler hale' an hour datha to 1.,i..• the ere 't•'ny t:et. o:.l,, 1 Ib. oi Noe llaeittteleg e„t• . } ' t,7iii, To e; ate rt tr• ievet ht` a a tri evader to quote wi ' iy' r. raft well.