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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-08-05, Page 3You OIL 'find relief In Zam-134 It Oases -the burning; stinging: rthepEilissInce?,.m_.,nelpotie_pnits,_borwitevt:eirertg:Id...iwitng-ce:Zwinotiht-shozani.!:011: Ito pow. HAS ABLE FINANCIAL HEAD If. RPOOT is VERY EFFIcIENT AND lEIGHIAr,RESPEC*1 'through RimPeople Have Had andidencd Oovernment Benda Beitored, ,Prance in her hour of stress look to two anon for the preservation of her political and economic indePen. , Once. These inen are Joseph, joffre, the generalissimo of her armies, and Alexandre Ribot, the Minister of Fin - mice, who, singe the beginning of the conflict,has borne the burden of the responsibility of furnishing the MoileY* and, above all, the supPliee needed for the operations on land nO4 Sea, for the defence of La Petrie • It is a 'source of congratulation to those Who have at ileSrt, the welfare of.France that the filianees Of the na- Veil should in this emergency be in the hands"' of4ta statesman so univer- • sally respected as Alexandre Ribot, , It was not until the French 'Cabinet ,had been reconstructed in the early • days Of September, and that . the Massa of ther-peoPle:hadit brought • home to them that the veteran, Aleic-, • andreRibot, had assumed charge of • 'Ate national treasury as Minister of , Finance,, that this- Sentiment OV • trim* in the paneiof the National IteaallrY began to disappear. " People Trust Him. • By degrees the "petite bourgeoise," the small professional classes, the • farmers and the peasauts,, began to •- take their, gold and silver from. their , • hiding placed, from the "Nroolen stock- ing,"- and toinvestit in Jinni -Mal, de- -fence- bonds; deeming it better; after allr,-te-hitite their 'savings earn interr est, than to lie idle in places of con- ,. eealment. •Ribot it the only great. French 'statesman of the present day who • • • ' has an American Wife. He has been • . happily Married, for More than two - score years to ,Miss Mary_ Burch' Of , . ' • Ribot is a. man of lofty stature, •ispare in figure; and yet of command- •. ‘Ing and distinguished presence, con- veying the impression of great cul- ture ,and refinement. He it perhaps the Most 'stately and 'decorative ,fig: lire in French public life to -day, is a Mast accomplithe musician, the .an- ,• „ • • , .• • 444.440444•44.44441444 Mr. Alexan4re:118)ot: *or' of Several standatd workt „ on English jurisprUdence. and judicial in- 'stitetiens; is possesied of a mOtt • Rio ti as.' /440E4 qtaiiteir 67;Til4706.",,e;Y• .A.RT114,0* This pietute shows the famous Roman Catholic Church d Reicitno in. the government of Warsaw Rut!- . plan Poland; which was. destroyed in the battle between the Germans. and Russians during the Week of Oct. 1343;1914.. The Gerinans first shelled it, and then capturing the hill an which it is located, mounted gunsin :the partially ruined towers. The Russians. in turn shelled the chureh, Coinplegng the wreck. The foundation of thia church was laid in .1631, architects fram Greece and Artisan*. from Italy_ being • brought to Poland to ' supeiintend the constructiOn. was not•OoMPleted Until 1890, con -tape, a thaumaturgiO figure of the Vir- gin, -.1iryhich was not dee,40.Yed during the Aomba.rdlllellt;a/lt, the Ileneintfi for •milea..about are now making - pilgrimages to the ruins to gasa.upsin the "lVliraele of the Sacred Shrine." - • „ . • tensive knowledge of American and English literature, and bas for the last) ten years been a Member of the' Academy of Prance. . •Friend of Reside. - father of the Franco-Riisidan It Was: he, who, as a Minister and Premier from 1890 to 1893, despatch- ed the French fleet on its memorable visit to Kronstadt, on which occasion the convention between the two coun- tries was finallVconcluded and ire- -Claimed to the World by :Alexander III. He further cemented the bonds of union between the two nations When pe;tettifned. to oar*, as Premier and. aa Minister of Finance in 1895: , ':•Whenk.,later, itot was accUsed in the Chamber of Deputies Of using his official position as Minister of For- eign Affairs to shield one Of the prin- cipal personages incriminated in the Panama scandal—it was • the • only charge • 'of the kind ever brought against hini,i•-he indignantly denied the imputation on his honor, and 4e - elated that if , he , had asked Baron Cottu and his lawyers to abstain from revealing the identity of "X," it was because he had learned that the, name of the. ambassador' in Paris of a ;ItiendlY aye been drawn-ifito the -discus, Won. • , • The name that was on everybody's •fins conneetion with The affair :was that of the late Baron Mohrenheim, then enyoy of Illifssia • olt Altruistic. -, Mistress—Why • are you leaving ps, Norah.? •• -Cook—Well mum me :reasons are 'unselfish wins, I want to give some other girl a chance- at the joy of liyin with yez." (1- • . The conUumPtion. of Cit r.Dairy Ice Cream. is In- c . creasing eyery season. The local dealer has not the • faeRlties,. besides he makes so 'little that he Cannot turn out a itiNormlee 'Cream. ',Discriminatingftbop keepers everywhere are sellhtg City Dairy Ice . . treani *stead of their min make, and their patron. • age is increafting betanfte City Dairy Ice :Ordain Li :better', amd.. the titiality Is uniform: • . . „ Loot's, • ' • • Abe, alter*, ' iroFtoNtoir - want an Agent in every town.„ GERMAN* AFTERTHEWAR. - ' he Will Find, Herself Hopelessly •,- Crllniled. • When the, European war closes Ger- manywlItthrd relatiOns with other countries, says the New York Journal of Commerce. No mition in this age can maintain an • ,CIVILIANS WITH ARMIES. Doctors, Nurses, Motorists, Mechan- ics, Interpreters, Telegraphers; etc. That the British Expeditionary Volvo ' ha's attached to it •almost enough-eiVillans to make quite- a -re- spectabie army in itself may surprise' people who rem.ember the attitude of the War Office towards newspaper independent economic system;- and correspondents ,and other non-comba- Germany least of all nations has tents. It is a fact,. however, that sought to do so, • Whensheresumes- the services of a large number of eh/ - trade relations her; danger will be Hans are utilized in various capaci- that with current means of providing ties at the front. The object in em - for the restoration of usual business i ploying them id to avoid diminishing relationships upon the necessary ithe ' fighting' capacity ot the troops sealb-,--,she- will find herself- bopelesslylengagedi.- the- theory --adopted-being crippled... She cannot look with Sue- that a soldier should only be employ,. ess to her patt, ,sources of supply in, ed. as a soldier, and that all other ne- London . and -Paiii, and she is likely 4 cessary work should be left to eivi- to. find .relatively little aid available Hans, „ in the, neutral conntries.' . Germany . This Civilian force, however, con.: now dependsrpractically entirely, upon sista mostly of French, although -there her own internal resources, both of are a certain nilmber of British civil- ians ,doing- d ty with the British Army in Frage just now... The ma-. jorityrof these are members of the either, and residents of the country, Royal Automobile Club, who are driv- es already noted, are deprived of the lugthe cars which they have gener- usual standards of comparison. Her ously placed at the disposal of the -leaders, under these conditions, are staff. Other British civilians accord:. likely to come to the 'end of her Panying the forces ere -the doctors, strength Without much war-iimg,-andsurgeone,-and nurses urho_ard-assidt• unexpectedly, both to far as their own ing military Medical Officers in the people and the -outside werld'ar-e-Fon4 base hospitals. ' • cerned.. When the, German. niacin:I 'There are a considerable number does thurs-reach,the ,finiit of its en- of -other-posts-I'm-which civilians -are durance for the present, recovery is eligible. Among them May be men - likely to be much- slower and more: tioned :the handling and despatching difficult' than in the case of other of stores,. the loading andunloading countries. The • "economic laws," of trains, the .driving of baggage - Which are said- by some to have been wagons,and the repair of roads, etc. successfully overridden by German, or- , The other, capacities -in Which civilians ganization and combination, have ki are employed just now with the army way of reasserting-themaelves. Ger- at'llie frontincli&.111,:irdeLof-lraersit Man conditions after the war are like- ciders, artificers, mechanics, guides, ly to furnish a striking illustration of Chauffeurs, interpreters, and to on; the way in which this process makes while a proportion -also End "work in itself effective. • the postal, telegraph, remount,: and ' sanitary departments, and so forth. sanitary service of an army in the field is a very important one, and upon it in a great measure depend the. health and: comfort of the troops, engaged. The personnel of such a de- partment employs a considerable num.; ber of • 'Civilians. These are divided into -separate-squads, each under the control of a medical officer, and their work deals with the provision of fr$sh water and the destruction of refuse. The civilian' element attached to the troops in, the field just now also in- cludes a cOnsiderabie- number' of French, BO Scouts. • They. act . as .eurrent Manufactures and of capital. Outsiders cannot determine, exactly how rapidly' she is • trenching upon Italians Well Trained. The, Italian soldier undergoes a more severe 'training in Some respects than any friend or etezny in the armies of Europe. ' His day begins at 4.30 a.m., and drill and routine '.con- tinue, with a. two -hours break of "compulsory 'repose," until 5 P.m. After that he has four heurs' free- dom, hilt he must be back in barracks by nine o'clock, or 8.30 in winter, and is supposed to be abed when, half an. hour later, the bugles sound the "sil- enzio." He is extremely well .cared for by the authorities,. but long .messengers, guides, orderlies, and so marches are reckoned among .the es-. on. .• sentials -of his training, and some re- ' ' giments can cover 60 -miles.at five -ffiiteriVi WOW; and -dOnsider it noth- ing remarkable. -Lunde' Are Re -Forested. -- The. Ladrentide Company of Quebec, ' producers of mar -arid puipatooa,-is re- foiestingits non-agricultural _cut -over lands. ItIs else importing reindeer , -Ittinarirs Liniment Cures Garret in Cows , . „ • . CLEMENCEAil.'S: DINNER-- y'AtTX..- Teld the Guests That It Had Been a Joke on Them All. The distingnished French Politician, M. blemenceau, knoish as one of from Newfoundland tq see if they Can • take the .place of dogs in winter woods, Work,lb CHANGE, THE yontATioD.1 It Makes for Health. ' • A Man • tried leaving off •Meat, po- tatoes, coffee, de; and adopted a breakfast 'offrdit;iGraPOTda...iVith eretiiff,lfelte. &ISO- toast and a cup of Postum. • His health began to improve • at enceior_the _reason that A meateater Wilt reedit a plate Once in a. while where his system seems ;to become clogged and the machinery doesn't' WOrk, sinoothly. A change of this kind puts aside food that is slow to digest and takes up food and drink of the highest !gine,: already partly digested and Capable of being quickly changed into good, Atli blood .and strong tiesite, ' A Most valuable feature 61 GraPe- IS1hts, is the natural mineral elements ,(phosPlutte of Oda* etc.,)- grown in the %teas ;ttoln Which it is vitido: •irliete elements' are absolutely ne- cessary for the building of body, brain and nerve. • A few days' Unaofarape-NutWill ahuW one a waY to ,physiCal and "mental strength well Worth the. trial. Lookin pkgsr for- the little book, "The Roati to WellVille" orhere's Itel180i1P • # the most determined men in Prance, and nothing ever' puts him out or ruf- fles his tempdr: When he was Prime Minister he -very- neatly squashed practical joke that, •some -anonymous person wished ..to play npon him. This would-hawit sent out a large number of invitations to people all over Paris to a big dinner _ at .,/tf. ,Clemengeau's lthuse.--AteK.idaYs later 41?1,,,;:Clets.$6, mail Was surprised to receive letters from absolute Strangers accepting his "kind invitation to dinner,", and thanidng_him..mostsordiallY- Instead of writing to these people to tell them • that there had been SOMe Aiistake, M. Clemenceau- at once realized .that someone ,had been playing a trick on him,, And he gave orders for a dinner on the date in question, and .it was dilly•lield. Everything was done • on 'the Most lavish scale; and throughout the meal M. Clemencsati's unknown and 'who* undistinguished 'guests were simply bursting with prideto think that they had been -invited to the table of such a famous rattn• 13nt M. 'Clanieteetin laid 'a little surprise for 'Mehl' Which he kept until the last course 110, boon eaten, .He then rose gravely and- his ' sistonisted guests that their present& there was really due to a choice little.joke which had boon perpetueteet ISy sonie per son unknown. °After that- the distil)" pointed guests hastened to dePart , as ' quickly as they could.. '• • • ' flOSPEO CALMAR. AmIseulsiter for Ainotrist *porta Ie. forealtlesi by Torture. A hundred, •yeas hence women ini Ala of Italy will still threaten un-: ruly children with the "curse of Gel -1 Go into Ala to -day end ask any . I inhabitant of the houses that so glad- ly 4 the tricolor what they kneW of Prospero Galvan, and you will see their f,acee blanch with hatred, if no longer with 'terror; because there is still with them, and will be BO long as they and their children's children. inhabit Ala, the spectre of the- sworn torfurer Of Ala; the Trentino rene- gado, the sergeant of gendarmes, and the infamous instrument of Francis' Joseph. The ,square, brutal face; the Aar - row grey- eyes, cord ", --piercing, arat pitiless; the shaven head- And the massiVe jaw, with its huge mandibles; Trost in Jetts. Joffro, heartz, hale, most whole. somely sane man, well around the cor. nor of the sixties, Imitates none of the traditional habits of ' greet cons' menders. Ile does not dictate throe or four telegrams and letters at once. Ile takes more than throe hours a day sleep. Ile deeS notreat in ix state •a trance, 7. quite the contrary. Re is fieod'feeder and a good sleeper. Re- gular meals and seven straight hours of sleep from nine at, night until four in the U. '40 in all the remaining 17 hours of 'the 24 the entire French ariny knows that 'the eta man" is awake. AS to the final result, not The re- motest shallorjof doubt for a moment crosses his nund. Ile is as certain of victory as he is of his existence. To every man in'the.French army he has_ imparted precisely this sante Cpliii- 4ence. And as it is in the army, so- • it is in the entire nation. "General FARM FPR itENT. ' the low forehead ,of the .typical joffre knewwe are going to win* ir 1.901CINit 03 1*04. COMMT inal, and the bigpointed mustachios*. therefore we knoW 'we. are going tO ma 1 F will for many years be the nightmare lid of. the French, war ' creed, "n• 11.- 1"4•1!'"m. BramPt°21" NEWSPAPERS FOR eau, •UnAiNkiVi. IELRL COMPLAINTS AIQ.NNT:s rwilleaneisuzeetlIccritniteirto4,,es:005 ROFIT-lkiAxING NEWS AND JOB Calves for sale toed OntartO e first sign of illness dunn have. ever Two undreit tur • win.". This is the beginning and the 4120eAVel A the beet eeellone of on, of the people of the Val Lagarina.. For this Galvan WAS a torturer' by profession and instinct. L'• To him was entrusted the teak of - searching out_ those inhabitants of the district whosesympathies were. with '.Italy. There is • not a house - which he has not robbed under pre - tem*, of searching for fugitives; there is not a , family he has not blackmailed under threat of denounc- ing father or son Or brother as "talo- . He "made friends" of some fa:nines under pretence -,� - being secretly. On- the italian,,side "(f0 , he cornea of it geod*Italian4familY), then haled the Mala members 'secretly and at night before e "commission of inquiry" at the headquarters of the gendarmery, .and there floggeL them to • try and extract from them the names of Italophils. An army of spies was in his service, and he created an atmespherenthatred, ter-, ror, and persecution. -When 'war aa - peered 'inevitable he sent his wife andchildren into Switzerland • be- cause he knew that whosoever bears his name will meet with no mercy at the"hands Of any Italian of the .Tren- tino. • • $1,0001EVARD • . FOR A OISE OF INOITRULE OON- . OWATION • t• To any person who cannot ° be cured • of Constipation by - Dr. Hamilton's Pills, •the above reward will be paid. No medicine gives such lasting satisfaction or effects such marvel- cures- aa -Dr.. .-Hamilton's-Pills. Relief instantly. follows their use. That blinding headache gees forever, that feverish" feeling in the skin is soothed away, bilious fits and stomach disorders are stopped. . • Don'tfbe nervous nbetit using Dr. Hamilton's Pills; they are mild enough for a child to use, yet- certain and effective in 'action in the most chronic cases. Get a 25c. box to -dal; they bring and • keep , robust good health. - A ' Harvesting the tdrop. • According to C,P. R. adyicer there. te.be aShortageofzfarnflik.- hot in the west in the fall., •. There ere, already over 100;000 of our Can adian young' Pien---nnder-armt, arTd -the---wat-may'deMand nore gration is, , of course, at a standstill. It will be impossible to get men item the east,: Where men are scarce, and in an Case thewest does not want men who; after the harvest, Would be a burden on the people: • The question is,iyhere will the Men agile from? The press is advising- the farmers to hire !nen' now and to hire them for a year m advance. There is,indeed, talk of a famine of un- skilled labor in the fell. -Many thou- sands of men, not merely from Can- ada; but theStates-, have left, fez. 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, esthete is .fully 30 per cent. of increase under cultivation? - The States expects the -Wgeott5,,crewinjtaidatokY*- netts 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 municipalitiet have _suspended their .ptogramme of public work in, order that the laborers Passible should be on the lend far the harvest. 1 he" Baby'shot ow*ent i t. hTe ra i lg LI e Vt se; . thoer I i.it nt l 0. . a °fumes, et AN.comall:iviSC:01:3.77.4)7411,0;_lay' ca.i'".•; hours he. may be beyond -cure These 1...2' Internet atie: RStersal. ettresl..witlfor TAlilqts. Will Prevent; elllillner - corn?' nt,4•Pttrn,519":%tirnitorVagen‘ii:liCal plainte if ,given occasionallyAO the Co.. ptatteo: Conlnawood. 05ti."1!! 1 71 .WAI:g1/04'.1111(I ,will PrOUiptli -Ore' -"----' ' tbesa troubles. if ?Abair ;come.02r. end • FA"81!"'SAL'a''' #, denly.- : Babies OWii Tablets '''. lihoiild': gugms.: -,Otai, .;• SALE- . ''IN VIII abrayS be kept in. every home where .•"'; .- County 'Of Norfolk. Mod choice, there are - young Children. Therettiiies pPerreeacreta.ligThlegrnifirMrea,"830%0Zotoe, 4 Al 04; no other medicine as good end e motherrninth il ns ailliY60 t idthaartanttheeey 4?farae 'agbc.solrit .- R. IV.' 13a 79072,1: esdaro°ch.; Ont. ' lutely safe. The 'Tabletsare eold by ' Medicine dealers or by mail at 25 MM. on ' BT'ADIC AND WHIT'S grovole_pri wurwria,_ 42.0„:?:.;eier .,111pseptaltrarate.e. itt!ssielsot, cePtS,A, beg_ . Medicine Brockville, Ont. - females 415. St. Bernards, males .430. I -- -- - -- - Co.,- 2 . ' -These arethebest breeds for Canada, „,*.- „ _ . _ s - - An k, pedigreed stocSuitable or chit. Wile isuisers Sneer. - . dren or guard .for the • nom". V,A32. • Stetvart,•Qakworth Kennels, St. Nicholas The strained relations between the • BUIlding. Montreal. .. ' • Queen of Italy and the Kaiserin no, Loustbetnihnagdosfomneattiningt,otot.hdwith the eo • 4/411e/11 vtAlli"D" ' war. via- Mer.....az.k.ekiiiej. ,AIA,Dlif e e.;67e v a tozia Emmantierli consort has never wenseiiiii-eeliere V titigrs ittCsreliegete forgotten Bielineer-of-the Germanmewl% wragari, 'Pas• - ' . OW Empress vOen she married 'Italy's . _ King. . The Kaiserin had .set her heart up securing him for one of her Sisters, but 'Victor EmmanuelAvOuld have nothing to do with any ' German , princess and married Prin.- gess Helene. of Montenegro, to the Kaiserin's. intensaehargin. - : On the betrothal ' being: announced, the Kaiser made one of his refined. .jOkearta-tha-effeet7 that-thaTrineess Ilelene's grandmother "mai but a • Look 11 streat4vagabond peddling .chestnuts. .e1.61 = The sneer delighted theEinpress who A Cockney thinking 143' repeated .everywhite, In due time Highland beatraan •not, treatin' g it reached the ' ears of the. f t him. with the respect due to his sta- u ure • .1:4;icet"="ithst -mt tion, expostulated o0dnt,you dt4hnu,st-i,seeLznetI-grbeatep,. -r4leittierionsa. -Ibteatit'-e-rathe°:it'"i;;Oil Do you know that never very ,eotdial, have been mere quite* wilt' ratn• my.family have been entitled to bear • arm's" for the ' last two hundred years?" "Hoots that's teething," was the reply. '"lity ancestors have been entitled t� bare legs for thelast. two thousand years." l'fiEP.11. A I. - Jo -tight 4 &indult 4 CysIg Maim' Moue* tiCyck, 4 CytIndesa2 10 20 ti.T. filgheafq 1t 511010, men by 0001050001 br414 prz010000mSo.1 00010.1 R,1.4 katuniers.cr"411,!""ei:4;;;'' ' or less' Strained. • Forming an Irish Army. One of the new branches of Kitchen-, er's arinyln training now in h camp south of London.' is an Irisharmy, cernmanded by_an Irishseneral. This ir7the r.--fitst-, tine -11-v British-liistory that-tuch-;a44tce-•has-beefi-assembled There have always been Irish troops .in the Brh army,and sometimes they - have even been in the:majority, hitherto the largest purely Irish unit has been theregim.ent. This it the first time that an entire division of Irish troops has. been made up. ,The "Irish Division," as it is techni- cally known, received its first train- ingon the -sot of -its native isle, and has only 'recently been brought to England. Soon after its arrival it was inspected by .the King and Lord Kitchener, and the latter -set his seal. of approval by declaring it "one of the finest divisions in the new army..." • • • CornsAppliedhi u reele" from m cOtrat-pltuched '• list- b ening feet Imes can be Mired 0• 140=11 24 hours. "Putnatt's" soothes Lythat drawing pain; eases Mete -a- , makes the feet feet geed at oqee. a 25a bottle of "putnaufe tn.*, ..__...... _.1. • ... There is one -thing to be. said. ' in favor of the egotist; he never' gets , :-. lonesome.' . - • . • . Thidged, the Question. Tramp --Please inuni, I'm aBeigian_ refugee.- , „Lady4--4,re yeti?. Montion_ajossn in Belgium. " • , •• - Tramp (cogitating a' moment) -4 would, mint, but. they- hate 11 been destroyed.__44 The Canary Islands are the tops of a great .sUbMarine 1110Untnin range. • Itinarerit'Idzianent Cures • '1 An -Error in Debate. "I think tmade a mistake in argu- ing the 'question of expense with my wife." ' ' "-What-do -younseithlw . "She' NiTalited-air-liiitaiifobile-7'ifid Eduard'. 'Lint:abut 'Cures "ids: *tn.' • Remonstrated- With. - A minister of a rural • parish .in Scotlatd,found-one-of-his flock shoot- ing •a hare on the. Sabbath,, and re- itionstrated with him. "Macpherson, do you knoW What a worli �f items. - pity is?" «1 doreplied IViaepher. son. "Weel, do you think shooting a hare on Sunday a work of neeeseity?" "It is . that," Said the parishioner. "How do you make that out?" "Well,. ye see, meeniatermicht. -nee-be:4)ot on Monday," " Some. Feat. • "He has e splendid meitory."' .41a,Cant-teven-remernber the I inadvertently told lier that I couldn't tames ancl• faces au his.; wire s ,afford it" I cousins: "Weill" ' "Navi Waite it Woke then be- fore." ' BD.' 6. This--fs- to '-certify that: fourteen ears ago I got the. eordt of my left wrgt-iiaitTyul---was--- for about- mine months that I had -ao.4use-of._,my-ImmLand tried other Liniments, also doctors, and was • receiving no benefit. By a persua- sion from a friend r got MINARD'St_ LINIMENT and used one bottle which ,.. completely cured me, and have been using MINARl)'S LINIMENT in my family ever since and find it the same as when I first used it; and would , never be withoutiL• _ • ' ISAAC E. MANN More or Less •Shy.* • Some people we know engaged a new Maid, the same being exceedingly willing to work, but who was more or less shy on experience. The mistress ° noticed - that her new maid seemed unfamiliar with fitger-bowls; so site •".' asked: "Did they use finger-boWls at the last place you worked?" X....answered Bridget "they gen-. _ erally washed themse1vesbeforetIieY came to the table, mum" Blinarirs Liniment Cures' atubtherin. , - Arithmetically- Described.--- ' • Jenks—Se you and ....the Brayton— 'girl are one? Timson—That's • whet theught"' - -when the-parson-married...US, -lieve since- concluded we traten.- TenlisWhat- dos you .-uipaiit'12. ijs�Shi and'Irin netight, my dear fellow.- . _ • . • . , • - • 1 "Overstern" V BoItorn =Motor' Boat Freight 'Prepaid .to anilway Station in: Ontario. Len* 15 Pt, • Beam3 rt. In., Doth iFt...0 In. A14`1t "ROT04. PITS. apeeliteation No 211 eigine prices on request, ' Got, our ,quetatlime on --"The Penetang Commercial and Pleasure Launches.. Aput boats and Canoes. •. • , . • TI1E GIDLEY BOAT CO,, LiMITED, PENETANG, CAN;