The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-11-30, Page 3•:'; •
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A TALK ON RHET4ATISM
Telling How to Actually Cure
This COMBO anclorahl*
• , ful 1VialSdY;
Thi a article he for the Mea Or We-
itigin who suffers frommheumatism
who wants to be cured,.110t merely re-
lieved -but adually cured. The inost Aid Has bowled Soldioia„ Noun*
floapitala, Moto* Aircraft
and Fortunes. "
e'ontradiction of the Many re -
4 , lfl 910 blood. TheretOre rheumatism ports of the disloyalty of India to the,
caii only be cured when this poisonelm British Government, the Goverment
awl Is driven out of the brood- y of India at Delhi has issued ieeueda sum -
doctor will tell you. this.ht true. if Mini Of the work done for tho
em -
you Wallt.Bolnething that Will go right Piro .(Inring the war PY the , Princes
to the root of the trouble in the blood and potentates of that country.'It
take -Dr. Viluiams Jjk Pills, They contains am:enumeration of manY of
make new, rich blood. which drives out the gifts and services of these rulers,
the,.poisonOus ,aeid d. urea rheu- including the Berm of Bhopal, . per-
matim to stay cured,. The Thu ' truth of Imps- the most noted woman in. India,
, these. statements has, been prbeee in "Inspiring • in it loyalty and thrill-
• thousands of eases throughout Care. ing in its magnitude is the aselet'ance.
,•, ada•Find the following cure is a strik- "Ilderb4 by the P;41ces and ruling‘
• jag instance.•Remy smith,.-st. chiefs of India to the en/Pire in the,
Jerome, Que., says; "For upwards of 'greet war," the rePort reads. "They
• a year ',was.a victim of rheumatism have given of their hest freely, enthu-
a most painful Wm. The trouble siasticn3iy. They.. have supplied
was located In my kgs and for a long thousands of figligne' men to march
• • time I was so bad thit 1 could .net With Pritigh Soldiers against Britain's
• walk. The suffering which 1. endured enemies, ,War -like chiefs -have taken
• eau, only be iMagined by those. who. the 'field With their: troops and. the
have been similarly afflicted. Doctors treasures of the east have been poor-
• treatment did not help me and. then I ed into the empire's War vilest. The
-began trying other reMedies, but with
• no better results. Finally was ad-
vised to try Dr.i.Williams' Pink Mlle,
'and'although I had begun to lose faith
in medicine, I finally, decided to give
the Pills a trial. I am very grateful
now that.' did so, for after taking
eight boxes of the. pills ;, the trouble
• completely disappeared.. I was free
•.. from pain and could 'walk' as well as
• ever I did in my life. I have Since
". taken the pills .occeeionally as a ,pre-
.
• cautionary measure, and I -cannot
speak too highly in their fairer."
*Dr. Williams' Pink •Piils' cure all the
troubles due to 'wet*, watery: blood or
broken down nerves. You can get
• these pills through any • dealer in
medicine, or by mail' postpaid, at 50'
• cents a box or six boxes for -$2.50
.from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co„
Brockville, Ont. • .
tive service
ad tie* Indian troops at frott•I
awhareths Idshorticuitseit was,s4n400Woundsdtrovo. affosI
A1N$32•000 for vim expenses wits AO,
opted. The Xaltareja of JelPar
fered his personal servkei, $1.001000
for war expenses POO for th•
In-
dian relief fend, 'together with. the,
service* of the Imperial Service
Transport Corps. The Maharaja of
Abair offered his .personal glen/ice/1
and the Alwar Imperial Service In-
funtrie While draft:: from, the Imper-
ial Service franeere.haVe gem as re-
inforcements.
MThe Mysore is second only in eine
'to ilvderabad, The Maharaja_ effered
'his personal services and those Of the
Mysore Imperial Service Lancers. His
Sift of $4000,000 was nientioned
Parlitialent Ile also offered • surgbIl-
lance carte, horsee and hospital tents
for Use in Fronde. .
• "Apart front the latinificent sifts of
materials of lirat,, the Frinch of °India
have contributed a total of mere than
$6,712,14041) ihe War chest. ••
WETS AND suavxcEs NA,..
TIVE *POTENTATES.
aAPI•grA•••,
• the rheumatic sufferer On hope for m
. rubbing ..some.thing<on the tender,. 401.,
inf; joint, la a little• relief. NO lotion
er liniment ever AK or van make A
• fare. •The rheuMatie'Poisort Is reroted
• naniber and .splendor of these priacelY
gifts is India's reply to those. who
Would seek to 'undermine her loyalty
and slander her honor. • '
"All India is .represented in these
gifts of empire, and among the donors
are men of great accomplishnients and
striking personality. That splendid
old soldier, Sir Pertab \Singh, the ma-
haraja Regent of Joilipur, although
he is neatly seventy years of age,
a vigorous eampaigner;and his only
wish is to die in the service of the
Emperor. The young Maharaja, one
'of the most romantic •personalitiee
among the Indian Princes, is only sev-
enteen, but he has seen fighting op
the Continent. • •The . services of • the
First JoiliPur Imperial ,service lan-
cers, together with reinforcements,
were offered to and accepted by the
Government, and they are now on ac -
RUSSIA A HIVE OF ACTIVITY.
A, Remarkable New Shell Is Being
'" • •• Manufactured*
• Under the caption; ,"The Spirit of
3
•
•
the • New -•?Russia," the ,,Russian
•. Anferiee,n.J.Oinnal • of Commerce call
attention editorially to whet.it3etm
• "the feverish:activity' to 'be observe
throughout the .length wed. breadth 01
the Russian Empire." All traveller
• coming out of Russia, it is Stated, bear
, testimony fo the wonderful reawal:
• ,ening everywhere noticeable in the
• empire.
"Americans in". .particular," the
Icotirniti salt, "seem most deeply-, ira-
preeeed with the changed conditions
In . EU/34a and are meet sanguine as
• to the future Of that country. They
• lay that there is something.akin. to
. the old call Of the West in the 'fiat -
opening ,opportunities and the wide -
reaching resources of Russia which
7 sends an anxious tinge through the
• , • Veins of every •American business
man or prospector who has delved
into Russian,- conditions. they exist
to -day and is' far-sighted enough to
See the prosperity that is in store for
thejtussian people. .
"Factories in Russia are running
day and night, turning out inunitione
of war., Clothing, and the varied „ ne-
'• cessitiei- of the empire's multimillicine.
• Americans. have said they -were :sur-
prised at the large number •of. ; fac-
tories, especially between Petrograd
. and Moscow. Other factories are go -
Ing up with feverish haste, and every-
where, it 'seems to the traveller, rail-
road:Pare under construction. Many
- of the lines are ,new, while others are
• being doebletracked. Men and wo-
• men are working aide by side on the
railroads, the Women handling picks
- and shovels with even , greater
strength and effect than many of the
Men. • '
"The returning Russian travellers
• bring many and varied" Stories „of the
Military resources of the empire. One
of these is to the effect that not less
. than 9,000;000 men have been recently
sent to the front and that another.9,.:
000,000, are in training. All are
im-
bued with the absolute assurance That
the weight of Russian men geed ma-
terial mu.st be the deciding factor in
the wat.• There has been told, too,
the story of a new explosive shell be-
- Ing manUfgietui•ed in Russia after a
French formula, but not yet used on
the western front --a shell which in
.- exploding spreads over a radius of
800 yards a heat of 3,000 degrees -a.
withering. blast calculated to ineinero.
ate all Within its fiery reach." •
• Prayers for Soldiers.
• Many British towns have just start-
ed the practice of having the church
--belle-ring at a certain hour every-
• day to remind the people to pray for
the soldiers fighting at the front.
• .ste,
•
ANISII PRIEST
SHOWS BRAVERY
WiNs Rcoi0E IN THE FEElicH
FOREIGN LEGION.
T^•••••••••
Was Confessor of Spanish Court,
• Asked for Chane to Meet- '
• , •Real Sinners.
'• The almoner of the Foreign Legion,.
Father has had a third' palm
pinned on the ribbon' of his war cross,
for having carried a wounded legion-
ary off the Somme hattlefiekt under a
hetavy fire, writes.a Paris correspond-
ent. •
,
This heroic priest, W110 is loved
and admired by every soldier of the
legion for his self-sacrifice and de-
votian, has a strange history. It is
told among the legionaries that he
was forkyears in charge of a fashion-
able church in Madrid. • Finally he
be.e:ame weary of hearing at the On-
fessional only the silly sins and petty he should prove to be a better or , the fleets of the great powers Coll -
intrigues, of the men and women of cleverer man •than you at' bayonet trolled every bucket of coal in . the.
IN EVERY
7 EMERGENCY
lita will some use fee
4•F
selme
' -Tose Issork
irotgaleses
It relieves. rov0, chapped
loads: broken bkaters_ buns!,
cute, nieeet bites end skin leo-
harts of ell Veda, ,
$old ia heady glass bolelego end
tht rubes, at chero4trand gen-
end rtersle srerrirhere, Itefisee
iabstitutee.
Free booddet Mailed on request,
ussEssouou ME'G. CO,
tie aind44 ) mamma
TVIDC:AND 111)CIIE COMPARED,
FOrtner is Brave and ights Fair,
Says Australian Soldier.
• AnCees ivhe.have bein,athrough 'it"
in Gallipoli tell me that they have . a
great respect for the Turk as a fight-
er, says a Writer in theLondon Morn-
ing Post. "Johnny •Turk " said
young 'Australian, '"in comparison
with the Beiche. is A gentleman. ,He
fights fair and is a brave .man. The
German is a swine, who , shoots at
wounded and helpless :nen I've seen,
him `de it: The Turk will fight • like
the • very devil at close quarters. Did
you, ever hear of the. Germans risking
their skins in a hand-to:hand encoun-
ter with the bayonet , net you cant
prove it. Why the mement they see
us coming at them With the ,bailithet and yetTnost generous
they flop down on their knees and,I 4'After the war I found nlySelf, in
squeal, like rata Johnny Turk will Ohefoo, waiting Ail answer, from •the
stancl.up-to You with the bayonet and Russian commander at • Pert Arthur,
fight like a good old tough. All . our to whom had applied for permission
clews, know that And. Johnny Turk : to " cross $iberia. The palace revolt: -
won't, give in till.you've outed him. If ton was in full swing at Pekin atul
STPTS
T mANILL4, IJONG• KONG, AND,
• AT COEFOO. •
•••eatrad
• ARMY DI19011.11YING ORDERS.
All Prowl' $teMiters Have Become Pipe
• iissekers.
The startling diecovery • has just
been. madea that , France's &moue
tannic* ares allnest to the 114 mans
ia state of •epee rebellion and
breach of diselpline.
TO he Mere exact, it has pat been
•' Officially ascertained that there is
Hew the British 'Atinifir4d PtevIdell: fs001!471Ymeti: junwPgQ/1101:41/-"gp:p!ratnheee whuls tet;
Coe' Free for American arms at the present moment who is
Pipe .m01414; Is one of the severest
breaches of discipline ,in the rrenelt
traveller and author a wide fame, in They
were
officialjy ,tabooed largely
011 aecount of the fact that a soldier
'smoking a pipe eannot`possibly salute
an officer whorl he may "ohanee.to
Meet with the dignity the ocesefion re-
•
of ymmeiatnowohfiltee,optirmayon7rmieltd qulijirhges:
failure of 'the French officers
garding the .attitude of Great Britain to note that their Men,Were smoking
in 1898; when Imperial Germany sided pipes until the, - practice had become
lvith Spain and SOWit to Wily' our _practically universal is geterallY at -
gallant Dewey in, Manila. . thbuted to the fact that all have been
• °Tpe tale of how the British CaP. sO ban" fighting that the breach '
thin altimeter stood UP with our ad- discipline Stomped notice.
•
mirel Dewe himself.. This story of the °poilVs" that th t* f svED 'Pars'rok:s. musk ctht.
been told before -and 'finally .:b1" 44-• and so firinlY implanted in the lstinktit I • """1" A
mirai against the German admwal has Now the practice is cisoueuaniiovner:oal. woo c•orni.
aimp '
Checked :step by step le Manila by rooting it tint pteeents a serious prOh-1, It once. ntte.,01r,mnlost• Will. (.r rer !gip^
•convereation, not merely with out OW, The men say :they were driven ;
admiral and his. British colleagne, but to smoking pipes because the tebneeo . srenialoor'nzte ;03SALB.
by other partielpigntein that memor-, furnished them by the Government ••pittanztAtarKINC: AND .1clie
Crulaer.
•roUjtneY ' „an Airgerlean
a- letter addressed to the odder of the
New York Times, writes:
. canoot be true that American
naval Officers assisted Prussian sub,
marines in their dirty work outside'
where the honnewitti knows
Shredded Wheat? In five
CAA prepare a
• satisfying meal•
with Shredded 'Wheat Bis-
cuit. virithout kitchen worry
or work, For brealc.ftot heat
the Biscuit in the..overr to
restore crispness and serve
with hot snillf. For lunch
serve vvitli sliced bananas
or other fruits* Made ni
Canada.
able fight. ••• .•
• •
• Aided Dewey at Hong Kong.
"Moreover • the British authorities,
in Hong Kong, although legally neu-
tral, interpreted their duties in the
manner most favorable to the Ameri-
can ships, and Dewey found no diffi-
culty in fitting otit to the, beat advarit-
deesWt. Ifters, mu. In ego Ontario '
ine1111471701:4,173.1:........t,t.;.:14;0111_,.nztarriapletanielodiras_trinalzoicetLern;:rno!..
CHILDREN OF ALL AGE)
...:Wh.eri sick the newborn Ube or the cisxcErt TIrcioncr
growingchildtehheil.du6we 0of Bnadbyptemopwnt relief tslyt pilblerarnifhoeitaLikl. Wick Bija:
through T4e3r aro 'absolutely safe for ;' Limited. CoMnAwood. Onta.111
before fel-a. lir. tette° isa/craii
age Prior to. steaming across to • the children and never fail to banish au any •
enemy in the Phi41thles. And as of 'Ole minor ills from which little
the Yankee fleet steamed past that of ones suffer. Othicerning them. Mrs.
England in Hong Kong, , the . British Arthur Sheaely, Acianac,' Sask.,
bluejacket manned theyigging and writes: "1,,halre used Baby's Own Tab
cheered us heartily -a most unneutral lets and think they are splendid f9r.
Obliaren Of all ages." The Tablets
are sold by meclisine...dea.lere oi7' by
mail at 25 cent:3'11'1)0x from The Dr.
Williams!-- Medicine Co,. Brockville,
Ont. , • ,
I.s.the Spanish court, andaskedpereis- work-we1, You'ie done in-hat'etteaty port
WR I Off d 0 'S vi si f his i
omen u er • ere wn er ces. on o slish
op to gp out into the all.
"Her Highness the Begum of Bho- world and seek o parish where he
pal, one of the. most remarkable • wo.... might Only in contact - with real sin
men as she is one, of the , most mas- ners. His request Was granted, and
tetful rulers Iit,,p,idia, gate great,as.,,,,i,,the.frither we:A.-to-Algeria; where, h
aistanCeilinonetaryi„.? thilitarY and per,. *Paine attached: to the First Head -
sonar. Her Highness offered to train i Aleut of the legion as , priest For
'remount's' for the government and thel?everal.yeare hefollowed. the .regi -
Bhopal Imperial Seryiett lancers were ment about .pofthern: Aftice,,,cheer-
piaced on , Vison.. duty,/ at liteerut: liter„ the lonely, sialc.and weunded, ad -
Ten tente,fo "lhispiti,ili,ithe. she sent io
France; SIle set out ohnctiveService
but Was invalided at Aden.. Bhepal is
the only Stettin India where the ruler
is a woman„and the present tsginn is
the • only living Woman ruler who has
been in action with her own troops.
During. ii. pilgrimage to Mecca ' she
and her bodyguard were attacked " by 1914. Father X--, , curiae with the
' '
Arabs, she repulsed after a corps. A regiinental priest or pE4r
bloody encounter.
' -. holds the rank "Of captain and . y
"Her Highness contributed $29,800 enjoy all the possible luxuries of *war
for the Prince of Wales relief fund, life, but this priest Went into the
18,000 for comforts for Indian troops, trenches with hismen, talking . with
and $1.600 for relief for,Belgian suf-
.
ministeilpg the last Sacrament .to
the dying on battlefields, and in mili-
tatir hospitals and reading the last
simple service over the dead. and un -
mourned soldiers of the legion‘ .
Went Into Trenches With the Men.
'When the legion crossed from
Africa' to Europe in the • autiunn of
kerers. ••
.
"A very fine example or .the old
Eajput nobility is -his highness ' the
Raja of Itetlarn'who has, been on tie- he went along ' with the legionaries
tiye service in FranCe ever since the, in their forward ',rink stoking •.to
beginning of °the war. • • ,A,..'.1.e.,tniikrq and , ofttimes bandage 'the:,
. "The • Nilath 'of 'Hyderabad, the mei as they, dropped down wounded,
great Museulinan Prince of the Dec- Or to dose their eyes as they fell in
can, at the outbreak of hostilities of, death. - • . • •
fered 32,000,000 toward the Oat of, On that day the bullets and shells
the war; together with many horses
for government use. -
"He offered $1;920,00a for the ex-
pellees of the First Hyderahad lan-
cers, w ich proceeded on active ser-
vice a d he provided a hospital of
fifty beds for the wounded. •
• "His Highriepies the Maharaja of
Kashmir skim $64;009 to the Imperial
Ihdian•fund, and $32,000 to the Prince
of Wales' Relief fund, together with
thirty hospital tents forugie.in France,
and 7,000 riees for comforts.
"Among other gifts he offered 4,000
horses and contributed $240,000 for
motors and motor ambulances. His
was the major share in the cost of the
hospital ship Loyalty, his gifts
of $90,000 foraeroplanes'his done-
tioe. of 000,000, cigarettes, and his
contribution of $228009 to Various
war funds add lustre to the proverb-
ial munificence of Indian potentates.
Camel Coos, Are Provided.
them and encouraging -them- as best
he could. Just before the First Regi-
ment charged north of Arras ' on may
O., 1915, he helda short- service' then
"The, Maharaja of 'Bikaner provided
the Bikaner. camel corps and 'himself
prOceeded �u•actiire service. Six
thousand • loading • tgidie:ls; 2,000 ea*,
were previded among Other gifts by
the Khan 'of Habit, the Silvio Ita-
lat; and the jam of Las Dela, frontier
chiefs; MO *leis froth. the
Persian Gulf have contributed large
aunts for Red Cross nrork.'„
"The Maharaja /Jollier of • Indore
Placed. his personal eseort squadron. at
the service of. the beverninent and
cent:limited, $32,609 to the Indiae re-
lief fend, $16,000 fer, the purchase of.
motor cars. $32,006 *for -comforts and
$25,600 to the- Prinee or Wales' fend.
' "The Maharaja of Kapiirthala Visit7
The Havor Lasts ---
In the making a Grape -Nuts there* is added- to the
meet; rich nutriment �f -hole wheat, the rare flavor
of malted barley, a combination creating a illOSt un-
usually dellefous taste. The palate never ,tires of . it
• People everywhere have foupd th.at•
ra uts
' is the most nutritiout and delicious cereal food khowii.
. ,
ivery table should have its 'daily ration of Grape -Nuts,'
•
The:re's a, ROasotf" •
rostuili Cared COod rote, tele
-;
•
•
,What We Give We7Get
,
•In tail and 1916 Ontario contribut-
ed more to the Canadian Patriotic
FUoti than she drew from it, the Sur-
plus going 16 assigit those' Western
provinces Whose contributions, • al-
though exceedingly liberal , did not
I '
equal the heavy demands caused. by
the large enlistment from these pro-
vinees. For 1917 the situation .will
.change. The demandis from this pro -
Vince on the Fund. are estimated to
reach six thilhon dollars, and the com-
mittee jias decided' to ask Ontario to
raise that amount ---in other words to
make' provision only for its own Peo-
le • - " •
The total represents about one mil-
• lion dollars above th ,nntvih,iH
. • . ,
for 1913, and therefore there can be
no Weariness in well -doing on the part
of Ontario's patriotic people so far
is the rum" is concerned. •
of War. "
GERMANY LOST CHANCE TO WIN
coidd, Have Ravaged British Shippini
at Start-
.
•
• •
with the siring of beads and crucifix Serts in'a letter to Colonel Robert M.
. ,
massed the slight, black -clad- figure Admiral Lord Charles Beresford as -
about his neck and the Red • Crow. Thompson, president of, the 'Navy
brassard on his iiiiii-:hiit On June 16, League, Waihingion, that if Germany •
1915,'he was struck Chitin by a shrap- •
nel ball and „ seriously wounded.- In
Africa he • had been .decorated with
the croin of Legion of Honor; now,
he *as awarded the French ,w.ar
crops with pahn. - • •
, ••
. Prayed or Alt the Dead.
-When the Chempagne •offensive
started last September, Father
was back at •the front * with the
iegiont All thretigh that ferocious
and weary battle he was with his
polyglot flock of warriors. It was he
with carried i'Lieut. ;Charles • Sweetly
as that Anierican volunteer officer
lay alinest dying -against the German
barbed Wire entanglements near the
Nevatian farm, and watched .Sweeny's
orderly carrY him off_ the field. . And
when, after the battle, some 600 nien
of the legion were buried in the tenrr
porary cemetery near the Bois &bet,
this breve priest of the Rennin path -
elk church prayer for them all.
• Many a priest and pastor has- cast
aside the frock and weed: dr�pped
his identity and entered the , legion
as a plain soldier. These 'Inert • have
made good soldiers,' too, according
to. the testimony .of their officers. No
questions are asked in the legion
&Met a man's antecedents, yet it is
hard for him to hide what once, he
was, and the former servants or the
church usually •disclose thrinselveS
in •one Why Of an"(ithtir. •
. .
The Lover''s Request.
--It
W5 tu1iniast call. TWO'
stood en the porch in the moonlight.
"You are- determined?" he ,said,
• finally. • • • •
• "Yee, George. I think it is for the
• best that we de not, see each other
o again." '•• ° • •
• "Do you love another?" .
• "I do, George. I have promigred-my
heart to Harold Urodyke.
•There Vegui a Moment's . ailenew
'George stepped back and drew from
his pocket a revel/Mr) which glistened
in the pale light.
"George; George.", shrieked the girl.
"What do you, intend' to do She
• took liold of hand, ••
• "Not great deal." replied George
calmly.. "I have been culling on- you
ter the last AIX months. Evelyn, and
X haveonly- cxterminated.obout .half
the deg;in this neighborhood.' lo.woat
xo,t to take this gun and and .give it to
thalyice. He may waut io finish the
• ct then0 '
•
Idinerdoe nittristeakt Ctrel ilaritsilt Cdtris
. •
• • ••
had taken advantage:of her opporttin-
• ity at.the eutbreal of the European
•
wet,. they could have entered. Paris
• and readied St. -Petersburg -in a short
• time. "we would have been brought
to our knees in a coople of:months'
...saye the *high adinitel. •• • 7 ' ^
"We e,scaped:a mot.
ger, 'for if the 'Germans- had attacked.
How-, a • Nan Who Landed On
us first. without a declaration of war; .
and sent what they coifid hav•e sent -;
140 -cruisers .dnd. ernied. Merchant
to °Ur thiptetected • trade
• ,
rOnt.es we would have been .brought to
our kneesin a.,conple of Months.. They
deuld, have put down A 7thousand 'ships:
in the 'Arai week• • . -•••
1 • "If the 'Germans had • -carriedout
that plat th,ey could have gotten intot-
Iots to 7get. scale ',banding 'materiel
cOmpelled peeee France; ta
.many.another makliving itv..the
'end then been hi St.Petersburg '•
a country. ;munt Sh&lenly he'
"-
• aliened and, fell. • ,Ten • feet. *Wss:
tort time, .ind f,iecOine. the' dominant .
pile Of'wood,. knotted and. gnarled; it
Was, • it *nasty. **tuni,bie*,' and ••Mr- ; Patnani,
wee injured 'painfully* iri the back.' lie"
Wan -covered wi,th. Ira! Osi.' :and -*he -sore-.
from head to'fobt. '
The non Any ,bought",ti bottle. of
Sloan's Liniment • Which " had been re-.
comtrIcaded to him. Within a'; very' few'
hours th soreness had vanished and.
Couldn't linty Coal.. '
•
. '
'Then it wag that our Consul Fow-
ler ran up and down the streets of
Chefoo , wringing his hands andbeg-
ging for a- few tons of ccial-Lbut not
. .
le IMO cOuld he.biiy. He showed me
• the cable in coal hisevery mo-
whiecruiser, expectedh hawas' ordered to
ment on -a hurry call to protect 'Am-
' i' *, i and %property. in " Tien -
'rein He told me l- • c.iiild ne• t do
anything -money cote, not buy an
ounce of deal.. "Noneense,! said,•I, 'the
British admiral has plenty of coal.' •
." 'True,' said. 'Consul . ]fowler, 'but,
what of that?! •
- . . •
"Help •Yourcelf."-
• "Our Consul, you see, was lanother
of that strange species. who • think
that good things can be bought by
Jrnoney only. . Then. I told ' him to,
state his ease to: Admiral Seymour at
Wei Hai Wei, forty miles to the east-
ward. He sniffed susmemesly, but.
finally yieldediand togetherlye eon-,
coded the able to whichin an .hour
Came the joyful pews :'Certainly, help
yourself --as much as you •wish' -or
words, to that effect. • I woncierif Eng-
land has ever been paid for that coal,
for I'm Cure that no bill would eVer be
sentby John Bull."
•
„.
This story, says the Tinies; is here
printed -fin- the first time -not he,
cense- it Is of importance. '• by
butbecause it is typical of hundred*
of cagies familiar to many 'Americans.
• . •
IFELL.FRONI LOFT;::
HURT. THEN WELL
...Wood Pile and Was,§ere.FrOni
. - Headto root Found .
Quick Relief; -
• • •
'Once tiPon- a lime 'Bdivin-Putpatn, who
the.. atilet; ',pretty hamletof
Wendel Depot; Atads., *CitinbCd up into
. power of Europeand the world; ees:
-cibly for a century." . • .. '
I „
• .Good
1-• "Yod. luOk vdfy Mulling this •morn -
.leg, Toner'," said Bailey.. "X guess 1
ought to be,I went 'to .fortene-
teller last nighb, and she prophesied
immediate financial reverses,'! chortled •Tolier. "I fail to see 'anyt)iing
v .y.: •
joyous t that," aid Bniley
"You would ' if you knew anything
about rily seid Tonat,:.
till-yVit fihtitewthat they don't
reverse pretty gum: •Pll be busted,"
lidinard"s idniment Cares fiblds. no.
•
the lain had disaPRearcti• He *all
an act' v once inore. '• ' •
' • klloa it's• ment ran be obtained at
all drng s es, 25e., 50e. and $1,00.
Wh3r.is it that truth Will rise again
When crushed to egirth?" • ' • •
"Because or it elastcitY, of course.
Don't you kiloW how easy it is to
itretch the truth?" . •
•
A
• • The Only Question,
The'. only refessat • was delivering,
the last lecture of the term. . • 1/9
told the students with.vitich emphasis
'that he expected theta to 'devote all
their' time In preparing far the 'final'
exam:natioi • • •• .• '
"The examination papers are now
In the hands of the ;printer,"' he con-
cluded ' "Now, thereanY fuiestion
yoti• would like answered
• Silence Prevailed for • a mosnent
then a 'eke piped tiro:
moo' is. the 'printer 7"
•
•Araa-a-A.•••••••,t9.••••••
Asugiters".
Plena
Dor Remetliet
;nocorc "
110G, DISEASES
.• And How to Peed
5renod Imp to tow Addass.
• the senior •
IL CLAY cuing cO,
U8 West 31st Stree,New York
• A Clean Page. 4 0171.:0
•PortlY Woman- (Pushing her *air'
into a police station) -I see you have PIANO ;AOTIo
arrested a man whose Mind is,a blank -I
Officer -We haYe, madam. ' ,
him
Woman -Then please bring
m Mit SO that I may have a look
The .Soul of a Piano • IS 'the
jrikf on the
'at him- : mY Henry didn't. come home
last night, and that's a fairly goad
description' of him.
.was cured of terrible Itiznbago by
MINARD'S LINIMENT:. ;
• REV. WM. BROWN.
I' *as cured of a bad Case of ear-
ache 'by MINARD'S LINIMENT.
•..• MRS. 8. KAULBACK.
Irrkets cured of sensitive lungs bY
.MINARD'S LINIMENT..
, • MRS. S. MASTERS.
• All Agreed•.
""Did you speak to -lather 'about nth,
'Arthur?" asked the girl. • • •
"Yes, I did, dear, and he agreed
with Me heartily," replied her wooer.
"Then he said I might MarrY .your'
• "Why-er-no, I didn't quite get so
fat as that I just said you were a ,
fine girl.'" •
liranalifetryelde,
Eyes inflamed by eicpti-
, sore to Sue, Dustand l'0011
..esterretiverit
, Ee ononyCl. At
Your Dmggises • Soc perilettle. Moriagays
Selveherubes2Sc. Foilleek el thetYeireeask
' Druggists orMerfaelyeRemedyCs..fidesisa
..- The More Self -Sacrificing.
. Heireas-4 like you very much, Mr.
Arai • but .I' marry-yoa.
rdup (picking up his hat) --I will
be equally frank with you, Miss
don't -like youat all; but I
would -marry you in a minute.• I ein
more self-sacrificing Shan than you are.
.Good evening.
estriummErs Trissolms TRE. lizarmanise
XN CAL32011267.41..
Get away from the cold; disagreealble
winter. California temperature Is from
60 to 75 degrees the year round. ;t le
'riot expensive to spend the entire winter
there. Bungalows rent from $23.00 per
month up • •
Special Wintir Tour Fares., The
famous .Los Angeles Limited. a fast, re -
Ailed and exelusive through- train from
Chicago to Los Angeles. leaves Chicago
10.00 p.m. and arrives at Los Angeles
4.30 •p,mthe third day -less' than three
dav, s eh route. •
_ Write .to Et H. Bennett. . Geri. At•t.,
Chigago delsiorth Western Ry. 46 .Yonge
St„ Tdronto. Ont. He will foetid you din-
ar/pave literaturd and train schedule,.
helpyou plan an attractive , trip, and
make reservationq for you clear through
to the Paciflo Coast.
• .•
•• •
liome
Table
040.:Atiest
Will yo 'aPti
forin„,of Indoor reereatlea,
..dUring.;...the,,,lOng. winter •,;Oreits;;,.
•
I; ouelPlitlifs.m.' 1.042140P(.0•40'
I'013 rOrasOnable,‘
. 15 made specially , for
the h9
Priem,
' Cash. or, on. terrine,
lauRstoilowES WA77.774 4 irb
.11a4Cergi to X. the .1CitiliV
,:g134;040•611, Stu. Toiroitto
,For Alt nopertnienta
4
, Steady Emplopnent
Good VilgiS •
. . 9 .
APPLY
IlidgeolootRolifir Co., Lid.
MERRITTON, ONT.
Teacher -"What is. rnettnta by divers '
disease ?" •Child -"Water on •the •
brain, MiSs.". _.•• • 1'1,
, .
iriardss-rdhintint 'Cares, nliplitl2tirg,.;
••
got•Responsible.
• The barber -tour hair is thineing,
sir.. Ever • try our. hair .prepara-
TOLD 'IN It SIMPLE WA
Wheat Appsratnip Inhalers; Meta-
' Lotions, Handal Drugs, Smoke .
or Electricity.
Beals Day and NI
It is a new sigt.Y. It fs something ohm,
Nolodons, _morays or eddy.
selves or cream. Noatomicerom
•
aigiliapparsittia of any kind. Nothing to .
smoke or inhale. No steaming- or iubbhig
efiztjectkuis. NO .eleetridtrorvlbration or
message.. No powder; no pasta* nekeepi
mg La ago house? Nothina..0-tlust-kIn4ak
,
• e
--, . ..
• moo end Sealuntee
To great 'me" of oar time' has
'ended during the Whiter ntentlis, nor,
with tho exception of thlitiesto4op.
anew; War. his any ilogult thenkor
a einitury all wars,have bega'in' the
,spring, OUInnier or early atituniii and
• ended between 1Warc1i and , August.
spines*.y,,,Udnaimt •Clnitil niattilitler,
• The patron -No,
that. • • .
•
• Indirectly. • • •
:
"Do you ever, Wake' .yourselfnj
snoring?" •
amounts to that, r ftequently
wake up the baby."
I 'can't blame it mi.
'
•PILES.
Yeawill find relief In Zitinitik
It eases the burningo ,stinend
pia, stops, bleeding,. and brings
ease. Perseverance; .aiith Volt;
Bak, moans ogre. Why notpro,vo
, this 7 , 4U bovOgiiVtge.Eforeo.-•-••
alp«,
CV
all. Stattetithig OW And ettorit, . Mit*
tmlag delightful iond ,Iteelthfol, something. •
Instantly successful. You do not None to
wait; and Heger Mid pay Mit lee ef meneY.
You can stopitOvornight.etand I will gladly
ten ynti. how-PREILO. 1 En not I% doctor
andthis he not el'so-called doctor's preserip..•
tion -but I eth. cured 'and myfriends_ertt •
et and and yott can b6 cured, ,-/T0iir ,
Jag win :stop at oneo like megio, •
Ani Free.6.1rou Cali Be. rfte •
eliWe,th onme as w
ili. At calm ow liand. taldellgI12414 Illf,
,41 Catittrb.. trAl filth* . OttIrtinosna. It
itstie 'weakening ley . Who
gitr.nftnags&
tiibPnTat4Vlth'nAinri:adisugttitaaZZigprl
iittltaifgl11:dttltikfitiiii.tenire11aWit
Ilae I otlabr St mato an unthelytae. lieteee
roeaetnehtot the y sadulst vse !IMOPS
trelyiinaraykr., .e,ri.
But tfo.lifg a_ptititielstiti I etiveialtto talltait'
,05:at it a 1.44,1 vsneogne eseasor. •
• agStiC %PUS? ONE CE1,11
. vi=Vaurtztvit wassavvrai „miisaileal, rolinuoviiii I. -
: „Sena ISitiot40. ItiatVoilr iltitaalltd"61.---4
i ral:orvri'laluttr"e el - y,t:%8 71 sClen"ol3tor ts4rt4 I 11:71: vataissiumentstie
- 1.1a ber_yoa eet‘le 'seats gate:tit east hew _eta_
, ; prearAltontinasigritalrit;
' .P154'4'g:116'? 41174klitliti,FiC6.1Sitlitb,4,1
:::,:_th.:4,770,.,..1:::.07._,:,7„
• elaot teat tl%taxag 01.1 vaa. AS JIPI Opaill VOF
: •.".14itt =Att. Itti•ollt At41010 .
lail 'matted at... ' Toretto. Alan .. .
. . .