"ba990d2a-c330-440b-8961-dd92349e2bd7"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "The Courtenay Review and Comox Valley Advocate"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2015-11-27"@en . "1916-07-20"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/courtenayrev/items/1.0070198/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " 16\n.H. H*- ~\n] VOUR PRINTING\n('an link he dupe any better, and\nnot iiuiif ho wo 11 anywhere else\nhereabouts < lur type and mtiolitn*\ncry in eoinptote nun The Review\npHooH are ri^ht\nVOL. 4\nTHE REVIEW\nClassified Ads.\nMake your little Wanta known \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nthrough a Classified Advertisement\nin The Review \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD - \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Phone 59\nCOURTENAY. B. C. THURSDAY JULY 20 1916\nNO. 35\nAUCTION SALE\nAgricultural Grounds\nHousehold Effects, Dairy Cattle, Horses,\nChickens, Harness, Gents Bicycle\nFriday, July 28, 2 p. m.\nFurther Particulars From\nGEO. J. HARDY\nTelephone 10 COURTENAY\nCOMOX LUMP\nCOAL\n$6.00 Per Ton\nDelivered ,in Courtenay\nj AU Orders Will Receive Prompt Attention\nD. KILPATRICK\nPhone 43 Courtenay\nCook by Wire\nElectricity providevS the cleanest, the\nmost sanitary and the most hygenic\nmethod of cooking\nThe Electric range closely parallels the wood or gas\nrange but \"excells either in flexibility of operation\nWith the Electric Range you cool-\nunder ideal conditions because\nEach cooking unit can be switched to high, medium or simmering heat and kept there as\nlong as needed\nIt is the acme of cleanliness\nPractically no heat escapes into the room\nThe air is not vitiated\nThere is no contamination of food\nYou save food values through the retention of the\nessential salts and meat juices, on a six pound\n_ roast the saving is nearly a pound\nAll the latest standards of range construction are\nused, including high oven, thermometer or\nglass door, porcelain splashers\nThe fire risk is lessened because there are no open\nflames\nWe will gladly give you information on rates and\nelectric ranges\nCourtenay ^Electric Light, Heat 6 Power\nCo., Limited\nPhones: Officep5, Ret. R98 (Office: Mill Street\nLocal Lines\nMiss Carrie of Vancouver is vis\nitlng friends in tow n,\nMr Win Duncan arrived honie\non Tuesday afternoon.\nMessts Robert and David Robinson of Vancouver are visiting their\nfather here,\nMrs. (I)r.i Morrison arrived\nhome from Vancouver on Tuesday |\nafternoon,\nThe balance of our stock of millinery nt reduced prices. Campbell's, Cumberland.\nJust arrived, another shipment\nof ladles white pique skirts and\nmiddy blouses, misses middies and\nmiddv suits. Campbell's, Cum \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nberland.\nMayor and Mrs. Kilpatrick lett\nfor Vancouver on Mondav in irning\nto atteiul the funeral of Mrs. Kil\nPatrick's brother, wlio lost Iiis life\nin au accident at Mission.\nMr. C. S. Wood has been appointed manager of the Cumberland electric li^ht company, in addition to the Courtena>' company.\nMr. Hancock, the former manager\nhas gone to Southern California.\nJust arrived, a late shipment of\nladies silk sweater coats in melon,\nkelly and gold with caps to match.\nAlso in combination colors of melon aud white, Copenhagen and\nwhite aud black and white, etc.\nThese are all marked at special\nprices to clear. Campbell's, Cumberland.\nFound\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDCircular \"Rbekah\" pin\nOwner can have same on application at the Review office.\nFor Sale\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDWhite Wyandotte Pullets, some laying, 3 for $5; cockerels $2 each; yearling hens from\n$1.50 each heavy laying strain.\nJ. G. Randall, Royston Station P\n0.. V I., B. C.\nWanted\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDLocal agent to repre-\nsent Mutual Life Assurance Company of Canada in this district.\nSplendid proposition for good man\nFor particulars send application to\nF. M. McGregor, District Manager, P. O. Box 242, Victoria, B.C\nCar For Hire\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDH. VV. Heber*\nden; phone Xo\".\nWelding-cast iron, aluminum,\nbrass, steel, etc, Ford Garage.\nPlant your fruit trees in the fall,\naud keep your order till I call. F.\nR. F. 3iscoe, Courteuav, P. O.\nF' rd Garage for Nobby, Goodyear and Dunlop auto and bicycle\ntires aud accessories. Bicycles for\nsale.\nFor sale\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD200 egg Cyphers incubator, nearly uew; uo reasonable\noffer refused. Apply, A. Barber,\nBevau.\nFor sale cheap\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDBuggy and harness, new last year, in good condition. Apply, John R. Johnston\nCourtenay.\nAnyone having more hay than\nthan they can conveniently handle\ncan find a buyer for the same by\nphoning the Review office. 59.\nFor Sale\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThe Cyclopedia of\nModern Agriculture in iu twelve\nvolitions, edited by Professor R.\nPatrick Wright, Apply, Review\nOffice. i\nt\nWanted\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDTo purchase a small,\npropellor and 8 foot shaft for small \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nlaunch Will consider buying a\nsmall marine engine. Apply at\nReview Office.\nA Snap\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDto let, 7 roomed house,\nnice garden, 80 feet frontage, cor-\nner Union Street and Cumberland\nRoad; would make good rooming\nhouse; rent $10 a mouth. Apply\nW. Idiens.\nThe Rev. Iv. P, and Mrs, Laycock are visiting in town,\nMrs. Lewis has returned from a\nvisit to Nanaimo, bringing her\ngrandaughter Miss Mav Taylor\nwith her for the holidays,\nMessrs D. Bnbar, R, Grieve, W,\nWain, P. Dargie and M. Rees 1110-\ntoied to Nanaimo ou .Saturday eve-\n; ning, returning oil Sunday night.\nThomas and Jack George had\n; great luck fishing at Yellow Rock\n011 Mondav. They caught 12 blue\nback salmon in the forenoon and 44\niu the afternoon.\nMrs. McColm had a very narrow\nescape from serious injury on\nThursday evening last She had\nbeen visiting at her father's, Mr,\nR, Willoughby foe tea, and when\nstarting for home, the horse, which\nis always in a hurry lo get home,\nstarted to run drwn the Lake Trail\nand very soon became unmanage\nable, and soon got into the ditch,\nThe front wheel struck a stump\nand Mrs. McCourt r. H Hendersou.\nSong. Bro. W. Aitken*\nSpeech, Bro, H. Loggie\nThe program was again invaded\n I mc piugrain was again invade.\nMr. anil Mrs. Joseph Thompson left I |-y the appearauct of ice cream and\n^.Woggtalso. Sh, is to stay I \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD , After severa 1 remarks \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDre\nwith Mrs. M. I,. Hagar of Victoria. The made by those present, the chair-\nimmber of 102nd badges she wore, in- man called for the singing of the\neluding a swagger stick, all goes to show National Anthem which put in\nher allegiance to the boys who have left I _\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDd t_ -,,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD festivitie3. The lo,ilt\nMrs R. A. 1-i.rcy took a business Kip -hen being declare I opened. bu-*i-\nto C lurtenay. | ness was proceeded with aud final-\nThe \" Sugar King's \" yacht Uelora |y closed in due form,\nlay in the harbour part of Sunday. A. 11. I\nHall says he hopes its advent amongst us i \"*'*'*\ndoes not mean another rise in sugar. I Mr, Sam McPimsey of Gamobell\nEnoch Hellan thinks it wont. ( _>,*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD__ ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDi-ji_, ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD .\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD._ \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD_ \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nMrs. Alston of Vancouver is a guest at R'ver was a visitor III town for a\nthe Elk hotel. I couple of days this week.\nJ. W. Williamson, editor of the B. C. _. _, . ,\nWestern Catholic passed through Comox j On Tuesday forenoon the man...\non Sunday. i gement of the Picture Show receiv-\nThe concert given by the young people ej a wjre that tne fijnis -or \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. Bn\nof Comex in aid of the Red Cross, tho '\npoorly attended, was a genuine success. .\"*\",'_\" \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"I'\"\"-1* wmiu out\nAn extended report will be given next bv 1 uesdav's train, but would\nweek. lint*** r\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Tl,i,r..,i-... t.*\t\nPresbyterian Church\nSt. Andrews' Sandwick\nService 2 p.m. Sunday School\nand Bible Class 3 p. in.\nCourtenav\nSunday School and Bible Class\n10:30 a. m. Evening service 7:30\np. m. All welcome\ntain Prepared\" could not get here\nbv Tuesday's train, but would be\nhere on Thursday. Everybody had\nmade up their minds to see these\nwonderful pictures, and much consternation ensued, but by presist-\nent advertising the fact was prettv\nwell known that the date had been\nchanged before evening, and only\na few gathered at the Opera House\nto be disappointed. The show will\ntake place this (Thursday) evening\nmatinee at 5 o'clock.\nFRUIT!\nLocal Strawberries and Cherries\nare now coming in, place your\norder for a crate now\nbox zse SHEPHERD'S n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n40\nComox Creamery\nButter\n40c per lb. this week\nMcPHEE & MORRISON\nDEPARTMENT STORE\nGroceries, Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes]\nPaints, Oils, Etc.\nWe carry in]stock Bricks, Lime, Cement, Doors and Windows\nGet our prices.for goods iu Urge quantities\nTelephone 1 Courtenay\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDe^^*ss*)**}**g**iasg*Mn*^^ THE REVIEW. COURTNEY, H. C\nCHEW \"PAY ROLL\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nA BRIGHT TOBACCO OF THE FINEST QUALITY\n10 CENTS PER PLUG\n:: LADY :: |\nURSULA'S\nHUSBAND\n .71V\nFLORENCE WARDEN\nWtrd, Leek i* Cc.l.lmikd\nTORONTO\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD - \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.-: ____!\n tuiii.ill\nSitu sl I lor n uunli' nt disconsolate,\ntn anxiety and distress plainly visible in her '.-I'liili' countenance, Then,\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDiih sudden airs oi decision, mIm* beckoned him in follow Iter into tho bedroom. Tli'ii- flu: turned and [uced\nl.im again.\n\"Paul,\" she said earnestly, \"il will\ncause m.' the verv keenest distress\nil you buy me any more Jewellery.\nJusl think of lho cosl ! Why, the re-\nHt'tling of those 1 have will come to\nii gn nl deal ol money, I'm Run.'.\"\nHe imi Iiis hand gravely nnd alfec-\nliuiiiitely mi her shoulder, with inal\ntlmt air nl tender preprietorship which\nihc could never resist.\n\"Look here, my di nr.\" he said,\n\"vou always allow yourself I\" I\"'\nguided by me, don't you, in things\nujion which I have set my heart?\"\n\"Yc es, Paul \"\nshe spoke with an air of timidity\nwhich was strange and touching in\nIhis tall, imperial-looking lady.\n\"Well, tlnn, yuu mi.n-1 let ine eive.\nyou a pearl necklace to wear while\njour ulil jewels are reset. Otherwise\nyon would he the only woman at Oaro\n<' 'im without jewels \"\nSli \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD I' oked up quickly.\n\"And don't yon ihinK 'l.nl would ho\nf sort ol distinction,\" she asked. \"I\nhave Mum liciuittifiil dresses, too\nbeauti/til, indeed, dresses that make\nmo n.-'*;iiiiei in have sn much money\nspi nt upon inc. Believe inc. I shall\nbe i|iuic nn imposing person, without\nanv oriiainents.\"\nlie seemed in hesitate.\n\"Won't ymi let inc. have my own\nway,\" he said, \"If 1 assure yuu ihal\nIhey would lei me havo this necklace\nupon very easy terms? Knowlns thai\nil is [or Lord Grnvenhurst's daughter\nlln y are wanted, the iewofler i\n(n lei me down easy.\"\n\"What jeweller?\" asked Lady\nUrsula.\n\"St ui mind who it is. I can'l trust\nrun imi In tn In liim and repudiate\n(he bargain \"\nShe looked shocked\n\"Oh, Paul, whatever I might think.\nindeed 1 should never do that.\"\n\"To (In ymi justice, 1 don'l really\nthink you would,\" snid he in that indulgent tune which, tn her mind, had\nrs ii irresistible piquancy when applied\n1,, In r, 9i ll'-rcliniit and i-pserved ns .-lie\nusually wns except lo him.\n\"What are you going In pny [or this\nnecklace?\" she asked, returning lo the\nsubject, which he would have boon\nglad to he done with.\n\"I mn going to pay [or it by inslal-\ni!,i nt-*. ' r-niil lie evasively.\nSi,- clung In him, entreating with\nall the earnestness nl lier command.\n\"Don'l do it, Paul; 1 beg you, T elite at vnii,\" urged she. \"It would bo a\ndint; upon ymi. ilium u\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD both, fur ii\nlong time, nml nothing is worth such\nii Mni'ilice Oh. Paul, iiiv own dear\nI'uul, will ymi hnve the In ail to refuse uie in n mallei' like ihis where\nI am, nft'T all tli\" person chiefly con*\ntirued?\"\nlh' nlfecled to hesitate, nnd then,\nfiiddi nly, he gnve way.\n\"Have it vour own wav.\" he snid;\n\"I i nii'l i-i -i-i you. I 11 take the neck-\nIn.-, back tomorrow morning, I've engaged UIJ sell In nothing'yel, ns 1 hnd\ni; on approval.\"\nIt was strange that, loving and trust*\nii \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD; .hi ns -he did. Lady I'i lulu i \\n),i i ii nei 'I n slrnngi ly chilling [i cling\n years in tllis province bus furnished him opportunity\nto study nl its bird life nnd the application nf such toward its noinic\nvalue in agriculture.\nUsually by Ihc first week of May, n\ngreater pari of Ibe bird migration has\narrived in Manitoba, \doquiito pro-\nicciinn ,,| inBoel worms or insect destroying birds has become a question\nnl vital importance to tho farmer.\nWithin recenl clalo it Im* been computed thnl if the family of insect devouring birds became extinct in Man*\niloba, within a tew veins lhe grain\nfields could not possibly raise n crop.\nUntil even a recent i\" nml certain\nbirds highly valuable in lho extermination of insect pests, were erroneously\nconsidered enemies of the farmer, and\nvery destructive to grilill nnd seeds.\nAs example the mhin. one of Iho first\nfeathered arrivals, wns deemed a plunderer of the fnrm garden fruit bushes.\nHut investigation of the charge has\nacquitted the robin, the diet of which\nconsists principally of harmful in*\nsects and worms.\nA list nf the must important insecl-\nivorious bird visitors tu Manitoba comprises: Robin, Cat-bird, Wren, King-\nBird, Oriole. Shrike, .lay. Woodpecker,\nOhiciidee. To Ihis n her may likewise be milled Unit alleged egg nnd\nchicken thief, ihc crow.\nindeed, the crow is one nf lln- very\nfew birds wliicli consider potato hues\nns a leading feature of the menu card,\nihe bluejay rejpioes in a repast of\ncut-grubs and caterpillars. Tlie woodpecker may be justly adjudicated a\nmust I'Otcnl factor in destruction of\ninsect lite, ibe principal hunting\nground of this bird consists of tree\ntrunks, from which is removed every\navailable grub, the woodpecker's beak\nlling deeply into tho limber and\nig haggard, pale, disillusioned, and eager abstracts pests immune from attacks\ncl buck in tin\nId borne und her of other birds, i' the day the\nown family. sparrow nriived in Manitoba, its ohnr-\nWhnl was the surprise of both to ncler has been stained with a charge\nsee, when thc train cumc in. a.smil- of grain theft. Tin ease cannot stand;\nitii:. happy I.inly Ursula, wearing a careful scrutiny of lhe sparrow's liable ,v and very smartly-cul Parisian its will reveal tlm facl Hint il is a\ncostume nnd n more becoming hat very decided enemy of caterpillars,\nthan she hnd ever before been known [The shrike, otherwise butcher bird,\nI., buy, whn stepped out nn lhe plat- possesses grenl capacity for inshect\nform v.iib nn nlerliiess which thev\nWhen Your Eyes Need Care\n_Re**uri\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDeEyc**edlul_o. NoSmnrtlog I'ccrli\nlice -Aon. Qulckl*'. Try It (or lied, Weak,\nSore Byesandarannlale\" *\"yell(l_, Murine is\nro_tpou_d. thc\nu-mil amount ol fruits, ihere may\nto that\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDBuffalo Ex-\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD_ .-_'_>\nSunlight Soap has a high standard of purity which is backed\nby a $5,000 guarantee. If a\nsoap has no standard there is\nno reason why it should always\nbe of uniform quality, always\ncontain the best materials or\nbe anything like as good as\nthe soap with a standard.\ni\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nPLIGHT]\n4 SOAP J\n5cen1s\nSunlight Soap\n\"Oh, that wn- l\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'i\nlion. The .lucksoi\nC Illl'l help Hid\nell mi the sumo si\nwe, . r Hither Paul,\nIII-. Sn he's e\t\nnlren ly, w\n1.1 dllVS I\"\nHUSO Of this elec-\ns Wiint Paul lo\nI, and ns WO nre\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD -. and nil keen,\ndidn't like lo rein l\" i inre Court\nHot ol every description. Hawks\nowls, regarded enemies of Ihe poultry\nyard, undoubtedly perform much useful work in tlm annihilation of mice\nand gophers. A deadly agent against\ninsects is the swallow. The whip*\npoor-will must also bo the recipient\nof nol ice; nud reference is necessary\nconcerning the night-hawk, that aviator among the birds verily n swooper'\ndown to earth ns its eagle eye per-1\nceives some species of grub.\nBeyond despute is lhe facl thai the i\nmain diet of bird life consists of\ngrubs and insects of every description,\nWithout assistance of the feathered\ntribes, crawling und winced pests of\nManitoba's agricultural domain could,\nnot possibly be sui)prossed. Then, as,\nii resultant issue, grain fields and\ngardens would speedily picture a'con-\nuition tt'o dare not even think of,\nA Railroad Novelist\nC. P. R. Official Earns Distinction\nliy Writing Novel\nPerbnps llio best known ol lho\nyounger literary critics in America\nis \t.i.ic Bi 11 of the \"Cleveland\nLeii'l' r.\" For lhat reason Ids tribute\nto tlm work o[ a C. P. It, official is\nwell worth attention. Thut woi k is n\nwork of tiction, \"Hearts and Faces\"\nhy name, nnd is ns remote from Canadian railway life ns anything could\npossibly be imagined. Here is what\nArchie 11.11 bus tn say in part,\nJohn Murray (iib.son wus born in\nCeylon. His father is a titled Scotch\nman. lie is u graduate of Oxford, and\nlie has taken special courses in pbilos-\nophy ai vnrions German universities.\nAnd despite some of Ihese things\npopularly considered llllll'lirnp- to\n\"getting nn in the world.\" be ci>n.\nluck to London nnd wns soon editor\nnl Ibe well-known illustrated news-\n1 iipcr, \"Black nnd White.\"\nRealizing that he did u it know ns\nn n \"i ns Ii\" wanted to kno'.v nbntit\nI art, a realization Hint came home lo\na****** vTBerwo\nwhile I begged tor i ip]\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD nine nml see you nil first.'\n'in be continued)\nhill) i inli day as lie sat at his editor\nPerhaps II ly thing that a ten-1 ial desk, ho resigned and went, to\nder hearted woman hides worse than Paris to become an ail student.\nI n, tnl. barbarous warfare is a man I lie lived iu the famous I .at in Qunr-\nwho won't fight mi provocation.' t.i flrr.il .\"iwj\n(llin-it WtUbU \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDm\nnitron toad ii-\" . iMil-\neri itil'l y<\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDi Inlm -ul\nVAntUVOI DO/ I'xtrvrl\nJflin offir. v,'_ M[ifii*t too iii i>'H vour fiim-Ii\nIf.'. . i in m-il n'.kW Itiotu tliu bwintilul -tnli'li,\nDoft't lIHoU tbl\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD offw too fO_4 l\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD UlW, hut M\n0.1 rflnU tOlUr \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Mill \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\"\", u\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-i.*ii. -'\nI \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDiii [>\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ti.i\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'. 'J \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ..'i'i ..-iii i ttoftU, i^i'i'i.t'.,\ntagUadL\n0-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDT-wT.1_!_n_*-_C.>**'32:-T \"^ SkWa-MBBB* 8TSS:\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.r ,\nMoney in Hogs\nCanada in a Good Position to Develop\na Permanont Bacon Trade\nA.s is well known, bogs have reached\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'ii unpr Iciitly high level $11.00\nper cwt., being |,.ii.| [or, tod nnd\nwatered on the Toronto market, The\ntucl that, even with live bogs nl this\nfigure, ship ids nf bacon aro regularly ffoliitt [orward lo England, will.\nserve In illuslrnte very cli inly llic ;\ndemand for lhal product on the Brit-1\nisli market Without doubt, Canada\nstands in n better position today I\"\ndevelop n permauenl bacon trade with\nGreat Britain than bus ever been tho I\nenso before. To dn this, however,\nthero must be volume of supply. There j\nis very 'jimil reus,,n (,, believe Unit, j\nalthough prices cannot bo expected.\nt\" ri main nl lho present high level.\nII,\" denii fur bacon, in lho face nfj\ntl i supply lliul cm be obtained, will\nI\" such ns to bold Hie market in a '\nvery [inn condition, both during and j\nfor a i sldorablo period following i\nii..' war,\nUn at Hi italn's Imports ol bacon j\nin 11)15 an lib I tu i:-_'.\"i.til. Kin. from J\n_\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'!\nwmi\nI las been Canada')\nfavorite yeast for\nmore ihiin Inrly\nV'-'.ll'.\nEnough (oi 5c, io\nproduce 50 large\nloaVei ol line,\n'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\"\" ' rA\"A!W wholesome nourishing home made bread. Do\nnot expnim-iil, there is nothing\njusl as good.\nm\nhi\nWh\nE.W.GILLETT CO. LTDf\nTORONTO, ONT.\nWINNIPEQ Morilf\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDWl,\nIiisl'cIs as Human rood\nCanada\nobtained only C3,.1\"M,5H.\nWill Take\nLot of Education Before\nEdlblo Bui's Become Popular\nThe fact thai Canadian bacon linn\n! ,'!,\"\" \"' \"!\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ''\"' '\"W:: \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\"\"\" \"Jl Dr. I, ti Howard, chief of tbe bur\ni<> \*in, pit cwl iihovn Ainoru-mi and\nI. nft more- nQCAMirjr\nIhnn Smallpox- Army\nexperience bu demonstialed\ndie almost miraculous off!-\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDlacy, antl btroites-neiSi of AntUyphol i Vaccination.\nB. vaccinated NOW liy your physU 1-ji*, you and\nfour (amiiy. it l.* mora vi..il than houae lofuranco,\nA_k your phyalclaoi druggist, or send for 'Havi\nifou had Typhoid.\" telling of Typhoid Vaccine,.\n(ftj'il's fiom ti\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.. uml danger from Typhoid Ctrtlcti.\nTHC OITTCR LABORATORY, fiCfKittJCY, CAL\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDlOOUCINf VACCIHI8 ft flDUua U.HOCR 0. 3. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.V. UCRUU\nfHENEW FltfNCH RCM-SDV. W.I N*2 N,9-\nTHERAPION K,1^. |t:\nvreattui i en, cures i iirokii iv '.au ess lc\nit VIM Kit)-;-..' BLADDER n* -t '.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-. BL II\nITILKS BITHSI \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD IH-'.'-'.ill-. >r . i -. Si I*\n&0I;G_:RAC0. IW BEEKHANSI t. \ V08I \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD I ,\nionotiVi HPit1. tun FREE book TO Dn I\nJjao CO.HaV\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDRSTOCKKD ItAMfSrSAO Losi\nfHlRAPfONSLo ,,\nitE THAI H'll/t! MARKBO V/DHD 'THERAPION' 1^ OH\nHaiT.COVI STAMf Ai.iM.i. TO ALL GB.HL'tME I'ACKETfi\n\ WATERPROOF COLLfifiK AND CUFFS\n! ... i ,,.,., li,,,.,, a,lit lit\nin mil more than I'J-i. under Iho nominal quotation [or Danish, illustrate\"\nel nu ly t \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD what exlent Canada t Id\nim i'i n \" In i export trade, had alio n\nmtficii m quantity ot liojta to make\nthis |)(.-i ill,. Tb,. Riifrllsb marltol\nand Hi \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Hriiish eonsumer will l.uv\nCanadian bi u today, quality being\n' qiUll, ill I'lefefellCC III tlllll fl'dlll ,'UIV\noilier counlry in the world, with tho\npossible excpi f Ireland. Nol\nnnly so, bul an enormous market exists also fur ham, frozen pork nnd\npork cuts in' van.nt, cleseri'itions. This\nmarket is a* remunerative hh the\nbacon trade, nil] gh il is it\"! likely\nin prove as constant.\nTbe West is producing ii great\nquantity of rough grain this year. As\ncompared wilh wheat, it will probably ii\" relatively low in price. It\nI should, therefore, bo a sound busi-\nI ncss proposition to breed as many\nI lows this r*|iriiiL,' in would provide\nj eai b fnrm next \"ull with such a number of feeding hogs ns can be con-\ni veniently handled ami suitably fin*\ni ishecl. Tin y should, however, be so\nselected nnd mated as to maintain\napproved bacon type, Unless tbis\ni'ii'.\". | be dene, wo ciininit compete with\n;;,',,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD; t Ireland and Denmark and will lose\n,.c.e\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDo status on the Britisii market. Tbe\ntotau development oi our bacon trade is a\npurely commnicrcial undertaking and\nwe must early recognize that we online! sell to the llritish merchant unless we give him what lie wants.\nI This granted, thrifty management\nI and good feeding should yield a return tliis year which will more than\ncompensate for all the labor involved.\nenn ni entomology ol tlie department,\nnf agriculture, Washington, i- quoted\na.* saying (hero is no reason why people may nol eat bugs, llu says lu-\nseet soups can bo mado which arc\nv. i y nourishing und appetizing,\nOI courso, if the doctor is quite cor-\nreel, a new source o[ food supply is\nat once open in the general public,\nbul it will undoubtedly be necessary\nLightning Rods Efficient\nStatistics Show That Danger From\nLightning ia Greatly Lessened\n'I he efficiency nf lightning rods may\nmay bo - itiiualed ai niiiclv-nine per\ni.'in..\" says the repori ul i'ho United\nSillies Huri'iiu of Standards, nfler di*\n'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-line the reporls ol [nnu mutual tire\ni'i-iii'iiiic \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD companies nnd slate [ire\nmarshals. \"As Ihc repori look account l\nnf every inid. both new nud old, good\nand bad, these figures give strong\nstipporl tn the use ol lightning rods,\ni'liiir hundred and sixly lum-, 9 noted\na.* being slriiel, by lightning wero occupied III til'' lime |,y 'aluilles. [ll\ntwo hundred titty-four cnsi s out of\nlhe four hundred sixty, one or mure\npersons were either severely injured\n01- killed. Illll tW ' till' f tbese\nbnid's were reported as bavin'.: rods.\nso ii mighl be icluded from these\nfigures thnl in the case o[ an unrodded\nhouse being struck, the chances lhat\nnil 0! ill\" occupants will escape harm\n.ne about forty-five oul oi each hundred \"\nWe remind you again that your\nfence wires should be grounded every\nfew mils mi a lightning charge will\nnol travel along the wires and Mil\n.-tuck ur set fire I., some attached\nbuildings,\nI '1 lake chances with lightning.\nIt is cheap insurance to rod lho build,\nin.\"--! nnd'ground the fence wires, Successful funning.\nSweet and palatable, Mother Graves'\nWorm Exterminator is acceptable to\nchildren, and it does ils work surely\nand promptly.\nBometlung bettor than hiion and lui, chr.-ipe-it of All Oils.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDConsidering\nlUun-ry bill* Wash It Willi\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDsoa_p ..and , )1io \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD',\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD , ,it;\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDa \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDt ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. rr1,nm.01\nSB I Uu\nurativi\ntnlities of Dr. Thomas\nIn du a lui nf educating before the |i*r will lie pleased to\n(cam tliat Uierc h at least one dreaded disease\nscience has been able M cure in .il! its states, iinti\nthat is en tar rh. Catarrh beius u\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD r*-itl>- influenced by constitution a J conditions reQuires constitutional treatment. 1 InU's Catarrh Cure tn tnlceit\ntnedioin*u Bold in tnree oe* l (ntemotly and ocLs thm the Blood on the Mucous\nGTOes of strength- No. I, Surfaces of the system thereby destroy ins the\n$1; No. 2, J.t, No, 3, Jo foundation of tlie disease, giving the patient\nper box. Hold by alt I strength by btiilditis up tlie constitution and\nSold by all j strength by building up the constitution and\ndruggists, or sent pro* | assisting nature in dolngibl work. The pro-\npaid In plain package on\nreceipt of price. Fret\npamphlet. Address:\nTHE COOK MEDICINE COJ\nlOSOttTO. ONr. (firwiii\nA Matter of Comparison\nElection Agent -\"That was a good\nlong speech our candidate made on\nIhd flgilaultural question, wasn't it:-\"\nFarmer Plowson\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"Oh, ay, it wasn't\ntad; bul n couple \"' nights' good\njain 'ud 'a done a Bight more good.*'\nMinard's Liniment\nFriend.\nLumberman's\nprletors ha\nmuch t'iii;h hi tiie curative\npowers of Mulls c&tnrrh Cure thai they offer\nOne Hundred Dollars for any vast* that it fails to\ncure. Srjitt for list of testimonial?\".\nAddress: r J. CIIENHY it cu\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Toledo, Ohio.\nSold b_ all druggists, 75c.\nMINARD'S T.IMMIIXT is tin\nLiniment asked for at my stor\nthe only on. wo keep for sale.\nAll il.e pt'0|ile use it.\nHAf.l.l.N II I.TdX.\nI'hasi.hi Bay, C. 13.\ntiid\nie.* man, In-ware nf lhe girl who\nspring.-i a cooking school diploma on\nvim. It is the same as a leap year\nproposal.\nA Silent Salesman\nMany manufacturers of machinery\nthat is hm heavy or too bulky to be\nsent fur inspection I\" a prospective\ncustomer now give Iheir travelling\nsalesman sels of motion pictures that\nshow exactly how the machines work.\nThe salesmen cany small, light mo-*\ntion-picture projectors that can bo\nconnected witli tho lighting circuit in\nlhe office of the customer. A blank\nwall .serves for a screen. Since the\nmotion picture is independent of tho\nseasons, the salesman can show a\nharvester at work in winter or a\nseeder or planter in the fall. The\nfilms also help to overcome the instinctive opposition that many buyers\nof machinery and equipment display\ntoward new apparatus and new methods. Such men will not listen to the\nsalesman or e.o to see the new machine I\nin operation, but they will look at\nthe motion pictures.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDEngincerin~\nMagazine.\nfor a fine\ncomplexion\nyou must do something more\nthan use cosmetics. Your\nkeep the blood pure, the live :\nand kidneys active and the\nbowels regular. You must also\ncorrect the digestive ills that\ncause muddy skin and dull eyes.\nHelmets Prevent Blindness\n\"We are parting today,\" an American inns, writes from a hospital,\n\"wilh our last blind hoy, who is going\noff to i. special school to bo put in ed'Yhe'port.'. -MhrVi-eTsou^eTn\nthe way ol getting lna living poor at Quifp'ort. iMiss., \"Is that the Gulf of\nMexico?\" the porter replied: \"Only\nWhen Alton Michael Packwurd ask-\nEasy to Talk\nAccording to the following anecdote\nour blockade of Germany has been\nmuch more effective than certain\nnewspapers will admit. Al a recent\n.offeryouthe needed help. They\n'are mild in action, but quickly\nstrengthen tlie stomach, ger.-\ntly stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. They put the\nbody in good condition so the\norgans work as nature intended. Backed by sixty year; oi\nusefulness, Beecham s Pill.\nare worth a\nguinea a box\nD-**K_\"B- wili E\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDI7 *.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDx \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDf Special V'!\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. Ij Wt_MB\nS.,1' -Yerj*.il_\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. la beiM. *S \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD_.\nIn Proportion\nfor several weeks a woun led s tidier had' luul no solid food -nol\nbut milk. At length the doctor I\nbanquet the Belgian Consul, II. L, de him that the nexl day he could have\nRussian Women Engineers\nA number ol Russian women university graduates hove specialised in\nnining, others again have become\naxpert- in the good roils movement,\nvhieh is ii vital issue iii Russia; sev-\ninil will undertake duties connected|\nnitli the rapid extension of the canals\nami walerwuy*.\nMany women hold imporlanl e\--\nicutive positions in the Ministry of\nigrieulluro.\nGraduates in architecture do nol\nbecome draftsmen, but have lie* opportunity t\" conceive and execute\n(Iheir own designs. In Russia there\nh no prejudice agalnsl the profes*\nclonal woman, in no other country\niocs she stand so fully on a basis of\n(quality,\nTrusted positions In hanks, form-\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDTrly closed to women have been offi*\ndally opened, affording an avenue\n'!\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD* specialists in economies.\nfellow. We liaVo bad no fresh eye\nclass lately, and I do not doubt that\nthis must in great measure be due\nto tb,- new steel casques, whose real\nvalue is shown by the ease of one of\nmy patients. The bullet struck the\n'peak' of hi* helmet, bul was deflected,\nan,! laid open his forehead in n Ions\ndiagonal. Tin- doctor.- soy if it Jiad\nonlered slraighl at the point of impact it would certainly nave blinded\nIiini.\"\na po'shun of it, sab.\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDLyceum Magazine.\nWouldn't Care Anyway\n\"I see where a judge has decided\nthai to tickle a mule on the hind leg\nis contributory negligence.\"\n\"I shouldn't think a man who did\nthat would care by the time the decision was given what it was.\"\nG i ve\n' \"I have just heard an anecdote\nabout, ibe German food-famine,\n\"A regiment of Landslurin men\nwere setting mil for the fronl from\nBerlin. Tlie usual crowd were seeing\nthe old boys off -an anxious, .silent\ncrowd. Kiit finally there was one chap\nwho screwed up spirit enough t\n'Long live Germany I'\n\"At Ibis a gray-whiskered T.ainl-\n-.1 iniii man turned round and veiled\nreproachfully at tho sl ter, 'What\na light meal, and tho solder, gr il \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nrejoicing, conjured up visions of underdone beefsteak, potatoes, i ; - \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,\nand so ou. What he was givet to\nbis first meal, however, was aboi I n\ntablespoonful of tapioi a II. - I\nit, growling and gi ambling.\nThai's nil the dinner you < in\nbout, have.\" the nurse said, \"and tin doctoi\norders that everything vise must be\nin the same proportion.\"\nThe patient pushed away the plat\".\n\"Well, I'll do some reading now.\"\nhe said. \"Bring me a postage stamp \"\nThe area in fall wheat in all Canada is estimated by lhe Census and\nStatistics office nt ],0.3,200 acres as\nromparcd with 1,208,700 last year.\nCondition of crops is not equal to last\n7r,ir but is B per cent, above the aver*\n_fc of the liisi seven years,\nW. N. U. IIII\n___a_E\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDs\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nDr. Cassell s\"\n%\ny*H\n-,' WNTAClOsv \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-'- .f.\n^'\"CA'ftKlJNAtlVES:;\n'wphx'*wm.&i .5\nDr. CmkII. Initaiil Relltt li Ihi camitinlon\nfr.ipur-tlon to lit. Cmoll'i Tjjjffl,\nLiver Troisb.es, Sick Headache,\nand Habitual Constipation.\nI.iver troubles and habitual constipation can be cured\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDbut not\nby cathartic or purgative medicines. The only possible way is\nto help your system io cure itself; and that is what Dr. Cassells\nInstant Re'ief so surely docs. It is not cathartic, it is not violent,\nit is quite different to thecoarsc purgative preparations in common\nuse. Tbese only irritate and weaken; Dr. Cassell's Instant Relief\ntones and strengthens the liver and bowels, and so restores their\npower to do nature's work in nature's way.\nTake Dr. Cassell's Instant Relief for constipation, biliousness,\nliver troubles, sick hcadaclie, flatulence, acidity, heartburn,\nand Impure blood.\nitli we Orvmist I t Dr. Cassell's Instant ItelicI and tahe no niiilitutt.\nPrice SO cents from all Oi'ii__l_t_ and Storskaapers,\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDr dlr\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDot from tho solu a.on!a for Canada. Han,1,1 P. rtiioliio .and Co., Ltd.,\n10, MoCautatreeti Torouto,\nSe>l\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD PfoflrJtlorfi Dr. Castell't Ci\nWar Tn\, l centn exl rn.\nLtd., Manchester, _nplan_,\nWtf\n\"Science Sittings,\"\nApril 11, 1918, saysi-\n\"Provid'noe hasgiven\nid tne braini to\ndevise moans to compensate Nature lor\nour ill-treatment ol\nlier. . . . The means\nal hand oome Irom\nnatural souroes, and\nwe have them embodied in such splendid combination as\nOr. Cassell's Instant\n(telilf, We take Ihis\npf-paration a, an\nexample because It\nis so well balanced\nIn the matter ol\ncomponents and io\neffective in every\ndireolion,\" THE COURTENAY REVIEW\nThe Courtenay Review \ Notes h*theW ay\nat\nAmi i'uinox Valley Advocate\nA Weeky Newspaper, I'ubished\nCourtenav, I). ('.\nN. H. HouitN, Editor and Proprietor\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDmbscription 81.M per Vear in Advance\nTHURSDAY, JUI.V 20, 1916\nThe Allies' offensive, active on\nevery front, continues, there being\nof course a certain amount of sway-\n'ng back ou the part of the Ger-\nuiiinsjuit never with any. lastii r\nsuccess. The advance continues,\nslowly, steadily but always moving\nonwards, The Russians by virtue\nof their huge iirmies, longer battle\nfronts and less heavily fortified buttle lines, are making the most\nmarked progress, punctuated by\nhuge casualties on lhe purl of the\nTeutons. Ou the other hand, the\nllritish, French and Belgians, keeping inviolate the territory they hold\nand watching for every opportunity\nto advance, are inflicting considerable losses upon lhe enemy\nThe advances recently\nnot merely for the sake\nalso.\nmane were\nof the terri\ntory recovered, nor were they only\nfor the purpose of releiving the\npressure upon Verdun. We think\nthat they will ultimately lead to the\ngiving up by the Germans of certain portions of the front at present\nheld by them in order to the better\ndefend the rest. The Allies on the\nwestern front are acting the part of\nthe anvil, while the Hessians can\nbe likened tothe sledgehammer. In\nScratch a German and you find\na spy, every time and all the time.\nWe are promised more deeds of\n' (rightfulness \" should the Allies'\noffensive be fruitful. It is therefore all the more necessary to watch\nevery German in Canada.\nTo secure immunity from insult,\nAmericans in certain districts of\nMexico are wealing small Utitish\nMags. Tlie Monroe doctrine has\nnot been iu evidence lately, all the\nsame.\nIt seems very evident thai any\nrevival in real estate in British Columbia will conic, not from Europe,\nbut from the development of ihc\nnatural resources of the province.\nWhile immigration from Europe\nwill be greater than it has been\nsince the war begun, it will not attain to prewar dimensions, the\nreason being that labor will be in\ngreat request for sonic years for the\nreconstruction of that which has\nbeen destroyed, and for the development of industry generally. Capital too, will stay at home In\nother words, those with real estate\nholdings in B, C. will have lo aid\nthe further development of natural\nresources if they wish to realize \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nupon their holdings.\nMillers Meet\nMr. Movit;-., Manager of the'\nRoyal Standard agency here was at;\nVancouver last week attending lhe j\nthe meantime the British and millers annual convention, lhe;\nFrench have been able to smash the following report of the proceedings\nprice impregnable defence works in | is from the Vancouver Province, I\nthe Somme and Ancre portions of\nthc- front, erected at a huge cost in\nmaterial and labor, and bearing the\nJuly 14.\nA departure in business operations took place in Vancouver on\nhope of the German people to a j Saturday when the head office exe-\ngreat extent. That confidence has cutive, branch managers and salts-\nbeen shattered with a heavy toll of men of the Vancouver Milling &\nGerman lives, while the hopes of Grain Co. Ltd. met in their first\nthe Allies have been increased and I annual convention in this city\nThe session took place in the board\nroom of the Cai adian Credit Men's\nTrust Association, and lasted from\ninspired, although at a heavy cost,\nrather less than that to the Germans, of precious lives too. There\nwill be 110 respite from now onwards, and the efforts of the Allies\nwill increase as they are able to\nbring into the struggle their magnificent resources of men and munitions. Our Canadian troops continue to arrive month by month\nand as regularly, proceed to tlie\nfront. Recruiting still goes on,\nnot quite so rapidly in British Columbia as before, but still very creditably. Men are still wanted, and\ngood men at that, and thev are\ncoming forward, as they will continue to come forward until the\nstruggle is over. Victory is much\nnearer than it has ever been before\nbut it is a long way off still. Only\nby the most strenuous efforts can\nthe Germans be decisively beaten\nand peace restored. Let us sland\nshoulder to shoulder in a wholehearted resoh e to hasten that day\nNot for a long time has it been sc\neasy to be an optimist. The Ger\nman navy is again skulking in liar\nhour, the German armies are takinj.\nheavy punishment, industrial activ\nity on all sides in the Britisii em\npirc is well on the increase, am\nconditions are steadily improvinj.\nin the province. Of course, tin\npessimist can always find sonic\nihing to grouse about, even if onlj\nin the smile of the optimist, bill\nlet lis all lie optimists and give tin\npessimist a bad time\n%d*cc\nThe New\nWaist Line\nand higher buat u\ndeveloped in all the\nnew model C/C A\nla Grfice Coraett,\nnow being shown\nat\n9 a. tn. to 10 p. in, having; every j\nappearance of a conventional nat-1\nional in character. The address of I\nwelcome was delivered by Mr. J.\nHall general manager of the com-\npanj. Mr. Hall stated that it was\nparticularly gratifying on this the\ntenth anniversary of the company's\nexistence to have the privilege of\nwelcoming the twenty-five men who\nhad gathered from all parts of the\nprovince. \"Ten years ago\" Mr.\nHall continued \"our organization\nconsisted of two men and myself.\nToday 01 r employees number iu excess of one hundred.\"\nAfter luncheon the delegates\nv\ere the guests of the company at\nAthletic park, where a baseball\ngame between the Vancouver\nBeavers and Seattle Giants look\nplace. After the game the delegates were escorted through the\nplant of the company by Superintendent Hall' At 7 o'clock all a.s-\nCity of Courtenay\nNOTICE\nPublic notice is hereby given that all\npersons having noxious weeds on their\npremises are required to cut and destroy\nsame within seven days from date, otherwise City will cut same and charge cost\nthereof against the property.\nW. A. W. HAMKS,\nC.tv Clerk\nDated July 1\", 191ft\nMens Dept.\nAnother shipment os Sport Shirts arriving in plain sell colors and stripes\nNewest in men's boater stiawsj with\nhigh crown and fancy bands\nMen's Outing Hats and Caps\nInvictus Shoes '-The best good shoe for\nmen\"\nCUMBERLAND\nsembled in th: blue room of the\nHotel Vancouver I'or dinner, aftei\nwhich a most enjoyable programme\nwas provided. Mr Robert Mc-\nKee salesinanager, pre. idbd. The\nfeature of the evening was an in-\nteieslitig talk by the general manager ou the subject \"Gcodwi 1: It's\nCreation and Value.\"\nNo other flour in\nin the World is superior to\nROYAL STANDARD FLOUR\nThais 11 hold, direct statement!\nHut it's 11 statement that the millers stand behind\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDabsolutely,\nROYAI, STANDARD PI-OUR Is milled from the finest wheat in the\nWorld. It is tested under actual haltin: conditions in the millers' own\nperfectly-equipped laboratory in orthr that vou secure uniform, perfect\nHour\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDalways.\nRoyal Standard bakes big, fluffy,\nfinely textured bread\nand biscuits\nVou take no dunces when you use ROYAL STANDARD .'LOUR on\nlinking day. Baking failures do not occur with tllis perfect Hour.\nHut see that you get the genuine. Look\nfor the Circle \"V\" trade mark on the\nsack us shown below.\nFor Piei, Cakei: and other Pailrici ask your dealer for\nWILD ROSE PASTRY FLOUR\nRoyal Standard Grain\nProducts Agency\nBEST\n^ ?A%\nROYAL STANMM\nPhone 33, End ol Bridge\nBRITAIN\nPREPARED\n10 - Reels -10\nCourtenay Opera House\nTO-NIGHT STS\nAdmission 75c\nShow at 7:30\nEsquimalt & Nanaimo Railway\nThrough Passenger Trains leave Courtenay 11:35 on Monday, Wednesday and\nFriday I forttVictoria and Way Stations\nConnecting at Nanaimo with Steamer \"Princess [Patricia''\nRETURNING\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDArrives at Courtenay at\n16:10, Tuesday, Thursday.and Saturday\nSteamship tickets on all lines to all parts\nof'the world. For particulars etc., address\nL. D. CHETHAM\nDill. Paiienger Agent,\"Victoria\nD. B. NICKERS0N\nAgent Courtenay, Phone R 60\nFirst-Class Plumbing\nHot Water and Steam fitting\nJackson & Whittle\nPhone 9 Courteuay\nColumbian\nHealth Salts\n15c.\nSanazont\nThe Ideal Disinfecting Fluid\n50c.\nROBERTSON'S\nDRUG STORE\nSpecial Matinee at 5 p .m.\nfor Women and Children\nChildren 25c Adults 75c\nNobby,\nGoodyear,\nDunlop\nAuto and Bicycle Tires\nand Accessories\nBicycles For Sale\nTHE FORD GARAGE\nPhone L46 Courtenay THE COURTENAY REVIEW\nit>l\nThree Reasons Why\nThe GREAT-WEST LIFE\nhas for nine succcslve years written the\nLargest Canadian Business\nof any company operating in Canada\nreraiums are the Lowest\nicies are the most Liberal\nIts Dividetids are the Highest\nIts P\nIts P.,\nVancouver Island Branch\n,i. linen' MORGAN, Manaiw\n109 Union Bank Bldg. Victoria, B. C.\nI'. L. ANDUKION, Anil, Courtenay\nCity Council\nThe second regular meeting of\ntlie City Council was held on Monday evening. There was jus! a\nquorum present. After tin1 inin*\nti'cs had been read ami confirmed\nthe clerk read the following coill-\nmiinications:\nFrom E. & N. railway asking\ndisposition of the matter ol drain\nfrom their building. Tlie Council\ndecided to have the drain put in\nami gave instructions to have the\ntile ordered.\nA letter from ex-Aid. Johnston\nre the Electric Light question stated that he was of the opinion that\nthe city did not agree to maintain vyas not quite ^satisfactory\nthe street lights, and that no repairs had been paid for-\nIvx-AId Robertson sent a letter\nstaling that he was of the opinion\nthat the council were to pay for renewals, Ex-Alds, Kirkwood,\nCroinptou, and Leighton also signed a statement to the same effect.\nMr. Sawford, secretary of the\nElectric Light Co. wrote that the\ncity were liable for $i per month\nfor each 350 Watt lamp and 50c\nper month foi each 100 watt lamp\nwhether electricial energy were\nused or not and that under the agreement with Mr. Peterson, the\nhave no agreeni\"'!!! with the Electric Light Co. at the present lime,\nand will not pay any bills for street\nlights a'ter the date of eti'ting off\nsame,\nThe ('ily Cleik again asked the\nCouncil for a raise in .\"alary amounting to #15 per month which\nwas not granted, the matter being\nagain laid over for another meeting.\nAid, McKenzie said $50 was quite\nenough for the job. Times do not\ncall for an increase in salary at\npresent. Aid. Aston maintained\nthat the City Clerk's work should\nbe done by someone who had other\nbusiness on the side\nAid. McKenzie said the work\nat all\ntimes, and wanted to know what\nD. Cudmore got for acting as noxious weed inspector. He gets $3\nper day when looking after lots iu\nfected with noxious weeds and cutting thistles on the streets. The\nClerk temarked that he could not\nbe i the office and chasing around\nlooking for persons with noxious\nweeds on their premises.\nAid, McKenzie\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"It's up to you\nfellows, I'm not in favor of increasing the salary.\"\nAid. Anderton said the matter of\na raise had been brought up several\ntimes : n it was time that one thing\ncity were bound to give one month or another was done. The Clerk\nnotice of intention to discontinue\nusing current. This has not been\ndone and the company could continue to bill the city as above.\nThe Council passed a resolution\nsaying that they did not take over\nthe Peterson agreement They\nshould be told distinctly told that\nthe salary could not be raised: He\nalso thought that 3 hours in the\nmorning would be quite enough for\nmost of the time except when taxes' seven\nwere being paid.\nAid Aston said the City\nhours should be 0 lo 12 iu the\nmorning. If he wanted more salary\nlet liini apply to the police commissioners for an increase from them.\nAid. McKenzie \"aid the taxes\nwere being held back either by his\nworship the Mayor or the Police\nCommissioners. No report hud\never been received from Hit Police\nCommissioners- The Council was\njust some kind of a joke, They\nargee to do something one night\nand countermand il the next.\nAid. Anderton wanted to know\nwho was to blame.\nThe Clerk said he had taken\naction against a peddler. The\nmagistrate phoned the Mayor \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDnd\nthe Mayor ordered the proceedings\nstopped. In the mallei of licenses\nthere had been no prosecutions yet\nOne had paid $5 and promised to\npay the balance next mouth,\nAid. McKenzie- ' Do you think,\nI you had n clear case against the\nI peddlar and were doing your duty\nto tlle city when you illowei\nbe called off by the Mayor?\"\nAid. Anderton \"The Mayor was\nliable to an action for criminal interference, Wasn't it your duty to\nreport the matter to the council.\n\"I don't know. ' replied the\nclerk.\nAid, Auderton wanted an explanation irom the Mavor, and the application of the City Clerk foi an\nincrease in salary to be laid over in\nthe meantime.\nTbe matter of accepting Aid,\nCarroll's resignation was also laid\nover for another three weeks.\nThe following accounts were\npresented:\nTarbell ec Son S3.75\nW. G, Robertson 65\nBodwell & Lawson (re Tripp) 15.00\nMcPhee & Morrison 3.50\nElectric Light Co,, office 1.20\n,, street lights. ...6.00\nrepairs 1600\nB, C. Telephone Co 5 60\nJ. Barto 20.00\nAll of which with the exception\nof Mr Tripp's $15 and tbe Electric\nLight $16 were passed on to the Finance Committee to pay if found\ncorrect.\nAid. Aslon reported that he had\nlet a contract to J. Carto to clear\nbrush on Grabble street hill for #30\nThe chairman of the Board of\nWorks said it was worth from 30 to\nJ.50\nAfter one or two dangerous places\nin the street hid been cleared up\nthe owners were to be notified to\ncleat: up lots where dangerous\nbrush was lying on them, at once\nA letter was read from H. D.\nForde stating that he had collected\nlicenses from owners of all dogs but\nFive of these belonged to\nDesigned this year it will ornament and enhance the\ngood appearance of the tidiest kitchen in all Canada.\nMcQaryS\nCome in and I'll show you why the Kootenay stays as\ngood as new long after other ranges have to be repaired\nor replaced. gM\nFor sale by C. H. Tarbell & Son, Courtenay\nthe\nI families of soldiers at the front, one\nClerk's to a chinaman, whom he had been\nYour Printing\nt\ntillable to find at home as yet,\nother belonged to the Mavor, and\nwas so diminutive that it could\nscarcely wear the city's jewelry.\nji\".'I The report was received and the\n1 c instable will try and locate the\nChinese dog fancier and collect the\nlicense or impound the dog, and\nthe aldermen will demand their\npound of flesh from tlie Mayors toy\nterrier,\nEx-Aid. Robertson wanted to\nknow if the Mayor wee not a freeman of the city aud exempt from\nthe license.\nThe report of J. W. McCaiin re\nbridge, was laid over tint 1 next\nmeeting.\nThere was no application for the\nposition of pound Keeper.\nAid. Aston reported that all the\nOrientals had paid the road tax but\n16, who were to pay this p'y day\nor the amount would be d ducted\nfrom their next pay by lln ir employer, the Mayor.\nThe rates by-law was finally\nadopted\nThe Sanitary Inspector reported\nthat he had examined the ' lncktn\nhouse complained cf by Mr. M-\nMillan, and found it was not unsanitary, there was just a little fight\nbetween the neighbors. The wash-\nhouse nuisance was not a menace\nto public health so long as it was\nkept as clean as at present. Report\nreceived and filed.\nThe aldermen were v\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDry anxious\nto know about the delinquent trade\nlicenses, The Clerk read out the\nnames and amount., This showed\nthat $65 was not paid. $10 was un-\ncollectable and of the balance about\nhalf had agreed to pay, leaving 4\nrjelinquints who will be interviewed\nby the clerk before drastic measures\nare taken.\nAid. Aston remarked that he\nthought it was up to any man to\npay his trades license and be a|\ncitizen anyway. I\nThe Clerk brought un the matter!\nof getting a list of registered pro-'\nperty owners from tbe registry office\nat Victoria. He said he wanted a\ntrip.\n*ild. Anderton said the only way\nto get a list was to have someone 1\ngo the registry office and make one\nor have the registry officials prepare\none. The clerk was instructed to\nfind out the cost of procuring same.\nCouncil adjourned at 11,10\nDissolution of Partnership\nTHEED PEARSE\nBarrister ami s\nl'ulil\nPhone 6\nCourtenay\nCourtenay Hotel\nCOUKII: *AY, B. C.\nComfort Wiil, Modulate Rates\nllest \V''ii.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD T. BOOTH\nninl Liquors Prop.\nCumberland Hotel\nGood Accomodation Cusine Excel leu\nWm. Merryfield\nProprietor\nThe Water Question\nSolved\nFOR RENT\nwl Houses,\nud electric\nin each\nWM. LEWIS\nFour f.-\nwater a\nlight\nApply, MRS\ncheap-\nCannot be done any\nbetter or any\ner anywhere else in\nB. C. than at the\nCourtenay Review\nSimms for Satisfaction\nWaltham Watches $7.50 up\nAlarm Clucks I/.S.A\nmake $1.50 to \"ii.'\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDM.i.i'fAi' rs<;i)iiii^/o;)*t.Tj:,:;,;,'jj\"\n;Di)M!SncSi'{:aAUtfc;!;\n-jif * *!' r> n'< -Jt <_ \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.( '&\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD> u *4-*'\nTHE WOI.LO'S BEST POLISH\nSome Famous Riders\nC.i.ixy ol Riding Stars Will Give\nExhibition ol Darini; Foats\nal Moose Jaw Stampede\nAmong llic many ImckiuR-horao\nriders wlio will compete at Hi'1 Mm'\"'\nw Stampede, .Inly nib in Mill, arc\nfive rn' lb.' best kin',\".n ami in.i-l during riders in tho world.\nMii i fatnoii \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ni Ihis quintello tirr*\nKuiory l.aliriimli'. the pri'Sonl world's\nchampion, who is beyond doubl lln1\ngrcnlcsl ii'lrr whn ever lived, ami\n\"Mim\" Parker, uf the ' Q's\" Itiineh,\nSago Crook, Aha. I'urkcr is luirdlj\nI.'.** i'h nn m \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ami daring 11 rider Ihan\nl.aili'ainli'. ami lh Iwo m ll mall II\nI i.i i r ui stampede |\nGirls to Stud* Farming\n[QUICK HELP FOR GHEST SORENESS, HOARSE-\nAlberta to give Girls Oppoi tiiriity of\nSludyine, Agriculture\n\"Equal rights\" an- Iii l.r extended UL'JU|\nr ' women whn w[sh lo lake up ugn\ncultural courses in any ul lhe three Worst Cold (ir SCTC Tlll'Oilt ''\"-If,1'\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIv\nschools nf nSr:e,murn In lho Province \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD;\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.]< (),.(jer\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'I Mli.'i'la. I br i-oiir.-,- ha\e li Oil\nwork un lho plan\nlaw s is w nilli a jinn\nmill's lu nee.\n.1\nM I mil | lh \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \\\ntaken by a number uf young men of\nlhe i)i'0\ in.--- and have proved verv\nbeneficial, Uoeenlly there have been\napplieatiun- from girls whn wish to\nstudy fni'iiiiiig on a scientific basis, i\nTho 'jirl, have previously been Inking lho Domestic Science, course!-, but :\napparently Ihis [lold was nol broad\nIf-11 lu satisfy lho female Bpil'il ol\nRUB ON NERVILINE\nWhere can you find so powerfully\nanliim; a relief as Nerviiine for .\nnl cold? Search llio world over ami\nvuu'll dis 'ovi l' nullum.' half su goo I\nfur nearly forty years N'ei \\nul\nil has lie\nml..I I.\n1,'ul. N'i'i'viliiio jilenlitully over lhe Ihroal Iroiibles, Thousands use It foe\ni I. nii'l ebesl nil. ii in well lots of | I'lietimidisiii, Reiallea ami neuralgia -\nnibbing cnn'l hurt. Th\" relief will In Ihej all speak well of this gran'l\nurprising. family lininieiit, lieeiuise Ihey hnva\nNerviiine is effeetivo boenusc it Is' proved ils a1 sl magical power\n'lh council deeided in nrgn upon ,.,]. n,,|,t n where the soreness ami ness, always remeniber thnl N'ervlliua\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ii I ih\" 'l.sii ,.,,,.-,...,,,,, |.,iy |,|.0i |ls ticlion is i.- Uie quickest, _nf.nl e \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Bv rr\nturins marvellously soothing, flubbed on at good dealer in modi ine soils the largo\nprovinee. m.i,,. ,, clruws mil llm Inflanintion, 5()u fnniily fine bottle of N'orviliiti,\nlh.- luiiii\" rn th,. \\,'.| is certainly ,,,,,1 a,.tor\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD morning lakes awav Uml I rial size 2.V, or direct from llu.\nbound up in her agricultural resources, (,.,.)\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ,,, |.,d,;,,..., ,in,| ,i\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDp's tlio | C'ntiiri-lio/.ono t'u.. Kin don. Canada.\ni!' refore loo much emphasis eaunol , ,\nI..' plai ed upon ;-\"i ioiiltunil education,\nI'*1* through lhe lissm s\nl'.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDnie,\" a halilir win, is known | ilio'p'rovlneiul' govmaii'ne'n'l lh- desi\"!' '* ''\"^ '\" Vh\"W \"'\" *\"\"\"\nas lho greatest ruler evi i sent mil MUy ,,, c-tiibli\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDhhiB mor\nfrom l aliluriiia, ami lhe man whn was .,.,.( reboots tbrouglinlil il\nsi \"nml lu bnGiiindi' nl the Cllelehon\nMia.. Slompnde lasl vear Tho [itli\nI [his [unions group of i iders is Ji\nM.'ii'liniialil. a entile hand on a i nu li\nsouth ui \lnple i 'n i!., v. ho is famous\nIhi'ougl\n1 'vane i i'ii.. who is in nnu.- Scientific ran g ns a profession Is\nout ihe noi-th-wesl eat Ie and \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD slij-n|\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD0 foi w n than are , \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. . , v. , ... ,,,,.;, .,-\n18 n cln\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDS \"l,1,1 \"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'11\"\"- fk'JW* many of the no-cnlled I. it-nod profes- L (i' ,.,, | p,v i f ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nI((r,,i i-i- fi- u if i nnvni' LMVCfl 111) 1 i \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD i n i i i ' ' ' ' ' ' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\" ' \".iu.iui.iii\n!',.;, \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,.,,; ., . i',,i, ' s I\" \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDl'.cl' 'hey have uli ly. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD..*,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD tj_|, bnvo b boon awarded lho\nRescues Under Fire\nI'i\" I\", Watson, (Cliatliiiin. nut.)\nhis wild mount\nThis galaxy of i id\n1 as many others, hav\nthe Stampede buokh\nwhile ..iiirs of equal\nowed niul beaten,\nHis,'\n'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, \Hi\"ita i* wi.e lu pluelng MHiinrv Mednl. A c \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDtide, writing\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDll'l.'liull.s ,l||\nrights of women in Ihi \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD respect,\ndurational [\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD_,,, uie touches says:\nitini\" in in\nnn lhe morning of April 3 lln\n: Germans coiieouli'nled au intenai\nThrifty Danes Win Trade fields of roping, triek-roping, Lull- Miller's Worm Powders, being in boinbardmont on cerlain dug-oiils nnd\n dogging, ami wild borso raoinp will be demand everywhere, enn he got nt j .-iippm-l troiiohes. No sli-elclior-hoiirers\nQuality of Danish Butter ir, so High present to mnke tho Moose ,lnw;St\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,ii*| any chemist's or drug 'hup, at very j or other medical personnel being on\nv_, ;.. ,..\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.., r, ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD pede the greatest frontier oolebrnlioii small cost. Thoy pro n standard lhe spot, rescue work was und.rlnkon\nThat Market is Rapidly Extending ever liclif. I remedy for worm troubles and enn bo I by Pies, Watson and Payno. Nino\nIn Denmark the bread is home* \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD -\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nbn wed, The women spin woolen varn TT * I _. f\\nWhich Ibe village weaver mak- '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,.,, He IS JUSI OllC\ncloth, or which they knit into stock\nim-. The wm\ndrosses. Often\ntheir husbands and suns. Tho ni m\nmak\" wnu.I. ii shnes for the family,\nnud house furniture ami farming implements. Ami th\" fftieiont Danes\nWar Hero Crate In Germany\nW I 'i .iiilin ' i\" ' i:\" m 'inory it\nIn un- is Iho lal ' ' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ii7.pi that h alibi ling i; , mm i The ill iplay of Iron\ni a.... i lusl i fur \"ui' months, bu*\nlhe ridieiili of H \" for 'i in press, ' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\ngolbor with ih dr i iulli| Iii ily, l_.il id\nlhal ' rn \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Now ii any one I* ing-\nin \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD iu oily, in \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD n, ... \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, IIIhji ' is repori \"I\nofficial!) \"i al In : ' '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ie, a * doiny lorn .\n.\"ii \"i am i . di .1 nl lh\" front, up i ' \"i\na woodi ii still ie w lib llll . peed.\n11 has In come quite n now pro! \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nsiun. ami, say i a wng, will oontiiiiu)\nmen make their own M(lT*P of tllP TVTrTIV nvllil11 so effeelivo a\nthev make clothe.- foi \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD iuuIC ul lilc i\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-i.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD**V : relief of their ebildrei\nrei Iv Im- 11\nWHO HAS FOUND NEW HEALTH]\nIN DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS\nullv relied upon lo expel worms from limes they went oul under heavy fire,\nhe's; i. in and abalo lho sufferings i applying first did lo the Injured and I to bo so Iill llio llei'lin Military Heir,\nbnl worms cause. There nro many carrying them baok to cover, Tu their nrcby discovers lhal the needs ol ,:.i\nnolbers thnl rejoice lhal thoy found gallantry ul lonsl seven men owe thcii aniiy shew lhal the liinib r stoi-ua\nlives, ui t these, who had been need replenishing, The daluo (o run\nburied in a dug-out, was released nfler| llindenborg sol lho pace lo tho crow*.\n' although up i\" lho pi'pacut lhat m mu-\nmoid holds n record for sir.o. Thirl/\nInns nf spikes wore used to pierce tha\nwooden god as a means of oolleeting\nmoney for lho privilege of showing\nnppro'ciution of hero's deeds by driv'\nin\" a nail inin it\nButtonholed Ir\ni|'-inqui ul\nmiii'li Inbor while Hie bombard ut\nwas still id its height.\"\ni'liiinrilisi. a British C'abinol Minister|\n\"administered a nenl rebuke. \"I-towl Ke\"P Mlnard'i Liniment in the\nsit Europe an example of intensive Philip McLeod Tells How He Suffered! ,,,h , ,\a _0l, [Jij,*]; [|,fi war will lasl \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\" ,',ous<:'\nfarming nnd dairykceping. Ono re- From Kidney Troublo for Years and v.'ns'lho'final qucslii fa long series ~\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Wanish butter is eaten | Feund a Quick and Complete Curo asked Uy lhe Interviewer. Wry Nellie, nged tour, was gazing I nt*\nIn Dodd's Kidney Pills. \ \"\"\"^ \"\"' \"I\"?-\"' \"'^V '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'T- i \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD We i\",f\"a!\"\"\" \"\"\"' '\"\"\":'\n' ! long is a piece ol string: lhe inler- Weil, uoni,\nTai'lnil, Victoria Co., C. I',. (Special.) viewer .tared at him in astonishment, \"what 'I\" you think of\nPhilip Mel.i'n.l is just, ono moro of| \"1 1 don't know.\" ho gasped. \"Nei-I \"Oh, r\nin countries east of the Suez Canal\nnm! -niiiii of the equalor. Vast quantities of Danish butter nre shipped\ninto lho hriiish Isles nnd to eonti*\nnsked tho lady ut Inst,\niienlal countries, but the output is so (he many residents in this neighbor-1 thor do I.\" said the Minisler, cordi- Ihink it's all right. Aunt Mary lold\ngroat, tin- quality so high, and the hood wlio have found now health in ally. \"I'm '.dad we've ogr 1 about | mania it was \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD perfect fright, but it\nreputation of Danish butter so wide- Dodd's Kidnev Pills\nspread, that il finds customers in \"] have used Dodd's Kidney Pills\nlands as remote from II\"' Danish-with great success,\" Mr. McLeod\nfarms ns Patagonia or Tahiti. I slates. \"For veins I had kidnev\n.lutlnnd formerly wns dpsoribod hyl trouble nnd could get nothing to help\ngoogranhPiv as a sterile vast.*. II is nie. Hearing of what Dodd's Kidnev\nnow n scene of highly profitable farm-, pil|s |.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDvo ,|, [or others led me to\nIng. 'Hi\" pastures nre sn small that Use lie in. five boxes cured mo com-\npvpry blade of crass must bo turned plelely,\niiii\" milk. Tho farmers arc sn pro- \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD- jinVc recommended Dodd's Kid-\nvident that they tether their cows in nny I'ills to many | pie. i eann.it'\nrow s ami nllow them to crop thc grass speak too highly \"of them.\"\nwithin reach removing them to the The testimony of people who hav\nnext i roppod gra - tli- next day, i \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ,.,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,.,| ia b\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-ltor ihan nil the\nnml llm* steadily mowing each moa-hi ry in the world, Dodd's Kidney\ndow. When tho fm side of tho plot Pills nro purely and simply a kidney\nof ground bus boon reached lln* grass j-omodv. If vou hnve kidney trouble\nupon the side at which the grazing an Vn'u i I to .1., is lo nsk others.\nwas In ii Im* grown enough to be They will tell vou that Dodd's Kidney\ncropped again. The humidity in the pj||g will euro you.\natmosphere 1 ps Danish pastures They will also* tell vou Hint Dodd'.s\ngreen when lln''-\" of many ( nlries Kidnev Tills cure rheumatism, dropsv,\nnre parched and ibe process of mnr* '-u,a,.| disease, diabetes \"ravel and!\nTwelve thousand lour hundred m in.\nhers of trado unions have lefl Canada,\nI ihe small observer, I for Iho fronl since lhe opening of 11 i\nwar. Of Ihosc, 450 were Hriiish i -\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nscrvists whn responded lo tho call\nlo join ih\" colors in I*nglai d\nketing grass a- hull\"! is not 'if' m in-\nti rfi red with by drought,\nAsk for Minard's and take no other.\nIlrighl's dis\ntin's,, diseai\nSi nlrv (aged nine'; - Halt' Who ;o '3\ntl i i \"\nThe Challenged (aged six) ', fri n I\nwit' doiighnul \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nS- nlrj Pass, friend- halt doughnuts I Judge.\n:. That Is because all\nnro either kidnev di-\nmsed by diseased\" kid*\nA\nans\nWorth\ndepends upon bis power to\nproduce what tho world\nrecognizes as of value.\nAnd when ymi skirmish nroun I\nyou'll find that this power \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nwhich is jusl power of mind\nnnd bod; depi ml i\" a remarkable degree on the food on i cats.\nI'ir highest accomplishment\none musl have the best values\nin food I I v Inch build. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD '..\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nfialaiic. mid brains\nFOOD\nbn lhal kind ol vnlue. It\nconl \r nil ii. nutriment if\nwhole wheal and barley, i.\"-\ncluding lh\" important mineral\nelements so often lacking in tho\nusual di tnry.\nGrape Nuts conn s ready to\nont - onsy lo digest. nourisbi\npeoiioni enl, '' ondpi-fully deli.\n. ions a hi'lp iii building m n of\nwoi th.\n\"There's a Reason\"\nCaiiiKlu.il I' istinii i\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,' ill ,. :, I\nv \"i ur, (Jul,\nThe Mesopolamian Expedition\nIt Is n complete misconception to\nregard the Mcsopofnrninn expedition |\nas an tint ossary side-issue. It was\nnecessary, ii was wise, and, in spite\nof the fall of Km it must bo pursued\nwitli all possible energy, and vigor.\n! It was necessary for the defence of\nour own interests in Persia and on the\nr_'ulf; it was wise as n means of relieving i'.ypt and nssisting tho Russians, ami it must now be pursued, in!\nco-opcrnlion with Russia, to the fill*\n: fillment of ihe original design. West*\n' minster Gazette.\nThe Pill That l^ads Them All.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\ni Pills are ih,. must portable and com* I\ni pacl of all in 'dicinos, and when easy'\nto take aro the most acceptablo oi\n| pr 'parations. But Ihey must altcsl\nllieir powi r In be popular. As Parle 'lee's Vogi Vli!\" I'ills are tho most I\n, popular of all pills ihey musl fully\n; meet nil ri quiromonts. Accurately\ncompounded and composed of in-\nr \"milts proven to bo effective in i\nregulating the digeslij-e organs, there\ni i no sun r mi dicine to be had any- j\nwhere, |\n\ oolleolor of siihscriplions fur the\nbrass hand fund unci' came across a\ntan icr v bo v as noted for bis moan*\nni ss, To his \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD urprise lln* farmer ot \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD!\nconsented to s ibscrlbo fully ns \\n.. '..-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD n .-mn a- any bo bad yet recoiv*\ned. \"Mr. Hnrdfist,\" be said, address-\niiq the farmer, \"yuu are surely very\nfond of music, lo givo so much?\n\"Oh, yes,\" .-aid lho farmer; \"they're\ngrand for soaring the crows frmn ma\nI 'laties when they're practicin', an'\n, 1 iu grateful.\"\nMinard's Liniment used by Physic-\n. ians.\nIjioulcnanl Navarre, a Freneh air-\nI lean, bagged 19 Hun planes. That is\ni what lho Germans call Hun-kind.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD|\n, Montreal Taller.\nThere may be other corn cures, hut\nHolloway's Corn Cur\" --lands at tho\nhead of lh\" list so far as results aro\ncone Tiled.\nW. N. U. IIII\n\"See. There's lho great catch of the\nseason.\"\n\"Imi' ed. \nd how many coupons\ndid you get with him?\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDJudga\nNerve Force is so much like Elec- the ears, are some of tlie symptoms\ntrieity, and the latter is so much bet- of a starved nervous system.\nter understood, that we have used Just as machinery lags when the\nthis vivid telephone picture to illus- current of electricity fails, so the\ntrate what takes place in the human bodi1.^ orSaus weaken wl,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD11 the SUP\"\nsystem when the connecting nerve\nply of nerve force runs low. Digestion is impaired and vou lose appe-\nlibrcs are deranged or something goes tite> m *iv(M.( kidupys ;uld bowel8 ara\nwrong at Central. s]ow -n performing their functions,'\nTn the nervous system the 'brain tlie heart's action weakens, circula-\nis the Central where the Nerve Force tion is slow, hands and feet are cold,\nis created, and whence are issued the you are easily tired, lose ambition and\norders which control the whole human grow downhearted and discouraged.\nbody. Here is consumed one-fifth of Thia describes the condition under\nthe blood in the human body, and which Dr. Chase's Nerve Food can. prove of\nwhen the blood supply is deficient in .rentest assistance to you. Forming new,\nquality or quantity, the brain and H\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDh Wood it feeds the starved, exhausted\nj.r ' i ,. , , ,. , nerve and brain cells baok to health and\nhe nervous system are first to feel vi,,01, Th(J \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDUal, n.,.ve ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,,,,. flo_.g ,mt\ntne enect'S. through the intricate system of nerve fibres\nNeuralgic pains and headaches', *\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ,every member \"lul \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDty or\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD!,u \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDr \"\";\ni-.i.iii'-. i.. i i body, eaiTymg new vigor, energy and\ninability to rest or sleep or COUCen- strength and driving out pain, woaknesa\ntrate the mmd, dizziness and noises m and disease.\nno ee.nl\", n bo_, tt for \"H\"..\"*!), all dealers, or Kdmnnson, Hales\n& Co., Limited, Toronto. Do not bo talked Into accepting \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nBiibsiitute. ImitaUoiis disappoint.\nth, UImum-'. lU-r-'liw Honk, 1,000 mImUU rociveu, wint tree it sou mil tlnn (_J\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD B'um. >o9\nTHE REVIEW, COURTNEY, B. C.\nWHAT THE ALLIANCE BETWEEN The Be|sian Rclief BACK TO THE LAND MOVEMENT\nGREAT BRITAIN AND RUSSIA MEANS\nPersistent Rumor That Fun,!\nSufferers are Diver-led\nis Denied\nFor\nSHOULD RECEIVE AN IMPETUS\nTEACHING THE ADVANTAGES OF RURAL I\n-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \" Reports still persist ihal the Ger\nABSOLUTE ACCORD BETWEEN GREAT NATIONS ma\" occupauls of Belgium are pro\n, limit: by lhe importation ol foodstuffs\nunder lho supervision of the Belgium\nSergius Sazanolf, lhe Russian Minister, Says That It Has Become lfrli,.[ Com mil tee, The latest report Should be the Duty <>( Canadians to go out and Possess the\nAn Alliance of the I [carts of the People, and Thai It NX ill - \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,\ frmn the Tivu.'h ni wspaper*\"!,. ^he Good, Green Earth, Which is the Foundation ol\nAssure the Peace of lhe World Temps,\" Paris,\n Mr. Herbert Hoover, the head of the\ni ' relief commission, firmly denies tho\n'\"lh. nbsuhib accord between Great \"I'ho reahxatlon of this solemn, Irulh truth of this, Me bus frequently mnde\nBritain nnd Russia means that lho musl demolish the fallacies nnd fie- such denials and be ngnin stales thai\nalliance formed iu tin [ war against lions herctoforo spread by enemies U|| fund and all supplies shipped\nregarding llio alleged Slav peril fo ij-rough the Belgian relief commission\nI'-uropo, nml musl bring eonv Ing Und Its branches is assured of safe\n,,iii\" an alli-\nWhatever Prosperity Our Country Enjoys\nWhy do the newspapers of the coiin- (oration will bo landli ss.\ntry devote su little attention i\" the Our country people should tnk-\nmovement known as \"Back to the heed, Their younger sue- id\nLand:'' A united press following out i daughters should go oul nud | -\nn concerted policy in this rngard could I llm land instead of drifting into the\nvidiiiee ihal iiie Hussian dues not I ddh'orS' io~\l% desihinUon ~l?arlv\"in I ncconipliah more in u single ynar than cities. What folly for tlie children\nland as a menace lo Norway, Sweden ||io work ol the commission small' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-\"\">' \",l\"'1' lil,\",'n,\" nse\",cy ,in '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD''\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\"l''-. \"' ,l\"\"w ,a*u*v. \"\"; -'\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \"\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'> ',\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\nview wiih The London Times Pol,,.- or other neigh s. I ie Ibe Swedes tlona of tho food were take,, fr. ..enl \)\" \"\"\". \"'ouIc lli,v\" tho \"\"'d'hood \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD=\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*on for hem by I he courage, endur-\n,'iHd enrns lent. wll w , i/.o lho fnlMiy of the depots by llio Hermans, bul in m rv ''''\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDv \"ll1 , \" al-1' gonn/al movement, an,\" and thrift ol their pioneering\nvicious idea that Russia has anv na- instance after affiiirs were straighten, ''educing 'he disproportion between Ihc fathers and mothers who nmdo tlm\nliuual aspiraliuns whalovoi lhal 111 ,.,| put, this fund was paid I'm and ll -I111'\"\"1 \"\"ll hll'llilM-' populations, WOlllc'i CO ry I\nii common enemy ha- In\nill.\" for all lime.\"\nThus spnlm Si rgius\nRussian Foreign Mlnisti\niiwonoff, th\nin an inter-\nI'll.il enrr. S|\nThe alliance mad\" by the Govern-\nim nls ha* now h. collie an allinnee of\nlh, hearts \"t ihe people,\" continued\nM. Snuonoff, \"In ibis frlondsblp 1\nl\" llm I'liliznl f Hi\" fullilesl\n.h, atu nf mi career, for in llm Inn'\nbii ndsbip nl I'nghuid amI Russi'n Ibe\npeaeo .f ihe world is assured toY ninny\nI', m n.i -. Wn have thus potential.\n[j wm, iim war, iillhough tlm strugglo\nitself mny continue fur years. Crystal*\nli/.ntion uf llm Idea that England,\nI'lauee iiii'l Russia,cunnol be alicnat.\n\"! establishes il crlaiiily Uml -he j polish \"'refugees' froi'n\"\"i'l'ie \"Teuton\n(..Mitral Powers have lost no matter \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ,.,,,,_ m8 m\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDj,,s,v n,,, |.*mporoi'\nnow Ihey may by fortitude and 111- '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, heen ^, moved at Iho distress . if\nleninl sacrifice post pone lhe inovit- \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD polish* subjects thnl lhe greater\nah Ie day \"f ih\" admission uf their |d |1Ml)s fll|. human Symp(1,|)y |,,IVI.\nI.iiluri\niijlitosl wav infringe on .Iheir I nioiiev nhicod lo Ihi credit of the automatically produce economic, so. These mueh-endurlng pioneers tl in.\nI ' { oin 1 and moral changes nf immense selves \"an, if they will, do much lu\nimportance ami value tu th\" entire .-.\"iii\" [or llieir children th\" heritage\nnow too lightly csteeinea, Let them\nWhat should be the ground nf -inli take a nul pride in their calling .imi\nan appeal? H should be the duty and their achievements, Let them pi icl\nprivilege uf Canadians tn go mil ami, iu season and out of season t! \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ad-\npossess the laud, (he good green earth, vantages uf rural lif\". 'I!, \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD;.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD have\nthe real foundation uf whatever pros- with good reason an abiding faith and\nperity our country enjoys. confide] in the goodness oi the Und\nThe war will be over some day. ami Ihey own and i:\\" nm (., t them \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-_-\n,,,,.,, 'In' hnmigranl will again in; knocking lend llieir patriotic faith a !i\".\ntheir daily fond, llio immense finaii- at our gates. Theso people are com- vond the boundaries of their own\n(\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDnil drain to meet, this demand can jngi ftml tney .vj|| COme, wilh a clear farms. Th. v should tuke a real pride\niiai'iiv i.\" um.\"iii\"i. understanding of the situation* a in their local district and say a\nclearer understanding than mi,- poo- word, not only fur farming :.s _ pro-\nple seem to have. Tiny know the Cession, hut also fur tlm district al I\nnational life, ami I hope ibe rooenl I Belgians\nmi 's regarding the Aland Inlands. i. .,,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD., ni \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*._,,. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, ... ,.,, ,\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD i i i'ii AH \" lllllll 1 DI 1M I, Illi ic S Ml OlN' I ' . >_ _ \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD 11 \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD * i *.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n* \", \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD '\"'!\"\" y nro dlsspdd, ; . h| \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD , , , t em..,,,\nwll prove he last error of sua ncion . |J(l| , \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD . , ., ,,,.,.\n111 \"\"' s\" s regard n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Russia. _,_\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD 1.ir)j\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDf ,,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDll\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDli'll\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,. This committee\nM, Sa/.miuif referring in lho prom- j\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDs|, noM |..l8 jis work ,.M( \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD| [,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. p.\nises ..I Polish aiiluimmy. said: The conditions in Belgium have rapid-\n\"Nu uim deplores moro Ihan the ly grown worse until now llu re are\nRussian Governnieni tb\" sufferings seven million people almost wholly\nwhich have come lu Poland nnd the dependent no this organization for\nswept, aside military aspects\nid In\n,...,,, ,, ,. ,. ,. ,, -i nvtt-jJfa il.-M'C' Minn,H\ III* U'l'IB, It I HI IH'\nV1 \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD1*G m\"'\"-\"'l f ' '\" '''\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDbas freely .hen permission for wide-\nlento s amity and unity musl come \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ,.,,,;\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,, _.,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.,. (fl |)(, -onihlelcd\nllm permanent dissipation of Uie ,, , . ,, |-.oekefo)]er (\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,,,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-\nI. ., . \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD... ... Mn. .nnu ' .n \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD .\nmischievous iden Hint tlie Russians\nme a people uf ambitions and aggros-\nin, design, planning In advance their\nuwn aims at the expense uf liurope.\nNothing is further from lhe Russian\n. burned r. With mir southern outlet\nmade irrevocably secure in perpetuity, with llm legitimate growth nf and\n.1, volnpin, nt uf our economic and industrial iife secured, with mir boiind-\niiries suitably adjusted nnd our follow-\nrTnV**- assured of their 'Iim. Ibe destinies and aims uf Russiu in tin1 west\nare fulfilled. We can Ihen turn to\nih\" Ini\" aspirations \"f Ibe Russian\nGovernment and people, namely, tho\ndevelopment uf our vast empire and\nthe fui-lli) ring uf the interests of the\nnation's peoples embraced within mir\nempire.\nSavings of People\nnf the American Society for Thrift, ii\nqonlr-ibuling n short nrliole uu \"The\nSpectre nf Pauperism\" lu tlm January\nnumber of Leslie's Weekly Illustrated,\n| mission fur il seemed heller in him\nthat there should occur a leakage in\nihe relief provisions than Ilml a single\nPolish subject should suffer unnecessarily.\n\"The Poles cannot oxpeel lhat in\nIbis life ami death struggle we will\nIn able to outline iu full mir program\nfur Poland's future, hut lhat Poland\nwill receive a jusl nud equitable nu-\ntiiuoiny in the greatest degree, adjusted lo its future life and its economic\nand industrial developnieni is certain.\nThe Poles and the friends nf tlm Pules\nmay, therefore, look forward in lhe I than $1,300 for the bah e of _0.\nRussians for \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD dawn of a new era and' Me further pointed oul flint al ag.\nn period of unexampled development sixty-five, 07 oul of every I fid poop],\nwhich will follow the inevitable buc-I*\"\"? partly or wholly dependent upon\neessfiil conclusion of the wnr\nTo meet this the committee is sending out new appeals and directing\nIhem particularly to prosperous Can-1 Jnennhig'nnd value nf'a7ife\"eioso\"lo j pVovuicc\"iii wh7ch\"\"they Tiv.\"\nula, I he Belgian relief committee,'\noO St. Peter Street, Montreal, is re- roi.t ft h0IllCi | of pessimism, is\neei viiii; I he donations for Lunuda.\nlias vuiii.s gone forward yet?\n1 . . . .\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ' .. .' . I uu. i i.i.i_ .1 uu \ .uu\" ui 11 nu' i lu.-e 11, | ii u, ii,\",-\na.la I he Belgian rjhef committee, tho soil. It means independence, com- liabit of\nHug, of '\",.-. oeki ..\nOur city men should take heed. The destructive force operative . tl\npioneering era. with easy o|iporttini-.[social and economic Iii\" of rura\nlies, free l.'ind, wide s|ia.'.'S, ea,i,n.f ' iiiunilms tuday. If this 3tU|\nlast much longer. II our cily dwellers.! ii ould bo replaced o mighi - a\nS. W. Strauss, uf Chicago, president struggling in lhe crowded occupation*\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDf modern life, do mil seize lb\" i\niimiil ami act, there are hosts nf people ready lu grasp tlm prize which lies\nbefore them, nnd lhe sons and dim eh.\ngives some startling figures nnd facts tors uf Canadians uf the presenl gen-\nHe pointed nut Hint in the United\nStales til. oul of every 100 people thai\n.lie leave uu estate whatever, uf the\nremaining .'1*1 only 0 leave more than\n$5,000, and Ibe average is a little less\npermanent habil of s|\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD:d;im.-\noptimism uragc ami -\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD If.r\nwould dn inure I., leiliii\" ih\" d \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nllm agrieullurist than much let\nand ma,iv pray, i s. \\ fnnipi - !\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD> \"\nI'c -s.\n:;d\"F;::;L\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD:'',nan,,: An Impression\nOf Kitchener\nWhen Germ\nTlm German pcO|\nin know,, sooner or later, whether\ntheir armies are iu sooth winning this\nwar. II limy ar\" w inning il they musl\ndemand thai as their .-mall.'.-I reward\nrelatives, friends ur the public fur Ihere shall be given lo them bread\nI I. clothing, \"te.. nud that iu iim and meal lu sustain them iu tin\nNot Always Popular. But A i.i\nAdored by the British ScIdI\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,-_\nIn Hi\" I k 'Wiil! Kit henec I\n*=\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ~ I ' - = United States 08 per cent, of the neo- labors lu keep nu invincible army Khartum,\" G. \V. _te\\nTr?licr>ei\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD- .| Cii\",'\". l-'ve iv intimately mir\ninle will he decided by the character\n, 1 the peace made iu Rui-ope. They\nare dreamers taking no uole nf fuels.\nthai do imi realize thnl this country\n\"It was slill enough, down there, nf\nIn a certain dockyard in England obtain. And added to ihis was the tor all the noise nl tl xplosion and\nthere is to be found a splendid tribute fact that she had made the voyage the smashing of tbe glass. You could\nto iim prowess of llritish submarines '.\"\" I,i?'1 sea; thai fur twenty hours, hear tho motors turning it's not much\n, ,, , ... ,. ,, ,, defenceless, sim evaded the enemy I of a sound thev make and tin' tesl-\naud lhe skill of ihosc who man th,,,,. ,,.,,,'uls. I fog ,,{ tbe wireless We were glad\nIt is ouo nf Hm lines! of llm British 1 had hearl stoles \"f German sub- enough to hear Hint. And when we\nunder-sea boats, which, with her bow marines sunk by a single shot, so [ saw the bubble in the clinometer wns\ntwisted and bent as the resull of al'ir,l'ed \"\".\" oi 'he officcis how this still registering Inclination we knew\n,, , . b'lii inn survived tbe tremendous 'Uml matters were nut ns had as Hi. v\ni, with an enemy mine in en- sWk 0, .,,. mi\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDe explosion'. mighi have been.\n\"Then they throw iu lhe levers. We\nwailed. That was a bad minute. Tlnn\nth\" luni.\"ii glass began to rattle around\nunder foot again. We were moving.\nWe weren't long In getting up. Al\nany lime there's nothing like en,nine\nup inlo tb\" air and sunlight after\nyou've In1' ii ninii r for a hit, Hui this\nwas different. Yes, this was a bit\ndiffer, nl.\"\nThis was bow b\" tnld nu* ill\" slory\nuf iim black interval when theso \"f-\nfieeis nud Hie men nf th\" crew waited,\nsubmerged, ai some 'Jan feel below\nwater level, not knowing whether or\nnot ilmir bulkheads were destroyed\ncollisi\neuiy waters, covered a distnnco of j \"She held 1 auso of her strength,\"\nalmost three hundred miles under her he -aid. \"It broke Inr nose and il\nown power and arrived snfoly in a!1',\"'\",\"!'1, lw\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \"''\"''' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDl'V'p,\"lls- l:,li\n. , .... , .. f -dm In Id. Ibe efllelelley ul Hie pllmiiS\nhomo port. Iluough lhe courtesy of \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD._, ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,, imimil,,,| witliin two .ninth,: British Admiralty the correspond-1 _(ps w bad Ihen, working.\"\ncut wns permitted to see this submnr- II\" asked me if I would not go be-\niho and talk- with Inr officers and low and see llio marks of llu dlsns*\ncrew. , ter. So I followed bin, across a gang-\nShe is in harbor with her bow facing way and upon Ihe narrow iron dpck\nturn ink, strips ninl two of her lur- which already was beginning in show\n|,\"du tubes crushed. Her plates aro red patches of rust, The hatch was\ncrumpled, two of her hulklieatls are open. Below I could sen a while\n..pineiit ol ii deinoeralic nationalism\nHint would prepnie the wav for some\nj , ,,f mmifie Internationalism, or broken away from tho bow; but in her c.iuparlmenl wiih brass fitting..\nwhether ii w.-.s I,, become militarily tubes are two unexploded torpedoes. I do nul know whai I expected In\nJuinerh'listic When Carthage fell be- Their easing is twisted and caved in find, bu' win,, I stood in this com*\nand th\" mouth nl llm all lube is jammed. But'lho qualify \"f ihe big ,-x-\nidosive iii ber torpedoes and llm\nmechanism controlling ii prcv, nted nu\nexplosion, thus saving ler from total\ndestruction\niu know what -me.'.!\" is. You cannot\nimagine tlm sirdar otherwise than as\nseeing the right ii,!:._ r,, do and d \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nim.' it. Hi* im .\"-mil ,s so inhuo ,r.\nunerring, In- is more like a mn :hin \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nIhnn a mnn\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDother gem rnls ha1 \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD bei ..\nloved; none was ever l\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Iter ;i -\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD '\nfur Anglo-Kgypl he is the mah li, t:\nexpected; th\" man who has -;;'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD d \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD X*\nin rience and corrected error, wi. . h , -\nworked at small things and wait, i for\ngr, al ; marl.I ' to -it -till and fir\" I \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nsmite; steadfast, cold, and inflexible;\nthe ninii who Im- ci ' \"ur !.:- hun ...\nlu'.-irt nml mad\" himsi If a machine I \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nretake Khartoum.\"\nThis wns just ...u twi nty-l '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD v \"'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD s\nago. i\" orgo Ptev, ns died in I..\nsmith, ami the In illiui I ; nd \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD is nol\na\nilable ,\" chronicle the sanii rele '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nless nn thods by which Kite!.- . r\nbrought tu an mii He* Boi r war.\nIn all tin '- II - a q aign levril. 1\nnizninst him in recent months l.o: i\nKitchener bad nevi r found f\".- a moment nny fnilh ami the ungrudging\nsupport uf ih\" common peopl, ha*\nfail. 'I him, lb , ioI i \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD 1; popularity- rail,\",' be spurned it\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDbul tli' re\nwas something in his stem pati, nc, .\nparliiieni I could see no traces whnl- whether their Instruments were irre*\nsinver rn Hie e.itesirnphe. Directly panibly damaged, whelher or not they\nin front ul n,\" Hm four real doors would ever come un again into Ihc\nuf Hm torpedo lubes, painted a brii- sunlight. It was his ship that he h|s hard rectitude, his whole- ,ul, I\nlimit while, ami m mv right nnd leftlseei I to think of above nil other devotion, thai appealed unci in l>\nthe great shining torpedoes were things. I'\" tl!'' unnginajion of Hm multitude.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD reared llimi.h Im vas, he was ndorcd\n.' ',,,.,art of lie world and1 She struck the mine head on. Tim clamped in their ranks. Only the \"We found -Sul what we'd come in-1 .-'eared though he was, he was adored\ndiiisI nnrlieinit \"in its mnior affairs. eolUsion smashed two of her bulk- wheel controlling Hm how rudder! to,\" he said. \"Then it was whether we hy the private soldier, nnd sorrow and\n\',V V I (' luh heads, broke all glass aboard her and was not true. The slender brass rod!could mak\" a porl alone, Tlm wire \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD persona sense nf loss enters today\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ' sent the crew sprawling in lhe floor supporting it had suffered from the less was working-thai is, we could \"\"' humblest home in Britain.\nAll the Men Off\nSeven brothers, Hie total adult male\npopulation nf Campbell Island, have\nenlisted in the 17th reinforcements.\nCampbell Island is situated some\n1.M1 miles south uf New Zealand, in\nthe Pacific Ocean, ami is a dependency \"f Hm Dominion. It wns dis*\ncovered in 1810 by the brig Perserver-\nI',..'.' owned hy \"dr. Robert Campbell,\nof Sydney. It is mountainous, nboul\nM) miles in circumference, and has\nii.v.ral good harbors,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDNew Zealand\nDispatch.\n'-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD* \" -\n>\ new fi.unn miles coal basin is be-\nfjij- opened up by a Mm mil\" extension\ntt, i; e Siberian Railway,\nif the compartments, \"in Inr tor-1 vibration. I send; wc couldn't receive. We took\npedoes did nut explode, Inr engines This was lhe only mark made by In look at Hie bow facing at the bulk-\ndid not fail lu register; she dropped lln- mine nf Hm enemy. Nol Hint ii beads. They looked pretty bad hiui\"r-\nto the bottom of the sea and the water\nflooded in under Hie doors uf the torpedo lubes aft. Hut within ten niin-\nules nfler the collision she bad been\nrighted, come lo the .urface nml\nturned her nose towards home.\nWhen I looked nt Inr lying there\nwilh her exposed tubes shilling in llm\nsunlight and Imr bulkheads in .-trips\nof rusty iron it seemed Incredible thut\nshe bad been under the const guns\nuf Hie enemy, Hint .-Im could have\nmade in Imr damaged 101111111011 a\njourney of three hundred miles, reluming tn a safe harbor with llm information Unit she bud bei 11 sent tn\nMovie Attendance is Astonishin.z\n\"The greatest inspirations which\ncomes lo writers for motion pictures\nwas to h\" estimated as minor dam- inr. loose in .'trips. Bill we decided wo\nn.L'e, for ill\" rudders have Heir part could make it. The engines were right. I is in the knowledge of the size of their\nlo play in the rise nnd dive nnd it nnd there wasn't a broken dial aboard great audience. In the year 1915\nwns necessary to come uji fr the lier. The periscope wns true. If was there were roughly 2,900.000,000 paid\nbottom of tho sea. N'ol a simple mat-1 only her nose and her rudder that admissions to the moving picture\nter with the rudders not uuder con-lwer'e g( theatres of tlm United States. This\ntn,I. I \"So we started back, If wc picked means an average attenda )f '.\"i\n\"You see,\" one of tl fficers ex- up anybody on the wirloss we knew times per year for every man, woman\nplained mine, \"we didn't know what I thai limy bad work ol Iheir own to and child in lhe country\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDor onco\nbad happened\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDthe water was pouring do, So we drove along under our a week for half the population of the\nin afl and broken glass was every- power. II was a bit of had Sea, bul country. Figures like those imply ,\nwhere, We didn't know niueli of her I we mad\" it. Tl.e waves broke over the\nwas guii\". We knew that ev, ry mnn j bridge nml pounded Ui\" one bulkhead\nnboard bad been knocked flat on his wo had lefl forward.\nface, that the glass off tlm dials was \"And fo,\" Im said, and smiled, \"we field wl,\" are by training and artistrv\nrattling nboul under luni. put ,re I came home.\" qunlifled to accept the reaponiibUHf.\ngrcnl responsibility cu the part of\nthose who supply this tremendous\nih m.ii.il, nud in, n are now entering tlm W1T.1M \"*I\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDTTT.H1TIW \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD TT \"B-lirT-M-F\nTHE COURTENAY REVIEW\nTHERE'S NOTHING LIKE\nLEATHER\nJAMES E. ASTON\nPractical Shoemaker and Repair\nNexl to Hardy & lliscoc\nELK HOTEL\nComox, B, C,\nBesl Meals North of Naniaino\nChoic.itt l,i(|iior.s and Cigars\nC. A. Martin, Prop.\nGRAND DISPLAY\nat\nWillard's Harness Emporium\nPine Showing ol Horse Blankets, I,np\n1'ugs, Clnves, Trunks, Suit Cases, Ktc.\nHarness Repaired Neatly\nW. W. WILLARD\nCumberland and Courtenay\nPalaee Livery\n&PeedStabl(\nHorses and Bu^Kies f\"r Hire a.\nTerms cash.\nWe also attend to wood hauling\nJAS. CAIRNS & SON\nProprietors\nCourtenay Phone 25\nWhen In Doubt\nPlay Trumps\nHave Goard Tune Your Piano\nFactory Experience\nRecommends from bending Musicians\nfrom the Atlantic to tlie Pacific. Copies\nof same furnished \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDn request\nW. J. Goard will oe hi this city about\nApril 1, Leave orders at tllis Office,\nor write direct to\n845, 8th Ave., W. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Vancouver\nICE CREAM\nParlours\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDAl.l, KINDS OK\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nSoft Drinks,\nIce Cream, Lunches,\nTobaccos and Candies\nCold Lunches, Salads and Sandwiches\nOU sale at\nJ. R. Johnston's\nMarocchi Bldg. Courtenay\nYob cannoi eat yoar\neake and have it\nBut you have the satisfaction\nof knowing that the ingredients are of the highest\ngrade when purchasing at the\nCourtenay. Customers swear\nby, not at, \"Purity\" Bread for\nquality\nCakes of all descriptions made\nto order\nCourtenay Bakery\nWM, AITKEN\nSutton & Kirkwood\nUndertakers and\nEmbalmers\nNight or Day Calls |I*rotnptly\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\ ttended\nPhone\nCourtenay\nB.C. Prohibition\nAct Does Not\nProhibit\nMeasure Provides for Free\nand Unrestricted Importation of Liquor from\nthe Outside\nWorld\nThe Ii. C, Prohibition Act, on\nwhich th\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Electors of British Co*\nlliinlii.'i will be asked lo rec-idcr\ntheir opinions at the poll, is nut a\nprohibition act iu auv sense ol the\nterm. So contrary is it to the\nprinciples of prohibition Hint prohibitionists '.heinselvi's are freely\ncriticizing the measure aud the man\nwlio is neither \"wet\" or \"dry\" is\nasking ihe pointed question as to\nwhat will he secured bv the bill\nsave the building up of industry\nand trade at points outside the province.\nAll of which goes to show that it\nis advisable that the elector who\ndesires to vote intelligently on the\nsubject .should carefully examine\nth_ Act before election day,\nThe \"Wide Open\" clause of the\nAct, Clause 57, reads in part a.s\nfollows:\n\"Nothing in this Act shall\nbe construed to interfere\n\" (a) With the right of any\nperson to import from without the Province liquor for\nbona fide use in his private\ndwelling house.\"\nThis clause means that any resident of the province is allowed to\npurchase all the liquor he desires\njust as often as he wishes, without\nany control or regulation by the\ngovernment, so long; a.s he sends\nhis money outside the province for\nhis supply.\nTins clause would, for instance,\nallow any person to place a standing order witli any liquor dealer\noutside the province for a weekly\nor monthly shipment of whiskey to\nb. delivered to his dwelling. Ou\nsuch an order the supply of liquor\nwould reach him constantly a.s long\nas he met the bills. In the lace of\nsuch conditions lhe question may\nwell be asked \"Is this Prohibition?\"\nIn the pre.imitiary campaign in\nconnection with the bill and at the\npiesent time prohibitionists have\nmade a grand stand play, both on\nthe platform and through their\npiopaganda literature of the drunkard and the Hghtful evils which\naccompany drinking. Yet, in the\nbill for which thev are admittedly\nentirely responsible they have done\nabsolutely nothing to lessen the\nconsumption of liquor in Hriiish\nColumbia, the sole effect of thc\nlegislation being to send money\nspent for liquor outside the province. Incidentally it may be\nmentioned that the drunkard who\nalready has the taste and the habit\nis the man most likely to be lhe\nfirst lo take advantage of the privilege to buy outside and. should the\nAct pass, would thereafter have liquor iu quantity iu his home\nwhereas he now takes his liquor by\nthe glass. As the small boy would\nsay \"What's the use?\"\nThe great question lying\nbehind the referendum vote\non the Prohibition Question\nis whether the regulated sale\nof liquor under Government\nlicense and control is not bet-\nI ter than the unregulated and\nunrestricted importation of\nliquor from outside points-\nReaders dewing literature or information concerning the Prohibition Act may secure same by writing to Merchant's Protective Association, Room .4, Canada Life\nBuilding, Vancouver, B. C.\nTenders Wanted\nTKNDKRS are wanted lor the trimming and erection of the City\nFlag and Staff. For particulars apply\nat City Hall.\nW. A. W. HAMKS,\nCity .'.erk.\nDated 11th July 1916.\nMortgagee's Sale\nof Valuab'e Property\nUNDBR and by virtue of the Power\nol Sale contained iii a certain\nMortgage, which will he produced at ihe\ntime ul sale, there will he offered lur\nsale by Public Auction on\nThursday the 20th day of July,\nA, 1). 1916, ai ibe hour \"l .* o'clock hi\nthe afternoon, by Mr. George John\nHardy, un the premises which are situate near the Junction nl Union Street\nold Warren Avenue, Courtenay, the\nfollowing property:\nbut One ill llluck One and huts Seven\nand L'lght iu block Four of\nl'art nf Section sixiv-Une, Comox District, and Registered May No, '17.11.\nTerms: IS per cent, of the purchase\nmoney to be paid down at the time of\nsale and lhe balance lo he paid by 111-]\nst,,hue,,ts at 3, ti and 9 iiiniitlis.\nFor further particulars ol sale apply:\nTHl'IJn I'RARSK,\nSolicitor, Mil' Street, Courtenav\nDated at Courtenav, II. C. tllis 6th dav\nof July 1916.\nApplications Wanted\nAPPLICATIONS :lrt' wanted for the\nposition nf Poundkeeper lur the!\nCitv of Courtenav. Said Poundkeeper\ni to provide a proper Pound. For further\nparticulars apply at tlie City Hall. Ap-,\nplications to be lu by .Monday the 17th\ninstant.\nW. A. W. HAMKS,\nCity Clerk. '\nDated 11th July 1916.\nMcBryde's Bakery &\nTea Rooms\nCalhoun Block Courtenay\nFii-slclass certificate Technics of Dreadiiiakhig and firslelass certificate\nUnklllg Conlectloiiery Technical College\nMcBRYDE'S BREAD\nSweet and Moist\nMalt Brown Bread a Specialty\nGuaranteed Pure\nRemember the address - Next the Royal Bank oi Canada\nNotice\nThis is to certify that my wife, Emily\nIsabella McMillan having left my bed\nand board, I therefore will not be responsible for any debts she may contract,\nF. C. MCMILLAN.\nGRIEVE and DARGIE\nIce Cream |\nCandies, i\nCigars,\nPipes,\nTobac cos\nSwan's Old Stand, Courtenay\nMoney To Loan\nWe are open to receive applications\nfor Loans on Improved Farm\nProperty in the Comox\nDistrict\nH. D. FORDE & CO.\nReal Estate, Insurance, Etc.\nUNION ST. COURTENAY\nCANADA from her abundance can help supply thc Empire's needs,\nand this must be a comforting thought for those upon whom the\nheavy burden of directing thc Empire's (-.fifth, has been laid. Gain or\nno gain thc course before tbe farmers of Canada in .'.s clear as it was\nlast year\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDthey must produce abundantly in orr'.cr :o meet thc demands\nthat may be made and I believe this to be especially true in regard to\nlive stock, the world's suyip'.y of which must be partirmlarly affected in\nthis vast struggle. Stress and strain may yet be in store for us all\nbefore this tragic conflict is over, but not one of us doubts the issue,\nand Canadians will do their duty in the highest s?-ise of that great\nword.\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDHON. MARTIN BURRELL, Minister of Agriculture.\nMODERN war is made by resources, by money, by foodstuffs, as\nwell as by men and by munitions. While war is our first business, it is the imperative duty of every man in Canada to produce all\nthat he can, to work doubly hard while our soldiers ere in the trenches,\nin order that the resources of thc country may not only be conserved, but\nincreased, for the great struggle that lies before us. ' Work and Save'\nis a good motto for War-time,\" -SIR THOMAS WHITE, Minister\nnf Finance,\nTHE CALL OF EMPIRE COMES AGAIN IN 1916\nTO CANADIAN FARMERS, DAIRYMEN, FRUIT GROWERS, GARDENERS\nWHAT IS NEEDED? these in particular\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nWHEAT, OATS, HAY,\nBEEF, PORK, BACON,\nCHEESE, EGGS, BUTTER, POULTRY,\nCANNED FRUITS, FRUIT JAMS,\nSUGAR, HONEY, WOOL, FLAX FIBRE,\nBEANS, PEAS, DRIED VEGETABLES\nWe must feed ourselves, feed our soldiers, and help feed the Allies. The need is greater in\n1916 than it was in 1915. The difficulties are greater, the task is heavier, the\nneed is more urgent, the call to patriotism is louder\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDtherefore be\nthrifty and produce to the limit.\n\"THE AGRICULTURAL WAR BOOK FOR 1916\" ia now in the preen. To be had from\nThe Publications Branch, Depurtment of Agriculture, Ottawa.\nTHE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA 2\nTHE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE\nTHE DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Courtenay (B.C.)"@en . "Courtenay"@en . "Courtenay_Review_1916-07-20"@en . "10.14288/1.0070198"@en . "English"@en . "49.6894444"@en . "-124.995833"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Courtenay, B.C. : N.H. Boden"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http://digitize.library.ubc.ca/"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "The Review"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .