@prefix ns0: . @prefix edm: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dc: . @prefix skos: . @prefix geo: . ns0:identifierAIP "ba990d2a-c330-440b-8961-dd92349e2bd7"@en ; edm:dataProvider "CONTENTdm"@en ; dcterms:alternative "The Courtenay Review and Comox Valley Advocate"@en ; dcterms:isPartOf "BC Historical Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:issued "2015-11-27"@en, "1916-11-16"@en ; edm:aggregatedCHO "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/courtenayrev/items/1.0068031/source.json"@en ; dc:format "application/pdf"@en ; skos:note """ lit YOUR PRINT!NO Can not bo dmiu uny letter, not oiiitii so wull miywlii io i liuroaliiiutn, Our tynu.nn I m n 1 ory iH i iploto mill 'I'i ,- Iti. prions u<��rl||li EV1EW Classified Ads. Mulie ynir little: Wants known /"\\t"it*'i���li a l'lw-��ili>.'l A'K.rii "i.'i' Sjl Tho Rovlow * - ��� l'lidi.6 51 MWwllP��'��. ���.��,....... VOL. 4 COURTENAY, B. .C, THURSDAY NOV. 16 1916 J }. -52 Ui Cliu.��i __����� Ies ;r i I- Nov. 18, at Courtenay, Men's Furnishings, Boots & Shoes, etc., for Loggie Bros. Sales at 1.30 in afternoon and 7.30 in thc evening Nov. 20, at Union Bay, Household Furniture for Mr. E, Lindon. Sale at 1.30. Nov. 22, at 12.30 o'clock, prompt. For H. W. Hebe-den, Esq., on his premises Little River Rond, one half mile from Comox, the whole of his Household Furniture and Outdoor Effects, including Ford Touring Car, Dairy Cow, Chickens, etc. Pni'ticuln's in posters. No reserve. Terms cash. GEO. J. HARDY Telephone 10 COURTENAY COMGX LUMP OAL $6.00 Per Ton Delivered in Courtenay All Orders Will Receive Prompt Attention D. KILPATRICK Phone 43 Courtenay Last year about this time we offered to rent a Sew E Z Sewing machine motor to anyone for a very small sum per day. To every dollar paid iu rent for the motor we gave one chance'in a drawing which was to be held as soon as we had received ;,the price of the motor iu rents. There are still a few chances left, and we would strongly advise anyone who has any sewing to do to give this proposal a thought. The motor does all the labor of sewing, leaving nothing for you to do but guide the material, and does all this at a cost of about half a cent an hour for current. Courteuay Electric Light Co, Local Lines ~*"������ For Silk-���io young pigs, 7 weeks oltl, $5 each. Apply \\V. Fletcher. Courtenay, B, 0,, or enquire at Shepherd & Co, Auctioneer Hardy will conduct an Auction Side for Mr. Heberdeu nt C'Miiox, on Wednesday afternoon next. And at Union liny on Monday he will sell for lv Lindon, all his household effects, etc, The Misses Milligiiu and Gibson arc desirous of thanking the parents of the children and o hers who _o generously contributed toward the relief of Belgian children. The stun of forty-three dollars has been received, I.oggi. Bros, have decided to quit, and have instructed George Hardy to sell by public auction, on Saturday, Nov, 18, the whole of their stock of boots and slioes. gents furnishings, etc. Sale starts at I.30 p. 111, sharp, and again at 7.30 in the evening. Mr, Ernest Lindon, formerly of this place, now of Union ��Bay, has joined the 230th Forestry Battalion and has been made'a Sergeant. Hc will be glad to have any of the boys from this district who with "to go overseas, join up with his company About fifty left with Sergt. Bates, of the 238th, when they left,here in August last, and Sergt. Lindon would like to have as many join up with him, He will give full particulars ou request. Wood burn Fitzgerald. rof Courteuay, who enlisted with the 102nd Batt, was killed iii Action ou Oct. 21. The word reached his mother here last week, On Sunday evening Rev. T. Menzies conducted a memorial service for hiin. "Woody" was one of Courteiiay's steadiest young men, He followed the occupation of surveyors' assistant, Soldiers, Relatives, and Friends, Kindly send without delay to the undersigned, the number, rank, name, company, and battalion of any you know who have enlisted from this district. Aii entertainment aud dance will be given in the Agricultural hall Courtenay, on Thursday, Dec. 14, to raise funds to provide each soldier with a gift from the Over Seas Club hamper fund. No expense will be deducted from the proceeds of this entertainment. !H. Scott Porteous Hon. Corresponding Sec. Over-Seas Club P. O, Box 245, Courteuay, B, C. Welding���cast iron, aluminum, brass, steel, etc, Ford Garage. Fi rd Garage for Nobby, Goodyear and Dunlop auto and bicycle tires and accessories. Bicycles for sale. Mr. Siuiins new jewelry store will be ready for occupation in a week or two. B.rn -At St, Joseph's Hospital, on November 6, to Mr. and Mrs. j R. McCourt. a son. A train load of Victoria business 1 men numbering 65 visited Cor.r- 1 teuay yesterday. They arrived at I 11 ..clock, had luncheon at the ho- j te's. and after being taken up Ihe valley by autos, left at io minutes to 2 for Cumberland. Owing to a slight Ullsuudei standing about the hall, the entertainment announced to take place about the 25th inst, has been postponed until some time in January, and will take place on the occasion of the opening of Fechuer's new hall. Keep your mouev for the boys who have gone overseas from here by helping along the Patriotic concert and dance as previously announced, to be held on Dec. 14. An entnusiastic meeting was held in the Agricultural Hall last Wednesday afternoon by those interest-* ed in its promotion, One of tbe features will be "The Fairies" presented by Mrs, Beasley and Miss Mildred Smith. A splendid concert program is being arranged by Mrs Porteous The (Refreshment Committee is composed of Mesdames Bubar, Callin, aud McNeil. Dance Committee, Mrs. Parkin and Alex. McNeil, A sale of work mil be "given by the womens Guild [of St, Peter's church, Comox, in aid of the local debts 011 the vicarage, in Martin's hall, Comox. on the 24th of November, 1916. at 3 p. lh, The guild have been working for some months past, and have a good assortment of useful, fancy, and ornamental articles for sale. An excellent opportunity will be afforded of purchasing Xmas presents both for old and young. Various side shows nre 'v fig arranged. A dauce will be'giveu by the ladies of Comox cn Friday. Nov. '.24, at 8 o'clock in the evening, iu Martin's hall, to help St, Peters |church in their efforts to reduce the local debts or. the vicarage. The Corporation of the City of Courtenay MUNICll'Al, I'I,EC.10NS The Volcr's List for ll i Mnuklpal Elections is u_\\. being , ������ pared. Those whose names ai�� ti.tr- I fed to he pieced on this 1 ���'���"'" personal declaration arc all aia owners who rue also registered ueeu 1 holders. A.11 other persons desiring to 1 have their names placed on tb*' Voters' List must file with the Cltv Clerk, declarations iis below aientiniii il A of those whose names are entitled to I <��� I placed on the Voters'List without the declaration may be seen at the City Hall, PROPERTY OWNERS. When the assessed owner ol real property is the holder ot the lost agreement to purch - or the Inst osslgnee ol sncli agr ement, or the hoi ler ol an unn . such owner, before having llis 11 placed on the Voters' I.i t must with tlie City Clerk before .i o'clock in the afternoon of tlie 3oih day of N'oveui- ber next, a declaration proving that be or she is the bolder of tin- last i ment to purchase, or tbe last sssig . thereof, or the holder of nn unregistered deed, anil that such holder or .i*-u is liable to pay and has paid tlie current year's taxes. CORPORATIONS. Corporati' * whose names are on the Voters' List can only vote by a duly authorized agent whose authority must be tiled with tlif City Clerk before the 3otli .;f N'i " ' such agent shall be a residi nl province nud a British subjeetol tl age ol 21 years. HOUSEHOLDERS AND I.ICI-N.E- HOI/DERS. Persons of this class who are desirous of having their nami s place ed on the Voters' I.ist must, duriti month of October, file with the Cut; Clerk a Statutory Declaration scribed by Ibe Act and mint also have paid t'.ieir Road Tn\\ or Ll 11 Declaration forms -1:. ��� the Cily Hall. W. A VV. Ham Anglican Church Notes 22nl Sunaay after Trinity, 8.30 a. in. Holy Communion, St. John's. Courtenay. 11 a. ui. Mattins aud Holy Couiuuin* ' ion, St. Andrew's. Sandwick. 2 p, tn,. Sunday School, St. John's. I 7,31) p. m., Evensong and Sermon, St. I John's, Courtenay. 7.00 p.m., Evensong and Sermon" : Holy Trinity, Cumberland. A Thing oi BcaUv; is a Joy Forever GET BUSY NyaJPs Face r;: 25 and 50c Nyal's Beef & Iron Wine $1 per Bottle If you feel good, All is Good Braces you up ROBERTSON'S DRUG STORE Tenders Wanted Tenders are asked lor purchase of pro. perty situate on the Little (River Road, belonging to G. H. Knight. Property j consists of half an acre, being Section No. 70, Comox, B. C, used formerly as I a school house. Tenders to be'forward- jed to A. B. Ball, merchant, Comox, by November 30, 1916. Safety First Go to FRASER'S For Fresh Tobacco, Cigars Confectionery and Soft Drinks. Isabel St. Next Royal Bank A Word to The Wise Buy Your Christmas Presents Early This Year Ph47 SHEPHERD & CO. B2?6 Family Butchers, Grocers and Provision Merchants Comox Creamery Butter 55c per lh. this week McPHEE & MORRISON DEPARTMENT STORE j ltii-i. i i_r j 1 - - ��� ��� --�����������������'���' Groceries, Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes Paints, Oils, Etc. We carry in stock Bricks, Lime, Cement, Doors and Windows Get our prices'for goods iu large'quantltles Telephone 1 Courtenay ti iTHF. REVIEW. COUBXNESk ���. IL THE CONGESTION FROM A BAD COLD LOOSENED UP IN ONE HOUR If Rubbed on at Night Youre Weil Next Morning Nerviiine Never Fails When thiil cold conies, how i.i it to be cured? This method is simplicity itself. Hull the chest nud throat vis-1 orously with "Nerviiine." Rub it in good and deep. Lots of rubbing can't do any harm. Then put sonic Nerviiine in the water and use it as, a gargle; this will case the cough, cut out the phlegm, assist iu breaking Up j the cold quickly, There is no telling how quickly Nerviiine breaks up a hard racking cough, cases a light chest, relieves a pleuritic pain. Why, there isn't another liniment with half the power, the penetrative qualities, the. honest merit that has iiiiulir Nerviiine lhe most popular American household liniment, A large 50c bottle of Nerviiine cures ills of the whole family, and makes doctor's bill small. Gel it today. The large si/e is more economical than lhc -5c trial size. Sold by dealers everywhere, or direct from the Catarrhozone Co., Kingston, Canada, The Study of Russian German as a language will not be popular iu Canada after the war. Neither for the matter of thai will it be popular anywhere else in lhc llritish Empire, wliicli is not to be. wondered at. No doubt a certain number of people, attracted by German literature and anxious to study_ at first hand the amazing phenomena of the Hun mind as disclosed during the lust two years, will learn German in future. Liul most people will leave it severely alone. What will take ils place? Unquestionably French will bc studied more llian ever, liul there is onc language besides French which Canadian students would do well to acquire. That is Russian. Afler the war Canada's trade with Kussia should grow rapidly. The channels through which it will flow arc now being made by the shipment of war supplies, in "the future these channels will bc deepened. And the need for a closer understanding between Canada and Russia will then be imperative.���Vancouver World. More War Economy Customer: lint these cigar.* shorter than the others I had j same price? Plausible .Salesman: Vessir; see the makers of that special brand found that gentlemen threw away aboul an inch of each cigar, so they [decided lo save ou that by making 'them a trifle shorter,���Passing Show, seem i the you "There will bc ladies coming as well, sergeant; how many do you think you can seal?" "Four hundred, sir, easy ��� sitting (amiliar!"���London Opinion. STARTED WORK AGAIN AFTER 60 St. Raphael, Ont. ' 'Pour years ;tgo I had such palnl In my back that 1 could not work, I read about Gin Fills and flout for a jmniplo and used Ihem, and found tho pains wero leaving mi and that I was feeling botter. After I had taken nix otuei boxes of FORTHE-B. KIDNEY* I fslt as wsll and Btrone; as I did at tin a.s ol ::o I am > farmer, now .1 years old. Frruik Lcabnd." All druggists sell Gin Pills at GOc. a box, or 6 boxes for S'...fiiJ. Sample free if you write to NATIONAL nBtlO & Clll'MICAIi CO. Or CANADA. LIMITED -;>*;k-.,��? completely cured of W%&rt>'^" '*'��� my ailment and ��rrrr?,J'/-;'; have never had any \\f$ft~0:]L/'return of same. I ' **-;..��� can recommend this medicine as being good, if one will give it a fair trial."���Mas. ,1oiin Ackbut, 07 Edgar St., Chatham, Ont. At the first symptoms of any derangement at any period of life Iho one safa really helpful remedy ia Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Thousands of women in Canada have taken it, with unfailing success. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a true friend to women in times of trial. For headache, backache, hot flashes, mental depression, dizziness, fainting spells, lassitude nnd exhaustion, women Bhould never fail to lake this tried and true woman's medicine. Prepared from nature's roots and herbs, it contains no alcohol or narcotic, nor any harmful ingredient. In cither tablet or liquid form. Write Dr. Pierce, Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., to-day for free medical advice. Uncle John (to his nephew): This is a wonderful luncheon for one and sixpence. Nephew: Splendid! Lei's have another. Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff. Willing to Do Business An Fuglisli milkman had just finished his morning's round, and was returning home as he was addressed |by an enlisting sergeant. "Well, my man," said the sergeant, "would you like to serve the King? It would bc lhc making of you." "That I would," said the milkman, very excited. "How much docs he take a day?"���Christan Register. No belter protection against worms can bc got than Miller's Worm Powders. They consume worms and render the stomach and intestines untenable to them. They heal the surfaces lhat have become inflamed by the attacks of the parasites and serve to restore Ihc strength of lhc child that has been undermined by the draughts that lhc worms have made upon it, and that their operation is altogether health-giving. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets not only the original but the best Little Liver Pills, first put up orer 40 years aat>, by Dr. R. V. Pierce, have been much imitated but never equaled, as thousands attest. They're purely vegetable, being made up of concentrated and refined medicinal principles extracted from the roots of American plants. Do not gripe. One or two for stomach corrective, three or four for cathartic. Some Have to Be Sir Cecil Spring-Rice, at a dinner in Washington, praised the pensions and allowances made by the British | Government in the present war. "The English Government, after ! this war," he said, "won't have to be '��� charged with neglect, parsimony, or .ingratitude. j "After this war thc schoolboy's definition of a veteran won't have thc ring of truth that it may have sometimes in lhc past. "A schoolboy, you know, once wrote in his examination paper: " 'An old soldier is called a vegetarian.' " Seedy Stranger: 1 would like lo se- It Makes New Friends Every Day. cure a place in your,moving picture ���Not a day goes by that Dr. Tho- company Manager: Arc you an actor? Stranger: Ves. Manager: Had any experience acting without audiences? Stranger: Acting without audiences is what lias brought mc here! "Made in Canada" Best for Quality, Style and Value. Guaranteed for all climates. ASK YOUR DEALER Think Twice Before Selling Fable of the Man Who Did Not Want to Sell His Farm A farmer who bad decided to sell his property listed it with a real estate dealer who wrote a very good description of the plare. When the agent read il over lo lhe farmer for Ills approval, the old man said, "Read that again." After the second reading the farmer sat for several mo- tnents in a thoughtful mood, finally said, "1 don'l believe 1 want to sell, I've, been looking for just such a place all my life and it never occurred to inc that I had il until you described it to me. No, 1 don't want lo sell out." T',18 slory contains a lesson for farmers whether the story is only fiction or an actual occurrence. Many do not appreciate Iheir own farms until someone points out tllc desirable features, Again, real rslate men have a way of describing farm 01' other propel ly, bringing out thc merits and passing over llic undesirable features in ,i way to give the reader a very exaggerated idea of lhc farm, while every statement about il may bc, strictly accurate. Spent Countless Nights Unable to Rest or Sleep Was Run Down and in Terribly Nervous Condition���By Using Dr. Chase's Nerve Food Gained Regularly Corns arc caused by lhc pressure of tight boots, but uo one need he troubled with Ihem lung when so simple a remedy as Hollovvay's Corn Cure is available. Canada's Semi-Centennial. Next Dominion Pay ill Canada will mark the 50th anniversary of llic founding of lhe nation. Its people are indulging in no flattering or false illusions at present; rather are ihey preparing to respond to further calls upon llieir loyalty, uo matter what sacrifices may bc involved; bul they would be more or less llian human if lhcy did not cherish the hope that next Dominion Day may bc observed lhc assurance of an established and enduring peace throughout the Empire, and throughout the world.��� Christian Science Monitor. In tills letter is told once more lhe slory which comes front many thousands of women. It is thc story of exhausted nerves, of a run-down system and of all tbe accompanying misery of sleeplessness, headaches and loss of energy and vigor. But there is a silver lining to lhis cloud. There is the light of new hope and courage which comes with the use of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. This letter is so representative of the kind we nre daily receiving lhat you can judge from it what ymi might expect from this treatment under similar circumstances. Mrs. Conrad Schmidt, R. R, No. 1, Mllvcrton, (int., writes; "Two years ago last spring 1 was run down, had nervous prostration, and was in a terribly nervous condition. I could not sleep or cat. Could scarcely count thc nights that 1 passed without sleep, and if I did cat, had sick headaches and vomiting spells. My limbs would swell so badly that it hurt inc lo walk. 1 would jump up iu bed, awakened by bad dreams; in fact, 1 was so bad 1 thought 1 could not live, and started to use Dr. Chase's Nerve F'ood without much hope, "Il tvas not long before I began ta improve under this treatment, and I can truthfully say it lias done ine a world of good. It look some lime to get the nervous system restored, but 1 kept right on using the Nerve Food regularly, and gradually gained in hcallh ami strength, 1 havc a fine baby boy now. lie wciglicd 12 lbs. at birth, and though my friends were anxious afler the condition 1 was in, I got over that line, and now weigh l���0 lbs. Before using the Nerve Food 1 was a mere skeleton," You arc not asked to expect miracles from 1 'r. Chase's Nerve F'ood. Hut if you are willing to feed back lyour exhausted nerves to health and strength you can depend absolutely on lhis great food cure to produce the desired results. SOc a box, 6 for !$-. 50, all dealers, or I'dm.-itison, Hales & Co., Ltd., Toronto. Visitor: Have you clubs for women in this lown? Resident: No, madam. I am glad to say that, as yet, we have been able to control our women without the use of clubs. M 470 Grain Exchange WH GET RF.SULTS THAT SATISFY. Write for market information. NNEAPOLIS WINNIPEG DULU James Richardson & Sons, Limited GRAIN MERCHANTS Western Offices ��� ��� Winnipeg, Calgary, Saskatoon Specialists in the handling of farmers' shipments. Write, wilt or 'phone our nearest office for quotations or information. Bill your cars "NOTIFY JAMES RICHARDSON & SONS, LIMITED," to insure careful checking of grades. Liberal advances on bills of lading. Quick adjustments guaranteed accompanied by Government Certificates of grade and weight. Vou wilt profit by Sending- us Simples and Obtaining our Advice as to Best _<*stinu_on be/ore Shipping Your Omln, particularly Barley, Oats and Rye. LICENSED AND BONDED Established 1157 mas' Eclectric Oil docs not widen the circle of its friends. Orders for it come from the most unlikely places in the West and Far North, for its fame, has travelled far. It deserves this attention, for uo oil has done so much for humanity, Its moderate cost makes it easy lo get. Germans Invited to Eat Bones German science has exercised ils ingenuity in every direction in the search for substitutes for fat. Among the most valuable results are those connected wilh thc food value of bones. It has been discovered that r.boilcd aud dried bones yield, to begin with, 10 per rent, of fat of excellent quality and very useful for domestic cookery. Besides this, capl- , ta! gravy is thus produced. After jthis lhc bones can be dried and boiled again and ground lo powder. This ' contains 24.41 per cent, of protein and j 13.11 per cent, of fat. Experiments i made by lhc Foodstuff Department cf j the East Prussian Chamber of Agri- ' culture show that pigs, poultry and i horses thrive on this diet, "My daughter," said tlie father, "has alwajjj been accustomed to all the luxuries of w.alt!uTr "Yees," replied the Count, bristling up. "Zat is what 1 am."-Exchange. THE NATION'S FUTURE Depends Upon Healthy Babies Properly reared children grow up to be strong, healthy citizens Many diseases to which children are susceptible, first indicate their presence in the bowels. The careful mother should watch her child's bowel movements and use Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup It is a corrective for diarrhcra, colic and other ailments to which children arc subject especially during the teething period. It is absolutely non-narcotic and contains neither opium, morphine nor any of their derivatives. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup Makes Cheerful, Chubby Children Soothes thc frcttiii-; child (luring thc trying period of its development and thus (jives rest and relief to both child and mother, Buy a bottle today and keep it handy Sold ly all dniggiiti in Canada and throughout the nverld The Market Report Supplied by Randall, Gee & Mitchell, Limited, Winnipeg A very positive feature of the world's wheat siluation under the conditions now existing is that the markets arc more sensitive to bullish than lo bearish news. Thc underly- I ing condition is bullish, and while this will not prevent wide price fluctuations, thc chances arc more favorable to the maintenance of a high level than to any permanent decline. So far as present indications arc a criterion, the beginning of the third year in the European struggle finds the wheat position lhc strongest it has been since that cvcnlful August of 1914. ln two out of three seasons of the war the harvests have been disappointing, hi 1914 it might well he said that the breadstuffs needs of the world were almost wholly dependent on this continent, and while 1915 was a most favorable year in thc surplus producing counlries, the present season is one of disappointment. The wheat market since the first of last July has been a most remarkable onc. There have been great bull periods before, but it is very doubtful if these great price movements have been based ou such substantial grounds. The trade has never seen heretofore a market which recorded so great an advance ostensibly on sheer speculation, and when that speculation went "stale" failed to turn sharply in the other direction and record a decline almost eiiual lo the advance, if indeed it did not show a loss greater than the upturn. It is the firm undertone of thc market at the higher level that is most impressive, ll is confirmatory of the strong commercial position of wheat independent of speculation. Few will dispute that previous lo last week there was a decided shift in speculative sentiment to (lie short side of the market when prices had shown such marked hesilency to go higher, Based on the history of previous bull markets, this growing bearisliness bad excellent precedence, but these abnormal limes and the market proved to be stronger than the speculative clement realize. IHI new r 1.HCH REMIDV. N.I N.I ���__! THeRAPIONH'.f.ra Htifit (rut lucceii, corns chronic weakness, lost vmo�� It VIM Ki'-NEV BLADDER. DISEASES. RLOOD FOISOV* riLE.** _.IT'1R�� NO URUniUSTSor MAIL, tl POST 4 CT1 t< .'��� -.MM Co M BE P. KM AN ST NSW WAR or LYMAN IIM roflO.STO WRITE FOR PRE! BOOK TO DR. LR Cull MM- CO HAVl.nSTOCRRD.HAMFS.EAD LONDON EH* tRYNEWDRAGEaiTASTEI.KSSJFOI-.MOF gASy jQ TktM __._. .-__-___*_ _-_-_____.-- gA_,_, AHD LASTING CUIIi lEE THAT TRADI MARKED WORD 'THERAPION IS M IK1T. GOVT STAMP AFFIXED TO ALL GENUINE FACUIt. THERAPION Weed's fhossbsti-u.; The Orcat Fntjlish Itemed*. Tonus and invigorates tli. who*. nervous svsle-i, lnn-cs new Blood in old Veins, Cures Kcrvou* Debility, Mental and Drain Worry, Despondency, Lees of I'.nenni, J'alpitation cf tht Heart, Failing Memory. Pric. Sl per box, .il for$3, One willple.ee, eix will cure. Bold.by .11 druggists or mailed in plain pkg. on receipt ol Rrien. jVefo pamphlet mailed free. THE WOOD 1E9IRI- ' CO.,T010SW,C_I. (r����r*i.')W_-|srJl WANTED���Representative, either jscx, Europe's Greatest World War and Lord Kitchener's career. Salary I or Commission. Experience unnecessary. Credit given. Sample free, send postage, ten cents. Nichols, Limited, Publishers, Toronto. Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, Etc. ' A countryman, whll a street, saw a sign: bell for lhc caretaker, ing for a few minute and pulled the bell, while, an angry-faced "Arc you the carctnk bcll-puiier. '-^A want?" "f saw thc ii the bell, and now I why you can't ring it e walking along Please ring the ' After rellect- s he walked up After waiting a man appeared, er?" asked thc what dp you. -���������cc. SO I rang want to ���_.w yourself,'' Overcrowding the Roads As the number of motor cars multiplies, the more evident it is that constant care by motorists is required. The highways are not being widened proportionately. There is a continually greater demand upon the available road space. Suppose a million or a million and a half new cars come on lhc market next season. Many of ihese will be operated by inexperienced drivers. There will be many accidents, of course. One great trouble is lhat even an experienced and careful driver is not safe, because au irresponsible person may at any moment run into him.���Editorial in Providence Journal. JV, N. U. 1121 THE REVIEW. COURTNEY, B-. 0. lb. "i PLANS FOR PLACING IMMIGRANTS ON THE LAND AFTER THE WAR BETTER MANAGEMENT OF IMMIGRATION PROBLEM Lord Shnughnessy Says That There Must Bc a Selection of the Desired Classes and a Refusal to Accept Any and livery Settler Who Might Offer lo Conic to Canada Lord Sliaughncssy, president of i!,e Canadian Pacific Railway-nfler returning from a prolonged lour oi inspection uf the company's system m the West, gave a mosl cheering report on condition- in lhc four Western Provinces, tiling asked aboul immigration after lhe war, llis Lordship made several important statements, In the lirsl place, hc said that even if llicrc was a movement toward Canada immediately alter lhe war, il COllld not be handled, since il would take con- ildcrablc lime to get ihc troops back, and there would be. a great deal of preliminary adjustment in Europe, lu the second place, he said that after the war there ought to be a much iniiii' thorough administration oi ihe immigration problem. lie said lhat in addition lo dealing in a bitter way with the immigrant afler lie reached Canada, there should be perfect supervision at the point of origin. There must be a selection of the desired classes, and refusal to accept any and every settler who might offer to come to Canada. In the third place, llis Lordship said lhat after the war every means would bc used to present the advantages of Canada to the intending settlers and to all desirable colonists who might wish to uuike new homes in new countries. The Canadian Pacific would continue to make every effort to aid these settlers after they reached the Dominion. Hc expected that the policy of the ready-made farm would be continued, but he thought that instead of building bouses, immigrants might be furnished with materials for buildings at the lowcSt possible prices and be allowed lo construct their own buildings, thus reducing the cosl and affording the newcomers employment for the first months of their residence in the Dominion. "Wc have no manner of doubt with reference to the future of Canada after the war," said His Lordship. "In the course of a few years there will be a satisfactory immigration from Europe, and thc development of the country will continue, and go forward as rapidly as is desirable. Canada has fully demonstrated its productive capacity, and in the course of a few- years, if wc do our duty, it will be the equal of any country in the world. With reference to the Western Provinces, I would say that I have never wavered in my faith in them." War and Women's Work New Place of Women Brought About by War Conditions The new place of v,omen in lite world is considered in au Interesting article in the London Times, Thc dominant idea is thai women have become the comrades of men. That implies equality���nol uniformity. There is danger of the loss of certain lillle graceful courtesies such as the raising of the hat or the man opening lhc door fur the woman, If we keen steadily ill view the idea "f equality and justice wc may be confident lhat what is good will survive, and what is superfluous will disappear. Alter all, there was a good deal ot humbug and hypocrisy iu the. old syslem. The man's hat was raised punctiliously, but somewhere some druu ken husband was healing bis wifc, some loafer was living on his wife's bard work ami savings. Thc woman was so sanctified that she must be protected from the arduous and dan- igcrotis labor of making a cross on a ballot; but she could scrub a floor. In this delicate feminine task of floor, washing she went down on her knees, thereby offering a curious resemblance to the old-fashioned gallant lover proposing marriage. ll may have happened that the lover went down on bis knees before marriage and the wife afterwards. The occasion of the Times' articles, of course, is the part taken by women in the present war. Women havc been seen running omnibuses, and working in munition factories. Truly an amazing spectacle, calculated to win men ovcr to woman's suffrage! The danger, and the toil, and the drudgery and the anxiety connected with bringing up a family counted for nothing. But during the war it has been discovered that women arc capable of doing hard work. Sa pos sibly they may win thc suffrage. Thc woman omnibus conductor lias done in a few months what the poor toiler it the needle and thc washtub could not do in centuries. -Toronto Star. Clothing Prices to Ascend Now Shortage of 200,000,000 pounds of wool confronts the clothiers of America, and unless sheep raisers in that continent get busy at once, winters arc going to bc colder for millions of persons who cannot meet higher prices, dealers declared in New York. Thc increasing difficulty of getting wool from abroad, and the amazing shortage of the product in this country is expected to cause a rise in the prices of woolen goods which will bc unparalleled. Kitchener's Sound Vision Kitchener had to make one of the hardest choices in history. . . Nine soldiers in ten would have play cd for momentary results. They would have burled into France every fully trained man. They would have packed off half-trained territorials after a month's hardening in camp They would havc left lhc future to take care of itself. Lord Kitchener, in rejecting the lure of prompt vie tory, showed the sounder estimate of the enemy's resources and capacity, His decision, a simple, intuitive, was the hardest and most momentous act of will which any general in Europe has taken since thc Kaiser declared war. There was bigness and vision in that man, and thc world must move against its wish to the slow rhythm of his thought. ��� The New Republic. Instant Relief For �� in.iaiii nciiezi ivi c ; ~,:' v- iliousness and otfcer Liver Troubles The astonishing efficacy of Dr. Cassell's Instant Relief is du* to its toning effect upon the liver and bowels. It gives strength to the organs and helps them bock to health snd nstural action. In other words it enables the system to care itself. Don't w.iiken your liver with purgative pills or morning salt*, don't get the salts- taking habit; let Dr. Cassell's Instant Relief bring you nstural snd therefore lasting cure. Dr. 0HAS. F. FCRStlAW, D.tC, F.R.M.S., a well-known British S-i-n'i-t, writes:" Never tsk* Ssll-iis er Purgatives ler ConslipsHon to lores Bowtl action it ts aura-its the. trou.li and create the Constipation ha.it. I men- ts a superior and convenient treatment Dr. Cassell's Instant Reliei." Price 60 cents, from all Druggists and Storekeepers, or direct from tho Bole Acenta for Canada, Uarolii F. Ritchie and Co., Ltd., 10, M'Cavil^treet, Toronto. War tax 2 c.nu extra. Dr. Ctiseil's Instant Relief ie lhe companion preparation ts Dr. Cassell's Tablets. Life of (ireat Units The Life of Modern Artillery Pieces Is Comparatively Short The life of a gun depends upon the progress of erosion, which Booncr or later is certain to impair the accuracy of lire, according to Iron Age. Erosion is caused by the action of ibe explosive gases at high temperature and pressure, The hot gases cause a thin lilin of steel to absorb heal. The film expands and becomes set. Upon the release of lhc pressure il contracts, which causes minute cracks that grow larger with every discharge. As they Increase in size lhcy form passageways for more, hot gas, and that tends to enlarge tiiciu still further. The inner surface thus becomes roughened and the bore begins lo corrode. Finally, lhe bore becomes so enlarged that it allows lhe gases to escape, The shell (hies not Ihen acquire its proper rotation, and ils flight becomes erratic, All guns except small ones arc now constructed with linings in the lube, which, when the bore is worn out, arc removed and replaced by new ones. The cosl of rclining a gun is approximately thirty per cent, of lhc cost of the. gun. There appears lo be no limit lo the number of times that a gun can be. relincd, 'The small arms used in the United Stales arc considered to bc worn out after 5,000 to 7,500 rounds have been fired. Small naval guns can bc lired aboul 1,000 limes before they arc regarded as worn out. Large twelve-inch mil fourtecn-inch naval guns are considered to have a life, on onc lining, of from 150 to 200 rounds. Low velocity guns, such as howitzers and mortars, havc correspondingly longer lives than high velocity gnus of the same calibre, because the pressure they develop, and hence thc temperatures, arc lower. OUR OBLIGATION TO OUR ALLIES AND THE SACRIFICES OF WAR VIEW OF WHAT THE ALLIES HAVE GIVEN AND DONE No Chapter in thc History of National Friendships Has Held Greater Stories Than That Which Records thc Reckless Sacrifices of Our Allies During thc Early Period of thc War o Africa a Virgin Land Development of North African Empire Expected After the War When the war in Europe shall have ended, the first great question which peace will bring is that of a food supply for the nations pauperized by battles. There will bc an immediate necessity for virgin lauds from which huge crops may bc taken at small cost, and with it will come thc need for new sources of wealth of every sort, says the "World Outlook." There can bc no doubt but that Europe knows where they arc to bc found. Unquestionably one of lhc causes of the present war was the need for richer fields for development. France, and England, particularly France, had found them. France had looked across the Mediterranean and had found at the very doorway of Europe the making of a great North African Empire. England had looked and found Egypt. Italy had looked and regained Tripoli for the Roman stale. Peace eventually would have resulted in the development of North Africa, but this war will equal a century of peace in lhat respect. Bandaged Europe, turning ils empty pockets inside out, will cross the Mediterranean and thc North African empire will cease to bc a drca.n and will become a reality. "I think that we shall never be the same people again," said Mr, Hughes, ! answering the lirsl note of his welcome home, Australians may think with him, and hope with him, that wc shall not, Wc laughed In thc sun and followed our prosperous paths ) with cheerful and childlike arrogance. Thc lirsl of our men ran bravely, even gayly, to the great game of war, hearing the. trumpets and not the groans, seeing the waving banners and not thc stricken fields, Thc knowledge and the pain of long endurance, sorrow and suffering have come lo us since thru. Surely no man in this counlry, aloof from war yet redly streaked by war's long lingers, can look back ovcr two years without a sudden flood of almost ashamed gratitude for what other countries have done for it. When the news of war broke upon us two years ago, there were few indeed who looked forward to this time as only thc glimmering dawn of the day of release. Britain was to bc the avenger. Her might, though long unused, would spring at once to fullest life and crush the despoilrrs of Belgium and the ravishcrs of France, Those first black weeks left us gasping and sweating as from a nightmare, Confidence seemed on point of giving way to terrible foreboding. Then the fulfilment of Joffrc's bravely patient plans brought a (lush of hope, and after that wc settled down to his grim nibblings, In thc long and imdcciding months which followed we comprehended morc and more distinctly how we I wcrc dependent upon strength Ollt- I side our own. No chapter in the history of national friendships has held greater stories than that which records the reckless sacrifices of Kussia for her allies' sake. She thrust an army lancclikc into Prussia���it was too slenderly supported to be called a wedge���with the one purpose of lessening the terrible hammering on our weak lines in the west. The cost ly relreat of ths.t army, involving the withdrawal of a line stretching north and south half across Europe never shook for a moment Russia's sacri- fical loyalty. Belgium and Serbia have been destroyed, .'ranee has been bled fearfully, great wounds have been lorn in the vast territory of Russia and Italy has flung millions in men and money into the whirlpool of war. Each of these nations has been drawn by necessity or policy into the struggle. While that fact is plain enough, wc will not attempt meanly to di=guise from ourselves the circumstance that their warring has achieved our preservation. Not Britain, nor any of the great nations now linked with her, could have withstood singly the fell preparations of the Germans. Now, in our own countries, a great measure of strength and order has been wrought out of military nothingness. Though Kitchener has gone, his work remains. We believe that we scc victory ahead of us, but we scc, too, the pitiful price that has yet lo be paid. Slowly we have dragged ourselves, through many little discords, to unity. It is our turn and our chance to repay our great and gallant friends. To this end Britain herself has given all. Her dominions have given much. To say that Aus- tlaia could yet give more is not to decry the nobleness and unselfishness of hundreds oi thousands of brave men, Individual sacrifices hive b��a innumerable and wonderful. Britain, in calling upon every fit man to serve 'his turn, lias made, as a nation, the I supreme sacrifice, and paid her _o_- | est debt to the men who first stood i to arms. And we���alas, we ar: laggards!���Sydney Sun. j I "I am goinff to see your fathTf 'about you," said a teacher to a boy who had exhausted ber patience. "If you do you'll never come back." j "Why?" demanded the teacher. " 'Cause pa's dead." The Voting Age In Many European Countries the Voter Has More Restrictions Than Here Anywhere in North America onc must have lived 21 years before hc can vote. Not so in many other countries. The 11 un votes at 20, but the Austrian in the oilier half of the empire must bc 24. Prussians cannot vote until they arc 25 years old, and that is the minimum age limit in a number of German states. Twenty-five is also the age in Holland, Belgium and Japan. Denmark is a believer in the wisdom that comes with age, hence no onc there under 30 can vote. English-speaking races vote at 21. In many Countries soldiers are disfranchised, and under the Portuguese law no domestic servant or government employe had a ballot. Sam Salter never lived in Belgium, and yet lhat country lias a peculiar system of multiple voting. College graduates, for example, have three voles, and so do many others who fulfill property requirements. About 300,000 Belgians have each three votes and more than that number have two voles. Failure to vole in Belgium is punishable as a misdemeanor.��� Philadelphia Public Ledger. Anxious to Settle in Canada Laucc-Scrgt, Colin Alexander, of the Royal Highlanders, an interned prisoner of war al lhe Chateau Docx, Switzerland, has written to London saying how anxiously he and other disabled Canadians there arc awaiting news of what Canada means to do to help them to re-cslabiish themselves in Canada after the war. Mexander, whose thigh was fractured, but who is able to do light work, has ambitions which many others in Switzerland share, to settle down as a poultry farmer on a little Canadian place of his own. Lawyer: Don't worry. I'll see ihal you get justice. Client: I ain't hiring you for justice; I'm hiring you to win lhe suit. W. N. U. 1121 M 'Woman'* - 9rebkm How to Feel Well During Middle life Told by Three Women Who Learned from Experience. The Change of Life is a most critical period of a woman's existence, and neglect of health at this time invites disease and pain. Women everywhere should remember that there is no other remedy known to medicine that will so successfully cany women through this trying period as Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs. Read these letters: ��� Philadelphia,Pa���"Istarted the Change of life five years ago. I always had a headache and backache ".villi bearing down pains and I would have boat flashes very had at tim^s with dizzy spells and nervous feelings. After taking Lydia E. l*inkham's Vegetable Compound I feel like a new person and am in better health and no more troubled with the aches and pains I had before I took your wonderful remedy. I recommend it to my friends for I cannot praise, it enough."���Mrs. _____qak_T Grass* .ian, io'J N. Ringgold St., Philadelphia, Pa. Beverly, Mass.���"1 took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, for nervousness and dyspepsia, when I was going through the Change of Life. I found it very helpful and I have always spoken of it to other women who suffer as I did and have had them try it and they also have received good results from it."���Mrs. (_eo**_e A. D-.nbah, 17 Roundy St., Beverly, Mass. Erie, Pa.���"I was in poor health when the Change of life started with me aud I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, or I think I should not have got over it as easy us I did. Even now- if I do not feel good I take the Compound and it restores me in a short time. I will praise your remedies to every woman for it may help them as it has me."���Mrs. E. Kisslino, .lil. East 24th St., Erie, Pa. No other medicine has been so successful in relieving woman's suffering as lias Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Women may receive free and helpful advice by writing the Lydia 1". Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Such letters are receivsjd ���ml answered by women only and held In strict conndeno*- TH_B COURTENAY REVIEW The Courtenay Review And I'oinox Val! \\ iV-eky N'.-��'.i,ii��� Courtenay, N. II. UimiSN, 1'diti Ailv r, Pub B. 0, r nud i ���.nbscription Sl.M) per Yt ate shed oprietor Advance l Ul DAY, 'i>v, In bin, ;i ii Val illu 11| portunilies in British Coluin- " ii publication issued by the of 1 leatotis, Toronlo, contains i ;renee to Ci iiii ii uny and lhe ley. together with four pages of .11 al ions Copies are lo be hud of Agriculture, Yic- of the Depl lot in, H. C, The city of Vancouver spends daily thc sum of $5,000 for butler, according to a recent authority, thai is. $1.8-5,000 annually, The bulk of tills money goes lo the prairie provinces, in spile of the many dairying areas in this province. This Is a fact that should make some of our farmers think hard, for many of the local farms are not being farm-d at all, they are merely being .'scratched," that is, when they are not let to a Jap. Yet there is good money in butter, or else how is it that the prairie provinces can sell their dairy products in this province, ami in this verv district at a profit, when climatically they are at a disadvantage compared with 1!, C. Perhaps ��ome Ioc il fanner will enlighten our readers. We print elsewhere, concerning improving trade prospects, what some of our renders may hnve read already ill the daily press, but which wi.l help lo restore the confidence in the minds of those, and the,'are many, wh ) have coin, to believe that llritish Columbia is "down nud out" Far from it. Tlm busy mills, the building of ships iu both wood nd steel, thej ready marl els for our fruit and, vegetables���All these factors spell prosperity that will affect diiectly] or indirectly, everybody in ihis, province. But the batik is for the strong and willing, those men who refuse to wa't Watson's Underwear Watson All Wool underwear iu Ladies, ! Misses, and Childrens in two piece combinations. "Tlie underwear that wears well and will not shrink." Millinery l The newest models iu Ladies trimmed and ready-to-wear hats. Specials iu black velvet sailors ami shapes. Invictus shoes shoes business coming t'i them I Will see tli 11 it does come, ; when that business is seem be ��� tit nfler more. The awaiting enterprise wen -:t Wt ml wh ed wil'll chances neverJ more plentiful than thev ate t .dav. and the Comox Valley h is as many chances and opportunities for men I of enterprise ns any district, in B. C. Those chances however must be' taken up :.i time, for they quickly j pass. I A molt enjoyable dance was held in the Agricultural hall on Thursday evening. There were in all 119 tickets sold realizing the nice little sum of $59.50. The numbers corresponding with the tickets sold having been placed in a box. Catherine McNaughton was asked to draw one, which she t ery pleasantly did, and was surprised to find the lucky number*. ' 134, belonged to her mother. Good luck to Catherine. I During the evening Master Hallie Dixon was enthusiastic it! the sale of,chances to win a big box of candy by inviting guests to pay 10 cents and guess the number of beans contained in a bottle exhibited for any contestants gaze. Mr. Stitliffe, cur genial totisorial artist residing in that part of Head quarters known as Courtenav, Was the lucky winner. Bill's modesty would not allow him to take the candy for himself, and afraid lest by donating it to any particular Ribbons Special showing this week of holiday ribbons in Checks, l'luid.*, and Dresdens, Newest patterns ill Itluck and White stripes, aud broken checks. Gents Hatss Newest styles in Men's Ikinlwear in "Hack, Navy. Hrown and Green. The latest creations in Mini's (lowing neckwear. CUMBERLAND Bakery and Tea Rooms Brown's Block, Courtenay lsl class certificate technics of breadtnaking lsr class certificate baking ami confectionery The place to buy Rood bread, made from Better l-'lour. Better nnd healthier yeast, and belter methods. Buy direct from McBRYDB The linker of Better Bread Opposite the city hall Esquimalt & Nanaimo Railway Through Passenger Trains leave Courtenay 11:35 on Monday, Wednesday and Friday for Victoria and Way Stations RETURNING���Arrives at Courtenay at 16:10, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday Steamship tickets on airlines to all parts of the world. For particulars etc., address L. D. CHETHAM Dill. Psn��_g�� A|��nt, Victoria D. B. NICKERSON Af-st Ctirteatr, Phone R60 lady others, might be angry with him, asked that it be put up for auction. This was done and after some spirited bidding was knocked down to Mr, Hartman of Headquarters, for tli3 sum of $4- which also went to swell the proceeds of the evening's entertainment While the number of pupils attending this school is about 12 and each was most enthusiastic in his or her endeavor to make the evening a financial success, and by the sale of Belgian colors, candies, etc, brought the receipts up to the sum of $76 86. Dancing was indulged in till about one o'clock by the camp lime when a pleasant evening, made the nioreso by the knowledge that the gathering was brought about in the hope of contributing somewhat materially to the happiness of children suffering pitifully as the result of the mad ambition of a crazy monarch was brought to a termination. Much praise is due to Miss Horbury Miss Margaret MaeN'augliton I Mrs. Dixon, and others whose1 effotts to make thc evening a bright one in the memory of the children a success, Many thanks are due to Messrs. Gallant and Melnnes' whose spirited music was, us it always is, highly appreciated by those who dance the light fantastic, Mr, Clarence McCormick ably acquitted himself as muster of the dances so that not a single hitch marred the proceedings, During the evening Mr. Miller entertained with many selections from the masters on his Victrola- While it was suggested that the I5th of November "King Albert's Fete Dav1'would be an appropriate date on wliicli to hold this entertainment, fearing it might clash with other appointments of those desiring to be present, the thirteenth was selected instead. Never theless, All Hail King Albert, may his children subjects soon have brighter days, is the loving wish of the school children of Headquar- ers. ii. C, ^SLs!_ M FURNI BOOTS & SHOES COURTENAY AT 1.30 P. M. AND 7.30 P. M. Instructed by Messrs. Loggie Bros. I shall sell by Public Auction as above, the whole of their stock of Men'3 Furnishings, Boots and Shoes 95 pr Men's and Boys' Boots and Shoes 6 doz. pair mens 6 doz. Fancy and Dress Shirts A very large assortment of Fancy and Up-to-Date Ties Heavy Woolen Shirts, etc., and the general assortment usually kept in a Men's Furnishings Store TERMS CASH Further particulars from Loggie Bros, or G. J. HARDY, Phone 10 Auctioneer, Courtenay Intense heat-resisting power is the feature of the almost imperishable fire-box linings of our own McClary semi- steel fire-box made Lu eight pieces���can't warp. Clar/s Mt*m0 The man who designed the Kootenay knew his job. I know that and that is why it carries my guarantee as well as the makers'-, ,ra For sale by C. H. Tarbell & Son, Courtenay Industrial Conditions in B. C. No'material change has occurred hand and there is little chance of in the lumber trade since last mouth stock accumulating, The present The following notes are taken although there has been some fal- position of mills in operstion, is to "Industrial Progress" for Novem- ling off in the demand from the catch up with the ord.rs in hand, ber, and are of a reassuring nature prairies, attributed to a reduction and a fair winter season .is looked to those who have faith iu the province, and who hope for a revival, of building operations on account forward to. trade of the harvesting. Nevertheless, The shingle manufacturers are the mills have still good orders on still experiencing difficulty in se- Co ln.begtorg THOSE WHO, FROM TIME TO TIME, HAVE FUNDS REQUIRING INVESTMENT, MAY PURCHASE AT PAR DOMINION OF MM DEBENTURE STOCK IN SUMS OF $500 OR ANY MULTIPLE THEREOF. Principal repayable 1st October, 1919. Interest payable half-yearly, 1st April and 1st October by cheque (free of exchange at any chartered Bank in Canada) at the rate of five per cent per annum from the date of purchase. Holders of this stock will have the privilege of surrendering at par and accrued interest, as the equivalent of cash, in payment of any allotment made under any future war loan issue in Canada other than an issue of Treasury Bills or other like short date security. Proceeds of this stock are for war purposes only. A commission of one-quarter of one per cent will be allowed to recognized bond and stock brokers on allotments made in respect of applications for this stock which bear their stamp. For application forms apply tb the Deputy Minister of Finance, Ottawa. DEPARTMENT OP FINANCE, OTTAWA, OCTOBER 7th, 1916. curing a steady supply of shingle liolts, due to the shortage of labor. In spite of the much greater log cut this year, there is no evidence of an undue surplus ol logs for this season of the year, the mills having continued to take large quantities and cutting steadily. i In the mountain district, the labor shortage in the camps has caused the shut down of several large mills six weeks earlier than usual. Tlie Canadian products Ltd, plant at New Westminster started operations this mouth, handling 125 tons of potatoes riailv, having large orders on hand for European governments. Kxport shipment of apples from B. C. will exceed the 1915 season and prices are higher, The peach ! crop is somewhat light, but prices are satisfactory. In general the fruit industry in the interior is prosperous. New Zealand, Australia and South Africa have been large buyers of I!- C. apples this vear Heavy shipments have also , been sent lo England, Eastern states and the demand from the prairies has been satisfactory. Terminal city Iron Works, Vancouver, who have completed their shell contracts, are busy with mar- , itie work in connection with the lumber vessels beina built tit North Vancouver, md have work on hand for nine months ahead. There is a surprising amount of work being given out by Wallace's Shipyard Ltd. in connection with the littings of the vessels under construction and projected. [ The car building plant of the C-, N. R. at Port Mann will be in operation within a mouth or So and is designed to turn out five cars per , day. It will be operated to capacity from the start, \\ Representing a Norwegion syn-' dicate. Mr. Otto Dabl, of Philadel- I phia, has ceen arranging to close ship building contracts amounting; to about $5,000,000 and entailing the employment of from 1500 to | 2000 men. Tlie ships are to be' built by the Wallace Shipbuilding j Compapy, an 1 by Messrs Cotlghlau & Company at their proposed yards on False Creek. Six ships aie to! be built at the Wallace Shipyards, I each being of a register of 8800 tons. Thev will be steel steamers. ' The negotiations with the other! firm are not sufficiently far advanc-, ed yet to permit of an announcement. Over 70 men are now employed j at the Ocean Falls plant of the Pacific Mills Ltd,, and the company has applied to the employment bureau, Vancouver, for an additional 200 me.1 at $3 and $3.50 per day, THEED PEARSE Barrister and Solicitor, Notary Public. Phone 6 Courtenay I .1 '. I II1 "���! Courtenay Hotel COURTENAY, B. C Comfort With Moderate K te-i Kent Wines and Liquors T, HOOT Prop. 1 Cumberland Hotel Good Accomodation Cusin? Excelled Wm. Merry-field - Proprietor The Water Question Solved FOR RENT Four Good Houses, water and electric light in each Apply, MRS. WM. LEWIS CHAS. SIMMS Watchmaker, Jeweller ami Optician at Brown's Furniture Store Courtenay, B. C. Courtenay Tailor Ladies and Gents Suits Made-To-Order Suits $27 up Pants $7 up Cleaiiinj,' ami Pressing Pressed Suits $ .75 Suits $l._j up Coats .SO Coats .75 Pants .25 Pauls .50 Skirts .25 Skirts .50 Vests .li Vests .55 Dresses .50 Dresses 1 74 Overcoats .7 , Overcoats 1.25 Rep .irinc, lite. Gents c other, ke )t in order by tlie IIIOIlll .2.50 Married���On Wednesday, Nov. 15-, at Vancouver, Mr. Kobt. Fill-erg, the popular grading contractor of the Comox Logging and Rail wav Co , to Miss Florence Mc- Cortnack, daughter of J. McCor- mack, President of the Canadian Western Lumber Co. Ltd., and its subsidery companies. The happy couple will make their future home at Headquarters, Haney I. Kushida Store, Union St., Courtenav APPLY TO RICHARD CREECH POR Sand and Gravel Rates Reasonable HEADQUARTERS FOR] Buggies and Express Wagons All Rigs Guaranteed and Sold at the Lowest Possible Price GEORGE B. LEIGHTON Blacksmith ard Carriage Builder COURTENAY ��� "* ------- -��� - - - ,-|- - - - - - - -_ ��� - - - - ��� ��� __ ~**!*_**||-crri ~ r r rrm ��.i_J_JJJij'u _iu -_���_.. THE REVIEW, COUETNEY, B. ft "PAY ROLL" TOBACCO A BRIGHT TOBACCO OF THE FINEST QUALITY 10 CENTS PElt PLUG Money From Waste Glasgow is receiving a fair amount ol revenue from the use of waste 111 a more Ihan usually Indirect wr.y. The city has acquired a considerable amount of land, and is fcrtillzin*" it with the refuse which cannot bc disposed ol otherwise, The Income from this source, last year reached $15,000, Bovril makes other foods nouriih you. It has a body-building power proved equal to from 10 to 20 times the amount ol Bovril taken. _agBB-_B_a_a LADY URSULA'S HUSBAND , my i FLORENCE WARDEN L rVtrd.I.cherC,.,Llmli,d TORONTO (Continued.) CHAPTER XIX. llie manner in which Paul Tayne received this announcement concerning the detective who was hanging about the grounds of Oare Court Struck a blow to Lord Eastling. Although lie knew a good deal, and suspected much more, about the lawless doings of his brother-in-law in the past, the young man had hoped against hope that 1'aul -was now, as lie would have put it, "running straight," and that he was showing at least so much respect to the noble woman he had married as to keep away from questionable dealings now that hc was connected by marriage with an honorable family. Lord Eastling, favorably impressed from the outset by the manners and good temper of Paul Payne, had always been generous in his views of him, and had wished, as much for the man's sake as for Lady Ursula's, that he would live down his past bad record and prove himself at least apparently worthy of the family inlo which he had married, as an offset against his repudiation by the family into which he was born. But the events of (lie past few days had shattered that hope, and Paul's sudden change of color on hearing about the detective in the grounds had made it impossible to doubt thai lie was still acting in concert with thh ves. Of course, Paul recovered his self- possession immediately, and affected lu be much amused by lhc solemn warning thus given. "That's awfully interesting by Jove!" said he as be opened the door. "I'.isls always arc exciting to hear about, aren't they, when they belong to other people?" Willi these words he left his brother-in-law, and let himself inlo the room where Brady Gane was wailing. ^ (ira-ulafetl Eyelids, ^ Eyes inflamed by exposure to Sun, Batl and Win. < YSferxt���, quickly relieved by Hgrlst ��J v5) Eye Remedy. No Smarting, �� just Eye Comfort. At Your Druggist's 50c pei Bottle Murine Eyl Sslvein f_bei2Sc Foi-Boo_alf_e_ye.ree~sk Pniggru. oi liurtac fiys Kenedy Co., Chicago Brady, who was fidgeting about impatiently, lingering everything in the room, apparently with the object of discovering something which it would bc worth while to carry off, dropped the volume bound in red morocco, which be bad been turning lover, and drew himself up. "Well, Where's the stuff?" asked he quickly. Paul shook llis head, ll was plain from his looks thai hc had received a shock, nnd the other stared lit him apprehensively, "Nothing gone wrong, rh?" said he in a hoarse whisper. "II il has, Syd, il begins to look as if you'd b'st your nerve, i.i- something, I'm sick and tired of the way you've kepi US hanging round, Come, out with it, What's amiss!" Paul made an effort lo recover his usual calm manner, which impressed his nervous and fidgety confederates so much. But the knowledge thai danger had conic so very close unnerved him, and his ryes wandered uneasily towards the window as he spoke. "There's a Yard mnn in the grounds, on the lookout," said be. "You've been followed, Gane. Vou must get away as fasl as you can, and bc sure you tlon'l go straight back to Kvans. When yon do scc him, warn him to bc careful," But before he had come lo the end of this speech the expression of the other man bad altered somewhat, Prom interested he had become incredulous and impatient. "Oh, yes, 1 dare say!" said he in a mocking lone. "We've, had that game, played on us already. Won't work the second time, my lord. Not 'alfl" "What do you mean?" asked Paul, who, however, knew very well. "Oh, what I mean, your lordship, lis as you lold me that when I come .to'sec you at the hotel. You said as how there was a fellow on the lookout, and as you couldn't give mc tlie i stuff because he was ready for to I pounce out on mc. You said as I ; should find his band on my shoulder ! before I'd got out of the house, and las he'd call a copper, and give mc in charge. 'You mustn't bc found with I the stuff on you,' says you. And 1, i like the silly kid I was, let myself bc kidded, and went away without the stuff. Lord, how you must have laughed," Paul, seeing lhat he bad a hard task before him in persuading Gane to go away quietly without the stones, sat down in an armchair, crossctj^iis legs and took out a cigar. Brady's eyes grew round with indignation. "Look here," said he, "I'll stand no nonsense. Go and fetch the stuff, and share out. No more larks!'1 "I'm not in the humor for larks, I assure you. Neither am I in the humor to be arrested on a charge of being concerned in stealing valuable jewellery. And as that is what would inevitably happen if you were to go out of the house with ten thousand pounds' worth of stones on you, I'm obliged to deny your request, unreasonable as it no doubt seems to you." Gane moved impatiently. "Stow that bunkum!" growled he. "I wasn't arrested at the hotel when I was fool enough to listen to you, and to let myself be gulled into going away without the pearls you promised us. Well, 1 was had once, but I'm not having none this lime." Paul shook his head. "I can't help that. I sec the point of your remarks, but the fact that you escaped search once does not induce mc to think you would escape a second time, Anyhow, I can't afford to run risks." "Why not? 1 can." . Paul laughed not in a conciliatory tone. "It's nol quite the. same thing, What are your risks compared to mine?" "Uli, conic now " Paul drew himself up and spoke with more emphasis, "(. repeat: what arc your risks? 'as you mean to do it. So llicrc now." I Paul shook his head. "If 1 were, ever so virtuous 1 cottld- jti'l give back the things now, because 'they don't exist any longer. I've, la- ken lhe stones out and thrown away jthr settings " "Ves! pretty well that, for ;i man as is turned so good!" Paul nodded. "As you say, it's prelly well for a ninu turned good. Bill I'm nol good. Don't bc afraid. I'm only frighten- ed." "Piightmed!" The confession wns SO unexpected thai Gane stared, Hut Paul nodded again gravely and slowly. Ves, it's funk, pure funk, blue (unk, thai makes mc anxious that neither you, nor 1, nor Kvans should be. cauglll now. A little while ago I I think I could have carried it off with- loiit so niucl) as minding ihe penally. Bill I couldn't now; I own it." His face grew very gra\\e, and he looked out at the trees and lhc lawn and the misly landscape beyond, instead of at Gane, as he. went on: "I want lo turn over a new leaf." Gane laughed, hoarsely, incredulous still. "Well, turn away as fasl as ever you like. We shnn'l slop you," lie. cried mockingly, "Only, before you, turn, just you hand us ovcr what belongs to us." "All right. Bul nol now. Listen,! Gane, I want to know whether you and Evans will consent to some sort of a new arrangement. Vou wouldn't get much on the stones, under lhc circumstances, would you?" | But Gane's face had Hushed, and his eyes were protruding. "No, you don't," cried he with excitement, as he clenched bis iisl and ground his teeth, and came nearer to Paul in a threatening attitude. "You don't play that game on lis, We're not a-going for to lake a few sovereigns and leave you to go off with the swag that we've been waiting for our share of this many weeks. We're " Paul rose from his chair, and his face assumed thai hard look which Gane was morc accustomed to in him than to the. more amiable expression which he had worn so far lhat morning. "All righl," he said quietly. "Bluster away. But I'm not going to give you the stones to carry away today, as 1 know you wouldn't get away without being followed, and if you were, followed you would be caught, and ii you were caught you'd involve me. 1 don'l pretend to be acting unselfishly." "I should think not!" jeered Gane at a white heat. "I'm not a saint." "Not quite." "I'm rather the olhcr thing." "Just about." "But 1 can'l afford lo bc found oul THE PEACE RIVER COUNTRY This Fertile Area of Canada's Hinterland Described in u New Booklet The demand for accurate and reliable Information wilh regard to the Peace Kivcr country is widespread, and is rapidly becoming more insis- Icnl. Any effort, therefore, that may bc made lo provide this Information through official sources is both timely ami valuable. A booklet entiili-,1 "The. Pence River Country" jusl issued by ihe Department ol the Interior dealing ivilll lhis matter deserves lo be brought prominently lo public, attention. Hitherto those who wished to obtain information wiih reference to this new land have been dependent on reports ol a more or less fragmentary nature, gathered Irom any source that happened to bc available, In compiling authentic information from reliable sources and publishing il iu thc form of a handy and attractive, booklet of fifty pages, the Department has provided a much needed source of information (or all who are or who may become interested in llic Peace Kivcr counlry. While a few pioneer settlers have from lime- to time penetrated this portion of Northern**Canada, it has only been within lhc pasl few years that it has been possible, to regard thc grent. Peace River valley as within the reach of the. Iiomcsceker. The almost insurmountable difficulty in taking in supplies nnd machinery and the corresponding task of marketing the crop rendered lhis fertile area of Canada's hinterland a veritable "terra incognita." Although but few have explored this district, many will be surprised lo learn that so long ago as 1870 grain from the Peace River captured ihe trophy in competition with thc world al the Centennial Exposition iii Philadelphia. The booklet deals with all the subjects which naturally suggest themselves to the. average inquirer. Under llic headings of Agriculture, Timber, Minerals, Game and Transportation the pamphlet gives a mass of information. Cllmalc and rainfall are also dealt with, Numerous extracts nre given from the. reports of well- ktiown explorers and scientists who have visited the country, dating from the beginning of last century down lo the present day. There is a concensus o( opinion among these authorities ;o to the adaptability ol the country lo ihe growth of all grains nnd root crops. The great amount of sunshine which obtains in these northern latitudes renders vegetation both rapid ami luxuriant. In llic Peace River district the seasons change very quickly, so that as soon as the. snow passes the ground is ready for seeding. The soil in some places consists of a rich black [loam, In olbers it varies from i blue I clay wilh a top soil of sandy loam��� from two lo six inches���lo a sandy loam much desired by wheat growlers. I Vegetables attain a large size, Dur- ; ing a large part of the winter season I cattle and horrcs may remain outdoors. It is a country adapted both tc mixed farming and ranching, A copy of the booklet may be obtained by addressing the. Railway- Lands Branch, Department of the Interior, Ottawa. EXCELSIOR INSU DANCE LIFE C0MPANV AN EXCLVSt VELY CANADIAN COMPANY ESTABLISHED IH90 Excelsior Policies Are Money Makers A Caustic Beggar Old Lady: "Here's a penny, my poor man. Tell mc, how did you become so destitute?" Beggar: "1 was always like you, mum, a-givin' away vast sums fe. thc pore an' needy."���London Opinion. W. N. U, 1121 What is a term of imprisonment to you? You've done onc or two already, and you're as well off in gaol ns you are out of it; heller. Willi mc it's different. Even you will admit that, 1 suppose." "Even me! 1 like your cheek, Syd." "Of course you do. It's my cheek, as you call it, that has enabled mc lo help you in ways that I'm sorry for and ashamed of," Gane stuck out his chin. "Oh, so that's it, is it? You're, coming the virtuous dodge ovcr us, eh, to get out of giving back our share? What are you going to do with Ihem, eh? Give 'cm back again, perhaps? Like what they say you did with the pearls? Is that the new game? Chuckle-headed sort of sport, I call it, and what's more, 1 don't believe UUI. "And suppose I was to go right up to this 'tec���if I could find him," jeered Gane, "and to tell him as there was a fine, gentleman in this house, with a good haul of jewels as wasn't his own to be accounted for, what then?" "Then you would probably get locked up as a person suffering from delusions," observed Paul impcrturb- ably. (To Bc Continued.) Bulletin on Farm Accounts Valuable Information Contained in a New Bulletin by Prof. G. G. White "Farm Cost Accounting,", is the title of a new bulletin by Prof. G. G. White, of Manitoba Agricultural College. In writing tllis bulletin, I Prof. White treats thc quesljou of farm accounts from rather a nc.w atiglc. lie holds lhat lhc typo of bookkeeping required on a farm dif- I fers entirely from ordinary bookkeeping. "The primary object of farm cost accounting," snys Prof. White, "is to determine what the farm business as a whole is making or losing each year, what each department is mak- ing or losing, aud to give such in- : formation regarding each a., will enable the owner lo manage his far-n more intelligently by knowing what it is costing him to produce." After dealing in detail with the whole problem oi farm cost accounts, Prof. While includes a number of tables and instructions, such as ho\\v to estimate the number of bushels of grain in a bill, amount of hay in a stack, quantity of silage in n_ silo, data regarding average life of innlc- metlts, and similar information of general farm interest. A copy of the bulletin may bc had free irom i the Manitoba Department of Agriculture or Manitoba Agricultural College, Winnipeg. Boil It! The beautiful aroma of the finest cocoa beans is brought out by boiling Cowan's Perfection Cocoa from three to four minutes. A-l A co-bastion ef Mi t_p_. __l pasts. i"t*j pr.tl.ee a ��r__a_t, _u__fi-in.wit_ vary lillle effart. Itat po_t.es c��-Ui..*ic-l-al w-l Ml crack Ibe Icat-er. Tit. preserve lie ludurud batata tie lift ��f jottt thou. t. T. BkU.U1 Ct. OF CAN-DA Ud. Harailtoa - Cauda Black-White-Tan to* secrets in jrou��' 'None to speak of," he replied. D__OS�� #T�� 'is good ted' fb 'li flEBDB lUSViKWfc COTTHTWKIi JL-H? E.W.GILLElT COMPANY LIMITED TORONTO, our.. _ Ytinmota New Competitors in Bacon Argentina has, in the past nine tears, hern tin- best customer of the British Berkshire Society. Russia-has also been a fairly free purchaser. The number of competitors iu the world's bacon market ir, incrcasingl (mil quality will be more than ever "he price of pre-eminence when lhc ���ar is ovcr. Faultless in Preparation. ��� Unlike py other stomach regulator, I'armc- lec's Vegetable Pills are the result of song study of Vegetable compounds calculated to stimulate the stomachic Junctions ami maintain them at the _ormal condition. Years of use havc proved their faultless character and established their excellent reputation, And this reputation they have maintained for years and will continue to maintain, for these, pills must always Stand at thc head of the list of Stan- ��(Jard preparations. A British Julius Caesar Julius Caesar had a prominent tta. "sake in Sir Julius Caesar, .Master t the Rolls during lhc reign of Jan. ��� I,, who married a niece of Sac ', and perhaps knew llic hey to Lhc i toriolis "cypher," About him Lord Clarendon tells an amusing story. The unpopular Karl of loit- land S'.t up all night in a barricaded house with his friends and retainers armed to the teeth, because he had .ound in his pocket a slip of paper on wl ich was written "Remember Caesar. ' Next day he found that this ireferrc I, not to lhc assassination of _he Ri nan statesman, but to some prcferr cnt promised to a son of Sir Julius i 'acsar. The tomb of Sir Julius i'acsar, with a quaint epitaph iin leg I phraseology, is among the many curious monuments of St. .���Helen'-, Bishopsgatc, Winter Feeding of Cattle Low Grade Grain That Can Be Used to Advantage in Feeding At the present lime there arc daily passing tlirougli lhe Winnipeg stock yards scores of carloads of sloclter nud feeder cat lie which arc on llieir way from the farms of Manitoba and Saskatchewan lo the farms of lhe Central and Central Western States. During tho month of August, *t,805 head of cattle of all classes crossed the line from the Winnipeg yards, and lhis was before lhc stocker and feeder movement had got under full Steam, At the same lime, there is in many parts of our own country a good deal of feed that will never be used, some of il griiin lhat is scarcely worth threshing, but thai could be used to feed a large number of animals. This combination of circumstances makes especially timely a new circular ou WlntCI heeding of Cattle hy the Animal Husbandry Dcpartmcnl of Manitoba Agricultural Cullegc. This circular contains data as to actual results iu previous Manitoba feeding experiments, nnd oilers Stiff" ffCSllons to those who are open to consider this line of enterprise, A free copy may be had by writing the Publications Branch, Department of Agriculture, Winnipeg, or Manitoba Agricultural College. Advice to Dyspeptics Well Werih Following lu the case of dyspepsia, the appetite is variable. .Sometimes it is ravenous, again it is often very poor. For lhis condition there is but one sine remedy���Ur. Hamilton's Pills���which cure quickly and thoroughly, Sufferers lind marked benefit in a day, and as lime goes on improvement continues. No other medicine will strengthen the stomach and digestive organs like Dr. Hamilton's i'ills. 'I'hey supply the materials and assistance necessary to convert cv- crylhing eaten into nourishment, into muscle, fibre and energy with which to build up the run-down system, Why not cure your dyspepsia now? Get Dr. Hamilton's I'ills today, 25c per box at all dealers, m Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Mitf���Pttmantnl Cart CARTER'S LITTLE Ll VER PILLS never (ail. Purely vegetable--ict surely tut gently on lhe liver. Slop alter dinner ditties*���/ cure imli-. jeslion ��� improve llie complnion��� lirl.hten the eyes. Small Pill, Small Due, Small Price. Genuine nun beat Signature Cannon and the Clouds s*mmmmsmmtmmm They Learn Nothing Why is il thai the idea can never seem lo be eradicated irom the Ger- mnn mind lhal the worltl can be conquered by terror? Why Is It thai lhc dreadful lessons of the lasl two years remain still unlearned by the German? What of good, of prolit, of advantage has (lowed from the Iwo years iu which Germany hns built up for her sons the reputation of wild animals throughout the civili_'d world? lias ii aided German armies to conquer France, to lake Verdun because German soldiers have outraged French women, slaughtered French children, destroyed the cathedrals, wrecked the homes, defiled lhe beautiful in northern France?-New York Tribune. Shopwalker: Do you realize that you wcrc four hours selling those two women a yard of ribbon? Saleswoman: 1 know, sir. But just as they got lo the counter lhcy discovered that they each had a baby just learning lo talk. The world's population makes use of _,500,000 glass eyes in the course of each vear. MOTHER LOVE IS 1 It lirin*|s Relief to Hoy Standing His Watch Deep In Mud. ��� Johnny, who had been study- ory but a short time, thought d give his grandfather a try- ihc subject, and asked: Gramp, what great war broke .850?" old gentleman laid down his ip_pi ind looked thoughtfully at the tooy :jr a moment, and then a sudden iglit dawned upon him, "Why," he said, "that was the year I married your grandmother,"���Harper's Magazine. Lilt "jig hi lie wi out 0 "Sr ont i Th [���apt Adds to the Joy of Living��� It isn't alone the deliciously awect nut-like taste of Grape-Nuts that has niiiilc thc food famous, though taste makes first appeal, and goes a long way. But with the zcstful flavor there _�� in Grape-Nuts the entire nutriment of finest wheat and barley. And this includes the rich mineral elements of the grain, necessary for ***igorotis health���the greatest joy of life. Every table should have its daily ration of Grape-Nuts "There's a Reason" Csnadi.n Postum Cereal Co., MX. Windsor, Ont, THANKFUL MOTHERS Thousands of thankful mothers throughout Canada ��� many of them your own neighbors���speak with the greatest praise of that splendid medicine, Baby's Own Tablets. Many mothers would have no other medicine for their little ones. Among these is Mrs. Albert Nie, St. Bricux, Sask., who says: "1 have been using Baby's Own Tablets for the past seven years and lhcy have done my four children a world of good. I would not be without them." Thc Tablets arc sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box fioin The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Out. Once upon a time, only a few months after this terrible world war had begun, Private Bailey, a soldier in the ranks, had slood for days in the trenches "somewhere in France." The cold rains soaked Ii iin lo the skin; the mud was deep. lie. had had no rest. Weary and aching with rheumatic pains, he recalled the faith his mother had in Sloan's Liniment. Hc asked for it in his next Inter home. A large bottle was immediately sent him and a few applications killed the pain, once more he was able to stand the severe exposure. He shared this" wonderful muscle-soother with his comrades, and they all agreed it was the greatest "reinforcement" lhat had ever conic to their rescue. At your druggist, 25c, 50c and $1.00 a bottle. Improbable That Cannonading lias an Appreciable Effect on Rainfall By a remarkable coincidence the latter half of Ihe year nf 1914, and the whole of 1915 and 1916, so far as! it has gone, have shown an excessive I rainfall in many parts of America and Europe, a stale of affairs that has given rise lo many surmises con-' ccrning the relations bctweeu the! discharge of great quantities of ammunition at the front in Europe and ' the heavy fall.of moisture, lu an ad-, dress delivered recently before thej British Rainfall Association n niem-i her of that body pointed out that the: processes of nature are so vast thai it is highly improbable thai even thc greal ffUlinrc of recent months has had any effect on precipitation. To illustrate this statement it was shown lhat ill one month lhe excess of rainfall mer an are.-t of 58,000 square miles, which includes England and Wales, was 3 1-2 inches, The speaker showed that this large, excess represents over thirty billion tons of water and lhat the minimum quantity of air which musl have been carried ovcr England and Wales lo transport lhat water in the form of vapor musl have becn at leasl 100 limes that amount in weight. .Such staggering figures are regarded as evidence tiiat lhe amount of force required to move masses of this magnitude is far beyond lhal which ran bc exerted even by modern nations at war. JfflilS Catarrh Cannot Be Cured ���villi LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they .itiinot reach iiie scat oi tli*- disease. '";itarrU is a lucal iliac;'sc, greatly influenced by con. Itltutiotial conditions, ami in order to cine it you must take an Internal remedy. J UN's Catarrh Cute is taken internally and acts tlnougli the i.loo-1 on tin. mucous surfaces M the system. Hall's Catarrh Cure \\>:r; prescribed hy one of the best physicians iu thi. country ior years. Jt is composed of some of the best tonics known, combined with tomfl of the lipjt blood purifiers, The perfect combination of the ingredients In Hall's Catarrh Cure is what produces such wonder* (ul results in catarrhal conditions. Send for testimonials, free. l\\ J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. All Druggists, "5c. Hall's Family 1'iIU for constipation. New Banking Device Multiple Cheque Is Great Saver of Depositor's Time The multiple check is the latest banking device to save depositors trouble. It has becn brought out by a Boston trust company, and its chief use is to make it possible for a depositor to pay all his monthly bills by drawing one cheque on or about the first of the month. The new cheque is precisely like the old style cheque, except that its size is much increased to give room at the bottom for writing a list of firms, with the sum set opposite each one which the drawer desires to pay. These arc added up, and the cheque for the total, payable to (he bank, is duly filled out and signed. That ends the bother of the depositor, for the bank does the rest. It deposits lhe sums named to the credit of such payees as happen to be depositors and remits to thc others. The payer may make entry of the firms and amounts paid on lhc stnb of the cheque, or he may enter only the lotal, saving his statements of account for record. The plan means more work for lhe bank and less for the depositor. But the bank gets its reward, no doubt, in the satisfaction of the patron and the consequent attraction of other patrons. The bank cheque is a wonderful instrument of business. We have become so accustomed to it that we sometimes fail to appreciate its daily miracle. The invention of the multiple cheque shows that the uses to which cheques may be put have by no means been exhausted. Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere. "Singular thing, isn't it;" "What?" "That people who arc. so different from us seem to be satisfied with themselves."���Boston Evening Transcript. Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia. Ambitious Plans "Arc yuu prepared to do anything for the heathen?" asked the mission worker. "I should say we arc!" answered the capitalist, proudly. We've sent some of our best salesmen lo China, and I predict that in a short while hundreds of well lo do Chinese will bc enjoying rides in thc best motor car made in America."���Birmingham Age Herald. REMEMBER! The ointment yon put on your child's 'kin gets into the system Just as surely as food the child cats. Don't let impure fat��an_".uinrral coloring matter (such as many of the cheap ointment! contain) get into your child's blood I Zam- Buk is purely herbal. No poisonous coloring. Use it always. 50c. llet el All Druggists *nJ Stores. 'AM-BUK ARLINGTON WATERPROOF COLLARS AND CUFFS Something better than liner) and hiic laundry hills. Wain It with loitp and water All shirrs or direct. State style and lite. F.t 25c. we will mail you Tlllf AllI.IN.iTON COMPANY OF CANADA. 1.iu.il..! S_ Praia. Arena.. Toraal-. Oafarl* The Heart of a Piano is toe Action, Insist on the Otto Higel Piano Action Ami ilea's Cimiir 0*1 Retnoiie: BOOK OX DOG DISEASES And How to Feed Mulltd f.M tO m'.lj IiM_-*U Sj thi Aiitlior H. CLAY GLOVER CO.. In.. IIS West ."1st Sireel. New lark OOMakeferOn LKMT. 5*1, AW with itils ScU-Stanlni Electric 1'ihtia. Pi: yuu run liave eloCU-Ifl 11,,'lu. In your firm bom.*. ,'uunlry estate, genera] itor,r, ll-.-ery Irsrns. skating and curling rlnu, at rj ciruw uf iem ot ilsy. Compact, simple���wife '-an oparmca it Hhc eleclrlfl IroilS, waslirr*., cleaners, t, well _* lilctily ul lnm|>a .lay or nlsht. Can v.e. fin hy llic engine yuu iiavi* or wn can ruxttlab -r_nn,r. arc lie't n minutes n"irr uncrating. Tall ua your ms_-t lully guaranteed. Write a k'.t.r. nor , nosr._ .'*_,(, tn WI 'STERN CAUl.l CO.. Wlaol.-a. M.a Western Druggists���Notice The first cold snap starts rheumatic pains and aches. Vou feel it in the knees climbing steps or in Ihc back or shoulders. Joints are stiff, muscles are sore, every exertion is a painful reminder. Vou resign yourself to a session of torture. But there is relief at hand, Sloan's Liniment, easily applied without rubbing, it quickly penetrates and drives the crippling pain and disabling ache out of your system. Heading and lifting arc no longer agony. Bruises, bumps and sprains following exercise quickly yield to ils application and mothers have it handy for lhc numerous minor injuries to children that, are more painful than dangerous, Sloan's Liniment quickly soothes. Lumbago, gout, neuralgia and kindred ills that put grown-ups in misery, chronic cold feet, loolli- aclie; in fact, all external pains arc banished by Sloan's Liniment, and it does not stain the skin or clog the pores, a disagreeable feature of plasters and ointments. The Last Asthma Attack may really be the last onc if prompt measures are taken. Dr. J. 1). Kellogg's Asthma Remedy will safeguard you. It will penetrate to the smallest broil- | chial passage and bring about a heal- . Ihy condition. It always relieves and ' its continued use often effects a per-, nianent cure. Why not get this long-; famous remedy today and commence* its use? Inhaled as smoke or vapor j it is equally effective. > "What is there about betting on ! horse races that is so bad for Ihc health?" said young Mrs. Brown. j "I never heard of anything," answered the visitor. "Didn't yoi? Every lime Charley | makes a bet hc comes home and says there is something wrong with his , system." I Millard's Liniment Co., Limited, Genls,���A customer of ours cured a very bad case of distemper ;n a valuable horse by 'lie use ol" UIN ARD'S LINIMENT. Yours truly, VILANDIE FRERES, W. N. U. 1121 Hinkson: I hear your wife has been taking singing lessons. Gibbs: Yes. Hinkson: Well, what do you think of her voice since it's been trained? Gibbs: It's no better, but there's a lot more of it I "Talk about check!" said the puppy. Someone has gone and put up a building right over the place where I buried a bone." Britain's Amazing Inventions The Britisii arc manufacturing new w-ar inventions "wliicli would turn thc Krupps green with envy," according to Dr. Benjamin Rand, of Harvard University, who returned to New Vork recently from a"- visit to England. Accorded privileges of inspection by the Britisii Foreign Office, Dr. Rand said he visited munition and ordnance factories and saw "some astounding inventions," but that he was pledged not to disclose their nature. He found among every class, he said, an intense determination to do all possible to win the war. In one factory he saw 7,000 women at work, uniformed in khaki. New factories were .being built, he said, and existing ones constantly extended. It Doesn't Pay To buy inferior article* for home use, no matter how small the article is. With matches, as with everything else, it pays to buy the best. EDDY'S "SILENT PARLOR" MATCHES Will save your time and temper, for they are good strikers, safe, SUE*", and S1I,_NT. ALWAYS ASK FOB. = EDDY'S =__ Affection's Pangs "Do you love your country?" "Of course I do," replied Senator Sorghum. "And 1 don't mind saying that it gets me riled to see my country Hiding with people who don't belong lo my polilical party."��� Washington Star. One of the commonest complaint* of infants is worms, and the most effective application I'or them is Motliei Graven' Worm Exterminator. At an American eating station an old colored man was ringing a bell, and a little dog sat beside him howling dismally. The old man turned tc him and said: "What you hollerin' for? You don't have to eat here," A Carelessly Treated Cold is the source of most sickness because drugged pills, syrups and alcoholic mixtures are uncertain and unsafe. Scott's Emulsion has been relied upon by physicians for forty years as the safe and sensible remedy to suppress the cold and build up the enfeebled forces to avert throat and lung troubles. Don't tolerate alcoholic subititutes, but intiit on the Genuine Soott's Emulelon. One bottle usually ' nger than a cold. Every druggist has it. ���- - THE COURTENAY REVIEW ,>+*tk#*s9$k>r*e>^^ ���A-XiJ-^i^i^;^'.' ^���^'���i^ftjfti^-J.'ftA'^ Is Your 1