Whitby Gazette and Chronicle (1912), 24 Sep 1914, p. 6

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f iSmiail IiIU_-is ',Che, wàr part>'. 'Txt it& la- gü?nce.IMMeasura.bly 0outrunsitàf nume,,ricai stienigth is evidfent fromn tihe'tf At 8aît they n0o.nIY waue wr, -'bttgot Wip.ýhc voize et the giyty4five ifflion w89 uîà onie 1n1 in 't-e wldenes. t hba aways -@0 in luPrussianized,. mitarlzed '5 O.nay, writes Fredeick Williâm WIO i theOut'lOok.ý -N& liat of members o thie wax: - P tyhu, ever beea publlshed. . t b -offial existence,.-But wi compoeit end, w}at It ha* ubood for. are am open bock. ~The Kaiser would deày the moat vieaînenly cf ail that ho i.s ffili- >m.,ted with the Kriegsparêei. ,-Un- fortunately, bisspeechesare agsinet him. lie liastalked tee mucli anfd toc often oft hie ma.rtkal ambitious, bhe s et thxe wcrld toc frequentiy by tbe estra Wiih bis hiatanat poj>eofe. of, Mans and tNeptune, Vo snerit the dia4ecm cf a pea-ce prince. PrineeParty's Arohprlest. William II.'s ebullient mca and beir, Vhs Crown Prinoe, i. an avow- ed adherent, almosit the arch-piries.t 01ofthie war party. His feLIcw-nem- --bers are, first cof ail, the corps et offlers of the German at~my, si body of- 40,000 cr 50,000 spurred and epailette4ý martinets,. who have ne- - * vr ceased to pray' for war. Theise *gentièm»n cf the goose-etep, tbrough their paramount postion iui Germa-n society, have infected the entire o-called 'upper dais.with their. be.lligerent views. The wa.r party, tiheretore, inoludes 'Germa-n upperdom. It embraces the intelllectuals «f the emnpire-the pro- fessional element at thxe gretst Uni- 'Versities, the DýIlbruecks, thle Wag- ners, the Scb-mollers, the Harnacls, an'd ail the other super-jpatriots who, tread in the path blazed by Treltscbhke, the pSxphet cf tAis; Germany's "fin-al, reckoning" witht Europeé. Varslty Mèn Next. - Îhee pieture 44nJwathe crac cerniaese4nn le.o.e:wae maonths ago by the Kaiser. A despateh pounted by' tho L 9dou14 o -4. Imayothat the regiment under. the Crow.i Prince -]r, dric.Williamn, declinins ouurrencler, wore aaalhilaW4 b>' 5altlmaz4_ Froq~çli nepr aI& ia the. march to ber predestineti goal1, at-Va.nsble caly by the employ- nnt of Êsiege guns a-a-ct dead- nougits, Tusse zaute anad meek millions, I my, did not want war. Tliey want- ed peace sad a continua-nce.cf the bounding prosperity wliicli hati lsrought Germmay t-o tc pinnaleeof econoie might. They wa-nted their army enadnavy te be t-hait whuch -the Kaiser lisct gra-ndiloquently boaated t-bey wome, a-ad ony t-ht.-bulwamks of pea-c, not englues of wa-r. Tii... were t-be sentiments cf t-le Germa-n'public up t-o the very heur wam desoendsd upon ibheir inoffen- sive heetis. 12xey eared mnet a fig, for Sarajevo beyond .thle wav-e et hu- mana symputiy and horior which wanton murder aiways produoes. They believed, suany cof tiien, that the. question as t-wbo shouad pre- vail in Euro'pe-Geraa or flav- must soi" day finda eanguinary TRIE BýST 'MEICIN2- FOR LITTLEONF-S Baby's Own Ta-blets a-ne the besa medicine for littIe ones. Thet' are guranteed by a govbrnninet an-s- lyst t-c be a-bsoluLely suite a-ad neyer faal t-o cure ceh-tipat-lea, côllo, ooida- a-ad simple fevers b>' regulat-' ing t-le bowels. Cencerniag t-hemn Mmii. S. Shannon, Urney, N.S., writes: "I have used Baby's Own Ta-blets for my two chjîdren a-ad thlnk t-bey aire jUtwha. t tta. cnes neeti. 1 wculd net be- wit-hout t-hem." Tii. Ta-blets are sol-c by medicine dea-lersa or b> Mail sM 25 cents a box froni Tii.e Dr. Willia-m&, Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. -'-bs - AUSTRIA AND ITS PEOPLES. Only 20 Per Cent, of bts Population souin ut L'iky d4UL Uot 100K upoi Folo6wing i - olat-rously in t-le t-mil the assassinstion of Archlduke Fra-az'b emn et the poliîtical professons are t-le Ferdian-d a-ad bis consort as the Tua. wqs-'-befemre t-he wa-r that it under-gmaduaves ofithle 'vareities, Or occasion for forcing t-lie solution. lied wl-t-b Prussis- fa 1866-wlica Aus- a-t- lc-st tint overwhelming majonit> tria wa-s recogaized as thle lea-ing affiliated witli t-le corps, Venbin-- Brought OnBy Austria. Germa-a nation. Tii. unification et duagen, or Burscbensciafte t-he Lt wa-s cal> whein t-le Aua-tria-u de- Germasny, with the King cf Pris,- equivalent- of cun cwn frateraities. maindu on bleod-ataiued Servia sia as Germa-a Emperor end wlth lktwas these youthtul spinits who brought Anuuageddesx mea-surably Austnia cnt-aide thle coafedienstion, bave htlie te sa-redaess cf w&r near--made lit, as Irehave seen, ia cbaaged t-he aspect completel>'. drillcd into t-hein seuts in clasrom, fa-", inevitable-t-hat Germa-n pnb- Austria- bas expa-nded sinc. its sev- 'who n a-n, shni-okin-' "Krleg 1le opinion, ehrewdly moýldeti, sud- erance fnom- Germany a-ad t-be ex- Krieg 1" tlirougli Un-tan den Linden deni>', relnc.tant-ly, came teýt-le coix- panasion à"ea beenc away f rom Ger- ia t-be fevcrish nights preoeding the oluslea t-ha- t hse oafict bet-ween manie ideals a-ad punWses. To.dsy actual iaunching cf the N»-Kaser'o G4xmasaaend-,fila-v uigbé as wdll be.-oi>' Vwe-t-y per cent&âf lt-s ppula- thuaderboîts on t-le ee-t -ad weat. fouglit eut la t-h-layes-r o! grace. tien is of Germa-n engin, while the LIn t-le war ps-rt-y, toc>, arc t-Ae I maike bold t-o proaWm t-hat-tale Sla-v, wbich include Ozechas, gemba, Prussian junker ia bis thousands, Germnens wenat lite t-ie bloody huai- Poles, Crcets, ct-c., have fit ty per the agna-rian land barons cf Poan-er- nees wiph a- hea-vy h-eart. 1 heard cent. eft tle popula-tion. The Ma-g- sala, Es-st- E-bis,, Bnande.ubung a-ad- t-hein reen-viets siaging "Die Wa-olt yens, et Hunga,ry, are. almotat s- Slesîa--t-hc Ger-ma-ns wdxo look upon a-m Rhiel" as t-bey began t-hein numerous as t-h.à Germa-ns, consti- * theniselves as t-le salt of t-le Teuton marc te dcat-h a-ad glor>' frein it>', tut-ing eigliteen par cent-., whie six ca-rt-b, t-le props of divine rigit sad town a-ad Ixaiet. per cenV. are Ruma-nians sad t-le Vhs monopolises o power a-ad pc.1- I sa-w flaxnca--red Prussian sa-me proportion Turks, Hebncws, -tion lai modern Germany. makidas toeixg roses t-o guards a-ad Bulga-ians a-ad miscal-la-necus. And lest, -but noîsieat, are thli Uhians a-s t-Aey st-artet for thle If -thbe Balkan ila-vs were t-c be ara-chair wa-nnlcus -oftt-hee Fatbar- front-, f rom which thoxusands of t-bain icluded ln t-he empire e-f Austria-, land, tIi. rstired'genana-Is a-ad ad- will neyer ret-nin. But everyw-bene or if Anstnia C ulti be a- triple ia- * mirais sad colonels a-adnasval cap- a-ad aiws.ya I founti bes-ing dowa steati et a duaI monarcly i>' Ge r- tains, wxose veny na-mes are a- pro- t-be spirit- of t-be Germa-a, thougb ma-as, Hun-ga-ians a-ad filsvs, it gramme a-ad a menaee-Bernhardi,- onl>' infrequ-enti>' expresseti b>' wrd would domina-te tAxe Baik as -8ad a-t Breusiag, Revcnt-low, Freb4enius, ot meut-b, the seýnti.men4 that- the the eame t-lais weuld b. a- ba-ien Ktim*oetht-e Army League, Von wa-r was un-Ixeessr>', cnrpelnain- a-gaina-t Russian &la-vs. Uadcubt-ed- Keest-enefthtle Nasvy League, a-ad telligible, tba-t- it cuglit- Abtebhave 1>' ia sncb a centiagency Austria- huadreds legs note-nous. beea. would la t-bue b. domina-ted b>'lt-s Tie Other Sixty-flve. -' --fla-v population.f TRECRE FILEDWITI DAD While iVhia-s been tuhe ambition cff If 1 t-lus fa-r eê radical im ex- TECE ILDWTIDA Austria t-o ma-ke iteeîf a great- fla-v1 n peso anti hsrsli, let mé tisai Lno ef Dea-d Germa-ns Stood Wi oe,'wtotsuraeinh-yc fo.rt.bwitla witb t-be sixty-five mute, Rleit' hud .t-be prestIe of thbe preseat dusi- meek mallions o! t-be Fat-brland Rfe oShudr.Monarohy, outsiders have beea Iookc- «who cmaved for pea-ce. Pon yes-ns - It wa-s as tbough sme 4gl ing ton t-he dissolution cf t-h. cm- * t-bey bave bsen excoria-ted b>' t-he Ire-m heaven lisd defcsnded upon Pire wita ht-e deat- cf t-be agedF - war part-y as a cra-yen, corneding t-be German rn-ah, smtotlering them Fesaz Josef. The>' have argueti influence, destitute c f patniotim, ila an embracé o! deat-l," declaied a-t-bat a nation ma-de'up cdf e msa>' ignorant e-f 1"t-hé resu feunastioas etfinember ofthtle Amenican branch of diffeenat races, eacsl antagonfist-ic t-ot Germa-a grea-tne-s," a-n èlemnct the RetiOnces, who1îret-umned t-o hethler, e'couId net endure. whicli wa-s netarding t-le Fatherlanti Paris after a- visit t-o t-he ba-ttl-field.. When thle war ends we "la&Ia-i: ________________________ne-ar Mea-ux. H& had goxe witulan, b. in ba-t-ar position t-o propIce>' as ambuaac to ealecyt wauade .te t-le future -oit Anat-ia. * II cers, sad lt-hue descnibesth l-Ire'S a Hiappy Toasties. and cream for breakfast, lunch or sup- per-, ' Choie. white Indan, Corn, s-rolled hito -thin- flakes, and tog Ote t-o arhgle brown---deUic1oust ThsfoCQIPU êin 01ê pacges abays, -fresh, eMlp 4 sw.gt; apd4 rady to 0 n.at amo231nt'O 110. -Pot Toaties inake a wSIy gà~acorydlsh a-t- by grooer wnmt1 c. Led.. which met heee:PRODI( "I saw t-endies fil-led wit-b Ger- ma-a dead, jut as fixe>' bs- been AIl Countnie !-eft b>' t-le Frenchi upa. It was t net s0e ucAx t-hé kreagit -cf deat-lio that wusIBO appl9hing; it wa the TheGlxane- 'utlandiah-postures e-f t-bae ng cliequer lr-c4 Corpffs aad -lrockupn d .~ t-be esential "flac. -t-he angei cfdcath paased wrsees a-boys hs camp cf Vàe Phlistnas I Gresat- Bn-tai a-m sure -net-ing 1k. lt lias bepredigicue.: seen. It- w" & s, thlxupb»nie, blig~tiiXaS fnrn hea-ven liad ti xded -f t-be pres-em the Germa-n nanke, amnatheing tAxai ina-aembraoe o bot..lü., la l to "Da-wn -was nt rueli'a yet lt-s esrna ca-me upon tii rnh. h -e cireumastance figbting lia-clbe-eubicodicut, the,0e lange ti-t gre>' iglit nested upon- a g.boat-ike ~a large, i ulled 1Va-e 'botis. - AMil t-be r~pouto withrife t ehnAdr d1a.I eb-d by t-h ,Yý a* be n 0, ThT à4 tc t< Oe Pl' upô ti* in Mié n&îhmron vb A thenebàd*» -a pofi'"4 ý reat ri eteri».'- ýN'l'see1IlVi- g~ ig lent -i»c&yý Qf -sfligure fkth6,et 1l.s1:Oni eanly "dj aul &bout"- -DCDUwhc Lntenoiire' wi n oaue!de - tribult- a cidd virue nti zeelnee~ cinflpioduce great importance ln the formationh-abbn'w cifa good chireotr, - -vs IO TIOUS WEALTH. m Are Payîng Trîbute Great Britaîn. sAlo etVhs BritleliEx-~ ogauzes thaV mena>' is It-bing ia carnying on duli>'. The wea-ltb of an lu la t-he sggregu.te Lt is la fa-ct practucal>' e, a-ad aitbouglit-le cost nt wiar wiil ms-k. great Md capital wlll be xnuch Sreplae prasent bss iings, even under such Dg az tbe preseat, àre tthere wll continue te surlusocr, a-y-ai1abie Mtî in Canada- Ltmust ecd that indver-y,,a-ad v1hieh W4111 be mosXtly ai- ie presant wam, de net tué total .inveatnxt oeuntry like Great fBn1- immente amou 1nt"o wa -wealth, asa-aâog hffs inheited W, whéi eeln' b. niaiSé 'toriger or better," It cures >Sclatica. la t e n iply a miracle , For years i suffiered f rlght. fUli7. I ruiaed XmY teg]2#0b wIthta- iis- and ilînlaets--none -were strong ealougb. One gooci zubblng wltb er- vilus eUeed I eptonrubbing andi shqrly -vos. cureci. - My- father .curedi nlapamatlumnx la'slm rglit, arm ai moàther,.Ctire4 heroelf if chronic lum. bago wiIl NervIîIie. Ourfa-iWtly slm. .Pi> swdbns b>'ervlllae ani w. are neyer without a 50c. family aize bot- tin: in>.our- home. Weý fiaci that fer ex. ternél.patin, fer eoûghs, ýcolcis, earache. epah MIner ills It isa:verl-table tamill> IIROIKE IN THE WARS. Ibow WoUnded Aro -C ameilfor la Fresent.Day B is TI»-s proer cSre of the wounded ia war la & eompara-tivejy mc3dern innovationq, cating frein tii.tiine of ti. rmea., elors that thiags were 'ei-ft pretty much to chance. First aid wa*,unknown. These ba-d- Iy lUrt ivare ofen left to dis or re- coyer aa beelt tibey ;night. lIts ncleus, seoto, speakis; the advançecl field-lxcsp"tl. A modern bttc may ext-end over a iront cf 9 birtY of fo-rty axi-ea, or evea more upon occasion. Ai l aAng- behindc this far-fupg lins, ddrectly in rear oft thle adivancedi infaatry, a-nd close Vo the great guns, the ýatvancet field-hospitals aire t-o b. found. One fieid-hospital of tixis descrip- ti-on is usuàlly a'ttaolied toeaoh bri- gade, going forwa-rd with it, as the. case may be. It consista, as a gen- eral- mle, cf a amail central mar- quee, con-se-tuting a coSubind oper- atitig ne-cm and dressing staton, with -a aunbem or-beli tenté a-round it, capable -cf acoommodtin-g fitty Vo one hundired men. Above es-o tent floats t-he Red Cross flag cf Gencva. - Four or five or more miles in t-h. rear, out of the exxemy's fire, are the stationamy field hospitais, as they are called, Vo, wbich the. ad.- vanced fi-eld hos.pitas a-ct as teed- ers. liey arenmucli the same in ap- parance as9 the otuhers, but the. operating mamquees are larSer aad More commodious, a-nd tho number of bell tent6 le fam greater. It ià w-len &i wounded soldier la passd de-wn fr~~ advanoed field h<*pital that-he finat coms in contact witli the nursing sisters. Women are flot a-lalowed t-c iserve with the advanced field hospitais, their place thprë beiag taken by mal. orderlies. A weundeci nxn's stay in thle a- -Va-nced"'field-liospital -le.-usuaIly reckoncd by heurs only, while h. may romain la t-he stationary field licapital tor two6 or tbre-e days, or a week. Sooner or ilate'r, liowever, he ie sent down txhe âine e-f communication te the base hospital, ther 'e te 'ne- cove-r or die, as fate, end, the na- ture o-f hi. wounds, mey direct. IY perna-nentiy dise-bled, he i.j inva- lided-home. Oft course, t-he wounded madin f one oft the»e estabuliehmenta pre-seute s. v.ry different sepectacle f rom whait b. does when thle streteber-be-arere frst brin-g hlm la te the advanced feld-hospital i-n rear of tVhe fightin$ line. Ia t-hicone cave lie is sur- rounded by every oomfort; lxx the ot-ber he is da-zeci, sick, and heip- lees. Hfe May have been given firat &Î,or h.lieay have not. It ahde pends. Ina-ny case, lt wiIl buet o a ver>' neugh-and-rcady description. Ia t-b. Bxit-ieh An>', turing tle hast Boer War, VIe -favorite 'methoti of improvising a field d-rean«ng was te firat ca&p a lant-f niof easg Vobacco o-ver t-h. wond i- rder te check thle lbbetang, a-ad t-bau bint it up with t-be tape,-cf a putte.. Ltsounda rat-Aernnvitiag, but-lt wo-rkcd weil in pratice, the nicotine moting as a ooarse kint ot antieelp- tic. Aad It Lad tbl o-ne great a-- vanuts-g.n!at-leeyee ef podr, ps-- tis-t, euffeng Tommy Akin8; hue iras able later on t-o dry a-ad emoke t-he tboco. His feet Were Clean, Bih>', Vhs grecer's boy, 'a. uum- bening up t-le kit-dieu tains s-V Mme. Clarke's, witb bis a-rnis filled with parcels.,,, "!,Boy,", ca lied eut, Mrs.Cia-rike, somewbs-t sharpi>' froin sbove, "are yirfeet ea? "4Yeh'h,was t-be prompt repi>', "lt' on>' w pioýs ,-tb&.asdirty." The itching, burning, suffering and. lbs of sleep caused byr eczenxas, rashes and irritations of the skin and scalp, are atonce relleved and permanent skia health restored ina Most came by warra baths wvith Cuticura Soap follqwed bygtntle applicationsof Cuticura Ointment. CgUsaraSegtn*Oftm.u emotbrusl=2,ouîM bookieVè th Md1WtrsR tti=mt ai thé 1kim and sl entpodre.Addreu PottIer aga hof TIIREE RACES IN BELG1U11. Racfl Digèere ~es ire Obliterateti Beiginni, which proveti so grave a stumbling block te t-be a-dvance of the Gens-ns, is a la-nd o! tliree people& - thbe Fmeach-speaking na- tives, chiefly of Osîtlo blood; the Fiemiaga, or Flamands, a Teutonie people speuking a- Itaguage t-lut, ia its literany fommi, lu nearly * oee witbhs-writ-ten Dutcb. a-nd t-be Walloons, anotiher Qeltila people, descended oetVhs Gallic Beigne, whom Ca-esar -decianed t-be brs-vest ot all the Gauls. A lins dma-w f nom Liege south ofe Brussels te 'Calais cornes near te marking Vhs boundar>' bet-weeW French-speak- ing a-ad Fleish-spes-king Belginin, thougli the upper classes ail speali French, wliether t-bey speak Fleni- ishl or net, sud t-lens are Flinish- âpeaking worklngmen in aea-nly ahl -parts eoflBelginni, sorbes of whom, evea la Brusseis, hardi>' speak French at aIl. the Walloons, 'a mens ha-adiul, live lu t-li Ardennes liglaada, Ja-n fmom t-le'conet, have t-hein ewn lanigua-ge, a-ad maintsm a- soiee 'lat suspicions attitude t-o- wards both t-he Frentli-epeakin-g Belgia-as a-ad t-ho Flemings.. As t-o t-le Flemings, altheugh t-bey a-e ne as decided minonity, t-bey are in a mat t-ena-clous peo- pie, extremel>' conservaVive, an- den-ily Cat-bolic, a-ad se devcted te ,thei owa langua-ge t-ha-t t-hey have been a-lmost-ready-to go to warwitli t-hein Fnench-speaking feilow-citi- zens for the sake et preserviag lt-s officiai place la Vhs Kingdoxn of Beliurn. The war cf t-o-day lis-s obliters-ted for the t-lie being ln Beliuin,as it bas la lmeland, ra- cial diffenences t-ha-t recently ca-us- ed mut-ual hatred. ArcYour Feet Calloused? Easy te remoneo lump. by applilng Put, na-m'a Coen aad Wart Extractor. 1hi9 vpurel>' rettble nemedy acta painiea.sly and le guarnn-tued. Inoit on "Putnam' only. 25c. ver bottle. Royal Prlneéaiýd the Vur. Lt cannot be eaid'that the Royal Faniily is nx>t takin-S its ful ehare inx the defence of the EmpiTe, fer near- ly a dozen British Princes are serv- ing, ore about to serve with -the col- -ers. The Prince ef Wa.les is a Gren- adier Quairdeman, and!. his brother Prince'Albert il witAx the Fîrsit Bat- ie Fleet. Prince Louis cf Batten- berg, the First Sea Lord,bas his eldest son in the Nayy, while three sens cf the Princeqs Henry cf Bat- tenberg are ae with thxe colore., P-rince Arthxur et Counauglit and- the Quee-n"s b rothers-tihe, Duke oft Teck and Prince Aleander Kdt Teck- will probab!ly b. off te the front be- fore lônk. Prince Alber't cf Soliles- wig-Holetein, who bam applied for. a commission in the Bitieharmny, bas the advantage -of, having been- an on- cer in the Gerýmain arMY.« 'Carterbagl, 2uSd. Minarda Liniment Co.. Llmited. - Dear ire.-WIVle lin the country' laet' summer I wae badi>' bitten by anoequit- oe, no badi>' thua I tbought I would, be. -diuflgured for a coia1e- of weeks. I wasa adviued te try your Liniment ta alla>' the Irritation. andAd n o. -Thee e st -wan more than I ezpecte. a-fgw seplicationu 0 1 picier~eiiïë the Irritation, and pre. MINARDOLINMENT lualo a g.ood article to keev) off the. msquitois. Yourutruly, W. A. V. R. Blooifled Stock. "Jdiabp,"19said the ,-gentleman "I mnust get smre oft this blooded stock Jijeadae .Rmn me te order, ene cf thcse, Holstein hoùeýw EVTise>' AbbRave It. Tii. farmer lad who siood a-t gaze W ie dyL'lquit this job, I 'bet, -An' -be a-u engineer!.. The. engineer hali- saw andi thought, "BSoie ltime ,peixape 'IIlie - In luék M'yself A little fs-ra Iowlhat looks geod't-o me 1"' calm *éhcwa in ,prcv-isitiing Vhs trooptê,ait, the ifroit. The e c 1u~'! s'a miniiÎ& rýeaýày the point th" it p- Ipe4r5 to uav9imade, the gre Mt'eFt4 ifl pressi-on- u-pon bu aiter theeqmip- lere&Lcar-ts andcl irieè lcwthe, arîny on thxe sareh, end the -quan-~ tity anid variety cf fo'cd carnieci ap- pears to him aeoniahing., 'There is Compressed îhlay for tii. -animals, Oasro cf tes, cases cf: cocea, 'cases cf snugar- boxe. of tinned;. meast andi vegetables, and imnejani potsA foot .high. When the' camping grounrd le reached everything la. rendly, and in a 'le' minut;es tAi inenare able to absck ahot meai,. The correspondent altso'prises bis Own Conxniria-t arrangeixent4. The fann'liar Paris omnibus.' with the deeign*,tic>a boardse Madeleine- Bastille, Olxcky-Odiaon, Trocadero- Gare de l'Est, or thxe de1iveryý vans of the gréat Paris ehopsi, rumbIe Vo the front with immenee Wstocke cf meat &ad provisions. On co,point, lie iBays lie wishes the French ofcm- ýcer would imitaâte thxe English, anc« lxait la ia tlxeir tr-eatment -cf spies. It le lAIss huxainity, he eays, not t sho>ot the spy when h. e cuglit red- hand-sd, since hie may b-egin -again on themcrrow, anad bis activity ny cost hundreds of lives. ANoya Scotia Case of Interest to 11A-i Womeii Halifax Sends Out a Message of HeIp te -Many People.z Halifax, N.S., Dec. 15.-When Inter.1 vlewed at bier home at 194 Argyle St., Mmm.. Haverstock waa qxiite willlng to talk of ber pecullarly unfortunate case. "l waa alwaya 'blue' andi depresseci, toit weak, languld andi utterly unfitt fer any work. My stomach was so.e dlsordereci that 1. bdno, neappetite. I What I dld eat disagmeed. 1 suffered gmeatly froax dizziaess andci sclieaci- ache andi teareci a nervous breakdowa. 1Upon my dmuggimt's recommendation< 1 used Dr. Hamiltoa's Pilla:, -1 feit botter at once. Evemy dây 1I Improveci. Ia six weeks I was a well1 woman, cumeci comipletely after differ-1 cnt physiclans bnci faileci te help me.t It la for this reason that 1 strongi>' urge sufferera with letomach or diges- tive troubles te use Dr. Hamilton's Pille."~ 1Dr. Hamilton's Pills streagtnen the stomacx, Improve- digestion, strength- en the nerves and restome debllltated systema te health. By cleaasIag thxe, blooci of longstsndlag Impurittes, by. bringing the systeni te a ligh pointe et vigor, they effectually dbase away wearIness, depression andi diseuse. Gooci for young or elci, for men, for womon, for chilciren. Ail denlers seUj Dr Hamilton% Pillae o Mandralce and Butternut; Puzzled the Lawyer. Occ.nsionll1v ia court proceed- luge which seane reporter la tryilpg te get into the record some witneas will insist on simpîy shaking bis head ia answer te questions put te hlm by the attorney. There wa present sucb a witness at a hlearing -recently heki intbe. oounty of L.- A-gain and a-gain the atmney was obliged te repeat the aaswer for the benefit of the of- ficia! court 'reporter. Preeeatly the patience et ' the atitorney gave eut. "$Please aaswer that quesation," he aaid. "Wby den't you aaswer the question?1" "I did answer," was the retort ef the injured W'itxxess. "I slieok ,y 1headl ACCEPTED NEILSON'S'GIFT. 65,000 Chocolot. Bairu IToronto, Septemiber 21.-William Neilson Limted, Torouto, ,offered to eupply the Gýoverna'nent with 65,00 bars of -choWolee, 'foruse i whatever nianner 'the Govemýnment should cheose. Thisoffer,,bas been graitfulIly ac- cepted by 4thi Minister ef MiLitia, and the Chocôat.. la to eipped te' Valartier, -and fron. heewill be reihiçped" 'wi th' ieCanpdian Comm>issariait te Europe. 'The'sev- erilfbx&lred mmbrsc testf cf *IIom, N4,ilson ted, have aloc -dona&tedOP , à, oe i y, pay te th C ixaln PRed 'trousFuad Golag te "ruos. BARK~R MODE 124DAB~ N Ew 1U 0 POTATI) OIS. BS. On aecountet'Uie w*r, thsIU s113iili b. orobably Une best tiue ta buy youi seeepotatoft. for next ear. Write me for prl.iS t t, jVa.ii. (0. 7rI1 out ToiSu ý709 hvMosr4 b pt me biter. too lmat. D. i. mA DOUBLE TRACINQ C.P.E.. The Eat WI11 Be SiMilàrly Treatel As the West. While the, vast enterpriseCi_ double tracking the enitiro Canadian Pacifie system is one that ca.nnot, in the nature of the case, be fiifly realized for yea.rs, yet when àt 10 staited that there wiU Ïbe sbioetly 1,095 miles of double traok between Port Arthur and Calgary, leavinig gaps oo n.ly something, like 165ý miles-one gets a rèa1izing notion- of the work involved, cf grea.t dis.- tance cevered and ci le ou~rage and persiistence 'involved in" this large 'and notable underta.king of, duplicating the *.whcle 8etm whiéh comprisùs some 13,=00 ile; of track.i0f -course thoeohief c 4on- sideriation 18 t6- WeÀ,t- wthom -ra- pid development called for tAis D6w policy; bu-t the Est will be simni- larly tireated in time,, especially the lines whieh conneet large -con-, tres of population, and- prprise b-Igger business;ýThe ceet Wiltl be se enormeus s Vo baffle exaét fig- ures at.the moment; -the. double tracking, to il1 b. built--in ýavsst- ly difereait.wa%ýy 'from ,tibe.,original rwilway, *hich waa put through In a -tremendous hurry. The present double tracki'ng wiIl offer a finish- ed railway, in e.very re-spect both as regarde -the weight of rails, the. strength Mi bridges, ani the per- fection cf; roadbed.' Thus applied, the- new pelicy will work out for inimediate return. Cola Feet.- During a mIarriage ceremony in- &ctland recently the bridegreoon looked extrenxely -wretched, an&' lie got se fidgetv standing firsit on one foot and thien on the other,- that the "best man" decided he would find out -what thxe trouble -'was. "What,'a up, Jock?" lie whis4pe-r-- 'ed,- "Hae ye lest the ring?" "No," answered the unhappy -one, with a woeeagone look "the ring's safe eneugh; but, man, V've lest mna enthusiasm." Mln2rd'à Liniment cures -çancruiL. Diseretion. "Pop what do vou nxean by say- ing discretion is the- bebter part ef valoir 1" "Generally speaking, Mny son, we axean that- disc-retion can rua S oi C'rasulatled yelids, Eyes iniiat bycxpo- E y - ~sur e Sua1,1, asfand 111,,I * ikIyclievedbyMrlàe y'ulYSE:zdyltNeSmartînî, - -- just ye èomfort. At VOUÉ D uggzs Sc-peritoulte. MnueE)>. hmviTué2C. For Bâh 01olshe Fmask Dmftgistor mNiusye Remeu! .,. Chiago floue pe-ople prune Vhieini geuca- logical trees by c.utt-ing th eir poor !mmInerd'sLiMiment cump Durîis. lIs Z&n~biilwAy gýuard- (te0 a.gentle- sMO'klng emanmn-"f yt .want toe mokla t'in sc p-mmet airy9u iustsiter putyorcia eut ômgô-xut-etle noxt- cardage." BIG- VALUE SM L CO a. Winut - -Al@@kt, wluh fancy TORONTO -The iand i place tr4)P5 perwi the G the cn leader * ther 1 a-dth, CA loai 11se Yî charge tlis ' i C-cpe 13 RuISFru clsng hleu evei Graix zen- *pensý ( 'y and andy * th Thle (.;e 0! lai gr 1 .

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