Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 11 Mar 1915, p. 2

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-l-r-----.---.-.. M MERCY, OF THE FRENCI General A de-heh Iron Peril up: Propen- by the Proud: troop. h the Chum. diatriet . , between Rheinl and tho Argonne forest, which has been new every day tor more than two weeks, has resulted, wording to the ow commu- nique issued on Wednesday MW in the oeeupation o 5 huge Iectkm‘ of the ground which bu been strongly held by the Germans since their retreat to the Aime. It is believed here that the Ger- mans are eoocentrsting forces in Flanders for (new drive nt the Channel ports, Doubly Calais. This belief is based on n iiespatqh from London saying that the German commanders have received orders to stop all trathe on roads leading from the interior to Belgium to West Flanders in order to prevent the leaking out of news regarding the movement of troops. on FILLED WITH GERMAN RlBllilllilll Dismal Scenes Greeted Russians on Regaining Town Mter Three Days in Elena's Ends. A despatch from Petrograd says: The Russians on a-entering Przaroysa after its occupation for thus days by tho Germans are de- ported to have found nearly every house filled with wounded or sick German soldiers. In addition there wvm Russians who had been pri- wners for four days. Except for the small service rendered them by the inhabitants. the men had vir- tually been without 2MP. .. . - 'hrim - .Wee_-_if_ -e' Hundreds of men had died from lack of medical 'services, and their bodies lay unburied. The streets wow barricaded with agricultural implements and household furniture and there was a great sanity of provision, Scores of houses had hoon riddled bv shells, and the provmom. ace been riddled by municipal build troyed. llUJI‘l. Many prisoners are being brought back to Przasnysz. having been cap- tured from the German rearward by the Russian cavalry. Along the roads there are evidences of a hasty retreat. hli Supplied Free by Department all Agriculture. Tho catalogue of publications by the Department of Agriculture, Ot- tawa. which cnn be had free of all expense on addressing the Publi- cations Branch, comprises Bulle- tins on every subject connected with farming. including vitality and treatment of seed, cultivation of every known species of crops, re- ports of practiqal tests of values, reports of experiments in all forms of agricultural production and in every section of the country, on dairy products of every kind, on soils, on posts and weeds, on the “Hasn't-S and their appropriateness tor different kinds of farm labor, on' the breeding and raisin of every species of live stock, and on many other subjects. Both the labor in- volved and the variety issued by the Department are indicated by the statement that, apart from the annual reports for the past twenty- one years of experimental farms and ottreers of the Department, the first series of Bulletins issued were 38 in number, the second series IS, the pamphlets 8, farmers’ circulars 5, nvbihitinn pin-"lav! " 'ed 23.:ch The Lvuekioinn Linear»: 5. Those are independent of the specialized branch publica- tions which include the following: Entomological Branch, 4; Live Stock, 30; Dairy and Cold Storage Enoch, 41; Health ot. Animals ranch. 34; sud Seed Branch, 10. There are other special publiey tions all of which we set Ionh in tho trrntuitouslr supplied oata- have. All Berlin Theatre? A despatch from Berlin says: The Vouiohe Zeitung says it len‘ns tlust the Government hue decided to close 511 the Berlin theatres tron! April lat. Protests from sew oral quarters already have been HEALTH OF BRITISH FORCES Neither Ty phus Itit'rt,TrRhr, PrBLtCATiON'. A despatch from London says: The first six months of the war passed without a single case of ty- phus or of cholera in the British army. including both the expedi- tionary tones and the troops in the British twining camps. Smallpox chained only one victim in the United Kingdom, but returns in this respect have not been given out by the armies in Fume 5nd Ity,"' Of 184 cases of diphtheria, y six ended {wall . Bo In the when] cause of ','l'duit",' among the troops] bu been pneumonia which resulted‘ in 357 deaths, out oi 1,608 cases. ( A: tetreas.ytihar ees-ca, 685 Mo! t;idrfri level-nod 49M are reported in the atf"t,'itg tome, and cos-M 47 the“! in the camp. Mt the and“ Pit, clout.~ Scarlet 101R. 0W 1 one!“ e deaths a in Air" tiexnartr lane, a wind 1,379 out! iiiar, $oeoe, "ioiGhns supplirmentary l Joffre Can Do What He Likes With the Germans In the Argonne Kniiing'"€m' party des -Giered to Close. hus Nor Cholera Has Appeared Since the Beginning' of. the War ciel statement In issued late on Wednesday night by the French Wu OfBee 2 “It can be stated that in the Ar- gonne, where we had been constant- ly attacked since December, the roles in the last three weeks have been reversed. Today we have trained the undisputnble ascenden- ‘cy. These local actions. of which ’the Argonne is the theatre. show [that more and more the enemy is at _ ' . ,A_ -..-., an. cy. luv-c - h---,m the Argonne is the theatre. show that more and more the enemy is at our mercy and that our moral gu- periority is assured. "We have obtained this result by a series of limited operation/see- “We have obtained a series of limited " geticslly carried out, the German forges V a senes- OI nun-nu "'r'""-C-" geticslly carried out, and although the German forces which confront us are extremely courageous, we feel that at a given point and mo- ment we are masters and can do what we wish." J tt ' what We “15". The statement gives the details of one of these engagements. which. it says. occur daily and Show the splendid ardor of the troops. FRENCH l'lllSONERS Ittyrrit?i. 254i Wounded Soldiers From Ger- many Arrive in France. A despatch from Lyons, France, says: Maimed French prisoners of war who were exchanged for Ger- man wounded prisoners arrived here on Wednesday in a train of 18 care, bearing the Red Cross and in charge of the Swiss branch Of this‘ organization. The excRange was made at Geneva. The former pris- oners, among whom there were many whose arms or legs had been amputated, aggregated 250. They were the first of such exchanged men to arrive in France. Many of them were attired in old civilian garments, and some even wore the jackets of German uni- forms. Pinned to the coats of all were small bunches of flowers given them during their journey through Switzerland. After the men had been given food at the railroad sta- tion they were sent to various hos- pitals. Those who were question- ed made no complaint of the treat- ment that had been shown them in the German hospitals. Italy Will Regain A despawh from Rome says: It is learned that, the Italian Govern- ment is not interested in the modus vivendi as regards Germany and , , _ AL.‘ vivendi as regards UUruuun‘y m... England which was proposed by the United. States, since it is regarded as certain to fall. Italian, appro- val is unnecessary and inexpedient, since it would be apt to be miscon- strued, and myuld be an limitation strued, QEEdma'm a. limitation on future freedom of action in case of intervention, . The Italian Government will re- frain from joint action of any kind intended to lessen the effect of war or hasten peace, and will not take the initiative nor support the initia- tive of neutrals. Italy’s position is to protect, unaided, her own inter- ests, hence she will not alter the policy followed since the outbreak oi the war until she deems it ht to BRITAIN'S Pb',N s'10N SCHEME. 10 per Jiri.' Jt denim, with 12 per cent. of disablement. . . Brilliant Exploit A despatch from Petrograd says: The Russian aviator Paschaloff, ac- companied by a mechanic, flew over the Austrian lines in Southern Po- land recently and killed five mem- bers of a patrol party. He captur- ed a sixth, and 1ci,',"i him to the tail of the machine’s rune, return- "rd to the Russian lines. and 22 deaths in Great Britain. Measles, a disease associated with children, sent 1,045 recruits to the English training camp hospitals, with 65 deaths, trhile ghe_sea‘soned men on the Continent had only 175 sick from this cause, with two deaths. Comidering that the British army, regular and territorial, be- gen the war with a half million men, and has since expanded to about 2,500,000, the low death rate a said to have probably established a record. A . 'I'his report of the Canadians be-' ing mowed down by camp 'fi1'll,d,'t proved to be unfounded, and the' Admiralty now anyl in regard to a similar rumor affecting tho naval dim in training at the Crystal PM that only two per cent. of tho 9,000 on as now on the sick report. >wh va a Russian Airman. iiiiG Joint Action. It EARLY HSSIDRY Ill Ilil.lllfll GHOSTS SEEM T0 1rhr'NT Till-INCHES l?i FLANDERS. Since British Are Now l'pon Fields ot Their cient Honor. The British soldier is not the type of man who sees ghosts easily. Sometimes as he stands on sentry- go in the early dawn, chilled to the marrow-bones after a. night watch at Ypres, or lies on his stomach in, the slush beyond the first line of trenches on the Yser, he seems to see vague trhadosrfigurea advancing towel-tie him through the mist. His finger trembles on the trigger. The safety of the men sleeping behind him depends upon his vigilance . . . iShall he shout out the challenge? "Halt! who goes there l" . . . He would look a. bloomin’ fool if those shadows were only the specks of durkness that _flotrt before his strain- This interesting picture shows a. detam 0x rrc‘x', l m parts of the Argonne forest in ambusoade. A loolrot observes the movements of Germars and communicates tion to his comrades below. One of the soldiers in the ing a. machine gun at the German trenches. uulnu-caa van-w "w- .,__V. - - _ ed eyes. Perhaps he has the giddy iim-iams after three days under thell-fire. He stares and stares through the white mist which steals across the marshes, suspecting Ger- mans, writes a, correspondent from Belgium. Fields Ilimoric. He never suspects ghosts-aryl yet I think that old ghosts must be astir in Flanders now that a Bri- tish army is encampcd there again, with Edward, Prince of Wales, on the Headquarters Staff. Out of the mists of time there m'u'st surely the Headquarters Staff. Out of the mists of time there must surely come some of those English gentle- men and mens-tat-arms who more than tive centuries ago came with another Prince of Wales, called Edward, to fight against heavy odds, in and about all those towns in Belgium and France otvfl'il'li",1 again, have become familiar in our mouths as household words-St. Omer, Ypres, Arms, Soissons, Rheims, St. Quintin, Gravelines, Dunkirk, Calais and Abervllle, Lille and Armentieres. l - Historic Spooks. Private Thomas Atkins doesn't bother about historic spooks. But his officers, who are presumed to have read a little history, occasion- ally have glimpses of things beyond} the length of their noses, and some‘ of them are conscious now, in France and Flanders, of voices which speak to them out of the past, and of ghost-fame which peer at them out of the shell-wrecked towns of Belgium and in the dark streets of French sets-Porta. They are English Voices and Eng- lish Incas, belonging to men Oi the lsame type and blood and slum td 7 - __ ' A - Am}: A Egmseiwzes. The'K are the ghosts or their own fotefat on w o walk with them alonsthe. yes of Ge 1r1sat1t',t, Kallt’ln nun-a vuu ..,_V_ __ who stand beside the guns and come r out of history to give a, greeting to , these modern, knights. l Bitterent Weapons. i Where the shells are shrieking 1 over Ypres, smashing the beauty of l ,the Cloth Hall, shattering the old Flemish houses on each side of the l market square, 9, little group of l ghosts may have been seen standing I in the shelter of an ancient arch- way. Sir John Froissart would have been useful as a guide, for he could have pointed out each man as he moved about in his ghostly armor, and would have narrated stirring tales of adventure and chivalry about the tall man with the eagle nose and steely eyes. and about the little stout man with a soar down his cheek, and the lean, bronzed fellow who watched a bursting shall l with a. hand hbovo his eyes, as I though it were a. falcon stooping to ' its prey. I Ancestors of British omen-s. Perhaps "Eye-Witness", knows . the names ot those silent ghosts,‘ 5 though he has not yet written about , them in his Wiles, owing to b the severity of the censor. Be 1 knows, I am sure, that amongthose 1 who watched the destruction of the t Cloth Hall were Sir Jollm Chanda: k .--"the flower of knigtsthood/'-etd Lord T homes Percy, Sir Godtrey de l From-h Machine Gun Oiru'atinr Ire Now Fighting l n- tshc, x s a. Jetai, _ . M . rt--"-'-' m7" Harcourt, and Lord Reginald Cob- ham, Lord Thomas Holland, and Lord Ihelawarr, Lord Robert Ne- ville, Lord Thomas Clifford, the Lord Bourchier, Lord Latimer, Sir Walter Manny - and many other knights and Squires, "whom," as old Froissart said, "I cannot now name." They, the ancestors of British officers who are now fighting in Flanders, knew every inch of this country along that line which we call "the front," at least as far as from Rheime to Nieuport. They rode under their banners over the flat marehlands of Flanders, they banquetth in many of the grand halls which now lie in ruins under the German eagle, they stormed at the gates of many towns which are now filled with British soldiers,~ their larnnes glittervd down many of the roads where the winter sun now glints upon the lances of French dragoons; and with the chi- valry of mediaeval knighthood they did many acts of courtesy and va- lor and heroic adventure upon the same ground where the men under Sir John French have upheld the old traditions of their breed with no less courage. Also, according to the way of war, still adopted by German officers and men, they rav-‘ aged the countryside through which' they passed, burned farmsteds and pcasaaes' cots, swept it clean of all food, looted its treasures, and laid it waste, so that there was desola- tion and famine where the English army had passed. The Siege ot hires. It was Lord Henry Spencer, Bishop of Norwich, who undertook the siege of Ypres in the days when English arrows sunk with a. shriller V note than the modern shell. "Day after day," writes Fmis- sart, "the assault continued, but the place still held out. At last the English, finding that they could not take the town by storm and that they had expended all their artilu lery, resolved to have a. quantity of faggots collected with whidh to hll up the ditches, so that they might advance and fight hand to hand with tho garrison, undermine the walls, and, by throwing them down, effect an entrance. Every road and dyke round Ypres was moistened with English blood in those old days, and now, fighting side by side instead of against the Frendh and the Flemings, English blood-our bravest and; beUt--drips down to the same soil which is mix- ed with the dust of heroic bones, of English tsrrow-heads, of steel breaat-pltstes and riohirohased casque, and of all the panoply of "nediaeval knighthood, now dis- leer! into the chemistry of the earth's graveyards. I Applies to Franck Also. I wonder it an of our soldiers hear thq “Emmi challenge come ringing down the past outside the walls of Bourbonrg, nee Dnnkirlr, where a few weeks ago I waited in _ the railway station with a. group of peasants who took mo for a Ger- man spy. The old glow and color have gone out of this game of death. The other day, wandering about the dark streets of Calais, I thought back to the days when the Lion of England sat at a high board in this town, with many knights richly dressed waiting upon their lord be- neath silken banners and "llli,i'i'i/ torches. Along the trenches of the Yser, and in the shell-wrecked town of Dixmude, the new way of furhrhtg did not seem to me picturesque or chivalroue, ‘or with any gey adven- ture in it, an when the forefathers of the men who now lie in the swampy” trenches challenged their foes to single combat, and praised the valor of their tttT and made a pagentr, of awe. -,-----u-- A man is notr necessarily a. harsh tauhmaater because he pays strict attention Ix? 1ruairyssts, . ODS. p303: (;iUTiErG Hut we]: and rye will we a. cold usually have eional mistake hi0 fl have no kick! axnintt. Ancestors Fought m From the Tree-Top. Fronrh in the outlymg A lockout at the top 1municates his informa- ers in tlw tree is train- ft, make an oom- 1iie friends would the outlying pre iiiiiiiriiuii moans Bacon. long clout 131-2 to Me per lb, in use Iota Hunk Medium. " to tt 140; do., heavy 14 1.2 to the; rolls. " to 14 IAC; breakfast bacon. 18 to 1B ltr, Inch. 20 to 21c; boneless bath. Mc. Lami-Martret quiet: pure. tub, 11 b4 to 12et romnound. 93-4 to IN in tube. a,nd -L'GTriirari" quid: pure, IN; compound. 93.4 to 100 10 to 101-40 in pull. Dealem axe paying u tol lot deliveries on track here Straw is quoted at " to , car lotswon _trturh pere.‘ car lots on bracx new. mar-No. 1 new hay in guntad It 817.50 to 91§;_No. 2_ttt...U6.50 to 16, and No. 3 a my ib'siuo} . WInnlm Gum. Winnipeg, Much '.--sh--wheyyt--rNt. 1 Northern, 81.43 1-2; No. 2 Northern, 81111-2; No. 3 Northern. 81581-2; No. 4, $1.34; No. 5, $1.29 b4; No. 6 $1.25 5-4; feed. 81.20 3.4. oaus--No 2 0.W.. 61%; No. ' CW. 681.2c; extra. No. 1 feed, 681-10. rlax--No. 1 N.-W.C.. $1.61 b4; No. 2 CAF., ".58 b4. Montreal. Man-h ,.-prrn--hmprieatt No. 2 yellow. to to 8ie. Odtr-ctutaditrrt West. ern, No. 2, 70 bk; No, T, 67 Ide, exam. No. 1 feed. 67 t.N.. No. 2 local white. 65 Its; No. 5 10011 white, 64tK, No. 4 local white. 651-30. Buley. Mun. feed. " to 'thr, do.. muting, Mk to II. Flour, Man. Spring wheat patents, timta $8.10; poc- omits, $7.60; anon bakers', 07.40; Winter panama, choice, tl.'lat, mam", rollers. $7.80 to 38; do.. bags. 83.70 to $3.80. Rolled oats. barrels. W.25; do., bags. 90 Ibm., 35.50. Bran ‘27. Shorts. $29. Middhnu $33. Mouillle, $54 to $58. "tp, No. t, per ton. ' lotto, ’18 to 819. C ease. ttttatt weal- -- " " A..-“ ---a....... " car lots. I“ to my. unease. - m... ems, 1714 to " We; 'dttegtt ”stuns, 17 to trtM. Butter. choicest creamery. 35c; seronO Me. Page, fresh. 32 to Me; to lax-ted. 27to ak; - o. 1 stock. M to tscams. 2, 22 tft A'. Pomtoes. per bu. cu- Iota. gi-tVit; bte Minneapolis. March '.--Wheat-Np, 1 hard. $1.43 7-8; No. 1 Northern. $1.39” to $1.45 b8; No. 2 Northern. 01.55” to 31.40 T8; Hwy. 81.38 H to $1.38 H. Conr- No. 3 yellow, 69 to 69 we. Oats-No. ' white, 551-4 to 53 1-10. Flour and bran undhnnged. Dulut ' March '.--Wheii-No. 1 hard. $1.45; No. 1 Northern, $1.M; No. 2 North. ern. $1.59 to $1.41; lay. 81.42. Linseed. was}; close, M.“ SA; Mu. 31.85 b4; July, " . Toronto, March $.--A few flne balloon sold a! $8. larger lots brought 87.85. while otill other load Ittts changed hands at $7.65 and i7.50. Chane bumher beau changed hands at $710 to $7.75. with good at " to 87.50. Medium, $6.50 to " tair trom $6 to $6.50. and common from 85.50 to 86. For better classes of bulls from $5.75 to $6.50 Ila plld, and for can of the limo quality from $5.60 to $6.40. Iod- ium cows brought $5 to $5.50. Milken 1nd springer: changed hands freely at and! prices. Good slackers. $5.75 to $6.85, with lower grades " " to 85.15. Calves, u to $11 tor good and $4 to $8 for interior. Lambs, 89 to I10, enjom for rough nun. sheep. $6 t.o " tor light and $5 to $6 toe heavy. Swine, $8.15 " can being paid in most cases. Montreal. Much l-Prime beevea. 114 to Tide; medium 6 to 7140; common. 4 3.4 to 5 Mr. Cows, 840 to :80 ads; sprint- etm. no to $10 each. (than. t Y, "to a Mo. _ ..n., IA... .A An “an. German Crown Prince Said to be in Disgrace. PTM. - Lu v-v w"... V_V.,,, __ - sheep. 5 to 5 We. Lambs, 8 to ' tW. Botta, 8 1-4 to 8 1-20. 4 'o"""""""'"-" _-' w _ .4 of Crown Prince Frederick William from the German reports has re- sulted in numerous rumors. The Daily Express, which a, yfar ago A despatch from London says: Speculation as to the long absence - - n . " 1, , " \I7:II_‘__. ”""‘.7 “'"r' - W ,, _ tht story of a, quarrel between the aiser ’aud his son, prints a Geneva despatch tsscribiog to an Innisbruck source the definite statement that the Prince is in dis- grace and is living in Berlin in se- clusion by order of the Kaiser. King Sends .t.reteaye, A despatoh from London says! King George on his return from I. visit bola}: (let, tfem, a, "heilte','o' to Admi ir . 011 ,. e licoo in ()rdl"L Edd: “I Lt l[men otr; representative ships of all classes and am much impressed by tho state of their efheieney and the splendid spirit which animatns both officers and men. I have not the slightest doubt my navy will uphold its great traditiohs." _ Shipments. trf. Sorter A despatch from Milan My '. Not- withstanding rigid precautio‘s tak- en by the authorities to prevent the 'e-exportation from Italy to belligerent nations of goods classed as contraband of war, it bu been discovered that Inge quantities of copper have been sent to Berlin concealed ia, _tr.ue load.ed with “LEE; "aiisiius now have in- creased their vigilance in attempt- ing to dheok Wilfredo. In order to facilitate the hmdling‘ of mail‘ut the front and to insure; prompt delivery it in requested that all mail be addressed as follows '.-- (a) Rink, (b) Name, (e) Regimental number, (d) Oomplny, squadron, ham or other unit, (e) Battalion. (f) 'ihFi (g) mm (or Second) ' n 0diitLntreU, fo Brigid: iriiriiiiilae, F6100. Oihss, London. Each salad May and “at. United Mam Multan. Neutral Markets. LIV. Stock "when. Addressing of Hall. American. " " {fig 13' 38.50 a ton To Adiniral J ellicoe. HiddeH in Cabbages. grades. " follow: tor car. A tow, tute. b01120? mime. tad at mm. Wurrterr? and No. ' " m or 90 It... ac;_inf°'3°'- K-. Lbtrrstor, outside. m Tb ton, "m to no. my Post TRY TO 'iiiiij, 1lililii.flluNMrlii. Incendiary Bombs Aimed " Parade Ground Whu. She Was Reviewing Troops .. A deepens}: from Paris up: Tu Germans, warned by spiel who still succeed in operating in Flanders, sent five aeroplanes laden with in- cendiu'y bombs over La PM!” while Queen mama; of the Bel- ’-~-=-- a}... 0M6! while Queen nun-w... - --- . signs was reviewing. the GM” Regiment and the Tenth Infamy on Wednesday, As soon u the Taubes came abroad: of the city they began to drop their bombs, - patently aiming for the psi-$0 grounds. Some of the bombs Ity near the Red Cross Hospital, while ‘others dropped close to the iGV villa, but none did my damage. While the presence of the uno- planes, which were so high as to be almost invisible, created excite- ment, they were not allowed to in.. terfere with the review. Cnmind- ful of the fact that the proceedings were punctuated occasionally by lthe explosion of a. bomb, the band i=ijjiilr; MAKE ADMISSIONS Progress A despatoh from by way of Berlin l contains the bare that source that t! fleet has had f.ny , A despatoh from Constantinople by way of Berlin aLrAmsteryiam contaim the bare admission from that source that the 'ru1o-Fretush) fleet has had any success. It ayav “The British battleship' can- pletely ouutrnged the forts, the guns of which were unable to reply effectively, so that the battleships gained part of the desired effect. Moreover the fleet has received re- inforcements and now more than forty big battleships are lying " the Dardanellee, besides ' gmt the Dammit-“tn, -V..-___ "__ v number of small cruisers, torpedo boats, destroyers and other craft. "The further advance of the Beet seems to be impossible owing to the chain of mines and the forts. An Mother and Three Children Were Tapped. A deepawh from Quebec “ye: Four persons perished early on Wednesday when hre broke out in a, dwelling-house in Saint Souveur Ward. partly destroying a. two- story building and burning to death Mrs. Arthur Talbot, 35, and three of her children. All the victims were trapped by the Gates and burned beyond recognition. The farmer who conserves his best stock for breeding will profit greatly in the future. At St. John, N.B., adetadhment from H.M.S. Charybdis were enter- tained by the Mayor and lending citizens. “Stop!” thundered the mm id the barber chair, who was having his hair out. "Why do you insist wpon telling me these horrible, blood-curdling stories l" "Pen sorry, sir," said the barber, "but when I tell Stories like that the hair stands up on end and makes it much easier to cut, air." ANOTHER SUBMARINE SUNK The U-8 Sent to the Bottom by Destroyers of th French Dover Flotilla A despatch from Paris says: 'Hie German submarine U-8 has been sunk by destroyers belonging to the Rover flotilu, according to un- nouncement by the Ministry of Mar- Ine. The crew were taken prisener. The submarine U-8 was built in 1908, and was a vessel of 300 tons displacement. She had a, upeed of 13 knots above water and 8 knots submerged. Her maximum "dim of operations was 1,200 miles. The If mm" "as mum mun HEARING an cum Ball tr "tiatillON" Don't Stay Deaf Any Longer-- Follow the Proeesaio-Utre Catarrhoamte. Nine cases in ten of had hearing are cunble. REE PERISHED LN FIRE. By curable we don't mean rollove- tutie--we mean that the sense ot heu- ing can be permanently brought hack Catarrh usually cusses the deafness. Cure the mun-bu condition and you remove the causes of your poor hear. ins. "it you were sure you had eatarrhat deafness you would use . real cure at onee--ot course you would. Them is a cure' tor 'ou-one that in White Fine 3 ft. 0 ins. e ft. 0 ins. at reduced prices in lots Less than I00 - "tttt each I00 to 200 . . _ 95c. qatttt 200 to soo - - Mtt. each PAUZE & GOHIER. Lumber Merchants of Combined 4,000 HOWE“ ”WES. 'T" 1822 Cote des Nerges Also. in Mock p, bined Fleets Against the Iyar. danelles Forts Write or wire orders to laid up . lively W, and m. mew-ho 1'l'lltd'l"l,d'l te, ttro mite" "nedied {you In 9er, and the m. The Queen, ”and” of thin also, m het to". like . veteran. And her um. trade ,tenqt1.setstd the nerve of the crowd of citizens who were massed on the dunes. They divided their game between the review and the We, which only could h.- de, tooted when the sunlight gl'med from their unwed sides. or Hum their It,t'th' signs. The 211 mm, Utttres o the Belgians were lezuht into m, and sprayed the I ', mini. but without any result, and tho Germ-m. after drawing: ail m4, bombs, liier.Teared over trtir ard, the iuied of the enemy. WWW Duke of Braham. the uir,iiipett to.the Belgian t'rsr mp. had We WW tendered 1.. hun ll“ loudly, ami. received 13 P A1h_ "rut the aootimpnniment of Tals:. and: from land would be by the Turu,.who hare , strong "my composed of moons." _ . . \l_._:.\1 uwyu. A deepetch from Munich any -1 at Field lush-.1 Baron Von Der lv 1'7. who was not to CornstannthW from Germany to act as the mix --r' of the Turkish Governmum m m w" tery aid”. has telegraph-d l. w; German military headquarters mg is tor tttp German artillery 'jh. out, on the ground that, they u t' w needed uetreptlr for the dam .7 , the Daadaneileo. The field mm in received . laconic reply, aw ttr"' patch aye. stating that the my mene pteded t.!teir artillery -fh rs It A de-tels from (Admin -‘_. Mum, an: Helliuh‘s comet. ll _ u visible in the morning "tu' through a amall te1eBexrrre, is 1 creasing in brilliwcy. and v make in peritryum passage an -.1 the sun on July 20, accordinu computations made by Pia-{u Crawford of the Student's (m.- mrys my. Calif.. and .'l munced at the Han-”d (Hum- tory on Wednesday. The put. light of the comet on March l 'd oileuUtod It LN, Ind Born)”, to the amputation, this ui' crew to 2.17 by_ln.rch 1'7. Biggest Peryyt.itn MELLISII’S COMET Tr,tilllll A despuoh from London V Them are 450.000 men of Iris) l or deacon in Great Britain “h of military age and 125.000 of I have already joined the arm) cording to fitrueeo prepared La secretary of the Irish Km league. This proportion. h- am, is much larger than --n ‘drown by my other national” Her complainant. was 12 men The U-ts was a Mr of the idis on: U-tr, ,rhish early in the N" sank the Britidh cruiser: Irwr-r, Aboukir tad Cw in the y, rt.'-, Set, and in October out. the Brr hi: cruiser Hawks to the bot-Pm WreekyrtgrieAed up late in 1?erwa use! ended three torpedo tubtsy iiit' in, GTitGa stated in 'ltd that the minutiae had as Gran-Idiom. littoral Will PICS Round the Sun July Nth. Any iruiiaurr imply you Calar who, or "qt can for $1 sevurv lt Pratt m ttndatr PM! wnpper trrm tho - _-_-- . .-,____..a., banana-one cis., wanton. t “36 your best ifiirissh in the Army. would be vein med Montreal. gnu f l' u been C4bt Canada. at an " fl " ‘18 tt or and 'k'8 T , " 569. NOTES AND col We are apt and freely in this is the m -ld.qier k, of it will be it we fol be the In! most decent loss othe to sum and war tt ll ll tt strum-TN tneat death" (n What mud The Ben " to ind WIN "

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