Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 5 Aug 1915, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

IERS an. “to: was. dough- on and In: in ITED IIAL way: st Rh I m for MI. he h P de " thor of several standard works on English jurisprudence nnd Judicial in- stitutions. is possessed of a most ex- Ribot is o mun of lofty stature, Ipare in future, and yet of command- ing and distinguished presence, con- veying the impression of great cul- ture and refinement. He is perhaps the most autely and decorative fig- um in French public life to-day, is a most accomplished musician, the au- Ribot is the only great French statesman of the present day who in: an American wife. He has been happily married for more than two- score years to Miss Mary Burch of Chicago. ~â€"-~â€"~, w»~mun§ u. ucstcl, “ALIA all, to have their savings earn inter- est, than to lie idle in places of con- cealment. th 1-"... li- Peeple new lied Calla-ea in Government has Restored. France in her hour of stress looks to two men for the 'reservation of her political and economic indepen- dence. These men are Joseph Joffre, the generalisaimo of her armies, and Alexandre Ribot, the Minister of Fin.. ance. who, since the beginning of the eonfliet, has borne the burden of the responsibility of furnishing the money, and, above all, the supplies needed for the operations on land and sea for the defence of La Pattie. " I, s Thrmars mm nhtgijiiijiiiifi ".an " VERY EFFICIENT AND HIGHLY ItE8PEcrEo. ICE CREAM The consumption of City Dairy lee Cream is in- creasing every season. The local dealer has not the facilities, besides he makes so little that he cannot turn out a uniform lee Cream. Discriminating shop keepers everywhere are selling City Dairy Ice Cream instead of their own make, and their patron- age is increasing because City Dairy lee Cream is better and the quality is uniform. Mr. Alexandre Ribot (IT'S A FOOD) TORONTO. The name that was on everybody's 'ips in connection with the affair was that of the late Baron Mohrenheim, then envoy of Russia. When, later, Ribot was accused in the Chamber of Deputies of using his official position as Minister of For- eign Affairs to shield one of the prin- eipal personages incriminated in the Panama treandal-it was the only charge of the kind ever brought against him-he indignantly denied the imputation on his honor, and de- clared that if he had asked Baron Cottu and his lawyers to abstain from revealing the identity of "X," it was because he had learned that the name of the ambassador in Paris of a friendly foreign power might other- wise have been drawn into the discus- sion. Cook-Well, mum, me reasons are unse1fish wans. I want to give some other girl a chance at the joy of livin’ with yez." Mistress-Why us, Norah ? tensive knowledge of American and English literature, and has for the lam ten years been a member of the Academy of France. Friend of Russia. M. Ribot may be described as the father of the Franco-Russian alliance. It was he, who, as a Minister and Premier from 1890 to 1893, despatch- ed the French fleet on its memorable visit to Kronstadt, on which occasion the convention between the two coun- tries was finally concluded and pro- claimed to the world by Alexander m. He further cemented the bonds of union between the two nations when he returned to office as Premier and as Minister of Finance in 1895. we partially rumed towers. The Russians in turn shelled the church, completing the wreck. The foundation of this church was laid in 1631, architects from Greece and artisans from Italy being brought to Poland to superintend the construction. It was not completed until 1890. . It contains a thaumaturgic figure of the Vir- gin, which was not destroyed during the bombardment, and the peasants for miles about are now making pilgrimages to the ruins to gaze upon the "Miracle of the Sacred Shrine." RUINS or FAMOUS CHURCH NEHR WARSAW DESTROYED BY ARTILLERY This picture shows the famous Roman Catholic Church of Rokitno, in the go ernmen sian Poland, which was destroyed in the battle between the Germans and Russians durir 12-19, 1914. The Germans first shelled it, and then capturing the hill on which it is locate the partially ruined towers. The Russians in turn shelled the church, completing the wre: of this church was laid in 1631, architects from Cream: and artinnnc frnm Itchy 1min" Ium Altruistic. the Slgn. are Look for you leaving Look in pkgs, for the little book, "The Road to Wellville." "Thisre's a Reason." A ted days' use of Grape-Nuts will show one a way to physical and mental strength well worth the trial. A most valuable feature of Grape- Nuts is the natural mineral elements (phosphate of potash, etc.,) grown in the grains from which it is made. These elements are absolutely ne- cessary for the well-balanced re- building of body, brain and nerves. A man tried leaving off meat, po- tatoes, coffee, etc., and adopted a breakfast of fruit, Grape-Nuts with cream, some crisp toast and a cup of Postum. A change of this kind puts aside food that is slow to digest and takes up food and drink of the highest value, already partly digested and capable of being quickly changed into good, rich blood and strong tissue. His healch began to improve at once for the reason that a meat eater will reach a place once in a while where his system seems to become clogged and the machinery doesn't work smoothly. The Laurentide Company of Quebec, producers of pulp and pulpwood, is re- foresting its non-agricultural cut-over lands. It is also importing reindeer from Newfoundland to see if they can take the place of dogs in winter woods work. Italians Well Trained. The Italian soldier undergoes a more severe training in some respects than any friend or enemy in the armies of Europe. His day begins at 4.30 a.m., and drill and routine con- tinue, with a two-hours break of "compulsory repose," until 5 pm. After that he has four hours' free- dom, but he must be back in barracks by nine o'clock, or 8.30 in winter, and is supposed to be shed when, half an hour later, the bugles sound the “sil- enzio," He is extremely well cared for by the authorities, but long marches are reckoned among the es- sentials of his training, and some re- giments can cover 60 miles at ftve miles an hour, and consider it notlr. ing remarkable. '; l Crippled. r When the European war closes Ger- !many will find it necessary to resume] 'relations with other countries, says the New York Journal of Eriii'miiri'i.,l No nation in this age can maintain an l independent economic system; andi ‘Germany least of all nations has) Isought to do so. When she resumes; trade relations her danger will be! that with current means of providing) for the restoration of usual business.I relationships upon the necessaryI scale, she will find herself hopelessly| 1iiififi.,' She cannot look with suc-l ‘cess to her past sources of supply in iLondon and Paris, and she is likely: to find relatively little aid available] in the neutral countries. Germany} now depends, practically entirely, upon _ her own internal resources, both of current manufactures and of capital. Outsiders cannot determine exactly how rapidly she is trenching upon) either, and residents of the country,: as already noted, are deprived of thei usual standards of comparison. Her; leaders, under these conditions, arel likely to come to the end of her: strength without much warning, and unexpectedly, both so far as their own _ people and the outside world are con- cerned. When the German nationl does thus reach the limit of its en~' durance for the present, recovery is. likely to be much slower and moreI difficult than in the case of other) countries. The "eeonomie laws,", which are said by some to have been successfully overridden by German or- i ganization and combination, have a" way of reasserting themselves. Ger-ll man conditions after the war are like- ly to furnish a striking illustration of the way in which this process makes itself effective. i She Will Find w. v er" Viv... moo . - «(one tan Catholic Church of Rokitno, in the go ernment of Warsaw, Rus- the battle between the Germans and Russians during the week of Oct. ’it, and then capturing the hill on which, 1t is located, mounted guns in GERMANY AFTER THE WAR. CHANGE THE VIBRATION Lands Are Re.Forested. It Makes for Health. Herself Hopelessly A'oid the Guests That It Had Been a Joke on Them All. The distinguished French politician, (M. Clemenceau, is known as one of :the most determined men in France, I and nothing ever puts him out or ruf- ffes his temper. When he was Prime Minister he very neatly squashed a practical joke that some anonymous person wished to play upon him. This l would-be wit sent out a large number of invitations to people all over Paris V to a big dinner at M. Clemenceau's 'house. A few days later M. Clemen- ceau was surprised to receive letters ’from absolute strangers accepting his "kind invitation to dinner," and, thanking him most cordially. Instead of writing to these people to tell them ', that there had been some mistake, M. Clemenceau at once realized that Isomeone had been playing a trick on Chim, and he gave orders for a dinner Ion the date in question, and it was duly held. Everything was done on Ithe most lavish scale, and throughout; the meal M. CiemeneeauU unknown) and wholly undistinguished guestsi were simply bursting with pride to) think that they had been invited tel the table of such a famous man. But) M. Clemenceau had a little surprise! for them which he kept until the last; course had been eaten. He Gen rose gravely and told his astonished guests that their presence there was really due to a choice little joke which had been perpetuated by some 'j2'I, son unknown. After that the disap-f pointed guests hastened to depart as quickly as they could, i CLEMENCEAU'S DINNER PARTY. Doctors, Nurses, Motorists. Mechan- ies, Interpreters, Telegraphers, etc. That the British Expeditionary Force has attached to it almost ienough civilians to make quite a re- spectable army in itself may surprise ipeople who remember the attitude of Ithe War Office towards newspaper {correspondents and other non-eomba- itants. It is a fact, however, that (the services of a large number of civi- ilians are utilized in various capaci- 'ties at the front. The object in em- Iploying' them is to avoid diminishing 'the fighting capacity of the troops Iengaged, the theory adopted being :that a soldier should only be employ- ed as a soldier, and that all other ne- Ecessary work should be left to civi- flians. The sanitary service of an army in the field is a very important one, and upon it in a great measure depend the health and comfort of the troops engaged. The personnel of such f de- partment employs a considerable num- ber of civilians. These are divided into separate squads, each under the control of a medical officer, and their work deals with the provision of fresh water and the destruction of refuse. The civilian .element attached totthe troops in the field just now also in- eludes a considerable number of French Boy Scouts. They act as messengers, guides, orderlies, and so on. . Mutara'. Lintmont Guru Guru In Cowl ( This civilian force, however, con. sists mostly of French, although there are a certain number of British civil- ians doing duty with the British Army in France just now. The ma- jority of these are members of the Royal Automobile Club, who are driv- ing the cars which they have trener- ously placed at the disposal of the staff. Other British civilians accom- partying the forces are the doctors, surgeons. and nurses who are assist- ing military medical officers in the base hospitals. There are a considerable number of other posts for which civilians are eligible. Among them may be men- tioned the handling and despatching of stores, the loading and unloading of trains, the driving of baggage- wagons, and the repair of roads, etc. The other capacities in which civilians are employed just now with the army at the front include those of traders, culers, artificers, mechanics, guides, chauffeurs, interpreters, and so on; while a proportion also find work in the postal, telegraph, rcmount, and sanitary departments, and so forth. CIVILIANS WITH ARMIES. ED. ti. "Now she wants it worse than be- tore." " think I made a mistake in argu- ing the question of expense with my wife." "What do you mean t" “She wanted an automobile, and I inadvertently told her that I couldn't afford it." The Canary Islands are the tops of a great submarine mountain range. Tramp (cogitating a moment)-1 would, mum, but they have all been destroyed. Tramp-Please mum, I'm a Belgian refugee. . Lady---Are you'. Mention a town in Belgium. The question is, where will the men come from? The press is advising the farmers to hire men now and to hire them for a year in advance. There is, indeed, talk of a famine of un- skilled labor in the fall. Many thou- sands of men, not merely from Can- ada, but the States, have left for Europe, since the war started. Where will the men come from, and particu- larly in view of the added acreage, which will mean more labor, as there is fully 30 per cent. of increase under cultivation? The States expects the largest crop in its history; and ex- perts in the west insist that our crop, if the favorable conditions are main- tained, will be the largest that we have produced. It is now the ques- tion of labor that is agitating the minds of the farmers. Several towns and municipalities have suspended their programme of public work in order that all the laborers possible should be on the land for the harvest. According to C. P. R. advices there is likely to be a shortage of farm la- bor in the west in the fall. There are already over 100,000 of our Ctuv. adian young men under arms, and the war mar demand more. Immi- gration is, of course, at a standstill. It will be impossible to get men from the east, where men are scarce, and in an,' case the west does not want men who, after the harvest, would be a burden on the people. No medicine gives such lasting satisfaction or effects such marvel- lous cures as Dr. Hamilton's Pills. Relief instantly follows their use. That blinding headache goes forever, that feverish feeling in the skin is soothed away, bilious fits and stomach disorders are stopped. Don't be nervous about using Dr. Hamilton', Pills; they are mild enough for a child to use, yet certain and effective in action in the most chronic cases. Get a Me. box to-day; they bring and keep robust good health. FUR l CASE OF INGURABLE GON' STIPATIUN To any person who cannot be cured of Constipation by Dr. Hamilton's Pills, thenabove reward will be paid. To him was entrusted the task of searching out those inhabitants of the district whose sympathies were with Italy. There is not a house which he has not robbed under pre- tence of searching for fugitives; there is not a family he has not blackmailed under threat of denounc- ing father or son or brother as "Italo- phil." He "made friends" of some families under pretence of being secretly on the Italian side (for he comes of a good Italian family), then baled the male members secretly and at night before a "commission of inquiry" at the headquarters of the gendarmery, and there flogged them to try and extract from them the names of Italophils. An arm?! of spies was in his service, am he created an atmosphere of hatred, ter- ror, and persecution. When war ap- peared inevitable he sent his wife and children into Switzerland be- cause he knew that whosoever ‘bears his name will meet with no mercy at the hands of any Italian of the Tren- tino. The square, brutal face; the nar- row grey eyes, cold, piercing, and pitiless; the shaven head and the massive jaw, with its huge mandibles; the low forehead of the typical crim- inal, and the big pointed moustachios, will for many years be the nightmare of the people of the Val Lagarina. For this Galvan was a torturer by profession and instinct. Go into Alt to-dny and llk my Inhabitant of' the houses that so (led- ly " the tricolor what they know of Proapero Gulvan, and you will see their faces blaneh with hatred, if no longer with terror; because there is still with them, and will be so long as they and their ehildren's children inhabit Ala, the spectre of the sworn torturer of Ala, the Trentino rene- gade, the sergeant of gendarmes, and the infamous instrument of Francis Joseph. fer-etio- by Tenure. A hundred year: hence women in Ale of Italy will still threaten un- matcehiidren with the “curse of Gal- ”and! than“: Guru lit-temper. Al Inquisitor I. Ankh Beard ll- "Well t" $1.000 REWARD Dodged the Question. An Error In Debate. Harvesting the Crop. PROSPERO GALVAN. ISSUE 31-'tgy TORONTO "He h» a splendid memory." "Soy' "Yes. He can even remember the union and feces of all his wife's cousins." A minister of a rural parish in Scotland found one of his flock shoot- ing a hare on the Sabbath, and re- monstrnted with him. "Macpherson, do you-know what a work of neces- sity " " do," replied Mupher- son. "Weel, do you think shooting I hare on Sunday . work of necessity t" "It is that," said the pnritshioner. "How do you make that out?" "Well, ye Bee, meeniater, it micht use be oot on Monday.” . by Putnam'o " Qui'ok tractor in 24 ham-I. “Putnam's" com way that drawing pun, use. immut- t7, nukes the not feel good " once. Got l Met. bomb at "Putnam'. today. The "Irish Division," as it is techni- cally known, received its first train- ing on the soil of its native isle, and has only recently been brought to England. Soon after its arrival it was inspected by the King and Lord Kitchener, and the latter set his seal of approval by declaring it "one of the finest divisions in the new army." There is one thing to be said in favor of the egotist; he never gets lonesome. One of the new branches of Kitchen- er's army in training now in a camp south of London is an Irish army, commanded by an Irish general. This is the first time in British history that such a force has been assembled. There have always been Irish troops in the British army, and sometimes they have even been in the majority, but hitherto the largest purely Irish unit has been theregimept. This is the first time that an entire division of Irish troops has been made up. Corns Cured Quick On the betrothal being announced, the Kaiser made one of his refined jokes to the effect that the Princess Helene's grandmother was but a street Vagabond peddling chestnuts. The sneer delighted the Empress, who repeated it everywhere. In due time it reached the ears of the future Queen of Italy, and ever since the relations between the two courts, never very cordial, have been more or less strained. The strained relations between the Queen of Italy and the Kaiserin no doubt had something to do with the hastening of Italy into the war. Vic- toria Emmanuel', consort has never forgotten the sneer of the German Empress when she married Italy's King. The Kaiserin had set her heart upon securing him for one of her sisters, but Victor Emmanuel would have nothing to do with any German princess and married Prin- cess Helene of Montenegro, to the Kniserin's intense ehargin. At the first sign of illness during the hot weather give the little ones Baby's Own Tablets, or in a few hours he may be beyond cure. These Tablets will prevent Bummer com- plaints. if given occasiomlly to the well child and will promptly, cure these troubles if they come on end- denly. Baby's Own Tablets should always be kept in every home where there are young children. There is no other medicine as good and the mother has the guarantee of a gov- ernment analyst that they are abso- lutely safe. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A: to the final result, not the re- motest shadow of doubt for a moment crosses his mind. He is as certain of victory as he is of his existence. To every man in the French my he has imparted precisely this some eonii- denee. And as it is in the army, so it is in the entire nation. "General Joffre knows we are going to win, therefore we know we are going to win." This is the beginning and the end of the French war creed. SUMMER COMPLAINTS KILL LITTLE ONES Freight Prepaid to any Railway Station in Ontario. Length " Ft., Begun 3 Ft. g In. Depth 1 Ft. 6 In. ANY M0103 HTS. t9peetttemttoet No. 213 divine engine prices on request. Get our quotasmnl ott-"Tlut Panama; Line" Commercial and Pleasure Launches, luv but: and Ounces. made“. Be does not dictate three or four telegram tad letters " once. 1.retahe1Ptetunthrsetumrdkiirr" sleep. He does not at in n state of trance. quite the eontrary. He in 3 good feeder and a good sleeper. Re- gular meals and seven straight hours, of sleep from nine at night until four in the morning are his routine. But in all the remaining 17 hours of the 24 the entire French army knows that "the old man" is awake. Joll're, a hearty, lulu. not: whole. lonely lane man, well around the cor- ner of the Iixtiea, imitates none of the mitioml habits of great com- mum'- Z-lnlnont Cun- Coldl. Eta. THE GIDLEY BOAT CO., LIMITED, PENETANG, CAN. . Forming an Irish Army Remonstraud With. The Kaiser's Sneer, MhJ‘N. Some Pent. Bore, billed“ feet t r o m oomplmhed Applied In "Overatern " V Bottom Mofor 30de RED. 0R BLACK AND meI Corker Spaniel puppies. Male. "o, females t15, Airoduior, male- "s. females ttli, Ht. lh~rnurda. male! tto. Theme, are the best bread: for (in-4.. IA" pedigreed Block. Suitable for my". i(Iron or guard for the hon t, F. IL Stewart. ()nkwurlh Kennels. St. Nichol“ B_u!ldin¢. Montrea|.i7 __ Tintron-That', what I thnught when the pawn married us, but I have since concluded we are ten. Jenks-What do you mean? Timson--tme is one and I'm nought. my dear fellow. Jenks-So you Ind the Brayton girl are one? - More or been Shy. Some people we know engaged s new maid, the same being exceedingly willing to work, but who we: more or less shy on experience. The mistres- noticed that her new maid seemed unfamiliar with finger-bowls, so she asked: "Did they use finger-bowls " the last place you worked t" "No, mum," answered Bridget, "they gen- enlly washed themselves before they cutie to the table, mum." This is to certify that fourteen rears ago I got the cords of my eft wrist nearly severed, and was for about nine months that I had no use of my hand, and tried other Liniments, also doctors, and was receiving no benefit. By harll'A sion from a friend I got Ml ARD'S LINIMENT and used one bottle which completelgI cured me, and have been using MI ARD'S LINIMENT in my family ever since and find it the some as when I first used it, and would never be without_it, _ -- -- _ ____ A Cockney angler, thinking his Highland boatman was not treating him with the respect due to his Ma- tion, expostuhrted thusc--'qaook here, my good than. you don't seem to grasp quite who I am. Do you know that my family have been entitled to beer arms for the last two hundred years'." "Hoota, that's nuthing.” was the reply. "My ancestors have been entitled to bare legs for the last two thousand years." fi PRflRee?.yt.?, NEWS AND JOB ottices tor In]. " good Ontario {oval Thu molt uueful Ind {mere-Mu. of all businesses. Full ittrortttntton on tellethioI. to Ivyrott I‘ubllghlng Co.- CANCER. TUIORB. LUMN. m "Hen-II um anew-l. cured with. out gtettt by our homo treatment era to before too tata. Dr. Bullmu. I Co.. United. Commood. Oct. M"t1.1?"it,t' MADE 857 LAR‘I‘ week. Mouse to huuse “Humming. Wonderful ”New Kither Hex. Ural“ Brothers. Maura Pulhc. out. 1 Inc. I have GG Gi", iiiiiGu""GG;; list. heated in the but sermon. " ttq. urio. Minna. I W Dnwrort. Brampton. ------v Laityrtriiurt ik'ii'drautt.'"i"o"rato', IPR!.'.'. FOR SALE IN THI County of Norfolk. Good choice. Prices ranging from 830.00 to "00.00 per ucre. Term- reasouable. Ami! R. W. Banmunn. Lynedoch. Ont. M's than.” Cunt Illuminati; sgtyge?hifi'it; Wig/all FooArsa FO2 _A gym. ooxsvu Aritttmetieally Described EEWSPAPEII FOR IALI FARMS FOR BALE. AGE '11 WAI‘I'ED‘ DOGI ron BALI. NISCELLANEOUI. FAR. FOR RENT, Look Here'. ISAAC E. MANN. $55-93 a! " " ' d

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy