Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star, 28 Jul 1915, p. 7

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hin es should always be used r pits... Algo the writers of boo cident is related by an rin a letter home, He day, before the mond , one of our pat. nd themselves opposite. a ntaining about 20 Austrians. imen, eight in number, charged "the bayonet, and taking the en- ly unaware, put them to flight. Six were taken prisoners, and an- ther tried to hide. One of our men aw him, and gave chase. The Aus- fired at his pursuer, who fired t last the Italian came up with | fugitive and' sprang on him to ke him prisoner. They pitched into another for some minutes, and "Austrian surrendered. : ) men looked at in getting into high places in the old di land.' ics the King. was uneasy at the appearance of such numbers of Socialists, and that he reassured the monarch by tell. ing 'him that every precaution had been taken for his safety. . Whether the fact of their leader having spoken to royalty made the Socialists suspicious of his' good faith or. whether in other ways some whisper. of his "duplicity came to their ears Is not certain, but it fa a fact that this time 'on he was frowned upon by the Socialist clubs and that he was shortly. afterward taken into the" King's na) vice and made a "polizeirat," or lice councillor, : In this position his business was no longer to orate to deluded crowds and preach the abolition of police and monarchy, but to keep a close watch on the police officials of the kingdom and report to the Kin; personally on | their activities and loyalty. This business of spying upon, spies suited him' so wall that when 'the chief of Dolice complained to the King of Stie- ber's interference and accused him of | being a Willi es, as apart system, which, by 1870 number of 3 Better sorTy. Louis of Battenburg, who was First| e| first to go. Sir HEAD OF ORDNANCE DEPT. British Officer In Charge of Ordn- ance Dept. Has Cousin in the German Army. Canadians have been amazed to learn since the war began the great tri and to demonstrate in a practical way | quarry number of Germans and people of German descent who have succeeded Many of" them are doubtless loyal to the Union Jack, but it was not long after the war started, before the British public began to insist that people an names had to get out of public positions, whether proven be sure than Sea Lord of fe miley, was the r yer, a Privy Councillor, 'was ols "for whom things became 50 hot that he had to' leavé for the States." Lord Haldane was forced to retire from the Cabfhet because he had been a great admirer of Germany, which he declared was: his "spiritual home," I. T. Lincoln was the Anglicized name of an Aus- trian who became a member of Par- liament, and then betrayed his trust, flying to America a short time ago to avoid arrest. " And the list might be greatly extended. The other day a despatch read that Lloyd George had ' determined that General Sir Stanley Von Donop, mas- ter-general of ordnance, had to go. This was accompanied by the rather startling statement that Kitchener eC guilty of disloyalty or not. ber A tiodel 0868 of demonstrating rotation and th e of alfalfa and corn for en- will be one of the features Ontario Government dairy ex- at the National 1 onto... Mr, Geo. A. Putnam plans ioeate the model farm in the south- wing of the building and nearby another innovation, an exhibit -the value of concentrated expects to have an unusually and representative showing of dalry products and intends ing the exhibit as practical snd tiive as possible. In this work have the assistance of several G ent officials, who will be en- [aged in making a number of demon- Strations, including the sediment test, iw testing, care and testing of milk "The Nag again \ gara Fall of milk will be & feature, the flow showing * the production of milk in the Province, und the proportions into which the total is divided for cheese and but- ter-making, city consumption, ete. It has again been decided to dis- samples of Cheddar cheese the relative food value of dairy pro- ucts. The great success of the Quebec contingent in the butter section a year ago has stimulated the spirit of emulation among the people of the adjoining province and this year there has been a large increase in the num- of requests for entry forms from dairy schools all over Quebec. THE NEEDS OF THE RED CROSS. The Red Crose need is like the widow's cruse of oil--it 'is jnex- Haustible, Fully to meet that need would require a purse like the wid- ow'sicruse, Such a purse is a fin- pncial miracle, but the Red Cross must ask the Canadian people to per- form that miracle. Every time you read a report of a battle do you realize that it means a fresh 'addition to the task of the Red Cross ? Do you know that every bullet fir- ed is only one more drip in the Red Cross cruse of inexhaustible obliga- tion ? i If the Government, when its Gener- al Staff demanded fresh supplies of munitions, replied: "Why do you want more shells?" would you think the Government insane? When the Red . | Cross agks for more supplies do you not realize how much it needs them? The need of the army is for shells, and still more shells, The need of the Red Cross is above all for money, money, and still more money, Fo Every dollar you. give to. the Red Cross is a bandage 'which ties up some wound, and there are ds many 'wounds 'to bind up ds you have dol- lars to give. ©. LL TT -Send your subscriptions to the of- fice of the Treasurer, 77 King Street East, Toronto. SY Minard's Liniment Cures Garget in Cows Not Seen in Daytime, A farmer worked his harvest hands from 4 o'clock in the morning until the big wheat field, asking him if he "How do I get "You go down this field," said the low the lane." 9 o'clock at night. A man looking for work 'hollered to a hand over in could get. a job. He was advised to ask at the house. : there?" the appli- cant asked. } ' haggard laborer, "turn down the road to the barn, turn to the left and fol- "What color is the house painted 1" dairy farm for the pur- | Exhibition, To- and municipalities have suspended their programme of public work in order that all the laborers possible should be on the land for the harvest. ge i Applied in Corns 'wiih 1 : Sore, blistering feet Cu red trom cornpinched : : toes can be by Putnam's Ex. Quick tractor in 24 hours. ! "Putnam's" soothes way that drawing pain, eases instant. ly, Takeg the lest fool good at onde. Get a bottle of "Putnam's to-day. ee en Generous Bay of Fundy. Some of the finest grindstones in the world come from the bottom of the Bay of Fundy. The stonecutters there have a simple method of mov- ing them to the shore. = Workmen the stone from. the solid rock when the tide is out, and fasten them to a large flat-bottomed hoat. The tides in the Bay of Fundy are the highest in the world, they rise from fifty to seventy feet, and rush in with great swiftness. The tide FARMS FOR RENT. P LOOKING FOR A FARM, CONSULT ot Io a Jey Buntred on fu 0. All a. BW Da oy Peamuton, ____Aonwrs wawrap, ! re---- cLAUCHLAN MADE $57 LAST week, House to hi 'Wonderful sell Bithe: Brothers, Ni Ont. NEWSPAPERS FOR BALE. T= ROFITMAKING NEWS AND 308 The most ui al a of all businesses "UR Bonita of FARMS FOR SALE. { J Arms FOR 'BALE IN THR County of Norfolk, Good choice. Prices ranging. from $30.00 to $100.00 Der acre. Terms reasonable. Apply R, W. Bartmarn, Lynedoch, On: HED, OR BLACK Cocker {hantel 3 males 15; Al 0, fei males $15. St. Be These are the best breeds for All pedigreed dren or ard for the home. F. H, Stewart, Oakworth Kennels, Bt. Nicholas Building, Montreal, A MISCELLANEOUS, TUMORS, LUMPS, and external, Canada. stock, Suitable for chil- vg REEF no |B Nein ss lifts the flatboat with the stones at- tached; the workmen bring the boat ashore and remove the stones at their leisure when the tide is out. amr---- sane The Substitute for Vodka. 'Elimination of vodka from Russia has evidently started that immense nation tea-drinking. In February last the New York "Journal of Com- merce" stated that the quotations were 8c to 10c a pound higher than they were a year previously, and that the Russians were buying' all the India-Ceylons available. The price has been advancing ever since, » | Unselfish. Doctor--1Is your wife strong-mind- ed enough to see that'you. positively refrain from eating sweets? Patient--Sure, doctor! 'She's got spunk enough to make me pass up the candy and pastry and all that as long as she's allowed to eat it her- self. OE : Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper. And He Cleared. * Builder--I've just caught that man Brown hanging about smoking dur- ing working. hours, so I gave him his four days' wages and told him to clear out. " JForeman--Good ' heavens, guv'nor! That chap was only looking for a job! Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, Ete. Why Cows Give More Milk. Cattle used to be bred. chiefly for work, Therefore the cows did not give much milk. Breeds improve the thing for which they are selected. In 1790 the work cows of Germany gave an average of a pint and a half a day. Interest in milk increased, and by 1800 the average yield was a quart and a half. = Breeding went on milk- ward, and in 1810 the German cows averaged two quarts of milk each per day. In 1820 three, in 1830 four-- and there the gain stopped for thirty years, But in 1860 the production had increased to six quarts, and by 1870 to eight. The brain is divided into two parts. If you are right-handed you think with the left side of your brain, while R think with if you are left-handed you the right side of it. ©. = That's All "What were you doing in that pawn shop, Jim?" +. "Oh, merely passing 'away the time." : Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. Reversed. "How long have they been mar ried 2" "About five years." "Did she make him a good wife?" "No; but she made him an awfully good husband." This is to certify that fourteen ears 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 a sua sion from a' friend I got MINARD'S LINIMENT and used one bottle which completely cured me, and have been using MINARD'S LINIMENT in my family ever since and find it the same as. when I used it, and would never be without it. ISAAC E:"MANN. Should be Off Duty. A sentry, an Irishman, was-on post duty for the first timg-at hight, when the officer of the day approached. He called: "Who comes there?" "Officer of the day," was the re- ply. "Then what are yez doin' out at night?" asked the sentry.

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