._,.ar ,ll ~,`;y-»‘ - .-7.-sv.. -- ,__ / l wrssr News l'V\~ 30, iw ,- ,iw hi’ , P£..RMirrEb To usiiivs lieropluiie Willie Two Officers liboord Crosses 1,! Frlilltliii* fiindl Lands---llviutors Expiuiii fioso- ieiie Become Exiiuusted. u `*-w- _ NANCY' Apr" 25 ‘5P°°iB1)-AIP ‘the landing of the Germans was nn- ether international military aviation avoidable. 'IIl0ii1BYlf- 0¢¢\\l‘l‘6d ou the Franco- Ger- The' aeroplane was then released, man frontier when a Germany army aeroplane alighted on French terri- tory at Nord Arracourt. Two Ger- man oilzere in uniform, Captain Dev- all, chief inspector of aviation, and Lieutenant von Mirhach, were abroad, The local miliéary police and French customs o icers hastened to the spot.. audi?-aptain Devall explain- ed to them that his gasolene had be- come exhausted and he was compelled to descend, but he had thought at the time of landing that he was on the German side of the frontier. The Deputy Prefect liuneviile and other French administrative officials made an investigation into the af- fair. The Minister of War and the Minister of the Interior were com.- municated with. They decided that-landings of this kind. l i and left here for Metz. The Gorman officers thanked the Sub-prefect for the' care he had exercised to protect the aeroplane, and asked him also to convey their thanks to the French government. A telegram from the French Foreign Office was sent to -Mr. Jules Camibon, the French Ambassador at Berlin, telling him to call the attention of the German government to the re- peated landiifgs of Germain military aircraft in France and to the serious inconvenience brought about by such occurrences. Mr. Cambon was dlrcct-- ed to ask Germany to take measures to avoid the-recurrence of such inci- dents, and to discuss with France the drafting of rules for settling future -_-i-__~;._. \ ` \ We have had so many inquiries ment to our patrons, friends and latgiy regarding Eczema and ,-,therlneighhors unless we were sure of it-_ skin diseases, that we are glad to make our answer public. After care- ful investigation we have found that irsimple wash of Oil of Wiutergreeu, nu compounded in D. D. D. Prescrip- tion aa made in the D.D.D. Labora- tories'of Toronto, can be relied up- E. -A. Foster, Central Drugstore, on. We would not make this 'state- ` _ _ and although there are many so-cnll- od Eczema remedies sold, we our- selves unhesitatingly, reronunend D. D. D. Prescription. Drop into our] store` today and let us tcll you more about D.D.D. Ask us also about D.D.D. Soap; it helps. Sunnyside. ' I 'EEE '_' si I ibiiiiy or the isfhiedded when Wersi, a ~ crisp,” tasty toast; containing all the .liodlyf-,b,uildi'ng material in the yvholeyvheat grain, steam-cooked, ‘ Shredded, ,compressed into a wafer and 'liiéikedwa crisp, golden brown.. ' e .lt is lfdielicious "“ snack ’ 'l for lunch- Vf in NM . ‘- ir."-‘~. ‘w - =.'.ii-aa.. e.:¢¢e~..~ I. =.-it'-,`~'~ I ‘~~ ‘.' " ‘I ' i " ‘ l Wd ' ' -~ " f,..»§.,_,-‘__ M., ‘l -" ` '_ ,.` i ° The dfifglc-é’stib»ility of ordinary whole wheat' bread 'is al much debated question-,but there is no question about the nutritive value or digest- . _eft_,3_;r'*i\°_'_s,.f4'itg,-i§»*i*`or any meal with butter, .$o,ft'cl¢ieese, .peanut ,butter or mar- ~ ' Male ern.. i-ughen ans; c..nah.h_wi...i 1 `l""”'f='* A Ganadidn Foudfor Ctnllliant -_ - f. " no. at , Shredded Wheat, Company, Limited e ‘Niagara Falla, Ont. A . - Oififm 49 Wéihniron Sues; Em - su suinii sciiui iissui ` APRIL 27. i JOSEPH HOLD INTO EGYPT. Gen. 87. GOLDEN TEXT. "Love euvieth not."-1 Cor. 13: 4. POINTED SUGGESTIONS. i By. Rev. D. W. Snider. Important and very practical les- sons are to he learned from the life of Joseph. concerning the fond follies of parents. the cruel envyings and fratricidal treatment among brothers, the exasperating talk of mm-bitious drenmers, etc. Jacob hlundered as father, the brothers of Joseph acted the part of despicable bullies, while, 0111! relieved by his youth, Joseph's talk about his future greatness was vaporing and vanity, Better had he Kvvt such dreams to himself and pondered them in his heart." Behind the action of the bully. there is lliillfllly to he found the anxious heart. Why honourable brothers, whose time is filled with honest toil, should give themselves to the “yel- i0“' Eyre" of envy because a young- or brother had glowing dreams to tell if* H¢l`2\Ili:¢. iudccd. But n too doting father' cau add fuel to unwonted 'lame and the Superior character of the dreamer will thrust the con- science with vexatious condemnation. Joseph's brothers, thus affected, be- came liers~iu wait for opportunity. All things come to those' who wait. Bail thinks come. Alas, that so many envious creatures are in hiding around the corners of malice, "abid- ing their time." That is the chuckle of revenge. "Just wait! I’ll fix him! l'm abiding my time." Such people forget that they are in the clutch of the devil all the time. The opportunity came to Joseph's brothers. It came, bringing them pro- visions-well laden with good things ‘u their bclialf. But envy must plan before it » can ea.t.,'1‘he awful thing meow in isieiiaefir can eat when - it thinks its hell-born plans are work.- ing. That is the heartlessness of it; "they took him, and cast him into a pit......"’A-nd they eat down to eat bread.” And while they were eating bread they were satisfied to know that the object of their jealous dis- like, thirsty from his journey, could not have a drop of water. The pit was empty; thcrc was no water in it.' Your flair Needs Par- isian Sage Use It As a Dressing-Banish Dandruff _ Stop_ Falling Hair and Scalp itch. _ PARISIAN Sage, the delightful and invigorating hair tonic, is a true hair 'nourl_sher. It penetrates into the scalp, gets to the roots of the hair, _kills the dandruf! germs, and supplies the hair with just the kind of nourishment it needs to make it grow abundantly. ' Since its introduction into Canada mensc sale, and here are the reasans: It does not contain poisonous su- luxuriant tonic made. It is not sticky or greasy. It'1s the best, the most Pleasant and invigorating hair dressing made. Made only in Canada by The R. T. Booth Oo., Ltd., Fort Erie, Ont. The price' is only 50 cents at drug stores and counters where toilet goods are sold. . Gap, E. Hughes guarantees it. covercd’Ho_w to Grow' A i A ,Haw i Ith be grow hair. That the! BFG ...Q _ ...e gar of lead, nitrate of silver or sul- By Rev. D. W. Snider. I phur or any injurious ingredient. |i » » It cures dandruif in two weeks, by This much is most certainly in evi- , l i .L - Yvl killing the deudrull germ. dence from what is told oi the ure of g\ . ._ _ »- " 9. l It stopafalling hair. Joseph: namely, that it is possible . Z , I , . It promptly stove itching 01 the to uve through evu as wen as ' ,_;,=_-`_f.¢.= H0319- through good report, through cir- ' "-S-`.`_f; . - 1 It makes the hair soft, glossy and cumstances pamgupy adverse and in '“ Apafis Has Dis' fault that a lust-driven woman, re- h ti W L0Da_n _ . In Pu" the hm" tvvayhggh ng, finder what circumstances do men rl ri ts. , dgznestlgglywgg tllggrgsw digwvei-y_, not seek comradesbip? The compan- “4 -Q U proven mst Hum, -lonship of prisoners is not common. th, ingredient, that Good things have come out of it and, _ M-emi, ig teaches the dread of' what the youth- s mi prisoner may learn from the vet- " g-in ' ,,f Dlspuie Over Possession of 'Salonica Rapidly Becoming _-__ LONDON, April 25 (Special)--Bub garia and Greece are rapidly drifting toward war _over the possession of Salouica, according to the Ghrouicle'a 00i‘l`€Bl>0ndent at that town. The Greeks have mobilized every available soldier and concentrated one army in the neighborhood of Salonica, while another is being laud- ed at Orfani, in the Gulf of Orfani, in order to watch the movements of the Bulgarians at Drarra and Kav- ala. The victorious Epirus army from Janima is being distributed along the new strategleal front from Salonica to Orfani. In the meantime, adds the corres- pondent, the Bulgarians have sus- pended passenger, traffic between Dedeagatch and Balonica and are utilizing the railway for the concen- tration of troops in the neighbor- hood uf Drama close to the Greek position. They have already brought one division each from Adrianople. Tchataldja and Bulair, and it is es- timated that the Bulgars now have 90,000 soldiers facing the Greeks and a Servian force supporting the Greeks, which is assembling along the railway north of Salonica and on the right bank of the Vardar River. wmm A chance for money making by put- ting Joseph into the slave mnrirct saved the cowardly bullies from mur- der. But it was only a makeshift, be- cause lt wns only a conscience-shift. Iln order words, it was murder push- ed to another sphere. It was murder- ous money-making. Nothing is right- ened bv conscience-shifts. Conscience- cleansing is needed to effect righten- ing. The sight of the slave ‘buyers gave the brother a premium for their pockets, while it kept murder in their hearts, out pushed it oil their hands. Thus are mon tricked by ein. (lf course, they had a plausible ar- gument to aid them” in their design- ing transaction. "He is our brother and,our flesh." one of them said. "And his brethren were content." But these men are to he iudged, not by the hands of others. They sold him. When Pilate was asked to give Jesus over to the will of the Jews he got a comfort that the brethren of Joseph never got. The people said, “His blood be on us and on our children.” No one has cvor freed Pilate, just the BBYIIB. Those who are capable of such a clever ('i’) shift of a murder trans- action .vill not find it difficult £0 life themselves out of connection with it altogether. They did their best, which also means their worst. They broke their futher's heart, and their lie one day came back upon them, as lies al- ways do~-some time, somewhere. Lies are hoomerangs. ' THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON. POINTED SUGGESTIONS. science gives Long before Paul's day he learned how to be abased and how to abound. Take close thought of the conduct of Joseph in the house of Potlphar. It is not his character which suffers under the searchlight. He fell into the suffering and impoverlshment of the dungeon not because oi.what was bad in him, but because of what was commendable It was not his sourceful with her adulterous decep- tions, brought shame and sudering. Many are the .innocent who sufler. Bur "vengeance is mine, saith the doubtless, much of evil. Social science' eras ,in vice. This must be reckoned upon, however, that where men an met together, there will .they ,tell tntir stories and reveal their drones. It is not wise to scout' the place is given to dreams in the 'rhere is no soubt _that ood used-"them as a mime of revisi- His guidance to It is not the pverfed 'and gluttonoul ' to i9°°¥l=¢°¢ °\= nm ai i - ufici iii .AMAZI ii'». . Bllllilllll ll Will Offensive Breath Caused ;' ` Usually By Caierrh' .___ A 5imDl0 R°m°dY ‘Discovered That Lures Without Drugs, The American people sugar from Catarrh than from any disease. lt undermines more consti- tutions and creates more sickness than all other diseases comibined. It is, therefore, very dangerous. You cau't successfully treat Catar- rh by internal dosing-you must in some way send a purifying, healing agent through the breathing organs, so that the germs can be reached. This you do every time you inhale Catarrhorone. It's rich essences and healing hnlsms are breathed all through tho nose, throat and lungs, and effectively, destroy every trace of Oatarrh. Tl-.ia is a proven fact. I endorse Catarrhozons because I know of eix bad cases of Catarrh, including my own, that it has cured. It_is a sensible remedy because it is capable of going where the disease ls. I believe it cures quicker than any- thing else 1 know of. I had head- aches, bad breath, and much stom- ach troublc associated_with my Oat- arrh, but they have disappeared since using Catnrrhozone, which keeps me free from colds, headaches, catarrb and all winter ills." OTTO E, KRA- MER, Belleville, Ont. Catarrhozonc is needed in every home. Large size lasts 2 months, price $1.00; small size, 50c; trial size, 25c. At all storekeepers and druggists or The Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N. Y., and KiuEBlS0l\. C0-“' ada. more other HI]EHElllHl'S CHEST TUPPLES [Will E ji OPALL' LGIAN AGE STRIKE EOPLE’S VICTGR-Y ~ ,lil . Government Accepts Liberal Compromise u Surr BRUSSELS, April 25 (Special)- Owlng in great part to the advice of the King, the government has ac- cepted ths compromise proposed by the liberal leader. lilr F. Munson, and the great strike for manhood suf- frage, which, ou account of the re- markable discipline maintained, the solidarity of those who joined in the movement and skilful organization, is unique in history, will be culled oil on Thursday. Only a week ago the Belgian Prem- ier, Mr. Charles de Broqueville, de- clared:--"No government con!-1 yield to a strike of this nature. To yield would be to'abdicate."` have made sudicient impression ou 8 bend from its uncompromising atti- Nevertheless, the strike seems tol Advice of liing llil Cabinet Decides Ou ender. _li *__~`_> tude far enough to insure the ter mination of a situation which llrlllly has cost. the country many millions. and is daily driving away from the manufacturers customers what never may win back. | The decision to accept the colwro' mise was reached yelterdaybhthe ‘Cabinet,. and the Premier ennillllmid lin the Chamber of Deputitl 1\i&ay that the government had made Mr. Masson’s motion its own. 1 - When the Chamber of Deputies met this afternoon there wee a tense hel- ,ing of expectancy. The conciliatory ‘motion of Mr. Masson, thie_I.£\0'll leader, was taken up immedillelym Mr. Usbaert, a Clerical Deputy. proposed an additional readlngr- the overnment td induce it to un- "The Chamber disapprove: and con- demns the general strike." ' offices of thc Hambiirg-American line that cable messages received from the company's office in ‘Hamburg denied the report that the company‘s new steamshlp, the Imlierator, had run aground while ou her way to ‘Hamburg to start on her trial trip. The representatives of the steam- ship company in this city stated that the cable message received by them declared that owing to strong east' winds and very low tides it was, deemed advisable to anchor the big steamship in the lower Elhe for sev-7 eral hours and that this gave rise to. the report that she was aground. It was said that ns the winds went down the Imperator proceeded on her way and will start on her trial run NEW YORK. April 25 *Speciali- It was announced at the New -York I IMPEHATUH HELD, Bl LUW ,lllll Mu rnouso, April 25 (special)-'mu crest of Mount Rochefort, doudqihe ing this town, fell off today. AIG- ormous mass of rock eetiuiabid "$0 measure 30,000 cubic yard! rolled Ink a miie and a half into the vallly, JK- troying fields, gardens and N » Its passage was marked by I' _ \' ful grinding noise. It stopped outskirts of a village. Nd Olll- . . uiueu ' ' at once. ' i i if Z _,..._... wh t t_i1ey_escaped doing to- Jose h' , _ /__ , _‘___ uyiihmr ownifliedic biit.'by=eW»:¢-=<=~»..‘5;-»-iv., _ , v » It gives. life and beautv to the hair. plain of P12363? S Jp;?gentgi'n;i1? ° ’ I It 15 tl-`*° d°inu°°¢ Vérmmea hair zdctelildl sciilgigiltyn w-hicho ap giilod con- S “Oh, to be free from school life and school worries during the sunshiny spring days,” is the wish of thousands of schoolgirls, to whom nothing could be of more beneit than outdoor exercise and an opportunity to drink in the powerful restorative influences in ' A the system, Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food Just at the springtime, when the human sys- tem is.sure to be more or less debilitated, and often ut the most critical time in a ¢irl’s life. crease the supply of pure, rich blood, and for this purpose there is no treatment complfdhlb ~ to Dr. Chase ’s Nerve_Food. ' “"“‘“- is its mild and gentle a treatment for girls of rich, Limited ”` .l-i' »~..~._»...-.-nu-n-_-_. _¢_»-.Q-»-V.-_--.vc-»» ,.. i i L i ...anna-neaavnn i i i i i i , , 'i l ` I