_home keeping hearts. Make the f iv I if ‘__. 1,-Ng.-§_,_ .` ` ' ' ` ,. 7"* 'sl-..i‘§~”. "T"-"‘ I" ’f" "71' “J” “"6"” ."‘»t '-W.. , I 'I-I,-./~'»‘...~._. '~‘ -.-’ -~ _»._.,e.»‘»'», ‘- .1 e., r _ -1- . » . _ _ - . .. ei D . .» - ., 1. _ ' _ ' "i ` ' " ’ _ ' _'f’~i'_ .‘fM"!‘-" .,_, H (fn, 7- l- _“Q 2, ._vf'v.` , _ ' I ’ "- . - ` "`:»”»~<\`-_` “u ' ’ _r "‘ ._-1,, _ I ' -` . '-ss.. .- . _ -f `,$_____`.‘ /_ .,n,,~,.,.;. ' _- - \ ` ~ _ _ ;=.,,.» -_ :.=_, .' ‘ 1 . . ...,-7-1 Annmi ' ‘ . P.4_cr:sr-jv,1;.\_r ,_-1, . _ __PECEM1iF`!R29.191e__ _ ,_ " . _ 'rr-is cnnnnormrows cu ' rm Fkissns een buy A... Yo., 1..., ' M-'-6”" °P9°i““l\¢U\ Will- ° ..°rr P/ive to buy in our rr-evmee. . \ a ' 0 - I ? ____ The Cooke Studie; C “‘f°"""l° ....-.':r.:zc:°..:'.:.‘r:.:.:-._°“"°'- New DesP»»sav ...wk _. _ A We have what you l ./.~w'e~oomo sects.-on nee. . _ need to bs warm the 23rd. 1916. on the arrival oi’ the Prepare for Christmas lf -you can’t_ get back to the old home for Christmas a new photo-\ Braph will come near est to taking Y0l.lr p|aCe--will bring cheer to appointment today at _ » ‘_ Bayer Studio - EFHU. _ ' Moccasins '-Felt Boots Felt Socks Knit Socks Over-.Shoes Leggins Heavy Rub- ®\\Vl l“"l‘\=ll18 train a quiet marriage took ith... at St. An-'lrcws Manse, Montague, P. E. l. when the Rev. David,Wright united in matrimony Miss Myra B. Campbell. daughter of the' lute Jas. A. Campbell to Mr. Nell H. Ceilings both of the Whian Road, Montague. The bride was accompanied by ht-r slster Miss Ella while' the bridegroom was attended by her brother Oscar. The young couple will reside at the Whim Road. - __j_______._,. ..°Nl. I- R. HOWLIT1' 1| Guns llisn sgont for Annandale and vicinity. ..°Bdr. Baker. is spending Christ- mas at his home ln Alberton. EASTERN PEllS0lllL8 __~Mis‘s Adele smith. teeeber in Sturgeon School and Miss Bertha Smith, of Prince of Wales Colflege, are enjoying the holidays at their home in Gc-Jrgetown. --G. .,°Miss _ Mattie Stewart, steno- gripher at Hunter River, E-pent the we k-cfnd in Georgetown. -G. _ ..°Mr. .Tupper Morrlsey, Morcll, TALES- FROM THE FIRING LlNE_ Every one of his' admirers-rand their name is legion-will be sorry to learn, says the London Minor. that MD-101' J A Wallingford ls about to A. E. LYON, Sbniie 1 be” ;;’.‘.'.":..':if:';,..":z'..f*;.':';i.'.,:1‘.:‘.'::;°.::::.ri J Good Photography Moderate Prices. ‘ Sheep-skin» Boot sand Moc- 0§I'».$. ed his heart. Wallingford was the champion shot of the British Army, at several Bisleys’ and his ilne work with the New Zealanders at the Dar- Pelfollal 81581115011 (0 Am- > darretiles has been mentioned in des- . , c . , ateur Photography _ 107`Queen St. Phone 68-J. ` LSR B . E .. \\\WV Let us show you the ny different digs we J De. es "l tried to stick it out.' he wrote to his parents at Newtown. Montgom- eryshlre. “but for fourteen days after we had beaten the Turks nil' l was home with my revolver. killing four- one at a. foot, one at five feet, one at ry’ tell feet and OM Gt twenty yorde- Prolessional _ Cards l wansurrrou a sr-law - Berman, Attorneys. Notary pas. ley & Co _ \\\\\\\Vl?4\\\l\\\ l"'._=é"'” 5 \\\\;\\l Poor devils! They were youngsters of about twenty_ At rifle flre I om sick of killing." Private Granger, who is in the pris- oners’ camp at Aflon Kara Hisssr, Turkey, in Asia, writes: The follow- ing extracts from his 'letters home gg ,iwsvzogam ar ess... 1..... - W Z2§I§'..lfI.‘.‘§ §’r‘...’§§"..‘i-`.l"f~.§’.f{"`.§`.". i'.'.‘.’.§"2.fl'.§`.? 0,,,,,,,_ ,.,,m`,m”l‘“‘°n“““°”c°m°"“‘l_» summsnsme manners. errn- ation oirleu-om eeeraiui omee. er. wso Block. Carlottstowu. P. l. L l Dr. J. E. BLANCHARW nemrisr PARLORS-125 Queen Street, Charlottetown, P. E. I. Phone 275-J. 3482-12-19M1mo. S. S. , Hessian .__ LAWYII lonh u Butter (dairy) per lb 37 to 38 Butter (creamery) lb 41 to 42 Buckwheat per bush 76 to 1.00 Calfskins per lb 17 to 18 E885 per doz. 38 to 39 Chickens per lb. 16 to 20 Fowl per lb 12 to 15 Ducks per lb 16 to 18 Hay. (loose) ton 10.00 to 12.00 Hay (pressed) per ton 12.00 to 13.00 Hides per lb 18 to 19 Lamb pam (each) 60 to 80 Oats (black) bush. 62-65 Oats (white) per bush 66 Potatoes per bush 50 Straw (pressed) per gon 6.00 to 6.50 Turnips per bush 20 Tire cat settled -rerself luxuriously in front of the kitchen ran e and be- I have got some very good news for you this time. We are now in much better circumstances than when I tachef from the American embassy, have also been kind enough to pro- vide us with`civllian suits, so we are been the growing suggestion of un- uuite happy DOW- W9 515° 80'- £1 DBI' rest and event of revolt in the Duma. man from the Americans, but to my Broadly speaking, the Duma rep great joy and' surprise I was called resents the national and the popular out by the Attache and he handed emotion of Russia. it not only rep me the money you had cabled over.; resents the domestic demand for lib- U 0 U S a I never SXDGCW1 10 80! |1280 S0011. erty and progress, it represents the and it came just at the right . time. national demand for the prosecution n't a cent and no clothes I of the national war against the Ger- srzd Mr. Frank Beaton, oi’ St. Dun- stnn’s College. are visiting in Georgetown during the holidays. -G. ..*Mlss Jean Aitken. of Chnrilottciowu. was the guest of he-.' parents, ii; the Aitkeniionse, in Georgetown for' (hristmas. --G. ..°Miss Glaiiys- McDonald. who has been in St. John' for the past few months, arrived at her home in Georgetown las; week. --G. ' DEFEAT Author of “Tha Great War." The f ll of- Sturmer, the Russian premier-,Il and the appointment of e man lr) sympathy with the Duma ls th most important incident in Russlzl history since the czar took the' command of his armies after the great defeats that began at the lDuns.jec and ended at the Heres-ina. This act of the czar put. the pres- tl~ge‘ _to the dynasty at stake and was 'a ilual answer to the German hope' and the Russian fear that the Gcrmanophille influences of the court and the bureaucracy had triumphed, land that Russia would make a separ- ate peace. When Sturmer succeeded to power relatively recently and Sazenofi went wrote before- Mr. Phillips. the At- inte retirement, the wer-id'wel1 again filled with reports that the German in- come un to inspect the British pris- anenees bed trinnnpbed and Berlin were last Ssturday.al1d brousht with once more began to bint broadly st hill! 9- huge BIIDDIY 01' 8000 f00tl Mid a separate peace. What has happened 0\0lhlllE- The Turkish Suthoritleo since that time has been hidden from the world. All that has come thru has as I had _ was rather disappointed not to get a man, who is for the mass of the Rus- rnessage from you, but 1 suppose your. slans the tnre enemy. It is the Ger- letter will arrive in due course. You man, associated in his mind with the, have absolutely no need to worry. We agents and forces of reaction and ab- many mean; to them the collapse of vlous tc enlistment at a grocery sales- the main buiwark of the old order, msn rn winnipeg and leaves-in s few the ultimate triumph of western d_em- days to take up his old position. Ha ocracy. 'was very well looked after, he acid. Conversely, the fall oi' Sturme will both at the base near Havre and in mean in Paris and in London. and England. | doubtless in' Vienns and Berlin, that- “The boys are quite neasrmeq in the the last hope Ol’ B DSW lwly 811111106 warfare now," said Priv te Cameron. between Hapsburg. Hobenzollern snd,°‘A¢ first the bursting if u shell was R°lI\l\10U BIS S0110. BDU thi! tht! DVB' quite an experience, but now the boys B911! Romano! has chosen to elcapo Day very little attention to these ex- WB fl'-G Of LOU!! XVI by IHBFCNDK plosions, even when they happen a with his Doobie rather than by i11~,rew ieev.rrer_n them. I remember upen ffltllillz With his bl'_0¢h0l‘ %0V0\’9l8l1l'- one occasion a German aeroplane We kll°W '-00 l|lt\6 lbollt RMBIBD passed over our billet and dropp'ed a Htfoirs have to draw too wide con- bemb wbi`eb ferr witbin s few reel or Clilil0l1B. YC! U16 l18Bl. Dl’00f Of i.ll8,whg|~9 wg warg' and ppl; ghg glfshegl, 1309111118 Of Wllil- UBB HIDDGHBU l“'attentrori _was paid to the results ol Russia is the tone and the course ohm, exp105i0n_ The B|.|¢|sh somier Allffl-Ylllil Bild 0! Germany- ll- IB H loci. feels his superiority to the German as testified ioyby all who know Russia 3 Mme,-_ ,md mg.,-e 1, no |0ng.,,. my that the people are for the war and doubt all to what mug; be me out. resolved that there shall be victory.' wma of the wan |11 me BMW "asm, It is ""9 th” th” U°°Pl° have 3595" oi’ the ‘war the British artillery was and _“gain lndlcued this de'-°_"Pm~' very inefficient. _For every shell We °“°“' “nd “mt We have °'|"€'“fY 39611 thrust at the enem there were eight if we had had more time we would ` have given them s much warmer time tl1an'v/e did." ' ' _ _--ir, .-._» wuiqa , ' - : REU CROSS, 80G'lI‘l’Y.-I _ - Pownal. Dec. 24th. 1914' Previously acknowledged $523.15 Further Donstionsz- Mrsx Wm Barrera Jr.. 81; urs. .ueiitslaaee $1: Efoveoiis of .concert and ice cream Social held ln Pownall Hall, Aug. 1'ltil. 1916 $52.46; Miss Helena Langslow Rochester. N. Y. $6; Mrs. Harry Jellklill $1:_ Mrs. John White 25c; A Friend $1. Proceeds of Parlor soc- _ ial held at the home of'lllrs. Geo. ' _ Cai-ver $6; By Mt. Albion people. | Rav. E. 8. Weeks $1; Mrs. Alfred 'Jenkins $1; Total to date 5539.86. I Further donations of socks etc: - 'Miss Susie Mitchell 1 pair socks. Mrs. James lliltchcll 1 pair socks. Mrs. Nathaniel Gay 5 pair socks, Mrs. Alfred Burhoe 2 pair socks; Mrs. J. 'i`. Mitchell 1 pair socks; 1 _ the court bow to the people..-f I Now Russian dispatches, escaping the censor no; by any accident, one may be sure, have reported a struggle have reported the determination of the Duma to see the war prosecuted to victory and the liberal ideas of Western Europe prevail in Russia. At the moment the effect of the newl change in premlers maylbe looked for at the front _rather than elsewhere, pehaps in Rumania first, but in the' and the latest political couilict in Pet- rograd may prove a landmark, in Rus- sian history and, indeed, in European history. This is at least possible, it seems probable . Thus the German victories in Rumania may prove mln- or when compared with the defeat that German influence- has sustained in Petrograd. BRITISH ARTILLERY NOW THE it was in the surprise attack ru Festubert orchard in which Pte. l<'. J. Cameron, of the 10th Battalion, Winnipeg, received those injuries which were the direct cause of his re- turn home. The wounds which he sustained were in the hip, and while they have so far discounted his mili- tary value,_ns to obtain a discharge, he hopes that they won’t be detrimen- tal to either his health or his work l ln the future. He was employed pre- Y responses from them. and that was somewhat discouraging to the British soldier. But that_hss all been changed now, and the British artillery is het- ter to-day than thai of the enemy. The French artillery was always 11 match for the Germans." Lauco-Corporal H_ Coppin, a mem- hcr of the Fighting Fourth has just returned to his home in Brantford, Ont. He was wounded in the right arm at St. Julien. "On the morning of April 23rd wo went lrr a full battalion strong. After the battle only 120 answered the roll- call. Colonel Birchall, our command- er, was a fine man. He stood six feet tour, and never carried a weap- on, leadlng us with a cane in his hand. lie knew 'nothing of fear, and to see him going ahead. waving his cane, and encouraging his men, you BE5T_ |wc-uid have thought he was on manu- Eoeuvres and not in n real battle Ad- jutant Glover, who war killed `almost at the same minute as the colonel, was another fine officer. "After the battle was over we found that we had been fighting against odds of fifteen to one. The Germans retired as we advanced, be- lieving that we were in much strong- er force than wc ware. It is a pity that we did not have more artillery. Our guns were put out of action, but Miss Clara lliitclrell 1 pair socks; Mrs. A. A. Moore 1 pair socks; Mrs. Henry Lane 3 lbs yarn; Mrs. Cou- sins 3 _lbs. wool; Mrs. A. A. Moore 1 lb. yarn; Mrs. Mary Sealy 1 pair socks; Mrs. La Boswell 2% lbs. rolls; Mrs. ll~icl?:Pd Stewart 1 lb, rolls. _ Total number of sc-:ks sent in from this society to above date 853 pairs. They also wish to thank all those who l.-ave in any way helped to make this Society it success by sewing knit- ting, spinning &c., helping with Baz- aar, ice cream socials, concerts, tic., also they extend thanks to Mt. ‘ Alb- ion people for the sum of 56 part of the proceedg of Parlor Social at ‘Mn-s. Carvers, N v. lfitlr, the rema nder being passed into fund for prisoner of war. MRS. SUSIE L. JENKINS Secy. 1 -11 3688. Flinty: lt’s a shame, Bill. to think that anyone would swindle a poor, ‘ard-working man in that way. Stubble: Why, what's wrong wi' yer now? Flilllyi Wl‘0l\8 Why. 'ere l worked hard for half a day paintin' up a spar- rcr inter a beautiful canary, n' l'm blowed if the teller l sold it to dldn't gi' me a bad ’half crown fer lt! t *f i _ 7 -F _ 3 1 g Come in and see “Heart Songs.” Go ovéra few of the pages Look for your favorite piece. It is there. Compare "1-ieart L_- | 0. P. I. i. _ ` g ~ ' gm., gg L... gan to purr. Little Dolly, who was ”|‘,|_u-“_ strange to the ways of cats, regarded . her with horror. % "0 5"““'m°' 5‘°““'“‘“" “he cmd' ' "Come here quick. The cat’s begun 1-1- Mol-un. K.°-. oenera uexrsaen 1° b°"-” _ have been promised a continual sup-I solutism, who has the whole-hearted ply of food and clothes from the Am- hate of Russia. ericaus, and we are all quite happy The real peril, so far as the Russian now. participatlorain the alliance against Don't forget to write every week, as Germany is concerned has always I believe the letters are taking a. long bead that tha court party would gain Songs” with any other song book you _have ever seen- We know the result; you will not go away without a copy of the ' IGLIAN I IIUKINNON 4 ».Ilrrlatorl, .. -iittornsys-ai~Law -lwll Blok Blue cbsrrettetom _ Monson a ourrv llrrlstsro -and Attorneys dolloitors for Roni Bank ot Canada rsonsv ro loan McLEOD & BENTLEY' `» W. E. Bentley, K. C. lsrrlstsrs and Attorneys-st-Law Money to Loan. . Office-Bank of`N. 8. Chsrhbers, _ Charlottetown. P. E. I. .. .. J. D. Stewart Barrister, Solicitor and Notary Public Oilice NEWSON BLOCK Charlottetown I Branch Office Georgetown Money to Loan on Real; Estate BEST Wishes For 1917 An appreciation to our pres- ent and prospective custotners. Our business of 1916 has ex- 'seeded in volume’ that of any previous year, and ws cannot conceive but that our "square deal policy" has been the means of our success. We have an appreciatirve host if customers that know our trade is large and they will not allow our stock to get stale on the shelves. We most heartily thank you all for the increased business of _tho present year. and it is under the same policy that we solicit your patronage for 1917. Your coupons from our cash register are worth 5 per cent on every dollar spent. Wishing you a Happy New Year. Ellis’ Pharmacy Ltd Montaltue 5579-l0~15I ‘ ‘ - f . I U- __ __ _fi I ` One hundred years rom now Russmns’ And everwne have can to Ny' Russia instantly, not merely because One hundred years from now. ss "t:2t;;?:‘1;`;‘;i;°:§:l°“§e:g:;"°‘:g£ ARD I b fthe e-long ambit- ‘:§:::.‘I.f.':.2L1.°:..1:'.":.;:.:"';.. l2§"2»’ 5-2112 MBER 401.1910 jen also because the German was hated. 7'" "`*°‘-5 'N 5""¢°"` ""5 V ranks te .trees me earn. with ' to clude th G;m_m Thomas A. Edlspn says that in hundred years from- now there be no poverty.- News Item A wonder world it's going to be ' Ons hundred years from now; I `wish that I might -live to see One hundred years from now. Each man will be a real success, Have all he' wants and never less dress One hundred years' from now. No one will need to scrimp and save One' hundred years from now; No dune or suits will make men' rave All folks in luxury will roll. And not one solitary soul Will fret about next wlnter's' coal _ One hundred years from now. One hun re years ll Z No man on earth will owe a sou All poverty will fade away (So liildlson was heard to say) have a -hole right through my shoul~ Yet Wo' have bud IDHHY 815118 F0 - » of a treaty wnrng from Russia .at There," bi, ng thinyetgg n°,;':,! due the moment of the Japanese war has Trains Outward, Read Down. Trains lnw P.M. A.M. A.M. Atlantic Standard Arr. 11.40 8.45 ' 5.00 5.45 5.99 7.00 11;5o 1.15 me :.40 a.ao P44- 'L35 Dep. Cbsrlottetnwn 8.30 Hunter River 10.85 9.59 sr Time. A.M. P.M. 10.15 9.90 8.48 "i»?§£."‘..‘_’.i: 10.90 0n`e hundred years. from now. “nd tm’ W” °x - ° 1. from Russia was instantly popular But °"m’by plana” though" m airnong the masses of the Russian peo- 9.08 0.15 8.00 0.02 Emerald Jet. 0.27 ' Kensington 9.50 Arr. Bummerslde P.lll. _ 8.98 5.00 5.80 4.50 AWK] 9.97 Den. 9.00 1i.T5_bop. Summerside AIT. swayed, I count the various debts I've made And .ssyz "By gosh! they'll all be paid Ono hundred years from now.” CHARLDTTITOWN MARKETS s.1o 0.05 0.57 lo.as 11.15, _ a 1.57. Port Hill 8.89 0'LGfY 4.40 Alblrton - 5.40 Arr. Tigfhilb DUP- Silk 1.45 1 'ma mt 5.45 6701 8.81. 1.01 11.55 1;.oo . Dep. Emerald Jet. Butter (fresh) lb ‘ Butter (tub) ..._ . Bubtn-d(orssmery prints) mggs, os. ATI. Fowl. lb 1.50 Ohiokens, lb .... .. ` Arr. Cape Traverse Dep.__ 7*.” P111; ' 2:23 num, is Turkeys. lb .. .. 'BNI (lb) retail .... ._... .80-40 85-85 48-45 40-45 19-15 15-18 10-18 gs.” happily in recent decades., 15-90 9.00 4.10 4.80 4.57 4.00 Tit 4.15 5.04 5.15 6.00 <` su. stewart lforsll 9.4¢ si. Pearl 11.15 ur. lwril En. III. _ 4.50 nos. cbsrremwwn an-. 0.45 :.3 8.85 8.07 7.44 5.94 9.50 Dep. 0.40 1.95 _ Ayr. The Dsp.5ff0 _ Egg' pep. lt. Stewart gc,” Csrlllllll 19,30 ' Montsllo 11.10 Arr. 000l'8°“?"“ Arr. 9.95 9.50 9.99 1.40 1.1¢ 2.10 nip. s_4o 1.ao Hit. only PM. 9.10 Eli, " eg. lot. 5 Sun. . 9.10 pe cbsriet ri L" 16'” M5 use be rms fer your aaegnterw Mi>r,¢\°\\t°'\ 01° °°°"'*‘="°° °f 111° ““'° D' li I 3-" 9'" " bait that the one escape from ““` "77 U wmonll :gift D09 ` 7'” mo Mud," lllsersn 'llsstioii in Russia was the vie- H ` _ ... . '_' 1_5 Arr. ilnlfly I ' "Nb, but i have hopes; he has ies- _~ ...__ rr __--1--1-1 1 _ ll All miss. anim enemies marked. mr dolly. WM” °"°°"°" en te ordering t be serum sbeui. wry vt 0°fmw¥- Th' “fmt vi Gvr __,,,_,,,.._.............-M ._-... .....-.L _...L ---L Beef (wholesale) dressed .07-.10 sm (un wergbt) .. .os-.or ll .. .. .08 -.09 Ph:r‘=h(s(el:c.€s) wholesale 135% Hay (ton) }1|.00 Straw (ton) .... .. 7.00 nun" (bushel) .... .. 50-00 1°\u_-sir (tn1slrel).... .°. so-to oats waits) barb. so-so Oats (Moog bush. psf" ( ) .... od _,_ N ` 5"” FR mtxut (hmm '°1'.§sZl'5g wi:°i5:vg;::'ei'¢be mansion warm °x' 9"' mm' wh.” ‘b_“___.____` "°° nm' . ' 8turmoi'~ when ‘he camo' to Dover. “As";°' ian, esms ss the representative of the CHIIRING 0 ion of an autonomous Poland was a woaid continue an enemy, to be feared and fought. _ _ _ Af. bottom. the present war is \a war of liberation for the Russian' people are fighting it with the spirit that marked the French in their own wars to protect the revolution from monarcliical Europe. Germany is the . stronghold of reaction and absolut- And "Km In style me" wives Wm ism in` the world, and it is Germany I that has been the friend of the Rus- san reaction and the Russian depot- iluence in Russia tended to strengthen the arm of the bureaucracy, it has' also one hundred yea" from now' brought about a situation where Rus- ' sis has been ruthlessly exploited by German industry. The German mer- chant and the German manufacturer have dominated Russia and by virtue obtained a practical monopoly in Rus- sian trade, to the very great injury of When the war came it caught on in' pie. When Gorman victories led to the invasion of the old Russian soil, the Russian people responded as did the French in 1792. ` In a very real sense the present ls' the first national war in Russia since the Nspoleoalclstnrggie. but now. in addition to the patriotic emotions mused then. there is _the emotion stirred by the unmistakable desire of the Russian' people' -to free itself from the bureaucratic and absolute system under which they have lived so un- Alrdady a revolution has taken place and some acute obsurvers suggested when the our took eommllll lftof Russian disasters that his choios was the front or the rw to exile. What- ever the personal shes of the csar, those about him, hft._w(fo and his court. are German, and it is not bard to believe tbst these indirsncss vonld hive triumphed had twin not been s nstfonsl sentiment an emo_tlon_too strong to be ignored and we-,powerful court and the friend of Germany. I-le .-. .-.~ --- -»‘ \ ~ aw. _ , _ H , . _ . .¢. » ism. But not merely has the German in- I l. time to get through and I haven’t control, and there have been many heard from you since I was captured, moments whékit seemed possible. Ger- and I want to__be easy in my mind|mans have ever forS0tt0¥\ that* B about mother. change in' czars saved Frederick the _ ' My health rs very good and my Great, and German hope of a change wound is quite healed and gives me no in Rullololl P01165’ lhlt W0“|d trouble at air, but I think 1 sberr be eliminate the xrear. Slay foe hw on a curiosity when I get home, as I durod t0 the Droieht 11011? _ - U ' . I ° , der blade. You see 1 was hit at such cently that U10 Germans W0" Bbw* 3 _ I S short renga met the bullet went donlns -th-is hone- Recently lt was i through the bone without smashing Dolhtod out hero that the Dl‘00lHIl1St' it. ~ - - recognition by Vienna. and by Berlin . .’ tlxt there was no chance of a separgte , p ce. Still more recently Count p- ' ONE HuNDR§gw_vEAns FRC” ponyi, in discussing the question oi " peace, expressed the view that all dll’ » ferences between the central powers g_ Edg” A' Gugitesgn Denon Free and their foes. save for Russia, would ` one be accommodated, but the Russian Wm question would remain and' Russia "Heart Songs” is not a mere collection of words and music thrown togeatber to make a song book, 20,000 people vobed the songs in “Heart Songs” the songs of the American people Four years were required to reach a verdict and the result is “Heart Songs,” the song book of the American people. _ M ipy of thes : songs cannot be found in any other collection They came in yellow, time-wom, tear-stained sheets- that had been sacredly treasured from childhood - _some were written out from memory-others were given by titles only- or remembered verses involving a long search to obtain the whole. Of the thousands received it is safe to say that the several hundred finally selected-as having the largest number of votes and the highest endorsement-represent trday the taste of- the Amerrcran people in its choice of music. We believe that the distribution of this unrivalled song collection will bring more happiness into t_he homes of our Readers; will do more to make them attractive to young and old; do more to inculcate a love for music; to soften, elevate and refine the home life; to cultivate the noble and higher virtues of the fireside- than any other means we could adopt. In cheap smralled P°P“|‘“' 31"- _ .9 c nts _ As Explained in Coupon on Another Page ~ __ . This Guarantee Goes With Every Copy I We unhesitatio ly state that HEART SONGS is the greatest collection of old produced d 'll not only please you tint will please every member gglyeisuslifrirlv more tags :dy other single volumlllyou have ever placed in your home in years, or your mmey will be cheerfully refunded _ A '“‘“‘°“ "°“‘°‘ 1”” "“°r....“‘ Sl'r‘.“°"'1l"‘“.'l.“rl'1¥.“f=»"7»'»»"‘13'§’“ ‘°" " Ill » UU ¢° 1 -- ?.‘?.‘l.i§‘.I'...i‘.1§`2.'§i'...‘r‘I.'§.i. .....¢. cemrafe fu- with we CUT( DUT Tilt BUUPUN lil-lil » \ .fx . M, » r . ._ 1 . . , f , , , . ._ __ ~ _ , » r . '~ ' 1 rr . 1 1- 1 ‘» 1 < ° W *V ' t ' ‘ . . 1 `\ iifé ~ »`,~,‘&;` l tl . -_ -rr ._--as-nsssnn - '_ `\*‘- .; _yi ` 'I C. "`( r fi