. Y stain-nu r . ‘ '-"-~'-.t:r.:-.~........:.:..:w.c~'--~-- » -i‘- ";-~'- ‘ _ IOIIGI! ‘h":hnah( 004g =IJ-I~_A- l THURSDAY, sslistnitann 8.19s‘: _ q .. lAveaue. the latter having been ‘completed last year. is a broken . , . lliink. in one of ‘the most travelled Fnlnably never before lathe Bil-sections of the nity. would it not l’! 0i’ Cllfldl ill! tllltwllllbll Ofluave been more in accordance with been , _ _tbrc1 the fitueafisof things to have com- ‘l in advance; Jlnecultofn plated this link. which is very much ‘DIS bo@—ind both Parties fol- in need of rqiair. before attending ‘lowed it. more or leer-w.» make to a section which instill good for arrangements in aucus or in the years to come? loner circle. make their own pre- it is of course desirablethat the partition and then as ’q'uickly' us wboleystreet system be connected possible “spring the mine.“ This‘ uniformly but the prevailing opin- gave the party in power the ad- ion among citizens is that the most vantage of knowing before hand traversed thoroughfares should be the date of_the election land the given first attention. Completion W" P011715 ti! flllaiik- N0! llllfe- of the ‘section from Elm Avenue tiuentli- the‘ opposition was with! to Grafton would ‘make a continu- lllltfolwtod and too often their ous circuit from the outskirts of was room for the reniiiitiint that the city. through Kent Street to the election was "BDFIIIIE" Hillsborough Street and the Sims There is no room for such com-IPacking Company, through Grafton, Plilili- on the present oecssion- Kent and Queen Streets to the EVHY Oitlwfillnilyy Will lie-liven to wharves and Railway Station and lllflcilfl U"! 111311)’ imitations at is-the Cold Storage Plant. Disconnect- Sllé. W"? P055151! (Yilltofllllill-Y l0 ed sections give promise no doubt enable the electors to size up the s! a intol- connecting up. but look- whole situation. And never before in; at it ffQm the 301m o; yfgw o; has there been so witch cause for the ordinary citizen and business deliberate and careful‘ ‘ consider- man and particularly of the truck. “mm can“ l! 1on7 mauled men. continuous connections wher- m never before with divided coup-level. posslble would be prel-qnblé‘ eel. with group government, withl . fir.’ irresponsible meddling. with the disentegrating effects of agitation and stirred-up unrest. Four dis-l tinct groups are striving for ascen- »___ Idsncy. Liberal Conservative. Lib- 309610118 n! Sonfnrtll. Ontario. terais. Progressives and Labour. Of Teceniil’ i316 JHW- W- L- M861“!- ihe four only one stands by the 0111.1“? K555 ma“ '1 llliilemfl" which landmarks. that is the Liberal con-lives as childish as it was insiiitirts- acrvative party. The oldfiistoriclllfi i8 P69011941 by the Cnnndion Liberal party which has much tofress as followsz- . its credit in the history of Ciilfifldiilll "Hon. ‘Mr. Ring‘ compared unfav- development. has obliterated its crabiy the present total national landmarks and is throwing in its debt with that under the Laurier l0! Willi "Y SPOIIROI‘ KINDS "i9! regime. The speaker termed the m8)’ 1191B i5 1° Hill. 0i" lil ll"! 9011' present debts ‘appalling.’ He pointed ttest. in some. constituencies the out that l“ 1;,“ when we Laurlel, 1m“ resmcuve groups have canal’ administration went out of power "3"" l“ ‘he ‘Md- ll i‘ “i” Pl” the public debt was but. sasohottooo able. unless Canada awakens dur- as agalust more than ‘$000,000,000 _ing the intervening three vmonthsqloday‘ n that each of the four groups will be represented in parliament; quite v possible that none of‘ the groups will be sumciently strong to hold or even to form a government; quite possible that even» the strongest group will be at the mercy o.’ one .or more of the other groups. NOT ORIIUNG. ‘ _-_ ——-—-—QIL INSULTING AND Fuel-title. This is a type of criticism which every. red-blooded. patriotic Can- adian should resent. Everybody knows, and nobody knows better than Mr. King. that the increase in ithe national debt from 8350000000 to 82.000.000.000 represents almost precisely what Canada expended on What. in that case. may we ex- lhe war.- the facts are official and pect from the next parliament? The chief issue before Canada today is 15B “rm quesllom The valley Ol, is an insult to Canadians. an insult t Glitilliilfli|._,°"'"i"ttt-t Brdhnhly no election was ever held in Canada fraught with great- ler possibilities for lasting ‘good ur perpetual evil. aa will be the con- Weat-whlch can uow be said to be fairly upon ua_ if ever there was Ii time in our history when every party. thought should be set aside. and every partisan prejudice sent to the scrap heap. it is now. f! may be hard for us to goto the polls and cast our votes against the personal and political friendships of the past. but when the most vital interests of our country are at stake. and the heritage of our children]: threatenql to be thrown into the caulldron of destruction. it becomes our duty to the present and to those who succeed ‘l! tc dis- regard personal and political friendships and to work and vote for the preservation of our fouhtry and the retaining of a goodly and unimpaired inheritance for our posterity. There are those who think little of tbeae things. and would be williuglto see Canada con- sumed to the ashes cf destructizfl. if from the ruins they can gather some embers of profit for them- selves. Biit the great voting popu- lotion. who have no personal inter- ests toserve anti ts wholii the pro- gress and welfarc of the country is of the first importance. can surely; be depended upon to offset these efforts to wreck our young nation. and to save it for the benefit of our own people and their sons and daughters. The contest in which we are en- gaging is admitted by all well in- formed piibilc men to be one ab- solutely between the Meiglten Gov- “ernnlent and the stability which it represents. and the Grain Grow- ers‘ forces of Western Canada led b_v the Hon, T. A. Crerar. support- ed arid financed by the Grain Grow- ers combines. There slloulti be no nrfstaking this phase of our situa- tion. There is not a sensible man lulCanada wllo believes ii to he le- motely possible for the Liberal party to prevail. Their own lead- en-tilc Hon. Mackenzie King. en! ,dor".sed byhis leading newspapers. have openly declared tliat ONLY BY A UNION OF THE FARMIERS PARTY WITH THE LiBl-IRAIS ‘fwihl. l'r an POSSIBLE T0 vs:- j‘ FEAT THE GOVERNMENT. And "Edit... lcidlngmirlen of the Grain Growers‘ partyhave nios! emphati- cally declared tliat 'l‘H‘lS UNION . FOR WHICH KING HAS BEEN PLEADlNG FOR WILL NOT DE ENTERTAINED BY "FHEM. As president Burnaby of‘ tile Unit- ed Panners of Ontario-put it in his press interview. "a vote cast for Mr_ King" will not help hliu (Mr. King) in the least. so we say. that 'lu the East. a candidate returned to support Mr. King wlii not help film any but will make the Grain Growers party more foriniddble. Tile choice being between the Grain GPOWQYS-Of the West and the Meighen Government. every vote cast. wlietller for a Liberal or Grain ‘Growers. will be in actual effect A VOTE T0 HAND THE.‘ GOV- easily secured. This being so. it ERNMENT 0l"l3i\N/\Ut\ OVER To THE GRAIN GROWER-S 0F AL- BERTA AND sASKATfll-iElVAN ~'Ihe Liberal Conservative party on "this question is definitely known; that of\the Progressives is freel trade and open markets; and of the Liberals is not kuownlany further ‘than that it lea sort of an unclassi- fied cross between free trade and a vaguely reduced tariff. What will the‘ tariff policy of the new groups Zbe under such conditions? Tariff tinkering and the attendant uncer- tainties will be the least of the pro- duels to be looked for.‘ _ v ; "lflaaadal hunt‘ IllPGQllZIIIOHEIIQ ill {which to consider the possibilities ‘I Will the electors to 60.000 of our dead. to challenge AND THEME ALIEN ELEMENTS of the name hegrudges or would re- OUR AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT- call a cent paid out in such a cause. mN- 017R lNDUsTnlns M“) OUR l COMMERCE TO THE EXPLOIT- riltnlté or" THE UNITED STATES ‘WITH WHOM THEY ARE lN OP ENLEAGUE. Tliis is the real ques- 'tiou and the one issue now before WHY THE GILENGI. q _ H l iht= mterti of tile country. if there r- The Patriot ill its yest§rday"s!?_il- Q+0Q44+ ‘sue deals with the Guardian's com- - t ' IIIBQlB urn the. coming campaign and volunteers some-information rcia- _ -tive to the Liberal situation in ""15"" 5! W- 5._|-°"l°"- Queen's and King's Counties. it QQ§N+QQ§>Q+OQ+++ONMH - t ‘want up l and "all" “m menace however remains stoniiy silent with: BOlLED DOWN WISDOM ‘of this menace. j or wiilthey allow matters to drift Howard; the inimitable chaos that it , ,9. .- - - - lconfronts the country because of l these pew and irrenpohsiblo groups? . l- .. ~ - . l l Finer riituoe FIROT ' whilo the City Council is to be l. commended for its excellent work -on the streets it iwouid appear that the principle "of "first things first." ‘If. in some eases at least. being Wveriooked. ' ‘ At present one of the "boat streets iu the city Lower ‘Great George htreet is being torn up preparatory “to being modernfled with asp lt. The modernisliiglproceut woil ‘be quite in brdqi it}; who not nitlliii moire urgently‘ _ ed elsewhere.‘ Lower Great George Street ia in Ingestion condition: viii: 0M1‘ . ._ t“... . 1. lrespect to Prince, County. Why so valuhly informative in the matter ll] of Queensland King's and so maid- enly modest with respect to Prince? A day of worry is more A great heart has no room for 9 YIIEIIIOPY 0f WTOIIK. ex- ‘ , haunting than a week of work. r. I Lord Avabury. l ‘cot-round. NOTEI. ‘Death always means ua a kinz. ness. biiuugh sometimes he has a rough’ tray of offering it. t Rugher-fitrtl. mm“ H” “m!” campfllvnlthgl‘ tLook not mournfuiiy into the electors will demand to know where nest; it returns not osrinl Wisely the respective candidates stand improve “w present‘ “lrngliglllglv on the two policies which consti- tute the main issue of the election. iNo camouflage interpretationt will. he accepted; candidates will stand or fall by the written platforms of The“ ‘in: ‘ 300d their respective parties. v Our future and our present are equally safe in Christ's keeping. Alex Smeiiie in the \bd.s0 rdiich bad in the best of us. ‘lint it iii becomq any of us ljigfinfl mitt will the rest of us. l __ '3‘ _ -—Stevenson J "Hlfqllqervnd l that UBDTICL. ‘ . and other . _ _. Th0 rgcent rail will several v l dhouslad bushels. ta the potatql crop and present prospect; are. that evils have stained vmritwet-gygtet ti» e 232...’; ‘..‘i°i‘ul"ll".l.‘.li't..l.l’ l my profession. iilii hat may . l5 * such expenditure; no Briton worthy and lo Dracllcally HAND OVER‘ the old pgel to be manhandied into quietness. The horrible circumstances of his death have ‘- ' htenod interest in llia case. which for IIIOIIIIII. has been one of the ciilef topics of conversation in New ‘York and New Jersey. There seems to be a gen- eral bcllef that Brandon was an innocent man. Great pressure was brought to bear’. upon Governor Edwards to grant-him anal-don‘ or to rule that newiydisoovcrod evi- dence might be‘ presented. The Governor. however remained ohdur ate. and now it is declared public- ly that his action has left an in- delible stain upon New Jersey jus- tice. The story of the case is pres- ented by the New York Tribune: At 1.15 o'clock of the moonlight morning of August‘22. 1918 Arthur Kilnfer. a young paymaster. and Edith Janney. a IQ-yearold ac- quaintance. both residents of Perth Am-boy. leffan inn on the out- skirts of Railway. to go home in Kupfefs automobile. Their visit to . tlte inn had been an innocent and ‘friendly one. The proprietors of the rplace knew both Miss Jauncy and her family. The murdel‘. At 2.07 o'clock. or 42 minutes af- terward. the Rev Frank H. Moore superintendent of the State Refor- matory at Rshway, was awakened by the sound of shooting. Leaping from bed and without stopping to put on his glasses he lookedbut on the road. which passes under his ‘window. in the moonlight. ac- cording to statements made a lit- tle while later. Moore saw an ‘auto mobile stopped, anti a ntan carry- ing another toward a ditch. Upon depositing his burden at the road- side this man returned to the car. and it was driven off at high speed by a third nlau. who had remained at the wheel. The man left inthe ditch was Arthur Kupfer. Within an hour‘ or thereabouts, he d"-ed from :1 bullet wound in the heart. At dawn the body of Miss Juniiey was found in beside a road in the viilagii of Linden. She had been ahot ‘through the head. ' Tlie Accuser Accused. .. .. For lflfllOBl/EWO years the policc ,matie no headway in the investi- gzition. Then they received a cam- munictition from John ‘Lflfflblfl. alias George i-l. Brandon. a prisoner at Auburn undcr a sentence for burglary. that he knew‘ the mur- derer. lie offered to reveal his name in consideration for his own liberty and a Job. All arrangement was arrived at and Brandon named ___ was any chance in the world of Liberals succeeding li.‘. ‘Jlc polls. there would be the p tsslblc cliance that they woul-l ila niziiir as they did in i806. ., is abandon .'lli their pnat pohtlci -rtl siztmi by ‘ha good old National i'i.llcy. but mitted by all thoi- iea-lit-g nit-n. Thsrefou the contest is absolutely between the Nation pl-essrvera cf the east, and the tlilcn destruction lets of the west. beween keeping Canada for the Canadlanl. or halid- ing alitha‘. we have and are over to the domination of the Americans undcr th-c leadership of their ug- ents in the west. Very nlany of the fathers and mothers will be casting their voted on this occasion. for Pnemier Meig- hen llas given ll vote to the moth- ers and sisters of the land. that they too may take part in the de- termining of our destinies Mliuy of these older people have nearly run their natural course» in life and have passed the days_ of selfish thoughts. it is of tile children ‘they. lire leaving behind that ‘their am- liiiic/ns are centred. and that these may not have to carry all the bur- dens that thplr ftmefathers and mothers bore. To them partizauehip is an empty vessel. while to leave for the sons and daughters a proa- pemus country in which toqive is ihcir holy aspirations Are these going to be wfliing to loin in the sion away from those they love. at our gates who for too long a time already have been sucking the industrial life blood from out vitaiii. There are young daughters look forward to being at some thud the heads of their own households. They too will have their part in dev’ tsrmlning whether their brntheri and sons will have n homeland tl- iive inmorhecome drudges to fort- eign countries’ and when the teat- ing day comes we have this cdnfl deuce ‘in’ tilriomen of our land . ills Been lxetatiil. George lLBrandoa was executed‘ _ l. __ l, g w. _ _ in Trenton a few days ago. proteibi _ __ "d u!" ing his innocence with his dying I ' ,"'°_P"Y" .9.“ murlh" breath and resisting until he had d ‘w "°vm'7"p°“°‘ °" mb‘ Lch is ltuplséiola. ant’. 1s in iiti- h‘ V ' ‘hid confec- en accused .. was of the ‘hevraaa ‘bevy. At "the trial. Pechaud l was accepted as State's evidence and stuck to his story. Dr. Moore idea- tiiied Brandon as the man he had seen. despite the fact that he had seen him only once before and tnmstances of some excitement. un- til he had seen him in prison. A Troaelieroua Lawyef. The State also introduced evi- dence in the form of finger prints ‘from the rear door of an automo- bile purporting to he Kupfers car. The door was not produced. Photo graphs of other finger prints. iden- ‘tified as those of Pcchaud, wero produced from the windshield of the car. These were hcld to crin- firm Pechauda, story to the tifect that lie rode. in the front o’ the car and Brandon in the back from whence-he hald i-fired the shots. Brnndons defence was that lie had ltcvcr been near the scene -' the CHINE. lie was found guilt)‘ flllll 8611 tenced to fleath. His lawycr. Frank M. McDermit. did not prosecute the writ of error which he had securerl iind admitted that his inactlufi was due to the fact that Brandon's mon- _ ey iind run out. For this outrageous .conduct lie was disbarred. The aci- “ion (if bfcbermit attracted more attentiolh to the case of iirandon l-‘tld another lawyer took it up ‘ma ‘ineitorable Law New evidence was unesrlied Wit- resses were prepared to corile for- tartl in support 0i Brandon's nllbl. “on who had worked lit New York Cty garage with him. itbd MlstrDor orbv Brodcii were ready to swear that at tl.e twv-i of the crime he cnind not have been in N-w Jer- st-y. Another witness a as ready to’ testify that l: l\ioi.lc_ ivilon sum- moned to identify Brandon at Aub- urn, did not recognize him until he had been polluted out. There was other evidence to show tho! the former lawyer had almost criminally neglected and bungled the case. Unfortunately for Bran- don, tile New Jersey 1"“ “ti?! illill after a case has been tried. any ‘new evidence “Don which it is dei “sired to have a new trial. must be submitted within six months.‘ The six months had elapsed and this new testimony could not be considered The Governor. however ind power to intervene. and he refused to do so. The net result .wl’|l be a large increase in the "number of people ‘who, disbelievo in capital punishment. —- The "Mild Beptembe l AsiAugust draws to its close af- tar a period of weather delightful- ly cool. it is not safe to assume that there will he no more days this year on which the newspapers will contain lists of the victims of the heat. Everybody recalls the hot spellscf early September which_ during one's childish days. so often ade the achooiroom. after long vacations. n. plac-e of torture. where the young idea withered as in s furnace. But it is not so generally known that. here in Boston, of the two days in half a century on which the Weather Bureau has recorded temperatures iii excess of one hun-’ dred degrees. one was in Septem- ber. Oue on. the seventh day of the month. in the year; 188i there was officially recorded a temperature of 102 degrees. On the ‘Pourtifof July. 191i. thirty years later. the highest record was made’ the mar cury then rising to 104 degrees. The year 1881 was particularly try- ing for the school children. Octob- er also broke a record with a temperature of ninety on the first day of the month. it ‘is therefore. too much to hope that the weather which has madelAugusi a month to be long remembered will not give place to another heal wave. But the September visitatlons soon pass.‘ They are interruptions of coudit ions generally conducive to com- fort and happiness. and which are leading to longer and longer seas one in 'the country for those so fortunate as to be able to remain and to give it over to the parasites‘ and sistera in our country who‘ l ,away from city streets. And what- cotisplracy to take this rich posses-l "el- ggpgembel- mgy have h] gimp for us, there is no reasonable ground for fault finding with the weather of the month that is clos- ing_ ..-»-<0->-—-——’ “(MIN AND Q1500) T0 lldAKl N. l. ION! DRM-Ifhe N. B. Temperance Aiii-ince campaign to place the province in the "bone dry" territory. by means of the plebiscite on Oct. i0. will coat be- tween $i0.000 and 315.000 is iii es- timated. The amount is ‘has UIIII campaigns on behalf of the prohibi- tion cause have cost iu tltc.past, but it is explained that. in fine that their V016! If" surely he gdkufll‘) #9 frog‘ lulllmswl jugivpgfi for the govt-roman. ._l.t and for ithnrtwili- so et-ilumuiinient, thu. vvwv ,1»... A Leader of Ioya (Youth'_s Companion) To be a successful leader of boys a aiau must live the life that" he wants them to live. A boy in criti- cabsuaplcious creature. with high ideals and sense of loyalty; but ha then without his glasses and lu cir-lhas a perception of hypocrisy arid insincerity that is uncanny. Moat boys have a sense of humor; they like play-acting and jokes, and hav a wonderful capacity for getting lil- to scrapes; yet their sense oi ins- tice is accurate and they really like discipline, for it relieves them of responaibiii y. But it is useless to preach to a boy unless you are ready to back up your courage by your example. Where tllc Girls Don't Paint (tl-farvard Glee Club Boy's Letter in the Newttn Graphic) The Strasbourg streets in view of the cathedral were all jammed full of people much worse than a ‘Boston Elevated subway ‘jam. it ‘was a great sight just to see the crowds of people that night. and surely Sraabourg is tthe most pict- uresque place you can imagine. The cut-cat things we saw were some tiny little girls. as pretty as pictures. rlbuut three to seven or eight years old. in their little Alsatian costumes. For that matter all the girls in Strasbourg are beautiful. i didn‘t see a hom-ely one all the time I was there. And the best thing about it is that you never see any of them made up-— they didn't use a bit of paint or powder or rouge or anything like that. You can see any amount of them out on the streets at night, but rarely without some sort of chap eron. At the cafes there were crowds dancing out in the streets in front of thern. at it after l got up nerve enough to ask some girl to dance with me and had a peach of n time. Beauty (Canton i-Mo.) Press) Some women are born beautiful and others have beauty thrust ‘up- on them by the society editor. "The Touch cl Death" (New York Times) That wise Englishman, Viscount Bryce. uttered a blunt truth tit Williams College on Friday night when he said: "The less governments have to do with business and internation- al finance the better for their peoples." Lord Bryce was not referring to this Government in particular. but. his hearers milst instantly have thought of the recent sad ex- amples in the United States of the impossibility of a Government successfully conducting business. The condition or the railroads when the Government turned them back to their owners. the unparalleled waste in the Shipping Board—could there be more im- pressive illustratiuns of the in- ability of government in work outside of its legitimate field? Ambition. energy and economy are the maiiisprings of American business. and every one of the tthree snaps when government takes hold. Turn a railroad. ii shipyard or a factory over to the politicians andlit ceases to per- form its functions and becomes merely something for office hold- ers to feed on. The touch of the government iu business is the touch of death. Carlton's Giving (New York Times) Frank Garilcha. treasurer of the Metropolitan company. ‘told the other day of Carusds Christmas custom. Said he: "At the last performance Mr. Caruso gave before Christmas ne would play Santa Claus. Two years ago he filled a big soup plate with 5. l0 and 20 dollar gold pieces, anJ between the acts and after the performance he walked aroun... giving them to everybody he pans- ed. He stopped the ballet girls on the atage. also the stage hands, and gave them his presents. Fin- ally. when he setw that he could not get around. lie called in nr. assistant Santa, his secretary. Mr Zlrato. who helped him. We used to receive all sorts of mementos! from 'him--scarf pins, wntchug, pens. l - “Once a member of the company died and left his family in hard straits. Caruso gawfiiie egntrit‘ fibtion int that‘ waits be oil-onto‘- ted to help them, and signed. ii‘ ‘first of all ‘for tsoo. Then the" on stalemate than Iitlbou and so and l0. t Ill L l took a hnnd] ' Greeks made this move necessary, ' penetrates Northern Asia Minor. l. ivfl! y -. liking charitable. A melnbe of the staff ‘once started topirrchase some property. hilt did not _hava the , to the transaction. Somehow ‘Caruso must have heart! of i.t He called the man into_ nis dressing room and lent him tile amount I'lll10tl.‘;f\q_f.h9r pariey, ‘The telephone girl._-whom Caru- so has well-nigh immortlliizi-d with a cartoon-in his book. ‘ slu just inside the stage door of the house. and all the artists pass her an they come in. Caruho was os pecially entertained-by her laugh ‘He would always prepared to great her with his blast comical expression so ‘as to produce ‘hcr Jineat laughten- Finally one of her performances pleased him st- much that the next day he present- ed her with a new spring bonnet. A bonnet in exchange for a laugh! Why not, if it pleased him to hear her?" Apparently nothing could inter- fere with his playing Santa’ Claus on Christmas. in tho last perfnr mance he ever gave, "The Jew- ess," on Christmas Evelof last year. those about him could soc the agony beneath his make-up as he struggled with the pains that were already tnrturinlg him. As part of his costume he wore a biz money pouch. No one , thought that be would remember his on! custom. sick asje was but at llll‘ first chance he began passing out his gold pieces. At the end of the first act. Roillier. the bass». caught him as he seemed about ‘.0 fall and carried him off the stage. lHis chest was tightly bound Wllll lplaster. and in the grt-zlt efforts ho lmade that night he iind actually burst tllc bands about him. Bu: he did mt forget to play Sniirii Claus! Ancient Slvaa (Philadelphia ‘Public i.t-riser) The city which was tilt- M‘ '11P Iii one of he most fiendish lit-t..- liltll. ever stained history's pages, iilvu-u has taken its place in newspaper date lines. Recently ‘it was tin- uounced that thb Angora Govern lment oi‘ the Turkish Nationalists [had shifted its capital from A1180- ra to Sivas. The victories 0f tho and tho affairs of the Nationalists are now administered from this city o! antiquity. which is morr than 200 miles leastunf Angola. ll"; railhead of the only line »v.'litt".i I. . _ SEPTEMBERB, 1921 i Slvas was sacked by Timur-tllc- Lame in 1400 anti he caused 1.000 children to be tralnlllflli l" 4cm" beneath the lloofs of ills vrar hor-, sea and then caused 4,000 of thci Armenian defendersto be buried; alive. At that tim; the city had a population of about 100.000, nrid even during the time Rome dom- inated thc world it was 4t city of great importance and. known as Sebasteria. was the source of quantities of copper. its deposits in this and cool, iron and other valuable ‘minerals are extensive. and if Turkey ever rises to tlio dignity of a commercial power Siv as will be its Pennsylvania Silesia or Ruhr. its population now does not exceed 65,000 and lts' almost isolated position has greatly dimin- ished lis importance as a rug-ma- king centre. fer which it was once famous. ' i} ‘ r ::THE- OllL FOR LETE.—-ln rubbing dow-n the ath- lete will find Dr. Thomas‘ Eclct. tric Oil an excellent iiriicle. it ren dcrs tllc muscles and sinews plia- ble. takes tlia soreness out of. them and strengthens them fol strains that may be put upon them lt stands pre-emlnentfor this pul pose, iind athletes who for yeari have been using it can teatify to its value us a lubricant. A ihbrqwi? fir? (‘Zttrkjg/ BY HYNDH/llib THINHER THE RIGHT soar or PROTECT- ivz nooirma ron YOUR BANK BALANCE is FIRE t INSURANCE "A stream of water from til iireman‘s hose docs not protect Your homo its well as our insurance Policy protects your finances. We will carefully explain to you the Policy you need. if you will call. write or phone. 6- " i INQUR/ifibl Ahf_r4' Y IN l) [at 0 THE ATM. THF. ()LDF"TT viiiflii i 1;.» wt " __________ {tr-Qty Hacker of WILSOTS FLY PAD will Klll NOD $2» vwlbin 8110M‘ - tdtritrn Making ‘Good Ones . “From Bad Ones” In formfl- days, before vuiggnll, irig iind become such an exact science as it la today. a tire 11m with a hip hole. or blowout in it was ‘done for.’ Not an now. We u}. take almost any blown out casing and make it practically good a adv. We vulcanlze inner tubes too. Trainer Tire Surgery CoruOueen and Water Streets _._ . ____= vvvv l A Welcome Gilt . to any woman who keeps‘ > house is a Out Glass water or. 4, lemonade pitcher. Sets, richly cut,» aucil z: you will nae on display at Wellner'a Jewelry Store. Did you know that we carry t the largest and finest Cut Gian stock In the city? l’ WW. Wellner Since 1868 Jewelers E 904 l CITY scliooll’ Re-open Tuesday, v Sept. 6th l SCHOOL BOOKS ’ -~ and SCHOOL " t SUPPLIES A large new stock just opened .1 bought lately at I the lowest prices. I .All ' School and ; College Books sold , at prices as fixed .by the Board of <> Education Send the children to Carter's Book- itore. Lowest l“ prices. Prompt attention. (Carter 8i‘ Co Ltd. l LIMITED g Carriage Bililiiiif tiiil llepalrlnl Ilaakamltlilng of all kindl- Horda shoeing a Iifimmy’ We have non! WF°*P"“',‘: .4 H“, fllgpgfpfn our l la to give our ellli°'""' tllfaetlon. Pitflllbltiwfliilil v aimil i~ ' lib. l“ I 4