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The Signal, 1910-12-1, Page 5THE TOWN COUNCIL. TREASURER HORTON RESIGNS, A STHAITON IS APPOINTED Government to Be Asked to Transfe Indian Island and Water Lots to Town School Board Wiil Need Further Funds to Meet Cost of New School Building, .. special meeting of the town coun- cil was held last Friday evening for the purpose of dealing with several matters which required immediate conridet•atiOn. All the tueulbele were fit esen t. \Iey••r IJarneron tend it letter which he bout written the Minister of Public %Turks It Ottawa, of which the fol- lowing ie 4 copy : (lode ch, Ont., No.. rah, 1!11'. non. Lr. Pueiese. .'C.. M. P. ?thunder or ubllc Work-. nv °neva, out. lk•ar Ur. Pugsley. -- Would it help you 111 ppi.t tine through your e.tlmeter re u.derich har- bor asbol tmprvveweul..if we went down a depute twit of tepre•eulatIvee of the steamship and railwry wtuysular and of the council and Hairdo( Trade from hate and from different parts of We,laru 004uio to wait 1011 the l;o% ernweul f .. The humid of Trade propose the preparation of a .hurl 'wort how.ina what we are capeblr of doing )tele In the way of handling gram, and what' been done to the satsuma a moa of new 4levator+, end att.china ...man plan showing our torsttlou with reference to the grain [tad,:. Ihis would be distributed „muga the member* of Parlament from Oo tarlo before we art you and we would have a con.lden tbla delegation of members join us. It-ee,u.lo me that Lbw would be of advantage to you and if you agree would you kindly n, „ date fur the meeting 1 With kind regards, Yours faithfully. Itllgned) M. ti.rt The following is the reply which he received : t fllce of the Minister of Public Work + of / 'an. iota. Ottawa. November 21.1. 1414 - Ireer Mr. Cameron. Replying to your favor of u'.. Lith iii -teat. 1 hal'r been living careful consideration to ark tog proal -ton for further improvements at liudera:h• and atter the Inti.• • a...te. h*s44eeu uomltted to Patti:,oueni' if -.. )oa tai .1 +.(hot w 4.. wirable all have a drlr.an„u Ileal Ilia, kindly adv,.e me to ',het Oki:844in 1 e ill make an appointment: Your. snivereh•, (Maned, 1141 Lit IM PI i.- 11.1 . !I... 1 au,irron, F:.4 , 1,.x11.1 i'It. t1111. The Board of Trade Proposition. • Respecting the coin cut's ciommere. ing et correspondence with the 1)e-- plrtntent of Jlarinr and Fisheries 111 have the- property known a Indian ls4and ono itin--adjarent- water- lute annexed to the 'town, A. (i. (bitable atul Dr. Macklin of the Hoard of Trade weir on band to present t 11e propoyi- - tion. On request of the *entries! A. 41. t.nldble, ptrsident of • Ibe Bo;tr1._of 'Hadi•. explained the proposal. Sometime ago- thr.-jrlrtiee- inlet.- _ eetedmti the eret'ti•1n of a flve.mittion- Iu/shei elecatur ,.n the .river break- w.t.'r h:ul cent a CIO • :0 engineer to ,Arenk It;t.r ne ma e P ' re prop- ...intel to grant a site qn the river natedieatte haul been reidersrd hy the e el, but further investigation had • revealed the fart that the.04lysuittble pine.- was north of the in•eakwater in the river. It ever at this paint that it Wart considered advisable to ask the 4.ovr invent to give the town Indian '11.1•1101 and the adjoining wa'cr The enguiet•i suggested that a con- tact.• well be built ani' an estimated cost of $ 0,!krt t) $11111,D1111, Ily doing this *lout thirty-five (cies could i1e used for manufacturing sites. 'aIr. (ramble had received a letter from -1. )1r1 It. Allan, is p'Onroter of the *theme. advising him that it would - Iw necr.eery fur the council to move epuia•kl)•. ur individuals would come into the matter. He *leo bail heard from E, N. Lewis. who stated that he had interviewed the Minister sof Pub- lic Works. who had announced hint- ' soh its bring in favor of the idea and willing W give any assistance. lin uotiun of Reeye Reid and Coun- cillor -Vanatter, it Was decided "that thio council apply t11, the Marine and Fisheries Department Aar the transfer l,rthe town of the land known ax In- dian Island and the water lots along - bide the north breakwater, comprising about thirty-four acres which it is ',re- wired to utilize for industrial pnr- ,K)W$." Councillor Hawkins weans the only one who voted against the mo- tion. his contention being that the proper course was to apply to have t6r bounds ries'of the toad extended to iiciude the area in 0uertion. Treasurer Horton Resigns. • The clerk read a letter from W. L. Hr•i•ton, in which he tendered his res- ignation as town treasurer. He asked that he be relieved of his duties as seaon as possible. It was moved by 'Deputy Reeve Muntings end sec- onded by Councillor Hawkins that Mr. Morton be asked to retain the ',mi- llion until the end of the year. It wu,anfrved in amendment by Council - Wallace and Vanatter "that the resignation Of Mr. Horton of the office Id treasurer of the town be accented to take effect on December 1st, hut that his sureties he not discharged -_until lies books have been audited Mall passed upon by the town auditors.' The vote was taken .in the amend- ment, Councillors Vsmatt.er, Martin, Mallace, Parsons and Hawkins voting yea and Reeve Reid, Deputy Reeve Mannings and Councillor Laithweite voting nee.. The motion was lost oh the reversing of the vote. Alex. Steelton Appointed. It was moved by Councillor Wal- Iacr, se400ded by Councillor Vanatter, that, Alex. Straiton t* appointed treasurer in the place of 1V. L. Hor- ton, at a salaty of vim per year. the spp•antment to take effect on Decem- ber est; that Mr. Straiton, before en- tering on hix duties, give security in ,he sum of $111,011, to be approved of ba I he flbance committee, and thr a bylaw be introduced embodying e (1111)5 of the resolution. This sa carried. Mr. Straiton, who was present, in a few words tendered his thanks tot the appointment. Fire Exits for Opera House, Rnbt. McLean was present with a plan of the fire es^.apes for the Opera [louse, which he submitted for ap- proval. Mr. McLean said he did not know the kind of fire eec&pe the coun- cil seethed to have placed en the build- ing, and he made the suggestion that a committee be appointed to meet with him and let him know what style of tire escape was wanted. This met with general apprntyyal and Reeye Reid, Deputy Reeye :Runnings and TI E, SII:NAS•. (�01�P:RICH. ONTARIO Councillor Wallace were appointed a committee to meet Mr. McLean Nstttl.- day morning and snap out a outlaws bystetu of tire ew:ape* *rad exit.. Bowling Alley License. 1Ir. McLean wanted to know what was going to be done with the applica- tion of A. Nichol, of Stratford, fur a license for a howling alley in the store Iwlow. the Opera House. He stated that Nisbul had his material all ready to install and wee waiting only fur the n grinding of the license. The neon - eery procedure was explained h • the Mayor, who pointed out that if the hcenier Were granted immediately the provisions ot the bylaw would cooee- quently be evaded. On motion of V ouncdlur•s Wallace and Vanatter the its work in his favor. Atter months sequeut speech he talked differently. I of WI tingling the sn, eeial tariff seerion but his attitude un this question was I tarred out a bill that was the dtat•Ung far from deer. We think, too, that. point-,.( the plllaent dissatishualou among the plan do us a whole regard- our correspondent will Jlnd that "he Democrat. in 'un- K r at It lis this election, a sinker, with the few ezceptlone where of leading whet he eonr>edeted a !ot• to have voted forpQregainet the .airing or lowering of elle duty on certain torn hope, Roosevelt declared on the articles tgould have meant the poli) i- eve of the election that he was going cal demise of the individual. The only ttmt. "knock his Opponents over th, element to put up a fight for a square deal was the so-called ••progressive" ropes." Thie is net to ray that any itepublicam e- Le Follette, Cuutmins, fault is to be found with the ex-PrAsi- Hri.tow, Beveridge and a few others, dent on the ground of lack of courage ; men who have the highest porrible he has plenty of that. -ED. SIONAL. lees of partyy C Hearst war with, not against. Rouse- t•ee* *wit' i t hook. line and ion and .that instead rtaoding in the country tod+ppyuu.end __----- Roosevelt as President in hie fight for he bettering of the conditions of the masses as against the select few. Right here 1 should like to change the *ubject long enough to ray this : Thr Canadian people seem to think the Democratic party would be mote friendly to them th.,n are the Repub- licans; that the Democrats here and the Liberals of Canada are much the same in principle and that with a Democratic Administration et Wash- ington they would have more con- genial relations, especially in the mat- ter of freer trade. Well, l'in from Miw souri ! In revising the tariff last eking the Democrats made no particular effort to get a downward revision and on nearly every vote taken on separate scheduler there were always enough Democrats lined up with the Repub1li- i can prot return crowd •rgailed the " pro- RI...wives" to prevent any particular decrease in existing rates, and on that score alone it. stands to reason our deem tome from high duties does not lie with the follower* of W. J. Bryan, "Fingy CODnors, Murphy, Suite men w u have always sup rted ANCIENT LUXURIES.^ r cense was irritated to take effect oney • December 1st. Councillor Hawkins wanted,to know what the public works committee was doing townt& repairing the roadway at the north end of Cambria road where the side hill ha. slid down. C.tuncillur Martin gave the in- t,temotion that an effort bad been 111RlasLo repair the road, but be con- sidered that to prevent further trouble poste would have to he driven in the hill some distance down the ttra�de. He was not sure if that were thW tOwtem property or not, so had taken no Me- tiun. Meat Inspector. Councillor Walla. •e wade the sue- geetion that au inspector of [neat. bold .10 the town he appointed. He cleaned that considerable meat was sold in town throughout the winter by -pet eons other than those who are', eugaged to the business in town. The appointment of en inspector he con- ein0red advisable on account of the danger of infected meat heing .old. Couucillur Hawkins thought..f,j►e idea a good 0041 and asked that the matter be referred to the market committee. CuuneIIlor Parsons was of the opinion that. the 'duties of this offlcia�,to-ate,. should include the inspection of weights tiud measures. Auother matter to which Councillor Pal une called -attention was Ole con - wet wo hrorwuf late,street whish was so Nuts in that p edeetr1ana Might ax well have walked &cruxs the street at oily poi et ab attempt W cruse dryrb/at et the crowing*. Coiwcitlor .Moulin stated he had endeavored to keep the .r•ross- ingr clean fore. time, but found that the traffic of vehicles made them as lad as. before in a very short time. He had coneideted it a• west* of lumpy -to have 11146 employed at i1uirT1 weak, so he hadundered them to stop. The New Public School. - van et al. Hut to get back on the road again : Mr. Taft gritted the tariff bill without a peep and afterwards on bis mecum - able swing around the country ad- mitted that it wasn't exactly what we were promised and entitled to, but it was the best they could do for us just now. That soothed the public nerve ptvee Lined Cooking Ut.nsIls Used Twenty Centura.. Ago. While the housewife of today may reasonably pride herself on the con- veniences which her kitcben affords, she need not smile too superciliously at the thought of the makeshifts of days long gone by. She would certainly not do so were she to spend a little time inspecting tbe kitchen and other household utensils that were in nes 4„000 years ago. as exhibited 1n the national museum at Naples. Sallee - pans lined with silver, palls richly in- Iald with arabesques 1n silver and shovels handsomely carved figure among the honaehold goods of those times. An egg frame that would cook [wen• ty eggs at once and pastry rnolda shaped like shells suggest Igrnrses of the kitchen of 2,000 years ago. Geld - Irons and- frying pans, tart dishes and cheese graters were in nes then as now, The Roman lady's toilet table was well aupplled. Ivory combs. bottles of perfnmet pots of cosmetics, battens, balrptn. and even a hair net of gold wire figure in the mnsenm. Bronze thimbles and spindles are to in about the same way that cod air -be seen among the re11r.. The Roman lady even tend ber safety pin, for there In a specimen of this Ilttl. convenience which, before the one to the Naples museum wax found, was believed to be a etrlctfy Wedern Invention. The Roman lady. bnwevet; apparent- ly lacked one exaentlal, fib* had 00 hairbrush. Neither bad the a gTasa mlrrOr. --All the mlrrora in the mnxeutn, pe�aepTt ie modem science of the Hales. probes and forceps resemble closely those in use at the present d*y.-Harper's Weekly. soothes at toothache. We knew we didn't get what we were retitled to and we were just dying for a chauce _to rrglater a kick.' The Republican party had another white elephant on its hands in Taft.'s Secretary of .the interior; Ballinger. Rigbtty or wrongly, Ballinger was dis- credited. in fact. very much se, and Sbould hove got 'tial. In keeping hire ti i him' rntdt t-- iRe s'reeidt-nt injorrd his patty to a great extent. 'then' again there was the revolt in the He- puhli:an ranks against the Cannon: Aldrich rule, which was as nearly atltoerltiC. as anything could be out- side of Russia ; end that coupled with thegrow iugagitation against WO?igh tact u! living, which was It*Qa1•aa chalked . ,gt against the Republican party, wars the way the situation pre- sent 1 se to otieeye on Its re u from Africa. From • a Republican standpoint it was hopeless and the only cbance•they ever hadyt retain- ing power 'hie vm the personal pslpu levity of Roosevelt lis pull thrum thi't,ugh. In the campaign %ete 8)4143 fightiug for election who had stood by Roosevelt when he was President and men who have alwayd fought for atquare deal and an r,tuvl chance for all 1W ngltin*1 moneipxdy and special privilege. They sought his aid -nut only sought it but begged it -and though he knew ptobahly Better than anybody else that be was u a ins[ rn} y I t p ga a losing game he entered the tight with all the energy of which he is cap- able and gave them the best he could, and even his enemies roust admit he had everything to lose and nothing to gain by doing so. - To show that the result was the outcrene of conditions and not a te- bttke to Roosevelt personally 1 wiU cite one or two instances : - Roosevelt did not appear at..all in i11 s or was Dot an issue in any way. yet the Republicans lost over 1110,1111! votes. Even Democrat's were elected who are at present either ih- dieted " or- standing trial for bribery and corruption. 'lbf people were dis- satistied and took that means of show ing it - not because they liked the Democrats more but because they liked the Republicans less. In Penrl- 1.vlvania, Maine, Rhode island and ether States it was the same. Roose- velt did hot appear there and in no way was am issue anal the Democrats simply Maned things upside ,town, Again. 'Tennessee went Republican. but Roosevelt got no credit Tor it, whish he eho111d have done if he -is to Ire blamed for the revereee. His candidate for Governor of New York was worthy of the support of any man regardless of politics, but he was fighting against a di1..atistied sec- tioo of his own platy. a united Demo- I cr*cy, the race track element. Hemet crowd, 'Tammany an all Street co red. Why __were they contbi to defeat Stf on? Simply tog a slap at vett! Not much. For four yeaovernor Hughes had forced tl to walk in the straight and . . row path end they knew that Stirneon on the jot} here would e no let -rap. Wall ettreEt will tight any man or party that is for a equate deal for all : Hearst is like the Irish• man just in.po)•ted-egairist. the (ioe- ernment-or anything else but Hearst; Tanmmany's reputation would hang any man as an individual -and so un down the line. And we rejoice and say Roosevelt is defeated. But is it really a defeat ? Chicago, Nov. lit, .1. A. 1'. NOTE. 1t is an ungracious act to in- terfere with another man's hero -worse ship; so we shall not attempt to show wherein Theodore Roosevelt seems to us to fall short. That he haw been a striking figure in United States poli- tics no one could p,eeibly deny -Mr. Roosevelt himself would admit it. With a greet deal of what our cor- respondent says we heartily agree; his sympathies ahP just where we hope our sympathies are -with tbe people as aigain,t the corporations. Prole ably Mr. Ho,.aeeelt's sympathies, too. He in the same direet.ion. Rut Mr. Roosevelt in hie speech at Saratoga condoned•. what our correspondent matt* wax the great failure of the Taft Administration, its breach of faith on the tariff question. in a sub - Alex. Ssuuders, chairman of the public schikil !Naiad. wax present and p1tsrnLed to the council a statement of the fivaucial condition of the attains pertaining to the erection y.o1� the new • .cb,a,I. 'l0 1w•ntrh the reboot prop- e11y and 1na1e it thoroughly up -to- cert e, ID ex- peruhitute the amount of dela•rituresI Issued for the erection of the school It would take about $I,:urs) more to meet til a.:cuunta, 41r. Saunders! .,etrd. (rut the board did not wish any a financial assistance until after the new.i )oar. Inc grounds L3.conl.ection with the new sehase Include about eleven acres, and Councillor Hawkins painted out that there was at least Ilse adieu of Loud which would not .be waisted fur schtiol purposes. Mr. Seuielere said it was the intention of the humid to present this to the town a park for the people. The Mayor tut ed that Mr. Saunders suggest t.. the •h.oi hoard that it make a con- veys ce to the Lown t+f wrh property Iu - 'eas rad not require. 1 Commit* Hawkins Indignant. Council or Hawkins, chairman of the parks :oIuWIIdee, itl great indig- nation' MIM(. nd denounced the erec- tion ot the se I. ax a -bungle from SUM t W Mihail. He declared that it had Bern built , low that it was im- pxosrlble to keep ter out of the time - went and meat mon several other de- fects, the exIbtencof which was curtly denied by Mr. Saunders. "Who has to do with -•,e preventing of parks to the town 1" Councillor Hawkins asked. "It ve - preposter- ous to COMP here with a n sgge,- trons. Let them call a sale nd real - ire the amount they requite , it their propel t urs." )1r. Saunders "promised to la' the mutter before the ryht)bl tooted toe meeting ad' tired without thcrdelay. . nd UNITED STATES r•OLITiCS. An Old Signal Boy Criticizes This Paper's r Comment on Recent Elections. To the Senor of The signet. Stn, -in looping over the comment front different sources on the outcome of the elections we recently held on our side of tbe fere:• the one thing that struck rue most forcibly was the large number of publications as well as individuals that spoke of the Demo- cratic landslide as t he '•tlefeat of Roosevelt," and great Was the rejoic- ing thereat, which extended eve' o the usually carefully -edited e'lerich Signal. is# As a matter of fact, W it a defeat for Roosevelt ? That is the foremost reinject discussed over here just now. To sum tip we must go hack as little way for a starting point. Two years ago Presud'•pt'l:ett was elected by the second largest popular maj•'rity ever given a candidate for that office. The Republican party c o n t vet1.4 all branches 1,1 government at Washing- ton and also in the foremost States. such as N e w York, Pennsylvania. Illinois. Michigan, Indiana, Iowa, etc., and eve, ythiutt was lovely from a Republlran standpoint. That election was won by the Repetl,licans for three teaxone : There w no harmony among the Democrats - Bryan was discr•etlited and would have been an easy opponent for almost anyone on any kind of ialrue; Taft had a wide experience in governmental affairs, was considered •'safe" by the •• intet - este," wee Roosevelt's ' Pe, and the masses believed in Roosevelt; and the Republicans had promised a revi- sion of the tariff - which we got. 1Ve all know what happened te the tariff. It was revised "good and plenty," hut not, In the interests of the nut.n in the overalls, 1)f coulee, he can get his oil minting. and uncut dia- i monde a little cheaper, but if he wante A pick or a shovel or a loaf of Mead he • fails to notice where the taitf got Ir • with one exception. are of silver or some otber white metal. The ezcep- tion is a dark Ample piece of glass let into tbe wall of a bedroom at the Muse Specchlo in Pompeii. In surgical instruments the ancient world was rich. Those found at Porn- ty credit of more than one invention. THE •CZAR'S LEAVINGS. A Doubtful Neuer That We. Molested by • Polish Gni. In gnosia royalty is ao revered tbiet to the loyal subject it seerns a grit honer to follow.tbe carr. Tbe cover,. meet 1. eminently patriarchal -fn tine ory. ■t least -and the emperor maul supervise as well •a patronise the schools. At the Easter festival the pm U are treated with especial fewer. y.1 Young girls of the upper clause* 01 the Imperial Girls' school are driven to a long procession throngh the streets in the Imperinl carriages. Thn pleaanre for them Is only that of being allowed to take a drive 1n a stylish court ear- rlage, with coachman and footman in the Irnpertnl livery. There is nnthtng ,aped a l to be seen. The theory of this fe that the roar stands in n sort of higher ttnrentnl re- lation to all these children. When he once n year visite ono of thea. schnola —to which only the children of the nobility are admitted -1t to a cnxtnm that rax a sign of his favor he drops his pocket handkerchief, nod the, girls all acremble for It, tearing It In pieces, se that each one can get a fragment. Ile takes the most brilliant girl to the table and tastes of the food ot the lnstltntlon. ' it IN valued as the highest distinction When be gives ons of the girls his plate with what is left neon it. It Is the custom and flange for her to est It with delight shown to all her Diatoms. Oat was the astonishment Of Alexander II. when n yonng girl, a Pole, whom the carr had taken to the table as being the most dlstingnl.hOd scholar of the Institute and to whom he had palmed what was left of his meat and potatoes, nodded to a Versant and calmly gave him the tsar's plate to tale away. An Unfair Attaek, Pietro was working with a gang at railroad constrnctlon. He bad been told to beware of rsttlsonakes. bnt as - surd that they would always give the warning rattle before etriking. On'e hot day be was eating his noon luncheon on a pine log wben he saw a big rattler coiled a few feet to front of him. Re eyed the esrpent and be- gan to lift his lags over the log. Hs had barely got them out of the way when the snake's fangs bit the bark beneath him. "Son of a goner yelled Pietro. "Why yon no ring& da bsU?"-Dv*y- body's. neat as an Adder. The ezpre,afon •'deaf an nn Adder" 1* from the Penems of Dayki. where It appears In the following form: 'Their poison 1s like the poison of serpentw. They ate like the deaf adder that stop - petit her enr, which will nee hearken to the voice of charmers, char ring ever so wteely." East Indian traveler++ tell os that there Is a widely prevailing su- perstition In the east to the effect that both the .Iyer and the asp stop their ears when the charmer 1s uttering his Ineant*tlons or playing haw mnelc by baying one ear to the ground and twist's( the point of the tall into the *bar. THE ANGLE OF REPOSE. Depends Wholly on the Friction of the Materials In Contact. Tbe angle of repose is a well knuwu term in the science of wertlarics, but, besides being used In purely theoret- ical problems, is taken into account by railroad and other eugiueers. Suppose that we take a brick and lay It on a board and then gradually raise one end of the board. Tbere will be a cer- tain angle reached iD time where the brick will Dot remain at rest on the board. but will start to slide down. This is termed the angle of repose of the brick on the board: It 1s at that point where the component of force dne to gravity overcomes the resist- ance dne to friction between the two surfaces. Therefore the angle de- pends entirely on the friction. Fric- tion vanes with the materials In con- tact. So the angle of repose of a brick on a pine board would be different than its angle ut repose on an iron board, say. Now for the application of this In ordinary life. When a railroad cut has to be made tbe sides have to be suffi- ciently slanting to keep the earth or clay from caving in. The game ap- plies when a ditch Is dug or when for- tifications are built in time of war. Tbe angle necessary for this of course the angle of repose of the r- ticnlarkind of material through wh h the cut Is made as measured by ltse on itself. as it contains millions of ire I dtvidual particles to contact The an -V, gle in this instance is determined with utmost ease and simplicity. A elle of tbe material is put into an open cylin- der. packed down' slightly, and tbe cyl- inder is then removed ,Of coarse the pile immedlately slumps down into a mound with slaflting sides, tbe angle of which Is the one wnnted. This an, t le 1K. somewhat smaller than the mei that would be taken by compact -earth' fond therefore elle we cteod mnrglu of eifet y. There are tables got out for_the en- :;Ineer to,'ef r to, ' but it 1s ulwayw wiser to make a trial for every pe ticnla1 condition of tbe sell. for there are a 1 y two cols made through e netly the same kinds of material In essei;y the game 0' Iteoord-Her:dd. Tin'aeDAY, DItt KMUER 1, i910 ,,GURNEY UX QRS D�r`�fe t.•� „ra To memse the o/b9 Rae a do • A muLtst..4 , .-•••-••• -,4: I- wo 1•r .hotel.,.•'. �,•,. •'..- I,eMd Is.eau„ • it 1. W'1 I:,'..:- •1'. . .1.'rd. Y.al N:,rt1! 111.- Ir, -:IIs I • IIL. i:'1 things right You t,...1, nu••; r•rrt 1., drat yo it oven -or x •1 e h firs -irk •'p a low lieu all day :,Ind nigh: Y•.: -' nrinry every.. day you try 0 I, :. ,r.1- ti -f ,lone r.,ule. I . n a Ii(, sin;'. nidi THE iMPER:AL OX'PORD 4Y «. Ito. ,iron 1 'ck of it. •41.'de for eon) er woof-a:u t.tt.r•Inurnt if .1es.rak. i1ns etachahlr u.ekrl tint.. ea!)' to elate. New derive f..r removing :-Sh4--s. 406. • lief, u LM range n r �.r.. pnrras Th • an• ,erf,.. - -11 relies ,,.' 14044 rata' day w uuu aim) out. >...r :.flet y„or. t1 ill ike0XfF1RDECi7NOM/IfrP which easily 2fY '. of your fuel. Kr, other det-ice of the kind r~vcr iia-efited i.= worth sr, much t,. you in. (•old r:"h. You,lust r :e ' e ; tr;' day •sop ;try to, get along without it. . Come in anit,:•.'. us show you . the Imperial Oxfrird with "Economiz. r ' ;.tt:.cllment. It means dollars-•11td,tv�nts-to you: Other Gil-rev-f)iford stoves and ,rteiges for every •put. pn„e and • >r:::'? '•f fuel. Get acquain 1 with the hest known, be•. .1,_,� stores. in all Canuibi. will be your gain. C. J. HAFPER PLUMBING AND HEATING "Just Around the Corner"' e 4 BAIT FOR SARDINES. Bretons Coax the Tiny .Fish With • .Salted Eggs of the Cod. SIrdtu'•, doling forgts the chief In- dn»try of itrittany. In an average meta ental 100.000.000 to 150.000.000 ponnds. of "ardtnes, for wbicb they elelt•e anything from 1300.000 to 0;00.000. while the shore industries de- pendent upon this fishery give em ployteent to 20.000 otber',erectus. most- ly women and girls. .So Importaut ie ,Iw- sardine that in many commuuttles In Ilrittany every person Ls directly or indirectly .apported by it, and tbe fail- ure of the fish It, come means ruin. .,tarvntion and death to many people 111 the more Isolated places. - Sardines are found on .the coast of Brittany' throughout the year. but flourish In greater abundance In sum mer mud autumn. As many as 100.- 1'Otl have been taken at one time in one net from one school. One remark- able feature of sardine fishing In Brit- tany Is the enormous amount of bait wblch Is used. The bait In general use is themiltedeggs of the codfish. end it is estimated that the [Ireton e.ermen pay 11'0,000 every year to Norway for cod roe for use as bait. Enduring fit, because all Pen -Angle Underwear is unshrinkable. Exceptional value because it does wear amazingly. Real comfort, because s: knit that the shape stays in it. These reasons si''ould make you request ti`ie brand and look for the trademark. Have you tried Penmans No. 95? For the children as well as grown ups. Tre•de /1.4 pen-JIngle UNDERWEAR & HOSIERY le 'the casting of tbe bait. on the prop real[fast in itself. Try it Pr use of which n great deal of the sue - eerie of the fishing depends. Is at yr apple. Smother them in done by tbe captaidof the beau, who • .rands on n little platfo n the stern dtnd while directln a movements of i TOAST !l' ,at and t manlpulatlon of the boat net throw a halt to attract the fish to tb rface and around the bont 1n the fish are on one side .art the substance of the sort for building bone and making muscle. net or on the other his next move is to cast tbe batt in such a tray as to ranee them to rush against ttle_pet $Il thugs hccowe gilled -London Tit -Bata TEN CENTS A PACKAGE tomorrow morning with a baked cream, and sugar to your taste. The right food for the start of the day. Kellogg's contains Unleq. Townsend -Can a mon live on SI a riay? Beers-Certa'nly, unlesshe's so prodigal ns to lay something aside for any day, keep np his Insurance. eat when 'e's hungry. hue clotbes rind pay his b -Chicago News. ' Fla "Would you take X10• 1Ibany to New York?" "Why not? Our cashier too 11.0Uti to fly to Europe." er "THE SWEETHEART OF THE CORN" Nothing will conviae Bo quickly as the quality wrapped 'a the Kellogg pacctaje—butt sure it's the Kellogg package. The rand you use will fain yob lasting