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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1917-3-22, Page 8GRAND TRUNK RAIL 8 TllowoWAY, M often 'tL. iWI7 PRF SIGNAL GOT)FRTCH : (INTARiO • 11lacEwan Estate Exclusive agents for SCRANTON I COAL NIA L for Goderich and District. Beat Coal Mined. Any quantity best all Maple Slabs, Mixed Wood, Hemlock and Kindling (Cedar or Pine.) TELEPHONES, office 98 residence 212 Or fig JtarVare Oor,.•r MontrsalfStr..t end Squats. HIGH CLASS and SAN'? ARV We serve excellent meals a la Carte daily,/ PiES TO TAKlA1'OUT Private Luncheon Poem for Ladies and Gentlemen can PUt. SERVICE Our Motto -Cleanliness Alw.rs OPEN 9 A. M. TO I A M. diessmortttm Often the Cheapest - Always the Best W. WALKER Furniture Dealer and Undertaker Clouse Furnishings PHONES STORE 89 RES. 197 WINTEIR TOURS SPECIAL Ferns now in effect to resorts in Florida, North and South Carolina, Louisiana, Georgia and other Southern States, and to Bermuda and the West Indies. Return limit May 3Ist, 1917 LIBERAL STOP -OVERS ALLOWED Por full information write to C. g. MORNINQ 0.P. A. Unset Station, Toronto, Ont. P. P. LAWRENCE & SONS Town Agents Phone 8 GIRLS WANTED. For oMee w•.,rk to All the Ware.: of men whp neva s urn el are going to . he front. Y.e.nk women can render the eerintry real .orv4ee by preparing to take pu.l..v.a to banks and bu.l.,eni 'rare.. Special Conner of training h, Hook. beetroot. t bo thsnd and til utter Cum ,ppeens/ -ubjera non In [rear 6..4 efudent.ad •• ttedaoy'lure. lIk tret.d esralogae fare. Northern Business College, Ltd. O W L18 IMG, U. ON1 Q /LIMLNO. Principal. ora6ad!• s s.iw0MeNN..... s. PELItILtOP Wt'nianu- facture pacil- ing6 for every purpose. Tell us your requirements and we'll : : prove : : "Duntep" Quality Q is t 614 4 PACKINGS • eteeerwerwoweeetwowdefereere-r-M--Yr. • LARGE FARM CROPS. Professor Zavltt Indicate/ Some Lines in Which Production May Be Increased. Toronto, Much 17. -At the inaug. ural meeting ot the Agiiculturr) Cow metre of the Ldgi.L.tulro et p, opagaad was instituted toward. meeting the problems imposed by the mat on the egricultusal induett y. At the request of Sir William Hearst, Minister of Agriculture, Profeesor C. A. Z.vits, of the Ontario Agricultural College. stoke et enure length on ways and mean of increasing crop production cud the right kinds of ruaterisle to use. Sir William himself wade a few re- works emphasizing flan need not only of growing foodstuff., but of growing those kiudr of foodstuffs which will be mos. Deeded both here and in floe Mother tktuutry. There wee r drette on all aides. said Pro/Gwen. Ztwits, to du all possible to lune( the very trying conditions that exi.(ed at, the present time, but he h.,prd the suggeal Ione be had to offer would be of reel service to connection tent' the tactrasr, tf poselble, red ...socially the uuahty of the scups of Outer d l tor the conneg year. Better Croon Wttb Lem Labor. Owing to Ibe red -city of Tabor all possible insane ghoul' tie &doped W ruonowize Isbur. White many of tbrw euggeetiooe were obvious., tbeie ituportao.e could not be WO SIrougly erephasized if actual resulin were to be acbiev. d on the yeal'r oper.t'ons., He, Uses elate, said as a filet u.mwdeta- twit the termer should qct turuy for the year's crop before the .Low morale pears trove the ground. The recd should to selected, cleaned and gut ready for spring rowing. las the great majority of caeca it lard beMM found that the send whish produced the best results was that, grown in the locality where it would be used. In (ntarto, generally specking, there was a lot of g eed of good quality. At the College they had learned from a Ring 11451 ire us experimenter tbat "plumb' seed gave much better results than smell seed, but more seed would have W be used in sowing, as the plants from lhitciase of seed were larger arid more wagerou, than from small geed, Plant at the Right Time. The next puiot made wee the im- portance of planting the reed at th•- r ight time. Much had beets leu tied in this rre.p•ct. by experiments at the C.dlege. Ba d.fiy these reaulte indi- cated that in the case of spa dug w heat it wax importaut to get it in the ground just as quickly ars the bred could be wt rked. I'hes should he Ino ediately tadlowa: by us, s. The l.ar• I«y should be put in n. at, Ihrn peas and beans. Getting the geed into the g round et the a igbt Uwe Meana an a,1• dition of bushel.' per acre. Beans Should Be Grown. Turning lou atteutiun to the crops that might be sown to advabtage, Prefeeeor 'Levitz aged an increased sowing of beans, Beane were grown extensively in Michigan and New York State., and it wee reasonable to assume that Ont trio, lying between them, could grow lawn, profitably. The bean WWI a highly Coucent(etrd food product, and the eeed available io.Ontario was comparatively free front di . The variety that he thought cuuld be used to best edema, - age was the cowwoo white pea bean. they are already grown to Burne ex - rut in every county in the Province, •nd could he greatly extended wi,h I,roflt. Prevailing prices are high and .vill continue 10 be so aa long e• the war lasts. He very •Lrougly urged the genuine of 11101 ft ti.sne. The I.ea crop might also be in- creased. m creased. but he did not urge thi. strongly. Like the bean the pea wa- • conceutrived food. Room for More Oats. Another crop that could be increaser. LO tetra( adventrge, said Pio/PA.nr Zi z, was este. The oat crop wss exceedingly important. It was needed 1.r feed nut live stock. acrd lave rte.► war greatly needed. The rut crop of Ontario was worth in value ebout one quarter of all faro clops. RHiteiatlne cls former advice about. aotti,g good s. ed, he declared the farmer should in- .iu on getting send meta of • known v sett'. There was a lim.ird suppply .1 O. A. C. No. 72 utu, end he til der- •t...d the Dominion Government war •rranging to gel "Horner"mrd nate fr•.m the West ; to fin , abobt 4tifl,I1Ot1 bushels h..d been collected for wed purpose. in the lei mina' elevate -ore, 11 the farmer could not secure these he sugaeeted tbet teu. 1 cuiiiiii lei send oats Ise purohaiwd, but on t n nernun•- the ordinary commercial freeing oath This potrlt ne .trungly vulpb...zed a• toeing e•epnl ial to slice e --flu t bottle. limen wed rend brat 11 est. rex Gerd til anown verb., y. Professor Zavitz warned the farmers against purchasing at a high pric. .red oats that were exploited by Un- ited States seed houses, when the Willie gnsllty of seed could be purchased in Ontario et from ode•tbird to one- quat ter the price. • The Potato Sitaatiod. At. the •egue.L of the eonimittee, Professor Zsvits referred briefly to the ,.oteto question. The existing high u•.• of p„ more he thought would re- s•1t In a gnat many people in cities and towns using 'grant land for potato arowtel the y•rer. Thrr crap could also be ver y well extended beratres of Ito gust luau valor. Ar to mel hods to m.. • n.pinved W sowing, he Raid hat b • It returns would be secured from sawing ,mail, immatore potato*. bout grad, heal t r Isms,. ea dile Ingetiitted from small potatoes of a noes variety, Large pntatne•, when need, should la rut Onto p sees ot armor tern odor.•. i . wrier•, Experi- ments along this) line had hen con- ducted over s series of years, and the au -moos •sen, of. er s -z eI ly .;miler •ganditlons to One -mimeo pi. res Rod 'ere, bad given a yield of 177 bushels torr core. This wee tile, don.onetrated ,• the ('en•cal Few rrn•etel Warm at Ottawe, whe-e they got heeler ncnlla from pot at ea from Indian Head than 'rein eleree Mother eolith. Not he rang. the poletore rem' from Indian Heed. hut rather that the potato.:. did PPL crane to the Mme desire or 1111- _ Ott•ily. li.vv Hest prof• r•o, a to y,n . howe•Krur u geed l.y ell•mranr. '► The welsher comfit, wne lest year, d Professor Levitz, welts abuorwal. rtuuately most tit the wed in (hi- tarlo was free from disinter. This laleor eho• lege continued to bre acute, sod it enuld nut well 1.e overcows while the war !Maud. Brit be was as.Atled that it the euggv.tious that be had thrown out n, the committee were adopted st riously by the ferment of Outrrw, be ..and prepared before the snow dis- perse", sowing done at the proper tiiiime, and "plump ".red .selected. Gee ' from disease ,.r hligbt, ills rwulte 10 Ibe fetwen I.uu tide •es -11r'. crop, given reaaoneble weather conditions, would be •►Wni•bing to the farriers theweelvee end a great help to the enuutt'y. John R. flargnvel, M. P. P., we. 'bend chaut•nwu, and the mewl/err pees.-..' ehowrd A guest interest in the diccu• *ion. Heavier Grain, Better Quality. 0. F. 'I'horuicroft, Lrmbett•, Onl., says: 1 nerd Hnweeteed Bone Black leer - 1 it-zer oil half a field of male and found that the grain was heavier and of le -1 - ter quality on that pert . 1 the field than en the other half. 1 sin well pleased withrrsups," Weil Satisfied. Conrad Frio -k. Stratford, elms, io, say. : "1 u•ed some Hon,eslrad F•'erliltze' this "meson on n.v mit.- ani 1 am well satisfied with the result,. ih1« could 'tend hack twenty reals stud ere just. Where 1 sowed it." One of the Biggest Crops Ever. Louis Wslper, Dwelt wood, Ontario, says : "J have lewd Hnrmo.. t• n,l Bone Black r illser on ory whet No„ 111.1..1 Huy I had one of the biggest , r.,ps ever seen on wv f r u." Lasting Results J. A. (iorIon, At kook', Ontario, 'You eek no. utast 1 thi k of the 1''.nir.trnd H •ns. Klerk heriult,rt. �: •11, I biter n -r i 11 (n, ,.i.o o 11.e yea ., .,n,1 the 1 s, crar 1 .owed t but it .d1 once arra,, the Held ami toy nrights.r •.aid he could we i11*11 ti rip etghl y rude a,vav ani yon cool 1 .Pr .1 1 an.. yeas'. 51.. 1• in t l,.. meadow, eo I think n pays all debt." Write Hieb' an tlsrbon Works De- i�roif; T Ti.p lit ok aid psr', cel n shout their Homestead Bone Black Fertilizer. No Breakfast. j To turn the 1 ht oft. the exposed end of the other Gln is drawn.-I'opular Mechanics. a�oroµiw�n , RECORD�AILWAYS Russia has beaten all records In rail- way construction. She built a great double -track, broad-guage line from Alexandrovsk, an foe -f pp t on her north coast, douse to ad, and completed It wlthle MX Months It is 1,220 muse look. glad 10,1109 men. most ly prisoners, were employed upon it. Then look at the Great Siberian roll• way! Five thousand Ave hundred and twenty-seven miles of Ione, most of it across wild plain and forest and over great mountaln ranges., in • climate where for Ave months of the year the sell 1s frozen to the consistency of granite, aad all to In eight summers! It is a record h, even to North America, has ne r bee* equalled It coat one hundr and orty m1111ons. and since Its coreeletlon another teen ty-two nllllone hive been spent In tin proving the tin The best wo done 1n America un der similar, but eves worse , ondttlons, was the conetrYQtion of the N'hlte Pass and Yukon Railway, which open- ed up the rout& from the roast to Skagway to the told region of Kion dike Within tMenty tildes from Its starting point thle line has to climb the White Pais. a height of just off three thousand feet. When the sta- tion et the eumt>dtt was opened seven feet of snow *mounded It. and the thermometer re*Iatered 67 degrees be- low zero -that M. 39 degrees of frost! Distinguishing Fixture Chains Annoyance through Inability to lo- cate quickly the proper chain fur lighting a gam Tamp 1n the dark was overcome by fltting a "mall brass tabs to one of the chain* Ile shown in tie Ulustratlon. The tube was solder - IM to the chain by which the light 116 turned on add the other chain peas - in through the lobe and is grasped be- low It. To turn on the light. it Is .only necessary to elide the hand along both chains yid to grip the tube, drawing on th/ thaln attached to it. c Lrs.nder, • N. -w York State farm- hand, wee telling his troubles 1.o s neighls•r, and among other things wed that the wife of the far tn.!. who employed hurl was "too measly close for any uw." "Teel. vs., y morning.' said he, "she acid to me ; 'Lyraud. r, do you know how men, nsncaaes you have et this ,1101 nin' ?' 1 said, 'No, ma ant, 1 adn't had no (OCs -ion to 000111'rlll.' sari she, 'that last one was the twenty-s,xt h,And it wade me "o mad I jeer got nn from the table and went to work wi hout any breakfast." -kveryboiv'e Magazine. You will find relief In Zam-Bok 1 It eases the burning, stinging pain, stops bleeding and brings ease. Perseverance. with Zan'. Buk -leans cure. V1'hy not prove this ? 411 1.1ewp es• •, ai 1 Get the Habit of Drinking Hot Water Before Breakfast Saye we can't Zook or feel right with the system full Of poisons. Million' of folks bathe Internally now instead of loading their system with drugs. "What's an Inside bath?" you say. Well, It is guaranteed to per- form erform miracles if you could believe these hot water enthusiasts. There are vast numbera of men and women who, immediately upon arising In the morning, drink a glass of real bot water with a teaspoonful of llme- Monts phosphate inift. This Is a very, excellent health nileasure. It is In- tended to flush the.tomath, hese kid- neys and the thirty feet of intestines et the previous day's waste. sour bile and lndlgestlble mstmrtal left over In the body which If not eliminated every day, become ,food for the millions of bacteria whih Infest the bowels, the quick reset Is poisons and toxins which are then absorbed into the blood causing headache, bilious attacks, foul breath, bad taste, colds, stomach trout-' ble, kidney misezy, sleeplessness. Im- pure blood and all sorts of ailments. People who feel good one day and badly the next, but who simply can not get feeling right are urged to obtain a quarter pound of limestone phosphate at the drug store. ` This will coat very little but 1s sufficient In make anyone •'real crank on the nubjeet or internal sanitation Just as soap and hot water art on the skin cleansing, sus Ing and freshening. do llmeetome phots ate and bot water act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. ft 1s vastly more important to bathe on the Inside than on the outside. becalm,' the skin pores doenot absorb impurities Into the ibloott; while the bowel pores 4..' r , FIRST ANAESTWET1C USED -chloroform Wad Dlstovered In 184S- WM69. Heiner 7 I Sir James alb,pson, Professor of MIdwitery In the ('hair of Edinburgh University, If hot actually the dis- coverer of chloroform, was, at any rate, the first tb Introduce its employ went as an aniesthetic Into surgical practice. Thle was In 1841. Previous- ly all operations were performed with- out antesthettcs, the patient being drugged with whisky and held down by strong men while the operation was performed. No medical discovery ever did more to alleviate human euf• Tering. Sir James Is generally given credit for the actual discovery of chloroform, but It is stated In some works that It was discovered enure years previous to his flret entitlements by an Ameri- cak doctor named Guthrie and by a !Tench physician named Souberlan. in any rate. It was Dr. Simpson who proved Its great value as an anaesthe- tic, and the room In which he made his first experiment still exists in Edinburgh. The story goes That hs s tried the chloroform on himself and two medical friends. They proved Its efficacy by almultaneously falling be- neath the tattle. Sir James had con- siderable prejudices to overcome be - tore chloroform was adopted generally by the medical profession, it being de- nounced at one time as dangerous to health, morals, and religion • Tricks of the Breen Man Those who have seen flims In which a player taking two parts appears In those part. at one and the same time, In the same scene, will wonder how It is done. The player, of course, doss not play troth parts at once. He. or she, playa one part, and while do- ing so the camera operator, by one of his many mirk*. keeps blank that portion of the Alm on which the play- er Is photographed taking his other part. When that part In which he ham played 1. flnf.hed the operator winds back the film to the beginning, my and the unexposed blank portion Is do, light exposed for the first time, while the Limb, yearling other part 1s covered. Then the play- er takes the other part. MARKET QUOTATIONS MARCH lith Tweeter Cattle 9jerkut Cbsdoe wolgbty steers..81$ T6to$11.16 do. stedtum 10.66 10.51 butchers', choice bandy • 10 t60 10.60 do. good 9.80 10.40 4a- medlam 6.64 9.N du common . 7.40 6.00 rRtehors' choice cows6.60 9.66 do. gime 7.80 1.26 da medium 8.60 7.06 •n' bulls, choice9.00 10.00 . good 7.50 6.66 do. median 8.50 8.70 Weeden, 900 to 1,003 lbs. 8.26 9.66 do. med., 704 to 900 7.26 3.00 7M to 900 Ibi 6.76 7.26 6.66 6.76 ere 6.00 6.36 good to cbelce 36 10 106.00 mist aad med... 80 ee 70.00 69 09 106.08 13 60 14.00 16.90 11.60 /Silo 1.10 8.00 7.60 7 60 14.60 9.00 10.25 veal, choice.. medium oomssoa Allo. rasa de. eavy tat lambs. 'holes do culls Sheep. ower Itght 4 heavy and bucks. 8.60 calls 4.00 welshed off ears 16.60 fed and watered 16.25 do. Leh. country 14.06 9.60 16.26 12.00 10.76 9.60 7.00 16 86 16.40 9.00 Toronto Grain Markets Mienttebs wheat -Track. bay ports, 1fa 1 northers. 33.04; No. 2 northern, >Kfy' ; No. 3 northern, 31.66}(1; No. wkwa7, 31.84'4 ; all -call Niro. trawl freights, No. 1 nor- usas, $2.02. Manitoba oats -All -pall delivered, Re. 3 CW, 72490; No. 3 C.W, 7149c; soars No. 1 feed, 714lc; No. 1 Geed, ne. Antal-tun mor' -No. 3 yellow, 11.32, "abject to lmb:go. Owearte wtieai-No. 2 winter, 51.22 to 6L64, aocordlng to heights outside; No. 3 winter, $1.80 to 31.82. Cratere) oats--AccorQlag to freights outside; No. 2 white. 84e to Nc; No. 3 write, 116c to tic Peas -ND. 2. 32.65. Barley -Matting, 31.21 to 8123. Idackwhest-$L36. Rye -No. 1. new, 31.43 to 11.45. Ddaattoba Sour -First patents in jute bap, N 75; seconds. in jute bags, $6.20; strong bakers. 1n jute, 38.80, j Toroato. Ontario tour -Winter, new, track, Toronto, prompt sblpinent, according to sample, 37.60, In jute hags; 97.10 1 Wr grade, bulk, sesboard. ill feed -Oar lots, del leered, Moir trial freights: Shorts, 840; bran. 368; good feed flour, per bag, 32.70 to 11N, Hay-1'ratk, Toronto, extra, No. 2, I 112; mixed, 19 to 111. Straw-carlots, 88.60 to 31. Careals--Rolled oats, carlots, bag of 90 lbs., 33 45; small lots, 13.55. Oatmeal. Carlota, per bag of 98 14.16; small lot., 34.30. Gold duet cornmeal• ll0-Ib. bags. 13.26. in carlots, $3.50 to small Iota, fancy yellow corn- meal. 33 In carlots, 3316 in small lots. Rolled wheat, 100 -Ib. barrels. 15.26. White corn flour, 98-1h bags, 33.76 to 34. Hominy grits. 33.75 to $4. Wholesale Produce 1 Y Toronto wholesale prices to the trade: 1 Eggs - New -laid, cartons 3 18 10 1 39 do. ex -cartons 36 37. Bulter- Creamery prints, fresh.. .43 .45 Creamery prints, .'_wage 42 .43 Creamery solids ........ .42 .43 Choice dairy prints.... .39 .40 Ordinary dairy prints.. .36 .37 Bakers' .21 .33 Cheese -New, large. 27c; twins, 27', e; Jute, large. 27%c to 2$c; twins, 28c to 281ac. i Live Poultry- Chickens, If fat 24c 25c Fowl, 1f tat 24c 26c Chickens. o:dlnary 22c 23c Fowl, ordinar7 22c 23o Beans -Japanese, hand picked, 36.26; alms, 16.75; Canadian, hand picked, bushel. 17.26; prime, 86.76. Honey -Tins, 211 -Ib. tins, 14c a lb.; 5 -Ib. tits. 13440 • Ib.; 10-Ih. tine, 16c a Ib.; 80-Ih. tins. clover. 12'4c to 13c a Ib.; comb honey - -selects, 83.40 to 32.75; No. 2. 12 to 1216. Buckwheat honey, 60 -Ib. tine, le to 144c a lb. M sats --W holeeale4 Toronto wholesale hon We MIK. • fog to the trade as folowi: Beef, forequarters ...113.00 to 116.00 do. hindquarters .. 14.00 18.00 Carcases, choice 15.60 17.00 I do. common 11.50 13.60 Veal., common 0.60 11.60 do. medium 12.60 14.60 I do. primo 17.60 18.60 Heavy hogs 12.60 14 60 i3hop hogs 14.60 19.50 llhattofr bop 19 68 20.00 nttoe hes 10.00' 11.00 14.00 14.00 11.00 16.00 Pilling the Radiate, 1t not Infrequently happen.'wlth the motorlet that wheh an empty radiator 1s filed up and the car runs a short distance, the water level will be found to have fallen considerably, though ne overheating has occurred and no leak exists. The reason for this Is that the water requires some little time to per- colate through the various re.trteted passages 1n the cooling sy,tem, and a little shaking down results 1. a fall- ing of the level. A War•tlete Problem IChleage Livestock Cattle - Receipts, 600; marlret tteady; beeves. /8 to 311.00; steetere lune feeders, $4.80 to 19.76; oows aced 1'elfers, 16.70 to 610 75; calves, 310 to 114.26. Hogs --Receipts. 15,000; market on- lettled; light_ 614.26 to 614.90; Mixed, ''14.46 to 616.06; heavy, $14AO to 115.10; rough. 614.40 to 514.66; pigs, 10.76 to 313.26; bulk of sales, 314.60 0 316. Sheep -Receipts, 2.000; market Weedy; lambs, native. 312.21 to 114.66. Seed Quotations A baker informed the Rugby tel- Teo following ars the seed pclew are paying at banal that he had advertleed for wee men workers Ti..reply he had re- ceived wee from s girl, aged misteea, wen ronf,'maed that she knew nnthing M the business and asked for els dot Mrs per week. it 1s not dMrnysfe,db to hair. $ Rhode island Ree red( threw a white feather. It Is no segs of itapertty. These white feathers ars apt M Ib velep with see. • Tomato wholeeal.rs ministry points: Alalte, No. 1, bushel .. 810 00 to 310 60 do. No. 6 s 60 1.00 do. Ns. 3 7.00 8.00 do. rejected 4 16 Cie lmetby. cwt. 6 00 6.60 de. Cern. grades. 9.00 600 clover, No. 1, Int 9. fi 10.00 da Na 6 5.06 9.60 • r Re 3 3.50 8.60 WOMEN'S NERVES Women, more than men, have excitable nerves, because tiring work and physical strain tax their more delicate nervous • systems and bring premature age and chronic weakness -unless treated intelligently. Drug -laden pills and alcoholic concoctions cannot build up a woman's strength, but the concentrated medicinal food properties in OTT3(NULSIOI build strength from its very source and are helping thousands of women to gain control of their nerve power --overcome tiredness, nervousness, impatience and irritability. SCOTT'S is a liquid -food -foe from drugs. Scsal 8 ague. Twvr.. O.t. WING POWER OF BIRDS germy Petrel's Great Power M PIIeht -The Swift awtallow There is nothing more wonderful to Nature than the power of Otgtt poe- seaed by birds, and no subject whtcb yields more tsartling facts upon Invea- tigatton "The way of an eagle to the air" 1s one of those things of which Solomon expressed himself Ignorant; and there is 'something truly marvel- lous in the mechanism which oontrols the scythe -like sweep of wings peculiar to most birds of prey. Yet even naturalists of the vest order ban had ltttle or nothing to say about the power of Olght In birds, while some ed them speak on very insufficient evi- dence. Witness Mlchelet's statement that the swallow mai at 16. rate of 240 miles an hour Roughly, this gives as 1,000 miles its four hours. but natur- a11y, even in Its .wtftest dashes, the Swallow does not attain to anything like this speed. But the (hake of Ar- wyU is rather under than over the (mark when he compute. the speed at more than 100 mile• par hour. The mechanism of flight in the swal- low is carried the' an ascending stale, until In the swtft it reaches its highest degree, both in endurance aad facility of evolution. Although there are birds which may, and probably do. attain to the speed of 160 miles per hour, this remarkable rate 1s sot to be looked for in any of the birds of the swallow kind. In their migra- tions swallows•-atlek close to land. and never leave It unless compelled. Tbey cress Itn.n( at the narrowest part, and are tee most sully fatigued of all birds. Apparently, though they pots a"sa considerable{ .speed they have no rowers of sustained flight. These at - Whyte belong in the most remarkable degree to certain ocean birds. Anyone who has crossed the At- heistic must have noticed that gulls ac- epapany the ship over the whole dts- enews-or, at (east, are never absent The snowy "sea swallows," as the terns are called, seem quite tireless; though the petrel and the albatross alone deserve the name of oceanic birds. No sea deserts seem to bound elxis range of the petrels, and they are found at every distance from land. Dif- ferent species haunt different seas - front the fulmar In the tar north to the giant petrel. which extends Its Sight to the ice banks of the south. Here the Antarctic and snowy petrels Appear. often floating upon the drift ire. surd never leaving those dreary BOIL Another bird of immense wing pow- er is the tiny stormy petrel, the Ana lest web-footed bird known. FREE Every young man of 114 year. or over who sepitve to achieve Should take advantage of the following coupon offering him 1alxedutely free of an) ex penny, beyond the price of the suititle-d envelop.) • truly splendid opp r unity of Entertaining in his own mind the It oughts of the leading British and A.erieae Writers on the War aid other great problems of the day. Free COUPON .icor Publishers of "World %V 'tie,' "With. -,e.' Bldg., Montreal. Please e. -m1 •ms. "World \%'id," for tits.• %eel,. FREE of all charges and without any obligatiho whatever on my part, and oblige Addrem CENTRAL STRATFORD. ONT. Ontario's Best Bashes College Studeuts may enter our classes at any. bale. Commence ymtr course now and be gw.liled dor a position by midsummer. iiwiag July and August of last year we received calls for Over 2N office aswtaes we could not supply. peer graduates are in demand. Write for. our fret catalogue. D. A. MCLACHtAN, Prisapl. 5 Safety First invariant No tag t sore t t to w Iry Macawdere w .00..tf es H.to..-R Is-Rrp'asb1.-Cat. Fur Hese& "Ship to Shubertlama(1b. lama( hour In the World deified elusively Aearkar new 1■ eve vat &west_orrehe the thepy�rem ierbitt . C..r..r.s rewslse Writ* fw tae loot .dtthe .r '-sae Wriest M ••• nue boo A. B. SHUBERT, Inc. toi. sti"r"s, A1iTo.u.AE s.A. roe i School of Commerce CLINTON, ONTARIO r Winter Term Begins January 3rd, 1917 YOU have always intended to take. Commercial and Stenographic Course someltime. Do it now. A course here puts you in a position to command a good income whenever and as long as you want it Can yon invest your money and time in any stock, war loan or anything else that will promise you so great a return ? WE GUARANTEE POSITIuIYS TO GRADUATES. Write for Full information. DO iT NOW. B. F. WARD, B. A., M. Accts. PHONIC 20a PRINCIPAL. • 1• •