HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1929-1-17, Page 6THE SIGNAL, — GODERICH, ONT.
Every tiny leaf is a
storehouse of flavour
A ORANGE
PEKOE
A
f
L
TLA
'Fresh from the gardens'
It
!tut w'e'll be cut off from civilization -1 he turued to his father. and stood for
for days. 'file water will sweep all ae long (natant ,s If in thought.
around the hill. i1w41 the railroad ltd. I "Father, I think that we'd all better
and t111 all the low places --eight feet ;4, and look for Ray
.seep. We won't be able to reach the We saw no sign of Hayward at first.
' helglua across the valle3'•" We gut down to ti•- driveway, and
Ila)'ward seemed to leap toward t flashed our lauterns .,ll along it. We
him. He !Imply Sjjeored to bunk be- looked und down lite path. We
tore our eyes. His voice rose shrilly, I it
to callp it in
the bean ut the talo.
anti he shook his arm In Southles's; 'Good Lord!" Bovinity cried. "He
oar. coatdn't have got dent, into the river
''Then get me out toufglu !" he I and drowned!"
s, reamed. "(let albet
e away from this 1 We scattered a.' - and began to I the moment. ent. Rt►t I would like to
Waage while there's) et time." climb over the hills'.,• The rain, the,klt"w what yon think, Southley. What
u1
'1'afraid it ' 1s too t a 'Tate now," ' Mobbing lantern, the oho of the catas- killed my father-aet•Ident er murder.
• I trop>tle, the dark h• twirled us and or
to watch orer the lowlands, and see
that he doesn't get out."
Ftoutbley's eyes met mine. 1 had
never seen better self-control.
'The brat thing to do is to quiet the
negroes," 1 told him. 'Tiley are ter-
rorized. The next is to send for aid."
The old man turned quickly. "Du
you mean the coroner?"
"Yes. The State will send detectives.
1 will be glad. It is certain that one
of us three will have to face a murder
charge, and the suener it Is cleared up
the better."
"(tut we three were together-.•
"That won't matter. They will say
we hired one of the negroes to com-
mit the crime. We can Improvise et
raft, and send a man out tomorrow to
bring the coroner."
"We can do better than that. I've
gut a little sneak -Mott- juet a canoe-
that I use for ducks. We'll have to
have a -bigger one to bring supplies:
but it will carry a mesenge to the
mainland:"
There was little else to do in the
rain. We went into the den. and just
as morning broke we told Ernest an!1
Vitas our plans. The rain wits less
violent now. The storm was at the
ebb.
"I'm curry I said what I did," WIh114
apologized. "It was the excitement of
southle) uu• gathering a car for um at once ----near, the R g lakes ,• front gave the
me? There's still time_to make the scene a singular doenm-like quality.
road. 1 eine! stay here another Then Ahmed, who w . kesl close beside
hour. Get un your feet, you foal --mud me. tripped and fell ,ver something on
soil a car for an'. You'll regret it if I the r ground.n
Hfleecas
ed 4th in his own
i tau don't .. t
I'hrre'. tto one to drive -but Ah- I tongue: then whirled t" look. Ile bent
mad."' ouutbley auseered wearily. :Diou"1se felthe aboutstuotl
wwit:'
lt ilia haul. 'the
a- ,t Httle ne<k of
what?"
swenrl• hone. The eyes of the two men met.
-Your father Was struck ,44%'11 -
"Anil 'hat about v'"tr sou!
"IMmn my son: Ihamn this wicked, land that dipped done Into the flood-
h,nlse: Did you guy Ahmad Y' 1•`ur waters, an irthmus that separated the
height hI f
Menne we sew the liattlr of two on which the ,.once steed from
ut
fears in his great face. 'Get Ahmad,. the plateauM opposite
teen. 1'11 be ready as soon as 1 can
"Bring the lantern." the Hindu
Mid a 'alt. Wilms eau tend to ourlcalled. "1 batve f"aiul Sahib Hay.
business. and he'll comutunlcnte with ward."
1 The lantern showy everything very
me." rinlolc. \Wr under-'oo.l why . }Iny-
Fuuthle}' sigh( l ; Iheu gut to bis l ward had not met t' .'wont at the
feet Ile tvoUVIIVIl a bell an the table. house. Hie neck w'a- !woken. aa if by he replied. "All We could tell was
'thtl' a moment we Waited. Then I ! neck like a reed. The blunt weapon
through the doss come AhmedDas--n gl:utt's blow.
t --We didn't Stop to examine the beefy "'r[ of a WMpnn. And with terrific
ca:m, imperturbable. his Oriental fare, I1 ower- Puouirh power to snap his
quiet as a seer's. Never was there 1 "11 the rata -swept hillside. 1 had 1 lurk like a reed. The blunt weapon
such depth of 'shadow as we saw In known the neck was Lruken simply by um+t have had two mile or rplkes-1
the way the great he:ut dropped Intek ,
hie eyes.
SWittlyn,•russtheflourWIt11'when a 4' lifted 1he.Lot:tiers fr.,m the b.'.ause there are two deep p•1rallel
• r t 1 f the bruised flesh."
there Is no question about It." &nth-
ity replied. "He was killed by a Mow
from some unknown Aeneas There is
every rel'on to think that his !layer
le still about this house and planta-
tion. and every possible effort will M'
made to chase him down. No one will
he able to leave -first. Mr•ause of a
rule that neressity prescribes: and
pectin ti because of the flews(. De-
tectives will be sent out here to in-
vestigate." i
"And what w-ae the blow dealt
with?" Yllas asked nervously.
"t'ouldn't you- -find the weapon?"
Southley looked nt him sharply.
"That will he hunted for tomorrow',"
Ha,,' 7"11 heard
*host Pepsi reps Is a
'
scientific preparation pat
■p 1■ pastille t4 . which
presides as entirely ` and ef-
feetlte Ueataest or coughs,
colds, chest aid throat eatables.
Peps contain certain
edilated
ed
ingredients, whIrk,
apps the tongue, tam Lately
tan into vapor, and art breathed
down the air passages to the
langs. 0a their Journey, they
soothe the l aaaed and �tated
membranes of the bronchial tubes,
the delicate walls of the air pas-
sages. and finally enter and carry
relief aad beating to the langs.
While ao liquid or solid eaa get
to the lass aad air passages,
these Peps fames get then ltretet.
and healing eomme*cts-
Oat oaf It►ta
Mit n.16 •rttoL, w r! f e
atido
pay�� is
tman Basso (wish is. Manse
to pal teem postage) to a ePapa oa••
Toronto. a tree Mat n
lset
Mesa se went Lsoa s oa,
sae stoles we11 Pepe. 2.• les.
Q
We (wry a good stock of
Electrical Appliances,
Fixtures, etc.
Electric Wiring of All Kinds
Estimates given on apphestsa
Frank McArthw
ELECTRICIAN
Telephone 82 West Street
PLATS 1
R('Fn.
Old Mystery 1's,), 1 arlieet Form of
Drama, 1s Being Itevived.
The queatlo.l u! stage plat's per-
formed in churches was raised In a
recent police court case In Manches-
ter, England, when it was argued
that from time imus mortal plays had
been performed in , hutches, says a
welter In Answers. -
In the Middle Ag. -s the only drama
known to the masa of the people was
that provided by 1!,e church. The
play's. In which mate simple folk took
part, were always sacred in charac.er.
They were performed at first in the
churches and late! •,n movable statees
set up in the open air.
To -day there is only one lineal de-
scendant of thee picturesque old
`' 'a ground Ti four ut a+carried him In•'sc a c ler n the Passion Play, which Is zh-
that s aaht eta feline grace. to the bones not an easy load at all. i My eyes were Been Vitae face. He I plays,
k en every ten years at Ober -Ammer -
Sahib
-Yes, sahib- Webs Hayward met ns at the door.' (didn't buy at tot.
"it hl the tour!. ear out at once."' The effiet on the younger Hayward "1 only know nue thltg-one kind Rau, a beautiful It Ile village in til•
Southley ordered. 'You "have to take ex f to WPnlvnt that would leave n mark I tate man Alps.
Sahib Hayward to the station. iwm't trio"IIS leardly what i exlrte41. It was •
like• that" he said Ina strange. harsh The represrntutlon, whish has
Mee an iltaut. . The levee le break- rear that 1 didn't Imes for prostration. 1.4ne. "AI" (hat Ivn't a weapon at all. ' ae ver been cttaga d for „this hut•
!yg• It will be broken before you re- Ile Was the kind of non that groves o, tired year, Is Klv• n on a vast stag•'
turn. sit you'll halve 1'! leave the ear '11"11 from Ills parents In Ince Tsry- eight hundred a1. ages.' taking part
firind. he t rRc turn het a an( u.hl� wP arthat e to '' So of strong has heroic the held of this
Ir'snu nnma spew.
n the station and come in a boat. r ley father?" he rhrfrkr t. The v lay upon the ve'utcra that it colors
range for cut - while you're til re learn file tenth," Southley tall him D
—We maybe cut off for weeks." sound went high and wild in rhe +dorm.their dally lives, and to play in the
"It only brings horror, net clear
"i'll cut down the walk to the base "Iw•n't dare to tell me hP'u deed." Pa -•inn I'ta:. is t'ambition of ever>'
of the hill." Ileyward instructed. "We clnu't dare to !slit yon anything • thought. Forget the legend at once. I ch .• ild In the community.
"tick me up there, and we'll have at 4'Is', 1 8.8113' he Is." F:roes, answered. en, begin with clear eyes. That's our only twice In three hundred years
p Vila./ leaped tower! Southley' : and .110y chance," have the Villagers failed to produce
lent a minute." With fills. mer 11(1). group broke rap. their famous play- (inc.' when ter.
The Oriental Mowed, then slipped for an Instant 1 thou_ht he woHM nt- I
away-. Ile went just like a shadow. trek him. IIIc issue n:w drawn este- Ernest tried to Snatch a few- limo-% of datroyPd t'u, vlllpge, anti once tine
He found a raincoat In the hall, and In "ash In the half-light. Ile had ort- Hee!, nn the morn. i had plans M my deg the war.
oMo
ut instant he was out In the d of ?cony left 'hist -bed oft- w hen the levee i own that nee4Ssitnted it ,•onwlltntintr will nt war.r.' playa be revived In
cove way Ire was ou!v p,;irtly finessed, ! With the negro that was to Barry word Ifingland? asks Answers. Many
•
Iltall. •Thea you're the devil that killed 1 to the coroner when the sun rose. And churchmen are advocating a tevlsal.
aywd putuuq •ills .n overcoat, him' Yon I say. $ ut!h'ey! You Inst as f ram?e back from my talk with 1 but there are many. objee Mous, tils
enddstarrrted nett' after himm. The rain killed him to get rid of him. anal him 1 met Josephine on the.stairs, 1 chief of them being the inherent dot
bol the darknevs swallowed them --Where are you going" i demanded. adence of promoters to present the
(both. !you'll 1e trying to kill me next '»
A window had been left Just beside' "don't be s411y," D cautioned swiftly. 1 She weaned snt'pri4Pd et my tone. central figure.
; the fireplace. and through it we could 1'1 was with Mr. Sonthlev up tn'the , "And what right have you to ask?" The law in Britain forbids the pr-
tnoment that we found hlm-" she answered me. sentlatlon of the figure of Christ up -
I gazed
awes the garage. Ernest and . She might hare- Men the spirit of en the stage, but there Is apparently
I d was
through that window. A(0 Then It was volt Long, Ini ythleg
1Py'r pay. 1 w-uo't believe nnythpltg j the dawn Itself in her soft gray ; nothing to prevent a vicar from Mak-
beat Was evidently having difficulty In (,hope find the light of stars In her ing the part of Christ. In fact, at a
Brophey Bros.
THE 1"14AD1NG
Et'NERAL DIRECTORS
ANI) F:.muti NER.s
Ambulance service at dl
hours, day or night.
PHONE:: Stole 120 Res. 217
e;uloF'ItI('ll
loenting his enc through the storm. It PISe.
rtere. 1 re• 1 knew from her book that clan mystery play performed at Int. Chn'-
was Ernest tried to quiet him. and ,, a long time before
we saw an 1n•
dt(vtion that he had reached the gar- he hod got him sway, i took the ,•„ver• had heard of the trng'ly. eestom's. Peckham. r'c••n , ':h'• yt-
I age, 'en we saw' his auto lights ittg from the dead ms, an'face. 1 Heide' "it is Just that 1'01 nfrald for yon.” I car. Mr. Potter, took t 't part ,,
n Hese examination of the body. Mr i told her hiimbly. "No one .knouts also the role of Jt:char
_ make „•..., aged hest knelt beside me. Sotlilnei,►Jliat might not 'happen -in this i ARTIST N'.45 sl Rl•RItiF:p.
dash on.
1\ a Were barely a
out. although . It was .plain . that the but a superhuman Il could u c11 Mire house.
garage door was open and they were
shining directly toward us. Of course
the distance was far; and the piercing
rays could hardly penetrate the wall
of rain. The lightning had entirely
ceased. We couldn't hear the roar of
the engine at all. Then we saw,
quite plainly, the track of the lights as
the car sped about the shoulder of
-the hill,
Perhaps. in all. the walk to the gar-
age and the starting of ole ear had
taken four minutes. The walk to the
base of the trill, where the postern
path met the driveway, took or-
dinarily two minutes. It was straight
do%thlll, and If Heyward had walked
swiftly at all, he would certainly
have two minutes to wait. The ear
come slowly, arid dill we could see the;
faint luster in the rain that Was Its
lights,
They curved on to the Mose of the
11111 Then Freest uttered a syllable of
sn broken the neck. it could not hare 1 'And yen are still aatchfnl. for one— i
beBoom, Artist MIs Amusing !story
been from a fall; because only n ee- !Wen since last night?"
' •g
it. and nut Of ennrse She referred to the srene I
on the 14thmur where we hod (nand
In the den. -
the corpse there were no heights to appealing• from the shadows of the
fall from. Resides. there was plenty stnirwa;r, was her vole*.
of other evldeare that woos Soon of a (Continued next week)
blow had killed him. The worse of them
all were two deep parallel grooves a.A.HPS.
on his See., from %-Mich the flesh had ' -----
been *Imply' rake,!. The flesh was dial- 1. 1:1r of the laflaldeea Had Lampe !Srtoted, Moa Thousand Years Ago.
"it's as plain as the mew on your Among the most
J. R. Wheeler
andFunertl Uirrcter at
F:mbaliner
All calls promptly attended to
day or night
PHONES
:13:4 Itesideu,e 34.1w
I1"utilton Street. t;,Mlerich
Cleveland's Bread
is a tempting compleuwet t•' any
nwel--delicious in If an.i lend-
ing zest toile- rep'f the menu.
Your latu ily 1;l dernatel twice
rs lunch of
on
i tie am the?..
l,te ,unac l n111' 1•,"".. 11 P
'
1114 nese1 Itbful are. . a1hil
food th.•y'earl take
E. U. CLEVELAND
Phone 11 4 \t •
Hardwood Flooring
sa
Rrding His Pictures. Let us give you a price on
were fall could have done
�nrds gen tell haw
notable ,bads of
fees that the man was murdered."the past season at ancient Cr of the
said. "Any coroner'r Jury 1n
I Chaldees 1n Mesopotamia, under the
FloridaFlnrlde would say so. And the firmer joint auspices of the Brlttah Museum
we Ref word Into town the tetter." and :he University, of Pennsylvania
"At least." 1 flowered. "the mur-
derer can't get away• f'nless he got
one before the ler'• broke. he's on the
}Mond with nes.,.______
"And it du,csn't seem likely thnt he
could get out without Superhuman
strength and hg illy. Of course it
exclamation: "Ile's driven post the I might have been t•^. her for n speedy
point." he Mild,runner to reneh Pie highlands nerosa
'Touistbly Hayward heM walked on I the collet Iwd"re• the flood writers
a few feet." 1 rltRge Leel.swept neer the fwfhtnhts Met It's eertnin
lThe cnr slowed no and stopped for 11 he couldn't Rot b•Mk to cia•iltzntlnn.
e Mingle instant, then Started slowly ��The flrst'thlns to ,h, iM to peed gourds
on. It ens hand to believe that 1t
halted long enutlgh to permit the
portly form of Hayward to enter. it
looted to ns ns If Ahmad were trying
to thrmV the car Halite on the site of
the road. Then to our vast olnaze-
tnent. We saw hint torn Around. -
The rnr heeded hark. Just a♦ slowly.:
and elected nlwtlt to the gunge
The servant stuple,l the ear in the
relit: and we waited a long three
minifMev for him to drive on acedia We,
only knee he v -ns standing will from 1
the faint tiler of the lights In the
downpour 1 don't remeuller that We
three men talked at al,. l'.waihly there
Were one or two womlering remark.
as I" whim %:a« the (:tow. of their
drill r.
And just then the dark form of the
1 1111111 e•nnu' Into the hill. The heti,
.•r question on 1114 free seemed Ven
real Indeed. i remembered It afier
'ward. as did nll'the rest et ns.
t' Where," he aekeel, • 1' llaywnrd
sahib?"
"Von mean \'tins?". Suttldev neked
'The elder lln•w•nnl, whom 1 e.;
drive to ' 1' !teflon."
"For nod's a tike. Ahmn.1 ! 1)1,1 yet
miss hint? 11e Started out In the r
Intel anti going to mecI you at the foot '
hof the prtth. Didn't yon nmlerstnndv,i
"1 honked -41t he wasn't there.1
Thea 1 thought 1 had ml+ltnder.trawl,
end drove hack to the garage. lie
wasn't there either."'
"flood mord, he'll he Arent -hod. Go
down the path end And Mm:"
"Tea, sahib-"
My eye" were npm Itrttent's fflee.
and anAArnly his gnat' met 01111*. 1
soe think that Se ked the acme thought.
"Wat
ti." he said
quietly.
"[ng a
tbs door shtt." Then
Seers s. 1:11040‘11
re essiamenin-Ost.- Ave
. w v
tt
• •
o Osticylposilo .+,Y 4F.e,• WIXOM r
a-"1MeT90.7. January 17, 1926.
The Tiger Trail
By EDISON MARSHALL
WHAT HAI'1'F:.NEL BEFORE
Lr. tenet is visiting Southley
Downs. to which he is teudu'ted by
Ahmad (hies an oriental. There be
meets Mr. Southley, whom a detective
friend, Alexander Diem., bpd told him
too watch. and his son Ernest South -
MY. Hayward and \ his Bon Tlhuu
and then Josephine J•
he had seen feint on the train. Jose-
phine tells him the story of Southley
bowls, anti its ghost, which Is not the
ghost of a human being but of a tiger.
Dr. iweug has a quarrel with Vitas
Hayward over Josephine. at8011 Iiud
e ani
that the lbty .trdS have a
thority ,o'er the Southleys.Ml 11 `. Ia or-
dered to leave Southley 1
rain prevents his leering at otter. Dr. !
long and Ernest go out on the road in
the rain broking for the tracks of a
tz.•r that Ernest says are there.
pouring from hits clothes. He louke•l
tired and hatless
"The levee le breaking," he answered
simply.
linty his son seemed to underetabd.
1 looked,up from the work of tying
my Shoes, procured in my room on the
way to the library. We made a silent
virile in the dim light.
"What tit's It mean?' Heyward
cried. "Does it mean we'll Ia'
drowned?"
He woke hoarsely ; but the ane
nouneement steadied we. Floud+ were
material. and could be faced. They
eoUldu't run and hide behind the cur-
tains.
•\ oohing as bad as that." Southley
answered. "(►f course it means a
flood; but by no cow -ell -able eircum-
ataneee tan the waters reach the top
of tie hill where thlr house stands.
They tln,l the tracks. Later ErIiPst
and lir. Long see a prowling rte bare
tliley
frighe hall ten* of t
ten* theHayward, HawDowns who ale,
meg It. Ernest begins .10 feel that,
Ahmed (las it perpetrating some,
deviltry. Now read on -
The old man rat down in a curb:A:t t
ebsir. He gave no heed to the water ,
LUCQ-GRIP
Rub on -inhale vapors
x4.•,
ICpp Kg�s S
Ow• st w J...Ti..�Y..rb
The Bell Telephone Company
and the Northern Electric
r
HE relationship between the Bell Telephone
Company and the Northern Electric Company is
direct and definite It consists of: -
1. ownership -the telephone company controls the
Northern Electric by owning 51 per cent of
Northern Electric shares.
2. contract -the telephone company has a contract
with the Northern Electric by which the latter
sells equipment to the telephone company at
favorable prices.
The telephone company thus has direct control of its
source of supplies. Without control there would be
constant risk of being forced to pay high prices for
apparatus or of being unable to secure consistent
standard of equipment.
If either of these conditions prevailed the result
would be higher rates or poor service for telephone
users.
Apart from this protection there are two definite
results secured. These are: first, dividends; second,
low prices.
1. dividends from Northern Electric
THE Northern Electric has developedfrom a small
beginning to an outstanding Canadian success.
In 1925 its total business was more than 125,000,000
which is four times its business in 1914.
48 pet bent of this total was with the Bell 'Telephone
Company. 11 per cent was with other telephone
companies and 41 per cent was in general electrical
business in Canada and abroad.
In all this total of success the Bell Telephone Com-
pany participates as Majority shareholder 51 per
cent of all dividends paid by the Northern Electric
have crews hack to the telephone company's revenues.
In the fifteen year% since the Northern Electric was
incorporated the telephone company has received
from it in dividends over two and -a -half million dol-
lars.
These have contributed to operate the system in
place of equal sums subscribers would otherwise be
called on to pay.
The dividends paid by Northam Electric represent an
average annual return of only 5.7 per cent on the
capital stock, surplus earnings having been devoted
consistently to extend plant and equipment.
2. low prices from Northern Electric
THE contract between these two companies stip-
ulates that the prices which the Bell Telephone
Company pay for equipment shall be as low as, or
lower than, the lowe t prices paid to Northern Elec-
frit by its other customers.
The other customers of Northern Electric include
every telephone -y -tem of ircportance' in Canada and
business from them has teen secured in open com-
petition with Ilei:,(h and American manufacturers.
it is thus ti'te ("west price level of this competitive
business whi-ii governs the prices paid by the Bell
Telephone ('on:lun)'.
The hoard o` Railway ('nmmissinners in 19211 made
a detailed it . airy into these prices and their judge-
ment ea' "-the agreement and iupplementery
agree merit e o rich govern their relations are etistinct-
ly' advantageous to the Bell Telephone Company'."
Proof of ',.is is seen in cnmparing costs of building
ui i g
the tele' ,11 system and rates paid by
with the , of other systems.
The average cost of building other systems in Can-
ada, England, Brazil and the United States has been
1227 per telephone. The cost in Ontario and Q
uebec
less
has ie.m $1(1!1 per telephone, or 17 per e
than the average.
And the rates which telephone users pay in Ontario
and Quebec are the lowest in the world for compar-
able service.
A large factor in obtaining these
low coSls and low rates has been
the arrangement and relationship
between the Bell Telephone Com-
pany and the Northern Electric
Company.
.
W. P. Frith, the e• !pleated Eng!1sh material or floors complete
artist, :ells an amu=Inc «tory regard-
ing of experience i had when on •
sketching tour In t',•• rural dlatricts.
e was boarding In a cottage owned
y a nice old woman who often used
to watch him pall'' There was a
rush -bottomed chair which he used
for his work and to which he became
quite attached. It w:,sn't worth mere
than fifty cents ---a :rat of money In
those days -{rad when he was leaving
Frith offered the dear old woman eve
shillings for it.
"But she aa:d 'No,'" chuckled
Frith, relating the Incident to Jullaa
Hawthorne. "she couldn't thlak of
robbing me, but she'd be perfectly
content it I'd take the chair in ex-
change for one of my little 'plcters`I"
Which took Frith'! breath away
for a minute --the little 'pecten'
would easily Sell for t thousand dol-
lars or mote—but he got out of tt
Somehow, and carried off the chair,
too.
are oil lamps of beautiful design dat-
ing to nearly 4.000 years before
Christ, revealing a civilization olier
than that of Europe. -
"Thus, however far hack we Ara
permitted to peep Into the dim pada"
the leader, Mr. Paterson continues,
"when man, with the same nature
acid feelings as we, lived and lowed, 1
worked and died, we And him facing
the same problems u we do to -day, In
seeking to regulate the light of day
which entered his buildings, and to
supplement it at nigh an effectively
as his knowledge would permit.
"But from 4,000 years before
Christ to 1800 A.D., close to 6.000 1 '
years, that knowledge took him no
further than the use of a wick dipped
in oil, or later, of til, caudle made
from na ural oil art! Pais. 'But with
the herinalne of the last century a �
new era begun, an era In which dawn-
ed the plsslblllty of unlimited light
during the hours t ua,uial daek-
nesn," •
1'
"How I got Rid
of Sleeplessness"
Me. Al.. 1 .,,,,1, it R. No. 1, 5.n
-
f.. (lot . - n"• - -
-Ammo roan Meme rnmplet•ty
down. a. un.,, I• to do my
own work
andcould not 1..p 1 wed Dr (ha...
ti.rv. Food +"h 1apI d' 1 Wain. that
1 wart scan much .saucer, .hlo to do my
own work, .i..p r.l et nights and et up
in the morning r....d and nfr..h4d
Dr. ChaSe's
Nerve Food
The Greet Nerve Restorative
RAD TALE OF' A TAIL.
Putty -Nose Monkeys laic Their Cold-
Atorwtt:' Tails. tide putty -m and a tail a yard long -
are amting the ntsractions possessed
IIII
by a m ,nk••y newly placed In the
famous Landon 7,00. it comes from '
e African Gold Coast. These mon-
•
ys hare weak circulations to their
alio, for the blood has to he pumped.(
so far by the heart. A towel of cold
weather, and the :all wllts like a
' dahlia In a frost. After stormy blasts
In the Bay of Btscuy the average
I length of the decoration when the
creature reaches England is from six
t Inched to a toot. Even If the tall Is
still all there, 11 has been blighted
1 ked fades away In the Zno.
Many putty -nosed monkeys eat
their cold -storage tails. They are
quite given to :his habit until the
Zoo uses a certain red ointment,
which spoils the flavor.
The hew putty -nose was brought to
England Ia wonderful condition by
the donor, a Mr. Woodward, who u
a labotlitery expert at the Medical
Retaareh institute at Sekondt, where
the yellow trver woutlte is taokled.
Robt. Standish
East St. Phone 369 Goderich
Have Your Clothes
Cleaned and Pressed
in the up-to-date way
FIRST-CLASS SERVICE
Goods called for and delivered
Fall lite el Geeta' Farushints
W. C. SNAZEL
Taberdasher and Pry Cleaner
West Street Phone 339
Plows, Wagons, Cream Separators, Windmills, Engines,
Pump Jacks, Water Troughs, Frost Fence,
Quebec Stoves and Heaters
One good Second -hound Plpe:est Furnace used
only :t short time
RO.L3ER'1' \\ 1 14SON
Saone Old Shop on Hamilton 1')nt (:oel'rieh, Ontario
Before You Buy
—Hear This Set
Nothing finer in radio has ever
leen offered than the new Kolater
All -Electric Radio. A "pltlg-in"
set of beautiful appearance. See
it and hear it and you will want
to own it.
Huron Motor Sales
nth "t t in,l, ne It 1. I• -pitons $ 1
KOLSTER RADIO
"All that you seek in Radio"