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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1929-7-10, Page 6'WEDNESDAY, JCL?' 10th, 11129 Here's Stomach joy For You. Light, Plavory, Easily Digested D ED' With all the bran of the whole wheat When fussy appetites are hard to please, these crisp, oven• baked, davory shreds of whole wheat give zest to the meal and energy for work or play. Delicious with whole milk and fruits. Glad -i -,Tats Accepted ictus little African species were col- lected and sent to England, France by Society as the Right and Germany until they have become somewhat .,care&. In fact, it is ditri- R r O n u :n c> a t i o n cult and expensive to locate bulbe of -- - many SouthAfricarn Gladiolus species Oft Mis - Pronowiced Flo" r —for instant e, Cruentis. Thi • has Grows Wild in Its Native been used in breeding in the past and Africa; More Than 100 Species a number or gladiolus hybridizers There. would like to use it attain. These del - irate little Aflicanders and Painted By WILLIAM EDWIN CLARK ;Ladies --some very beautifully .,cent Vice -President of the: American •; r,l —have. beeoine so ..earn: in South Gladiolus -oei, ty ' Africa that the P-,otanie,I and Wild There re is aseemly a flower whoee ' FA—lessee' .at. etc h.tt . h,11•1,•d soap - name can be pronoure ...1 in so nuuly ' t11,,• to PrOIJ,Vt th,•: c lade l :,u,ie= e as ace nio:i' n,•,t sting many of nay bloom well in our summer time, On March 10, 1049, the tragedy of until he had finished it. ways a' the g trot , and according Jut a ser wild floe 'rs. la the small hours of Sunday he to variot us e•J t r n tt. +. I believe,- Then also, there are the hundred the Wilderness Mission in the. Huron -11 closed the honk. The gSBloting of The Fede t:d ITor a rt..i:.} i.u.u•e1 almasoaltare aeries Feit, e.at :: , e. i s ties +++er alt'. of glediol- "dd very delicate. species with such Country (between Lake Huron and, Sydney Carton sent hire to bed thor- ing of the Au „s scan td,. ,... :w- 1, , .1 it . st. ,,,. t �a 1 r. Us, and African em esperdally, so uu-hly worked up in r,ali.d. A fere stet • at Itochest.•r in � ,:�•r,t. ..{�-,, S it was unanin:ua.ly rot:•ri that it 1,,-• , as to present the ancien tion of insect the consensus of opinion of tb a a 1,•et , Pot:` of various kinds. ing that we Apulia fe ,mouse: ti::r ! 1 have grown a few South African secs with much l Bute and some name of our Special 17atw•r Glad-i.e. species P ` lus—both singuln am: plural. The profit for about six years. Uracoce- adoption of this pronou rel alee by 1 phalu' often r•+.lhr , large curb., a. all the leadm ' i 1 THE IIIVS$Z143 r'OsT JOINS "THE IMMORTALS" Marshal Henry Philippe Petain, 'Commander -in -Chief of the French armies in 1117, who has been Mode(' by unanimous vole into the company of "The Immortals" of the French Academy. Marshal Petain will take the seat lett va- cant by the death of Marshal Foch. k4•,i'dk3'• ++.1•+i•�r'k•P 'd•d••h•h�t••4•h++4-1. }roar Country and Mine 4iCl Rreethes tiler., a man ',' hu s Beata So Sind; WWho nezet'to linti.if bath 4a1L1 i UUr is my a ie uty N ttit u land i••F'E+!i+'A•AtF+++ +++fid••h•hd••t:9• 6•t•+Mi++A•+ The number of telcphnnes in Can - Lida is steadily increasing, totalling at the end of .1927, 1,209,987, on n phone to every eight of the popula- tion. There are no less than 2,462 telephone systems in. Canada, the Bell being the largest, The rapitai invested in all the systems represents $75,000,000. The net operating re - 1.1n1110 for 1927 was 38,845,422 and salaries and wages of 23,437 employ- e.; mploy- t ; was $90,000,000. Ontario leads in the number of phones with 558; 408, and Quebec second with 45,- 970. The Dominion Cabinet forms the ministry of the Canadian Govern• anent, whish comprises eighteen mem hers, who are also as a matter of course members. of Parliament, The Right Hon, Mackenzie King, is Prime Minister, President of the Privy Council and Secretary or state fox abeet one-quarter to one-nalf inch in External Affairs. Hon R. Dand'ai'anl diameter, and are quite inclined to Prime Minister receives a salary of shrink in winter storage, They $15,000 and other :$10,000 each in should be kept covered with sand or addition to the sessional allowance, earth' The same salary is given to the Lea- der of the Opposition, at present Hon, R. B. Bennett. is a minister without portfolio. The Them, there are Quartinrarius, re- quiring •i long blooming season, and Cardinals. and probably others that eia+l'T'itX"' 1111, 1013, Children of ('eiebrated Men (& lttcize Their AVritinss• The youngest daughter of • It. }I. Dana,author of Two 1. uC B fists the Haat, AIM. Henrietta it ut c Skins nee (in An Echo from Pitn sus') recalls tbltt as a child Lanef ltov's Memo a'. Cambridge, Masa, oma 'a1 - most a sneond home to rut.' The two fruullley WIT(' neighbors and intimate friends, and the Children of both studied and played together. The Longfellow "ltictdies, It seems, sometimes made jokes about poetry in wltleh their father aided and abe.ted them. "A favorite breakfast dish of :the family was batterealces baked lit cups which puffed out in the baking till they were nneal> crust ani little ln- eide," Mrs. Skinner says, "T10,1(4;rt•re known as 'popovers,' but ler L• ng - fellow children called them 'poi try rakes,'because they explained with great gist°, 'there's nothing in them! and this joke their father re- lished hnge l.y," Which recalls a story Ian Maclaren -author of that phenomenal best seller of years ago, "Bestdt the Don- nie Briar Bush"—used to tell. "My schoolboy son," said :'laelal'en. —wllu was really Rev: Dr. John Wat- son, a Scottish minister—"bad vainly been trying to read some of my books, and in a confidential mood remarked: "'I say, father, why don't you write a proper sort of. book—one Of ;hose Sherlock Holmes stories, like Conan Doyle, or somethhng of that sort, and not so much Scots' rot?' " Did you ever hear the story of what happened to do enthusiast after reaching Dickens' "The Tale of Two (1111c -s?" 21 was a Saturday evening and he became so absorbed in the story that 11,, refused to go to bed nam SA Grandis, Recurvout, Macul- Lake. Simeoe) took place. The invad- atus, auerustus, with bulbs one -four- ing Iroquois captured the Jesuit Mis- th inch in diameter, very delicate, sionaries, Jean Breheuf and Gabriel' stems with three to five. very artistic Lalemant, and tortured them terrib- end often sue.,, ;crated flower:: that ly to death. Brebeut was •of strong , =tined n his hlrees his wife nipped ••rl are difficult to obtain and need ger- Norman ;tock, kin to the English. =tinerdse so lightly lois her nipped lista on e d+ ;*toys vigor- "nitous+' cpn hulons, earls of Arundel for fiftecrr years i the (1'11back of the ntck, WW'}tr, r fen he s To those Who wish to cxper'mcnt- he had worked among the Huron,. crumpled to the floor—dead: :tae ap ter groti♦eur r -in d:anu•ter-and with the South African speck; of winning many from their sine of That was the '.trete story told at at: seem to lag, bat it should be U,<, :n r . 's two !lichee} fu type I .would advisee sending "ferocity and intractable indolence." lit rL parts sue eL suing 1:y n Favor- uf't vent' mart • huiblets, It is a Y ate hams tat, Needless to say il. dais duty of all ot'ety sof the American y for ar.eds _.-not bulbs, Seeds may be A man of great gentleness and in - Gladiolus Soeiet to bell: make , .Ili •gra<enirh yellow with purple I not raise n sorts until a brig*nit- young y I v« -in; that show en both the anter h` .— sage not especially expensive.— clustry, he died dauntless and defiant damsel said: Glad -i -o -las the usual ;nun.;r;.:'t' are not rohibited by the Federal- to, the last, a hero of earl Canada, "That'.: all very well. But hoe• was tion. nd outer Sid, of the florets, There I P' y' "ire usually about eight to ten florets Hoticultural Marc—anshould It ascertained than he dreamed he was Then aro between ler ;Incl . n' ` came true to name, about to be guiliatined?" gladiolusspecie in southern and ..on from the full size bulbs, The bulbs - teal Atria and a very t .n ):ecie ,n 1 "'em to require just the same care as �` FRANZ JOS t;:1` LAND, southern Europe and Asia. ; do our varlet::: gladiolus varieties. Our Rising i'Vealth p Chou, thea r Y rtta.inus (parrot's lied Flat: Planted on Arctic Wastes These are mostly rather tld and i highway forms a ;bort, route of near by Soviets, delicate affair. compared with our `head) that b hale; just about the The Dominion Bureau of Statistics ]y 200 miles, makinc accessible a ser- A land wll. r.• nobody lives has gladiolu. of camturra•. to -day, '1 iv: same. These two species that bloom i h rs jut issued a statement in rets- les of attractive • centres and beaches been claimed by the trot Lads; No sterns are .;icrteia r, often about one-' Itat and art well in ocr :ummer lion to national wealth which should along the southern shore of Lake natives looked on In wondernu•nt; no eighth of an inch in diameter, and have large strong spikes. c give a fillip to our pride and sense- Ilun•on, the great:inland sea long fa- white settlers saluted when Prof, there are mac b:• a i+•;v small flowers It, •,•e+ is also the Prrnnlinu( :;per- Samoilavtteh` and the crew of the. Iec- ir.. fell of vigor but very =malt and of vigor. To be told that aha health , sumo r resp early Red man. atony r•r1 i. thr.a to ii•:e inerts, in da- of the county s a whole stood at summer resorts and playgrounds are amcter or perhaps a little more . :Ws th lircetr in 3 lilt ram that ha= a $27,687,000,000 in 1927, and to be reau•hed by this modern highway and stem only a little more than one farther infarmud that this might be y far as w«, are + pnea•rned 'neve in the -y., Ir h heal in dinnr•ar. Titers aro is steadily becoming an attractive colder parts of 'America. wt-• mi 18 ' t conveniently compared with $22,. � feature of motor traffic not only by class ,,hent as rho•. that aril! gru:v in from three to cis, beautiful d+,.ply lttu,8f52,11•', in 1925, leases one • Canadians but by the army 01 Arner- our summer -Cele out of dour: and haven heory -+e yellow fl h r gasping for a cense of realit ••. The ' ivnn tourists finding •their' tray to tltosc . that woes t to grow in our win- have a theory • that nature provided big y this greatplayground. this very deep }toad to protect the ligates Etre too hi to be understood , Canadian la round. ter time f nee.iin tarsen^nose •condi-except as a more or less abstract Lions) which would naturally he their honey and pollen from the mist that One of the most famous historical hangs about the Victoria Falb of the proposition in mathematics. We talk rains in -Canada is Fort Louisburg, own winter time in South Africa' Zambezi trivet, where e11.• 1'rimuldnus glibly about million, and billions ;1 in Cape Breton, the original dating PREFER NORTHERN WINTERS yi,e•ci,.•, is native. The ntlibd are one - notion wry have no more than a feeble from 1717 when the French made it Titers is much didi. tih,y in gro:v- s,,,11•tit to one inch in dirtmeter and notion of what they mean. j their chief defence in America 'al Mg meet of the 1 ,es u1 tI e United behaves very well except that they. in Ontario loads among the provinces 1 11(21 tremendous cost and effort. It suf- Stat. s first, b.•ea11-.. they •it senses; his a slight t••n=tan: y to ,:brink national wealth with a total of feted two cel gas e'froma v 89,500,77.5,000, or 34.53 er cent.' 6 e :e L second, hcett r„• they are excluder!, ‘,..11,.0 in :Litt* +mage. P hinglanri forces and the second by except by ,,,clad permit from the there of the: w_hnlc, and uebec follows , the British under Wolfe and Am I l } Tire 1 ,= Strand r,-li, one of the Q Federal Hnr•irultn+'al flutarl and most, heau'.i.^t.I of all the .pedes with 2-L75 per cent. There is noth- I lu•rst ' 1"S This last set r . . g hours later ISIS wife molt Mian to church. During a Ione prayer he doz- ed off and dreamed that the guillo- tine was about to fait on Itis neck, When the prayer ended and he re - The Blue Water Route or highway is the name of the motor road along the shore of Lake Huron from Sar- nia to Owen Sound. This new trunk third bcrau>e most of thein need yawn le r ii,light reel with a white blot - green 110,:,,r' culture. ch. This is positively -the most beaut- P,e°o ' the World War, for many iful species I know, It is very lily - years the hulk; or corns of them del- like, The belle, have been very small Land and Water Champions e a Parkdate Ladles Athletic Club of Toronto recently visited Mont. real, andsince all tho nice girls, love a sailor and ahlps, they had 6f con;ase!, to pay a call on Cana- dian Pacific steamer i1'etagama, then in port.. t After tea and in- spection of the ship, the young Mies donned their bathing sults and exercised on the broad decks of the, liner, The photograph shows, lett to right, Dot Prior, ,Olymplc champion swimmer; Cap-' tato 51. F. Murray, R.N.E„ skipper. of the Metagama; and Myrtle Cook, Olympic champion runner, ing surprising in that for the accunt- followed by the capture of Quebec ula e ri d fruit of many years of toiling the next year and •the final withdraw and building . When, however, we !ail of the French armies, from this come to view the national wealth on 1 continent. The ancient ruins from the per capita ];aria WO are amazed one of the attractive spots in Nova to find that the comparatively new I Scotia and are under the control of western provinces are head and ; the Department of the Interior, shoulders above all others. Here is the full story ; Ilritisn' Columbia, I The World's largest canal lock is *'1082 Alberta 13$600; Saskatch- : on the 1teW Weiland ship canal, being e2Lan, 5114111 Ontario, $300 ; Mani- a guard lock near the southern or toba, $2976 ; Quebec, 2631 ; New Lake Erie end of the canal, as 0510 Brunswick, 81 829 ; Prince Edward , of seven lift lecke. It is 1380 feet Island, $1713, and Nova Scotia ; in length between the inner gates and $150,7 lis therefore, the longest lock in the In these figures is wrapped up the world, the nearest in size being two epic of ('111v131'8 steady and eoura- r lodes int Sault Ste, Mario, in United genus, pro51)81 in the development' States waters, each of which is 1350 of her rich heritage. It is stimulate. feet long. Ponderous steel gates ing t ary of triumph over oh starless are an important new feature of con of patient plodding, 'of hardships Ctrurtion on the Welland Canal, eheerfully borne, and of Victorious t which will be operated by' huge val- eefrort toward the goal of national vee, opening and closing the gates— strcnt'l.h. Wr•nith is mounting rapid- a process that will only take eight ]y, ,1n.i ye•t it: diffusion is the salient minutes: It i; expected that the feature of the situation, If Karl WTnrk could loak in upon us he would be bound to ehessify a high percent- age of us as capitalists. That would be true in the sense, in which the great eociellst wrote sixty odd years :aka 1 yet we err' at the name time all workers• The old cleavage between ealital and Labor has completely disappeared, The Columbia Ice-Fieltn The melting waters from the Cod 'smbia lee -field in Jasper park, Al. berta., freed the sources or three of the largest and most historic rivers in the Canadian West—the Athaba- ska, the Saskatchewan, and the Col limbic:, which flows into three Sep arate oceans, Box kites are used by the United States weather bureau for lifting in- shvments into bhe upper atmosphere for recordingall kinds of tempera - Welland -Canal will be opened for traffic in 1930. Dalhousie i, mil r r ,. ity 'was founded in 18155 by George Ramsy, the ninth Earl of Dalhousie (17701.88}1), a distinguished Scottish Feltner, who had fought on many fields; ITe WITS rine of Wellington's generals, and was appointed Lieutenant -Governor of Nova Scotia in 1810. He subse- quently became Governor-General of Canada and on his ret irenncnt from that post Ise was appointed Cotnman- der-in-Chief on the British Forces in India, His youngest son, James Ram- say (1812-1860) who accompanied his father to Canada, succeeded to the titles as tenth Earl of Dalhousie and as known in history as the great Administrar of India, of whieh he was Governor-General from '1847 to 1856, George Ramsay, the ninth Earl of Dalhousie, left to Nova Scotia a great intellect- nal inheritance, laid the corner atone of Dalhousie College on the old tore, humidity arid wind conditionsa.. Grand Parade in May, 182,0. breaker Krassin. while on hunt for Amends n, raised the red flag at Cape Neale. 1'ranz Josef Land. Most ice -bound of Arctic lands, is never has been inhabite•1 Cate by an nnstabte and small "pomu!atfon” of explorers. Prom: the work of Anstra-Hunnar- ians who discovered and named the group in 1873, and all,., British, Aneir- lean, Italian and Russian explorers who followed them, Franz Josef Land is known to he an archip•nlago, Thirty islands of the group are from ten to fifty miles long. Scores are smaller. Ice free's the tops of them, Iams, or small, all the ye,rr rrnuMI. The warming Gull 14: ''n that makes Norway livalal'• and tempers Fnitsb:r.^an, 11.1: no ca i:f1rt for Franz Josef I and. So de solcle are the Islands that f tv pn. tr Legatee 01' foxes lite there, Walrus and seal are rare in the adjacent waters; (.111r birds that rtes: on 1 he cliffs from March to ScptcmJ, r find F'::tnz Josef Land a refuge. A tine fleet of large stationary "Icebergs." That is Prams Josef Land, whose possession by the Soviets is not calculated to stir up euyy in Europe, Immediate prospects? None, Future Prospects? Possible elation ou Arctic short-cut air routes, such as Seattle to India, Tho latter possibility Is re- vealed by Franz Josef Land's position off the north end of the trial Moun- tains In the same tante ie as Afghan- istan. It lies straight over the North Pole from Los Angeles. ,. Andres, the f:Lv, dish balloonist, who disappear d in 1897, was sought for by the Ame 1 tc.n, Walter Well- man, in Pram, Josef Lend. Nobile flew there before the Italia crashed on the ice north of Spitsbergen, Modernization Aid • Sanity. There are now fewer Insane pa- tients In Alaska than at any time sures the Klondyke !sold rush, In- sanity generally was described as caused by the long winters and iso- lation from human goer y, Miners, trappers andreindeer herders 8' O'e Its vleIInts, Radios and airplanes •s have redueed this malady, physicians declare. Prac- tically all thy, distant camps have ra- dios to tell of events around the world and diffuse entertainment, Al- most cdail'1 airplanes may be seven in evert section of the territory, Mang - Ing getters, newspapers and supplies to the most isolated settlements. Woridrs Largest Stones. In the ruins of the famous temple of the sun gad, built by the Roman mporor Anlonins Plea, a1, Baalbek, In Syria, are the largest stones ever used, 8atne of the great stone blocks aro more than 60 feet long and nearly 20 feet square. The ruins can still be seen a few miles east of the modern city of Beirut, ('ateem'8 Daughter a Singer. (Moria Caruso, the mire - year - old daughter of tho fan10U6 tenor, is said already to have a voice of exceptional promise. tier training is being super• wised by John McCormack, and every year until she is sixteen a gramo- phone record will be made •privatIdy to show her vocal progress, 111 Cream Wanted We pay ,Highest Cash Price for Cream. 1 cent per 1b. Butter Fat extra paid for all Cream delivered at our Creamery. Satisfaction`' Guaranteed Brussels Creamery Co. Phone 22 Limited ie •, U,se Radio In • Fire -Fighting Cockrane, Ont., June 21.—This summer a new departure, in forest fire fighting so far as this section is concerned, will be introduced in in- stallation of a radio outfit, connect- ing up the towers in course of instal- lation at Stimson, 19 miles east of stere on the Canadian national Rail- way lines to Quebec; and at the little Abitibi Lake, north from the tracks. The code system will be used, and the operation will be similar to that introduced in the Iced Isake District, which mining region is connected by radio with a station at Sioux Lake, • Additional equipment to be instal- led last year in the distrlet includes five steel towers, two wooden towers, four pumps, two new track speeders; two new trucks and about 75 miles of telephone lines. The work of for- est protection is expanding each year and the service is being extended gradually. Towers are being located on the best sites available and they are linked up with the different cen- tres by telephone. About 180 men will be engaged in the Cockrane .dis- trict during the summer, their duties being to watch for fires, to superin- tend the burning of slash and to re- move possible fire hazards. The Restless Dollar The supplies for the little Abitibi tower will be sent by airplane, ar- Thirty years ago the total exports rangements having been made with of Canada were not equal to the dir- the base at. Remi Lake to 'undertake ect money -value of the tourists bus - this task. Heavier material was sent bless of to -day. In that fact is an ar- in by dog team during the winter resting suggestion of growth along months, new lines. Fifty years ago, and even hater, the volume of money in circu- lation was insignificant as compared with the aboundance of these latter years. That tourists should have left a quarter of a billion dollars in this (333) country last year gives emphasis to the change that has taken place. We are in contact with the restless dollar ; for no other phenomenon stands out so boldly, or with such vi- tal meaning, as the rapid diffusion of wealth during the past three or four decades. So conspicuous has been this movement that the line of cleavage which was drawn half a century ago between the capital and labor has been absolutely obliterated, No one but the blind and fanatical communist talks to -day of the way Karl Marx did sixty years ago. In this very rapid growth and dif- fusion of wealth'however, thoughtful men descern a danger. That menace lies wholly in the possibility that young men growing up under these new conditions may forget the part which hard work has always placed insucess. Thee spectacle of so much money• in circulation, coupled with the further spectacle of fortunes won by speculation, may gasily lead inany to shun the harder but surer road to self -containment. In other words, there .has never been a time, !-$spite the immense in- crease in wealth, when the fundam- entals of all true progress needed to circling the Nobe ing less thanns 30f be more impressed days using aniy "regular meaoyoung Canadiansearnestly than right naw. Aon transportation." Olsen left 'aorta nation of speculator's would soon on Canadian Pacifie greyhound nerdglt ; but a nation of 1 Empress of Asia ,Tune 13, and 1p •oduceis Maiullarl arrived at Vancouver on goes from strength to strength, the Empress of France June 22. ' Airplanes come within the terns of , — -- the contract since both men have , already used then. The race at 1 tinne of writing is very close. �Y: A Problem that has defeated thei learned for centuries --the squaring the } of thcircle--has apparently been ,r solved by L. W. Hartman, Canadian , '145 Pacific Railway timekeeper at Lon- don, Ont. Hartman claims be de- vised a geometric method by which to reproduce the exact area of a circle in the shape of n square. University professors are now ex - mining Ids solution. He was born in Rumania and never saw y a college, but spooks Eng]iah, `L Only to ricturelean you French, German and Rumanian flu- t !rove that story about the record catch. Take early, a Brownie. Here and There. Four hundred thousand babies have been born at Banff: during the past fortnight. It is not the fine mountain air that accounts for this phenomenon, but the mountain water, and the babies are rainbow trout from the Dotnlnion Govern- ment le'Ish hatchery on the banks of the Bow River. They will be placed in the lobes and streams of the pocky Mountain Parks. Canadian Pacific Railway Police, Ontario No. 1 team, are champion revolver shots of the Dominion. After winning the Chief Constables Association Trophy in May, the team shot against the Lethbridge detachment of the Royal Canadian Mounted Pollee which had won the championship for Military forces, and defeated them 1412 against 1370. Possible store was 1100. The victorious team is composed of Investigator P. O'Brien, Sudbury; and Constables Ii. 1I. G•V< n.S Port McNicoll ; T H. B. MacDonald, Tor- onto; D. Prendergast, Sudbury, and W. E. 'rifleman, White River, Ont. With a population that ranks 28th among the countries of the world, Canada is fifth in total exports held third' In total turnover ,of trade. Charles Olsen and Raffaele Maiullar', rival round -the -world racers, ere trying to make a trip Adeliu'd Goulet, bead barber of .1 the Banff Springs hotel, bad what he regards as a close shave the 1 other day when be was off duty on 1 the golf links and met a black bear. i He topped his drive and the bear beat a hasty. retreat, Wild ani- mills are very tame in this district this year. 1 Of the 2,750,000 acres taken up by settlers in Canada In 1928 eighty per cent. was in such northerly I' districts as Prince Rupert, Saskat- cbowan, and the fence River dis- trict, Alberta. The migration north- ward was most pronounced In the Peace River region„ where 4,000 homesteads were taken up last year. 1 In this dislriet, there are still available 40,000,000 acres of fertile land, capable of adding millions et ,]oasts to the annual value of the Dominion's crops. Drop in before Saturday NEXT week -end you'll have a lot leof fun—take along a Brownie and you'll bring it all back. You'll find a salesman 'here to show you just how simple picture -malting is with a Brownie --drop in before Satur- day and get fixed up for the best time ever, bevdoping pard printing of !ha quality hived J, R, WENDT, Jeweler Wroxeter BROWNIES & KOIYAKS IN COLORS -