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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1929-01-10, Page 3Ski-ing in the Lanrentians As WIRD OFF INFLUENZA '4hsousands are finding relief yids K-'rt4i'a :Tai ldA�lllin� CC1la S rut. mn�L t31tC. „ to teeiletaf: •.!u?, �;fFi `,,IutiB; 'S' eateteeetentee les :.ngln A Keen But Friendly' Critic From Across the Herring Pond' Hits Out at Their Insularity and Love of :SiDort 13y PROFESSOR W. CALDWELL, M.A.,' D.Sc., of McGill University, The more,Britein changes, the more it remains .the same. Two years aitei' the Armistice I was walking along the streets of Lon- don with a brother Canadian. "'You'd never think to look at those patient, uncomplaining Britons, that they were bearing the heaviest burd- ens that any nation has ever been called' upon, • to shoulder," remarked my friend; n, "They:•` are indeed the sweetest tempered people in the world," I re- plied, "a modelto the grumblers and whiners everywhere." • And then rue both said together:. "There will never be a revolution in Britain." • SANE AND SOLID STILL. Today, -after my; latest trip to Bri- tain, and fresh from visits to Glasgow and the Scottish Highlands, I would still say the same things. You've seen a big mastiff or New- eefonndland playing with children. You've never worried about- the kid- dies becauseivou know that they are safe with the dog. It is sweet -temper- ed, dependable. It knows its strength, and because it is strong, it is, entle with weak • things. •s, And it never "fusses," but just goes calmly and solidly on its way. The Titan. is like -that. He is sane and solid and noncht lent. He is in- different to,,all the minor wellies and troubles of life. because he knows that everything will come but right in the end, because he is confident of his own. power to make it come out right. He is strong -a mastiff among the "lesser breeds"—and he has the sweet -temp- ered, equable disposition that so often goes with the giant's might. BARRIERS BREAKING DOWN Prom the unchanging British char- acter let us turn to the changed Bri- tain which is its background. Coln - pare the country as it is with its pre - War past. There have been vast so- cial improvements. Education, hous- ing, sanitation, the care of the _ick, and provision for the unemployed and the destitue have all taken giant strides. There are more amusements, greater opportunities of getting on in the world, a general broadening of horizons. And the old barriers are breaking down. Social distinctions, mean less than ever they did before, although the opportunities and the power of superior brains and enterprise have increased. People are better dressed. They eat more' nourishing and •palatable food; they play more. There is a new, joy- ousness and freedom in the lives of the young people. The girls know the thrill of independence. ARE YOU A "LEFT -OVER MAN? Our young men, too, feel that they are as good' "as anyone else:" They no Ionger believe that Providence has placed them, once for all, in a certain station of life, and that all who are a little more wealthy are their "bet- ters," and will always remain so. That old "cap in hand" attitude has gone, and it will never come back. But these things are on the surface only. Below the surface the Britisher remains the same. He still "takes things as they come," still believes that to "play the game" is tha whole duty of man. I have thegreatest admiration for these essentially British character- istics, but I earl see that there is -a »• certain danger in them. Sport and the -team spirit are an admirable training for life,, but they are only a training. Too many Britons don't realize this. They take this prepara- tion for the real business of life `50 serieusly that when a titan's work comes' along for them to do their thoughts are still on play, British people do not work as Am- ericans do. The daily job is not, to them, a thing to "rise or fall" by. It is not the step that it should be in the development of .manhood and citizenship. In America -and in Canada -there who is good for nothing but taking :hinge easily. • 13ut, he still manages to "rub along somehow" in:Britain: ' This 'must be , changed. Britain must realize that work alone can re illy satisfy the energies, of a man, s the only thing,that will lift Britain out of its present stagnation. Work and enterprise will make more work, create` new opportunities, both for labor and for capital. • And so wheels long silent will begin to turn again, and the unemployment problem will gradually tend to disappear. There is another change which might be beneficial. The average Bri- ton is inclined to be insular, -he for- ;;ets that his forefathers were ;pion- eers who blayed the trail of civiliza- tion over half the world. IIe does net realize than his is ,an Imperial heritage—that he is the citizen, not only of a little country, off the coast of Europe.' but of a great Empire -- the greatest ,that this old world has ever seen. e OUR UMPTP.h IIO?,TS Now, Britain has perhaps as large a population as she•can support, and while, tackled in •the right way, the unemployment problem can be solved, it will necessarily not be a very speedy process. So I want to see the young people's eyes turning towards the young lands of the Empire. They mustrealize that the.new age has brought new. conditions. The true environment and heritage of our, peo- ple is no longer that of the island hotfie,-but that of our great Overseas Empire, Commonwealth, . Britain can live again—and is livingagain— in the ,life 'and activities of the Domin- ions. It is as an Empire that -Britain is known and respected and reckoned with amongst the nations. • There is still plenty of opportunity for the right, type of worker in. our Overseas Dominions. The stories you hear about bitterly disillusioned .men returning to the • Old Country after finding only privation and hardship in Canada or Australia are nothing to go by. For every man who comes back, twenty. forty, a hundred re- main. And those who remain make good. The truth is that in every batch of emigrants there are some easy-going fellows who get the fright of their lives when they find that they are ex- pected to work early and late, and to go "alt out" all the time. And they jib at facing a stiff job with no prom- ises—of high pay, or any kind of pay —attached, until they make good. Taut the tan who sticks it finds that he gets, as everyone else does in these great new countries, what he "is worth." That le usually, after he has shaken down to things, more than he could ever have hoped for if he'had stayed at home. There is no need for any youngster, able and willing to work, and work hard, to be„afraid of trying his luck ir. the Dominions. --Answers.. Irish Girl Stowaway On Canadian Liner "I'm Desperately Homesick, and That's the Truth," She Tells Captain' London—Twelve hours after the Canadian Pacific Montroyal sailed from St. 'John, New Brunswick, a twenty -year-old • Irish colleen was brought before its. captain and con- fessed that she was Margaret Patricia Rogers and a stowaway.' Shaking her shingled head for emphasis she sought to excuse her act bythis statement: "T am desperately hometick, and that's the truth," The captain ordered that she re - delve some sewing to do, and she was put in charge of a stewardess: se But when the passengers learned Of her plight and heard her tell in bee captivating Irish brogue of how she had worker her way across Can- ada, stolen aboard the,ship and locked herself in a cabin; they passed round a hat and collected enough mousy to pay her steamer fare, and railway tleket to home in Lisburn. ' 1' The only popular detour is the one around duty. , Articles advertised• on thla page may be used In the limerick contest described elsewhere In this Issue. Send In your Ilmerloka.and win'cash prizes. • .QCO of PailarrgAtr, 3,590 fut Ili 1c, I nonny educational and other ,anent 1_I, Eons in the healthful surroundings, !and also a' colony for those: retired ' off eials of the=3ritish rave, who must for economic reasons live and bring up their families within the Punjab, With the aid of the line the plains of the Punjab will be brought into near proximity, and the official ex- ample is certain to be copied erten 9ively. In the first instance the light line will 'stop at the power station, but later on it will extend to the nacre beautifpl valley of Itulu, and make available tothe dwellers a the plains the wond'er'ful fruit that grows there, but cannot reach them. Vii -The Sari Of C,w3 aversatin "The habit of using epigrams andl humorous stories to salt the conver- sation of 'everyday life has become more general than ever before," writes the .Marquess of Aberdeen and Temai , K1.C,, in the Yorkshire Even- ing News. "It was once considered the exclu- sive hall -mark of , poets, writers, and _ Nota .country of wide open spaces but one - of long capite. stretches where ex quisites that .they bould answerany d sometimes gold question with a. brilliant;" quip, or de - and the week -end mecca, that of, humor; though not infrequently the. Canadian Pacifc'mu55 run. Ski -Specials from Montreal from one season's 'satire to give'point 50 their remarks. end to the other. ' The enthusiasts in ever-growing numbers fake train to a "Nowadays, however, probably' be - given Kent and skl down to the: next station' or the one, beyond, as time cause of higher ediicational standkrds permits 'or the spirit moves them. The trout streams are frozen, but they and the - growing love of books,. . an resort -owners and the Habitant are beginning to count on the revenue they underlying capability;for. wit, or at derive, from the ski. , least appreciation of it, seems -evident in almost all sorts of conversation. That le good, "While there is laughter in our hearts, we can confront life's adven- tures with a smile; which is half the lioness, irlr.`thereof. fiat still we fel- low too easily the example of those. unremembered wags of former years, if we are overready to raise.a laugh with a bantering sally, hoping' the laugh will excuse just a little that is spiteful in the epigram. "A really lkappy epigram is a' con- cise, pointed, thought, but the point ie It is: a that of a foil, not a rapier, thrust inplayrather than anger, and no' quality of amusement can atone for ,ridicule or satire be it ever so slightly intended to wound." of the daring and Tarn It has come so now, a they ..permitted a rather ungenerous --- _. is no place for the "left -over" man, Minard'o Liniment Is good for cods. -b4.NUfM4 ":rs , *‘-..0 OpMAG�FS� • . br'&4las due to Acid ,No,o wTION ,ACI() eTonoteH "HL"ARTOURN• NCAOACHIL What many people call indigestion very often means excess acid in the Stomach. The stomach nerves have, beenl over -stimulated, and food sours, The corrective is an alkali, which neutralizes acids instantly; : And the best alkali knowii' to metrical 8010000 is Phillip' Milk :of'Magnesta, It rtes 000151ned the standard with physieianrr in, the •10 rears slime to ;uvontioh , Ohe apounth, of i1:s narmkess, ISOie• less alkali in water will nelstralfi®.lu Stantlymany times a9 351105 aoiC1, Find the symptoms disappear at ones,, 'You will 50705 1199 crude inethod0 when once- 7011. learn tris efeelenee of 11118, Go get a otnadl.bottle ja try, AA: sure 50 get the genuine Phillips' 115115 of Magno51a prescribed by )tllygi.,. clans for 10 years 1.w oorrs9hillg excess acids • Biel bc-tie svlltair,r. tilib,duPen= ttoths-- •507 4555gtteI'5. 100.00 IN PRIZES FOR BEST LETTERS The Dr. Williams' 'Medicine Co. Offer Twenty -Eight Prizes, in a Letter Writing ' Competition. Some .years ago the.; Dr. Williams Medicine Co., ,of. Brockville, Ont., of- fered a series of prizes to residents of Ontario for the best letters des- cribing benefits obtained through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. Hundreds of , letters were submitted in this competition, and yet there must have been thou- sands of ether users of the pills who did not avail themselves of the oppor; tunity to win a prize. To all these another letter -writing competition: is offered. Thousands have benefited through the use of Dr. Williams Pink Pills whose cases have not been .re- ported. These will furnish the mate= tial for letters to be written in this contest. There is no demand upon the imagination; every letter must deal with facts and fasts only. THE PRIZES The pr. Williams Medicine Co., of Brockville, Ont., Swill award a prize 01 $25.000 for the best letter•received on or before the 20th day of January, 1929, frons residents of Ontario on the eubjept: "Why I Reecommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." A prize of $15.00 will be awarded for the second best letter received;' a prize of $10.00 for the third best letter, nod 20 prizes of $2.00 each for the next best 25 Tetters. THE CONDITIONS The benefttiderived from .the use 01 Dr. Williams' Pink Pills described in the letter may be in the writer's own case, or that of some one in the writer's borne. More tliin one case -may be describ- ed in the letter, but every statement must be literally and absolutely true. Every letter must be signed by the full name and correct address of the person sending it. If it describes the case of soma person other than the writer of the letter, it must also be signed by the person whose case is described, as a guarantee of the truth of the statements made. The writer of each letter must give the name and date of the paper in, .which he or she saw this ennauuoe- went. Fine writing will not win the prize unless you have a good case to des- cribe. The strength of the recom- mendation .and not the Style of.the will be the basis of the award. letter tard TIie Dr. Williatiis Medicine Co: shall have the right to publish any letter entered in this contest, if they desire to dot so, whether it wins :a. prize or, not. Tho contest wtli closet,on. January 20th, 1929, and the prizes will bo awarded as soon as possible there- after, Do not delay, If you :know of a good case write:your letter IeIOW, Observe the above conditions care- fully or your^letter may bo thrown out. Address all ratters tie follewei The or. Williams. Medicine Co, Brockville, Ont, • Letter Oontoat Department, Mistress: 1"Do we wn05 anything from the tower Maid; "Yee, madam, the china will, not•dast over 5und,iy,!" A young bachelor, Herod by n sew. Ing maobing agent, said that the ma= chine would not answer hos purpose,' !'Why, said the Agent, "It le the. best on the »radio, .n every respect" "That may ;be," replied the, bachelor, "but the sewing machine I pm look - Mg for must have flaxen hair and blue ey60,"' • Senator Lad mid at a lueobeon In Vargo: "Tllo world really done need a pact outlawing war, for when war comes every people is ,as blindly obe- dient to its government, no matte'', how, blameworthy its government may. be, as was little Willie, "'Willie, said his teacher, 'suppose,' Willie, that a tiger was to" come rushing at you to eat you up -what Would you do?' 'Nothing, teacher,' said Willie. 'What? Nothing? You wouldn't even; shout for '.help?' '0, no, teacher; 'good" nese, mel Why not?' 'Because my pop says I nnlsn't tape at meal;;"' --- Los Angeles Times, • For frostbite use. eV:tard's Linlntcnt, Viceroy Opens. angra Valley Light Railway Line Traverses Beautiful Scen- ery to Great Power Sta.- lion in. Punjab London.—The Viceroy of India has just opened lthe Tfangra Valley Rail- way.. The main object of this line of two feet six inch gauge is to connect the broad gauge railway and the Cen- tral Punjab tothegreat power station of the new hydro -electric scheme. :In- cidentally it will make accessible some of the most beautiful scenery in the world. Tt has been disc"o`vered that the Beasr one of the smallest of the Five Rivers which give the Punjab its name; is a most valuable centre of waterpower, sutE that from, it and its tributaries 830,000 kilowatts can be produced See the benefit of 'mankind. From one of its tributaries, the Uhl, enough power can be generated to supply, it is believed, the nee& of the present generation in an area extend - lug from the imperial capital at Delhi past atlie Punjab capital at Lahore and en to Sialkot and Lyallpur. WATERS DROP 1,800 FRET, The snowfed waters of the Uhl will be diverted through 2% miles of a nine -foot diameter tunnel located in solid granite, and then dropped through a fall of 1,800 feet to the first powerhouse at Shanan. This place lies 4,000 feet high on the southern slopes of the Himalayas, within the Mandi State, about 100 miles from therailhead at Pathankot toward the lovely valley of Ku1u. ' From Pathankot, which is itself only 100 miles from Lahore, the light line starts on its steady climb of 8,000 feet through the Itangna Valiey, a picture of rural loveliness. Looking down on the fertile fields is the mighty ridge of the Dbaola Dhar, that con - mete the Outer Hinialayas with the Mid -Himalayan range, and has an elevation from .,15,000 feet to 17.000 feet. • . HILLS CLOSE AT „HAND Elsewhere in the Punjab the effect of the snowy mountains is softened by intermediate ranges, but above Kan - gra the sterh and majestic hill stand close at hand. Their sides are flute rowed, with precipitous watercourses, forests of oak clothe their flanks and give ,way higher up to the pines; above all ave wastes of snow or pyra- midal masses of granite too perpen- dicular for the, snow to rest upon.' There are many' level plateaus and gentle slopes amid • the transverse ridges of the lower hills, It. is in- tended by the Government to establish of these, especially itt the neighbor - A PERFECT MEDICINE FOR LITTLE ONES -- Blending Red Rose Tea is an art, To obtain tthe'nin.a9 flavor, and full-bodied richness required years, or, experi. ence,'' Every package guaranteed. oe RED :.OSE ORANGE' P K. 01''• IF YOU ARE GOING / O BUILD IN THE SPRING NOW IS TIIE TIME TO HAUL YOUR AT A LOW COST OVER W NTER ROADS. All kinds of Texturesan all colors and shades for all pin'poses, Send or free Colored Catalog re and Samples • The , o r;k vii ie ook` Liralte 26 Queen St, N., TORONTO, O50T -:1174 Phi lips P0a00, S2017TRE.41Bi, I'sQ. Elgin 8171 WORKS, Laalga&ter 7500 C00hevllle, rlStrton,, Oheltenhartr, nelson. Baby's Own Tablets Should be in Every Home Where There Are Children The perfect medicine for little ones is founts in Baby's Own Tablets. They are a gentle but thorough. laxative which regulate the bowels, sweeten the stomach; drive 'out constipation and indigestion; break up colds and simple fevers and promote healthful refreshing sleep, It is impossible for Baby's Own Tablets to harm even the new-born babe, as they are absolutely guaranteed free from opiates or any other. injurious drug, ' Concerning the Tablets, Mrs. Alex.' J. Perry, Atlantic, N,S., ,writes:—"I always keep Baby's Own Tablets in the house for the children, as I have found them a perfect medicine for little onus." Baby's` Own Tablets aro sold. by :Medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. "How many have you dependent on you?" "None to mention," answered Mr. Wrigley, after some thought. "I thought you had a large family." "I have a large family and a houseful of servants, but they are the most inde- pendent bunch of people you ever came in contact with!" Always keep Minard's Liniment handy, • A mau mortgaged his home by -buy- ing an -automobile. Then he went around and tried to mortgage the car to get money to build a garage. "%Iow are you going to buy gas?" curiously inquired the man of whom the loan Was asked. : "Well," replied the other slowly, "if I on a house, a.' earand a garage, I should think my dealer would be willing to trust me for the gas; • Dog Days of Quebec There was groat consternation in the canine world, a foie days ago ivhan it was decreed that no dogs in harness must roam -the stroetl of Gtuebeet. Thera was a' rumor ,that the greet classic, the lllastern.inte"inatianal p015 Sled Derby, was to he cancelled, that tho Chateau team was '10 be eaniehea from the terraeo-•all sorts_ of.ltoi'xlble rumors; but, a5 afterwards developed, the. edict wag not •directed against any other than tile` small boy who, with a" dog he may o3' May not 5 ttblo t9 control, dodges,:u ldor the herfi58' hoofs aad cal' wheels, thus, endangering hie awn 11Co and ot5ora, fnclisdtng that Of )lie - Sq once again "ttt0untle," veteran Mounted Police dog, will, 129 leaflet' of the Chateau P'rontcriiao beam, wag hie tall as the winter tourist pato) hie Ileal, Anti the Dog Derby, it,• on—FPel:Teary 21.29.23 One hundred and twenty milds in three laps, with; perhaps, men whose names wera feuwill last year --St; Cod1ia0lt, pippalra, Cheyrottt and Dupuis. Cross -cut, Crescent Ground, will saw 10% more' timber, time and laborbeing equal,. than any other made This guarantee has never been challenged, SIMONDS CANADA SAW CO„ LIMITED, OT. REM! STREET ANO ACORN svoaus', CAONTREAL, QOm. VIAOXCOUVEH,:B,c. TORONTO, ONT. ST. JOHN, N.&.`S.20'-J Cash Prizes' For Limencks ;Readers of this paper may win cash prizes. while .spending an enjoyable, hour at home byrcomposing limericks about any of the well.l.nown articles. advertised on this pager" Limericks are quite easy to write as the follow. Ing example will show:' There was an old codger named Daws Who 'twos said knew a lot about saws For teeth cutting Ince diamonds There aro none equal Simonds, Sale the experienced saw.oxpert 0111 Dawe. For every limerick accepted we will pay one dollar. There is nothing to do but write the limericks and send them with name and address and name of this paper to Limerick Editor, Associated Publishers, 'Rooms 421.5, 73 Adelaide St. W., Toronto. ' Light Wires Electrocute Sacred Benares Monkeys Benares, India.—The Hindu .section of the population of Benares was l stirred at the news of the sacred monkeys from the temple of the god- i delis Durga being electrocuted. Dur- ing' two days. more than thirty monkeys have thus been ,killed and the temple, which usually is overrun with the red-faced :simians, now is de- serted bytthattribe. /n.•-romombranoe of the services r t'altderoci by the monkey tribe to the (fed 13anla' alt lila 'iigltt whit tha demon iiavniia, oho monkeys have boon hold speate)ly saorod, and no Ilindo will 0111 Otte. At; D011:trha, tile' MOO, plaeo • of the Hinrllt, the R'aluplo of Durga, ilia 9511801 et Vialtweehwsr 5118 prasidlos deity of hoot olty, is noted fel' 1511 iillndt'et19 bt 10000oys, which are fad with genie Mel nota by pier 4 ntigrime, The lnunloiiiaiite 55 )Ssoin'os r@•1, eantll' lntreduoad eleetrlo liglitlne tar .fife town, and the inmate te, Icemen eievywi101'a 5ai' their '1itiitotealveeese and spirit tri' Teleell'tof, nntferea 030077 easuaidee, -- Local Agent Wanted An' old established Toronto Invest- ment Rouse wishes to add to its organisation a full nr,ualt ❑are Iucal represrntatite.of good 'standing but .not necessarily with 33(101,u renes: He will have 01150103 terri- tory. erri- t r . leaeis, literature, alai e1.-ry assistsm t• permanent .•m:n ti , an 1 Tia roc, 1lent im Onle 110n, n ri '(re• .ear rt. Sts 1 :.:--- t pre notN paying a 1121 nlral n 1. 1' tilt 'demi. All replit-s ra - 1 • dellti^31y iiod should: be -a,.... ,n • nest. D, H. S DII O:nt:ASr:tu cork rtatar , 1rn3•vtment fatties Central 1iOSiding - • Toronto fhe diifeleuce bot ansa ' nr to drive a motor and 1e r: In L'1:1 golf is that xylem you ',eye. t" P.,.7• golf you don't hit any:.:irg. • Wli if'Ith: Witt' "CIs�lhillT - able" Truth. (London); Sltpbos1 that either of we (.Britain and the L,S a ehould fionict day fo ruralI Y withdraw fcoin the Kellogg Poet and restore war to IN forbear place es an instintnlont Of our policy towards one another; what could our fleet, whatever its strength,_, do to prevent the armies of the United `States, with their un- limited reserves, of man -power, over- running and annexing Canada? When the relative naval strength of the Uni- ted States and Great Britain is re- garded by their Governments as et vital lmeortanoo to national safety, Why le each indifferent to the military strength of the other en each side of a 3;000 -miles frontier? ' • The Awakened East 'Spectator (London): The dawn over lfotlten will bring new things 'with it. For forty years we looked on. Turkey as the sick man of Europe Now a lusty young nation has arisen. So with Persia and Afghanistan. And in Egypt, Palestine; Iraq and India there are mere important movements than the political manoeuvres of which', we hear. The patient and con,. templative East seems dissolving'be- fore our eyes. -Movie-fans, novelette- devourers, eigarette-consumers of beth sexes &lave appeared, Islam reels from the shook it has received at Tur- idea hands, The caste usages of the Hindus eatiuot compete with tramcars and railway travel, sa Modern Version Mary had 'a little lamb, (liven` by a friend to koop. It followed hitt around until Xt died from loss of sleep, the Mlnard'e Liniment for GrlPpe;: " a cloven has 131151en:' "Good Jmtal o heavens Vas ho ` gone stork mad?",. ISSUF No. 2-'29 USED PIANQS Heintzman et coapt. ;, t1 ,right, thoroughly overhauled, test -close condition, 71.3 octavos. nee.) tratea regular price $600. sd,ee;ai rt $276, easy terms. This is just a sample 21 the many Bargains in Used Pianos on hand. Write for SehnIt6r1 1.1.11 HEINTZMAN 4. CO., Ise Venire Geese, ' ..11:0:1.0 A 0i" E 1.1 .11... -57 1.43 01 • wit rhea 1.,1 r illl"114'• and Pull 1nt•.i..lutroe .lent rine on lieeuast. T00 RAMSASC 00.. Dept. W. 272 Bank 5t.. Ot`1atva, Ont. Caroblietr>'l ti -•t,'. t w•.nantive Anciit,oPriv Maxatinlg ia.a I.•.upen6505 on Sorg stea, troop. 021tmonl •'roirme.. Si".tingtir;et, 25C, .00..1.4.1,oink Iorttggints b neriewims Cel$d v Tltug'e why n2 aulsry Sao 5e bur annokley'a" to c,Tri' ("9:1013.. Bona. chitin and ala xe•nt. Chest and Lung troubles ,05'e h elson, pleasant~ guaranteed. Y.kaUl rote its unique powersin the von first dos, and there are 40 closes in a 15 -cent bottle, Ask 7001 drug/60 tor "Butldcyp'. W. 1C.- Buoadtq, LImitcd, 142 lautnal 51., Toronto 2 ICIr Acis fora a !cosh-. a siagle sin plppee it n `3 -: 75c and .10c• Frost itten., Itelieve the piirr,ofr c i p• ped cheeks 01 eam t`• 1h 1030. ard s. it will no..+ly. t