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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1924-03-20, Page 6For the Boys and Girls FEEDING PUPPIES. Puppies should be weaned between the fourth and fifth weeks. When they are about three weeks old, get theta round a shallow dish of milk, which has first been scalded, with a little Lugar added. Allow them, to have it when it is just warm. For the fun, clip their noses into it. That which adheres about the muzzles will be lick- ed oil by the little fellows, giving them a taste. After a few lessons they will soon lap eagerly. At first each puppy should not be allowed more than a teaspoonful twice a day. At the beginning of the fourth week a tablespoonful of milk or soup thickened with stale bread or toast may be given twice daily for the next three days. During this time the mother must be allowed to visit them as often as she ehoosea. After the third day a tablespoonful more may be added to their meals at every second or third day, gradually substi- tuting soup or broth for the milk. Between the fifth and sixth weeks, the mother should not be allowed to return to the puppies more than two or three times a day. Between these , visits,, at regular Periods, they should have their milk or broth. Five or six days later the mother should be alloo ed with the puppies only at night, and then they must be given two extra meals to make up for her absence Three or four days later the mothe may be removed altogether. Th puppies must then be fed lightly ever third hour, beginning the very firs thing in the morning and giving th last feeding at about nine o'clock night. IThe meals may now be varied so as to contain toast, well -boiled rise, oat-, meal and broth, gradually adding, Well -boiled. meat and vegetables of all kinds, except potatoes—which are the hardest of all vegetables for the dog to digest. Remember that a mixed diet is' the very best that can be fed during the life of the dog. When the puppies are ten weeks old , the number of meals'may gradually be reduced to four, and when old to three n day. When one year old be should be fed twice a day, giving a, light meal at morning and the prin-' cipal meal at night. Feed puppies little and often, give a nutritious diet and plenty of exerci e, and you will have strong healthy dogs. Small bones, such as chicken bones, that are inclined to splinter, should never be given, as they are apt to cause trouble by lacerating the stom- ach or intestines. IThe dog should have plenty of fresh water at all times, and the container, i must be kept in a shaded place, not left out where the'sun will shine upon it. five moms Thrilling Fights for Life Beneath the Waves In the whole history or submarine hauled both men to the surface. diving operations there is no more I Girvan was more dead than alive, but amazing episode then that which cul-, after a tew days in hospital heerecev- minated in a fierce fight at the bottom eyed sefficierftly to resume work. The of the sea between two divers, Girvane tem combatants afterwards betaine and Series, who were engaged in salty' tele best of friends." 0 ing the Royal George, which went A duel' of a different kind was that dawn oft Spiteead. In which. Alexander Lambert, one of The story of this astonishing en the greatest of divere;'to0k part while counter le told by'Mr. R, H. Davies, working fu the Indian Oceau, ole. (lead of a famous marine engineering was annoyed by the attentions of a firm, in the "Diving Manual." shark, wbich molested him orfseveral days. "There had been keen rivalry be- "After this sort of thing had .been tweet, the two, ;and each was jealous going o.t for nearly a week," writes of the other's achievements. It all- Mr, Davies, "Ire determined to end the pears that Girvan,• whilst trying to re- lease a certain cannon winch had 'be - WORKING AND WINNING. w- The boy who works is the boy who wins. Nine times out of ten, all other things being equal, the fellow who puts in the most hours in plain, hard ✓ work will in the end be the most sue - e cesaful. There is no substitute for y getting clown and digging a thing out. t A boy may have any number of wish- e es and dreams, but the things he is at looking for are not likely to be handed out to him on a silver platter. FOODS THAT WARD OFF 'FLU. Iu a world where all sorts and con- ditions of germs, known and unknown to medical science, are always "on the pounce," the gerni•proot human body has a distinct social, hygienic, and commercial value. Recent advances in our knowledge of dieteties have shown that a great deal can be dine to render our bodies proof against the attacks of those germs, by the simple expedient of tak- ing the right kinds of food. Green stuff, for example, is one of those foods which •contain valuable es- sences of the vitamin order, which are among the most powerful of the germ. defying principles with which we can fortify the d'efeneee of our blood. The addition to our diet of water -cress, even though taken only tree or four tunes a week, will also help very great- ly in maintaining the body free from attack by germs. From the beginning of the year until April salads should farm an essential part of . the daily menu. What Children Should Eat, It has bean observed that bronchitis and catarrh, or "colds," are of common occurrence in ,children whose food In winter is deficient in animal fat, The reason for this is that animal fat is very rich in a particular vitamin called vitamin A. Not all animal fats are en- joyed or easily digested by children. But moat children like and are able to digest cream, because it possesses the Music with all lea elevating ate re- eeeential quality of palatability. fining influences has become linked up It must, of course, be the best fresh with commerce within recent years in cream, which has one of, the essential a manner it was. never before. qualities of cod -lives' oil, in the 'shape Twenty years ago the luxury of hear - of the accessory food factor vitamin log the great musical masters could A. It is this•potent essence which as- only be employed by the rich. That slats in defending the body against pleasure is still available to those who oeugles, colds, and influenza, There have the means to afford it, but the are some children who like cod-liver phonograph and player piano have oil and flourish on 1t, For those who been the means of bringing accurate bo not like it, however, full cream is reproduction of the human voice and the one thing needful. 1 the skilled instrumentalists into the It may be, of course, that when the most humble homes. Who can deny child who dislikes cad -(liver ail takes the genuine enjoyment that those in. ills cream with gusto, he Is only drink- ventbons have rendered possible to Mg cod-liver oil witich has passed every man, woman and ebille Whither perltape, is water. In the Parched through the magic laboratory o1 the they reside in the city or in the coon- lands, where the bones are mostly Cow's udder, The modern cow has de- try, or even in ties isolated camps and i found fresh water is scarce, and that veieped a preference for fish oils as an settlements of the undeveloped virgin Mich Is obtainable is often tainted with alkali. Drinking this has much the same effect upon the body as a dose of Epsom salts, and if taken two annoyance. Signalling to his attend - e it for a large knife and a rope with come deeply embedded in the sand, a lnaose, which were promptly lowered was reminded by Tones that that par- to him, Lambert held out his bare titular gun was his (Toner,'s), he hav- hand as bait to the shark, and as it ing been the first to find It. There is began to turn onits beck tor the an unwritten• law amongst divers by attack he stabbed it repeatedly." which, in certain circums•tanceen the There ensued a struggle that, after first to and au article is entitled to some time had elapsefi, ended in the salve it, • monster fish being sent to tribe sur; Attacked by a Shark. face with the noose round its body. On another 'occasion a diver we gaged on harbour work had a startling experience with a huge conger eel. "Iie was repairing an old sea' wall when the head- of a huge fish sud- thought it wise to retreat, and had denly darted:out from a hole in the already ascended the shot -rope a few wall quite close to where he was feet on his way to_Ilia surface when working, and tried to attack him, only Girvan seized shim: by the legs 'and missing him by a few inches. tried to draw him down."Subsequennvesti t igation showed "A desperate struggle ensued, in the ,that the fish was a huge conger, which course os- which one of the windows by some means had got trapped in the of Girvan's helmet was smashed in. worn masonry, and was unable to get The attendants at the surface, uotic- more than its head through the hole, ing a violent tugging at the lite lines Although it was observed many tunes and air tubes, and realizing that some- 'afterwards to seize peseing fish, its thing unusual was happening below, body was never seen.", "Girvan was disinclined to give way, with the result that the two men came to blows. Tones, feeling that he would scat get the worst ot it, Why Bolshevism Declines, Russia Is an enormous country, Pas• sensing great undeveloped resources, inhabited by a white population to wbich we are indebted for a great lit- erature and drama, for wonderful music and the soientiflc achievements of Mendelyeev, Itiechaikov, Pavlov and other great scientists. In the realm in which. the Russians seem least capable --that of practical politics—eve have the fact that from 1664, when the Zemstvos were first in- stituted, they functioned an a fairly democratic electoral basis and pro. duced many capable and honest work- ere orkere who extended the bounds af free- dom, secured the establishment of a Duma and showed a capacity to deal with national politics whioh might have saved Russia form her calami- ties had it not been for the infatuated folly of the Czar and the melevolent influence be the arch -scoundrel Ras- pntin- a. To -day we are approaching a criti- cal time. The dictators who rule Rus- cia are nearing the end of the store of gold they tools over from the former Russian Government. They have ex- pended the proceeds of the property seized during the Strst yearn of their reign. Their system neceseitates'the employment of an enormous army of officials, estimated at something like one-half the town population, and the productive capacity of the countl'y— where hardly anything has been. re- newed since the present regime began —is running very low, Music Belongs to Everybody. Finds Fds of Daring Fossil -Hunters The news that an expedition, organ- ized by the Natural History section Of the British Museum, is to be sent to Tanganyika Territory, East Africa, to recover the remains of dinosaurs un- earthed by the Germans just before the war, calls attention to the present- day work' of the rossii-hunters•, 200 teeth, and the monster was esti- mated to have had a length of Soft. d 11 flower sizes among different varieties, The King's Income. good males. For best results it Is not work for their meals. Positively, do In my 1023 garden, on each of twenty The King is allotted $2,360,000 a wise to mate the entire flock, better not feed chicks before they are 49 five different varieties I had blooees year, and he earns it! Most of it goes pick out only the best fameles and hours old. The yolk of the egg pro- seven incites across. I know no other in household expenses ($1,000,000), mate them to the best males precut-, vides food Inc at least that length of flower suitable for cutting that can be salaries ($626,000), and other neves- able. Never mate ,.'lekerels and pui time. Additional food is over -loading grown in the open garden to' such width and depth combined. Moreover, you can regulate the size Of blooms of the better varieties, according to the way you cultivate, disbud and fertilize then. Most varieties are rapid root mite pliers. Each hill or dump usually Yields many tabors where only one Is plented. After a season or two you may knee/ paFor ikular. people' Roasted and packed same (.t day in airtight cans of Losses 1�f9�6D19 Chicks Preventiong By S, W. Knipe Recent figvl•es show that there are breeding system is too small for num- only about 66 chicks raised out of ber of chickens. hatched "there is • apt every 100 hatched, and this is on to be "crowding," causing lass through feline where there exists a' better aver- suffocation. Obops without floors for age of poultry, enuditione. Many b!en-hatched :chicks often result ; ill Poultry. raisers try to reduce their loss chilling the little birds. Chile usually by"doctoring" sick and weakly chicks. bring along bowel trouble. They lose, sight of the fact that for the previous 9 or 10 menthe the stock these Weibins were raised from had not the caro' and ,attention necessary to produce sturdy chickens-, anti so care of breeding stook results in chicks hatched with weak constitutions, un- able to live under ordinary farm con- ditions, A strong, vigorous chicken, with good brooding system, clean and Time close confinement of baby chicks is often claimed to cause leg-wealrnese, something- w�hi.ch rarely is seen in chicks which are allowed nu outside run, ever for a few minutes, after they are about a week old: Of courae, in etormy or wet weather' this is impos- sible, mpos- sible,,-therefore for, such occasions keep sand, or fine litter on the floor`, Feed grafi in dry litter to induce ex - Proper feeding, should be easily raised erase. Keep brooder house well vet,- to -maturity. The greatest lose is ow- dieted, Supply. green teed suoh-•as ing to leek of vitality, which may be sprouted oats, lettuce, green alfalfa or caused by poor parent stock, poor clover cuttings. care of egge before they are set, or No matter how brooded the chickens poor incubation. On forme, wheme the meat be kept free from vermin, must fowl are allowed to forage for them- be kept dry, mist have plenty of exer- selves most of the year, there etre else; and small birds should not be many mistakes made in breeding; the allowed to run with half-grown -ones, fault often being due to both male and , es the little chaps don't have a chance female. The males, often late hatched, to get the proper amount of food it lack vigor and are small ill size. Be- o0mpened to fight with' much larger cause such birds give a high percent -I birds for it. Keep your baby chicks age of fertility in eggs. does by no growing every minute till they =- means warrant the assumption that: tare, whish can be done by proper the chicks• hatched will be sturdy. ` feeding. Improper feeding is feeding Good hens are almost as important as too soon an without ma making chicks DAU'ILIAS Iii ALL 'WEIR GLORY By M. E. Douglas • If I could have but one ;lower for a term garden out of 'deters MY 0110100 would be the dahlia. Stupefaction 1s the only word to expresa my sensation -mein seeing for tlie firsr1inte the mar- velous colors and size of a bloom of ' the modern large -flowering types, It was on display-. la a oity show window. People outside elbowed: each other to gaze at it. I grow dahlias because I Want plenty of blooms, large and small, from 'Jule. untie frost. T don't, want brush 'or chicken -wine supports. I don't;,aspire to breed, aphis, slugs, beetles or. chat- ere—young chicks that eat rose bugs nsueld.y ale within twenty-four hours. Neither 40 1 cherish mildew, bled: spot, blight or.root rot, Blooms from root, cutting or seed come freely the first year--wilihiut Longer waiting for plant devehopn hfit. No cold frame or greenhouse 10'rieces- sary to being to perfection fon garden display, house decoration or exhibi- I prefer the dahlia because of its. un- precedented beauty - and varietyof colorings, both' by day and artificial e light Only sky blue and shades close kin thereto aro lacking. You can choose varieties either al any solid color or of almost unlimited combinations of colors to suit youI taste: Princess Juliana in pearly wed- ding gown; Queen'Alexanflrie., soetsal • mon pink; King of the Autumn, of Pleasing shades; Countess of Loae- dtile, a profuse bloomer of rich red see mon; and countless others in shades of glorious range and brilliancy, mod- est and bold, .subdued andfiamboyaut, inconspicuous and bizarre—all the ee- sult of breediug and selection foe color both' by commercial hybridizers and be amateur devotees possessed of remark- able giftsofcolor appreciation. I meter the 'dahlia for its range of Dinosaur is the name given to a see- eery kingly expenses, and if modern cies of huge prebistoric lizard that kings were not philosophers, they flourished millions at years ago, The might feel bitter when comparing remains of one in Tanganyika Terri - heir fates with those of kings in the tory are said to be 16011. in length, good old days,.Such an animal when alive must have Formerly, the King had the most weighed over a hundred tons money os- anybody in the land and did lets. Never use bens which have been a small stomach and causes digestive sick and out of condition. Bowel trove; trollies. ble and diarrhoea are sometimes I To sum up the matter, the remedy caused by infection of the eggs, there- for the great loss of chicks is "pre - fore the necessity of not breeding from vention. "Eternal vigilance is the "pre - ! any birds thus infected. The best of price which must be paid to reduce eggs may be ruined by faulty incuba-- the loss to a iniaimum. Careful . feed Searching for the remains of these the least work for it, Now, a King Is' tion, not only artificial, but when and attention from the day the extluot animals nmmy be described as a net so rich as many of his subjects, broody hen is used. If the hen is Molts are hatched, for remember, new vocation. A decade or so ago and bas to work a great deal harder flighty elle should not.be used, Nests those chicks ntay eventually be the those engaged in this quaint calling than quite a lot of then. should be in a place easly accessible,, breeders you are going to depend on, the pleasures of sharing your surplus could have been counted on the fingers The programme which King George where water and food are conveniently , and must have every chance to mature stock with friends- Neighbors often of one's hand. To -day there are hum- and Queen Maly have to get through obtained, Incubator chicks are just Into well-developed, vigorous pullets fort a •pool to buy a single expensive dreds, an•d at the moment they are in a year would appal the average in- as strong as hen hatched if they are' and cockerels, "tuber• "One o them grows it. The fel. busy in the was of aloagolia, in dividual. Real holidays, real peace, properly batched. Too.high or too tuner. Oning, after taking it from sandy nest in the root cellar, they China, Africa, South America, the and real leisure, are very rare in the low a temperature, not enough fresh share Its Increase by clamp fromtets United Slates, and Canada.Royal Family. air, and wrong moisture aanditions, What Is success? It is achievement, o bench cuttngs, or both. „;, r i1, Discovered by Chancy t' erre the most common faults of weak I Iiow de we nieastira it. By the bane - The prefer the dehlta for its long arreY Woks. f tiff i 1 f b tion Do fit that it confers, letealth is not neves The explorer may remain in the field for a whole season and at the end be able to show uothieg for his labor. On the other hand, he may startle the scientific world with a find that Will upset the text -books and existing theories regarding the form and Habits of certain prehistoric creatures. It was pure luck that led to the dis- covery of what proved to be a vast graveyard of fossilized remains of ex- tinct animals. T(1r. Walter Granger, an American scientist, was crossing the "Bad Lands,' ar desert wastes, of Wyoming with a party of advemturels a few years ago, when a sudden storm came on. The party sought shelter in a disused sheep -herder's hut. Mr. Granger thought the poste which held up the rickety roof looked strange, and on examination he was astonished to find they were the bones of some prehistoric beast. Believing they must have been taken tram the ground near by, a shovel was obtained and the party started digging. It was not long' before they alighted upon the remains of a brontosaurus, r ten• d Bone Cabin The spot was christened e Quarry. From this single ancient graveyard the whole or partial re-' mains of seventy-three different ani I male have been recovered, the ma- jority of them being absolutely new to science. The fossil -hunter's greatest enemy, article of diet, when administered in areas where pioneers elect to dwell? the farm of oil cake, and the vital prin. I The day has passed when music was oiples ot the fish oil are first trans-icaneidered a perquisite for the rich muted and then transmitted to its milk and the cultured alone, There is no or three Limos a day. is very weaken- sibd thereby to the cream which final envotion so common to the human race ; i to the .system. Malaria fever is ly appears on the nursery table, I as that which responds to the eeeeee ; often the result. Now what is it that makes the cod- notes of music, whether in the form liver oil, this cream, this vitamin, so of folk song, national melodies, or this It Is disheartening to an explorer; potent an agent for good? These more impressive and higher forme of l atter s, has discovered upon a worked, things ase, in the innermost electrons musical art. to bee for months a skeleton, to be"obliged••to:�i'eturn home broken in health and with the precious trea- sure only partly, .excavated from its rocky bed. True, he:can return to the spot when he has regained his health;, but„he never knows what will happen tonne :prize ill. the meantime; lie may find it dainaged beyond repair by pass ing cattle -open ignolrant of its scientific valise 0r a rival may have' removed it. The heaviest single specimen ever taken cut of the recite was the head of a trioei+a,teee which weighed, when boxed, over three tons. This is a pre- historic rhinoceros, a veritable giant' compared with- hits brother of to -day It had. a length of •26ft, and carried' three.11orns been its head and a collar of spikes arou•ud lis neck, while its body was encased in a thick coat of bony _plates. ,) .. ' I ' oxl. 'Flerei-lies• the eglpremovirtne of Tramp—et don't, lady; slut I've al •en tlle.Phospiiate•beds of South l;;a.ro- r In Dry Times, "Why did you break your engage- ment to marry?" "What's the use, when you can't give the regulation' bachelor dinner?", Brook Trout for Sale Brook trout fry (mime fondness,) gpnwned from wild trout, guaranteed healthy and rigorous, For April delivery, 80 per thousand, 1',0,11., Shelburne. So orders neeepted- for less than 0,000, Waiyngton Brook Trout natebary, i0onhng'a Dnas, Di,e-run County, Ontario, SholOurno dation, L. 0, A, Strother, proprietor. of their composition, "bottled sun- • There eau be no question that the, light.” This was dlacovered years ago' great masses of the people are better by a woman physician, when she found 'and happier yid have more of the en that the good rosette obtained with joyment o1 meszve resuit•.of=real con - sunlight in the cure of rickets could tads -'with good music .. be got equally well with cad -liver oft: 'But, We maid= well ask; -hew does 'the sunlight get into the oil' in the •cod's l liver? There ars on the surface of the'. vast expanses of tlre.sev.en seas vast; multitudes' of, tiny living. creatures's ➢mown to zoologiets as "plankton,' whose tablet business in life is to ab-1%orb every available atom of sunlight; . These tiny creaturesol light are eaten' by saraid fish welch fatten and flourish exceedingly on this light diet. But these, in timer turn, are - eaten' by bigger "flea, and so the bottled sun-'; ligtt is carried to the sunless depths; No Objection. of the ooeau in the bodies of tee big Lady—"Why do Yon objectl,to,wark?" God -liver oil and its euin•teeeen Mine' there wee eeeclll,ly dug up the • • dream. i jaws of a pi'ehcsitoaio ~hark It jlad ISSUE i�10 12 'ese �f 9Y _4k $15.00 Bugs this, GriffithTepan Outfit ($18 wad of Fort William) 'Comprising Stant Rope Tram, Slant Yoko Ropes, 'flames, Hama Strop,,. PBilllets a°oinoline Bally Bands CAN 5oi boat 110 Who' nvlolobdsl- 11 Wil f a tern x00000 ata p lco that palr00 1t n real eon - WWI Aspin 00r0l•a last, lm,o priahl Wend 1uaaUun that rope ]conn 00000 pit 00 0.011 an leather.:. Farmers every- w1) ro aro finding the Griffith Team 00101 e, groat boon, an the fu000f the stenilily 1ncr,ast,5 price of leather, Order an omit 10 clay. 0,100 811 (or 810 west of Fort William). GrICilOa. 0 bit'Rope Traces 0010.per sot of four, trlth heel (mins, 80 (or 68.88 west of bort Wlllfml). Orlflthh CIAO Yolto Ropes, to repine ls- lI,hnr. 50:e Aram 001,0 emo to 01t11 0001* and sills 81.50 per palr (or Sl 1 n• ut of 1 pct wllllam),. tract dWtito for booklet. order nr, e,,e'„'s,a, 08 waterloo st 'vi[f�S „4,jti��y Stratford, Ont.. 58-n Atecnk el lerot Chi ( c w tom ar c a nen a s a o ` of varieties, with prices proporibOnlate away with these causes and you batch eerily the measure of it, for a• man to rarity, supply and worth. Growl• g . good, vigorous, healthy chicks. Goad may be srraceseful and never rich, or fifty varieties for the first time Sine Incubators are usually obtained by he may be rich and full et success, year, it is possible to have fifty other poultry raisers, yet'a great number of , True success is measured not by dol- separate hind: distinct kinds each eine these people make the "penny wise" and lams but by :service, and health, char- 1 deeding year. pound foolish" mistake of thinking ,actor, education and in(tustry are the they can make a brooder at home quite foundation stoues upon which it rises. good enough to brood the small num- ber of chicks they raise. Too often these home-made brooder's do not keep "Love and Hate both bear interest, away to his heavenly reward Dr. Mac- tiee proper temperature nor supply the The one have in -your heart will Cowen, the famous missionary • ;to LittleDrift. In England there recently passed you what will come to ventilation necessary, Again, if the determine you." China, One of his favorite storieai Of - his w.ork was of a canteen day whew lie was traveling down a river towards Amoy. In the brilliant sunshine he suddenly saw on the -water a large Chinese jar such as howsewives use for cooking. It was weighted with stones and was floating upright. When the men brought it `on board they found to their amazement that. it heed a little Chinese baby girl! These were the days when the Chinese etin- 8M0red girl babies as extraulely desirable; the child doubter's had been put Into the jug to die. Dr. Bike Gowan speedily wrapped the h)ite; in one of his flannel shirts and brouglll it safe to Amoy. There he ordered a Chinese boatman to carry the babyita the miesdon house, and he and Mrs. MacGoevan adapted it for their own.. The news soon spread; the Chinese were amazed that the missiantµy should take a cast -oft baby into kris house and; care for it as if it were dee 01 hie own daughters; { The' child flourished, and in a short etime Mrs. MaeGowan; dressed' it in a b ietiful 'white frock that she ]fad m�ad'e pecially' for it, and she and her husband,. took it to cburch to be bap. Used. Til'aot.whalo city was interested; hundreds of ereoes strove to view the baptism. -10 inlssienaries had given 11101011 thoegletat0 finding a ,suit' able name'" for the Suttle "hioc'e of China," and at last they 1 eeepe11 the right one. They called her "tLitelteeee, _-� Drift: '• As a result of the missfonary'eetind hese a wealthy Chinese gentleman 01' ganizad'a group' of rich mer010000 'and raised a.stihrof money for a foundling Canada united home, When it was built notices were posted all aver the city 'inviting= par - eats to send unequaled baby girls to the care. of the Homo goon its in mates numbered two tlloanat, But, alter. a while parents began to. value their baby gi'rl's warweeeeloath to part with these., To -day •tile found. ting home is n0 mere, because it is not needed in that distd•iet. Thus did Lit- tle Drift start a great reform and re- verse the great drift of, an an�clent and cruel cuatom. 00, full ways found so many Other filings to ,, • do." irto • c EVA LET R ii igs Motoring Er oy'ent to Every C •_ s d w i OW great the service done for the Cana- dian People by Chevrolet cannot . be ,estimated. How great the benefits it has brought to.them is beyond human ability to reckon. �i - ost gine nailed in It has provided them,. at `a c ;* q motordom, with a means to speed up business, to increase wealth, to better health, to bring friends closer and to open up every part of the whole country to every Canadian. The fine quality, strength, endurance and full equipment provided by Chevrolet cannot be purchased for so little money anywhere else. Moreover, the owner of a Chevrolet finds a further satisfaction in the savings effected day by clay as he drives his car. No other car built can be run or maintained as cheaply as Chevrolet. Chevrolet cars are built in Canada by Cana-- dianworkmen. Every dollar you pay'not only • buys a good-looking, cornfortable car, but helps build up a strong' Canadian industry. 0.116. Ask. About The G-M'A.C. Deferred Payment Plan Chevrolet Motor Company P y ices Transpot'tation, of , Oshawa, Ontario Dealers end Service Stations Everywhere. • "Oh, yes," said Mrs, Gadgett, proudly, "we can trace' our ancestors back •to—to-well, I don't know exact- ly who; brit we've been descending for centtries.n`::.