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The Seaforth News, 1917-07-05, Page 2
./bsep z Wm -kits - Author of "Alt for a Scrap or Paper.- "Dearer Than I'. ' etc- Published By Ltorider Stoughton, Limited, London and Toronto CHAPTER, L—(Cont'd.) I "Tom," went on the girl (pie !M. "you know what you told me twe ve • As Tom neared the Town Hall hie! months ago; you know, goo, what my face changed somewhat, and a lookof l' father and mother saiel when they saw eager expectancy cal" 'nth his eYes•l us together; it has not been pleasant Be noted with eatisfaction that the for me to listen to people's gossip, yard outelde a tog building was empty., especially when 1 know that most of I'm in time after ail," he reflected. n- it is true. I have been eery fond of "They've just sung the last hymn. you and 1 don't 'deny it; if I hadn't A few minutes later several hun-, I should not have walked out with yon, (Med young people mime intothe', but I want to tell you this ---you have street, and Tom was not long be eingi-; to make your choice this afternoon; ing out one for whom he had evidentli either yon are going to give up me, or been watching. This was a youn 1 you are going to give up the Them girl of about twenty years of age, and and ermetie and all it means." it was easy to see at a glance that "You're jealous of Polly Powell," . she was superior to those whom she said Tom, with an uneasy laugh. accompanied. Her face was retinol,! "I'm jealous cf your geed name, her eyes large and irtelligent; and her Tom, jealeus of evil infltience." neat, wen -fitting clothes did not suer 1 ,.E,..n. influenee? What evil haw_ gest the flamboyancy ref Polly Pi.weil sleneee., adornments. • 1 "Going to the Thorn and •Thristle "There's Tom Pellsed wetting fee' has done you a great deal of harm; it you, Alice," said me of the girls.' has Amused you to give up yeur Young Alice Lister flushed as the girl melee, Mer,'s Claes, and—and—but there. I and the color which rose to he: eheeles: needn't talk any more about it. You told ita own tale. !understand what I mean. It must be "If I were you, Alice." said eitither:' either one or the other, Tom." "I should keep ray eye on him. Sh"You mean that I must, either give he give up going to Sunday Seiee? he's. up you or Polly Powell?" - moan so much ef a catch; besides, - "It meane more than that, replied saw him with Polly Powell last Sun- the girl. it means that you must eit'n- day evening after he went home with er give up me or give up going -to the you; and Polly Poweli is mean your Thorn and Thiet.e. I ou used to be sort." . a teetetaler, Tem." • Alice did not reply to this, but her "As though any lad's a teetotaler in Ups trembled; evidently the words these days," laughed the young fellow, wounded her. AB the time Tomstood."Ceme now, Alice, you are not so nar- smoking a cigarette. Although km rew-mLuled as that. I am nearly, had come to meet Alice, he did not tike twenty-three now, and if I want a the idea of going hp ue claim her glass of beer surely I can have it. Yea while so rnanygiris were around. don't mean to say that everybody but "Ay, Tom,"said ore ed the glees, teetotalers are going to the toad:. shouting to him. ellowe's Palm; "You knee; very well what I mean, Powell?" , Tom. You are not the kind of young Tom did net reply; hie ready wit'rean you were, and either you give up left him for the moment, "If I were Alice," said another, "I'these things or we part company." d "Nay, Alice, dean': be narrow -mind - give thee the sack. Tha's noan fitted ed. I suppose," he added bitterly, to go with her.""that you are beginning to look higher "Ay,"," saki anethee, "and Pdhy e than me. that you are thinking o' ere just• only playing wr him; she's has Harry Fmierfield was up at your house Polly. And she'd noan look at thee, tre supper the other night." Tom, if the young landlord at the Bull (To be continued.) "The Stately Homes of England." The stately homes of England How stricken now they stand, The cottage homes of England Are lonely through the land. And Elanderi from her riven side Sends seagulls in with every tide. The Mace bloein in England, But their fragrance breaks the heart. The Hawthorn glows in England, But it has a peleoned dart. And Flanders with her erinesen flow= ers Has stained the tender hue of ours. The nightingales of England Still cry from hill to hill, The cuckoo sings through England, But other songs are still, Ard Flanders from her ilaids of red Sounds us the Last Poet of the dead. The sad waves cry round England, The sad closie tower and break, But brave man smile in England, , Brave women work and wait, And Flanders from her deathless pyre Waves high her torch of holy are. The stately homes of England. How glerious new they stand! Oh, the cottage homes of England. How great they are and grand: ' And heroes kiss the sacred sod Of Flanders and give thank e to God.: —S. M. Smythe. THE PYSIOA IN THE WAR ZONE WAR TAKES HEAY y DEA FR TOLL OF MILITARY SURGEONS, In Their Efforts to Save Life They Expose Themselves on the Actual Firing Line. The military surgeon, according to that revised aft of war which began to be on a fateful Ammet day three years ago, is no long ir the neutral ministrant to the wounded. He is ' leader of men,. for he sustains the ' morale of troops, he restores the slightly injured as speedily as he may to the fighting Hoeg -and he kite his fel- I tow soldiere for their trade, Therefore he is marked for death be -a savage foe just as though his scalpel were sword and his tourni- quet were trigger, The military ne- cessity of Kaiserism demands the tor- pedoing of the hospital ship, the shell- ing of the ambulance unit, the bomb- ing ref the dugout where the maimed are in refuge. Hence it is that in this tragedy of Europe the casualties in the medical profession have been much greater than in any other war, for they are relatively equal to the mortality among officers of the line and greatly exceed that of the staff. The army surgeon, whether he be with troops in the charge or far back from the front, is exposed to peril, for in these daye of long range wea- pons safety is not assured by dis- tance nor by the dictates of humanity. The surgeon volunteers who are going from this country to fill the depleted ranks of their brethren abroad are therefore Knights of the Great Ad- venture whose chivalry is a rally of seif-sacrifice. The Army Surgeon of To -day. The army surgeon of the new order was revealed recently in a lecture de- livered by Coi. T. H, Goodwin, D.S.0-, an officer of the Royal Army Medical Corps of Great Britain, who has been on the western front ever since the war began. "When the battalion is ordered to attack," said Col. Goodwin, "the regi- mental medical officer should, as far as possible, keep near the command- ing officer and move forward with him. If the attack is successful there will be a certain number of wounded in No Man's Land. "The medical officer should direct each of these who are able to walk to go back, taking shelter as much as possible, until they meet the stretch- er bearers of the field ambulance divi- sion who are coming up behind. Those wounded who are unable to move should be placed in shelter, in shell craters or trenches, and first aid performed as rapidly as possible. "The medical officer should not and Butcher had made up to her." Lancashire folks are not slow in speaking their minds, and they have no seise delicacy about telling people their opinion of them. "Well," said Tom quietly. "I fly' higher game than you, Emily Bileon, anyhow. I have ordy just got to hold' up my finger to the whole. lot on you, . and yo 'd come after me. But I'm noan going to do it;, I've got too much respect for myself.' Almost as if by arrangement the girls separated . nd Tom found him- self walking up Liverpool Read by the side of Alice Lister. Neither of them spoke for some minutee. Tem didn't First Lesson—Food Constituents, know what to say, while Alice was evi- The secret of. success in successful • ing tissue. They also furnisb heat. dently thinking deepiv., cooking lies with the Imuseveife who Starch, by the process of digestion, is "Have you been te ihe Young Men s keews food cranstituents, their value converted into a dextrine, and then Class this afternoon." she asked pre- and the proper method of preparing, made into a convert sugar. This sentIy. "Nay " as well as how to plan a diet for in- ! change takes place in the intestines. His Other Copper. Macdonald's dog was in the habit el going daily to a baker's shop. His master would give him a penny, which he would drop out ef his mouth on to the counter, receiving in exchange a penny bun. One day his master said to the bak- er: "I should like to knew how much my dog really does know. Try him, with a haIf-penny bun to -mon -tree Whnn. the next day, the dcg drop - peel his penny, and only a halfpenny bun was giver. to him, he sniffed at it,! turned it over and over with his paw,, then itt a dignified manner walked out of the shop, leaving the bun. In ten minutes he returned, acesern- panied by a policeman. DOMESTIC SCIENCE AT HOME "Why?" asked the girl, irking at valid, chile or grown person. ' Fats.—The source of fats is in beef, him steadily. Many women read technical terms lard, chicken and other compounds of "It's man in my line," replied Tern. and become frightened and bewilder- an animal source, and in olives, corn, "That kind of thirefil do for kids, bat ed. This is very feel -isle Just re- peanut and cottonseed oil of a vege- when people get grown up they want member how hard it seemed to do table source. Vegetable oils are --ee something better." "Better and cleverer p_eopie than decimals before you mastered them, from all disease. Corn oil is superior you, Toni, don't give it up," replied the and how quickly you understood after to all domestic oils, it is the by-pro- girL a little practice. It is just the same 1 duct of corn from which cornstarch is Tom continued to walk by Alice's way with food terms. Learn the few made. In composition fats contain side, looking rather sulky, simple principles and become mis- carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Fats in, He and Alice had begun to walk out tress of the finest profession in the the body furnish a greater amount of together a little more than a year be- word—become a practical and scienti- heat than starches. They are used fore, much to the surprise of their de housewife. also for building tissue. A large mutual friends. For Alice was not only better edueated than Tom, but The five principal elements of food amount of fat must be used during she moved in rather a better circle. necessary to maintain the health are: cold weather than in hot weather, for Alice's father was one who, begin- Proteins, carbohydrates, fats, mineral the heat radiating over the surface ning life as a weaver, had by steady salt, water. evaporates more quickly in the cold, perseverance and good common sense Proteins.—The source of proteins' ca, in other words, the cold oxidizes become a small manufacturer. He are meat, milk, cheese, butter, eggs, this body fuel. ' was anything but a rich mail, but heinor-1 fish, grains, and legumes. Proteins , Mineral Salts.—The source of was what the people called "Dein' vary weel"—one who with good hick would contain carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, ganic salts is principally in green in about ten years' time "addle a tidy sulphur and sometimes phosphorus. vegetables, grains, milk, meats, eggs bit of brass." Alice was his only Containing about sixteen per cent. of and fish. The salts found in foods daughter. He had never allowed her nitrogen, their chief use is tissue ' are calcium, iron, chlorine, phos - to go to the mill, but had sent her to building, repairing waste and making phorus, magnesium, sodium, sulphur a fairly good school until she was muscle. They also supply the same and potassium. Salts are used to re - sixteen years of age, since which time amount of heat as starches. 'gulate the body; they are also needed she had stayed at home with her moth- Carbohydrates.—Their source is in' for the formation of bone and teeth er, and assisted her in the house work, Alice had continued her education, , , searches and sugars, and they are ' structure and appear in tissue build - however. She had a natural gift for found chiefly in green vegetables, Inge s music and possessed a fine contralto grains and fruits. Carbohydrates are Water,—Water ithe most neces- voice. She had quite a local repute.- composed of carbon, hydrogen and sary of all foods; it forms a part of tion as a pianist and was constantly in oxygen in small granular grains in all tissues and is the important fec- demand to sing at concerts, She was closed in cellulose coverings. Carbo- for in the blood stream. It is pre - more than ordinarily intelligent too, hydrates are used to supply energy orl It carries nourishment to the blood' and was a lover of good books. Add- newer to do work. They enter, to a i and regulates the bodily process of ed to this she attended classes in the . town for French and German; and had small extent, into the process of build -.elimination. on more than one occasion been invited to the houses of big manufacturers. Canning Gooseberries. That was why people wondered at To can gooseberries, stein and re - her walking with Tom Pollard. He, move the tails, then wash in plenty of although looked upon as a sharp lad, cold water and drain. Pack in jars was not, as was generally agreed, "up and fill with boiling water or a heavy to Alice's mark." syrup. Place the rubber and lid in Still facts were facts, and there position and process in a water bath could be no doubt about it that Alice showed a great preference for Tom, for thirty minutes, Remove, and test and, in spite of the fact that her father for leeks, then store in a cool, dry and mother were not all all pleased, place. Label and date. had allowed him to accompany her , Canned Gooseberries for Pies.—Pre- home on several occasions. pare the gooseberries by stemming "What are you going to do, Tom ?" and tailing. Place in a preserving asked the girl. kettle and add one cupful of sugar for "What am I going to do?" queried every pound of prepared fruit. Add Tom. "I don't know that I am going one-half cupful of water to a cupful to do anything. What do you mean of sugar. Place the kettle on the fire Alice?" "I mean that you must make your and bring slowly to a boil, stirring all choice." I the time the berries are cooking, Boil "Choice? What choice?" for five minutes, then pour in steriliz-. "I should not have raet you this! ed jars. Place the rubber and lid in fternoon," replied Alice Lister quiet-; position and process for ten minutes , "but for the fact that I want to in hot water bath after the boiling once toan understanding' 1. have net' starts. Remove and cool and then een blind, neither have I been (kat!i hese last few months; a change has 1 test for lesks• one over you, and—and you will have 7 Gooseberry Jann—Use two quarts o choose." ' of gooseberries Stem and tail them Tom knew what she Meant well end and place in a preserving kettle, add - Ugh, but he pretended to be ignorant., ing one and one-fourth pounds of au - "What has come over you,Alice? I gar and two cupfuls of water. Cook 1 do you mese? Surely,"he went ;until very thick and pour into steriliz- ri, "you sire not taking any notice of i het Emily Hilt= said. Just as 1 ed glasses. Cool and cover With ough lad can't speak to any lag paraffin. Store in the usual manner a gi• t km own!" 1i or je II. los, Gooseberries may be combined with other fruits when making jams, such as strawberries, raspberries, black- berries, huckleberries or currants. English Gooseberry Jam. — Two quarts of gooseberries, two cupfuls of water. Place in a small preserving kettle and boil until very soft, usually about one-half hour. Rub through a fine sieve and allow a measure of su- gar to each measure of fruit pulp. Re- turn to fire, cook slowly until thick. Pour into glasses or pots and cool. Cover with paraffin. Floor Fillers. Cracks and crevices in old floors may be filled with the time-honored paper pulp, made by boiling newspa- pers to jelly, draining, and mixing with glue. The substance is jammed in with a knife, then painted over. But sawdust, mixed also with glue, is more satisfactory, and saves time. CornstarCh, moistened with turpentine or linseed oil, makes an excellent filler for porous -grain wood, to be applied before paint, stain, or wax. If de- sirable, tint with ocher, burnt umber, or lamp black. Commercial fillers ready to apply may be bought at any paint store and, of course, save time and trouble, touch with his battalion and move for- ward with it. His presence in the new e won trenches will wilh be o mense moral value. He can forthwith set about improvising a regimental aid post, improving shelters for the wounded and attending to casualties as they occur. He should take every opportunity to get in communication either by telephone or measenger the field ambulance bearer division, which will now, under a pretty heavy shell fire, be clearing the wounded from the area through which he has: just come." Some one asked Col. Goodwin how it would be possible for a regimental officer advancing with a battalion to attend to so many wounded. Death in No Man's Land. "He can do first aid," was the an -1 ewer, "but he should endeavor to move forward with his battalion. He can, as a rule, place wounded men in fairly good shelter. and if he can do ! that with every man he. should con- gratulate himself. "If he had fifty cases, twenty-five would probably be more serious. He, cannot manage twenty-five cases , without taking at least twenty min-; utes. He cannot delay long, however,' as the battalion is probably going into the next trench, and he must at still costs endeavor to be with them. "I grant that it is difficult indeed,' but we have to do our best. There: has been the suggestion to abolish the post of medical officer with the bat.; talion, but I am personally very much opposed to that." 14,11G‘GO =TENcr It Is part of out Service to WON, u for Your• t", why should. yoworry about thW e in cn5, ..s living interfering with your annual VS:OtiON. Our excellent buying I aelhelpe combined with Increased patronage it enabling us to i1ve the ingh cost of living a black eye. and with our 2.1033Vssree you ran rte more for yoUr sixpence than you can elsewhere That de why yoga irhould sp.nd your vacation In Toronto. Gonad a,. or send your wife and }whiles. they will be very much at borne at the Waihor Hyper:, the House ot Math se the management Oil special attention to 'Adele •Ing children traveling unescorted. REASONADLE RATES r„...,,,,,,..„,,,..„,,,,,,,,,„,....„„.„...,„m„,„ AMERICAN PLAN EUROPCAVI PLAN IF DESIRCP) I ,.e Garet, Wright 4 0..TorontoCanada The Walker Hou4 A "2 in 1 Shoe Polish" is made for every use. For Black Shoes, '2 in 1 Black" (paste) and "2 in 1 Black Combination" (paste and liquid); for 'White Shoes, "2 in 1 White Cake" (cake) and "2 in 1 White Liquid" (liquid); for Tan Shoes, "2 in 1 Tee (paste) and "2 in 1 Tan Combination (paste and liquid). 00 Mack—White—Tan 10c F. F. DALLEY CO. OF CANADA LTD., Hamilton, Can, The Paulen Pealseien Fean©s 0151,10a your atheir and they stir, where 0,..nt put there. The fence ONO servos roe for all tine, Ennis rook, sag or hrsok down. Stands any weather. lOsok joint aaeurely held with the Poetic.' loelr. all parte heavily gulvanieed. Cho stance.., moat aerviaeahle farm fence made and full, guaranteed. SMWO FOR OATALOro sr on cares a Posta: Pe tomsvsselisv. parkg, wooreriss, hood, peuttry wires, ornettssool howls,: Sw PotIrlaism un :00111 aolltera, Agnuts Witntatt in pal. 41CCIthry THE BANWELL-HOXIE WIRE FENCE COMPANY, Ltd. Winnipeg. Manitoba Hamilton, Ontario "What about the barrage, Colonel?" asked one of the listeners. "You get quite a certain number of men killed by this barrage fire in No Man's Land," replied Dr. Goodwin. "It is going on the whole time, of course, but it is astonishing the num- ber of men that you can get safely back through ..the communicating trenches. "Out of a total of 6,000 casualties you will probably get back 4,000 to 5,000 right away to the clearing sta- tion. Sometimes the wounded have to stay in the front area all day in the dugouts and then when the fire de - • Sometimes it seems impossible, but you can manage to do it." Speaking of the field ambulance, Col. Goodwin said that it was largely composed of newly commissioned of- ficers with men under them who are little more than boys. "They go cheerfully and quietly for- ward," he added, "into positions which , can only be described as unmitigated. hell," Dr. Goodwin then tersely laid down some general axioms for the guidancn! of the surgeon in the field and put especial stress upon this: "Keep cheery. Yottr mental atti- tude will have a considerable effect upon the men." Medical Corps Heroes. "Although as the organization of the war hospitals proceeds there may be comparative safety for the sum geons at the bases, the ranks of the profession are being constantly de-; pleted by the demand for first aid 001 the firing line. This ts the duty of the regimental rnedical officers, to whom Dr. Goodwin refers, and among these there has been the greatest loss of life. When the war began many of the best surgeons of both England and France were sent to the furthest front. So many of the profession have lost their lives that in these days when a skilled and experienced surgeon is worth as much to an army as a Colonel, every effort is being made to protect the surgeons. Bolivia, South America, the coun- try of Andean heights, torrid valleys and freezing plateaus—a South Am- erican Switzerland that perhaps never will be liberally provided with hotels for tourists—has a total of 153 auto- mobiles. HISTORIC FLAGS CREMATED. Or Buried With Military Honors to Prevent Ignoble US.eS. Britain is the only country which allows its historical flags to go into the pawnshop or auction room. One such flag, after having waved over the 39th Foot for three years during ' the siege of Gibraltar, was actually ' found covering the sofa cushions of a tradesman's sitting -room! In 1886 the 1st Battalion Gloucester Regiment recovered from a pawn- , broker at York four flags, which it had borne from 1795 to 1810 through the Egyptian and Peninsular cam- paigns. There may be seen to -day in the Kendal Parish Church a pair of the old colors of the 2nd Battalion Border Regiment. They were res- cued in 1888 by Lord Archibald Campbell from a London upholsterer, 1 who had advertised them for sale as though they were mere window cur- tains. To prevent old colors meeting with such fates many haye been cremated,' with great ceremony, and the ashes preserved carefully in a box. Others have been buried with full military honors, among them being sets be- longing to the King's Own Scottish Borderers and the 2nd Battalion Wor- cester Regiment. Field beans planted in June mature a crop in ordinary seasons. Well- drained, limed loam soils of medium fertility- produce the best crops. THE NEW KING OF THE HELLENES PRINCE ALxklArnwit 18 A YOUTH OF TWENTY -EMIR, A Charming anti lat./tilde Pereonallly And a Ki'elt 141),01' itt Ithithi of /Wind. A sturdy (Idiom, lem lather tient e soldier is Prince A boutieler, 11 big Alexander 1, whom the entente pow, ors have rttiami ti, 1,1o. Carook Llama) in place of Cored:tar Lino. A eharming porno/Wile,' in Prinee Alexander, irrelined lather to rending history Own multirip,- 11, paying mere attention to higimer veered automobiles than to fill 1,11‘. Intrleaelier of intero national polith, preferring the charming comintny or sparkling' youth to the grave facers of the military critics, Alexander, of all the children of Constantino, minuet lira in the affections of hie faller, whom he lovos dearly and adinheur openly. 01 his mother, 11 van be said with equal frankness that oho considered him a wee bit frivolous and fur less martial than a nephew of the great war lord of Potsdam ought to be. But Alex- ander has always succeeded in dis- arming Queen Sophie. Ho was the most lovable man in the whole pal- ace and shared in no small way the immense popularity enjoyed by his father and his brother, George. The Prince, who is now twenty-four 1 years of age, likes any kind of sport, especially football and tennis. His particular hobby, however, is motor- ing in all its forms.. He simply wants to drive anything, just as fast as he can; and he does it, too, in de- fiance of all the speed laws of the Athenian police, which • is especially lenient to the popular Prince. One thing his father used to tell him often was that it would be impossible for Alexander to get a royal warrant of driver to his Majesty the King. Neither the Queen nor her daughters ever intrusted themselves to the driv- ing abilities of this princely, chauffeur. A Characteristic Incident. Incidentally Prince Alexander was a lieutenant in the artillery, and those closely associated with him found the young man an exceliont officer. A curious thing about it was that So- phocles, the second son of Venizelos, was likewise a lieutenant, not only in the same regiment, but also in the same battery with the prince; more curious still, both were promoted to a captaincy on the same day. The officers of the regiment, desiring to celebrate the promotion of the prince, arranged a small affair with. plenty of champagne and other accessories. Then, however, a controversy arose. . On account of an interview that King Constantine had given to the writer • of this article, which was published in America there appeared in the news- : paper edited by Venizelos himself a • vitriolic attack on the king. This, by some diabolical coincidence, hap- pened on the very day when the offi- cers' spree was to take place. There was consternation in the regi- ment. "It is impossible to have the son of the king and the son of Veni- zelos at the same table," said the offi- cer in charge of the arrangements. "But what is to be done? We cannot tell young Venizelos to keep - away from the affair any more than we can tell the prince not to come." At that moment Alexander came in and solved the problem. "I don't mind drinking a glass of wine with Captain Venizelos," he said, "and I wouldn't mind cracking a couple of jokes with him. If he were his father, and I mine, things would be different, but as it is I ani not king and Sophocles Venizelos not aspire to the premiership of Greece." The celebration was held and the two young men shook hands, to the de- light of the whole regiment. Such is Alexander, the present King of Greece. He came to the throne not at the bidding of his people, not as the lineal successor of his father, but simply because the entente powers so willed. His popularity will depend not on the ,amount of friendship and confidence that the entente show to him, but on the message that his fath- er will address to the Hellenic peo- ple, indorsing his son's nomination. NEW SOURCE OF REVENUE. Utilization of Waste Materials Prac- tised in Britain. Britain is finding herself in many ways owing to the war, One source of much revenue, as well as of a re- quisite in the preparation of explo- sives, is found in the camp refuse. The Yorkshire Post, in describing the results secured under a process for utilizing the camp Telma by the Quartermaster-Gcneral's Department, says: "While the English -made glycerine was $200 per ton, the United States fixed their figure at $1,200 per ton. During the first month the scheme was put into operation, a weekly ea - turn to the Army for camp refuse was made of $9,000. In January of this year, the weekly amount increased to $47,500, representing approximately $2,500,000 annually returned to the Army for waste rations, The produc- tion of glycerine from these waste camp products enabled the Ministry of Munitions to dispense with over 1,000 tons of foreign glycerine at a saving in cost of $900,000." (Foregoing fig- ures on basis 019 $6 equtealent of 21.): A tratemat and Insurance society that 7=etects its number' in accordance whit the ntarlo Government Standard. Sick and rare' henclits optional. Authorized to obtain members and charter lodaea in every Province in Canada. PU:511 Ce.‘e.tian, safe, sound and ocono. cacti. 11 there is no local 'oat et CleeermFrienda le your district, apply • act to ser et following officers: Dr.3.W.Eawardt, M.P. W. P. Montage., Grand Councillor. Grand Recorder W. F, Campbell, J. IL Bell, M.D., Grand Ordeal:cr, Grand Medical Ez.. HAMILTON . ONTARIO "Redpath" stands for sugar quality that is the result of modern equipment and methods, backed by 60 years experience and a determination to produce nothing unworthy of the name "REDPATH". "Let Rap* Sweeten it." 8 40,20,50 aons nd 100 lb. Bags. . Made in one gra& only --the highest ! 2 and 5 lb Ca t—