The Seaforth News, 1930-01-02, Page 3FORTH NEWS,
THUIRSDAY, APRLL 14, 1932.
LS
hipment
to T
or
:orating
ly pur-
l.
if flu in
etunred
Id Mrs.
t. their
3atbylon
.athwell
Mossop
sek,
neat of
tear the
.nd else
able to
ire.
Detrotir
home
Sunday
y.
Londoln
Pe laid
tram.
red for
tlr.
olite
s come
daugh-
dial of
to held
ly wel-
of the
I their
F Mrs.
'airline
Walter
)ended
'niton.
es for
pman,
Coch-
•ved a
eeting
:rs. T.
celfield
hold
rnday,
B.A.,
e ser-
e•
the
last
'ehrouglt strength to
tndergo an`oper-
HII,LSGREN.
L r, Charles Bitaekweill attended the
school trustee convention in Toronto
recently as a delegate from S. S. No.
3, Hay.
Mr. and Mrs, "1-Iydatan of Zurich
visited recently with Mr, and Mrs. G.
Uovc and family,
Mr. Reid of Sea'fort'h paid a flying
calll here recently.'
Mr. and Mrs. G. Lavander and son
jack of Hensel'. visited. recently at
the home of Mr, J. B. Forrest,
Mr. and Mrs. J, G. Forrest and son
Jam !spent a day in Clinton recently.
We are pleased to report that Mr,
Robert Parsons is ab'te to be up now
and we trust he soon wild have his
good •health again.
Miss Dolly Hagan returnedto her
!atonic after spending several days in.
Hensall, also a day in London.
'}V.M.IS. meets on Wednesday at thd,
home of Mrs. Raba. Stephenson,
Little jackClerk who
•
cut sever-
al, weeks with
his grandparents, Mr,
and Mrs. Ohas. Blackwell, returned to
•Iris hbme in Tucl.erssni'th,
LONDESBORO.
Mr.n
a d Mrs, Mc
Coal Sun.
Bayed
with, Mr. and Mrs. C. Rud'delt,
Mrs. Cree and daughter, Mrs. Mor-
gan and children of Clinton, also Mrs.
Murphy and .Miss Mildred of Exeter
were guests at the hone of Mr, H.
'Riley ore Sunday.
Mr, Wm. Brigham and Miss Lavin-
ia moved their household effects to
Clinton on Monday, where they pur-
chased a cottage on Albert street, Mr,
Jordan, who' has bought Mr. Brig -
ham's farm, intends moving on to it
shortly.
Mrs. Youngblut returned home
From Goderich on Saturday where she
spent some days with her sister, Mrs.
Pipe, who is very ill in the hospital.
Mr. and d Mr
s. Alex. e�. Wells spent,
Sunday with Centralia friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Kunkle and family
Niagara Falls spent the week -end at
the home of Mr. Ted Crawford, •
Mr. and Mrs. John Fingland re-
turned home from Walton on Sun-
day,
"THE ROIB'OT' DETECTIVE"
MRS. BILLETT'S LATEST
QLondon Free Press)
Public taste in reading =titer
seems to run, like everything else, in
cycles. Some years ago the dime
thriller and the penny shocker were
all the rage. They were' read univ-
ersally and omnivorously. Today the
crime story, detective fiction, again is
as popular as ever, and on a Higher
plane. While the shockers still shock,
they no longer insult the intelligence
of the reader. For a couple of hours'
entehtaintnent in the evening there is
nothing better than a well -construct-
ed mystery story. There is a certain
•fascination in matching one's wits
agai
est the
author's, uthor' in
s seeing
whe-
ther one can discover at page 115 of
a 314 page book who the murderer
was, and tvhy he did it. Providing the
writer does not play; the dirty trick of
dragging in by the hair some new
character at the end of a complicated
plot, there is always a pleasurable
sensation to be derived from this
'harmless pastime. Iif one's nerves are
strong and one's system inured, to
murder mysteries, they are fine, but
they should not read Mabel Brough-
ton Billett's new book, "The Robot
Detective," just before retiring. It is
recomm•endled as daytime reading for
timid persons night t' df
anvil • time rea di
or
athe a1'e addict, but excellent reading for
last Her Third Book.
Published at first. in England, and
•
now in 'Toronto by the Mac nillans in
Canada, _ this is the second novel Mrs,
Billet has completed since coming to
London. . Her last book was "The
Shadow on the Steppe," a story of in-
ternational intrigue with an > exotic
setting. In ."Tihe Robot D:eteletive"
she gets back to • an envieotrme'n[t
which she knows intimately aiid por-
trays realistically -the Nicola Valley
in thet
O can
agar Lake district of Bri-
tish Columbia.
This was the setting,
loo, of her first book, "Calamity
Mouse," and-many'o•f the characters
Ind place names in that work appear
again in her latest. Mrs. Billet lived,
for some time in the part of .British
Columbia where the action of, her no-
vel takes place, and her background
has that ring of authenticity which is
predicated on first-hand knowledge.
She e
knows small
town life and small
Irene
c end
e vi1-
t of
e 8Th
from
ivieg
td in
,'hick•
the
rting
'card
ifted
mita
gash
led
e_
x
ttI
4Y
ego'
tee
Sea-
mere
The
e
ome.
e
t$e
et_
tvet
hirel
eleven t People, their philosophy, their
eaoiromscs, :their reactions to any gi-
veli situation. One .imagines that her
books• are read with more than,Usual
Intereet in the srtvalt,Brittish Colum-
bia r
is dut +
n '
m-
w hill
hsh
she once made
her
hole
e.
One •
tapes, .however, that the
wholesale slaughter, dealth and discs
[ter which seem to ,dog the place are
products of her imagination, Other-
wise, the Ain'erican tourists will be
taking the upper t'o'ads to avoid it.
It le always refreshing to find'
something new' in the Kay of detec-
tive fiction, Ma's. Bliliett approaches
the solving of a murder-ot series of
murders --from a new angle. Admir-
ing the English people very much,
althoti•gh herself 'a native of Huron
County, the writer has cast an ex -
imperial officer in the role of hero,
or solution -(finder, ' I -Ie has the Start-
ling idea of card -indexing the whole
population of his town (2)700' of
them); for future reference. His files
contain as complete inieorma'tion as
possible about the past and present
of every -inhabitant. So, when a Oran
and his wife are slain in cold blood
the major goes to his "robot detec-
tive", 'asks him questions, feeds him
facts, and gets his answer. The sys-
teut is modeled on that used by the
police Of Bertin, whose files o'f infor
mation regarding both innocent and
guilty fit! great buildings.
A Human Guiding Brain.
The tnechanicai device for the de
'teotion of crime, invented and perfect
ed by the German police, which the
author adeepbs,for the little B.C. nom
nuiiut +
Y, certainly lives up to all that
is claimed for it. Hiowever, more in-
genious than She robot detective is
retie living, flesh-andblood man shunt-
er who operates the levers that make
the n
eckgut
cal ap
para.tu
s go. One
the gets tmpreseiat that without this
human guiding brain the robot would
not be worth much:- "The Robot De- ,Horse, colt or filly under 1 year --D.
TRY
i11esp ies
Cleaners & Dyers
WITH YOUR NEXT ORDER
Phone I96w. We call and deliver
V. J. Gilllespie, Prop.
,Frilly or gelding, 1 year and under 2
yrs -D. Fotiheringhant and Sons,
'B'recdfield, 1 and 3; R. J. Scott, 2
Horse colt or fitly, under 1 yr -D.
IFothe•ringilean and Sous; William
,Black and Son; Robert Wright, Sea -
forth, Team in harness• -James;
Scott, R. 7; Scott, William Urquhart.
ISweepstakes-lJatnes 'Scott.
Agricultural
Brood. mare, 3 years and over -C.
Stewart, Londesboro W. ,S, Broad -
foot, Kippen; .Murray •Grainger, Var-
na. 'Filly or gelding, 3 years and ove
er-IS. Thiel <a and d S'on Mitchell; Fred
Toll and' i •
Sou, Blyth; GharleS.,Stew-
art, Londesboro; 'Robert Wright, Sea -
forth. Filly or gelding, 2 years and
under 3 -Robert McMichael, Sea-
foreh; !Fred iRoney, Mitchell. Filly or
gelding,
1 year and under 2 y •
rs-V.
M'dEu en 1CLin r s
to t, Stewart McEwen,
[Clinton; Allex. Wright, Bru•cefield.
tec'tive" (a clever title, incidentally) is •Floleheringhat; and Son; 'Eldon t0' -
'Brien, Clinton; Robert MdLe'an, Kip -
nen, Team in ,harness -Robert Mlc-
Miehael, Fred Roney; S. Thiel and
Son; Rdbert Weight. Srwreepstakes-
Robert 'McMichael,
certainly replete with action, Preme-
ditated 'murder takes the lives of two
nien and two women; a mine disaster
wipes out a score more. Mrs, Bitten
'handles a complicated plot with in-
genuity and finesse. Its ramifications
edtend from the Persian Gulf- over
the seven seas to the Rocky Mts,
Its characters include well-bred and
arot e • 1
so'welNbred. Englishmen; Austra-
lians, Americans, Canadians and Chi-
cago gangsters. In less skillful hands
it might have become very confus-
ing, i
g tis n
at,
If
you like
a battle
of wits, with rules according to, Mar-
quis of Queensbury, you will find it
in "The Robot Detective."
This book was chosen a- couple of
months ago as one of those recom-
mended by the Crime ,Club Society of,
Great Britain, which h'as its counter-
part in the United States, This is the
same society :which recommended the
works of distinguished English wri•t-
ers of detective fiction. Fortunately,
her book wn
as published in England,
end not in the United States, or Mrs.
Brillett's name would have been fink-
ed with, possibly, that of Frank L.
Packard. She would not like that.
"The Robot Detective" sells for $2.
..'C G.I.T.
Ont April 13Th the Marion Keith C.
G.S.T. held their regular weekly meet
ing in the basement of the Northside
United Church, The meeting opened
by shrging the CJG.LT, hymn Iollon-
ed by the 'Lord's prayer repeated in
unison, The minutes were read and
ad'opted as correct. The roll call was
answered by eighteen members, The
?Scripture was read by Dorene Hud-
son, .on. Etlhel Shorey, the slpiritual vice-
president, then took the chair. The
first number on the programme was
an article "Short !Stories on Hyntns"
by 'Leona 'Box, '.following which Miss
Thompson read an interesting story
from "Fireside Stories." Several
games were then played and the meet-
ing closed with the CdG,;L'T, benedic-
tion:
[Remove all callouses and enfarge-
m n
e is from your, stock with Douglas'
!Egyptian Liniment, a wonderful re
•medy.
-r
OLDN'TON SPRING` SHOW
The 1432 annual Spain !.Horse and
Cattle Fair under the auspices of eh.
Huron •Cen•brat AgriculturaI Society
held in Clinton on Thursday was th
'beat in •tile history to'f the society, Per
feat weat'he'r and the useal attraction
of the fair hr,ought out a record at
tendance, estimated at well over three
thousand. The ,cattle entries were
More than double that of any previous
year, and' the quality exceptionally
good. The .entries in the "heavy
horse" e' cls
ss were declared by Judge
BI
J.Gardh
ou
se of Weston to be the
best he ever had the privilege of
judging, President Wm. McEwen
and officers of the association are to
be congratulated on the outstanding
success of the 1191312 fair. Following
are the winners in the ;various classes:
Heavy Horses
Clydesdale s'tall'ion, 3 years and ov-
er -Thomas Mcefillait, ••Seafonth; Gus
Bt
sbacic C1'
ut ton•
R,
D. Murdoch,
l
•Brae0
fie4d,
Percheron statllion, 3 years and ov-
er --William 11, Keeler, !Dublin, IR:R,
Heavy Draught brood mare 3 yrs.
and over --William Utiqub�at t, Mit-
chell
William amiI
gt, ac.
r-r(Seaforth;
M
i
sy Grainger,
Varna. Filly or gelding,
3 years and over-_tjames Scott, Cro-
smarty, 1 an•d 2;'R.,J. Scott, •Cmomatity
3 and 4. .Filly or geldlitlg,'2 years and,
over-4Wiliiam Urquhart, Mitchell, •1
and 3; (Alex. Wright, Brncefield• 2,
General Purpose
Filly or gelding 3 years and over-
Elgitt Goudie, Seaforth; William
iDecher, Zurich, 2 and '3. Team m
harness -Elgin Goudie Fred Pepper
and. Son, Clinton. Special prize Of
'$1'5.00 donated by the late. Mayor S.
S. •
Cooper of :Clinton
forh '
t e best 3
heavy draught agricultural or general
purpose horses (stallions barred) any
age, in halter; not necessarily owned
by one man, but must be owned in
one township, won by James Scott,
Cromarty, Hibbert township.
)Special prize of $15 donated by Ro-
bert •Mwrdach, Brucefield, limited to
colts 2 years and under, sired by "Fa-
ivorite Aigain"-ID, Fo.dheringha'm and
Son, Bruc f
el cid• 'William am VMdEwen
Clinton
Stewart titpEweu, Clinton,
'William Black and Son, Seaforth; D.
iFotherittgham and IS'on, Brucefie'Id.
!Special prize of $10 for 2 animals
2 years old and under, draught or ag-
ricultut
ai i(stallions ( s barred), owned
by the exhibitor -,D. 'Forheringham
and Son, Brucdfield.
'Special prize, $10, team coming the
greatest distance (six entries), won
illy 'A. 13. (Chalmers, London.
Live stock judging competition,
judging baby beef and heavy horses
(29 competifons)-George Mundaedl,
'Glenantan; Aubert Pearson, IBaylfield;
Alfred Patterson, Lucknow; Tom
Turner, Clinton.
Light Horses
6'
Stallion, standard bred trotter--
William
rotter-William Berry, IBrucefield3 Leonard
Hunter, Clinton,
Carriage horse in harness --A. B.
Weber, Kitchener; Gordon MdClin-
chey, Auburn; A. B. Weber, Kitchen-
er; roadster in •harness --Robert Mc-
Laren, Hensall; A. 13. Weber, Kit-
chener; best 'gentleman's outffit -
George Tenwitt, Wingh'ant; [Henry
'Gown, Listowel; sweepstakes -JA.' B
'Weber, Kitchener; Robert McLaren,
Heneal'1; lady driver --Mrs. A. 13.
Weber, Kitchener; Mrs, Wes. Nott,
SeeforIhi Mrs. !Ross Chapman,
Bruceifteld.
Cattle.
'S'ho,rthorus-tlIui1, 3 years or over-
Oestricher Bros„ Crediton; E•phriant
!Smell, Clinton; bull, under 3 years'-
Oesh•icher Bros,;' James Foster,
Lucknow; John Barr, Blyth; cow, 3
years .and over-Ephrian Snell; ,Mel-
vin Crich, Seaforth, and 3'rd; heifer
2 yetirs-rOestricher /Bros. and 2nd;
Melvin Crich, Seaforth;; heifer, 1 year
year-Oestricher Bros.; Roy Pepper,
Seaforth;[ 'Oestricher Bros.; Eph.
Smell.
'Her f
e ords-B
ut l 2
an .ears
Y d 'over--
Howard
ver-Howard Wright, Cromarty; George
Kennedy, Lucknow; bull, under 2
yearsO'Neil .Bros., D'enlfieid, and
3rd; Fa -ed 11. 'Carbert, Staffa, 2nd.
S'weepstakes-Oestri eher !Bros.
(Market cattle -Senior baby beef,
steer or heifer, born on or after,
January 1, 19311 -!Roy Pepper, Sea-
Fred H. 'Car:bert, St'affa; Andrew
Park, Mitchell; Ephriann' Snell, Clitt-
Stan ; Andrew
Park, 1
ft
chcl1, junior
or
baby beef, steer or (heifer, born on
or after Mray 1, 1931 -O'Neil Bros.,
IDenlfelld; Norman Heal, lfitc'hell ;
A. Bell and' Son, .IKippen; Herbert
IKercher, Kippene E'p'hriam Snell,
ClintI
sit.
The light horses were judged by
!Dir. !Fowler of Guelph, Ibm cattle by
Co!. Robert McEwen of London, The
Ontario Agricultural Dep actin en.t,
live stock !branch, was represented by
R. W. Wade, director, and L. E.
O'lNeit•
'York Buys Champs
to have a position under the
dramatic moment when the h ld a privileged P
broughtHapsburgs, who Stull larder for,
asou the Royal
'totbuyers
to
Its
Fair, Toronto,
.nal carload lot of
,ch created a great
.' cattle experts
.r. This Champion
ora
ked
steers,
td tic t
ha't 1
on: the famed Mac,,
a southern Alberta,
•lightly under 7.200 lbs.
s 'heralded on all sides
inch of beef cattle ever
Quite a t into the Coliseum : e
steers were
f■ 1 err+ ,r7� '(� Classified; Aclvert�aem$>'itst -
111 -Fated [�t�'d Ring a SITUATION VP ".YQT ..
> hibll� J.F 'Ofat e nN' t5 h•v•L•,at 1 winos l 13th•
Placed on Vat easy work Gat n twu(10 to nx
ing .barber Lrde er alter.. moat areM oat
1 Use noncan D t Write nr
Tragedy Followed USt3 � ' barite' sehoot system catanegue. l shit
Wt Bartelimmeciiatett' for free
�'% Ca( ud ) i..� � 12atber College.. 12 LQueen \'Fest, T 'mite
Rudolf's gide "NsT er;e sa a
i __' r.Lr,n.rs; tt�rzcs' xis r:s,
Vienna, -It ie a popular, tradition ,� i--- J .01
ld not die used x tea ns made Done trey Inst ic'xon
that matT at here is s n it free itc. utot t}1 oo71G •E,dtt ii3,ly', Lei-
t
taullctng CoxxlPav},.
twice, That there ri sosmivh ell wore recto, _.
13
Proved tb the ring olf Empress l ----'--
made for rhe wedding mPeror Frame Y'
Maria Theresa to time
at the wedding I L heir tions ti Ii Ari c
and used a 'meed t tri er. 01 ta.n.
of Crown,'Priuce Rudo1'Y' with Priucesa Ontario.
et
Stefanie of Belgium,
The eight years of RRudolf's married _-- - -_
lite were filled with matrimonial triCQ:
and ended with the drama at the
hunt-
ing lodge of Mayerling,
the
Grown Prince shot his friend, Baron-
ess Vetsera, and then made an end
to his own life. These rings are
retsho It
in the 'newly opened "dice
Treasury," whose Ramous colteetlotI
has been enlarged by the "Treasure 01
the Capuchinea," which hitherto was
n Canada, It was not accessible to the f public.
Capuchtnes
been
Welled i Th in
o
1•j+ PL1 NT, GOO11
radio trntteny 41une11,..
the ring. aps , were - baptized by
and Herded in the,r?nter•of purchased ,Capuchins monks and buried inthe
also :puech � in the lye
t
t . vaults me
1•' tis
as
amonastery's to
management gs 3
The o
na
m
Tleco -
thecity.r g
of
In
r
he
lle
ett
�of
Champion
m
east
ah
h P the
C �
the Grand the Hist prize ket in the
Afar -
fair and a lamb%rt_ nal purchaseinitiou ot the many
services
of tat
cadet ot ten Jamha. iA final monks to the Imperial way the Grand ct specimen
Champion
eSteer,
a oe the ter made them precious gifts, and in -
Shorthorn
tho perfect ale ividnalHapabur'gers bequeathed them
JioY' P Ern- d
eRobson,
Class -was Ont. T e art works and sacred objects,
The Royal
all
' eufl ,
Ro
b
s
on
D
estof
total o
b. D
ra
1�5
per
1
!d
a�•�i
1,0k p
$1,003. "Play Boy" weighed 1175 tbs.
shown in the above c. e
flbiss cut.
P
The Dispute
"Thousands wonder,
Thousands ask:
Why the struggle,
tx/by the task?
"Why the burden,
• VIlhtat the Yoke?
1$ it all
The devil's joke`s'.
"Why the 'bar,
And wily lire bond,
If there is nothing
There- beyond.
"Head and heart
Quarrel and cry; u !
Head shouts, nothing!
g
Heart -You Ile!"
-Philip M. Raskin:
Sacred Relics•on Display
In the monastery the ,gifts were :who spoke rola or that;
u to remain there il after but mkakeken•- Thomas
added to the treasury Search not
A Kempar•
entombed like their donors untasurers s what is s
when the treasurers
w
the revolution
were handed over to the state, which
has added them to the.ecoleaiastical
exhibition In the former inverts! pal'
Some quaint mementos, including \
ace,
iame to sharing out the
to the lot of this officer
, mutineers that the "trea-
h had caused so much
ousisted of worthless tok
Flowery Land was atter,
rered, the survivors escaI•
boats and reaching the
veil, •
y of these tales of terror
s veru small in comPar-
a costa Livres were taken ships p
rued
or
sunk
s
s bu
Mends gain. At times, it
re were "grievances" al-
e e mutineers; but
leen to be' just murder for
ke.
he most curious of these 1
ss recalls the case of a
-was forced by mutineers
ie plank, and yet lived S to
"tie. 33e was Mr. S., o
iPpointment in India, and
at Singapore with his wile
sl containing a large
number
M convicts. It was these
mutinied and foreed the
rew to walk the plank.
A Night • of Horror
MEN YOUR BABY
CST -'
C A COW
In spite of all precautions little ones
will take colds-especiallyr Fduring the
s axon•
changeable days . &spaarn.
When the first symptomsrunning
sneezing, redness of tate eyes,
inose -Baby's Own Tablets should be
given at once. They ,wilt rapidly
break up cold and prevent. more seri-
ous complications.
ou• v's
: of
B
at
tit
e
es
who
keep
a
box
Roo
Own Tablets in the home silvers feel
safe. In fact they are 1Ske having a
doctor.in the house. They are a gen-
tle but thorough laxative that. sweet-
en the stomach and regulate the
bowels, thus driving out egonstIpation
and indigestion and relieving the baby
of the many childhood ailments which
are the direct result of a clogged con
(Mon of the bowels or sour stomach.aar
They are absolutely safe -being
guar-
anteed to contain no drug at all harm-
ful
babe. e,
Thy
ful to even the youngest
cannot possibly do harm -they always
do good.
Baby's Own Tablets are sold bet all
medicine dealers or will be sent Y
r.
mail at 25 cents a box from Tho D
R�iiiiants' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Out.
the reliquat•Les of the pious There L@ t
ress
Anna, are in the collection, 11
a tree of embossed gold,
ch hears 1
as fruit little receptacles
conting
teeth and other relics of saints. The
receptacles hold relics of the Virgin
mother, it is sold, also of $t. Peter,
tthe founder of the Church;
erine, St. Joseph and St. ChristoPhP-
reAAnother reliquary of the same em-
s has the shape of a miniature al- � Si. Lawrence Mar Fe '
pees sated with gold and '--
turn came at midnight. He
swim a stroke; the sea was
arks, land was a thousand
y, and the ship was in corn-
,ession of the convicts. Yet
to tell the tale at a London
ter!.
',ug off the plank he caught
wing overboard. By
this he
iaible, heating successive
FOR THE HIR
Ask Your Barber --De Knows
We Pay the Highest Prices for
DRESSED POULTRY
t,/rite for quotations
Co, Ltd
a
Flo
11'
1Harris IIS
12 Toronto 2
tar, richly cream -• -_
set with Diecious stones. In the C _
ire is a picture showing tate flagella.
tion of Christ and the setting up el
the crown of thorns,
fall, and distinguishing be,,
.he dead and 'living bodiesby questing
the
-.'-including-2000 gallons of
n051109 in the former case of the cetroi, and asking for quotations for
- At P
copper and sliver,
This Is taken to mean that Nadir
hopes to intuit coin. in Kabul, but um
til the Kabul' Governmetreaestablishes
its l
credits it is improbable
re-
quirements Can be supplied,
,available
Habibullab seized all
money in Kabul eultstituting leather
While small
The picture, of elaborate mosaic i
work, " consists of countless little
patches of variquary, richly set with
pearls and rubies, contains in a niche,
a thorn de the crown.Ftobes
nin •
ste 9
C
hri
the '
to
centuries course
0
E the I
In the c
Capuchins monastery received. from
its patron3 many precious church
utensils and embroidered vestments,
which are exhibited in glass
e work o£' -
Most ot the latter are
archduchesses, The ohrtstegre tt
Hapsburg was alwaYS a great e
and surrounded by tradition -hallowed
ceremonies.
The garments, which tate newly
bora archduke or archduchess wore on
such occasion, generally were elabor-
ate miniature state robesits hefina
avY
gold and silver embroidery
lace, Several O% triose garments are
to be sell in the Capuchin@ treasure,
aures
among thein one worn by
Josef at his baptism. It served for a
at -
whole generation. of baptismal can
dates and, also was donned by Arch-
duke Maximilian, the later
Marie of
Mexico, by Archducheas
and the Archdukes Karl Ludwig and
Ludwig Vietor.
;,Afghan King Orders
Gasoline From India
Calcutta -Telegrams have reached
ial
India Yl'Om King Nadir In I{alsul, re-
f various mer-
e frantic struggle for exls eu
,gth his Chilled Singer's lost hold'
the rope." A
ButAs Bir.
providence
was
kind.
1
mada11e-leis final effort to keep
afloat
olt
s legs struck a hard substance..
as one "ot the ship's boats which
'as towing astern, half -submerged.
sn t himself
'o he managed to DPor.
111 dawn came, when he wars discover- and Paper moue,•,
back on deck. Later quantities are still iittt tcirculation et
tl and brought
confined to his Dehio, but one no veins �adraI�han is therefore
:r was co each money. banits-rn the
Sr other of his whataptors came
like dayfonegotiating with foreign tos and is under••
Rimer!
inquire he wouldhome of arraugiug a
linnet! Calm Sea Istood to have dispatahe mon thly bent
Founnnerd. in however, s urg5 t
[ al and France
what spinner of in"tail stories" ha? i tueestion. So far ei'
Iver a sequel,
the putt ti to match that? ,. anon of the risks involved has pre -
eke
%tie the seq Brite mnnaval b were cap., veiled with those addressed,
aired 00 a mysishteries,
boat. I ltd and torn to lin a con-
Famous sea:mysteries, such asdthe l being
q disrep a invest money internecine a eci n-
(Selasto an l
'cases' of the B'laty Mr, are touched upon by
' Lockhart, wlto quotes other cases of
equally mysterious .accidents where,
however, there were survivors to tell 11n los
alt "tale: vessel France and Italy State 1 Canadian
•
One evening, while the Ito nl tariffs on foreign wheat) ager and
f the Tndin see the cls
wee in the diddle o unaccountably i reheat -growers
her holds began The crew
' admit that European Goverutnentseare
ocean,
to fill tats, water. The trete came
doing all in their Powerealize that In
s
p� the boats,. and most i themna not local Productiou,.�lThCnadi= farmer•
strife.
The Wheat Pool's Policy . .
Soleil (Lill.); (Germane`,,
Quebeced 11i,h
Old saws re••
paired and
sharpened to
give
good
work,
Cort
P
lr
stock on liana of new
grid band saws 1
Trate 00CIVOLT as'a1 sate,„
S1 M0Nos CANADA sAmire l..'ni
7•2PSVANcauw_x • sv.3 N,
NSUat irritating: h
A hale teaspoon of Minard's
taken internally with molasses
will stop a cough, and prevent
complications.
_.-. a badloser,irl,
"Never play cards with a s d loser,"
le the advice bI a famous p
n.
But that !s better than Playing with a
good winner.
a
�t l
!e
safely through the eaiplain what' et -Jelling Co give
cau of them could everthe greatest possible protection,the thpee-
used the sudden and tragic l7, t have united against him his for -
next
in doll, io fouttler, the
More. ,recently, duCtive forces its 1Hurohse w It is
next mor, left Calcuttacal sea o
just after merly bought wheat
from t tee,
ma1 is
m s j the
1 •e
ca u
na tt I
• ill
o quite n
nest morning g JOIt
taentting aro Bay of astral. The.cap. remains largely open to users than he.
Goingo 'dcby a 'strange Poen.: Bull is not gong to pay
Going on deck, ail onnd should for his wheat and he buys at
C o grani' the starboard wheat from all
lid over thepossible was done,. the, bestpossibie price, wheat
rom the om all tills. > verythiug buts in. There parts of the world,
o save the vessel, but to get
the tine, the United States, Au tralla and
eta
t not
was s not even time withgtweutY- Canada, Britain, we must
n till Steamer sank with d. has forty million mouths to feet and
boats., t � large :one int
one men still on Court, atte all t:ne bread item is a g on in the'
e Maden vi1 .alter hearing
national budget. Site mustwithout t ,e
"the cause -available,. foundering
dammed1 the; cheapest possible market,ito the
iu fproduction
et g t o
and os
of e c
f th
e to
the rd
Of, 0.
asegird 1 .
"thewayu
tl s PP Y
:iter
itsSeeks into the
Was r water finding1 market where she
see
into rho heerwa waofter
the vessel. is leu I nt•ie
for Chapped Hands
caused the Nater to Minerd's Liniment known." ~,
-"iVo send' CHARACTER
As hips o seaLock,e tui adds; ed with. all that
sea. equipped Character is a garment which the
hl g to Chai ever
outs P of •e
et.
at
f u1
safety s
I o
e the
to f
for n
o engem • vtd d g
to • ole
' eau P invisible e i
tient n
s
Crecy and., passengers. Yet the.
and the ineaiei}- weavfug.-George h tint.
ca le sle t Once t, Charm and the ---- 5l —���
is at once, the Clia �, 1 1.../E 0n
Miele
flange' of the sen,' ,
•
t
eS
IlaaNDISx,S
�t�
St{ ':.tit Y•�. 5.1
rexpl
en arosra,is,•.. �'
51,25 Alt ere8eisn oeseri5ure foddet oil 1E00r
A. O. LEONARD, Inc,
'IR oak Ave.. New tient elb.
I
NOTICE-
Attention
in been directed to the scarcity ofd ork
ask-
ed
ste
At City t having ers of labor a
in this City at help1p present time, employers
b5* engaging only
bo to fitryde
andt to relieve any available wort,,
residents o£ Toronto on a .
bona fide NON- '1':ESI DENTS
Notice hereby given that to
assistance or relief will ll
be given to mon-residents of the City on account of their
n lotela, 11 1,
cin out ote! employment,
SAMUEL McBBI
being �- Mayor's Office, Mayor.
Toronto, ' December 12th,
1929,
" TO EMPLOYERS OF LABOR
APPLICAlliONS
Are Filled As Far
As Feasible In the
Order In Which
They Are
Received.
ONTARIO
DEPARTMENT
OF AGRICULTURE
APPLIC
offering
g
Work W
0 1"I'.
WV rto
515111
td? .
lle
left
1'.phe
last
\'It
Miss
;pen
eit
Fang
1 t:
The Colottizatlou and Immigration. Branch
Department oe Agriculture :for Ontario will have
number of Experienced, "Married dilen With The
and Families--Mars'led Couples Without Chl
AlsoSingle Men.'
repliers reeideing peep, will be we
tto
t�
stt a
0.
t
t
oma
fco oarl t
v t
u
® t
a ais
n
iOtt
Clea.
ill
ilEraotoroH Colonization
paToro O
tgt
To
ronto, Ont.
File Your -'
Apslloation
at Ono.
PI
to
rtattitur s
A
iter 0
4iPhi� 3PHN lir. AtAAit'l'tMr Minl
ti