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The Huron Expositor, 1920-08-06, Page 2'Red Star' Washing Machines Are made of clear cypress wood, cor- rugated inside, equipped with bevelled gears, ball bearing, solid cast bed as- suring smooth action. The work is made easy. The Machine is thor- oughly guaranteed to give satisfac- tion or your money back. Price Electric Machine with Wringer $.120.00 Power Machine for gas engine..$64.00 $20.00 Wringers Wringers are necessary. They cut" out half the heavy work but they must be good. ' The Crest Wringer has enclosed gears, individual springs and easy clamp $7.50 Bicycle Wringer with ball bearings ' $8.50 and 11 inch roll Enamelled Wash Board .75c Wash Boilers Hand made, both in extra hear copper and tin, with copper bottom. Tin Boiler $6.00 Copper, Boiler $8.50 O'Cedas Mops with handle . $1.75 Dushill Mop% with removable cloth, complete with handle $1.50 i SPECIAL OFFER, 4 DOZ. SPRING CLOTHES PINS FOR 25c A. Sills, Seafort THE MCKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y. HEAD OFFICEr-•SEAFORTH, ONT. OFFICERS J. Connolly, Goderich, . President Jas. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -President T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treas. AGENTS Alex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed. Hinchley, Seaforth; John Murray, Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth; J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G. Jar- muth, Brodhagen. DIRECTORS William Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John Bennewies, Brodhagen; James Evans, Beechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas. Connolly, Goderich; D. F. McGregor, R. R. No. 3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, No. 4, Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock; George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth. G. T. R. TIME TABLE Trains Leave Seaforth as follows: 11 a. rat - For Clinton, Goderich, Wingliam and Kincardine. 5.53 p. rn. - For Clinton, . Wingbam, and. Kincardine. 11.03 p. rn. - For Clinton, Goderich, 6.51 a. nit -For Stratford, Guelph, Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and points west, Belleville and Peter - boyo and points east. 8.12 p., m.: For Stratford, Toronto, -Montreal and points east. LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE Going North a.m. p.m. London 9.05 Centralia 10.04 Exeter 10.18 Hensall 10.33 Kippen 10.38 Brucefield 10.47 Clinton 11.03 6.45 Londesboro 11.34 7.03" Blyth 11.43 7.10 Belgrave 11.56 7.23 Wingham 12.11 '7.40 Going South a.m. p.m. Win'gham 7.30 3.20 Belgrave 7.44 8.36 Blyth 7.56 3.48 Londesboro 8.04 3.56 Clinton 8.23 4.15 Brucefield 8.40 4.32 Kippen 8.46 4.40 Hensall 8.58 4.50 Exeter 9.13 5.05 Centralia 9.27 5.15 London 10.40 6.15 4.45 5.50G If you dont see e the "Bayer Cross" Y 6.02 on the tablets, you are not getting 6.14 Aspirin -only an acid imitation. 6.21 The "Bayer Cross" is your only way of knowing getting 6.29 � n that you are genuine Aspirin, prescribed by physicians for over nineteen years and proved safe by - millions for Headache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis, and for it'ain generally. Made in Canada. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets -also Iarger sized "Bayer" packages_ can be had at drugstores. Aspirin is the trade mark .(registered in Canada). of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaeeticacidester of Salicylicacid. While it is well known that Aspirin means Bayer, manufacture, to assist the public against imitations, the Tablets of Bayer Company, Ltd., will be stamped with their general trade mark, the "Bayer Cross." C. P. R. TIME TABLE GUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH TO TORONTO Goderich, leave Blyth Walton Guelph aim. p.n. 6.20 1.30 6.58 2.07 7.12 2.20 9.48/ 4.53 FROM TORONTO Toronto, leave Guelph, arrive Walton Blyth. Auburn Goderich 8.10 5.10 9.30 6.30 12.03 9:04 12.16 9.18 12.28 9.30 12.55 9.55 Connections at Guelph Junction with Main Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon- don, Detroit, and - Chicago, and all in- termediate points. OTHER TABLETS NOT ASPIRIN AT ALL Only Tablets v;,, Hi Bayer Cross" are Genuine Aspirin WE ARE EXCLUSIVE AGENTS -Fo R WE INVITE t1OUSCHOLDERS GENERALLY TO CALL AND SEE SAMPLES OF THESE `"FINISHES. EVERY PRODUCT GUARANTEED FOR QUALITY AND 'SERVICE. H. EDGE, SEAFORTH, ONT. SNOWFALL NO HELP TO WHEAT 4 , CROP It has long been believed that a snow cover is a beneficial factor in the growth of winter wheat; but some doubt has recently been cast upon this view, writes C. LeRoy Meisinger in Science. Clarence 3. Root and J. Warren Smith have been, studying this subject im Ohio and Illinois, and Mr. Meisinger quotes some of their conclusions. It appears that for Ohio, as a whole, "a -warm March and June and a cool, dry May are favorable for a high yield. There are certain critical stages in the development of the plant, in which the conditions during certain ten-day periods may exert an important in- fluence, especially in Northern Ohio. It is found that the weather should be cool during the jointing stage, dry during the development of the boot, warm while the head is filling, and warm during the last ten days of stooling. As to the quantity of snow- fall, it appears that a heavy fall of snow in March is detrimental. Fore- casts of yield earlier than . May or June believes T. A. Blair, can be of little value, because of the great in- fluence of temperature during those months." _ In Illinois Mr. Root "found that there is reason to believe that wheat has a better prospect when the ground is not covered in January. The best years have been those with less than normal snowfall and with the temper- ature above normal for the winter. The years of poorest yield were those in which the winters had heavy snow and the temperatures were below normal." QUITE HARMLESS UNLESS ATTACKED As the "open season" for sharks approaches South American liners ar- riving in New York report the sight- ing of these 'sea monsters, a fact which lends interest to the following communication' to the National Geographical Society by Dr. -Haugh M. Smith, a world famous authority cn .tish: "When giant fishes are mentioned' most people will at once think of the shark, among which indeed are found the largest fish now existing," writes Dr. Smith. "Of the many species of sharks noteworthy on ac- count of their size, there. are about half a dozen which are pre-eminent. These differ. much in their disposi- tion, some being as harmless as clovers and others the incarnation of ferocity. "The sleeper shark (Somniosus microcephalus), whose scientific name fibs it so admirably, appears to have developed its body , at the ex- pense of its brain, for it is .a sluggish, stupid_ glutton, about six tunes as long as an average man. At home in the Arctic regions, it sometimes makes visits as, far south as Cape Cod, the British Isles and Oregon. It is most often observed lying quiet- ly on the surface apparently dozing and easily approached, but at times when hungry, it rouses itself and fiercely attacks whales, biting huge pieces out of their sides and tails, and when ,feeding on the carcass of a whale which has been killed by •hunters, it is so voracious that it per- mits spears and knives to be thrust into it without seeming to take any notice of them. - "One of the most prodigious and perhaps the most formidable of sharks is the `man-eater' (Carcharo- don 'carcharias): It -roams through all temperate and tropical seas and everywhere is an object of dread. Its maximum length is forty feet and its teeth are three inches long. While there are few authentic in- stances of sharks attacking human beings (prior to the recent tragedies) there undoubtedly have been many cases where sharks simply swallowed persons who had fallen overboard just as they would swallow any other food. "How easy it would be for a man- eater to devour a person whole may be judged from the finding of an en- tire 100 -pound sea lion in the stom- ach of a thirty-foot shark on the Cali- fornia coast. A certain man-eater 361/2 feet long had jaws twenty inches wide, inside -measure, and teeth 21/z inches long. This may have been the `great fish' of the Scripture narrative and it is possible that at that time much larger manLeaters existed than are now known, as shark teeth with cutting edges of five inches long have been found on the sea -bottom, and these are believed by naturalists to have belonged to sharks not 'long dead. "The phosphate beds of South Carolina yield very large fossil teeth of a shark which was related to t%ie man-eater of the present day, judg- ing from the comparative size of these teeth.., Professor Goode thought that sharks 70 or 80 feet long must have been common. "Many years ago a Norwegian bishop in a learned paper brought to the attention of the scientific and theological worlds a shark which he attempted to prove must have been the `great fish' that swal- lowed Jonah. This was the basking shark `eetorhinus maximus) known also as the elephant or bone shark. which is an inhabitant of the Polar Seas, but occasionally strays as far south as Virginia and California, and in former years was not rare on the United States and British coasts. The species has the habit at times of collecting in schools at the surface and basking`sin the sun with its back partly out of the water; It reaches a maximum length of fifty feet and is exceeded in size by only three or four animals extant. "Provided with small teeth, it feeds on fishes and floating crusta- ceans, and is not of a ferocious dis- position. It is dangerous only by vir- tue of its great bulk and when at- tacked. its powerful tail easily demolishes boats. In former years the basking shark was hunted for its oil on the coast of Norway and Ice- land; it was also harpooned_ on the shore of Massachusetts in the ,early part of the last century, and as many as twelve barrels of oil were some- times obtained from the liver of one shark. "There are many records of bask- ing sharks twenty-five to thirty- eight feet long from the coast of New York, Massachusetts and Maine. THE HURON EXPOSITOR RHEUMATISM FOR OVER 16 YEARS No Return Of The Trouble Since Taking "Fruit -a -tires" 103 CHURCH ST., MONTRWI. "1 was a great sufferer from Rhein nnatism for over 16 years. 1 e onsulted specialists; took medicine;_ used lotions; but nothing did me good. Then I began to use "Fruit-a-tives", and in 15 days the pain was easier and the Rheumatism much better. Gradually, "Fruit -a -Lives" overcame my Rk+c nsatis ; and now, for five yeast, 1 have had no return of the trouble. I cordially recommend this fruit medicine to all sufferers." P. H. Me HUGH. 50c a box, 6 for $2.50, trial Mae 25o. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit -a -tiles Limited, Ottawa. but the species has not been common in our waters` in recent years. "The largest of all fishes, the lar- gest of all cold-blooded animals and the largest of all existing animals, with the exception, of a few species of whales, is the whale shark (Rhin- eodon typicus) originally described from Good Hope, but now known from Indian, Japan, south America, Panama, California, and various other places, a small specimen having been obtained on the Florid'a coast a few years ago. "This shark has a very broad and obtuse snout and an exceedingly wide mouth, armed with numerous min- ute teeth; the dark colored! body is marked with many small whitish spots. The species is stated to attain a length of seventy feet and is kngwn to exceed fifty feet. Notwithstanding its immense size, however, it is harm- less to man unless attacked, and feeds on the small creatures for which its teeth are adapted!. It's huge bulk makes it dangerous in the same way that a whale is dangerous. "Years ago it was reported that the sperm whale fishermen at the Island of St. Denis, In the Indian Ocean, dreaded to harpoon a whale shark by mistake, and stories are told of a harpooned fish, `having by a light- ning -like dive exhausted the supply of rope which had been accidentally fastened to the boat, dived deeper still, and so pulled a pirogue and crew to the bottom.' " HOW TO DETECT DREAD LUMP JAW I spent several years as a veter- inary inspector for the Department of Agriculture, Most of the time at post-mortem work in' some ' of the large packing houses. Daily I had experience with so-called lump jaw. The head is the first part to receive inspection in the regular routine of post-mortem, and here we find tu- berculosis of the submaxillary and postpharyngeal lymph glands. I believe that any inspector will agree witb me that more than nine -tenths of'` hese lumps are tubercular. Look at the post-mortem reports of these inspectors and see if they, do lot re- port these lumps as tuberculosis of the submaxillary or retropharyngeal lymph glands. I do not believe it is possible for these inspectors to dif- ferentiate between tuberculosis and actinomycosis of the lymph glands on gross post-mortem, but every in- spector knows that if he finds these throat glands abscessed he must be on the alert for other ailments in the organs and body. I can classify my reasns for tak- ing this stand about as follows: (1) More than nine -tenths of these lump jaws will react -to the tuberculin test. (2) More than nine -tenths of these abscessed 'glands reported! by the veterinary inspectors are report- ed as tuberculosis, and I believe they are right in doing so. r (3) The packer will not buy the lump jaw. He wants them tagged, so that if condemned the loss is thrown back on the shipper. Now look over the condemnations LIFE WAS A' MISERY TO HER Says this Woman Until Re- lieved by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Owen Sound Ont. -"I suffered for ten ears with female organic trouble, neuralgia and ;indi- gestion, and was weak and had such bad pains' I could hardly walk or stand up at times. When I would sweep I would have to go and lie down. I could not sleep at night, and would wander around the house half the time. I tried everything butnoth ing did me any good, and the last doc- tor I had told me he never expected me to be on my feet again or able to do a day's work. One day one of your little books was left at my door and my husband said I should try a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound. I thank God I did, for it cured me, and I am now well and strong. 1 think there is no remedy like the Vege- table Compound for anyone who has my troubles, and have recommended it to my neighbors. You can publish rey letter for the benefit of those I can't reach. -Mrs. HENRY A. MITCHELL, 1767 7th Ave., East, Owen Sound, Ont. If you have any symptom about which you would like to know write to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for helpful advice given free of charge. ofr any inspector and see how many carcases are condemned for actino- mycosis. I do not believe it will be one in 1,000. The packer would not go to that trouble to save himself on one carcass out of 1,000 con- demned, but he knows that by ex- perience that a lump jaw is quite apt to be condemned by the inspector for generalized tuberculosis after a thorough post-mortem. The packer loses many cows in a year condemn- ed for septic metritis, but he does n'ot insist on a cldse eqamination of the tail and vulva, yet his loss from septic metritis is far greater than from actinomycosis. I have been in practice the last few years and some of my clients are men well informed and who read a great deal. I was surprised at first to know how lightly they re- garded the lump jaw. Most of them regard it as something that can be cured. I am beginning to under- stand- now there has been no effort to eradicate lump jaw, and no infor- mation sent out by the Department of Agriculture warning the farmer of the danger of keeping the lump jaw in the herd. To me it seems just as reasonable to advise a client how to load a herd so that it will not re- act to the tuberculin test as it is to operate on a cow, - remove a tuber- cular lymph gland and make her look alright- so that the owner can sell her to his neighbor or the stock shipper. AIRCRAFT AS AID IN MODERN CRIME A statement of General Sir Nevil Macready of the London Metropolitan Police ' admitting the possibility of crime by aircraft,, illustrates the fact that the police are aware of the danger of crime from the air. How- ever, the possibilities of crime -detect- ing by aircraft are as great as the chances of criminals using aeroplanes to carry out their crimes. The founding of an air police force for Great Britain would nbt only be valuable from the criminologist's point of view, points out P. B. in the Daily Express, but it would also help to solve the employment problem of the hundreds of Air Force officers _who are now out of congenial work. The criminals' chances are many. With the exchange at the present rate diamonds and other valuable jewels, as well as rare -old masterpieces, can be bought comparatively cheaply in Austria and Germany.. To put a false bottom in the petrol tank of an aero- plane and to disguise the insignia on the planes would be but a small • mat- ter. The false bottom could be filled with precious trinkets, or any cheap- ly bought valuables, and -the machine could fly to England and land, after- wards disposing of the "swag." In case of detection, if the landing was made at night, the smugglers could plead ignorance of the aerial laws compelling a foreign machine to register. They might be fined, but it is unlikely that the police would Look in the bottom of the petrol tank. But then false struts that is, struts with neatly' covered cavities in which to hide the contraband --could be easily added to the machine, and var- nished over. However, the hiding places might just as well be in the ailerons or, the longerons. America has no alternative but to establish an air police force to guard her Mexican border. The use of aeroplanes by the police and criminals, however, is not a new thing. a As early as 1912 Maurice Devos, a Dutch airman, made his escape from a•Dutch jail with the aid of his brothers by aeroplane. The machine landed in Belgium, and the fugitive from justice diisappeared. One yearrprevious to this a pick- pocket ickpocket made his escape from pursuers at Sayre, Oklahoma, by holding up Mr. George Harvey, a balloonist, at the point of a revolver and compelling him to carry him, away to safety. On the other hand, many arrests have been made by air: Herr Max Optiz, the celebrated German detec- tive, apprehended a scoundrel who was running away with a rich bank- er's daughter. An enterprising sheriff, with the aid of the pilot of a seaplane, arrested a negro fugitive in a fast launch. Railway trains or motor cars trans- porting gold or large amounts of money could easily be held up . from the air after the leader of the gang had got a "tip" of the shipment. A small bomb dropped by the thieves in front of a train or line of motor ears would cause them to halt. The hold-up would probably be car- ried out by two planes, and while one landed the other would hover above with threatening bombs im'case the;, guards attern ted to protect the bul- lion. It stands to reason that the thought f beingblown o to pieces by an aerial bomb would put much more fear into the guards than' several guns would. Then from the humani- tarian standpoint they would have to give in to keep women and children passengers from harm. It might take several daring deeds to cause the authorities to establish an aerial police force but it is inevit- able that such a force will be form- ed. NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE For making up payrolls a machine drops into envelopes coins, for which keys are pressed. Electricity was first used in amine in 1879, when a Scotch colliery was lighted with it. An individual dressing tent for seashore bathers can be packed and carried in a suit case. Japan produced 310,894,000 bushels of rice last year, the greatest amount in recent years. at, A patent has been granted for a stand on which a wrist watch can be hung to serve as a clock. About one -eleventh of the area of Africa, some 1,000,000 spuare miles, still awaits exploration, Pressed cardboard covers to protect the tops of school desks are the in- vention of a California janitor. A broiler invented in England con- sists of a tent shaped wire in which meat is hung over stove openings. An automatic filler to keep autom- obile storage batteries supplied with distilled water has been invented, To make it easy to repair, a New York man has invented an umbrella AUGUST 6, 1920. Incorporated in 1855 CAPITAL AND RESERVE $9,000,000 Over 120 Branches TheMoisons Bank r AIT The saving habit like all other good habits is the result of resolution and practice. By depositing regularly a portion of your earnings in THE MOLSONS BANK, the saving habit is soon acquired. Your money grows by the addition of the interest which we pay at current rates on -savings bank deposits. It is safe, and can be drawn upon when really needed. Avoid careless spending by opening a savin'ga account with us. BRANCHES IN THIS DISTRICT Brucefield St. Marys Kirkton Exeter Clinton Hensall Zurich in which each rib and stretcher is seperately mounted on the tip plate and slide. Crystals of sodium nitrate made by a Paris scientist are so pure they can be used in optical instruments. An electric candle for bedroom use lights when it is lifted and the cur- rent is shut off when it is set down. A gasoline engine driven dynamo that is entirely automatic in, its ac- tion is attracting attention in Eng- land. An electrical novelty is a toaster and food warmer that will toast both sides of twenty pieces of bread at once. - A process for obtaining nickel and cobalt from pit waters containing those metals has been developed in Germany. A Kansas City inventor's track sanding device for locomotives used compressed air to insure an even flow of; sand. An English inventor has obtained an American patent for detachable shoe soles and heels, easily replaced when worn. One of the smaller airplanes has wings that can be folded down to form a tent in which its users may sleep on the ground. A Brazilian. railroad has met with success in experimenting with pulver- ized coal, blown into the locomotive fireboxes as fuel. Owners of an Alabama mine have found that their mules do better work and are less troubled by flies if given daily shower bath. Coal deposits are known to exist in at least five of the provinces `on the western border of Argentina, an al- most inaccessible region. A Nebraska inventor's automobile thief alarm utilizes the drive shaft of a car to sound its horn or bell i. the car is improperly moved. A French telegraph company will lay additional submarine tables be- tween Montevideo and Rio de Janeiro and Montevideo and Buenos Aires. To free gasoline that has been used for cleaning from accumulated dirt a pail with a strainer a few inches from the bottom has been patented. An Hawaiian irrigation project when completed will penetrate five mountain ranges and deliver 50,000,- 000 gallons of water daily to planta- tions. Harnessing a nearby . river for power, American interests will, build an electric railroad to reach inacces- sible gold fields in the interior of Venezuela. A machine has been invented for winding motion pictures films so they can be shipped by mail or express without the reels upon which they usually are wound. Of Australian invention for race- tracks is a machine that automati- cally prints betting tickets, registers all bets and indicates the odds against any horse. A New jersey man is the patentee of an undetachable umbrella ring for holding the ends of the ribs of a closed umbrella and be engraved with the owner's name. An agricultural spraying machine of English invention, which has pumps geared to the wheels so that it oper- ates as it is moved, is claimed to do the work of ten men. There is no reduction in the heat- ing qualities of natural gas after the extraction of its gasoline, according to tests conducted by the United States bureau of mines, Developed in Switzerland, a new steel detempering process consists chiefly of laying the metal missed hot iron plates, covering it with cold plates and leaving it until all have cooled. ' newform A of Tres r o arrester for telephone lines has eight blocks of car- bon mounted on a revolving disk that one can be installed quickly place of one that has been burned out. To keep dust out of the cylinders of motor vehicles engines an Englishman has patented an attachment which forces air through a water seal and cleanses before it reaches the car- bureter. In a new combined telephone re- ceiver and transmitter the latter con- sists of a horn projecting at such an angle from the ear box as to rest at one side of instead of in front of a user's lips. - The director of the Chinese geologi- cal survey estimates that the country has coal deposits sufficient to supply the world at its present rate of con- sumption of a billion tons a year for 1,000 years. Operated by pressing a trigger, a nail feeder has been invented that can be attached to any hammer to enable a man to drive nails as fast as he can swing his arm and as far away as he can reach. CASTOR I ADo Ed Yu Halo Always Bought Bum theShinatore of Constipation Generates Poisons When Constipation come. *wit happens: The Colons get awe. : with waste na erial, which is ex- tremely poisons s, the blood circula- tion eom4s in sufficiently chose ona- tnct with; the waste to take up these- Pokons lily absorption and to didirilk- ute Ahem throughout the body. result is --the Liver becomes Mott gish, - gish, you (become dull and heavy.,. Biliousness asserts itself, then yaw have Headache, Kidney and :Bladder~ Trouble, Indigestion, AppendIcil , and more evils besides. Hacking's - Kidney and Liver Pius are highly recommended for ` Constipation and its Evil Results They are purely vegetable, chs hast. Gripe, Purge or Irritate, a War rale by producing a healthy condi- tion of the Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and Dowels: No matter what medicine you are, taking for a laxative it might be inst as well to cbaage off to Hacking's.- The coxnibinta'tion of COMM, Pep- pernrint, Mayapple and the other- Vegetable ther-Vegeta le Drugs contained in th.ese- pilits will produce reeults to be un- equalled by any others. They work. - beautiful in Digestive Disorders, for Gas on the Stomach, for Spasmodic: Pains in the Stomach and Bowels, *rind for Dyspepsia and indigestion- - Buy a few boxes from your dealer to -day, but. be absolutely sure you . get Hacking's. Hacking's Remedies are sold za, Seaforth by E. UMBACH, Phi, B. Rheumatism Now is the time to get rid of it t Nature is pulling for you- The warm weather's here - This is your chance - grasp it -take Templeton's Rheumatic Capsules Get it out of your " system the easiest way! Sold by reliable druggists for It dollar. Ask our agent or writs us for a free sample. Temple- ton's,142 King St. W:, Toronto, Sold by E. Umbach, Seaforth. Lift off Coms! Doesn't hurt a bit and Freezcx* costs onlya few cents. With your fingers! You can lift err any hard corn, soft corn, or corn betwass the toes, and the !card skin calluses frost bottom of feet. A tiny bottle of "Freezone" costs muoi, at any drug store; apply a few drops upon the corn or callus. Instantly i'• stops hurting, then shortly you lift that bothersome corn or callus right off, roapt, and all, without one bit of pain or acre - nets. Truly! No humbug! CASTOR IA he Infanta and ClAildrea. lb Mod roe Han Always bib' Bears the avatoreot SU)1,:t. At th the hot Baby's he may will pr€ given oc will pro they coi Tablets ery horn ren. T good au - tee of a n-teeofa are abs sold by at 25 ce Hams' 11 The of who bad ing the experien of traini in his ea "After route ma Weenie them, nit stone up not put for sone bad rel! All 1 ha was a p ;taboo" any pred Major saying to have shoes; aj Pll get well, th get the put on cook w "1 to 'but that leather that a about tl that 1n ,cobblers` leather "1 w left the gent do cooks w Cow ani - iinn'er. I said: of that. t'Seei7 readj carried said: the sol cobbler "Phe! 'street, walk vi ing at ethers At last pointed the ma gave a. ors! al along As v fellow shoes gooc BEE 4 The sugar opportt operati fined tc to prow home Hone tute fo years as ,a f< Iiiscove, that ti the col tions, l scale, thousaj a min sprun which cower that for t No r �h po'a' there in th ;more •woul for t Inst They'. stud take it is pers • assu £l t tura? d€' is t labo Opp ever ever shot ssma as as+