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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1922-09-22, Page 611101MIWIIOIIIIDNl10111011111 ESIMIIIE1311131111SIIIIIgIIIIiIImIfMNSIINlS1101111111NI0IIn01NIlMfllltllllMINIIIIIIIIuuIININmIm1110E1® s m'edy for this is so simple! of suffering -night after aikat of disturbance -have been fitttoided by Mothers, who have *lusted ou--BBabr's Own Soap. Of course it costs a little more, a very little wore, however - than what is often bought and Used -but four generations of Canadian Mothers are there to vouch for its purity, for the soothing healing effect on Baby's delicate skin, fur the lovely pure flower fragrance it leaves when Baby fresh and clean is taken from his bath'. Don't you think, Madam, it's worth paying 1 �. a cake little less at u !c the & you buy a box (3 cakes) winch your dealer asks for Baby's OWrt Soap. Adv. ES CRY o find the trouble eeth - it may be t oh 1 so often it is d irritated akin on Soap has beeu used. Mani - - Girls! DON'T BE "LONESOME" We put you in correspondence with FRENCH GIRLS, HAWA- IAN, GERMAN, AMERICAN, CANADIAN, etc., of both' sex- es, etc., who are refined, ch.irm- ing and wiab t.' c,rresp.,nd for amusement or fl - -iage, if suit- ed. JOIN OUR CORRESPOND- ENCE CLUB, $1 per year- 4 months' trial, 50c, including full privileges. PHOTOS FREE. Join at once or write for fall information MBS. FLORENCE BELLAIRE,. 200 Montagne St., Brooklyn, N.Y. CREAM WANTED CREAM Ship by Express; send by our cream drawers, or deliver your cream to the Seaforth Creamery. We are determined to give our Patrons better service than ever. Watch our prices, consistent witk our accurate weights and testa, and consider the many advantages of hav- ing a thriving dairy industry in your district Do not ship your Cream away to other Creameries ; we will guarantee yon as good prices here and our very beet services. Write, or call in our cream drawers and we will send you cream cans. When in town, visit our Creamery, winch we want also to be your Creamery. We are proud of our plant. THE BEAFORTH CREAMERY CO. C. A. Barber, Manager. 2884-tt FARMS FOR SALE FARMS FOR SALE. -FARMS FOR SALE in the Townships of Tucker.mith, Us - borne and Hibbert, at pre-war prices. For further particulars apply to THOMAS CAMERON, Box 154, Exeter, Ont. 2856-8 Fi ARM FOR SALIE.-LOT 21, CONtIES- ,ion 1. Tuckersmith. H.R.S., 100 gores well cleared. Good frame house and bank barn, pig pen, hen house and driving shed. A rood orchard and plenty of good water. Tile drained, rural mail and telephone and is in first clave condition. On the Huron Road 23%,, miles from Seaferth and a miles from Clinton. Will be sold cheap and on easy terms. ADpty to J. B. HENDERSON, Seaforth. 2856-tf FARM FOR SALE. -NORTH HALF OF Lot 5, Concussion 2, Hallett. containing 50 sores. There are on the premises a good frame house and bank barn 84x02 with a 18 foot lean to. All fenced and tile drained and seeded to grass. Five miles from Sea - forth; 40 rods from school. For farther par- ticulars apply on Lot 6, or phone 15-147• Sea - forth. THOMAS E. LIVINGSTONE. R. IL No. 2, Seaforth. 2855-11 FARM FOR SALE. - ONE HUNDRED' acre+, Lot 5. Conccvaion 6, MCKinop. First -elms land. fine buildings• two never falling well,, with windmill. The farm is well fenced and tile drained. Convenient to good markets, echoole and church. • Rural mail and telephone. Terme reasonable. For further particulars apply on the premises or address WILLIAM .1. O'ROURKE, R. R. No. 1, Dublin. Got. 2654x2 FARM FOR SALE. -200 ACRES. BEING Lots 8 and 4, Coneesaion 4, Hallett Township, in good state of calt/vation. Large stone house and two bank barns with stabling underneath ; windmill and water piped through the stable. Will sell with or with- out crop ,and would separate either farms. For particulars apply to EDWARD PRYCS. R. R. No. 2, Seaforth. 2841-tf FARM FOR SALE. -FARM OF TWO HUN- dred acres adloining the Town of Sea - forth. conveniently situated to all eharebea, schools and Cnllegiate. There is a comfort- able brick cottage with a cement kitchen; - barn 100x56 with stone stabling underneath for 8 horses. 76 head of cattle and 40 hem with steel stanchions and water before all stock; litter carrier and feed carrier sad two cement altos: driving shed and plat- form scale. Watered by a rock well and windmill. The farm to well drained and In a high state of cultivation. The crop is all in the ground -choice clay loam. Immedi- ate possession. Apply to M. BEATON. 5. R 2. Seaforth. Ont. 2787-tf grim EXECUTORS OF THE LATE ARCHr- bald McGregor offer for sale Lot 16, 8th Conceaeion, McKillop. 100 acres of first eiaaa farm lands. The land le in a Brat elms stats of oultit tion and there are erected nn the premises a good frame dwel- ling henso, with kitchenattached: frame barn 76x54 with atone foundation, stabling underneath and cement fleets and water throughout, driving house. TAR pen and hen house. Also about ten ts c a of good hard Wood bush. The property 1s well fenced and wall drained anda nv nient to good markets, churches and schools. For further particular. apply to MISS LILLY J. MCGREGOR, on the premises, or to R. B. HAYS. Solisaor, Sem fortth, Ont. --86 FARM FOR SALE.. -FOR SALE LOT 20, Concession 8, McKillop, eontalning let acres, all cleared except 8 acres of hardwood bush. There are on the premixes a bank barn with stone and cement foundation. 46c82. with cement floor.; driving shod, 14x86; frame stable. 28.82, large gravel house. 7 roomy and kitchen, cemsnt floor. In cellar. Hard and aoft water in kitchen; two acres of orchard. The farm la all wire fenced Ind ale drained. Well at barn and des well at the bush. This is a good farm -one of the best in McKillop. It a situated 8 miles from the Town of Seaforth and one mile fame school and shard,. Rural mall and phone. Will be sold on reeeonabie terms. For fe ther particulars apply on the prem• tees or address R. R. No. 1, Seaforth. RO8ffiT A. 8000. 2801-2 .a, TWO. BIBLE • GOES ! man win Be Taken to and Front Which It Caine. Eig'hteeu months ago an Egyptian young man, Mr. Yuset Iskander Grace, a member of the Orthodox i;:,ptio Church. went to Rev. Stephen a.ar it. 'Trowbridge's ol9ee In Cairo, welting to learn how he •might work :,,c ('hriet within his Church. Mr. I' ,wbridge, who is the Sunday ase sot secretary, for Egypt, repro- ,,.ui: the World's Sunday School ,,.1atiun, gwvu him un Arabic copy t Lr Martell Lawrence's "How to Conduct a Sunday School," and a V. oak later the young man resolved to devote his life to Introducing Bible study among the children of t.ie ('optic Church. For centuries the priests have discouraged individ- ual study ut the Word of God, re- t-rviug the reading and interprets. - to the clergy. Thus the Word has hero smothered and negledted. But through this new effort of fifty )nous wen, led by Mr. Grace. 2,800 .scholars. cbtelly boys, have been .inhered into clauses and have re- ee•ivod New Trstaweuts or single Gospels, besides weekly lesson helps. rile uutveineut has spread from Cairo to Alexandria, Assuit and provincial elates 11 t.• re•tt::u larkable that this same � t„Iowa•, "How to Conduct u Sunday School.” should have gripped the life �.1 a yo,ing Gregorian layman In the city of .Aietab to Central Turkey. lie ;,nids:, d a uuwlier ut bunks, includ- a this one, Bruin a 'Turk who had acquired them es loot during the de- portations of the Great War. Orig- inally this copy had been seat by Mr. Trowbridge to au Armenian pastor. Reading this volume determined to a large degree Mr. Levan Bushgea- enlan's` Itfe w'urk, and Ile is now studylTl,; In the United States with a view to returning to his own Armenia to engage in Sunday School work. The Pantomime. The connection of the mimes or mummers with olden -time festivities probably acceuuts for the Iact that Boxing Night is the recognized lime for the Opening of the seasuu-s pau- tomiuu's Ties'' p'•rfm'wauces, with their gores.o fly seeuery, now bear lit- tle, if any, resemblance 10 the dumb shows which tm earlier days were known as pantomime, for these latter depended entirely fur their success upon mimicry -the art of lending meaning and suggestion to dancing and gesture. Pantomime proper, 11 may be recalled, succeeded the pup- pet show, of which we still have traces on our streets in "Punch and Judy," and, on the variety stage, in the "Mariouettd'; living beings act- ing in dumb show instead of the wooden puppets. But modern pan- tomime Is merely a spectacular play based upon sum" popular fable, with tendency year by year to push the so-called plot further and further In- to the rear. In many theatres the Pantomime's last link with the past -the Harlequinadts--has totally dis- appeared, fur in these days such a show would be regarded by all but the children as meaningless buffoon- ery. There may not be, of course, much that is rational in the present day pantomimes, but there Is at least a pleasing display of scenery and dresses to compensate for the usual flimsiness of the plot and its general lack of cohesion. -Family Herald. A Queer Menu. You might be surprised for a mo- ment If you were told that mankind laves entirely upon stones, metals, and other minerals. But it Is true. Our food is of two kinda--animal and vegetable, and the drat is really the essence, so to speak, of the se- cond, for all our food animal/ make their flesh by eating grass and other plants. Plants, then, form the food supply of all other living things. But how do plants get their food? They live entirely on minerals obtain- ed from the soil, and on chemicals distilled from the air. Our bodies need these chemicals and minerals, but we cannot use them directly; the only two that we can use in their crude form are water and sale All the others must be worked up into different forms, and this is done by plants, Their roots bore down into the soil, breaking up small stones and extracting from them the minerals that are needed for their -and our - existence. These they transform into substances that animals can eat. Women and "LII -Luck." The ill -luck women are supposed to bring uuder certain circumstances is noted by Mr. Charles T. Gorham. Men who worked in the Cornish mines used to believe that if the first person they met in the morning was a woman it was very unlucky. They believed this so Implicitly that they would afterwards refuse to go Into the mines. It was also considered unlucky for woman to "let the New Year in."' A woman who read the marriage service through in its en- tirety before her marriage was said to be fated to spinsterhood,`but Mr. Gorham suggests that ono could scarcely believe this, inasmuch as all women who could read had probably read the whole service through, and many of them had no doubt afterwards married happily. Use LEONARD EAR OIL IT DOES RELIEVE DEAFNESS and HEAD NOISES. Simply rub it in back of the ears and insert In nostrils. MADE IN CANADA L H. Bedlington & Co. Sales Agoiaia • Tmentp For sale in Seaforth by E. Untbaeh, and all good druggists CURRENT WIT AND WISDOM Success is getting what everyone else wants; happiness is getting what you want yourself. -•Pittsburg Press. A little knowledge is a dangerous !::: • especially when it is a little knowledge of driving an automobile. Manitoba Free Press. Two motor cors have collided un the (omnia•, bonnie banks of Loch 1,o - mond. The accident is ascribed to u misunderstanding as to which' should take the high road and which the low road. -Punch. A man serving a tine -year sentence in Curlph made a laborious escape although he had only one more month to go. it shows what chances people W111 take 10 get away from Guelph.- Kite•he•ner Record. There are more automobile mergers ging on in Canada. Saw one the other day. Both cars were piled in the ditch, while the injured were laid eat neatly along the road. -London Advertiser. In Africa the native girls want .-American elethes. Somebody is go- ing to get sunburned.- Nashville Ten- nessean. September is a beautiful month in which to take a vacation, but some - hew or other we never remember it until too late.-- Detroit Fb'ee Press. "('ituranges, the new hybrid Am- erican fruit, are being grown in Ire- land," says the Daily Mail. A na- tive hybrid, the Paturange, has re- sisted all attempts at cultivation. - Punch. Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested. -Bacon. What's the matter with Lenine? He isn't dying as often as he used to. - Halifax Herald. When they speak of the soft coal situation they're describing the coal, not the situation. ---Washington Post. An Appalling Name. Lord Iteaart, one of the Brit.lsh members of the International Court of Arbitration at The Hague, rejoices in the altogether appalling Christian name of Agmondelsham, which was borne by the father of the first Lord Desert and also by the latter's ma- ternal grandfather, Col. Agmondel- sham Muschamp. of Cromwell's Roundhead cavalry. Company Registrations. The total number of companies registered In the United Kingdom In- creased from 10.721 In 1919 to 11,011 in 1920, and the nominal capital Increased from £412,967,204 to 2598,189,032. In Tibet, it is not unusual for a woman to marry three or four hus- bands. NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE A detachable pumping unit for fire apparatus has been invented that can be run into a river to obtain water, electric power being supplied by a generator on the main machine. By inserting a tungsten filament into a mercury vapor lamp to heat an inert gas that it contains a French scientist has found a way to pbtain the full light in a few seconds. A dash board indicator for automo- biles has been invented that shows a driver the position of the gears so that he can change without danger of damaging them or causing noises. Telegraphic communication has Leen established between Finland and Soviet Russia over two routes, one from Holsingfors to Moscow and the other from Viborg to Petrograd. Mineral springs of almost equal medicinal value to some of the most noted in Europe have been discov- ered in Esthonia. ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN Fifteen United States cities have women mayors. The eye of a woman is said to be better than that of a man. Mrs. Pauline Beldam, of San Fran- cisco, holds a unique position. She makes a business of building person- ality among bank workers. On the last leg of her ocean jour- ney of 1,200 miles, made alone, Hel- en Krawgoff, fourteen years old, re- cently sailed from New York for Ger- many. Jerusalem is to have a daily news- paper, published in English and own- ed and edited by an American Woman, Mrs. J. Gatling of New York city. Rose Ponselle, the noted singer, is the first American horn prima donna of the Metropolitan Opera Company to have received her education in the United States, Miss Clara M. Garret -eon, secretary of the Grocers' and Importers' Ex- change, in Philadelphia• has a man- sized job, which she is handling with the greatest of success. Queen Mary, of England, is not spending more than $1,500 a year for her clothes nowadays, and of this total a1out. two-thirds is required for the necessary state gowns. Templeton's Rheumatic Capsules have become he Standard Remedy for Rheumatism, Sciatica, Neuritis and Lumbago. Thousandsltavcheen restored to health through T. R.C.'s. If you suffer, get a hoe at your Druggist's -to -day. Don't let pain spoil the hest years of your life. Stan or... Sold by E. Umbria. In Walton by W. G. Neal. Mme. Tetraxtini Tells About tier Experiences In A11 Parts of the World 1+}t�C'PrQ FI'om the day when, as a little girl of elxteen, Mme. 'retrazzini took her first audience by storm, to the time. when she was leaking thousands by her golden voice, the grout prima .'e. ea lived a life of rpmunoe. ' 'i he Brat of the many great per - she wet was tate Queen of Italy, who made the prophecy that "little Luisa"- its Tetrazzint was then known -would become a groat singer. A few years later the diva tans taking the gteat clues of the world by storm Up to the present Iter volae has e a ucd a few million .lunars. A laughable e'perleuce befell Tet- r,tzzint on her eint tour et South Auu•rica. The sell 012'.'t razzi al's -- wild Yount, mau- ��st a strong,. 3 g h II It. live Wil i., r, and our day, I a most beim, :sial voice, declared is passion. 11, ..,., r••tused, but so • i:,stent wits 1, :!'. the treat hI,g- lis: tl to tell t I.,Iher. Th.. Latter :.•I it •• 1 was nothing, add I ,sly said i„ runt Itis s.. "es•asiuoally We ut 1, dile un th' .,loo 1011• she was :•.i1'.1 to visit .. '. 1:1, small toWu- . _' When ale rated she discover - ,1 the object W iii e visit. "\1'e have it 5n9e•ry without an .•.elu;ire, and 1.10 re is nothing to ep the anima; • out," she was told. ..1-'e wish you slug for us, and r, taise the nt,,n•y to build a wall." \\Then she ,..,sed A tnerIeti, the ,i^,•r formed a friendship with. , ,esident 'Taft. winch resulted In the .1 of the , 1,1 '.tnr'y 1, 1.1 of every - MME. '1'1:'rJtAZZINI. oat• who has :Milken hands with a ':'eat personage --that the hand con- cerned should never be washed. An American journal, in an arti- cle, mentioned that the superstition was observed by the singer. The article concluded: " 'Why, of course, Tetrazzint washes both her hands," said the hotel clerk. 'What would Tetrazzint do with a marble bath -tub If she washed only one hand?'" At a great public function In Cali- fornia the prima donna was the ga,cst of honor. Tolease her the Governor of the Stat6,who presided, announced that she could hold office for five minutes, when she would be able to give any order she chose. Tetrazzint took the seat and' gave the order. It was: "Everybody drink what he likes!" During her 1920-21 tour of the United States Tetrazzint sang Into a wireless telephone for the benefit of American sailors. Mr. Daniels, Sec- retary eo-retary of State for the Navy, at the conclusion, asked her to name her favorite song. Tetrazzint named the ditty which has won popularity re- c'ntly: "How dry I am nobody knows!" Once while on. a sea voyage to Italy the singer had a rather peculiar experience. A wireless cause from Paris to the effect that Tetrazzint was seriously 111 !n the French capi- tal. had lost her voice, and would not he able to sing again. Tetrazzini's amazement was in- creased when she was naked by one of the passengers whether she was really herself, or wheher she was a spirit. Her answer took the form of a song, which certainly Proved she was no spirit. The most memorable evening in 'retrazzinf's life was November 2nd, 1107, when she made her bow to London. 'Phe occasion was respons- ible for one of the beat stories in "511y Life of Song," by Mato. Tet- razzint. The grant singer was excited, and when she gut to Covent Garden site went to the curtain and surveyed the ;feat ghetto looking auditorium. It seemed empty. "Wier, ar•• the people'' Tetraz- zini asked of one of the directors. "The hnun,• lo full," hr answered. "You can't see the people because of We fug" Tho Tipping Problem. nue of the hotels on the Riviera in trying 10 solve the tipping prob- lem by a profit-sharing system. By this sys1„111 a guest of the hotel is supplied -with vouchers by the hotel ulatagement for part of the 17 per cent. of his bill which is devoted to payment of the hotel's employes. These vouchers are to be distributed by the truest among the hotel's work- ers, a list of whom is supplied to the guest with hid bill. The system, ns one readily sees, 1s only to get away from it by some method which will reward service. Some hotels have tried the plan of adding 10 per cent. to the guest's hill and from that amount distributing tips. But that resulted in the enrolees waiter getting as anneal as the attentive waiter. The new plan overcomes that difficulty. Mies Jennie Matzke, of Depere is the champion bee keeper of 'Wis- consin. a; (Continued from page '7) }- life: How after his wife's death some years before, and his only daughter's marriage -"and a great affair it was, my boy, I was there and know," -Cohen had moved down to his shop and fitted up the back room for a little shelter of his own, where he had lived with his books and his personal belongings and where he had met the queerest look- ing people -with ,big heads and bushy 1eprdB--foreigners, some of them - speaking all kinds of languages, as , welt as many highly educated men in town. Once inside his own cosy rooms Peter bustled about, poking the fire into life, drawing the red curtains closer, moving a vase of roses so he could catch their fragrance from where he sat, wheeling two big, easy, all -embracing arm -chairs to the blaze, rolling a small table laden with var- ious burnables and pourabies within reach of their elbows, and otherwise disporting himself after the manner of the moat cheery and lovable of hosts. This done, he again took up the thread of his discourse. "Yes! He's at wonderful old fellow, this Isaac Cohen,” he rattled on when the two were seated. "You had only a glimpse of that den of his, hut you should set' his hooks un costumes, - he's an authority, you know, -and his miniatures, ---Oh, a Cosway, which he keeps in his safe, that is a wonder! -and his old manuscripts. Those are locked up too. And he's a gentle- man, too, Jack ; not once in all the years I have known hint have 1 ever heard hirn mention the wtsrd money in an objectionable way, and he has plenty of it even if he does press off my coat with his own hands, Can you recall anybody you know, my boy -even in the houses where you and 1 have been lately, who doesn't let the word slip out in a dozen dif- ferent ways before the evening is over? And best of all, he's sane, - one of the few men whorl it is safe to let walk around louse." "And you like him?" - "Immensely." "And you never remember he is a Jew?" This was one of the things Jack had never understood. "Never; -that's not his fault, - rather to his credit." "Why?" "Because the world is against both him and his race, and yet in all the years 1 have known him, nothing has ever soured his temper." ,Jack struck a match, relit his cigar and settling himself more comfort- ably in his chair, said in 0 positive tone: "Sour or sweet, -I don't like Jews, -never did." "You don't like him Lecause you don't know him. That's your fault, not his. But you would like him, let me tell you, if you could hear him talk. And now I think of it, I am determined you shall know him, and right away, Not that he cares -Co - hen's friends are among the best men in London, especially the better grade of theatrical people, whose clothes he has made and whose purs- es he has kept full -yes -and whom he sometimes had to bury to keep them out of Potter's field; and those he knows here -his kind of people, 1 mean, not yours." "All in his line of business, Uncle Peter," Jack laughed. "How much interest did they pay, -cent per cent?" "I am ashamed of you, Jack. Not a penny. Don't let your mind get clogged up, my boy, with such preju- dices, -keep the slate of your judg- ment sponged clean." "But you believe everybody is clean Uncle Peter." "And so must you, until you prove them dirty. Now, will you do me a very great kindness and yourself one as well? Please go downstairs, rap three times at Mr. Cohen's shutters - hard, so that he can hear you -that's my signal -present my compliments and ask him to be kind enough to come up and have a cigar with us." Jack leaned forward in his seat, his face showing his astonishment. "You don't mean it?" "I do." "All right." The boy was out of his chair and clattering downstairs before Peter could add another word to his mes- sage. If he had asked him to crawl out on the roof and drop himself in- to the third -story window of the next house, he would have obeyed him with the same alacrity. Peter wheeled up another chair; added some small and large glasses to the collection on the tray and a- waited Jack's return. The experi- ence was not new. The stupid, illogi- cal prejudice was not confined to in- experienced lads. He had had the same thing to con- tend with dozens of times before. Even Holker had once said: "Peter, what the devil do you find in that lit- tle shrimp of a Hebrew to interest you? Is he cold that you warm him, or hungry that you feed him, -or lonely that-'-" "Stop right. there, Holker! You've said it, -lonely --that's it -lonely! The Qfl y Way To Teat Tem 1 to Taste it. PI Natural Leaf Green iris its proving s revelation to those who have been users of Japans. TRY Int' YOU WILL LIKE IT That's what made me bring him u the first time he was ever here. It seemed such a wicked thing to me to have him at one end ofh t eo h use - the bottom end, too -crooning over a fire, and I at the top end crooning over another, when one blaze could warm us buth. So up he came, Hol- ' ker, nowto 1 who am lonely • when it an a week passes and Isaac aloes not tap at my door, or 1 tap at his," The distinguished architect under- ! stood it all a week later when the I new uptown synagogue was being talked of and he was invited to rneet' the board, and found to his astonish-! ment that the wise little man with - the big gold spectacles, occupying the chair was none other than Peter's ! tailor. "Our mutual friend Mr. Grayson, of the Exeter Bank, spoke to me a- bout you, Mr. Morris," said the little man without a trace of foreign ac- cent 'and with all the composure of a great banker making a government loan; rising at the same time, with - great dignity introducing Morris to his brother trustees and then placing him in the empty seat next his own. ' Afterthat, and on more than one occasion, there were three chairs a- round Peter's blaze, with Morris in one of them. All these thoughts coursed through Peter's head as Jack and Cohen were mounting the three flights of stairs.' "Ah, Isaac;" he cried at first sight , of his friend, "I just wanted you to know my boy, Jack Breen, better, and i as his legs are younger than mine, I sent him down instead of going my- self -you don't mind, do you?" "Mind! -of course I do not mind - hut I do know Mr, Breen. I first methint many months ago --when your sister was here -and then I see him going in and out all the time - and—" "Stop your nonsense, Isaac; -that's not the way to know a man; that's the way not to know him, but what's more to the point is, I want Jack to know you. These young fellows have very peculiar ideas about a good many things, -and this boy is like all the rest -some of which ought to be knocked out of his head, -your race for one thing. He thinks that because you are a Jew that you—" Jack uttered a smothered, "Oh, Peter!" but the old fellow who now had the tailor in one of his big chairs and was filling a thin wineglass with 1 a brown liquid (ten years in the ' wood)-Holker sent it -kept straight on. "Jack's all right inside, or I wouldn't love him, but there are a good many things he has got to learn and you happen to be one of them." (Continued next week.) t �♦_� Y �...tom,Ever 10c f r Packet et or (WILSON'S I WIC4 KILL MORE FLIES THAN 8o1'WORTS OF ANY STICKY'FLY CATCHER Clean to handle. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and General Stores BLANK CARTRIDGE PISTOLS Well made and effective. Ap- pearance is enough to scare BURGLERS, TRAMPS, DOGS, etc. NOT DANGEROUS. Can lay around without risk or ac- cident to woman or child. Mail- ed PREPAID for $1 -superior make $1.60, blank cartridges .22 cal. shipped Express at 75c per 100. STAR MFG. & SALES CO., 821 Manhattan Ave, Brooklyn, N.Y. PRESTON PORTABLE GARAGES AND COTTAGES in several designs, also Steel Truss Barns and - Implement Sheds, all sizes. For further particulars write The Metal Shingle & Siding Co. Preston. or WILLIAM T. GRIEVE, Walton. Phone 14-234. Also agent for Chicago Auto Oil Windmills. Get the Cream. of the Trade 'What lovely styles! How do you manage to get a these, delightful novelties?" said the new customer as she looked around her. "I got tired of seeing my customers boarding the trains to buy elsewhere, just because I didn't have some novelty that was being advertised." "Whenever a new style makes a decided hit, the whole- saler or manufacturer's salesman calls me on Long Distance, and tells me about it, and I order a few." haven't seen prettier veils, smarter stockings or gloves, georgette-crrpes or ginghams anywhere. And 1 see you have the new music, too. How perfectly splendid. They leave me no excuse at all for going up to town to buy." That's just one of the many things Long Distance does for small-toiltn merchants, enabling Dry Goods, Hard- ware, Grocery, Paint and Shoe Stores to obtain new styles immediately and cater to the progressive people in their town — the cream of the trade. Every Ball Telephone is a Long Distances Station $ISm L, M ,MCCORM4OS.BI;AMA MANAGER, , , , , 461 1