Loading...
The Huron Expositor, 1930-10-10, Page 6I:. �.: ,'..'�'i"11�1� I,, I , � I$ �, " ti ., ,� �..i, , ; .1 AUN Ty * Mlt � , , ..�� I,* ,.:..ill I !, �:� ,,. � I. �,,T�j V "Aly'.. � -1- 4 � _�P. .. "" A , ..2111 _.".­. IP'A,',K�;.�,�iv��.��,"i�,t'�,�l�4 �,,,, "I .�A'WI.^4 , `KfA"R"W':�: Q , r,: "� , "� ;."W" W. "" 1 0 P M.W., -'g,"., 47UU. 1. �; - -,o 1-1J.-, ____ . I . " - � ­ W. , '1'�� I , , " n* ` , . , " ";� � � - ,"', ;,4913ft'r �', 410'' ,�% ,I-, � .1, 1 . ;',�' �, p - � , 041V 1-1 ,I �, � - . ,,, 1 L � .q,r -, ! . :,9 I, '7 I I , - -49 _r �1.11� " �, b. I ! E��M_W�0%-`� Im ; . ,� �1111111 . , , � "'; �'m-'­,­', -.". - , �. - , , ` � , 'I - ,,, i i i`,'1111'� , �R,%,Y; ­ �;l WE � WAI ,,�J . 0 - �j " � , - qw��fflpw 1%_ ':�I' � . , , W'A i , I ., , , 't .Ln ,0 , V - I. ; I I , � . , "I � , . , . ,.";., ,'�,:. - I , , 1 X,JSAX4,0 V 1k ma . , " , .", 4` 4, pnoftt',Or&.� ft ., , 1�- , - "In 4 , , , I , � �ii =2 �1- - W � socle is. A WA4 0, st=d. 11 )� a tv " L Al"'I T, �1, " ;n,, �, N , ,�,�g, " "" , , i � " ,q4r,�,,� - I %, , � .�'. , - . , SQJS Ob ;'u -mm-,; IV, I I41:� � .f ., 1. � It OK VIA so 0 1 � , '17mili"R -1,1", , M I ..A 'AW . _ �, ��A% rR. 0'.A�ANI �b z t.A�.' k"I'I -0',"I%1 G , - -, ! ..... .. �1.1.11. wl�. 1� . , � , X-1 .,;."I , �. I , ,.I., s:,V:,t,� `-r, .. � W . . , �1:� . .. Z.4, 11 4 1 . .N,m � ' k that ,1F1b4#,1RiWi1 w.pA ,fif,4Q, I �i: � , ,.. A � , IW1,11, ­,?,6AU­r. 60 1 .1 '- ", - I- % , # , ,� , � I , , , , " .,�, _, �� . i , �,O . w: W L, N �;U , ,;, no. -S, I � ��t I., t . . 1, . �� -!'?AA'w , JV411" 4W �� 41 I ;5 . . ; . - '', . I I ,11 .,q ,i!.1 , , -4 " _� lw'lil -.0 : quPport, i 'R " 1�1� I. uoually made'pf rice, 4, . " . , , " ,', . . , ** , " ,�.A, " &7TI I.A'?, �% . � � e� ot t . , V Of I W, #0 , .,. 1 � ,', V , � ". wil .-, 't I L I-, I I RAO, ateavir, 00, , ,, . I 'A _0 I O"? 14, Vn_qq1g. - w, I ax bread and, it may be, saidi tb 1�40, 0,330 -of, tho'0400,1040 (1-9 � wq�qu�t'.% .I _'. �', "t"I" �: i, , . , �, �, � I . �� `*T. Wbogi�` 1- , . , . __.�.7p,�. !1M , ��,, I - ,�'11'1'1��:` "'. . _e,pf Ampricap *vontl 0. V , I,* — , �,.�;� "'. , , q yr;,'4st, used, is;t�!., A , _pqry,an .q for; aa,is 4UMM,ii, I. R#9pW -, P 9M - to,`. � �0,�,%r �. VT whm t1ko, s4ove is, wpm, � � " " .7 ��', -a foundiation on which to uoo, , . : .401 TAO# IR104"t .01*0*�4 w1vo4i � I X , , ,i , , . , ,,, 6 91 ., of 'I ,V�p A,�,'i: "M PAIRA NR..,. "Am . I, I ­ I I I ... _ I I'll - �-, , �'. ow -4, , ., TWo , ead-atA ox9eap "I , 009 �', I � !Wler - _ ,ffj3,r,, is pr ,t` d % -t 101 - , IV , thi - A steak from a Wlet 0 I Oamxr�l �d � 1py&,q- ,� r- 'I "."J".'. - TO . Soft" PAW Rr I . Po C, and 111br OZOIC la %J 1415,eef, neatly bound into a qircle by 0 .0 TAO -40V , . � �' "'Busi . ", PAISO �: , py-, F -',wft,Q, 44 1 � � I `�' A��,00. T t U UV 111"In, ne � .,tpp I � '14, " . ,; � I , " ,4 . I - I 4 ,4, - , � � ell I�R 1 Poo : �_ , I . - - , . " -, I . � q � I 1, = C f fl. S",ip of baoQu, may be Put,& c,Q9 a yinegar.i-a an an Artiae on erlo# I ... m"I' - - '%uoineso: womagO. are .. . ?;�.It I . .� T'. v In,, �i- -a . , 8�0 ,,:;� ost Isa,titires.couAit ," unqu 'A 0 - tm I - 1 �� _ , , �-gk�, ...... : �'% �', i�l , :, It * ' . . 11 se T , .. , kno"" - I I" . . - -h,w b ri the Unit !'w9_xq*:,vdth which the U,aite& States , ut, it , liq,t � � ` 4; il, o I .. . �.. .Ufr, . . on a circle of rim over which bring it to bolUng point, . bAn i IS �J� "are _411", . - � vhole fealm- paint, brush in the bwolli I , I bag" ", - 3ug, ai t tjigt' the"p-, t , .. ;, 7 '. I ,,, t ,, it a eire 1% for,a9me time in oonupetiIl[�n wit% , ri . e, it'l i 1 ;, "i I �le of spinach, the N ,phed the language. 1. 1. .9 I -,� i obavk , _�, I , i4orkt. Aegq- :��'., ��: � , � i - id ",back tax"* wMch 1 ree v Tho,pm I , , ; IS . . ing a complete meat cou�rse. Or a When tharoug-bly softenedi clean on proposal that an American dictio�� V. al Idif " �.' � ._ . ' - I I .. mound of rice may be used tQ support an old rag, wash in strong amm.o.11- of the scope of the Oxford SAW440 06. 1Are,,jJt40yZr then tile English equiva- sMd,he ."s so,rryr of -tbel'deviaift pf , � - I.. I �.,-� 1, ­', � til W `,�,� - a compote of pears and set off the wator, and you will find your b lentg(ef"lloverdue pay" and oo,verd,ae, the local reception e6mmitteo to bkg�- �� " I I.I.-�ll.�'ll'-�",-�,-""i:l�"...�..�-. - I " - rush written, and by this 4me, we hav'q., no - . m4ryif ; .1-1-1-111--.1111. ,I-,.,,.,-,--,' . 41* t,,�. . fruit by thus �bringing them into almost as good as new doubt that be is as familla,r with tbe, t4nh,"-� . ffl: '; . I 11 t 11 � . �t is said, that the origin 6f him from- the peftoAp,rs. 'Ble elioRW -� * "' " 11.11 11- 1-1--, ... , -.1 .... - 11.1-1-1 1.1----11.- , �, "-.,I ­­­­ 11, .�.�'S; 1-1111-- ,;'­- o, * ; American language as with. the , i5nd. the mliWai `-, . �­ ­� _ L ' , ' ' ", � 1� '. . 0�� , .4 of 1140OW" is unknowm� 'while, �Ibom# his eyes, several times . .� I L. 1)­._�I.;-...1.., ..1.--1 -....-I, .1, -11- I 1 1-7 prominence. * I , , �,11 ,, �,�, I .. . - ., - "". _-::*4r:,;e 1�; 11 ' - . . . ­ 11 teacups and teapots the'British Wes. Since we believe was of .Dutch ,origin and "bunkum,, of his fiwe twitcheol. T hifi, h(i,., 44ddl� �, y I �_�L. � ?I -11 " � - I,F" - I . ,:11�' ,V� i,�. ,, Spatchcock. This is a mode of Tea stains in � �� . . . . . . - . , I I,', I N� "I'll, . I . "' ­ I " " b-' ,1� ", " I, 1 � .. .t ,� � - . 'i aworo# , " , I : , - � ,,, serving or preparing a fowl, it is a may be easily removed by rubbing thalt the language e0nlm,only spok.,en ctime`ft � y in Nor�h ban4s with 'the V'Sit'DIZA5 Od th,�,y wit ., :,� `� I ,� . ,� I 1. . '.. ": 9:� ",chlo, , , I . �,� '� I 1.�.. .. .q,x,n Buncombe Count # WA 1'hq�7. ., "' ­; , , ,�. I - - ,. . I ,., grilled the stain with - Can�olhiq, , The American, or perhaps dT, -w in -something like plan ,, . � F.V,�. I , , I . .1 particular way of grilling or a g a little dry baking in) Ontario, if not the written la;ng . ,, � . ,� I � - � ",v .. I .- ' - ... � '..,_ �, , '' " ,',,I,�., . � 9 � I r - - - - - - I fowl may be called a spatchcock. The soda. uage, is more like that which, prevails the 0samilian lumber camp gave us thrust ,reporters aside and das,be.O.-f - "� � PWI�, jii*t0fPA - , ... - : .. � , ­ %.- . , . - �­, kp'.,�� 1, :- ,.:. - ' , o� -`i 11 - I . I I " * * * F a street car. All of tliem. bad ,the: fee]; - ` `,�� ��, I.. , i . . .W1 bird has to be young and tender; it in the neighboring states, than that "booln' both va noun and veorb about r I . . � 11 1. I 1, � I I " "Vor .It��t � t� ., , me � �' � N I ­.�, oldl . , . .. , ,, is out open through the back, but with- had been � sorn&AV�k � , , I ,.,p,,,,, , 9 V, ­ ��,� J . I . If vour windows rattle, on windy Which prevedils in England many of sixty years ' ago, and we certainly ing thift th -'r .... � � � '171 � .y . 21'A , k -1', . I � - I , ,41 ' saild, - , : , 11 I y,�,. � t - x ng v readers will, n* doubt be surprisedtWould lse�em rather tongue-tied w1ith. griOlk about the',interview. J"pps,� .... LL .. 1, , ' ir 1� rr J.�, out cu ting it all the way through ; days, we ige Ahe sharp end of a spri ou I �... . .... -';.Ww, ro' .1 sw , � , � � y, I the legs, of course, are removed, so clothes pin into the crack. idh have enter- out tlle= ,'Big hug" has been .. , , �' � -1 , - horders . 0 � to learathat words whi � , in, use that they a1mbA regretted the plan �� � . I ; 11 I 0 1� I _0 , ��, �1,1-.% I 'It IM, ., � ." , :_,� V., . 00W :: , .., 1306, . 1�� I- .1 �. L . "y is the wing tip Or third join * * * ed into our every -day speech and for more than a century,, but "big which they beliove,d had, Vven Wilson � V , ­ 11 . . . . lk.­­'�. . �. . , ,� ' ­'.- ­ I 11 I 1 4 - d96,,MW- ,Aks�,Aft,,dk.� .� ,",,. �', r -,"I'.. i'll, .. .inb.L� * I I I,--,. r I "' e - . � )��'Lll� the fowl is pressed flat and is Wet days are ahead of us. Clothes would hardly be challenged by the money"' 'is more -recent. too ".feel it such a terrible shock. A. few' we ks . , .. '4' , ,; I , �� ­ I . ;; . I , n .. ' , �" � . ; . I ;, � I 11 . ,I 1:, 11 I W g; 1. �!' 1, skewered so it stays flat, then it is raust be dried in the cellar, attic, or niost irascible of Pundits were ori-dImw� in 10nWIS bones" has not an American later he collapsed. rand, though lie liv��d : I � . - � 11 ; I .��,. I r" "'I'l for several yea-i� after the Seaftle . " i .... LL " � I I i , � . . �� :,;�l il. grilled and you have a spatchcock. other room indoors. Simplify the dry- inally Americanisms. Sir William sound but it is an Americanism as ' . .. I , i I ,rrr I . WE . - . I - . . I ffr�, - . 'r I , r I , ., -"to fill the bill," "to e he never recovered his heQth. % I ;. a�/, M . . , . . N. � Au Gratin. This simpl.v means a ing by arranging parallel lines (like points out that the divergence between well as take 4 PaTad � 1. i . ... �� "I %. � ,X - 1K . � I I . . . I � � .. .... Fi I , dish with grated cheese over the top. car tracks). Instead of hariging the established English and the lang-mge. ba-ek seat," "to bite off more than One It was and remains the theory of the, . , _. .2 ., - - ... .. .r . ,. " lawo ... . I . . i . � ,;I: I, r a clothes in the usual wa _leneh employed by the English, Irish and can dhew,11 "to brace up" and 11W wobblies that the dreadful judgment .11 . . I . I I V� I It is usually a creamed dish, y whose origin, is gOlnewhat of silence that they had ,,passed upon .. I ,.. . � I 1, . � . �.. . .., . . . . . .. . �.Vl, warmed-over, with cheese added to wise -pin them from one line to the ScOteh'N%"h'O came to this, continent, blow in," him was the final straw that broke . �. I � . r.., . i ===;: . ,Ir P.. - F� I �'. .. give flavor and improve the looks. other, thus filling in the space be- was n6ted nearly 150 years ago. But more obvious. I r . . . . �1­ , � , , . � 1. . r ., v.1. . I ;- Scallop. The word is founded on tween the lines. You will find that even earlier than this, in fact from I down. his strength a belp- idate. S1. ,succeed. So aiUlf a fortnight spent' — , nd laid him was not a suitable cand r �.' I -00 less ,on his bed. That is why Kipps ii Hitler orman , 'making snowshoe -s �id dog sleds,' , ., the scallop shell with its well-niarked many more clothes can be dried at almost the beginning of the British , is neither a rG ' citizen nor in 11. � �A ". : to one time when this method is embered as the "mom who s- gin Austrian- citizen,. He 'a man and r�ou-ndjug In . . � '' '. . , 4'f lines or divisions. It is applied em- settlemei�t in North America, the new- "ASSASSIN OF WILSON" AN rem ' pf 11siT .. is UP . ;dxans, they . "t �--�-, sinated Wilson. I �,,,, without a country, like Trotzky, -aIhd forth -under bommap,d.-o � ,�'�. dishes of two or more ingredients ployed. Also, the drying 'process is mmers began to adopt� words from - . . .. . f. the veteran - cooked in layers; thus we have scal- hastened. the Indians and, give to English words 1. W. W. INCIDENT . - .a commentator' has observed, that it N-leol#s Aiitoi4e�Icoulo' Tier d. i . I - — , OW- I grandson of the famou's '4,jtldelearie""'�a �-' �.Y. loped cabbage and tomato, where a new meanings. I 11 'may MI to, him wh-en, he attains p layer of cabbage is topped by a layer Tea Stains in Silk. For instance, "corn" came to mean Throughout the Western, States and A NEW HABIT err to confer ,citizenship rights Upon Vercbeies,'the s6eond in eporainand.be-_ k I of tomato until the dish is filled. If ' I'maize" in a very short time "lot" a wherever there i.� a group of 1. W. . himself. Seven years ago- Hitler ing Chevalier Louis Francois Chapt. I Tea is one of the causes of the un- Therels -a reason for everything. leaped into national attention wh6i de �La Caftie. 'Oth -rs . the cabbage and tomato were mixed � - piece of ground, "lumber" io mean W.'s, popularly known. as wobbliez, ek offic:, were L sightly stains which one som,�times "timber" and "hemlock" became ,the Jack Kdbps was krio-wn as the ma,n Mrs. Brown's son, Fred, away in. the wlth,raem Erich Ludendorff he launch. scions of the Pr t. and the mixture turned into the dish ench nobility. In - 4P this would not be a scallop. sees in kitchen sinks. Before empty- name of a tTee instead of a plant. It w7h*, assessina,ted Woodrow Wilson. big city, never would write regularly.'ed a refiellion against the German,re- eluding e . ill . ing the te,a leaves into the strainer, is the He was a constant anxiety to, his publ . ic, lt'�Was a feeble efflort, eas- bere.4 about three hundred mem. Prb- 1� - American rather than the Eng- Kipps died last spring, and the story . W Turban. A turban is a rin.cr mould, start the tap running; the cold tea lish meandng of .y efished. I I e mother. -But lately he has formed the il; .. . :;, but higher than usual, and may b these words that is of how he acquired his sinister title . visions were scanty, -and before the ki does not then touch the porcelain but accepted by all Canadians. In time is told in The American. Mercury b - habitof telephoning every,Sunday ev- Mtler was tried gad R"I - made of rice, spin�ach, potatoes, niaca- fl y sentenced* to march had been half completed they F - roni or anything mouldab�le. oats down the drain with the water. "branch" and IlcreA" became syn. Louis Adamic. Kipps had wearied of ening! Her friends say Mrs. Brown five yeaTs' imprisoitment,-"but :rpally gavk- Gut, Thereafter, the s�oldiers do- t Keep the tap running for two or three onyms for "stream." Other' words th4 burious fame that bad wine to looks 'better than she has done for Served ,only one� year," his ,gente6ce, hwv� �pended upon. what the French settlers ' , "I'l. . - - -.4- second-,, and you will find this hint which were not, as we might have sup- himand bad asked Ad-amle not to, tell years. Wonderful what a diff erence. itg been comm.u.ted. ' In this 'leniency in thp country thwough which they ra '.1 ,,, well worth while. that weekly chat has made for her, I New Green Houses For O.A.C. . posed, invented by the Americans, are the story while he lived. But when was seen, the goo&humored contemptimarched ,could provide them, It was . I I. . Another big undertaking in connec- , am swamp, swale, bottom, canoe, meeting imprisonment and tuberculosis com- -40. of the German -Government for thd -not much, -and when the Mien came at - �.� house, log house �ind cabin. They were bined to cut'short his, picturesque rebels. It eduld afford to �e, mag- last to their destination they wexe � ., . . .... . . tion vith the Government'-, 19.30 build- WIT AND WISDOM simply English words that had little career, the oddstory became avail -able MAN OF THE HOUR IS MXX nanim-ous since it appeared that sueh'suffering as much from hunger ,as � ,f. . - I - .. I ing programme at the Ontario Agri- currency in the British Isles but for �circulation among a somewhat . a .small fraction. of the population sup- I from. the cold. As they approaclie4 f . cultural College has been announced We have renounced war; why have proved extremely useful to the Ameii- more sele,A circle thaii that in which WITHOUT COUNTRY. Ported Hitler and Ludendorff. VAjen Grand Pre they got infofmation,most- 4 I I .1 . I '. . by Dr. G. 1. Christie, president of the we not also renounced armaments?- cans although they did not invent Kipps habitually moved. The incident 'Adolf Hitler is the man. of the �Iour Hitler emerged, he found the littlelly chetering, about the strength and , college. The latest project, which Sir Robert Borden. them. The word "bluff", meaning a occurred in Seattle in 1919, and party which be, had tried to bqild up disposition of the enemy. But Noble's , . . - ; will be started at once, is the erection I steep bank, is an Americanism -and though it passed, practically without in Germany,and-as such may by one rent and dispersed. He was 'himself �strength was somewhat under esti- 11 of new greenhouses at a cost of $75,- The public is a fickle master. One was first noted by John Wesley. R mention in, the press at that time it of Europe's men. of destiny. If he discredited as a political force. In mated for it was about 509, - , The com� ., III should be able to seize. power there fact, Hitler bad belen deprived of ev- manders tried to keep fbi' 'news from :. 000. They will permit the carrying day it put� a laurel wreath 'round has since,beep accepted as good En�_ is indeed a dramatic one, well worth is no question that he would on that , on of research work on a scale never your head, and the next it presses a lisb, and Tennyson made use of it. preserving. President Wilson was day become one of the signi 1 n eTything except the essential thing the men but: when it leake'sd out ithad I I . I before possible at O.A.C. crowA of thorns upon your brow.- More than'50 years ago the common expected in Seattle in the s filalt me which is Hhler. His passicuMe spirit no dampening effect.. They shouted, .. co"T ' of in the history of the. Twentieth. cen- I Mr. Snowden. American use of "balance" in the the tour of American cities he was tury. He stands for , rem,Iiiined. His ability to electrify aud- tfiat the more English there were the, . . Bacon Hog Fair. sen' Germall Irevolt lences remained, Presently these two more they would kill. " se -of "remainder" or "rest" was making in defence of the League of and for a repudiation of all -the, ob-liga-, things began to rebuAld what had beet It was on January 23rd that the � . � The Middlesex County Bacon Hog Cricket is more than a game; it is noted and condemned. We might say Nations and his owd course 14 fram- tions, and admissions that German I . .� Fair will be held at Thornolale oil really a manner of living. -The Jam it is noted and condemned to -day and ing the Treaty of Versailles. H y to,, down.. People began to listen to mealch began. and it was Feb?uary 1() - .1. Monday, October 6th. This fair, Sahib of Nowanagar. e was signed in the Treaty of Versailles.,His Mtl,,, and t,foflow hirn. * _. . careful writers avoid it. The word everywhere received with tremendous appeal has been against the capital- The wea.kne,s of the that the French stood under arms -be- , which is to be held under the auspice-, `pra,irie" isi also called an American- enthusiasm, and it seemed German. Gov- fore Grand- Pre waiting the signal to , � . . that he ists the Jews, the foreigners. The ernin,nt ,,ntiibuted to this end. He attack. "Stood", it, hardly the word, �: of the Dominion Live StOck Branch On the old-fashioned, narrow high- ism, and drew a dignified protest would succeed in so stirring up public for�es'of discontent, as well as the tered the Reichstag with a follow- for they had to keep moving in order - and the Provincial Department of ways, just wide enough for two cars from the poet Southey, who said, "If feeling that the Senators who had re- aspiring forces represented in the. en ' 1� I., Agriculture is being arranged with a to pass. many a time a couple of cars this -word be merely a French syn- fused to ratify the deals he had made o o ast their ing of 12 W an assembly of 570. He to escape death by freezing. The Jit- . . . � . st seemed in the same relative position tle party, -as divided into several k view to interesting the farmers of would- collide. But now they're build- Gnvm for Savannah, which- has long abroad would be silenced. The l.W.W. fir ballotat the recent eleection, are ..,a the leader of the prohibition., party bands, for the English were -quarter- the district in the production of select ing highways much wider, enabling be�n naturalized, the Americans"dis- probably knew little about the League behindhim. Heis akind,of combina- in th, House of Lords. -But the Gov- ed in a couple of dozen housesstretch- & �. . bacon hogs. Hogs for the market three or four cars to smash at one play little taste in preferring it," To of Nations or the peace treaties. They tion of Mussolini, Lenin and the emment, -was not popular. The more ed along a mille and a half of road. . � I classes will be graded as they are time -Judge. use another Americanism, we cannot had no particular ill -will for Wilson Grand Kleagle, of the Ku Klux Klan.t it -was acclaimed abroad, the more it The intelligenee. depaTtmenthad been 1. brought into the fair, giving the far- . , . � . string along with the poet Soutbey in except 'as the representative of a No other leader in Germany co mers. an opportunity to see the actual "How to keep that girlish complex- this contention.. system'which they opposed. But they r1aPareg was distrusted at'home. It was, at well served *,nd every attacking body I grading and to gain the fullest infor- ion" is described by a beauty spec- "Lengthy" is also an 'Americanism saw in'his appearance in Seattle .with him in the enthusiasm, L,vTn best a minority party, carrying on knew just where'and when to strike. .,­ mation possible about grading- and ialis,t. Hide it so that younger sis- which we find ,descriptive,. though opportunity for propaganda. an idolatry, with which his followers- rl�- Government -with, the assistance of,It was in ithe middle of the night 11 1 what the market requires. The judg- ters cannot use it, we presume7-Lon- British critics objected to The One specific grievance they has the same'power to sway an audi. were yet united in believing that .the have the full effect of -the uneipected, . �, it in the gard him. No other German le'ader other powerful, mi'notity parties which When th-0 blow fell, But it did not �. , I es will give reasons for the placing of don Opinion. eighteenth century, but Bentham us- had was that there were in the Unit- .. , all classes, giving the farmers an op- ence. But one ,of his chief gifts is Republican form of Gove m t MU t "Ther as an iTp . , - ed it -without apology and so did Dick- ed States at that time many political that which he shares with Lloyd rn en s e TV jtial blunder, the mis- I � portunity to study the type of hog . It can -not be denied that many mar- ens. We find in the word a shade of prisoners, among them men wha had at all costs be, preserved. in the, pr�s. take of a house. A sentry challemg- , 1. that is in demand and ascertain the tv're have been pig-headed fellows meaning that is not'necessarily im- been active wobblies. So the Seattle George. It is not so much his oratory e,t Reichstag there -is a stTong ma- ed suddenly and shouted "To arms.,, � "that holds 'his hearers spellbound _. I,.. . requirements from the standpoint of with only one idea in their heads and plied by the word "Iong'A nor in the brethren determined to present a p9i_ 'but jority for this principle, bu-t the olee- The French soldiers standing thirty . . 11. quality and thriftiness. that a bad one. -Dean Inge. wor(I "tedious." In fact, I'lengthy" tion to Wilson asking for their re- the impression he gives of a, mastery , �: tion was fought for the simple reason PaCeS away saw lights go up and 1. I of facts, and an. encyclopedic knowl- that the-powe,fiil groups could not fGrl,ns hurrying inside,* Silently am4 71, , lq� seems to us a happy coinage. "Re- lease. Whenthis plan became lmown edge of political problems, Listening agree on other printiples. The result 'Qwkth one accord they dropped into t'he . . ' nrr-q Use nf Tractors. The, idea that nothing is true ex- liable" is another word Of American they we're inforined that they would to m ' e. % - origin which excited protest, as Sir not be permitted to see the presi- � -d them, and' the I., A well known iarmer of Western cept -what we comprehend is Silly. hi even his critics feel that h5 of the election may terrify them in -to Mow, which coverL .. .. 1. Ontario who has had 11 years' ex- Mr. Winston Churchill. William said for about half a century. dent. It was then that Kipps, is unamswerable. Rea,ding his speech- a closer -and more workable union. guard treated the sentry's warning as . a es when the absence of his vivid per- Otherwise whout is feared is that the.,a false alarm. But many had been perience in the operation of a pro- So far as we are concerned, the half prominent wobbly, had his in-spira- . sonality makes analysis s s usiastic group follow- roused by the shouts, and -when the - '; -minent Tnake of tractor claims that We must surround children with century is by no means en&d. The tion. Here it is in his Own words:- arguments may seem hollow and his ing Hitler and numbering 10.7 may be general aftack began, some of the de- I -1, in ordinary field work a tractor of teachers whose spirit is expressed in American words up to the middle of "When WiIson is driven through the C cl ions fallacious. But even ', -modern design will do as much work the words, "I believe in boys and girls, the nineteenth century may be said streets'in a machine so that the mob. on us if enabled to seize control, and Hitler's fenders bad already ,arm.$ in their 1. . - ,,, as three to six teams of horses. "As the fathers and mothers of the fu- to have come as single spies; but since can see him and chteer him, why don't reason turns with disgust from his combinati-on, of debt -repudiation and hands and were -hurrying to their 1� I to cost," he says, "there is -no feed or ture."-Dr. A. E. Lynam. then they have invaded the language we thousands of us -line up along demagogy, human nature responds to Fascism come i -n -to effect .with the Posts. . " I . - ,,,, time lost when the tractor is not in the fiery revolt against the hard and extreme probability of a renewed war In the first volley Coulon fell ser - in battalions, and it would keep ex. certain blocks, along the route, all of unjust fate to which the present , , F. average cost for plowing as follows: the ng - of Germans are _ I use. This is a big item. I figure the One thing in which Ireland leads perts busily employed in, pointi us dTessed up in our working clothes, future generations and with France. iously wounded and Beaujeau and La I world is -naval disarmament.- them -out and raising the alarm. Who sleeves rolled up, arms folded on our committed. .0 Corne carried on. Noble, the dour Ul- , Fuel and oil, 55c per acre; time of Dublin Opinion. . sterman, rushed into the fiay sword �� but an expert would suspect the Am,- chests? It'll be Saturday afternoon rt gitven in hand. He was surrounded, and of- . . .. I operation, 35c; interest and orverhaul, encan origin of such adjectives as and all the work vAll be,suspended for Hitler is the fact which the, nations NEGLECTED EPIC OF EARLY fered quarter. He refused amd was I 4.1 . 20c, depreciation, 25c. Thisl makes It takes all kinds of people to make "governmental," "law-abiding" and the occasion, and some of us ' I . al't formerly at war with Germany will , shot dead. So from house to house I a total of $1.3.5 per acre. The beauty a world. Yes. but look what a kind "whole-souled"? -One could, us Sir working anyb,ow. We can get out admit now but which they could -not CANADIAN HISTORY the carnage raged and when daylight .1 � . of the tractor is that work can be of a 'world tl�ey make. -Sarnia Can- William says, fill a volume of Ameri- thousands of warkers, and mass them I ". 1, rushed when the land is in proper adian Observer. . afford to a4mit when the Treaty of ,One of the almost forgotten inci- came the village was partly in the �; condition for working thereby secur- can words or English words used in all together, occupying say, five or six Versailles Was signed. That is, that dents in the long struggle between 11ands Of the English and Partly in � a particular sense, but he contends .blocks. We can get out early so the Germans7-*bo will be called' to the English and French for the posses- the Ivands of the French. It became 1� ing better till -age -and of course, ev- A roll of $8040, left in a New York himself me,re]7 with noting instances that the hol polloi can't get those pay fo,r the war were not soldiexs sion Of North AmeTiea, namely the re- .Plain that neither was in a sound , . � "O. I entually cleaner and larger crops." taxicab, was -returned. Just a few provided by a single letter. blocks. And when Wilson comes 'by while it was going on, were even not capture of Grand Pre by the French, strategic position. Logically, the ..... � - — months ago the driver would have "Back country," "backwoodgman" we don't give him a tumble; nobody babies irg a great .number of I thought it a tip.�Sault Daily Star. cas`06- is thesubject of an, -article in the Dal- struggle sh.ould have ended, in a state- - I and "back -woods" -are a's old as the lets out a sound of a cheer and nobody German, yet unborn will come, into houge Review, by Prof. Archibald mat,,. I , HOUSEHOLD DISCOVERIES middle of the eighteenth century, and claps his hands. We just stand still, the world t �i.. The Canadians did not Itnow .1 wi b, a burden. u on their MacMechan, -the well-known historian when reinforcements for the English , p 'O. I In the short run, rationalization is we agree with him that pioneers who ,11 of us, thousands of us. Just stand by their grandpar- and writer, and a particularly author- would arrive, The� English did n t I not a remedy shoulders imposed ,a 11, A Mending Hint. for unemployment, on had invented "back country" should still like this, our arms folded -no- ents or rather by the politicians and ity on this period of our history. He know the strength of the French. Per - I. When mending a corselette-whe-Te the contrary, is itself a factor in mak- have found no to import the body moves and everybody looks miliiarists wND deceived and intimi- prefaces his graphic account by a baps the death of Noble, demoralized I . need V. the steel has come through the mat- "19 for unemployment, except to the Gei-man "hinterland." We might note straight ahead, -not at him, but at dated tbei± grandfathexg. There were quotations from 11-aliburton: lq'his the defendexs. In any event, they, . terial, I always use a piece of chamois extent that it stimulates demand in that the early use of this word had , nothing at all, just stares past him- in the last election some 5,000,000 enterprise of the French, if not well agreed to terms which were tanta- , .1 for a patch. The steel of the COTSel- the constructional and equipment in- hum-prous imPlication and people who everybody still and silent." votes cast by people who. voted for authenticated, would now be deemed mount to &urrender and evacuation. " I . . ette will not push through t h P dustries.-Prof. T. E. Gregory. emptoyed it usually did so with the The idea was enthusiastically re- the first time, the boys who were not incrcdible.i� Nearly 200 years.after There was�no disgrace in this. The .� chamois. self-satisfied expression of those ,rho ceived, and it was suggested that the of military age in 1914 or . 1918. Most that amazing Winter, march, the percentage of dead and wou-nded t. I The home that has raised a boy to 'have produced a witticism, He say, silent men should wear printed cards of these youths voted for the. Hilter bloody -fight Ind the victory for the seems shocking even to those accus- 1. , Making Children's Bloo . I I, ,.. I mers. he a killer in the woods and fields, of that the ye of the word 44belt " as in on their bats -with the words, "Release program. Manry of them did it know- smaller French force, Canadians ,,,, tanied to the huge fatalities of -the , I ? nature has, somehow, missed I I I I � When making bloomers or panties its the corn -belt or black -belt 'is more Political Prisoners." The plans were ing that their vote might be, a vote to look 'back upon it without 4, is . . mark. -Woodstock Sentinel -Review. not kn I . prejudice, great war. There were 120 kille . I., for my little girl, I always worl�eitber picturesque than the word "zone." made secretly for it was on another war. But having for the F,rench were the Canadians of wounded and .50. ta,ken prisoners a- . a red buttonh,ole, or a red dot in the There is something picturesque about what action the -police would take and had no experience of -the last except thatperiod andithe English were the mong the 'English. The French lbs% 1, centre of the front, In this way ,my I . In England I 'have encountered only "bee -line" although neither this nor when the time came the woloblies, of the poverty and disgrace that fol- Americans of to -day, If we take was less but 26 per ce-ht. of the total '� little girl does not have to come to one man, in the *prim�e of youth -Mr. the equally common "air line" has thousands of them, lined the side- To -wed, it they were prepared ,to vote sides it will be with the Frenclh,.and on both-sideg had been killed,-wound- �� .: rne to find out which is th L 0 Bernard Shaw. -Signor Pirandello. been generally adopted in England ' walks for five 'blocks. The police did for,an entire war, with its excitement with certain resezpations, with their Od 'or taken prisoners. Armed and ra- . 1 the ,bloomers or pantiee. — "Bed rock" ,and "bonanzapt a,e min-* not know what to do. There Were SO and its prospect pf ftin, adventure and other Cangidian auxiliaries, the In-- tion6d. the English marched out, but I I often find it refreshing to,.turn to ing terms, and we learn with ,ston- maIny wobblies that to drive them victory, rat�er than 1: from their position, would have meant the d,feat.og the last -war. et to note, that while not belfore the officers had bden din- ,.. Orange Marmalade. the newspapers from much self- ishment that the word "'blizzard" was in, cOnfiTmatiOnof dians. We regr . . conscious i;Igmarole which professes the Indians did their part in the march ner guests of the French officers., kum . When making orange marmalade I coined as late as 1870 by the editor of blood -shed, a -ad with the president in Hitler himself, the? mouthpiece and and the fighting, as soon as.they 'had punch circulated freely, and nothing . I to be literature. -Mr. John Buchan. the city this was. to be avoided. - So the spearhead of German revolt, is a re- killed enough of the, enemy to satisfy ts were exchanged, and �, always save the seeds of the f ruit, an Iowa paper whose name, IWO Te- but complimen j. � cover them with cold water, allow V gret to say, the learned philologist men were permitted to Sta e C te I ­ xactly what proportion nd as they markabl harac T. He, does not,be- them they -plundered their bodies, and praise for the bravery of brave ni" I them to stand over -night, then bring ' of our fails to mention. The braiMing of bad determined. In the distance came long to the aristocracy. On the cojl� loaded - . po�ul-ti,, is "industrial urban," I do with' all rthe -loot they could ,,by her bra t was the blood- � 71. them to boiilng point. I then strain arried, on in eerillg 9nd traory, he was: a carpenter and, earned carry -abandoned -the main,part of the . . � . - England long before it became an the blaring of esjLttle ve Tr I 'not know, but in any case, Goi help cattle was -no doubt c the 66und of tumultuous ch ' that j�r'took place, in I off the liquid and add it to the MaT- it bands, almost drowned' M& living at this -trade before the war expedition -and returned to their Idist. Acadia - .r. malade. This liquid adds to the I -Mr. ,Clough Williams -Ellis. American practise, though never on by the cheers. Then the Wilson car broke out. Though am, Austrian ,by ant 'camps. . . I .. I . � .i � . . such a grand scale, but it was not., . entered the first block of silent, griM_ birth it was the German axrn wb ell , 1. .. flavor of the marmalade and also s also the miserhploy- til about 1830 th Un- looking Y i It was in mid -Winter, 1747, and 1; helps to make the marmalade "jell." -at one began to spealt workiui��Ien, arms folded On- he entered when the struggle began I I ­ �� , , arge operatiom were out of the ques- . I � 11 ment problem -Arizona, Producer. of a cattle -brand, and twenty y,ar� chests, eyes fixed straight in front. and he served'through it as 0, Private tion. Suddenly a �ftrce from Boston , . . Moulded Jellies. later before the word "brand" was us- The president was standing in his car and petty officer. Then. wh , � .,.., The living the world owes you fs an it -was under. the; ,command of Col. Art];UT ' , I. Ar'and be- Noble, one,of the heroes k tbe.sue- ne fruits and as hard to collectas -any other bill- of silence, the smile was struck from gan to interest himself in politics..96 cessTul attack upon Louisburg, march- . -, . .. When taking gelati - smiling. When he entered this zone over he returned -to fGewma � salads ,out of a bowl or individual Greenville Piedmont. ir 1.11 lk� 1 his face. He stared about him, ,his' ha,d . , Ig moulds I have found a curved grape- found tb9t his Onlistlnefft in th4 ed down upon thq- Fre'rich settlement , 1� ,,, I ,,FwLFI - I� ` f me white. Wbem be -reached the army of aermany, despite the falet -of Grand Pre,and i I , �, , n' fruit knife,very useful. It will loosen A Memphis man has a family Bible I ook possession. The i. f third block'he sat down, and Rd not that Germany iind, Austria were al� intention was ... %� I the jelly -without leaving any of the 315 years old. We don't know any- . to prevent the French, �, ,I "'No other sweet Issm � 11 rdfkture clinging to the dish. . thing that !gets less wear..-AmeTican � ,4 , ____11____--`. again rise to Vis, feet, even W11`0111 the lies, bad coot. him his AuStiiftft citi-Irom, using lt'Wer on as a base" of so lafig, costs so little or ".. I car swept into streets where the -iti- zenship, and when. a few. year& ago V.." . Lumberman. el opftations against Annapolis i Row. .1 * does so much for votC. ", F� A Serving Hint. Zen$ cheered. The president had suf- h6 applied for Gormat citizenship this, The fores hid Ujov�khouses� I - 11 ...., 11 ' I fered a shock, : I . I was ed lir I . in, framos ' . - . I I .. . . . 11 . . � � re always trying A OUP v I That night a'meggenge-t,p ' Oni I A On, the ground that ho and sev6jal . eamton, .but when th&, . - t 1, I . -ame, filoin d � .� . I When the Tim of a !;pool breaks a Those who a to I . - ge a k5ek out of life frequently get coftmon 0 . 11 . . I 11W , 1 I - 1 .. 'M !. , way tagwus Ira news reached,the Aearost,Frenck-,�,,4=1) - I � I.., I . I . endsl of thread on partly used' spools 'V ., I , zl_ at the usual nick, causing the it on the shins.-Arkatsaa Gazette. � , h- to the b6adquarters of the T.W.W. __"_*_"V*_� the iram.e houselad not been aft bp - I . , , I Run Dx�,�e,UZ' Fatal ' 'saying thut thei 3text morning thc; Pre5l, �. . I . .. . . - t -chtu , 'The' , � I . � 1, I�11 . . IV, I 1*1 I nOr , he .on mounta lh6aih, IF ". to beeome 1*6se and, in consequene,e, that, to � idelit would r�ftl" a deputotion and � . . - I caftip, . , rkoili US, 'Ell , , , read, to become a tangled -wo"alm a any Petition Wulitlit, be desifed to 1, i J_,.� 6d, h ithn n I yards of th, . I �7- . st� Bealll*idy� *be&i'thig StIft I . .�f_lv � I " ", 0161; d- -- --­` . I I . I r � I tegdhitly. r rnws I ? I I . ,# A, �� 11 - carried b- 4 Ity'l , " . , , . 't , , I... .1 I 11 I _�,� � Tay mind, set a boy or girl on the road . C F W:kt .7 aull �Ie" , a -9�-�vfl evadlingAkeharg* I . It is home surroundings .f:0611 11 .. 4g�... fgg'. -A-X.,,,.iNW4--­ 4", %= subnot to 'him, mpps and four oth6t towshoodAtobi a 8 '66t ^and* . .1 ,.. -hi !-, t*,It!c10aAse f6df ,, -r ,, '� , .. ' ' , ,11 ,­ to success. -Sir Tho . 02A., .� 1! ,,. was,, Ithrovii into, ,expRemept � I I p , try sealing the loose ends with I V'1.,:,.t,C. `5% tho gummed strips from a sheet Or mas Lipton. I ighk. PmOokotlow6lew Tneh,'two of them, returned sol&rn, I - '' � I by t . - ­ - . - I- I . .,. I . � ., ,�, � �.­, 11W ; . � 'Postage stamps or a portion of a gum- - -I " and- ia�,, 1� .1 nekvs,,"S�A thbfig1i',,_thb,*I1 'on- had .' eet&0 .., . I , g to .."Qua, vf ere ch , - nislitl i . , bi � , , WitH all I 1. I . I I . � 1", I I osm On ithe deputitjon� .? 11� : � I , I hot arenas and. het, wars, 1 .4'�k: . the I � ' va ag-ki. : � :11, 11 ", , -been f6e'f6maftr -41�kfk6m_*, .,unfit Ahe I 10it' "bl#h � � 1, . I I . 1�., � . 'Aied label ,or envelope flap. You ,will , � .. I � 11 �.: " ; I, , . . y carried, with''theift �a lm�i# -1 I 1�1 I , Y, . .cw�pqf gft ��p " ai�g dW " ' 4 i d, ,'� 1. .�'. - i ,". ,., , , f1W this suggestion, a decided saving Rome ptobabit didiet kill "vA. Inav hu;- . . . . , itiy� for D"', , $�4tig, 4,�:cpufi ,,, , . ito, � 414fte of' tbA poli#eat _..& d' id d ;,\�,,.., , y"o-cli, h-6 ,ld&",4 ilid % I . I � k - I .1. I , T AQ *G az�� , � - - - , 02 11 ? TA, I , ',�I laim- "",-xIii .�"'� � , cr IT - 4 "Im ", �� . 4 " , � 14 Uot a li'l , .1 . � I � & I... , I I ,:�n, , during t1ko I . .. �, ", �. I .. uN1h or I moil OWN �k�' I , �:Vpllm".Tow . I �. , - ,--. , .0,6m Fa i *aui . 'Xi � 4ft tbilead, time and temper. rekilled, 1, . , Prisoners " 3 lorma - , , k i. I.' I "' , ., I 1. wa, 7i beings as w6 . �, I I ; I vrobblies ,w& e%r I . 11 �� . , ,I .. I " , -J "I I b .11 , � .. , 1 - I - �,� (A'dtlrb ea. ,to I i� Th 1, h Id � A 0 �. . world war.­-Claftned Darrdw. , , , - %�4"Ile�IIi � a I .1 I N'_ �- I 11 I �� . I V I 11� i I I-— , . , ." . ., rl� & - 266 "Ifilki dfs� ' , "' - , � 1% . g the KitAh" " WhO ' & p�,4991 ,',� -X, -_T- - -#_,'*6W � I - - I I " � " - - bl, ,&�t ;MoOd ACh , -;, �.,,,,j, d, " , - Rauge. � " . . I- �,., 11 I " VI? - ,41--` A W01 W, 06 ftth','at �. - . I * I - � I , 4 1 . , � - , V I *, I ', ,4 1 " i 1.... Ji6*,e � 1, .. "54T ON '.."'Od I.- I. . p , - i1w "' 1, - ad,451. - I 4"Ma � 11 I ,,,.11. .!Z� ., 'I � thO'IbIAA�Idng to *q , ft&'&� I 9 - 07,11"PI R �. I I I , 0. � , W taIC6 noflung getioU017 to,.dayo " k $IV , � ;i... " %1 � �,,�,, '10".11 .. , , I , .f, � I. ..., 7 1 toble. '&I# "'Wot. � ,� ,�,,I, Ili ,�s At gp, " poth,66sig, , 9 ; :0 " �' , � ,,,, V ,,01" 1 1, I d I P,t , ­ . � 1,,,,'_;$R. � 6, � ill lfi*o , - , . I W_ .1 - ;III,! . 4 ,�l DT.gg ��,,� I. " p . ­_ - ". . ­_ , I 'Ail '_ , , , � _ , , 1W., . Z0 11400, W i'l L, ., ". � 11 � , � 4 t " V � , ­ ! ,�'_ ,, !ipb�F�, 18,41 ,a �Vf.,�� 14,1ftbb, p ,TP## �* I � I . .".. :�41� I T ,� ,�'. 11 . � ,',�:, . , _�aftift-4,gh- Uft - xlohunolu � & & � ',,..b&. , AWA ',',­�),,,�14! � ,,.'�w ttowlx. 5W ,I rr . .i, - I e� , ".. , , , 1 �f Ch 10 .. I I ,L . , - I , - 0 tlt& H� v %W e , I I . . . 4w@,,� V169W A6, st0#4 �, t ,lth, 00#'., , � �, lhk*�, 1114 Alt'"t ftg,dlt f 6. , � AMA , I �� lw� . , I_ A 1. ��4 I , ,h '6219 I" IV ­-, o 'O , It . 01, : I - .1, �!:,� . �, I.: 1,14, 9: : � , . . I .. . . � .11 I" �X -�t, - ".,�. , , , 1, �L%4 .. 1,11" .� 1, '%6kM. 'DId 1. j,.W � I. __ , , , r,,,",, 4 ." ,� ,� * ,6 , ,:.,�I% 1: �m . �N fiwm ; , I'd `4 00". I ,;; ,�v­_"­'_'� I.. '60do itta . , ... , , 't, - . � �.��,�y,,,,��,;:? ,� I , I 1, ,�:,_"o I ; . �0 �7: I 11 .'' .1 Ir ,a ... .... I . . � , �� ., - J .i4 A.", . I 11 , I � 6 ­U,� ". . W,ft 464 4pob, 8'140w"W��l . � ". � " `,, 5 , A '. �,A ., , , T , , ., I ; � _ "'i 1 4 � . r. - . � , � A,* �� 11 ,,, , rr . %% , '* ft fTf&.,.JW_1,*AJaJffj#�?1,'W . , - '. ­%,.�J,­ I k; , -, . , I I - �,, III. , �, " CtL `11I.k -N . "" - . ;,'�,Wvlo��,�'?!.k',:`, :'. , ,"', 'M-- , , � �� i�4u,_.J.;�� fiwIJ , _ � I d5f. � . . �.r � , it , ., �,:` % . aff, tm., .&At , af UiLm"LlIndAlm. IA4 we ., ­�,6­1!_�_L. _�, L -!K' ' I19' - -- " � -Y'- I 4A . I ­ � ,, i L ITI�;,' a I I - , k MEAL 1. V E R, V I