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The Blyth Standard, 1925-05-21, Page 1
et 0411411+14414+1440.440.44.444 SCII0(1l S;11I1J11i('H. at A full line of Public and I ligh , School Supplier: at THE S'1'ANT..AR). 044+44444.4444-P+++++41444.44 • VOL XXXVI /RAM •,-w•-r....•.•.••••.,--w•-•••Ink 4.44,6444+44 +y+1. 4,40+•;•4.41-t-i•r,14 4.+++4.+4.41,▪ 44+4•44+4,41, BLYTH, ONTARIQ, THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1925 IAY.Y.►I--M.I.M4,MA €91.1 TR 'T "' 'IC'.f . IL., E Jost opened up in n( v'c0 f i r('c ('t rare(' En"- 1?;1i h 1?rcadc1ni li 1 it 11:1 (('', 1 1( n <! (1,. YOUR FAVORITE ARROW COLLARS BINE, HOSIERY in silk Silk & Wool, 1111 W,'col, ('i.f l vie and Lisle, in l;c\V 1-411t(:11:s tl1'(1 C'alc1F. LATEST IN HATS i'. ND CA FS Select your Spring Suit and O'Ccat, Now we will tailor i1. to ,ycur mtasurc, sat- iSfaeti(;n fella] till I C ( (I, S. FI. G!DLEY f Clothier, 111 on ;fid Boys' Furnisher. Phone 7S :1nci 8 6 I>I '1,11, 011tRri()- •: Local News. 35 sleet tae llsrau (fad for 10c an The Standard hook & Stationery Store, . • Under the Indiana law not only the bootlegger but his customer gets a jail sentence if caught. The Irrgest water wheel generator Y.et made will be install( d at Niagara Falls, It trill weigh 700 tons.' The br ick work on I he new postoffic was commenced on Friday, Mr. Rober (toward has the work in hand. • Mr John Vincent received $2 for In sircting kilos instead of its as apptare( • in the cuunu!I minutes last. issue, .. &Ir. Wm. Craig completed last week # •the takingdown of the Mr. Gro. Machan went to Clinton ]Iba•, grand -stand at pilaf on Wednesday where he will undrr ,o, the Agricultural grounds, This structure b h d become quitely badly decayed and ' an operatir,n, Mr. 'John M. Craig is act- was unsafe for use and as a precaution erg as mail carrier during his absence, the society deemed it advisable to have it Uorse races tvi11 be held at MitcliZll on rerr,oved, .e Monday, May 25, There will be three The Standing Field Competition in oats classes - 2 50, 2 15 and 2.30 trot or pace, , tb Winghnm will celebrate Empire Day on Monday, May 25, Mr. and Mrs. John Fingland are visit- ing their daughters in 'fronto, Remember St, Andrew's Church Garden Party will be held on Wednesday, June I7th. Fuller particulars later. The Y. W. C. T. U. will be held at the home of Miss Alberta Richmond on Thurs- clay, May 21, at 8 o'clock, Visitors wel- come. , Friends will regret to learn that Mr, Chas. Grasby has been on the Fick list. has improved considerably during tfie ast few days. wh cit has bten arranged by Blyth Agri- 'FI4++++4++4441'44+4' -14•(+'484 1.. {•4.444 54•444,544+++461-644-14.114+,4 full heats. 1d1;'d0U is offered in purses. cultural Society offers sevtn prizes, as fol- " lows: - 1st $20; 2nd $15; 3rd 812;'Ith $10; 5th $S; Oth $tt; 7th $•t. All desiring in cortlpete roust make their entries to the secretary by May 25; All of the surfaces in t!:c v.'o'! 1 rote.., ;r•t l•a;itt, .arni't or siai.l are ownCa by somcbc,,ly. It i ; tier: r thero- -who. haws made it possible fur The S!;e4e.: ir,-`-t, W,' (. - ,.t;, lee, orae the largest paint and varnisli'rnal:c•r, 'Ott-, Whether (fees,' bre;', they pay for the tre':ar!c,;. , ;;1 j'.:.' ' Every drop of Sllrrv,•ia • '•` '!' .r; . forty year:;, been t,u1.1 ti --the. lit '.t i;,- thy. particular . sur- face face to he treated, 'J Co.Ct. have become the largest paint and. ':,ii'::i,l; ro;'!;'`r • ell tlic v:c'rl,l en this heist'. and with millions of surface ov,-iie'r'`; a:: ;.•.i' ,:i ii; ,r ' :ir'.ti, i.; ran: hest answer to any question of "(rho 1:;:11:o; tai,. I: it;t:l , n l ,, ;a'rti:;tic:; ;sir;: •tea(. .,r: .!;c hq, fc^r the past t;ic• r:iane: who' buys, Come in and have d t;t1k \N.idt u;; n,ho1_tt Sherwin-- . Wi111am,S Product;:, iI you have any Equine to ,bc finished or COLIN FNOLAND, HARDWARE MERCHANT. BLYT1H,,ONT4 6'8 4.4.444.44.4.444+++++++4,4•i..t4d,d..p.I..I 4-1,3.4;,4-1•4,.r.r,..1.4•+r444+++++.04. HARNESS AND S REPAIR! <G, Cheques and maney orders for $5 or leas are exempt from the stamp tax under an amendment to the War Revenue Act. The new regulations will come into effect nn July 1, • The sale of cattle which was first after. t" Standard hotels have until the 15th of flied to take place at the Cllmulcrcwl +++++++++44+4+44++4444+4444 444444444 411.444444444444i4i Iuly to umplcte their premises for the house barns on May 17 and I ire: arrang- s.ile neo •I beer to eerier' with the mail- ed for the 230 has -been indclinatl' at ions, ur;Iess elherwiee crder'cd by their,. pnstpora d as Mr. (McDonald Is unable sfector. purchase cattle at a price to warrant fern'. Messrs. Chas Lockwood and Finlay atlrririg them for sale at public auction McGowan returned home last week from Inspector Tom, of Goderich, was pre, Clinton 11n -pita) (there they had their eat at the prayer ineettug in the Metho- tonsils removed, 'f'hey have both almost dist Chards last week and gavea briefed - fully recovered . •, dress. making reference. particularly to The play "Patty Makes Things Hue his deep regrets concerning the amend- twill be presented by the Y, P. S. of St nient to the 0 1'. A. as to the tale of 1.4 beer. Mr. Torn is a staunch and lifelong fi Writing 'Tablets. A largo assortment of Writ.,. Tablets, Fipeteries and Envelope( at THE STANDARD 444i14il44l+ilii♦ f• Nos41 - y. 4'+++++444++++++++4444+ 444+444444444444444444+4$+ AN ENTIRELY NEW STOCK OF Wall Paper FOR SPRING Come in and see our various designs. REASONABLE PRICES R, M. MCKAY OPTOMETRIST BY EXAMINATION BLYTH, ONT. Iw Andrew's Church in Memorial Hall, •Blyth, ou Friday, May 22nd. For fullcrr terolnbilionist, • particulars see adv. on page 5. • According to word received at Windsor • "Eat more frail!" is the slogan through by Barrister Gearge D. McLwan, the cut•Britain, This has brought the Can. Dominion Government will nut appeal adian apple info prominence and they are the decision of the Supreme Court of Can being sold at the groceries and fruit shops ada, which ruled that the income of boot - and from push carts on the streets of Iegg`rs are exempt (rum income tax. The of London, decisrjn saves Cecil Smith, for whom Bar rister McEwenQUI was acting, upwards of - r ,I1211! IIEE3 WE CARRY IN STOCK PURITY, NORTH STAR & BLYTH FLOUR TRY A SAMPLE OF OUR TEAS, Green and Black at 65c, 75c and 80cts. OUR NEW SEEDS ARE ALL IN Mangel Turnip, Garden Seeds, in Packages and Bulk. FRUIT IN SEASON. Oranges, Grape Fruit, Bananss, Lemons, Tomatoes, Lettuce. We keep a full line of fresh Groceries at very close prices. HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID FOR BUTTER AND EGGS (i. M. CIIAMBERS, 'Phone 89. BLYTH, ONT M1 ' L l l' nave ci© 7 At a'meeting of the Utility Commission NO COO it is said. held last week, the commision counters _ :;:;.nada supplied one third of the cheese iriip;rted rito • Oreat l3ritain.;during the sion will pay $22.50 and the council $5b ast• three years. In that period, of 040.• per month, making a total of $72.50. 383.200 pounds of cheese imported by Great Britain, Canada supplied 331,132, It is rather early to talk about crop con' 588 pounds Canada's exports of cheese to ditions in this country, but all reports are the Muthe.r Country are increasing yearly favorable and optimism reigns in all rural, although prices for the best Car:adian sections, In the Praiaie Provinces seed.' cheese actually, tun from four to eight ing and land cultivation are reported •of 'shillings per long hundred weight higher from ten days to two weeks ahead of 1024 ,•a minded the wage set by the council its.f spec( to Engineer •Thtrell. The comer i' with abundant moisture. Using as a text a motion passed in the The Sunbeam Concert Trio, graduates Alberta Legislature recently to abolish the of the Ontario School for the 131ind-Miss ofircial residence of the Lieutenant-Gover- Gladys Say, Soprano Soloist and Reader; nor of that province, the Farmers' Sun Miss Greta Lamrnie, A. T. C. M.. Violin advocates similar action in all the provin ist; Miss Kathryn Sells, A. T. C. Ater ccs. Our cliicial gubernatorial residences Pianist and Accompanist, will present a are costing the provinces of Canada up - program under the auspices of the Wom- wards of a million dollars per year in maim en's Institute in Memorial Hall, Blyth, on tcnance and upkeep. We are much wed - the evening of Wednesday, June 3rd. Pro- ded to custom and will likely resist every seeds in aid of Memorial 1•Iall Fund. Ad• attempt to abolish them, but they are a mission—Adults 35c., children 25c burden upon the taxpayers for which n., The Standard has made arrangements adequate return is received. with the Family Herald and Wekkly Star The members of the Session soil Board whereby we can offer New Subscribers of Management of St. Andrew's Church both papers for the remainder of 1025 for at a meeting last Wednesday evening, 0E.• . the small sum of $2 70, Take advantage look into consideration the alter of If thi; offer at once and get the full bene- cleaning up and beautifying of the old 5t of the radar ,d prices, which also includ cemetery and church site on Dinsley Si. es onc,guess fn rhe Family herald and , than for New Zealand cheese. An offer by the newly organized Iiorticul- Prompt attentionand first-class work r..tlec'1c1Y S.nrs great $10000 contest. tural Society to take this work in hand What will be the number of votes cast was discussed and grater uliy accepted as e- at the next Dominion Election Leave pairi guaranteed 1n -all Harness and Shoe re -ng. it was felt that the condition of the ,.4, MODERATE PRICES, se J: S. + • Blyth, - - . - Ontar prop- ' subscriptions at The Standard, p I erly makes it necessary to take 'some The entaance examinations commence measures at once. Any interested parties- on artieson Wednesday, June 24, and continue for who may wish to make representaticins three days. Grammar, writing and geog- regarding the cemetery are asked to coni- rarJhy are the subjects for the first day, municate at once with Mrs. 1'. Gardiner ;arithmetic and literature foe• the second •and Frank Kershaw who have been ap- ' day, and composition, spelling and history pointed to supervise the work, 444•1••144••t•3•'+r'a444144+40314, 04-$0,1,04H,44444.1.4044:1 m the last day. Lower school examine • The following local was inadvertentlyOur greenhouses will be open to overlooked last week:.. Mother's Day tee'; visitors each evening this week' duly observed in the Methodist Church WE \'ILL BE PLEASED TO SHOW East Sunday at all three servict s. The ) OUR S I OC:K , cepa- Sunday School presented a very appropri-from three greenhousefilled to capa- .tte but varied program consisting oil city, and fun hot beds and cold hcripture and other quotations. Three 'frames in t.hich thousar:ds of plants On the eve of the departure, of Mr. and readings by Mesdames ‘Vightinan aua „re growing, Qrs. R. A. King from Blyth, rI large num Fawcett and Flot'crice Slater, a boys' We are prep Iced to supply your ter of their church friends and associates chorus, duett by Harry Baker and Nor- needs for spring vegetab'e and flower let in the Methodist Church. During man Floudy, a selection by the mixed plants, , i, :he 'course of the evening many kind quartette and an address by Mr, S. A. 'l'ommato plants are our specialty ,,, 4..41) • hicgs were said concerning the King 1'optestone in which he dealt largely with 'rom far Ia'gtr , Advanced plants in y --tt,d-14L4tt .;., ,r • -ttr! l\) -_ : amity as old residents and valued memb- 'the Conadian Mothers of the last goner- i bud or bloom to choice varieties which 'Kt. 41 _ ;yrs of the churc ', and more particularly' allots and instanced much of their heroism ' we sell direct f rdm the hot beds at just . 4, •-{)''..d4 -r', VJr14. a .... Q l reference was made o the valued service: at d selfdcnlal and sacrifice often entailing10 cents a dozen Bacon Type Yorkshire (registered) : • f Mr. and Mrs, King"in their work in the sufferi,g. I -le explained the fact thatt YP 4 g yy / .*,g p 3 du for 25 cents. boar will be for service at lot l6, Con. /1'4 l li{ f j..(, •dj/Irj .:hutch, Sunday School and &fission I3and !mothers are peculiarly and specially tilted Early ceirry Wants note ready. 13, Hallett, Fee 61,00 at time o` ser.. to address of appreciation was read by to administer Consolation, Inspiration Greenhouses on Guderictt R ad two vice; - :Ir. J U. Moody and Mr. Thos. Kernel( ;tad Advice and that it is their preroga- blocks from. Main Street. Nelson Lear; -- i Wade the presentation of a purse of mon Live so to do. Mr., 1'uplestune gave a rlowcr shop at Canadian National 1Ut' TINSMIT},ISG, WMBI],,jSTEAS`,.'ITTING: Hot Air Furnaces. Eavetroughing Corrugated Iron Roofing and Steel ares' a Specialty Orders Promptly attended to J. H. LEITH, Blyth, Ont. Phone 12. wNMMMM 01+11011011Mr0110110M011011 NMM 1101101i.11.0/M 11N1.MMNM 11I1/14 • 1 I PIANOS, MILKING 1 ACHINES ! AND RADIOS. - 1 Kindly bear in mind I am still distributor for the above . I named line of goods and guarantee to save you from $53 to $200 on your purchase as 1 sell direct from the factory, cutting out all expenses that add nothing to the quality of thearticlewhat- 7 ever. Phone me 34.61 b Clinton at my expense, or write, as now now is the time to start your children on music. - JONATHAN E. HUGILL, I R.R. NO. 2 SEAFORTH, ONT. P. S, - A good horse or a Ford car will apply on the purchas4of above goods; also terms arranged to suit your convenience, 1 I 1 1 nM4uM nMA 011011•0411004110011110.0111100111104110004106011041011100411001110 Greenhouse Opening II I. I I „I ! i.4 I .,. idM•4 •i. • , -. lions start on June 23, and end on June 20 For the middle school the tests, begin 111 June 22 and extend to July 7. with no nt,jecls to be written on tue 25th and 20 :1udenIs of the upper school have examin ,Buns each day, from June 22 to July 7. TENDERS WANTED Sealed tenders marked "Tender for wiring Court House'"'will be received by the undersigned up to 8 o'clock p, m. May 25th. 1925, for rewiring the Court House, Goderich, for lighting purposes. All material to be furnished by the party receiving the contract. Plans and specifications may be seen at my office, The lowest or any tender not neces. sarily accepted. Geo. W. Holman. . County Clerk. Goderich, April 25, 1925, FOR SERVICE —d, .ti', %r,Q1' .114446 •1 '- r'y. - Mr. King made a very effective re- splendid address that was well received ▪ sly in which he expressed sincere thanks on by a big school of 114 in attendance. The ,n behalf of himself and Mrs, King for the pastor, spoke in the morning on "The ;rind things said, fur the gift, but more Ideal Mother" and in the tveiling on "The Th Standlardl look •& Sta.tlonery S t c Express Office. Greenhouse 'phone 176 W EGGS FOR HATCHING Shop .'phone 31 J. CUNINCH t% ME Thoroughbred S. C. Black Minor. 3 75 100 ' -?articularly for the assurance they had Perfect Hume.'' Splendid music by mar- a cas, 50c per setting, $, per for , ',d the deep and•abiding friendships which. tied women's choir in the morning and FLORIST, incubator settings.' Appf' to . George itad been formed, Mr. and Mrs. King regular choir at night, with l:r•ge congtc- CLIN'i'ON, • ONTARIO Brown, R. R. 1, Phone 22.14, Blyth,, will be very greatly missed, gallant mat ked the day; man," went on Afters', precisely us ift • he had not. heard, "which )guts up the FACTS ABOUT TEA SERIES—No, 6 Western hack. it Iu►s never soros (sown again, so far as he is concerned. That's why, out =isle some offices :end places in the West, you strike the le- gend, 'Ne English reed apply.'" "I say. is it .so had es that?" A fiery nodded, t "'l'iar's why the rnl.,ing and the lumber (emirs are so fu:l of thole„ Mighty decent. elutgr., nnpzt of limit. but the victims (•f tilde own in:,u';tr prejudice, Heavens! Don't it die hard! 1 do bear►•,• it',: ;ince the \voie that dieth not, The hr t most of thee; can do i;a to CONTI' it ;m•" "!hit In its way :t', flee to thin!; one's country the hest in the world! As you haven't any partietilar coun- try, naturel:y you don't wets], it," '•ill isn't cxect:'' th it, 1','n /,"rein is all right within 'limits, it's rantntine it down other people's throats that's so blamed etnpid! \nd new counlri' aro sensitive, They are 4111 the :0111i- out oakout for slights ---don't you sec? Fully aware of their own cnr'uitions, they've got to bluff --and bluff herd ---to try and convince reop'c they don't exist," "I see," observed Rankine, as lie stretched his Ions* legs across the we:I- scrubbed deck. "Then mwn's the word on the other side?" "That's so. And you must be pre- pared for heckling, good-humored questioning, in fact—to turn you in- side out—that is their first, and gen- erally most successful endeavor." "If they turn me imide out, then the climate is going to leave nn extra s. - ordinary effect on me: I'm not Scotch for nothing!" - "Oh, you have to give .'em an ans- wer of some kind. They'll draw it out of you like a corkscrew. You can't squash them," answered Affery e, • with a augh. "But the Yank is a . thundering good chap when you get him at close quarters. And you'll find it pays to slake hands with him -- they're awful duffers for shaking hands," "If they keep 'em clean I shouldn't mind; though it must get a trifle mon-. The warn► winds and sunshine call' otonous after awhile," said Rankine, with his easy-going laugh, 1 the young miss to doll' her he;(vy! "I'nt talking of the Mates just now coat. We answer the call with to cape, —principally New Yorlc, As one gets:ensemble, It snakes u charming out "Love gives Itself and Is not boeght."—Longfellow. further out, men and manners change fit for wenn during :.'iv spring and' I till you get up against the, big, orifi-; the cool days of summer. The dress,! tnal silence. You find that in perfec- the, straight,' tion at the Yukon, where I'm going.", No. 10.11, muinlrrinirg► rhe; CHAPTER XIV.— (Cont d.) air had lost the chill which is never` "What for?" asked Rankine Ii ter-; silhouette, is made in pondre-blue A certain kind of intimacy is forced j absent in mid-Atlantic, and lounging! estediy, "I thought the Yukon was flannel. The front closed with a upon the traveller on board ship; un -I about on the deck was, in consequence,' played out as a commercial enterprise,' line of half -ball buttour,. Either side! Ws he unblushingly proclaims him- singlarly pleasant, or even as an adventure card los of the vertical rocket-Ia rs has one "Say,Rankine,if it's a fair quer- ?" g. I 1 1 self a churl, he finds it difficult to since. button, which adds an interesting,, escape from his environment. The tion—and, after all, you needs t ans- p wer unless you like—what's your Affery appeared to ruminate open; touch to this simple dress. The belt surest method of obtaining the neces- idea it New ork? 1 su soyou the words. The expression of his. is narrow and adjusted al low ►►•,riot-' eery peace is to tack on to one com-ppos Y face completely changed, until he ap- , have sheaves of introductions. line. The cape bus the required full penton. "Nary n one," answered Rankine poared like a man who dreamed Alan Rankine had little or nothing r dreams and saw visions. tress to make this costume Smart.• It' r. of the churl hi his composition, but. lightly, •.or his spirits, which certainly "I went over the trail in 'ninety-'; is lined with a white polka -dot -on al--'--'M_� __.._ there were very few passengers in the 'had dropped to zero at the moment of eight," he began slowly. "Heard of field of navy. The fullness is galh.: conscious 01' it, every limo I go hack. second-class saloon to whom he could jleaving Englund, lead been rising.it, I supose?" ! seed into a narrow band and tacked;llut I can't stop anyway. I hate the "flow carne you to be lost?" nsked a talk with even n seeing; sense of',hteadilaven an Atdea.to b Iquite t ld f ounith1e "Tine trail to the I{Iondyke, soul to the dress un(ler the large collar. icut -e of it! 1've known men wrench sympathetic gentleman of a little boy pleasure. Again and again he blessed' first night out, I'm going to look out mean? I've heard, or read of it, Cut in sizes 16, 18 and '0 years. Sizej themselves free with frightful ostia he found crying In the street for lila the luck which had given him Affery a job." course. The gold rush—wasn't it, I 18 years requires 3(ii, yards of 36 -- for and vows, and they were back before mother. les. There were thousands of us !the snows melted on the trail another for Theiroo itimaacy, though not of the "In New York?" queried Affery, —no rail then, hardly a trail. Only! !inch material for the dress ;end I'rz spring! I'm going back now." "1'm not lost!" Indignantly exclaim - Their a queer look on his face, g, yards for the cape. r== p ► or talkative order, grew et might have a trythere," Ran- about a tl.ird of the <lc( -seekers over Y P•• fat what for'. repeated Rankine ed the litho three-year-old; "but in -in - boisterous steadil and bythe end of the third g reached the goal. It took me thirteenT �tug,idly, my mother Is, and 1 ca -ca -can't find Y, kine again answered „ HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS, 1 I;RNs, they inseparable.Afferyshrugged his lightly.hulders, months, ! Affery shrugged dayout were Yetgg i his shoulders, her." theyknew ver little of one another. u gg ou _ Thirteen months to go over one Write your nante'and address plain "I've been out of it two years. I Rakine, though no great student of Yorks advice to bad place to Ftarve in. I I've ew Pass!" said Itanki• no ineredulousl=, ly, giving number and size of such bought tt place in Donegal, near my human nature, realized, or rather di- done it, and I known" Wltat happened?" patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in father's birthplace, and tried to lo- vined, that some havoc wrought In e, �„ "We had to camp for eight months) stem y 'g lo- cate; but it's no good. The thing's in You have, asked Rankine with in the snows P or coin (coin pr: erred; wrap suppose, = g BEAUTIFY IT WITH Affery's life had made -111m a wanderer,waiting, for the ice to it carefully) for each Number, rind my blood I sol se. I'll o back, and Y quickened interest. Oh, tell me an -on the face of the earth. Afferyhad „o "out; and don't forget that the back, and finally lay my bones beside other. „ address your order to Pattern Dept., i, ,, ; a quick, warm temperament, as well ,( , , , ukon is fifteen hundred tierce long!". Wilson Puhlishin Co., , Arizona's among the snows. Well, u q I have. Ive been a hobo, sleeping "Good God! And when you got, K 1`� \Vest Acle- man might easily have a worse lin- as a hasty temper, tough that he had out in Madison Square and Union all? !aide St. Toronto. Patterns sent by!" well under control. His knowledge of there was tigers any gold at I; 'ale. g Park; Ivo been a welsher -up in a i seem to remember that the boom fiz- return mall. (To be continued.) ""'~ men and things was that which is delicatessen shop,a shouter on a ; l'erfect home d gained by the wanderer; a knowledge megaphone, arta bar-tender—the. zled out rather quickly." ; �-- Ye• which, through course of time,be- Plenty of gold, said A(Tery slow- died in their tracks, carrying their.-Mlnard o Liniment Flne for the Hair. only good job I struck In New York.them! lug; and tinting Is comes a kind of second nature.lye and the deepening solemnity of secret with T know of one bur t You couldn t.,do it,old chap! Don't rHollerda .�j g;uaran.c: 1 with Dia- Ing his face laid a strange fed treasure. It he.on ed to a cher y mond Dyes. Just dl By the end of the third day out try. And the moneyyou sayyou've kine's imagination. "But -it's in-theyatp "Coote, come," said a distractedp Y nicknamed Arizona Red, Bun-, Affery had learned a good dual about got would lest about six weeks." g anza, The ' said he wi.S a murderer' f In cold icater� to des, Rankine. He knew, for instance,that tended for common men—it'll belong y father, who had endured the children's ( ?? colt delicate shades he was the eldest eon of an acient Rankine took his repo from his, to the Titans, as it has always done. from the States, but if that was true, noise till patience ceased to be a ver, or boll to flys rich, mouth as if it had lost its flavor, The poor humans who essayit will then I only wish that there were some, "there's lr , house, from which lack of money had "See here, old chap,Now you have l non -murderers with ct soul apiece half tt"' no reason why you should permanent c o 1 o r s. merelybe crushed in these awful i =( driven him forth, He also—and this asked me the Straight duestion, I'll fangg' as white as his.. We purled together. s`'''eat" and holler so. ( �i Each 16 cost package caused him a great deal of rivets and do what I've been thinking of since (,__ for awhile, He RaF uu the trail a' 'Why, father," said one of the little :; contains directions What Titans, and what fan s� . cynical reflection—grasps the fact ever we've met. You've had ex per -more g' ' 'month ahead of ire, and he Ftalced !l' fellows, "don't you knrnv this is n ) so simple any -wo• that, so far as making good in the exper- Rankine, more end puz- tence of this side, Do you know of sled by the strange imagery of his claim and made good, ahead of every—holler•day?" man can dye or tint world of men was concerned, Rankine any opening likely to be available for companion, anion, body. Queer betsgtlr! after he had o lingerie, e111te, rib, was a babe in arms. He had been a chaplike me?" rep worked like a yellow slave for tt The Elephant's -Years. bons, skirts, waists, The ice and the snow,of course, It'dresses, coats, taught nothing, and, though -his de- Afferyturned and,half , ausin will month or so on end he would - sod -d termination to succeed in the world ' ,pausing, 11 never be possible, on account of � It is said that an elephant does not stockings, sweaters, draperies, cover - termination fully met his eye: climatic conditions to upthe nee- deity set out at nigshl, for Dawson, was dogged enough, all the methods (, , get reach proper maturity until it is forty Inge, hangings, everything new. - No, Rankine, I don't know a single essary plant,or make work profitable, paint the town reed and then come �( whereby he proposed to achieve that one. And my advice toyou is oncep enough." back and settle down quietly! Yet, years old, and that,ft may live fora Buy Diamond Dyes —no other kind success were sim 1 like floatingchem- (, ' But the pay streaks are rich p y• more—don't." � ee (.sitars. —and fell 'your druggist whether phi eras before his mental vision. (, Bud surely I've heard of some for- with it all, he. was a white man, and Well, but—"began Rankine, a ► _= I ; 'material you wish to color is wool or tunes been made?"I'll never meet his like again, , Affery likewise incidentally learned trifle testily, "You know what I'm up(= gnA great man is he who docs not lose silk or whether 1t 11 linen, cotton, or that Alan's whole available capital The were made but never ear- "What became of him?"asked Ran•; , , p against, I've got to get a job some- ried out of the Yukon. GoldI There's kine, feeling enthralled us he had• his child's heart, mined goods, was one hundred pounds, and that no where,and myonlyreason for askingnever been by the most thrilling tale' more was likelyto bQ forthcoming. millions Ramon on thotcawful river, g is that your experience of the coup- Rankine among the can While he obtained by suggestion, try must be worth sonmethin " _ sons! Mil- of adventure ho had read in his boy -rather than by cross-examination, "You're „ g'• lions, I tell you!"hood, , right, said Affery lightly. "But what's the good if, asyou sa "He died of double pneumonia, I these outstanding facts from his "It's worth agood deal, But it isn't �__ y Y, the travelling companion, y I it can't be got out• was with him at end.. I nursed Affery remain- of a particularly joyful kind." "Millions weregot out -hidden byhim, and 1» his delirium he talked fin- ed singu Orly reticent regarding his. "Perhapsyou dont want to art ► cessantlyof the gold he had hidden own intentions. On the evening of the:with p the men who got it --and its never , fifth day, however, when the other! thowith it, said Rankine, with a slightly been retrieve(d. Why? Because they and which. was to have taken ltiin side was tactically within sight, if aloof air, as if his pride suddenly back to Arizona to redeem the old ed up in arms. not hail, a suddenly came to close'''. - ! "Let's go and sit down and yarn," quarters. said Affery, gripping him by the arm. They were strolling round the deck after dinner. It was a heavenly, calm'. night—the sea like a millpond, and the' Appearance of Tea No Guide The only way to test tea is to taste it, Many people have the idea that a finely rolled and tippy tea is superior in flavour to a large rough led. In reality this is not of necessity the case. The altitude at which the tea plant grows determines the amount of essential oil and alkaloid theine in the leaf. The essential oil gives tea its flavour; the theine contributes the stiniulating value. The only way to insure always re- ceiving a uniform quality is to insist upon a skilfully blended and scientifically sealed tea like"SALADA" whose reliability, good- ness and delicious flavour have become a household word. Lrg,� ., 7or washing andc eanl�ng ff on can't heat this soap —" Love Gives Itself THE STORY OF A BLOOD FEUD BY ANNUM 8. SWAN. A CA P E ENS i;11BLE, 1 says Mrs. Experience, who chooses soap for its economy and labour- saving value. , "Sunlight puts the sunshine of cleanliness into the home! For washing clothes, dishes, wood'work, lino• leums, in fact, for anything that can be cleaned with soap and water—I call on Sunlight. And Sunlight does its work so well and leaves everything sweet and clean, "Sunlight really is economical, too! You see, every bit of it is pure, cleansing soap, containing no filling or hardening materials, which arc only waste as far as we women are concerned, "You get greater cleaning value out of a pure laundry soap—and so I say, `Always keep a good supply of Sunlight on hand'. It really improves with age. And because of its purity, Sunlight is kind to your hands and keeps them smooth and comfortable." Sunlight is made by Lever Brothers. Limited, Toronto. 5430 u Lght Soap Couldn't Find Her. "DIAMOND DYES" CIIAPTER XV. sky studded With a million stars. The THE WANDERER5 DREAM. I"So it's luck you're pretty - well trusting to, old chap!" observed Af- fery, as they drew two deck chairs 6L into a sheltered lee -way, and turned up the collars of their coats to keep off the sharper night alt.. "Well, luck's about the queerest.thing on earth. You haven't had much up to now, I ga- ther?" meat - I "Precious little. Only one stroke— every •f :if you exempt good health, a fairly i cheerful temperament, and a few good pals." ' "One stroke --eh?" repeated AfTery,. and lingered, as if longing to hear what it was. But Rankine did not enlighten hien. His face was turned towards the green and heaving masses of the sea, and there was more in his eye than the emigrant's yearning for home. "A queer tiring is hick. How it de- serts the best of chaps persistently! t Deserts, mind! No sort" of shilly- shallying; but ii complete and finished job! it doesn't seem to be any kind of use fighting against it. I've seen it times out of number!" "de's a pretty hopelefts doctrine, isn't it?" observed Rankine rather shortly. "I suppose you're slinging it at me as a warning not to expect too much on the other side." "Don't expect. anything, for you won't get it. -It's the cocksureness of the Englishman " "The Scotsman in this case," put 'in in Rankine quietly. • S8L1C No. 20--'26, . "The cocksureness of the English- )Avvnfs,- encourage the ,t'lilldren to care for their teeth/ • Give{ them Wrigley's It removes food particles .from the teeth. Strengthens the sums. combats - acid mouth. Refreshing and beneficial! R82 -.STALED tIOHT • KEPT RICHT Tit FLAUOR LA4 usicarl aids Di esffon Mustard stimulates the flow of saliva, and of the gastric juices inthe stomach; It neutralizes the richness. of fat foods, makes them easier to digest and assists you in assimilating your food. Mustard makes ordinary dishes more tasty. Alwayu have it on the table—freshly mixed with cold water for every meal, COOK BOOK FREE Our new Cook Book con- tains many recipes for deli- cious salads, mayonnaise, pickles, etc. Write for a copy. COLMAN•KEEN (CANADA) LIMITED 102 Amherst Street MONTREAL' ase homestead. There were womenfolk on it who -were dear to him. But I never got to know either their names or the place where they lived. I made a journey to Arizona first time 1 got clear—about a year after he died, But, of course, it was like looking for a needle in a haystack. I hadn't the ghost of n clue." "So he died babbling about hidden gold?" mused Rankine,. feeling his pulses oddly stirred by the strange re= ectal, "But probably ii: was only the ravings of a sick man whose mind was obsessed by one idea," - "Not altogether. There was gold, for Arizona Red had talked of it often in his normal moments. He was beginning to trust. me --well, as one man trusts another he has proven in these hellish wastes. Towards the end, when we both knew that there wasn't a chance, he' tried to give n, clue—but it was no Use," "But didn't you have a loiic for yourself?" Affery smiled the begs, slow smile of superior knowledge. "ft wasn't tied up in a stocking -foot or. hidden under the floor; or on the ` roof of the shack, ny son! 'These! things are not done In the Yukon. Arizona --.trusted the mother -earth from which he took it. But no human intelligence will ever locate, mue.h less. strike, the lucky apotl" "That seems rather hard? • doesn't it,. after your poor pal's superhuman labor to get it outl" ':Sure thing. But that's the law of the 'Yukon "' answered Affery; !'There is n kind of sacrilege in man's efforts to wrest 'ter treasures from that great white world, l'm always 4., For Gore Feet—Mlnard's Liniment. fee* Toilet Bowls Clean and. Ramie, amain y ors and iuolerWi5 gee - Clequirt 1 it ;e;1 I owr3son13(Ca .............moommismoomomi0000•01.01001.000m00111000m.00.00110.0..1001 Jr- "-, I1EALTH EDUCATION BY DR. J. J. MIDDLETON Provincial Board of Health, Ontario. t, Dr, Middleton will be glad to answer gtAeations on Public Health mat• tors through this column. Address him at 8padlna House, Spading Crescent, Toronto. In country districts it case of con- the disease had been diagnosed as. ttgious disease sometimes break out whooping cough.Christening Cotintriea. like n holt from the blue, without any! It is a different state of affairs tell There IN an intoreNting legend coo apparent -cause. On the surface it the cities as compared with the cuun- would seen! that the case had occurred' try in the !natter of the spread elf c''1'uing the n;unnar in W111(11Canada spontaneously, but on prying deeper communicable disease, In cities such; got it.; Hanle. Spanit;it adventurers into the history of the outbreak, a' dis=eases as measles, dir)itheriu, coal were the first, co fat' its Is known, to more significant reason is often found, ecal'lct fever lire presentall rho link, visit the American idioms In aeitfCh of Take a _disease like diphtheria. Oc- and it is next`to impossible to trace booty, ii the north they found the casionally n fresh case may develop' the origin of any singe case, Carriers country disappointing. The soil was NURSES The Toronto Iloapllal for Incurables. in 4111110nn with eeilrsue And Allied Hospitals, New, Yerk CIL offers a three years' Cour►o of Tinining to yr.uno Nomnn, baying the Needled education, and dell -rout of becoming r:uytes. Tido 11ospittl his adopted the eight. hour system. The pupils melee uniform, of the School, a monthly allowance end travelling ',peons to and Iron Nev, Yo:k. for further itllormstion apply to the $uper,n1 ndon1. Cat and Queen, The Royal Sorlely for the I'revt:n• tion of 1'rnelty to Animals of Groat Britain, whirl► has been much 1n diel limelight I;rl' , was always warmly implanted by Queen Victoria, %Vhen the society decided to vivo meeialn in recognition of Hliecial nein of bravery in saving the liven of ant- Innis, the de.tlgn for the medal was subnlittr•d to the; Queen. A little, Iirier tho so Iet.c rt'1 r•itr 1 a tetter from her set'1'et:11'y., saying (flat, 118 DO eat Wan 111(111110 .1 til the (I ire, (Queen 1'ir tnr'Iit itad dr;m11 11 0110 hcrtielf ..at....,r•.( (W The name "Red Rose" has been a guarantee of quality for 30 yearly SE "is good tei 111 the ptr►,ltir►n in which the 55 it+he 1 hi The ORANGE , PEKOE is extra ,,. Try it 1 to 11p1,eu1'. - The cat FIIll a•ltpertrn 1)1►nil metals """!!"!" IsEited by the h,wie!y. The Canada Wind. • Classified Advertisements You may praise the glamor and glory nubs WANTS`D To DO MAIN AND _ may transmit the - -.. --- without ande�Y'- w■ .-a ■ ■\ ■• rhe.• ■ ■1 , LUC not very clean,' simileThespeeindspod pay; stork amt any dletanee; cheeses pal& Of spring if •yon w111, 1 1 NU at l pee; whole or ,span time( �. pod And the beauty of earth, bet free Breed 'tamp tat particulus. National Aleaulitaurtail unci as a result, the theorygains„ i showing any symptoms at all, find 80 I µ.til 111,1 (i b}' I he path e h tl, male rue o • ground that diphtheria is a filth dis-; the vicious circle continues. Not so. quota Oso of tits c xprc ssion "Ara t'o.. Asontrul.•• t FOR WEAN 61ft from the frost's embrace;1 c (live rue rho north wind, sweeping over case, No case had heen previously i in the country. There is generally - ' re rted in the nciglibothood. and to one or Inure cases that can be pointed ruulll, uteaninE; It k barren, it was i the 11111, • - Roues') (corks t noted tliat. after' giving expression to • their dissatisfaction they invariably can be Had Through the Rich 1 stings my face. , tiff: Reds,. Loth combs; Black Nenoroset whlu Mad departed t(1 another place! �' ' • 59''r-Lewrd 5t'yeadlotter. Write for—duce,. Jobs' When the French explorers arrived Red Blood Made by Dr. Wil- Give inc tho sky with it.8 gllululer of Jeuoue, laaer,,,n, oat, n.n. ti. on the H('ene( the inhabitants gathered ' Pink ,• stars steel -blue, liam5 i ink Pills, i on the shore and yelled "Ara nada,” And a sclmltar•blade of !noon, swung hoping to drive them away. The ')'hero conics a time in the Il(e of tow and bright— French look this to he the name of the There is No Salvation—For the boy, alm0'.t ever, girl when weakness at- You may keep the langorous darkness, i who will not take his father's advice. ' tacks her. The strain upon her blood drenched with dew, 1 --1;or the town that enact' the lime .supply: Is 1(0) great, and thorn comes And thio slumbrous scents and sounds for Money makers, not children, headaches ital backaches, loss of ap- of the summer night. - - Fol• the ,club that organl$os only petite, attacks of dizziness, heart palpi' for personal advantage. tat.ten, a constant wearinese and a Ab, ale! for the snow that creaks be- —For the ueighborhood that cannot terldensy to n decline. All these symp- neath my tread, • learn co-operation. t intents and purposes, the patient i to as the root of the trouble, and if never had been in contact with any-ithese cases aro promptly quarantined, ono suffering front din ntlieria, Surely the outbreak will soon be stumped out. it must be the result of uncleanliness. There should be little or no infectious A little investigation, ,, however, will diseases in rural districts if the nec- likely reveal the fact that some child essary precautions are taken to pre - in the neighborhood had a sore throat, vent its spread, No child suspected but nothing was said about it havingtof having a disease that is infectious diphtheria. It was a mild cease, per- j should be allowed to attend school. hapsr+.but no doctor was called, or the Tho child should be kept ut home and country, and they c;aieri it Canada. first case may have developed after the doctor called to make an exnnlina- The Spaniards also named Florida, the child had been on a train journey, tion. No•other children in the house meaning Land of Flowers, and Vette- coming In contact with people in the should bo allowed to school either, as zuelo, so called horuusc of Ito resenl- coach.. they are nearly always in contact with biallce to Venice. the sick one and likely to spread the ._p.._.-_.-.,,-, I have in mind n case of whooping disease themselves if allowed to min - cough zesultin from direct infer- glo w tin other children. An ever- Helping the Cotton Trade. tion, A baby of eighteen months was taken by his parents to visit at a getic 'health officer is an effective The cotton famine In Lancashire is home where there were children all agency in any community for prevent- a poignant memory cunnucted with ilio under ten years of age, The eldest ing any outbreak or controlling it,, blockade of the Southern States of boy played agood deal with the visit -t because he has the authority to taker America in the Clvll 1W'ar, with which pi active steps to impose quarantine I , tlg baby, and at tinges would burst) regulations aid other measures tot rho name of Lincoln is inseparably out coughing, though whooping cough! connected. its spread. In the absence of connected, haver since that great dls- at this time was never thought of. p aster there has been much talk of Em - About ten days or two weeks later,'the health officer, the school teacher the baby developed a persistent coogh,l can do much to prevent. the spread of pire•grown cotton, which would ren - which ill spite of treatment gradually; communicable disease by reporting to der such an event. impossible in the grew worse. The mother, treatment, her the edetaiinedr that such at home through nd such tililness, l fuThi�s Is what makes the record of suspicions aroused that it might be and having Inquiries to the , whooping cough, communicated byUganda so Interesting. In 1909.5 the telephone with the lady whom she had nature of the disease. If contagious 1 production of raw cotton In Uganda visited two weeks preciously, told on disease breaks out in a village or rural community, all visiting anmonF, amounted In all to fifty holes, but the inquiring as to the health of the chit- Yr dren, she was grated with the re_ the local residents should cease, all 1813 4 crop is officially estimated at mark, "Oh, we are quarantined. The public meetings should be cancelled 130,000 bales, or 2,600 time:; cis much children all have whooping cough." and all the streets or otheren wise intef rem rmingling. as sThe twenty acreage ago! for 1924-5 anAsy the house had not been visiting ap- The diagnosed cases of infectious dis- shows a Targe expansion over previous luny but this one, it was ease should be kept under strictquer- parently a case of direct infection, amine and till contacts should alo be Ilguree, and with favorable conditions and the infection took place, before is esthinated to produce 160,000 bales quarantined until the danger of or more. Such an increase may have spreading the infection has passed.Y Only by mutual co-operation between a great bearing on the cotton trade. WE WANT CHURNING the tuhlic and the health authorities :N -- can infectious diseases in a rural com- munity be,etfectively stamped out, If MAKE CARE OF there is :eo-operation, the efforts should be crowned with success. And the st nl ry of driving snow that (� • N ALL nATrIONO Eons MAI ROCIts, While and tier rd• Orpington', 15TStlo Sentence Sermons. 0 We supply cans and ;►ay oxpros,, charges. Wo pay daily by express money orders, which can be cashed anywhere without any charge. To obtain the top price, Cream must be true from bred flavors and contain not less than 30 per cont, Butter Fat, �° - Bowes Company `Limited, Toronto- For oronto For references—Head 0tllce, 'Toronto, Dank of Montreal, or your local banker. Established for over thirty years, ideal Spring Vacatio�p Only 2:Dayrfront NewYork Go in May and June when Bermuda le ablaze with Flowers—perfect days for rest or play, Pelglial, Twin -Screw Steamera "FORT VICTORIA" and "FORT ST. GEORGE" Zt, For Illustrated Booklets Write FURNESS BERMUDA LINE 4 Whitehall Street. • New York CitY or Any Local Tourist Agent FREIGHT PREPAID IN ONTARIO Pope's Crown of Gems. Stomach disturbances and constipa- The wonderful Papal tiara, or crown, tion aro responsible for much of .the which the Pope wears, is, a Inagniflcent peevishness of babies and young child - emollient, '' • i It is formed on a basis of very line 'ren, When filo baby is cross or Irrlt• felt covered with silver mesh, . on which there are three crowns. Each- of peso consists of a gold band, set with jewels and edged with two rows of pearls. There are ulnety pearls in each row., In addition, the first crown is de- corated with sixteou rubies, throe emeralds, a sapphire and eight gold points. The second crown has ten emeralds, eight bolas rubies, ono chrysolite, two aquamarines, six small rubies and three sapphires. Niutoen bales rubies, four sapphires, three hyacinths, three. aquamarines, one garnet, eight gold floral ornaments —each set with two emeralds, one bales ruby, and a chrysolite --and eight gold points each trimmed with a gar -s net, adorn the third crown. - Tito top of the crown is covered with a thin layer of gold in which eight rubles and eight emeralds are set. This covering is surmounted by a'gold- en globe, on top of which is a cross composed of eleven brilliants, BABIES EASIER M., able the mother should not resort to so-called soothing mixtures,to -correct -the trouble for in tiro majority of cases these mixtures simply drug the child into an unnatural sleep. What is need- ed is a gentle laxative that will sweet- en the stomach and regulate the bowels. Such a remedy Is found in Baby's Own Tablets. They are easy to take and are guaranteed to be en - Grisly free from opiates and narcotics. Concerning them, Mrs, Jos, Tousalg- uant, Ste. Sophie,. Que., writes:—"I would like all Mothers to know that I feel there is no other medicine to equal Baby's Own Tablets,\ I always keep a box in the house and their prompt use never Pails to restore'my little ones to health," The Tablets aro sold by medi- cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co,, Brockville, Ont. Mildew sometimes appears on blan- kets; owing to their being stored in a damp place. For this stain there is no remedy; so- prevention is better than cure, Settee . $32.00 Armchair $13.75 Rocker . $13.75 Thle Suite Described . Fully on Page 76 of Our 1925 Furniture Catalogue • Just a Small Sum Down. Balance Spread Over a Long Period Without One Cent of Interest ;Charged to Prices Quoted. The construction Is of high-grade Anlol'Ican out•rounll reed 1n a rich brown finish, Settee seat has 24 toll springs and each. chair seat inns 0 coil springs. Inside length of settee- 49% inches; chair cents 20 by 19 inches each. A splendid assortment of cretonne coverings from which to choose._ This suite is a very popular seller and the pieces may be bought. separately, Send For Free Furniture. Catalogue - To -day Every -Canadian home should have this Furniture Catalogue. Tremendous, range of Furniture, • -Stoves, Rug's, .Llnoleuine and - ChinaW&re,' photo` Illuetra4ed. hpiendid values, THE F. C. BURROUGHES FURNITURE CO., LTD,, Dept. W.L., Corner Queen and Bathurst Sts., Toronto, Ont. Gentlemen,—Ploaso send, without any obligation whatever on any pari, a free copy of your 100 -page book of 1925 Furniture Styles. Name Address The Furniture Co., Ltd. (Dept. QUEEN' and BATHURST TORONTO, ONT. : For toms may not be present in any par- the triumphing wind, that calls For the manage In which" both ticulur case, hilt thio presence of any and laughs and sings, parties aro futerc>sted chiefly In Eight. —For the team on .whloh every player wants 10 bo the star, . • -For' the play that depends upon smut for its pepularhty. one of then( shows the necosalty for prompt treatment. And the very best treatment is through the blood -making Unite qualities of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, They are the ono thing needed That shouts to the eters and bends the pine tr'ee's head, And over the wide white world Its challenge flings, to maintain the health of growing girls Then praise the dews and the showers and w0111el1 of mature years, of spring If you will, lienee Ls a bit of strong proof:—Miss Or the long, hot summer days with Matilda Brenn, King highway, New- their languid grace; castle. N.11., says:—"1 was in an ex. Give Inc the north wind, piping over tromely retedown and nervous condi- the hill, tion. 1 was losing flesh, had a poor And the scurry of driving snow that appetite, always pale, and suffered Ire- stings my face. . quentiy from headaches. In fact my --Norah M. Ilalland. condition can best be described as ----�_ inlserable. I had tried several treat- "The Mille of the Gods." inents but they did not help me in the This 1s an old Greek aphorism taken least. Then, reading ono day about from the "Oracula Sibylline." - The Dr, aVilliams' Pink Pills, I decided to original, literally translated, reads as try them. _After using three boxes I follows: "The mills of the gods grind 1 was much Improved, but continued un- slowly, but they grind small." Long - til I had taken six boxes, with the re fellow, In translating It, inserted the salt that I and now well and strong,' word "exceeding" and made It read: 1 with good color and a hearty appetite. In view of what Dr, Williams' Pink Pills have done for ale I cannot re- commend thein too highly," You can got these Pills from any medicine dealer, or by mail at 50 cents Mlnard'e Liniment for Colds. a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, . Why Pure Bred Sires. "'Tho mills of the gods grind slowly, hut they grind exceeding small." The sumo thought Is found In Plutarch and other ancient writers. Canadian live stock men are intense- ly,lnterosted in the extension of the Market for beet and beef products. In order to compete successfully against other countries .wo must improve the quality of our live stock. Tho Argentine Republic Is witho:•t a doubt the hardest competitor for the English market, Today they are able to place a large quantity of beef on the English market at very much lower price than Canadians, This pro- duct is very much superior its qunlf S. Therefore, the question confronting us 1s, what can we do to beat this com- petition? As we look over the reports of nuc - tion sales hold In Great Britain dur- ing the last ten years, wo find. that the big ranch owners' of the Argentine have paid enormous prices for bulls to head their pure bred herds, Alen who know conditions, in the Ar- gentine say that these high priced bulls are first • used on the smaller herds and later turned 1n on -the range of cattle. It Is little wonder that the quality of beet animals in that coun- try is exceptionally high, 'Thus, we can readily sou that we must follow tine example of our strongest competit- ore and use only high class pure bred bulls on all our grade Morris, Figures from our Canadian stock yards Show that only about 2% of the stock marketed during 1919 was fit for export trade, To those who sit down and figure otit the loss sustained, the figures are startling, - Tho average farmer lcses about $30 to $40 per (lead on steers bred from grade sires. Facts prove that on every instance, the steers from pure bred siren,' not only sell for higher prices, but make more rapid tend more economical gains than those shod by grains bulls, While we are well aware that high prices aro obtainable for almost tiny kind of beef animal, yet it is very clear, to those who follow market re- ports closely, that the low grade stock are the first to suffer when the mar- kets take a downward drop, It is,, therefore, quite clear that the its -o of grade sh'os is a losing proposi- tion viewed .from any angle. It is high time that wo discard inferi- or bulls whether they. bo grade or scrub purebreds. • This is important because of the fact'that the hull used on a herd in- fluences all the years of calf crops, Discard the inferior type of bull and increase your year's income. • Brides.- in some of tho southern prottitices of the Philippine Islands seldom attend their own weddings. Unsightly nail holes may bo filled with a mixture of fine sawdust and glue.. Fill tho (role with it and leave till dry. - - For Gore Throat use Mlnard'$Liniment Co., 25 Front St, East, Toronto, Ont.. i. ItSUE No. We'll,- " - • Man or company, your character is built upon what you do, not what you - say or intend to do. fit) I1 1 rOR youn EYES. Refreshes Tired Eyes Write Murine Co.; CMrhpo,forEyeCareSook GOING FISHING? ' - Take along' a' bottle of M1nare'e. Wonderful • for insect bites. • Also. gives quick relief for sprains and: bruises, • • ,• ;,. Methylated spirit is excellent for cleaning mirrors. Apply with. a soft cloth and polish with another. - I PI' Say "Bayer" - Insists Unless you - see• the "Bayer Cross" on tablets you are not getting the. genuine -Bayer prod- uct proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years, - Accept only a Bayer package ,whichcontains proven directions Randy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists Aspirin is the trade tweet( (registered fn Canada) of Bayer '.tanufaclure of-.Mono- acoticacldcster of fialtcy cacld, •. The _Ritz-Carlton, HotelAtlaw Jntic Clty• 1. Neersey - , America's Smartest Resort Hotel, Famous for its Euro. -pean Atmosphere. • Perfect Cuisine and Service. Slagle rooms from $6.00 Double rooms from $3.00 European Plnu New Hydilatric and Electro - Therapeutic Department. ' • GtUSTAVE TOTT, Mann fret . Thin Fol • If you aro vtO0,k, 'thin stud nervous, lot your druggist supply 'you with Bitro•Phosphate, It is guarlutteed to incroas•o weight and ,strefigth and res store energy, vigor and nerve force, EOZEMA IN: RASH ANDBLTERS Had•to keep Handslta•rid-.. aged!. Cli'ctlr Foaled, '. Eczeria brokr.yut in a rash and blisters ,between my fingers and oil the backs of my hands. The 'akin was red and' awolfen and 'used'tb peel off, , It itched and burned badly and was awfully sole 'especially when I put my hands in'watbr:'•'.I had 'to keep niy hands bandaged. -" I sent for a- free sample of Cuti- cura Soap and. Qintment htlped me:' I, purchased more and after using one cake, of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Oint- ment I was. completely.. heale$1" (Signed) Mist; Nettie Keesa., R: R. 1, Liptowrl, Ontario. ' •' Cuticura, Soap, • Ointment and Talcum are al) you, need. for ever}/• day toilet and nurhery purposes. Sample Eqqb. Free by Mal Address. Camden Depot: '•liteobonte, Ltd., HontrraL Wee; Soap fie, Ointment 26 and Pe, Talcum 8dc, Cuticura Shaving Stick 20c, HER NERVES BETTER NOW Received ` Much' Benefit by LTaking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound 'Chatham, Ontario.—"I started to get weak' after my second child.was. born, and kept on getting worse until:I could not domy ownhouse- work and was, so bad - with my nerves that I.was afr9id to stay alone at any time. 1 bad 'a girl working for me a whole year before I was able to domywashing again. • 'Through a friend I learned of•Lyydia E. "" Pinkham's Vegeta, )le Compound and took. -four bottles o t. • I gave birth to a .baby boy the 4 .dayof September, 1022. I am still do my sawn work and washing. Of cour- I don't.; feel well every dtly.becauso - don't get my rest as the baby is so cross. But when 1. get my rest I feel One. I am still taking the Vegetable Com- pound and am going to kap on with, it. : until cured. My nerves are a lot better since taking it. 1 can'stay alone day or night and not be the least frightened. You can use this letter as a testimonial and I will answer letters .from women asking about the.VegetubI s Gbm ound. "- • —Mrs.- ClfAImIis CAM! )14, 27, +ort,ythd Street,' Chatham,. Ontario, - . Mrs. Carson is cyilling.tiowri+i;+ to any girl or woruun,:suffering from female troubles. - Price $1 per pkge, Arrow Chemical. -- — • PAGE 4 --THE BLYTB STANDARD—Nay 21, 1925 PROhoenel Old Illattemenfe ADVENTURES AMONG 1„tI(;t1IOS. pp•:eseses,seeseetee.s.ecete;s,'rw7s444 UM* $sen Made and Accepted IN the Ave Free From Convention, Saks Or. Queerest Places. Wilfred T. Grenfell, Mitny proposals of marriage haps Dr, Wilfred T. Grenfell, the motif - been trade and accepted In the queer- ettl ntlselonery, in the Free C'4urch- em; places and under unusual con- man, relates some of his adventures 41000$0 says a writer in a London among -the Eskimos• ('�'e,;.f«:..�";'". ;';';,.;..;., ; piper, but it must be agreed that one "Eskimos," he Hays, "are free from1 For the second time in a space of of the most up-to-date "(Mingo for convention. One of our travellinga few weeks, an Indian potentate lits the declaration of the tender passjpn ministers was called upon ata place WKS selected by an aviator. Called Spotted Island to marry a coU- been made to figure, more or less tits - Re Invited the Aid, with whom he pie, the bride -groom being a kind of gracefully, in a case which has at- lta4 long been In love, for a joy -ride, king in the vicinity. When the min- tracted wide attention, This royal and she accepted his offer with celet'- lately• arrived he found the Islanders bidder for intereational celebrity ..ia ity, They set off, and for a time the Rivaling him In the schoolroolu. It the Maharajah of Indere Who is au novelty of her surroundings intrigued was not until he actually entered the ?per irnriensely, but ss London Laded building that he discovered that the , cued of inspiring a brutal attack away with all its familiar landmarks, bride was the man's deceased wife's , upon a nautch dancing girl, The and she eouid se?() nothing hut cloudy, niter. : assault did not occur In the fast - her ante gave way,' rind rine sat "Thin being a forbidden relation- nes.,es of the inahtu•ajah's realm, but quietly crying, This was the pilot's ship, the minister refused to proceed c r of ohportnnity, and he aot only comfort-, with the ceremony, whereupon the In 1110 'limit fashionable quarter ted her, but plucked up courage and intended bridegeoout remarked: Bombay. Moreover, it remitted not r7tispeeed his love-tal'e into her ears, 'Never mind, parson, one of the oth- only in the death of a wealthy native, )lith the result that when they land- ere will tlo.' And, turning to tho but in the wounding of a. itritieh oftl- od they were engaged. expectant crowd, he selected a suit- c:er who rushed to the assistance of 'Even more daring was the psycho- able partner, and she was willing. tthe girl andher protector, wounded,but only logical moment chosen by a eelebrat- , One day the hospital ship Strath- � 1 performer on the tight -rope, It cone was found to have her bunkers three companions were tired at, and wee part of his program, whilst in on tire• one of them happened to he a colonel, raid -air, to carry a girl member of "There were 30 tons of coal As a writer in the New York World ti►c+ company across a swinging wire, aboard. Water was thrown on the Maya, Indian natives are not exactly One filly he managed to whisper, burning coal, and the flames were encouraged to lire at ]iritiah colonels, "Will you marry nee?" and received smothered for a day or two. Then and while a point might have boon A wholly satisfactory answer before they started again. Once more water stretched out of deference to the i.e deposited has precious burden in was poured on the coal, and the boat maharajah, this affair turned sud- safety at the other end of the rope, was sent ahead, we not daring to atop dent), into one that could not be A popular stage -favorite, who had to find out whether the fire was out , Itue Ited up. !seen taking part In some tender love- or not, i The nautch girl In question is scenes with the feuding lady in a "Wo travelled for ten days with known as Mumtaz Mahal, namely, certain play for some time, tell head- the hold on fire, and covered stations Beauty's Pinnacle, a title not un - aver -heels in love with her. On one for more than 600 miles. It was the faultier to Englishmen in the last oecaaloa, all unsuspected by the audi- most anxious ten days of my life," ! couple of years bucantle of the ex- ploits he Infused such genuine feeling Dr. Grenfell speaks highly of the ,plops of a horse bearing it the inti his lines that hie companion re- courage and hardihood of these cnratzed that he had ceased to litmus Northern fisher folk. late merely the ardor of the lover, "Near one of our hospitals two men and, responding promptly to his cue, alerted off one morning acmes a accepted ltlrn there and then. Their frozen arm of the sea on a komatik marriage followed a few months (a light sledge). Their object was later, to fetch some firewood from the oth- At a recent ball a uoblenaan espied er shore. They had not proceeded In the crowd of dancers, gaily jazzing, far when the ice gave way, and the the one girl In the world for him. , whole team full through, carrying the He Loped that his love was reclpro- men with thein. sated, but parental authority had for- ; "One disappeared under the ice, bidden her to dance with him. She and was drowned. The other suc- ttad been compelled to obey, but her ceeded in disentangling himself, and !over could endure the suspense no reached an ice floe to which he clung, longer, and as she pirouetted past but could not reach the top. )Tint, he contrived to slip into her 1 "A sister of this man saw the accl- hand a program on which he had . dent and ran to the aid of her bro- seribbled: "•R'IIt yon?" , ther. She had the presence of ntlnd The neat dance was •the Hesitation to throw herself full-length on the Waite, aad as She' glided round the Ice and glide along until she reached pillar by which he was standing she her brother's hand. Already he was returned httn the card, on which she , half frozen to death. But elle mann;�- had written: "Won't I?" . aged to hold him until the rescud boat came. One of her own legs was Mathias Is Their Clothes. through the ice." Me1oram:� In �'omR�ay 'Hie Interesting item of informs- I'er•sfan Coronation Rug. tioiii that the Tibetan Lamas who redentIy Visited the Old Country an- A truly unique piece of Oriental dinged in but one wash a year sug- work to Persia's wonderful "Corona - vete estate 01 primeval savagery to , tion" rug. It embraces a pictorial our Western mese of what is. right ; record of Persia's rulers from times and proper. But in parlous parts of antedating the Christian era to the the world strange customs prevail :time of the World War. During the w1t!Oh to the practical British mind ' last year it reposed in a storeroom world be classed as sheer madness. i in New York. Work upon the rug It is probably news to many that : was started in 1906 and went on until high -carte Hindus take their daily it was completed. It was to have bathe with their clothe* on! knd yet ; slorifled the crowning of the Sultan it la a tact. Their religion compels Ahmed Mirza, on the occasion of his Wets to have a bath daily. They will ,•expected ascension to the throne of n,titber toueh nor eat anything before t Persia, but was diverted mysterique- b• ving their bath. It is considered ' ly to New York. The rug is a multi - in "scent to bathe naked, even within colored one, is 16 feet long by 11 their own houses, and a rich semin- feet wide, and watt specially woven driri'or a poor Burman obeys the same during the period of seventeen years, raja, I being the handiwork of the.27 moat :Men, women, and children are gen- 1 famous rug -makers then living in of Ily seen bathing in open wells, ' Persia. With remarkable fidelity to native policeman, dielarlug that she Hogg, Grant, Ch►c ley A9t cf aI lane, Mc fustics, or on seashores with dhoties i features and absolute verity to cos- ' was,* a British - subject detained Dermal. \1cConr,cll, Foote at d'1[ami;tun on-,: A dhoty is a piece of white cloth !fume of the time of each individual t depicted,against her will and demanding Brit- minisltrs, and hlcssis, Hunch, 1)1•dde, elfbUt six to eight surds long, wrapped this rug represents the per- id justice, Official inquiries were 1 , r rod the body. After the bath they , trait of 160 of Persia's ,great kings, , i1le.v felt, Strachan, 11,cNav Latd•.Iw. , made, and Mumtaz's petition was :I and farm property. If you content - AO wrap a dry rhoty round them ' or shahs, and is otherwise highly de- : I{irhe, I{ig;gina, hras:r, Locher tin, ;,rid I amenia and invite your inspection. i P Y• aird tet the, wet one alt trotn under- corated, There aro 1,000 knots to r granted. She was declared to be a yatilt, ' Insc:ri y p'' y 'b. p Weir, Mr. Aber was i' led Inscriptions neatly,careful) and tem Tate hu 'iu call on us and eve• I free woman, •eldtrs, aei�th, so that they neither expose ,each square inch, or about 25,300,000 So she went to Bombay and soon I for this meeting as mudtrator, Mr. Mc- I promptly done. I will give you full purlieu) .rk. The .k tetldth 1 Upays N O oQ% Pir PAIttfrVARNSHES rot Evt;ryl'ut/aa:.r,--rot. very Surface Write to }tend Office. Moult -cal for Free E3ooklet ' HOME PAINTING MADE EASY SOLD BY ItIUNRO i13ROS., l3lyt ), Ont. c,• -)1 lr '��111 � a ; ;u ' REI.) STAR lie ..it 1 : •...Jck.Jb#-+[ NAVIGATION CO, i.. ANNUAL LOW FARE EXCURSION Goderich to DETROIT -and Return ����ti• .�:.+ 11,/ romp ww,��tuyy,'n.1.-•••�ir?,C. ...,u,• f.�t:..i-.4� w .y'. - •ri3f, (,.},7 llttl�.� r. � e�l�•. ,,,.�._ , ;M+H1;�� •►rte .•+,. , ,—.45,%7,74-14. ..:.�??a•,x,. .• h.ly.'� � �,y,.' i_<t..e'' _S .tt_ .,r.Y,Jils..v_n • ". •... ti•.*.w:*.-„Nt•.ssiYi�7j��'i:1L'.,LCa,eYrr.-. �;nr�' ,�.:.'r'�.li"•rr..r, o•, �--•- V;'w 2Lrr:'!'"<ri:..xl ,`, 4) i ':t4,t "r!fry(7fL!fryel'tr oti, 'I'I:II; Blia STEEL STEAMER GREYHOLIN.D f;:!4.00 SAFE, SPEEDY COMFORTABLE $2.50 horse also being the property of an Round Trip WILL LEA VE.GODDRICII One way ' !ANTI I, Indian potentate' A nautch dancer TUESDAY •t at is simply a professional dancer train- ' , J tJ N. .9th t 9 . 0 a. in. ed In the nautch or mach, the tra- i Dr. �' . %. Colborne, ditional ballet of India. The word Ai'1'lvllln' Port Huron 1..'Q ), Ill. I)('tl'O1t 5.30 ) 111, i , , .� I '1 ' i ` PHYSICIAN Sl(:lA,•; & SURGEON has come to signify a pc't'sut, with- Returning leaves Detroit 1 p. Tl�., j hlll'�'(Ia�', June 111h, Medical Re >tcscatalive 1). S. C. I' out morals, just as the word geisha I '• has been similarly corrupted, a con- ! The only h:;at trip frrrn Goderich to Detroit this FcaFc.n. Children + office over lt. M. McKay t1 Drug Stun e notatlgn that does not provall in the ' betw,°'°n 6 and i 2. 1 elf •fore, Visit your Michigan hinds r std ;ce hib { f ' 1+1'1'I.!►S I('„ T)t N('1��'�', BAlt.ltlyrI It,511fill'I'I'Id , oli iflt' 1'1'Itl,l(', i (t� 1'l:\','. iNt,l'.It, 110;,1;1' •rt) I anise -' (,[marl; ;t l vet, 1i 1, \''i i I , �f'N Llhl'; Is:�I'1:.11'I ('11, III' C:1N';11);., f'1f(),tl'1'I;(tl',;,1 1 i;(ulltl':��IVP. h I, ' is .i.,' tir',i ,Iu,„i II. It; 1,ON(, Ititittl;t 111,naget tttele' ieh J. 1-I. P. ELLIOTT 5 NOTARY I'I'I:i I(' ,� (l,N\'h:v.1t�ct:t'. Fire, Accident, Sickness, Employer's Liability, Plate Glass, Autoino- 1:ilr nn'l hive, Sind) Insur:cnce, 131.Y'11 i, ('Phone 104) ONTARIO. , I-1. A. 111cIN I'YI�E, L. D. S., 1). D. S t+l:v 11 I' - OfTlce ()vet McKay's Drug Store. Oil e hours 9 to 12 1 to 6 Will visit Auburn each Tuesday .af:crnonn. 'Pi one 130 Dr, VV. Jas. Milne, PHYSICIAN & SUR(;h•,ON. c't)it(t°ii;it ('')1'`�'I'Y 01� IIUItC►'!. (Ince- Queen Sh'c et LZ:e,idcncc - Dinslcy Street. • • ONTARIO countries where tho wordy - were busy Detroit. A'i:l ithtful stip over the great intecnath:nal highway Lhure. Nn. C)(iice 51; Pr�icence 46 coined, Mumtaz appears to have I B1.YTI ( ON 1'A1? 10 of lahes and rivr,rs. i + been a famous dancer and a great beauty, but as she Is now twenty - its OONI IG e l OUT OF O'OOERICH five years old, she would be popu-1 Monday June 8th, .t 8.30p. tarty regarded as stricken In yearn Imo' in India, and most of her triutuphs, ' FINZE!.-3 Or:'teotra for dare: ,: in starter's new ball room. amatory and'terptsehoroan, would Three hales or, he. utiful Lake 1'uron fir 50c. Children. 2[c supposedly belong to the past. It LALT' TRIPODERICiI TO DI TI�OIT, FRIDAY, JUNE 12. at 9.50 a, nt. I,.rt til ti,,. 10,11. r.t,,►+I,►t�! t ui„1) rr'1I1; c has long been a custom of the native • 'I'I:i } A/I1 \f'; j i!Ci11)14ECR, COUi-rtiCH, ONTARIO 1'It1III ,til,-• li i�••,� •'i 11'•1,• '�'tI.) , Ut.tt•r Indian courts to have a troupe of �__ _”-•---- dancers In constant attendance and the most comely of them have usual- ly found Savor in the sight of the reigning prince, T1i t Waft the case with lilumtaz at the Iniit of Indore, to which shay was attached at the ago of fourteen. Once she accompanied the maha- rajah on a visit to England, and her mother sought to have the Authori- ties intervene and resettle her from her pnaition of guilty splendor. ]3ut the girl asserted that. she was travel- ling with the maharajah of her own_' free will and she was not interfered with.. The ruler's wife or wives accepted the situation as normal and i Mumtaz continued at. the court, Whe- ther ther the affection of her master cool- ed Is not said, but some little time ago Mumtaz was discovered In an ! `.'-"" .-----___.---......_...._---'-•-- -- .- Intrigue with a member of the staff Pts d tytur), o f tpiu:' Economy -- Charm saves time Charm makes your favorite fabrics just like new 0101;11,11y nt tu+:'t,',l to. Ielephoue 'I�e —._... 'bat h Nt toy t•Xg,Pnbe. (-' /�• l USE CHARM 6. JOHN M. STALKER AUCTIONEER, AU(URN, - t ONTARIO 1'• . n. ti r,.t: s see er , l' .1: i. t1Wet.' Id! r 0 ! h • ,i ) eh `:; ul'ivr11 Ofti'�' viii I►f I'I,$,,lt'11' tt',+.+10:1!.'i t�) 'I' 1, Ilh'►nu n► d;►lt' i at toy OXiion t ',t 4 ��"'t''l' r1" NMI T'AR.M i aS' CLUE. Co-operative Buying and 1st and 3rd 'I•hu►sday of cath month. I l k:I i \ I), • ,I,1 S f l• II i \ 1i President. Shipper '1,11 LUIi, and forfeited the princely favor, But tact q�y �} �. w, she was not permitted to depart in 1 The 1 csbytery of Huron held it, c.', I Vi'i�i� �f���� jt��11�VY���tiia�t� NM; peace. She had to escape by a daring u'ar met the: on Tuesday, at Ciintoe a lilt I h 1 ' Sec S '('rens. • h, r as the largest andmos compete strateg;etn. Accompanying her mus- the fc.lios ii g p,esartl: hlessrr. A y. I tpr on. a visit to another ruler, alto ; ,,, stock, lhs'-most beautiful designs to •----^—___.__.________--____-__._..- sprang from the railway carrhtr'r. and acting; inodetawe, Drs. Flach� r Ard Lao. ; choose (rum in threw her time around the reel# of a ;km.Ferguson G,Im •ur, Ala Telford, THE STANDARD PEAL ESTATE MARBLE, SCOTCiI AND CANAD. AGENCY, IAN GRANITES. We have at the present time I44'�►�d We make a specialty of Family Mon.. with us some vety desirable villa e y nor let the dry cloth get • no e o t e 1 nen warp threads became acquainted with Abdul I{rlillr D�rnrid resigned Itis position .,s nu,de,at- t Electric tons for carving and Letter - wet, Even when travelling they man- 1 to produce the wool nap that forms ;Battle, the sun of a wealthy ACo i or and his resi'ttaliun was artel ted, ifig. age to have their daily bath at eta- the velvety body and creates the por- •• I 6 Cions where the trains halt for about trait and decorative features, hammerion merchant. This young I i he meetingwas reg ularhy begun w'ilh gall and sec us before placing your rran was a nurmbe►• oP a new cies twenty minutes, raise, reading tit t he weld arc} n aye( by order. r s that has made its t p 1 Mnt.crn Also a good table. 'I his 1tobt. A. `i�l(l>ltoifl properly it in good repair and has ly,for this purpose, and the spectacle of which there la any record, were :are neither of royal nor peasant en,ttn, 'the Presbytery ut Sainii, and Mr. a,rcr;, WINGI IAM, ••• • ONTARIO .,dwelling .. o eC,thls strange religious rite being ' those lett on Sable Island in the ' Frame on King Street with 1 ,and who have been neaniiuj; some : of the staff of young pt:cl,le's Wo.k and �__ ___.___�_--_ 1 acre of land, I his )ro )cel is in ca 'ted mitt wltl! unfailing regularity Atlantic to the southeast of Nova <<I { 1 Y r} oP the. vices of their heifers. I or ' gun were received'b • the ['reshot r'. and Is; Sine which causes Europeans to' Scotia. They were lett on the !eland instance, they have developed a 5 1 good state of repair and can be pur- ttla'ttrel at such seal, by Baron de Lery and his Portuguese somewhat sultanle view of drt;lrable aslud to ail and cu►rrsput�d, TI :e :Hun MY OPTICIAN chased on reasonable terms, associates in 1599. Tho !eland was rcc'rds of I3iyth and Grand Bend at•d :r Battle of the Nile, females, and having, plenty of money . Brick dive lingon Queen Street, in thea larger than !t la to -day, but have been able to compete with Corbell were ,rt cnt ed for ex,mtr,,,tiuu ��(r i r q n t r n riill D of the Nile, or Aboukir, then as now, it was chiefly a sand l YV t t [i U l t � 1.11. ll� ��tJ good rc[;air. Apply for fuller parlicu- ,1 i prince a for their favor, Had Mu.c1• and committees were appointed 1„r t al rollowi,t are some properties that are well worth investigatinn:-- Two storey solid brick dwelling. Most of the railway companies t appearance n ' r c i First Horses In Canada. have welts near such *tailors epactal- The first horses brought to Canada, • India in the past generation—name- ' Mr. McDonald, There wetc j.t'..c u1 al -o ly, the sons of wealthy persons who Mr. Anderson, of India Mr.Monteith of hydro installed. ♦ . battle't1he Wight on August 1, 1798, near Il, .tta, off tete coast of Egypt, be- t n the French fleet under Brueys, a the British under Sir Iioratio Nilson, later Lord Nelson. Nine of tit* French line -of -battle ehtpe were lasaen, two were burnt, and two es- ei:Ised. The Fiteneh flagship with R'f ueys and 1,000 men on hoard, blew u ,' and only 70 or 80 escaped. Net- a 'e exclamation upon commencing t battle was "Victory or Weetmin- et r Abbey," It was a victory which p 'ideally ruined Napoleon's carn- 1ign In the East, • • :,, • 1i'twtificstfona. i'.fhe ancient If'hoenictans are said to',.have been the first people to tor - tics' cities, The modern system wan introduced In the year 1509. .Albert Dtirer wrote on fortifications In 1627, and great improvements were made by Vauban, who fortified many places 1st -France and Belgium. He died in 1907. The tremendous increase in the power of artillery and .the Inven- tion of airplanes have necensltatod raaicd1 changes -in the art of fortify- ing: Probably the best fortification an inland city can have is a powerful covering army in the field, First Railway Adv. , The first railway advertisement fa Canada appeared in a Montreal rews- papor in the summer of 1980: It t' nnotinced the time -table of the Champlain and Bt. Lawrence Itail- wey, which extended from Lapratrie, on thee south shore of the St. Laiw- rrnce 'river, eight miles aboveMottt- real, to St. Johns, on, the Richelieu river, The length of the line was 16 miles. It was the first railway in Can- ada, and was opened on July 28, 1880, by Earl °ostord, the Governor. COneratt. ' • bank on which grew some wild grass with a pond of fresh water at about , . lata, j taz passed under the protection of ' purpose and they woe examined Ial.ri ccs• another prince, the Maharajah of ; titled accnrclingrty, DR W, J. MILNE, Brick dwelling on Hamilton Street,, the centre, The horses found subsist- ``Indere might not have cared, but i.he j,% ence and their descendants are the ! idea that one of his former. chattels ! No c•haug;ts were made in the list oft i, Cement garage' on 11 t. ,� acre of Sable Island ponies, now cared for by should flagrantly misconduct hcrrelt ; cce>r:utisaiuncts to tIi Gtne,al Ae�cnlbly, Ii ine Spectacle Ware and land. This property is a good buy for the men of this lighthouse and life- with an upstart like Abdul was bitter ! Mr. Gilmour was uppoiuted to ctuvcy anyone desiring a comfortable home, saving station maintained by the to hitnn. Abdul received several let. gt•ertings to the til, M. & dtty at n aceFederal Department of Marine andAccurate Lens Work Frame dwellinr•r, on Drummond Si.,S ters warning hits of the dangerous field at the Se' tc 11.40 met,iin Thi. 7ro- in good repair .1 i acre o' land. Fisheries, Impropriety of lila conduct, but, he : " b I 1 ,a Specialty. p � (Iisrcgarded them. Ile was perhaps. I test of Dr. Lar Ion and i•thcr:: was 1)Ic,ent Brick dwelling on Queen Street 111 The Orange. flattered at the attention he was re• cd by thein and laid on the table. QUEEN ST. . PLYTH first•clnss repair, 1 The eweet, or China orange, was celving and went his hrcdinse way, 1 • At the afternoon session the resignation ' 1f you desire to archaic a f'rrtnl first carried to Europe from China parading ,the foriner nautch girl in ' of his charge was presented by Mr Mc- p Me- lly the Portuguese in 1547, Orange public, i get particulars from us. trees were first taken into England Ifo was riding with her one ever,. i Cannell, of 1ler,•.all,' and reprrsct,la• Standard ' The 5tatrti�et'd itbe r lions in cultntcrwn therewith were I,; arc), The ua+ a+ � Club f� ellucy, and planted with practically no suc- Ing on Malabar Hill, when a second : })y t;n► a 01 elle l rnsall crlrgrcg't,ti:;n, MS in 1593. They are said to have ,automobile drove along side, tend Its, ' Blyth. Ont, been planted at Beddington Park, halt dnzt n dusky occupants opened ' 'I he rt s i.netion was r,cerptcd. bing List: near Croydon, Surrey, It was assert- fire on the pair. Ahriul received ' The Presbyter y .w;, ; t :It n acdr or.sl,1 by V ed up to a few years ago that the first wounds from whichho died in n Mr. Audi'r,uu, ui [l e Indian !rust wna�y Standard 'and Uri ly (3lobet $6.75 �• sq• ,�t BROS tree that ever bore fruit in hospital, and Mumtaz had her pretty 'staff, and special n.e:;umu was triols .•t • Standard and Mail and Empire,,, 6.75 W h. A..'P� .e � ®E • ? Europe was still standing in a garden face savagely slashed with knives In Lisbon the capital of Portugal. and Mr. Ghandi and tnit;inn.try work le India, Standard and Daily World 6.75 P g perhaps permanently tllatig;urcd, Standard and °HinduWorldn Both Portugal and Spain grew large The murderous assault took place in ; 7 he conference at ranged for by the tont, �► y 4.27 butchers S quantities of oranges, those of Seville, a quarter of the city much frequented j tuittee was entered into with i'11r. hl..ytis ;Standard end' London Advertiser 6,75 mid Ilam bile Spain, being especially noted for by the English residents, and among I of the antral committee in charge oft 'Standard and Free 1)ree.,...,,,,,•,,,, ., 6 75 excellence, those who heard the shots were four 1 , StandardI-Irekkf-st Bacon 38 40c British officers, including ' training fur leadership -among the yoten; . and Toronto Daily Stir 6.75 Back Bacon ,;;,,,,,48 5 Oc g Lieut, -Cul, ; ru e, 'the resignation of Mr, 11icFar. Standard and Family Herald 3.5U C. L. Vickery, I3rltlsh Royal Field ' Pe°P Pork Sausage 22c Art(lleriy, and Lieut, H. 1L Senrtght, I lane is to be considered at a spccial'mect. Standard and Farmer's Sun 3,911 Bologna 20c They dashed to the spot, and despite. ; ing at 13ayfilacl at 2 o'clock hi the after i Standard and Can.Countryman 3.40 [Iced cheese 15c the flring•of another volley, which - 32c wounded the gallant lieutenant, laid 22c hold of one of the murderers and held 20c 22c hint, He wan found to he a menthes Standard and I uvtcrlut 4SO (,cif Roast of the secret service, sfnff of the AU�ty,t.� Standard N 'I 1 15c l0c ' Maharajah of Indere, and it In nap- Standard and Ywitlr s Cum anion 4.50 prised that his accomplices were also A special evening crevice will be held in p Polk. 20c 2Sc members of the Indore entourage. I Knox Church next Sunday, May 24th at ; Standard and Northern Messenger 2,50 We carry a complete line of fresh I .3p Ick, I Standard and C'an, Pt CIOral,.,,,,,,,,,, 3.90 and cured inerts. 1 Standard and Rural Canada x.2,75 r -,,:w. ___._ __ Standard and Farm & Dairy 3.00 ' Standard and Saturday Night 5.10 Rev. A. C. 'I~Iffrn and Mr. E. Bender Standard and McLean's Magazine 4.75 are in attendance tit the Methodist Con• f4rrnce ill I-andon thle Wet*, r'-.r..w-- ._ _-u•1�ww. •. .. _ -,raw .•M• Engraving on signets is mentlonc l in the Book of Exodus XXVIII. "With the work of an engraver in stone, like the engravings of a sig- net, . ." Engraving on plates and wood bry;an about the middle of the' fifteen century. Engraving on glass was perfected by Bourdler of Paris in 1708. The earliest dato known of a copperplate engraving is 1401. Pitching on copper by meann of "aqua -fortis" was in use as early as 1532. No Speaking Part. ' "'Ml the world's a stage." "yes, and very few htlsbrlp(ts get a spgpking part. ' . noon of Tuesday, May 20th. ', Standard arid Farmer'b Advocate 3,50 co,tt'ge Roll ! Standard and Wrnl;iy Witness 3,50 Lard Standard and 1'4 Irl'' Wide ' 3,90 LCef Steak ,. ' , , andPoultry y ,Journa ,,14')A0 .90. Beef Boi' Tho Bone of Contention. 7 o'c o Two warren who claimed the same ratan as husband were airing their troubles in court. "Who's the eklhny fellow over tlier•e?" asked a visitor., "He's the bone of contentlgn,'r chucked the cmu't attendant, , ' 71w li1v tit Ztartdara,• - Bluth Markets. Butter, dairy,, 32 to 3Z Fggi per doz • 24 lo` 2 Hay per ton 12.OQ to . 12 00 Moots nor cwt.. `:13 50 to 13 50 ( rballalrUti Olio fRIAlf 11111 40 MB We have , gcod line cf becks by the fo}lowir.g well hcvvn auUi ors. Make your EelfcticI.1 while the assortment I; collide. Jahn J3tYchan,eLert. Watt n I-1% . Cody, Rex Beach, ,Taney C`r.uc.k, Agnes Latta, Ethel M. Deli, IJingvi all Fordyce; P. C We curI'ou: e, ? r.r.ic Swan, Jack } tithe n, Fuit,:l-1 Ccrrrc.r, John Owen, JeEej: h Iic:e'I )r1 ;, I.;c'er Fla'.ggavt, Ea2'onet s C1`c2y, James fel ver Curwood, Florence 13 rclay, Peter B. Kyne, Ruth Fieldirrg, Frank Webster and others. REPRINTS 85 CENTS A complete line of Ida, a n d High chool Boots and SL;rp'ic':. Magazines and Newspapers. /' The Standard Book & Stationery Stake, Phone 104 BLYTH, CNT CZEMIX 40 =IMMOfla algig= Gra 0 CMS= 'i 43122173SID 0 4 PAGE 5- 'ruE BLYTI-I STANDARy 21, 1925 t i pays to use MARTI N •-•S ENOU R frL&PBLE-ITE FLOOR FINISH NoflliaP like tE For 11ar�dlvood Floors It wears !the Iron Write to Head Office, Montreal for Free Booklet HOME PAINTING MADE EASY SOLD BY MUNRO BROS., Blyth, Ont. THE GURU IN INDIA. Still Exercises Considerable Influence Among the Natives. LIVERP001i IS A VERY BUSY The guru, the sacred man of India, CITY. still exereisee considerable influence among the natives, but his power Is years ago Magic of Great Riser, Rustle of not nearly as great u3 It Was 101110 World's Commerce, Architecture Native papere, however, continue of Leading Streets and ileauty of to tell of the wonderful blessings and Parka Appeal to All. terrible curses he, can work on those who please or anger him, As the gateway to England (rota All gurus havo not the same au- tho West, Liverpool might be excused thorny, but so surrounded Is he with for pride In the immensity of her an apparent sanctity', he may claim anything of his disciples. possessions, One of the old books says that Ever/thing she owns might be (1- "A true guru 18 a man who is In the habit of practicing all the virtues; tolled for its sire, It It is not the who with the sword of wisdom has greatest show on earth, it must bo lopped off all the branches and torn the biggest in Britain, writes Herbert out all the roots of sin, and who has Vivian, dispersed, with the light of reason, Her tobacco is kept in the largest the thick shadows In which sin is Warehmt8e in the world, a skyscraper shrouded; who, though seated on a mountain of 81118, yet confronts their of more bricks than there are males attacks with a heart as hard as a In the kingdom. The quay: would diamond; who behaves with dignity stretch all the way from London to and Independence; who has the feel- Reading, mud vast., also, are the Inge a a father for all 1118 dIncInI.,s' 1925 Season 1925 TIHRou(,II FIRE AND THE PREMIUM CLYDESDALE TAWON x'0;1;;,%', „IL ~ S' x<<tltk Commodore Prince (22591) ) Aireeltles Have !fern l'onunnn . to All Parts of the 11'url+t. I'11•t' l'o'o war'. 110'1111y 11'il'll in .he lfadras high Court for c,+lnllrt'Ilin( •tineteen people to thrust their right lands into a cauldron of boiling II11113d au a trial for arson, says an 1•:111:1 :'li pupil'. '•iucil p;l!.:�1t1 trial atiucltlett have at ' VAnle titer 01' the other lo'ii C0 111 111 0 11 110 all parts of the lverld. It was ' known even amongyl the intelligent (, re( Ito, 1 With the En(Ilsh It was a judicial ti nu Itiynifyitq the rlr:lerminatina of accusalluus for criminal offences by ilei: and warm', It wits ttaroduccd 1',lth other Fuprrs•littnns taken from the cedes of the !Icrmaus, The fire !ordeal was confined to the upper ' (Itr:;,+es the water' to bondsmen and 0 ! C041111000, friar ,, (•11`,111) kit ha•ultlfte I,11;Id�r c!atisc,t gen( tally, lienee the blv with time at1,1 I Ir' It•+rv,,‘ 11'tr, lTr through fire and'V•1S VIII ,i nil ,3'+n" 1(1, II)I,i, ,"ot 111140 h, ('\pt'et.slou of goir'3, JAI, (',, 1)Itrrt., of (,'union. if,, (v n hot i' 11'1110r 10 :1(.'1•Ve all(11110I'. 1 Xrrt'II'',unll% 1'111 ('l'i'ed, it,'.,•,t11,) tyre, 'rho water ordeal was performed of the ('lydesrhde, 1f '+•+inneref'l,if m''z' 1,,,,t1 swe,gegalies at, Doren Cluely 1''tfi. held at Cilie on 1(121. ,Ife tuts stroliiX rrin• cle,, in II II rt porn; hat lc and l; ldr nl.., vl lth ,:old frnl and Ire". II,- li'tv an intr'lllrtent lwar1, ty':I'tt 1 of the ('I1''1r'e tele, fool en 'tr.e1h 111'11 ck cel. nn spier slid shoulder., 11 • as It true type of ilk pra..1 •'!ra'h,. ' ,,,'lrhr+ttrrl (Diene 11 'e',11 vie (:,:1:,1( (mite, ; Weil ,mill for `17.11(1(1. 11I., (13n1 L•.'Ity Vert be Inge, ('1!1•!:111 131:r'i'l) Is tt mous, of tenial ni.'rI' (' )one dere prince ' t' 2:dll) w•eluln, I 1700 lily as 11 thief, year ol(I awl %Own fully netlered »111 easily re- eb''2 0f' Ile., weigh!. ' (Innteeelrre l'r(1,e•', (:),‘.).5111) sire wy, a I'. )nn„nllnr•r h 19:50'11 11 ((33) l'v Parer, 1 It'lchlvv'r (53:13( II616:3) flim P'ee11n SHALL WE CROP IT AND CONSERVE OUR FOREST CAPITAL SULU .LI U 11`. D U S'1 R Y • ENSURE FUTURE PROSPERITY; or SHALL WE MINE IT AND i)E[[LETE OUL FOREST CAPITAL UNDERMINE INDUSTRY 11°1ENACE FUTURE PROSPERITY• National Interest and ,National Security de- mand the Treatment of our Forest Resource, Crop, as.a Crop, TI IL". OJBi'TACLE to proper trctrtmerit is FIRE Jy 'fl•iE CAUSE of fire is CARELESSNESS THE. CURE of carelessness is Aroused Public Opinion. WE MUST ALL PLAY OUR PAR; HON. CHARLES STEWART, f the interior -Ir-tit! b� -1FE ._-- 1r ----, A COMEDY oe will betyre.sentecl by ,the Y. P. S. of St. Andrew's Church, in ' MEMORIAL HALL, BLYTH, ---O N- I \\'•,n'1 11++:3,45) II(1n». (i'mn,ndnre 1''•','• 1 •',''" el '1,11 w•1`• i,u(j' 11011'0)o Imp. (7112:11) teiese:n ,1nel h,•1• Mile '%11 111I'rn 11'3vtnn (10013) 1I:33131 rroe the cl'ebrated mare \1 tt(ul' 1,ind •11r (11)11111, C rnnlndOre, iil, re trill ,+t'tnd for (lie im )I r)V nlent of tatve'( t.hl,( season, as fo3 • Inv.'s; • 1f 11N 1) iY•-will la,, yr his own MtnlIp, 1n'. 2:3. eon. 13. 101l1..l.t: nod prr cleft lc. Ilunl,Inv'I• swear and thee north to tion, 1'nn¢h'ull:'r. for norm; thence west to 1 (I••n's owI,er nil um'Ih to h'nuld• my to 2 el er1, East \\'e.t+'ann-h and .V0 1 ,e boundary nn,l north to 1)anry Mml( to Norman 'l'hon,psee'rl for eight, RIDAY, MAY 22ND, 1925. AT S'O'CLOCK P. M . CHARAC.TERS:. Captain I3raithwaitc who wasn't so slow after all 'John Barrett Captain Little,,,,,, ...... wh3 had a little misunderstanding Alexander Elliott Mr, Greene...........................,,,11'ho playcd.the host.,.,,.,.,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,..I-Iarold Jenkins 'Mr. Smith,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,a neighbor worth wliile,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,F inlay McGowan S rat. "'"'who proved herself a true friend,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,Katie Lnidlltw Mrs, ans,. C Capt. Little's sister who elfzertained under difficulties ..J. Cowan Patience Little' who managed' to make things hum Effie Logan 1-lelen Braithwaite engaged to Captain Little Margaret Cowan -Hope Dunbar who is still hoping W'nifred Cowan Hyacinth a loquaciou' colored•maid • Mrs. F. Marshall SYNOPSIS: AC'1 f-Mrs...Greene's living -room. Lite afternoon. ACT II --Same las Act I, ifext morning. ACT III -Garden near the house. Salve evening, ADMISsIQN: ADULTS 35C., CHILDREN 25C. Proceeds toward Mission Work of the church. - �OLIN FINIGLAND, ALEX. ELLIOTT, President..: Secretary. In either hot or cold. In cold lvater the persons i-ai ;tested were adjudged 17uloeent if thdlr bodies were borne up by the writer. In hot water they were to put thtar bare arms or legs into or:ailing water, and if brought. out again unhurt they were declared innocent. \Cun1on accused of incontinency formerly underwent the ordeal to prove their innocence, A prisoner who pleaded, not guilty might shoots whether he put hltueelf for trial upon God and his country by twelve men, as it Is today, or up- on God only. The latter was called the judgment of (Lod, In the ordeal by are the accused had to pass barefooted and blind- fold over nine red-hot ploughshares, or carry burning irons Iti their hands. In England such ordeals were used from Edward the Conff.ssor's time to that of henry III. In Scotlaul the trial by ordeal was very Much the stone as it was in Eng- land, and of longer persistency. Chief amongst these was the trial by touch. guilty A person accosted of murder was re- '11'ES1)111'-w(11 pre, aNilm earth tohoed•? you Cllr n neer to t to il,hl 's Stored to touch .the corpse. If he h for ; here gu noun; rhon(•e east to Coulter s envier ; Y the corpse Was supposed and Horth to the 1:10) em,. 1.tst Wawa- to give some significant filen, 0n nosh, ellen enol to .'r+,vet and north to • leave some convicting mark ou the .I us. (I0(}1I1'''4 for n1Kht. accused's hand. 11'EfN I•,*1),.t i' -w('1 nrneer'1 east i } The ordeal trial prevailed Infoil,.; Mil thin SO"' ll t.11 11 r, C mites' The from before the time of for nun'.; 111r'ree to Witt, G Ade,', Uel Charlemagne down to the eleventh IL"111', fn,' ,fight., , 1'111'1if111A\T--will proven'so'1th to.lohn' c'('utuy, The ancient Gc1'nlluls, loo tl.ildwel)'- fnt' Hoon; the, e„ to- resorted to' divination, and their School II.Juse and south to .1;,s, 11'att,'s superstitious notions led them to in - for nixie,•vent 10ere0113 wetkods of trial unknown 1''111 1)A1' -e ill pi'oeerd ' t to Tana,.Tana,.elsewh, lyes nnru0rsed south to the 1101 (7nn1 i At a period when" most ordeals of Hallett to I'.'r" v Mooting', fur nnnt' 1 here falling into disuse, the noble's there! vers;, to 111~(7 Lbw to lt'rhartl ; w111eh011'4 for ntlrht, ; of Southern Germany established tin Sr\'I'U111)A V -will pros led! by w ty of water ordeal as the mode of deciding i,I1'r• t.o N-4 0 ,.01uo1 and then east , doubtful claims on fiefs, and 0 to (inn. C Iwnn'• for none; there, home ; Northern Germany it was lnstfi uteri to his nw•' s+nhle where )ie will remain :for (he settlement of conflicting title until the fullaw'Ina Monday morningon land. tpproved Farm All , As recently an the err;'-nnlnti o CEII'l'1FiC,1,'l'I:OF ENI 1001('N'i',the nineteenth century the popular of 1Ie111, netts' Dantzig, twice plunge( ANI) INSI►KI'It)V 17rto the sea an 0111 woman repute( of the porn 1)10(1 Clydesdale Sttl(1 n Coin to b0 a sorceress, who, on persistent madla'e PI(itee, 11"((i511n,l In 1)117 o. 225111, rising to the surface, was pro Ornned h3rJo,lieph and gyrdesdale S,1,(1 o 1(1�t;Nor I�llythnollnced guilty and beaten to death Foaled le 1018. luta peen e1 rolled under 1 Grotius mentions many instance '131e Ontario S'a(Ilon r`c`. Tnspse'cel on I of water ordeal in 13lthynla, Sardinia t''e 1th dry of Nov niber 1011. null f0un(1 : and other countries, and It wee 111 Its to hn sunup, of (marl enreed. tlu,l Inut nn in Leda ed ft'ont a very early period animal lypleni I f Ihr1 (100(1. In the primitive j1u'luprn(lence u '1'111; ONTARIO STALLION ENROL- Russia, ordeal by boiling water mg'11 ENT Boma)Russia, to cases of minor import Rebt, 110E,ven, ]t: A. \1'ute, apes. 1u the eleventh cent Chairman C iidmaian tii!01'etary. (171(1 burning 1)071 created "where th l'I;It1i3 AND CONDITIONS:molter tit stake amounted to mor To In4715 7- I1 roti $1-1.00, ptyaldo 1''eh, u. • than half a grlvna of (401(1" h ars l' 11)2'0, 1u•urc(t n)7(09 moot he y' I A culotte survival of ordeal eager u'urd f rgnl+u'ly to the bulge or theey will be Charged fIIl.htm„111en lvhet.h,., , station prevailed till quite rscently t in foal or not, Persons dlsp11r,irlg of their ; Southern Russia. When a theft Iva woes before loalini( dole will he tespoun•' committed In a household the set Ude for the insurance whether In fn+11 or vents were summoned together an not. All accideThese lrulerts ow1tli t118 at rlsk he strictly nd� a sorceress was sent for. Should n tiered to i confession bo made by the guilt . 8c 1V, GRAY, 1'', Y UNG BUT, party, the sorceress rolled up 0 Proprietors. manager. many little balls of thread as titer were suspected persona prellcnt. Sh then took one of these bans and, ad Mothodlst S. -'S. Officers dressing the nearest eervttnt, use this fbrmula! "If you have comrnitte .At the annual meeting of the Sunday I the theft the ball will pink to th School Executive of the Methodist church 1 bottom of the vase, but 1t you ar the following officers were appointed for innocent It will float. on the water. Tho rtecuratby of this trial, howeve ,was seldom tested. The guilty pet son usually confessed before his tut arrived for the ordeal. the ensuing year: Superintendent -E, Bender Assist. Supt. -Jas. Moody Secretary-- Dr. I -I, McIntyre Treasurer- John Pet is Librarian • Lillie Taylor Pianist --Roberta Sanderson Assist. Pianist -May Taylor Missionary Sec, -Mrs, Tiffin, Mrs. E, Bender. Temperance Sec. --Norman bloody, Irl. Baker. Musical Director -D. Floody - Curator -Mrs. Crosby, Supt. of Cradle Roll -Mrs, II McElroy Supt, Home Det,• --Win. Taylor Mr, Wm Robertson, editor of the God - etch Signal, gave The Standard a call on Tuesday. •Mr R. I -I. Stextart, piano tuner, will visit Blyth shortly, Orden) jnay be left with Miss Pearl Gidley, „ The Nicene Creed, Nice or Ntcaea in ancient times was a town in lllthynla, a small country of Asia Minor and a Province of the Roman lDnlplre. It lay to 111e south- east of the Sea of Marmon. During tho second century before the Chris- tian era Bllhynia was an Independent kingdom and Ntcaea was the seat of the royal government. Ninon, is cele- brated as having been the scene of the first general council of the Chris- tian Church, which sql from June 19 to August 26, 325, and adopted the creed, which, taking its name front the name of tho town in which the council met, is known as the 'Nicene Creed. Th14 creed emphasizes the divinity of our Lord and the doctrine of tho Trinity, It 114 the fundamental creed of all Trinitarian churches the world over, GATEWAY TO ENGLAND who makes no difference in his con- clocks, The great Gladstone graving - duct between his friends and 1718 ene- dock is the largest in Europe, capable 1111014, but shows equal kindness .to of dry-docking the largest vessels liolh; who looks or, gold and precipus afloat, and so well contrived that It Monett wil'h the saute indifference as can he emptied by pumps in two and. on pieces of Iron or potsherd, and values the one as highly as the other; a hall' hours. whose chief care Is to enlighten the There aro mammoth cranes cap- ignornncc In which the rest of plan- able of lifting bridges 200 tons In kind is plunged," This Is one side of the picture, and Weight, it will readily be admitted there are The racecourse at Aintree, where to he found a few such gurus in the the Grand National 1e run, possesses country. But one needs to have but a steeplechase track that his no rival n passing acquaintance with Hindu anywhere. Ono of the station hotels religious life to know how widely the is so enormous that visitors ars al - majority differ from this standard. ways losing themselves in the laby- They are credited with fabulous pow- ninth of its corridors. Even the cathe- ern, and they try In persuade their dral, when finished, will be one of the disciple© they really possess them. biggest In the world. The attendants of the guru recount Indeed, a great deal of water has wonderful stories of the power of flowed up the Mersey since the days their guru with a view to deceiving of Edward VI., when !Liverpool was the people who come to him, and it described as "a creek of the port of is not surprising that 1110 simple peo- Chester," With all her natural ad - pie readily accord to him unbounded vantages, she remained, an Inslgnifi- worship, which no exposure can cant village all through the groat shake. I maritime dawn of the Elizabethan 111n(lus have, been reduced to such age, and during most of the etghe terrible straits, says Dubois, as to sell teenth century her chief business `their wives and children in order to . was smuggling, prsctmro Money to pay the imposts or I How different Is the spirit of the procure the presents the gurus re- , scene today! Let um mount the over- Inorselessly claimed from them rather head railway at Pterhead and gaze • than to run the risk of exposing , upon all the docks and super -docks themselves to their much dreaded contributing color and animation to maledictions. The changing condi- 1 the varied panorama. Fussy. little tions have deprival most of the gurus • tugs are piloting huge ocean liners of this power over educated people I to their berths, and heavy -laden who are, however, quite ready to barges on their way to tho Manches- accord almost unlimitert respect and ter Ship Canal. honor to a guru who conies up to the Steamers of all shapes, sizes, and standard laid down In the sacred countries bear otie-third of all the books, kingdom's traffic overseas,' Here' Is one from America, groaning with pro- visions and grain. Suddenly a swarm Major -Gen, Sir George MacMunn, of men invaded her, Tike innumerable in a recent magazine article, tells a ants, her hatches are cleared, long story which, he says, should "touch pipes appear from nowhere, spread strong men's hearts with glory tall forth like tentaclee, and disappear they weep," to burrow in the grain, Then; while The story was told to Geri, Mac-, bustling cranes are conveying the up- per cargo to the quay•sheds, a float- ing elevator quickly sucks up bushel after bushel from below, weighs It automatically, and drops it Into barges alongside. ' Great mills are waiting at Birken- head to turn it into flour at the rate of some 300 tone an hour, and It often happens that, from the moment the grain leaves the vessel, it is not touched by human hands until• de- livered as bread at the consumers' doors. Milling, mixing, baking, even wrapping are all done by machinery, Liverpool still stands supremo in the cotton trade, Cotton used ito come from Greece In olden days, And It was not until the seventeenth cen- tury that America sent a supply. -At first it came in barrels insteadf''of bales or bags, and was accordingly so unwelcome that the first consignment remained for months without w -'pur- chaser. But gradually it cam, into ' favor as the Liverpool merchants per- suaded Yorkshire spinners to substi- tute cotton for wool, American cot- ton imports, however, havo been de- creasing during the last forty 'years, partly through a tendency to spin finer counts, which means less con- sumption of cotton but more work for operatives, Over £60,000,000 is collected at Liverpool every year In duty on to- bacco, A trip through one of the fac- tories is a revelation, with cigarettes - being turned out at tho rata of five hundred a minute, armies of packers performing incredible feats of skill and speed. Tinned goods are imported to Eng- land to the extent of £14; a year for every man, woman, and child in the British Isles. • There are salmon trotn the Pacific, lobsters from Canada and Newfoundland, crabs from Japan, sardines from the Mediterranean, all tho most luscious fruits from every- where. The gardens and orchards of the world aro ransacked for the profit ' of Liverpool. Durin -vino months of 1824 some 250 million oranges ar- rived, and as many apples, besides mountains of grapes, tomatoes, lem;-, ons, melons, and pomegranates, to a total value of;15,000;000. i \ Liverpool s -'.the greatetit timber, market in the world, the goal'ot thou- sands of people scattered oder the entire globe, lumbermen, shippers, and buyers.• • - . The rope industry is second Onlr • to that of London. The story of salt manufacture is a romance in itself, and much the same process 11'8411 used as by prude forefathers..,tq•o thousand years ago. Matches are pro- duced to , satisfy half the require - month monta of .Britain, Port Sunlight, CM the Cheshire side of the estuary, is probably the most extensive soap 'fan- Watches. tory in the world, and very, attractive \\'atelles are said to have boon fn- with its model village and all Sorts vented at Nuremberg, Germany, In of entertainment , far employes-- 1477, nitltoutili It to affirmed that sports and games,, libraries and lee - Robert, King- of Scotland, had p tures, swimming bathe, and' sylraa` watch In the year 1310, A watch retreats. that belonged .to Queen . Ellzaboth is And great as is Llaerpool"'td-dap, preserved in the library of the Royal she is looking forward to 'It,tt11 morN Institut(, lr' neon, 1 boundleeti niagnt fence, 1-• Munn by Mr, James Breasted, Pro- fessor of History at Chicago, who had It front a Turkish officer. It tells of Havildar Muhammad Ismael and nine rank and file of a Mahommedan com- pany of Indian troops guarding the Suez Canal who were lost among the sandhille and captured by enemy Dedoulns and 'Turkish cavalry, They were taken before a Prussian officer of the General Staff of the Turkish army. "flow is it," he de- manded, "that you Indian Mahonune- dans are engaged In fighting your co - religionists? Surely you aro aware that a Holy War against the English and their Allies has been declared from the mosques of Islam?" The havlldar thought for a bit (the story proceeds) and then made an - elver: "'l'hls is a political war and not a religious war, Therefore we remain with our own units and observe our enlistment oath and our faith with 'the salt lee eat." "That may be," said the Prussian with a scowl. "There are ten Turkish uniforms 1n the corner there, I will give you ave minutes to put them on or be shot as deserters from Islam, whose lives are forfeit." At the havildar's request the Prue - ,elan gave hon three m17nites, to speak alone with his comrades, . . . And their-faino has blazoned the answer, as jewels that on the fore- finger of time sparke for over The party, soldlerliko while in extremis, drew themselves up, nod there rang forth a8 tine a challenge to a cruel tyrant RS the world hoe ever heard: "Three cheers for King George!" The Prussian lifted his hand, and they were led out through the crowd , of tierce, flushed faces thronging the door, and a volley wrote their simple village names on the great book of Fate, "Colonial" Snobbery. It itt to be hoped that the' snobbery chronicled in the following story did not originate in Canada. It is told by Arthur Lanibton In his new book, "My Story," recently published in London: "A colonial lady once asked the to stay in a country house, and said afterward that I was invited 'under a misapprehension, and that she thought my father was an Honor- ab.le.' "At Oxford a certain Dean's wife asked about a dozen undergradu- ates to dinner --all peers, save one. Site apologized for his presence to t.ho other guests by murmuring sweetly; "'Although Mr, Gathorno I•Iardy is nut yet olio of yourselves, he will be ono day.' " estroyung Weeds by Means of Chemicals • Most farmers have the general FERTILIZING THE '. '\... •,,; Whitt Ie your plan far feeding yours of it besides that which they get 1 #ie , the hna and the cultivator Sulphuric acid or oil of vitriol has living and that it is not necessary to !child? Do you think only about keep- the milk, (, • • , , � spraying rt 1-' give theme much feed or attention; ll 13 � M. 13, Davis,B,S.A., Assistnnt � Make a list of the foods sill Feeding Top Lambs. A DAY'S MEALS FUR A CIIILD GARDEN ti opinion that sheep will find their own are likely to remain as the two most a corrosive effect on the I ging indigestible loads only from him? . 1 efficient weapons to use .n the conbutl paratus and cnn bo used only in a is a well-known fact that sheep will; Dominion horticulturist, If syou are behind the times. Or ants and sect all six ofodathese yourrdrU w1th, weeds them are certain cases weak solution varying from 3 to 10 graze On Weeds around the fence row; do you think first about serving him kinds of food aro included oaclt dayti where the use of some chemical play per cent. It has no injurious effect and over rough land and find a great n Must amateur ardcners de lend the foods his body ectasis? If so, you Milk, eggs, vegetables, fruit, whole-) bq extremely desirable. A good ex-� on wheat, oats, or bc►s:ey crops and the rt o 1 their diving, butr farmers ke nl'anL. lart;e'y upon the use of nunnura nus are modern anti up-to•date, grain cereals, and button or creams grain crop infected with an culnuu i Iron su r n bring them and this is pocid practice, but oft.ell tt children ren w rte l contain such b wild mustard where 1 little comnlercln fertilizer can )e used• Bible by spraying with iron sulphate cannot be applied with safety to a through the winter in good condition,Breakfast--Juice of half, an orange{ Practical farmers seem to overlook as a sueplement to very great :elven- First, there .is at least a pint of • � , Breakfast—Juice whole-grain cereal, mush milk two-, or'eiopper an extent to injure the weed' crop of beans or flax, milk in each do s rut�on, Manychit- g ' ' to such extent that it is unable Copper sulphate or bluestone cub the fact, that the ewe must maintain tallrnuure contains large quantities of dren want moreandcan take iwith- thirds of a cup, or more if wonted; e. to ripen its seeds, be used instead of iron sulphate but her own body, produce a fleece of wool 1 toast; butter, There aro also numerous plots of only in a solution of 11 to 21 per and develop a fetus during the winter nitrogen, some phosphorous anct poi out leaving out other essential foods.Diner--Coddled eggs; gassed po% months. Unless she Is properly fed ash, which alts the three constituents Under these cileumstanee€ they ought waste ground in towns, mites of road- cent. generally1to have. more. tato; spinach, bread; butter; pulp of. aides all over the count►Y, railroad Common salt or sodium chloride is she cannot do this work. Improperly In addition innsanost garcontden . Second, there is an egg in the first cooked prunes, cookie, , backs, and large areas of stony or used in n strength of 20 to 26 per fed ewes produce small, weak lambs. !urge amount o nt oe or Supper—Mille ono sacs one-third rocky ground that cannot be eultivat_ cent. It checks the growth of other These lambs have been improperly fi genic or vegetable bill of fare and a little meat or flab material wheels on decay, cups, or more if wanted; whole-wheat in the others, This is for iron, ed, where the employment of chemical plants besides weeds until it has been nourished through the different stages Y, ss the 'Miff!, there is fruit in two meals bread; butter. s 1'd out b of development and after they are humus and organic acids necessary to maintain u good physical condition out of three. This is u good rule to Suggested 13111 of Faro for Child and to assist in bringing into solution keels in mind nil the time. Fresh fruit of Five, forms of plant food otherwise un- is best—juice or pulp for very young Breakfast—Baked apple; wholes av either for plant e: ser ; so that children, If fresh fruit can not be grain cereal mush; milk, half pint, or Dither manure or setae sort of green obtained, dried fruit may be used at more if wanted; bread; butter. manure crop is essential in any gar- one meal and either n little tomato Dinner --Boiled potato; creamed lien, even though largo quantities of juice or a raw green vegetable, such codfish; string beans; bread; butter; nitrogen, phosphorous and' potash aro as lettuce, in the other. These foods cup custard; cookie, supplied as fertilizers, are tho watch dogs of the dint, They Supper—Milk, half pint, or more if Nitrogen is the most unstable of help to keep off disease, wanted; whole wheat bread; date our elements and the most variable,Fourth, every meal In these rations marmalade ainple'of trio latter' the case of n has a fertilizing effect on the soli. spr ng- am sections d Suggested Bill of Faro for at Child l ill ate or saphenas is used take when they fail to givo breeding the amen source of fertilizer material l B to are lsonbilis allr the ftt things for of Two, h ''d t 1 tis 1)08-' in a solution of 15 to 20 ix�s cent but ewes enough feed to r g 1'tt' 1 f 1' 1 needed for their development f k d weeds might wa 1e means or keeping own e . y 1,1111 profitably be considered. Caustic soda or sodium hydrate is born aro stunted for lack of milk. The spray should bo applied in fine used in a 5 per cent. solution. It kills If lambs aro to be made "tops" they calm weather when there is a prob- all kinds of vegetation. must be well nourished from the time ability that no rain will fall during Sodium arsenite is used at the rate they aro born until they are sent to the next 24 hours. The amount of of 2 pounds to 60 gallons of water. It market, They should be made to grow spraying mixture will vary somewhat is very poisonous and the powder is rapidly and take on flesh regularly. with the kind of spraying machine dangerous to health if inhaled. It Lambs are best fed through their used, but as a general rule at least 60 kills all vegetation. mothers for the first two months of their life. For this reason the ewes gallons are necessary to cover an acre. Carbolic field is used in a solution should bo fed a milk -producing ration. The spray should be applied while the weeds are young. The chemical substances that are most employed for killing weeds are sulphuric acid, iron sulphate, copper sulphate, common salt, caustic soda, sodium arsenite, carbolic acid, orchard heating oil and fuel oil. After the use of some of these the soil remains ster- ile until the chemical hag been washed out by the rain. In calculating the strength to bo used it has to be re- membered that a gallon of water weighs 10 pounds. of 121,2 per cent. or stronger. A ration consisting of oats, bran Orchard heating oil is applied at and oil meal and a legume hay, such full strength in a fine mist, It de- as alfalfa, clover or soy beans, is best stroys all vegetation but is not poison- from lambing time until good grazing ous and does not injure the soil. -is available. Ewes do not require' a Fuel 'oil can be used on waste large quantity of feed; in fact, they greens or garden paths. After its faro better when they are not over- use the soil remains sterile for a con- fed. One-half to One pound per head siderable period. a day of the ration mentioned is suf- ficient the various patent weed killers ficient for average ewes. They should "Atlas A" was tested during the sum - After what hay they will clean up. mer of 1920 on various weeds and After the lambs learn to eat they gave good results, should be fed grain from a creep. This , method of feeding them .prevents the Fighting Weeds. We used to think the main object of cultivation had to do with making a dust mulch. Wo used to think sum- mer fallow out in the dry country was a matter of snaking a dust mulch in order to save moisture. The new orthodoxy, arrived at by trials and tneasurements rather than by the old plan of merely thinking out a thing, puts the dust mulch hypo- thesis pretty much to one side. The new orthodoxy lays the blame for the necessity of this summer work on weeds. Careful trials have shown that where land is already clean of weeds and grass, cultivating, between the rows of crops has precious little ef- f feet one way or another when the t result is measured by yield. On some steep or hard-baky lands it does have a bearing on the moisture problem, but it has been found that the effect of euitivation on such soils is to enable the land to catch and soak in the water rather than to hold it. And out in the dry country careful studies showed that the good effect of, summer cultivation lay entirely in the elimination of weeds; Showed that a dry surface acted as a moisture - retaining blanket whether stirred or, not. This new point of view has one, nighty practical bearing on farm work. Any everyday farmer knows that cultivators must oe kept going if a good crop is to bo raised. At first' blush he is not concerned as to wheth-i er the theory of cultivation tics on to ! weed control or to moisture saving. On second thought he is finding that it does make a deal of difference. j --- ewes from having too much grain and The old type of cultivator share is gives tho lambs the advantage of not a good weed killer, 1t was design- extra grain along with their mothers' ed back in the days when we were milk. A very small quantity of grain all thinking in dust mulch terms. To- fed in this manner will give splendid day the summer fallow work is being results in growing and finishing largely clone with the duck -foot type lambs for the early market. The flock of cultivator. Crop cultivators are should bo kept on the small grains, being equipped with this same type of such as rye, barley or wheat, as much share—a type which cuts off rather as possible during the winter and than wiggles by any weedy growth early spring months; in fact, every encountered. farmer who raises sheep should make And incidentally, if anybody has a it a point to have a small grain pas - weed -free field—a field which natur- ture for his sheep. ally _stays weed free throughout the 'rho ewes and lambs should be turn- season—frequent cultivation does ed to fresh pastures as early in spring more harm than good. Any doubting as it will supply good grazing. Clover Thomas, if he be so fortunate as to is one of the best pastures for sheep. have such a clean field, can prove this The flock will do well also on early to his own satisfaction by leaving a blue -grass pasture. ew rows without more cultivation One of the best" annual pasture hap necessary to keep weeds and that can be seeded is a combinatlo grass away.—B. II. The Best Sink Value Ever Offered Entirely new typo of Sink at a remark- ably low price. The baso is rust•resisting - Armco Iron, coated with purest white enamel,. same as refrigerators, electric ranges, etc. Sold complete with all fit - tinge and instructions. SMP Enameled Sinks Price Complete } ; SUM° "./ SMP Enameled Drain Board—Price $6.00 Wonderful value. White enameled Armco • I1 on base. Very strong; handsome; handy. These new SIP Sinks and Drain Boards sold by ell plumbers and hardware stores, or write direct to ThSSNEET MtTAL PRODUCTS eo°�I�nu • slow SAL TORON1'O WINNIPEG 183 ▪ ,COMONTONVANCOUVER CALGARY 1,r...�I,-,,II 4.01 ell IC,I,II I.I.1,1. IYI d.. I 11 Oiling the Harness. I spent 22 years of my life makiing and oiling harness, and would not want any ono to oil leather for me while -it is wet. Water and oil are enemies. Oil does not go where water is if it cnn avoid it. Oil put on a wet or half -wet strap will largely stay on the outside, and the water will gradually come out through it, giving the leather a nasty and slimy feeling for many weeks thereafter. Let the straps get dry,, not bone -hard. Roll the straps and dip them in the oil, laying them on a metal surface to drain back into the oiling pan, When all the oil has drained off that will, hang then) in a warm place well away from the fire till dry, then wipe the straps and buckles clean with a dry loth, Taken rood rade of bar c gharness 1 soap and a moist sponge, wet the soap and get a good lot of it on the sponge (not lather) and draw each strap through the soap about three i times, Assemble the harness and let it hang in a warm room for 24 hours, and you have a No, 1 job that will . stay pliable.— I'�. T. Darkened nests will do much to- ward preventing the egg -eating habit. • Clean the windows in the hen house with newspaper—nothing better. 4174/CAP il e nw njves IINONDII CANADA UM CO, LTD, d,� 1000 rUNOAv 01, W., 7000010 411,1!"':" .r MGNTREAL 10Nr0UYtA ..tl�/l 11,1! ':" e1,. J0ftl1, II II yl,. 1 �,} 4-4 STOCK Man 'r° Farmers mere Buying Pure }fired Budd Ontario is fortunate- in having many Pure Bred Breeders of proven merit, and the stock they produce bring fame to Ontario. Ontario farmers are rapidly getting the- idea that the herd that ;pays is the only one to keep, Follow the lead 9 successful farmers by get- ting good Pure Bred Bulls. Your Agricultural Representative knows the breeders of good bulls in your county. See him. GOOD BULLS PAY DIVIDENDS los n of oats -and rape. When own together they afford a maximum of good graz- ing. Renting Out a Cow I the early spring, even on well ma -provides for "roughage," In some 13111 of for a Child In e Ill SuggestedFaro o nured land, tho nitrogen supply is meals it is supplied by potatoes,From Eight to Ten. low and it does not increase until tlsei others it is supplied by whole -grain - soil getsr begins to warm up and rho' cereal breakfast foods or whole-wheat Breakfast ---• Berries;' whole grain soil pretty well heated and�l)read, This means that the food will cereal mush; milk, two-thirds pint, or, worked. Decomposition of the veg ! bavo enough bulk to prevent collate- more if wanted; bread; butter; sugar, table material must be progressing be -1 17ation, plant and, as the nitrogen in one level tablespoon. fore there is much nitrogen available ( Fifth, at ono meal there is a vege- Dinner—Beef stew with potatoes for the table other than potatoes. and carrots or tomato; bread; butter; manure is locked up mostly as vege- Sixth, every meal contains it little tapioca cream; ginger snaps, table matter, we say it Is slowly avail butter or cream. Something very Supper—Cream of lettuce soup; able. It is liberated throughout the much needed by children is in butter- graham breed toasted; butter; honey season and tho manure we apply this fat and it is well to givo them a little or syrup; milk if wanted. spring will act as a sort of reservoir •..___. __ for our nitrogen supply all summer. In Private. Leg Weakness. But if we want early growth on our lettuce, for instance, we can afford Eight of them sat at table and each Leg weakness in chicks is generally to supplement the manure by a light had a fling at Dickie --grandparents duo to artificial conditions, with too application of nitrate of soda whgchi and parents, sister and brother—and much crowding, too little open air is already available for the plant, and their missiles, though only of words, activity and not enough contact with the response will be very rapid. Some-' were sharp and stinging and Dickie mother earth. Many people make tho times wo want to bring our celery grew "madder" every minute• mistake of "coddling" chicks in bad along a little quicker, an application+ He seemed a tough little propos)- weather, keeping them almost con-! I of nitrate for this purpose is excel -'tion, it is true. Iso had pitched greed- stantly housed, This is almost certain! lent. In fact, wherever we aro growl Ily into the feeding process as soon to lead to delicacy and leg weakness,' ing plants for their foliage and note as Ito had noisily and rudely taken especially If tho birds aro kept for for the root or for their fruit, appli- possession of his chair. any length of time on cement or' cations of quickly available nitrogen Grandfather And Grandmother look- wooden floors. Earth that thoy can are excellent, On the other hand, ed frowningly at him, Their pro- scratch in is it necessity to young where we want root; as' in the carrot, jectiles began with "fin my day—" chicks, They should all be kept in beet or onion, we only resort to ni- "Look at those hands!" big sister open-air runs placed on grass or earth' trate when the manure supply is de- demanded of the company in general, and fine gravel, preferably a mixture ficient, For these wet supplement "I'd bo afraid to cut the bread they of both grass and gravel soil, with phosphorous, and if we want touched, but Dick seems to thrive on O quick response,We use acid phosphate a germ diet." Bright Cushions. instead of the bone meal which is Beg. brothers ammunition required much more slowly available, a big gull. Ile raised his voice for Homemade cushions to brighten long In t -he growing of (lowers it is pec- rho mention of some "perfectly awful" seats aro best made of the cotton felt essary only to bear in mind that used for mattresses. It comes in lay - . Dickie had sono that day, and ars is sold by the square foot and where we want increased growth, suchma-!Dickie's shortcomings, which were • :.s in a hedge or a supplement shrub! generally very short indeed, were re-; can be cut the desired width by the, You speak of renting out a cow. I for instance, wo supplement our I surrected and hammered at one after dealer• another l The edges will be square for boxing have been using this plan for ten nuro with nitrate of soda; where we years: I furnish a cow to 3011)0 one want perfection of bloom or fruit we near town who has children going to resort to the addition of phosphorous school, or a young man working in in the form of acid phoephato and in town. The party furnishes the pas- extreme cases also to potash, as muri- ture and the feed, rind brings ,mc two pie of potash, quarts of mills a day. I keep two For most crops and most soils the buckets, one of which the party uses. above mentioned elements may be sup - I place the other on the porch and plied in the following forms and tet then when he brings the milk he sets the following rates: Nitrogen, ap ni- his down and takes the empty one, trate of soda, -at the rate of 7.1,a lbs, I usually have a month's vacation 100 sgtsaro feet. Phosphorous, as —this would mean that I receive two acid phosphate, at the rate of 10 lbs. quarts of milk 335 days, and I also to -100 square feet. Potash as muriate get the calf, I change cows when I of potash, at the Tato of 21 lbs, to feel the other is getting old and I 100 square feet, , usually get as much for her as I had paid, so there is really no deprecia- tion. My figures for one cow last year showed a net profit of $36.70, --V. B. I have found thebest way to repair traces which wear through, or break at the point where the backbend is attached, is to insert -an oval link ' about three or four inches long in the vHn.do'la. Father looked as fierce as a South and cushions will bo found springy, Sea Islander as he said, "I'll 'tend to yet soft, and will ]scop their shape, you later." • Mother wound up by saying, I You can take this or leave it—there can't do a thing in the world with is no substitute for plain hard work him," her voice a despairing plaint. in paying -off the mortgage on a farm. There Was no such ugly trouble in The good old-fashioned kind of hard tho family near by, though it included work that means getting up with the a boy of Dickie's age and proclivities, sun, milking the cows, feeding and For fault in the presence of the fans- harnessing the horses before break -1 ily, a quiet "Go to your room, Tom- fast, and being in the furrow by seven 'ply," from his mother was sufficient, o'clock—that's what inttlses farming It was true that one might have pay.—G, thought Thomas had been` shod by the blacksmith judging by the poise he For mildew on roses :pray with bi- made climbing the steps, but he obey carbonate of soda, am ounce to a gal.. aOne cannot expect ill temper ton of water. 'there stye commercial ,. be wiped out magically, only that it sprays you can use effectively,' too, be treated sensibly and considerately, regard for the child's future regulat- ing word and action. Dickie's mother visiting Tommy's -mother on one of these occasions, ap- preciated tile- even -flow of cheerful conversation that -continued uninter- rupted by Tommy's defection. It was so different from the general squabble in her own home that followed misbe- havior by Dickie When Tommy's mother reappeared, and her son had dashed out of doors to his play, the less successful mother ue o $60,322,439, as compared with 202,- put her plea: "Please tell mo how you settle 186,508 dozens of the value of $48,- things so easily, I can't do anything 770,780 in 1923• ' with Dickie. I believe he takes a pride in his successful rebellions." . "I make it arule never to correct _ Tommy in the presence of others," her friend answered quietly. "Notice that tree," she continued, pointing through the window to- a fine, rztraight little beauty. "A few snontlls after it was As soon as • they are rolled into a planted it began to lean. I set the small ball, he releases his hold and gardener to work. Ho drove a strong they aro snapped back under his coat, stake,. the top pointing ass -directly 1,6the movement being concealed by his the sky as if a plummet had been hung forearm. He should continue through ,as a guide from the cloud above it, the actions of -rolling for a,_minute, and to it he fastened the young; -geew- just as if the gloves were still in his ing thing. Not with flimsy strings hands, and finally he will go through that would break in a day --as incite— the motion of. transferring the gloves tient as intermittent discipline—nor from' hie left hnnd to his right, turn- did he pull it violently into place, ing around as he doge so, until his allowing others to join in the rough right side faces his 'audience, The treatment, No, alone he tied it with ,next motions should be done quickly. strong bands neither harsh nor con - He brings his arm down to his side, to fining, leaving it .room to grow true allow the sausage to fall into the to the guide, upright, - My dear, a z Poor Thing! trace. I fasten the oval link to the I3obbv Bu "B 1 1 trace with hame deeps, slipping the hame clips in the oval link and rivet- ing them to the trace, The backbend is then fastened to the oval link, and the job is complete and stronger than when new. -0. S. Utility is the science, and beauty the art of poultry keeping. i,1,_ oo too. 1 want bulitt- ing blocks with letters on them!" It is estimated that the production of farm eggs in Canada for 1924 was 212,648,685 dozens of the va 1 f A TRICK FOR THE YOIINC MAGICIAN BY S. R. WHITE The "Gloves and Sausage" is not only a startling trick but it causes great amu,eement as well, The per- former enters wearing gloves. IIe re- moves these and rolls then( up into a ball, He throws them into the air, but instead of the gloves, a string of Peal sausage leaves his hand, and the gloves vanish, The method of doing this trick is very simple.. Tho string of sausage is placed in the performer's right sleeve before his appearance, The gloves should be of white silk, or of some other soft material so that they may be rolled into a s111a11 ball, To the glove which is worn on the left hand should be attached one end of a piece of rubber band, of elastic, the other end of which is securely fastened to the belt strap or suspen- der button on the left side, under the cont. Standing with his left side to the audience, the elastic is concealed by the magician's forearm and coat. Isis right arm should be held in a hori- zontal position in order that the sau- sage secreted there will not fall out before it is time. The gloves are removed and the right one is rolled into the left one. hand, and brings it up again, just as if he was throwing- something into the air, and the sausage leaves his hand, This • is one trick which especially requires practice before the mirror. The performer can t9.11 much better by observing himself in the glass, just what positions to assume in order to conceal the secret movements. Sau- sago, is not necessary, either, for the successful' performance of the trick, noel' .are the gloves. A handkerchief and some other article, such as a ban- ana, would servo the purpose, but I think that the gloves and sausage aro about the best combination. mother may be the strength that will keep the child growing straight, bound and protected by bands that will not break—truth, affection, respect. The child respects the mother who shows respect for him. One of the ways of • doing this is by recognizing his one, inviolable right—correction In pri- vate." Nobody has any right to find life uninteresting or unrewarding who sees within the sphere of ,his own activity n wrong he can help to..rem- edy, or within himself an evil he can c hope to overcome. --Charles W. Eliot. During the seventeenth century it was the custom of English women to wear the engagement ring on the thumb. - 1 3 3 4 Mks A New Dairy. Pail at a Papular, Price 'See the zt SMP. Dairy Pail next time you are in town. They are made of r;peeialqual- ity, high finished tin, have large dairy pail ears, revelers with largo rivets, soldered flush. 100% )sanitary. Cut out this advertisement. G3how it to your regular dealer. Ile has our authority to give you n special low price on a pais' of these fine pails, ;SIR !.: 4'.€R HAGGARD '`..1676 IN LONDON World-renowned as Writer of Tales of African Life and Adventure. A despatchfrom London says:— H. Rider Itagt,+ard, the author tiled here on Thursday, Sir Rider had been ill fur four months, and recently when his condi- tion became serious he was taken to a private hospital in London, where to died. Although he achieved n world repu- tation as a maker of fiction, it was known to but -a few that the real life- work of Sii`" Il, Rider Ilaggard was in the field of practical agriculture, 10*•-• which ho gained the highest reputa- tion among experts, Sir-Ilenry Rider Ilaggard was bon at Bradenham; Norfolk, Juno 22 1856. Ho engaged in Government service in South Africa, and while a young man became celebrated as n writer of romances and tales of ad- venture with• African backgrounds. From 1882 to 1924 scarcely a year passed without the publication of a novel by him. In his day Ii. Rider Haggard' was one of the most widely rend of popular novelists, the acme of his popular achievement being reached in his nov- els of the lute 80's, "King Solomon's Mines" and "She." The scene of these, as of his other • most successful works, was laid in South Africa, where Rider. Haggard went in 1875 as Secretary to the Gov- ernor of Natal. He served later in the Transvaal, and was one of the offi- cials who hoisted the British flag over that territory on Queen Victoria's birthday in 1877. After the Boer victory at Majubn Hill the convention -with the Boers was signed in itis home, and he shortly afterward abandoned South Africa, Returning to England, he began his career as at novelist while studying for the Bar, and published his first success, "Dawn," in 1884, _ The novelist, was Knighted in 1912, Ile married Miss Mariana Margitson, a Norfolk heiress, in 1879. • GIRL SAVED FROM HORRIBLE DEATH Pembroke Youth Makes Gal- lant Rescue at Risk of His Life. A despatch from PcIT1hroke says:— The residents of Pembroke are ac- claiming 19 -year-old Iloward Riley n hero as a result of -a daring rescue which he performed when he snatched the unconscious forst of Muriel Swit- zer, aged 23, from in front of a fast freight train here. Miss Switzer had tripled across the Canaciiun tar!fic Railway trucks at Moffatt's Crossing at the west end of the town, and had fallow unconscious.' Riley, who was some distance oehind her, saw the fast freight thundering ._down the track toward her prostrate body, and, running as last as he could, was just in time to jump the track; and at the sane time drag --tire girl literally from under the wheels of then locomotive, Had he been a second later both ho and the girl would have niet with u horrible death, s, Abolition of Stamps on $5 Cheques Effective July 1 A despatch from Montreal says: -- Tho Canadian Manufactur'ers' Asso- ciation received information from Ottawa that the new regulntions in- troduced in the House of Commons providing for the abolition of war duty excise stamps on cheques of $5 or less will become effective on July 1. In tho Vacuum, Tho most perfect vacuum possible still' contains about eight billion gas molecules to tho..cublc inch. Messages from the Youth of Canada to the King and Queen On June 29th, in Trafalgar Square, London, ICIng George and Queen Mary aro to open "Canada Building." Keys of gold, silver and nickel from the rnlnes of Northern Ontario will be used at the ceremony. The Canadian Illgh Commissioner will present the lceyan to Their Majes- ties, With the keys he will present messages from the youth of Canada, ono for the King signed by a Canadian boy, and onto for the Queen signed by a Canadian girl. Selection of the boy and girl most worthy to sign these messages will be made by Sir William Mulock and Sir Arthur Currie. Tho young persons selected will bo:— "Tho boy and (ho girl attending any primary or secondary school, public, separate or private, whose natural en- dowments or attainments as pupils or iu tiro arts or any other sphere. of worthy endeavor, or who have per- formed such heroic action as, com- bined with qualities of chartkter, will make that boy and girl fitting repre- sentatives of the youth of Canada to ,sign the messages to the King and Queen on the occasion of the opening by Their Majesties of Canada Building, in London, England, on June 29, 1925," Robins at Dawn. As dawn came wanly sliding In at my window grey A burst of music waked me, A chorus wild and gay— A mad and merry chorus -From trees about the lawn— A jolly band of robins Clad hailing in the dawn. Such wild delight, such music bright, Burst from their pulsiftg throats, Such scorn of fear and love of cheer • Bubbled from ringing notes,— No pipes of Pan though piercing sweet Could fling out more delight Than tiny rod.vestod choristers Singing Thy Dawn of Light. . --May Howe Dakin, Amy Lowell Dies at Her Brookline Home A despatch from Brookline, MasA,, says: --Amy Lowell, long the out- standing exponent of free wrist) in America, and noted for her essays and literary criticism, is dead at her home here, "Sevenels," at the age of, 51. --- Miss Lowell had recently completed a widely acclaimed, biography of tho poet John Keats. THUNDER BAY AREA OF 5000 SQUARE MILES THREATENED BY BUSH. FIRES A despatch from Fort William, Ont., says:—According to reports fil- tering in to the head of tho lakes, an area of about five thousand square miles in tho sparsely :settled. region to the east and' west is menaced by for- est fires, In the burned -out terri- tories there are tho smouldering ruins of numerous -homes -that that belonged to hardy settlers, In the 'Wolf Mountain and Silver Mountain districts to the west timorous homes in the clear- - -: inge Itnve been. consumed. One home- •1- • steader, John Crisp, more. thin sixty ,years old, is believed to have perished in -a firetltnt swept that district Wed- nesday and lie. has not been seen since. It is believed that he must have been Weeping when the fire came toward . his clearing .and that he was unable to outrun the flanges, While it is pos- • -Bible that he may have escaped, it is not considered that the chance is very bright. With the exception of Mr. Crisp, there is •no 'definite report as to losses of life, although many set- tiers in the 'Silver'Mottnteirt area are said to have had. narl'ow'escepes; and malty others aro ' prepared to leave their hotnos as sor.,n as the danger draws near, In seVor'al Eutions valu- able areas of pulpwood stimber have • been. destroyed Or .are in danger, - Rports front Nipigone one of the most beautiful spots in Northern On- tarso, tell of •a bravo: fight throughout Wednesday' night to cavo alto town.. .I' Moro th"tui; •one , hundred men fought the encroaching flames with every conceivable weapon until they were ready to drop from exhaustion. At last report it' was said that the fire was under control and the village safe, The airplane and seaplane forces -of the Forestry Dept. are expected soon to take vigorous action in "spotting" fires so that they can be attacked be- fore they spread to dangerous dimen- sions, The long spall of dry and sun- . ny, though cold, weather has dried the forests to tinder, The coolness has kept the leaves from budding and the green grass from sprouting on the 'meadows, glades and swards. When the grass becomes green it acts as, anatural deterrent to the progress of fires. . A despatch from Sault Ste, Marie, Ont., says:—With the district dry as tinder, a small number of bush fires in the Soo area aro causing no little anx-' iety. At Massey the citizens of the town turned out and helped the rang-' ers fight`a fire near the cemetery. Fires are also causing trouble at Mil-' ford Haven, St. Joe Island and at Rydal Bank and. Desharnts, In fact,' more or less serious fires at many, points are keeping. the rangers on the, jump. •The rain on •Tuesday was not; ,of sufficient duration to give ,muchi aid and there is no immediate pros- peet • of more,_,There Thera have been but two smalt showers in two months. . THEIR MAJESTIES, THE KEYS AND THE -CANADA BUILDING I-Iis Majesty King George V, ant Her Majesty Queen Mary, who, on Juno 29, will open "Canada Building," Canada's new headquarters fli Trafalg:lr Square (upper right), the set of keys from Ontarfo mines with which the King will open thi• building, There are four sets of keys,, ono for the King, ono for the Queen, one for Canada's primo minister, and fine for ('anada's high Commissioner in London. Each set contains u gold, silver and nickel key, made in Canada, with metals donated by Dome, Hollinger, McIntyre. Keeley, • Nipissing, Mining Corpora- tion and Mond. (Lower left) Trafalgar Square, at the heart of tho Empire, with Nelson's monument in the centre, and with the new "Canada Building" at the left, facing Trafalgar Square and Cockspur Street. (Lower right) Rt. Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King, prime Minister of Canada, to whom ono of the sots of keys will be presented, and Icon. Peter Larkin, Canadian high, Commissioner, who originated the Idea of having the keys for the opening made of metals from the famous urines, and who will also be presented with a set of keys. Nova Scotia Butter Boom. II The outstanding feature of the agri• cultural industry of the province lust.! year was the -continual growth of the; creameries industry. The year 1924 • Solation of last showed an increase over the previous year of 563,156 pounds of butter, and an increase in business done of $153,- 328. 153;328. • ... CROSS -WORD PUZZLE , )TMC INTERNATIONAL SYNDICATE. SUGGESTIONS FOR SOLVING CROSS -WORD PUZZLES Start'eut by filling in the words of which you feel reasonably sure. These will give you a clue to other words crossing them, and they in turn to still others. A letter belongs in each white space, words starting at the numbered equaree and running either horizontally or vertically or both, . • HORIZONTAL 1 --Sweetheart 6—Fishing Implement 8—A crack 13—Land surface 14.-A Jewish festival 16 --Always 17 --Incomplete 18—Assemble 19—Otherwise 20 --Afflicted with grave, disease 22—Reaches a finish -'23--A street car 26 --Sour 28 --To move back 30 ---Explosive machine 33—*Account book 37--A variegated waxy quartz 38—Not fastened 39 --Hereditary , 42—Colored 43—To replace 45—To threw 47—Weapons 61—To scorch 63 --Subdued 56—Assistant to military officer 58—Small dog 59 ---Wishes 60—Therefore 61 --Firm 63—Tidy 64 --To Inundate 65—A speck 66--DIseae6' of caisson workers VERTICAL 1—Part of a coat 2 --Verbal 3---Russlan measure of distance 4—Consumer 6 --Govern 8 --Correlative of "either!' 7 -4 -Cubes of chance 3—Bar of metal 10 --Happening i1—To ward off 12—A lock of hair 14—Concealed In the hand 16 --Subject to death 21--Tn peel 24—Amount overdue (pl.) 26—A studio 27 --To commence 29--To-•beslege .� 30—A chum 31-4 color 32—Consumed 34—To put on 36—Obtained 35••-•A color 40--A communication 41•—Newspaper paragraph 42—Exchanged 44 --Performed 45--A chip's•frelght 46•—f missile 411—"An, eastern State of U. 9, 49---.4 fabulous nymph CL(1--..lokes 62---.A form of addreas (Ger,) 64 --Dry 66• -.To prepare tor'.publluatIot,`:_ 51—Deceased 2 ---Proceed week's pule. BARTER JAB:' A APE' .. P AIR A I LE:':HAIR D EDW EIN OLIO BEDEW : ST' f A L s E BEE .00: T PR,TDN CMENDI TIONS NC� R e) A. LLa pii HOGS `.r ;•. Qa ui:. 5 •; D F:. AH`.:•�RUDITIO TO NOB _UN; S BU:. RM TOOTS AS KARL I P AVON: BROIL: Lill PE t1EN ,ANT .i;; ;:ELL RETMIL 'EQUI NE_ 0 The Rainy Day. When there comes a day that's rainy, As it's certain, sure to. do, Junt draw upon your savings Instead of looking blue. If you haven't saved much money, Then draw upon a smile, And see 1f that won't help you Over many a weary mile. When there comes a day that's.rainy, Don't till It up with sorrow, But set about a job or two -- It may be fine to -morrow; The rainy clay is dripping down On other folks, than you-- Maybe In trying to cheer them up The sun will shine for yon. New Gorman stamps are to bear the portraits of notel Germans. Do not, for one repulse, forego the purpose that you resolved to effect. —Shakespeare. THE WEEK'S MARKETS TORONTO.• Dian, wheat—No. 1 North., ($1.81%; No. 2 North., $1.78%; No, 3 North., $1,73%; No. 4 wheat, not quoted. 1 Man, oats—No. 2 CW, not quoted; No. 3 CW, GOc; extra No. 1 feed, 60c; No. 1 feed, 55c; No. 2 feed, 521/2c. All the above c.i.f. bay ports. American corn, track, Toronto—No. 2 yelloW, $1,25. Millfeed—Del., Montreal freights, bags' included, Bran, per ton, $28; shorts, per ton, $30; middlings, $36; good feed flour, per bag, $2,05. Ontario oats—Nominal, f.o.b. ship- ping points, Ont. wheat—No, 2 wintor, nominal; No. 3 winter, not quoted; No, 1 com- mercial, not quoted, f.o.b., shipping points, according to freights. Barley—Malting, not quoted. Buckwheat—No, 2, nominal, Rye—No. 2, nominal, Dfan, flour, first pat., $9,80, To- ronto; do, second- pat., $9.30, Toronto. Pastry flour, bags, $7.50. Straw--Cnrlots, . per ton, $8.00 to $8.5(1. Screenings — Standard, recleaned, f.o.b. bay ports, per ton, .$21.00. ' Hay—No. 2, per ton, $13.00 to $14.04; No. 3, per ton, $1.1.00 to $12.00; mixed, per ton, $9.00 to $11.00; lower grades, $6,00 to $9.00. Cheese—Nefv, 1ar;e, 20 to 201c; twins; -21 to 22ce triplets, 22 to 23c; Stiitons, 23 to 24c. a:l, large, ii7 to 28c; twins, 28 to 20c; triplets, 28 to 30e, Butter—Finest creamery prints, 37 to 33c; I7o. 1 creamery, 36 to 37c; No. 2, 35 to 36c; Dairy prints, 20 to 30c. Eggs—Fresll extras, in cartons, 35 to 86c; loose, 33e; fresh firsts, 31c; seconds, 27e, , Live poultry—Chickens, spring, lb„ 55e; hens, over 4 to 5 lbs., 20c; do, 3 to 4 lbs,, 18c; spring chickens, .1 lbs, and over, M.P ., 24c; is, corn fed., 22c; roosters, 15c; ducklings, 5 lbs. and up, 22c, Dressed poultry.. -..Chickens, spring, lb., 65c; hens, over 4 to' 5 lbs,, 28C; , do, -3 to 4 lbs., 22c; spring chickens, 4 lbs, and over, M.1''., 35c; do, corn fed, 32c; roosters, 20e; ducklings, 5 lbs,' and up, 27c. ` Beans—Canadian, handpicked, 1b., G? ac; primes, 6e. I Maple products --Syrup, per . lin- rerinl gal,, $2,40; per 0=ggal, tin, $2,30 per gal.; maple sugar, lb., 25 to,. 26c, , Honey—G0-lb. tins, 131/2cper lb.; I 10-1b. tins, 131/2c; 5-1b. tins, 14c; 21/2 - lb, tins, 151 to 16c. Smoked meats—Ilanls, med., .80e; cooked harts, 46c;' smuked rolls, 22c; cottage, 24c; breakfast bacon, 28 to 32c; special brand breakfast bacon, 35e; backs, boneless, 35 to 42c. Cured meats --Long clear bacon, 50 to 70 lbs., $22; 70 to 90 lbs. $20.50; 20 lbs, and up, $1v.50; lighitweight rolls in barrels $39.50; heavy- weight rolls, $34.50 per bbl. Lard—Pure tierces, 18c; tubs, 18%e; ppa.i)s, 1.9c;, prints,`•20c; short- ening tierces, 14e; tubs, 14%c; pails, 15c; blocks, 1Gc. +Heavysteers, choice, $7.75 to $8,10; do, good, $7.25 to $7.75; butcher steers, choice, $7 to $7.50; do, good, $6,25 to $5.75; do, ale., $6 to $6.50; do, colli,, $5,50 to $6; butcher Ateliers, choice, $7 to $7,50; do, med„ $6.. to $6.50; do, cors., $5.50 to $6; butcher . I cows, choice, $6 to $6.60: do, fair to I good, $4.50 to $5,50; canners and cut- ter, $2.50 to $2.75; butcher bulls, good, $4.50 to $5.50; do, fair, $3.75 to '$4; bologna, $2.50 to .3.25; feeding steers, good, $6.50 to $•• ; do, fair, $G • to $6.25; stockers, good, $5.50 to $6; . do, fair, $5 to $5,50; calve:, choice, $10 to $11; cio, red., $7 to , $9; do, common, $4.50 to • $6.00; mild cows. choice, $70 to $80; do, fair, $40 to $b0; springers, choice, $75 to $90: !good light sheep, $8,50 to $10; heavies and bucks, $5.50 to $7.50; good ewo la rebs, $14 to $15,50; do, med., $10 to 12; do, culls, $8,00 to $9.00; npring iambs, each, $8 to $1.4.50; hogs, thick I snieotlls, fed and watered,. ,$11.35; do; f.o.b., $11,76; do, `country points, • ' $1.3,50; do. oft' .. cars, $12.85; select ll..ei:tiara, $2.42, O.tts Can. west. No, 2, "clic' do, No. 3, 63c: extra No, 1 feed;'601/2e, Flour, MONTREAL. AL. Alan. spring wheat pats,, firsts, $9,80; seconds, $9.$0; strong bakers', $9,10.. Flour, winter pats.. choice $7,60 tie, $7.70. Roiled vats, ]tat; 00 choice, $3.45, Bran, $26.25 to' $27.25. -Shorts, $28125 to $29.26. Middlings, $3,1.25 to $35.25.: Huy, No. 2, per ton,- car lets, $1.4:to $15, ' CIteesc•-.-Pila'a&t vests., 17 "l to . 1.7 ?,4c; finest casts., 1.74 to 17%c, Butler—No. 1, pasteurized, 321,( i 3:14 No, 1., creamery," 81► to 82c; scco:ncls, 801; to 31c, Eggs --Fresh .. specials, 36 to 87c; 'fresh extras, 850 fresh firsts, 32e. Dairy cows, $2 to .$8,601 ,calved, '. $7.60 to $8; de, mixed lots, ordinar9 •quality, $6,50 to $7; do, poorest; $0; hogs, mixed lets, 413,21, • MirrlifearienZti SEE OUR ` NEW PATTERNS IN CONGOLIAN and LINOLEUM SQUARES We carry a full range in patterns and sizes SEE OUR NEW STYLES IN BOYS', YOUNG MEN'S -AND MEN'S SUITS, FOR SPRING New Broadcloth and Crepes for Children's and Ladie's Dresses. SPECIAL OFFERING Ladle's Hose and Men's Socks. E. BENDER, L E3 L,r Y T H , ONT. ++++++g or4, 4i, This is the season for nice dressy 61 Mr. Orton and Mint Alice Stubbs spent '' Sunday with Stratford friend,, 44 shoes. We have some of the latest ÷ Mies Lottie Young, of Londesboro, left + styles including Ladies and on Monday on a visit to Mrs (Dr) Alli- 4t • Wen's New Russian/ lidlht + eon, Welland. r Mrs. Geo. Collinson, who is visiting her + tan strap Slippers and daughter, M. Sllib, Brantford, is ex- + Oxfords. These are + peeled homes this week. + very' neat and Mi, a Mrs. H. Gidley, who underwent an + dressy. , '?! operation for mastoid in the Clinton Hos- 41 + `1'• pita! last seek, is progressing nicely. +ev + 0 5 Sugar it almost back to its pre•wer a "�° :•..price. We note that the best grade of srranulated is quoted f. o. b. Toronto at4'4• 7.00 per 1OQ ib. bag.MtMR Richmond.Mp Wecarry all the newest shades ina�+ At a meeting of Memorial Hall Com- secretary �r�!•tr,j rnittee Mid last week, Mr. Jas. D. Moody LISLE S L B AND'� was appointed Treasurer in the place of 4 4, the Tate Charles M:Clelland, some special prices in ;. 'a The Liberals of North Huron will meet �„ Silk Hose all sizes. �, in Ntingharo Town Nall next Tuesday for �,, �' r the purpose of discussing matters pertain- , . 4' '� `alta Lq.,.: Ile el, et. 1': wt/ere els ►kit, `,tw:t�r.1°..t"..Me.Ale ���,•It. `]�•,►I`1�,•�1/ kf/ 1r AN q► +{► . t ✓i► IIS• , \ » r{ .' r,1► r,` vi. .,► vie .s\' e{ti r,• 1i a! •1 01. �\ 01. ✓{: R£NNTE'S Selected Pure Bred Seed Corn Is of uniform, high germination, and is tho best that cap be procured anywhere. It is care- fully ¢elected, and thoroughly `acclimated to Canadian• growing conditions. We ltigI ly recommend the following varieties listed in the Marr of theft'' popularity. RENNiE'S REST STRAINS OF DENTS i II'� UST STRAINS 1f.IPRQL'P.D lAMINQ //��,' OP !/LINTS •WlitTE CAP Cb nbNs BAILEY O,SU.OW GOLOI'.N GLOW NosTit DAKOTA WISCONSIN Nn,'r s GIANT Wines NskAC8 RED GQu ENSILAo8t Ord t Rsnnl.. Seletrrd Seed Corn through your Taal Dealer or direct from W tLIAMR Et N N I ECt.tMOT Grrti ADSLAIDR and JARVIS Streets TORONTO you minor obtain locally, please wile us, Vying your ,dealer s address ' We ttathteit► et Chatham, Ont., a Seed Corn establishment equipped with the most modern machinery for handling high ��tti ed Corn and in which has been installed all the latest imr>iroved cleaning, testing and drying mzchincry of the most tscientifc invention, TA D,rvtinton $al inspector Ina recent report stresses the Impar. rigy�/ teaming Sad Corn of the proper Quality for this season's Its/, IAS aper) weather having caused considcraNe damage to Seed M1. Local News Women's Institute Elect Officers At. the M• ay meeting of the Women's Institute the following officers were elect- ed tor the ensuing year: President -Mrs. John Armstrong 1st Vice President - Mra. R. Richmond 2nd Vice President- Mra. Herrington Sec'y•Treas.- Mr,. John Colcloueh Assistant . Mrs G. M. Chambers Pianist -Miss E. Mills Dist. Director- Mrs. S. A. Poplestone Auditors -Mrs. F. Kershaw, Mrs. P. Gardiner. Directors --Mrs. S. H. Gidley, Mra. R, C. McGowan, Mrs. W. A. Logan, Mrs. P Gardiner, Miss Alice Gillespie. Representatives to 'District Annual ee irg•- rs. rs. Jap. Cook, Mrs. G. D. Leith, president and Program Committee -Mrs. Newcombe, Mrs, Cnok, Mrs. Telfer, Mrs. Poplestone, Mrs. Wightman, Mrs, (Rev.) Telford, Mrs• Geddes. Music Committee -Mrs. Jno. R. Bell, Mre. H Brundson, Mrs C. Fineland Miss A. Mowatt, Mies P. Gilley, Miss E. Mills Publicity Committee -Mrs. (Dr.) Mc• Iutyre, Mrs. Wm: Mills. Emergency Committee-Mre, J. Carter Mrs. Wm. Mills, Mies Vera Tierney. Flower Committee -Mrs. Geddes. Miss Gillespie, Mrs G. D. Leith, Mrs. G. M. Chambers, Mre. S. H Gidley, Mrs. D. Taman. �r��t•�rti•��^'�� 4 :r: r+' '4'rj► ()flJ) RARGANS FOR YOU. • Meng Khali Over tll5, sizes 38 to .42, ref; $1 5; �a1e 1 33 Men's l Maki Pants, no b;bs, sizes• 34 to 1124,1reg 2 00, sale 1 57 Gordon's Woi'l�; Shirts, a big gar - mut, guy;, a!i.teed rip..pr�ocf �tf+ wear like iron, Na'e 1 12 Khaki Work Shirts, full size gar- ment sizes 14 1-2 to 16 1M2 to 10 1-,2, y�a1e 89c Feather Ticking 22 in. sale Feather Tickhl 32 in. sale 35c Men's Balb'g'n Mils and ,* Drawers * ate Penman's or Zimrnerknit, 'sale 68c Balbriggan Cornbiiiations sizes 36 to 4, 4, with short sleeve, knee or ankle length sale $ 1 22 Met' Silk ani CaslImer Sox, * Mitchell make- sale 68c. 75c, 90c ing to the next Federal election. L. 1'tte entertainment committee of Blyth Jas. 0 �' w Dodds:. Agricultural Society have in hand the pro grim for the concert to be held on the Phone t,„v c,„ .�.,,., ..e.. V J. .e. :.- second night of the fair, Sept 24. X11 ' Fl + + '52A. ++ +/A' .i. + . , ►'l. f I ----------------- ---•------._.__..- --.._..- ,..,.. _ _..__ _ ... Mr. Dcloss Taman, who has the work -._-_.---_-____----...._--,-•::_-,:_,---,---_=.,. _____ _ _._�__ _._.__.._ . of seeding for the Collinson & Glousher y _ _ st __ - - - - - -_ �_-. �___ �_ = �.. __ _ _- -- - - X f++++++4+4,4 -10++++++++++++g ' Fla Milt, is progressing well wi'b the + 'p 'fit p �v 'r• ' work and expects to have 200 acres com•tiA1,691klie%VteAtient-IteAtt%Siv+ r ICE .CREAM BRICKS n�.* , reeled this week, ' . --^ - !�' Kelly's "Pep”Bran �'' Mra N. A. Taylor and Miss Annie hr ve SHIPMENTS OF LIVE STOCK DUR- "� ti - moved into their new home on Drummond ING APRIL_ ►Y.► '' �T Apex Brand Canned Street, Chief of Polio Ferguson will Total Cattle 1720 F,E�~b d.Y IF+S +� p Goods, 1ok•+ tnove into the dwelling on M111 Street Steers over :200 lbs. 208 t .'la vacated by Mrs Taylor, it Jumbo Sugar Beet, 0 + Cream Cheese. Steers 1000 to 1200 lbs. good 213 , � �, �" .t the evening service 'n St. Andrew's do do do common 7 4$ Tankard Sugar Beet, Campbell's. ►� Oup S, ,~fu CPturch on Sunday, Mr. G. D. Leith, Mr. Steers 700 to 1000 lbs good . 392 A Levithn Sugar Beet, S.!_iA. Poplestone, Miss M. Cole and Mrs. do do do common 26 r Grand White Mange), e) ' 0�" s t;+ C. Vineland sang a de;ightful quartette Heisers, good 410 g ' 0 ASparagr as Tips, ,th::o 'Yellow Intel me diate Man 'e'. Vas there ever Sweeter Music"Mrs, do fair...,, 3 . Fngland taking the solo part. do , common 1 • . Yello ),vLevithn Mangel Seeds, + Roman Meal. , ..f.' l3tyih Community Horticultural Society Cattle expo, ted (March) 305 t•gt TT TURNIP ''�, (r 1;� a�'1('t r� Iodized Salt, + y Hogs Shipped Direct tq Packing Plants JL 4JI h9 �• F7lt l�,!!1 t' tr4ve set Wednesday afternoon, May 27th, � r •� , the time to clean up the old cemetery Total 'per cent 5446 Irish King, Canadian (�E-nl, Prize Purple Top, +I Bulk Dates, - ' a ounds on !Ansley Street. The services Select 30.7 1673 Derby. fall wishing to give a hand at the work Smooth 67,4 " " 2134 y Maxwell House Coffee:1'.4'Hogs shipwed to Stock Yards'q'��'�•�sill be appreciated. Farmers wishing toTotal . !�.t.t:j,1 D �" rive the use of their team for the after• 1336 t erg �'t��on will kindly advise Mr,•L'. Geddes, Select 34.5, April .420 Se 'ort? It edl•ly aS l i 1S 11aL'd t0 pI'OCU1'e. `l` . Brooms t7 5 50c, 60c $i.00 ' r �) Shirk smooth 56.6 700 - ":"' STANIINAX—Gro< frig Mash and Chick + Blyth and Purity Flour'. • e: - Food. + ,-;,: ALL EGGS BOUGHT ON GIRADE°� +61, ' ,�• Gem �', J # + R. J. POWELL . 0 i •4 a 1 > l� ' 'PHONE J',1.a�vrlil, OJT 'PHONE 14 f;, - (--h.tro.i.jo. 0. 44++ffitf++++++1.+444+++1,+.4u+ t; 4 !.r 3 / i . 1 at �. li 11r 1� ,Ir ►+...l, 'li , l� �,tG,l.• ,1 ale �+4 ►L+ :�r: )L' �. �e• \ * �'` •r ' /j` !(i �Ir� i{`' �i. /j� r 1�t vj` /�� ✓(t r,w Jul i�`� .'{► J�� .,. /l. Kaufman's Lifel:t•c oyt Outing Shoes at Factory Prices. Men's and Women's Shee3 at big Reductions Inapection of our Stock will con._ vince you we are sellingoff our entire stock. r p go L A • Co t Lr:t.c..) •,i•e 4,0 Y44. • • r,; w r 4.4 , 4,, •, l., ':S)me interesting figures on the cost of l�cc mot ion were adduced during the dire cb§sion of Canadian National Railway finances in the House Committee on ROI - ways and Shipping. It cost $17,290 000 td keep the locomotives of that rcad'in re- pbir last year. Depreciation was $424,890 and retirements represents a loss of $805,- 4440. New locomotives purchased in 1924 cost $1,800,000. They were all purchas- ed in Canada. Mrs. John Armstrong and, Miss Vera visited London friends during the week. Mrs. R. J. Powell and Mrs, Bland Her- ri' gton have been on ,the sick list these past few days. Mrs McKenzie and her son, Charles, of Galt, spent Sunday with her brothers, M, sats, A. B. and Frank Rainton. , 'More than two billion Kilowatt hours WANTED -Long haired collie pup, R. of electric power have beeu exported from Laidlaw, 'phone 13-11, Blyth. Canada within the last five years. accord- FOR SALE -3 burner "Perfection" ing to answers made in the House of Com coal oil stove with oven. Good condition, mono, The Hydro -Electric Power Com- Apply to F. G. Kershaw. - rnihsion of Ontario has obtained two licen-BOUND --Ladies Stole between Con, NOTICE 'Twnclii+t of HuHet t wee to .sport electric power, one for 80,000 . 8 and 6 East Wawanosh.� Owner mayThe anneal meeting of the Int hnkleor Cctttt •of l�rvi>!un. No'tic'e is h rebv kilowatts and one for 45,000 kilowatts of I have same on callingat The Stands d. Cemetery, t.tll he held in, "oIT peak or interruptible power" The f in the Union riven that 1 h•' Com t c f !►r:vtsiun on the IvhrrivJriat hall Blyth, on Saturday, May ; A,se•�emrnt !loll for the 'I'r,wnihip, f Hill. Ontario Ilydro Commission has, accord- LOST -On the road between Wingham 30th, at 8 o'clock 11. m. I let t for the year 192;5 will he he'd in i lir ing. to answers made, been exporting pow- and Goderich, two short -hand books and ..R. 13, McGoti;'AN, Community 11x11, L',ndeshorn, on Friday tr elm 1917 from Niagara Falls. - key touhort-hand ccurse. Anyone find- Sec). -Treasurer, I the 20111 d:oy or i`tay next. at 130 p, r„ ins same, kindlyleavr"at Standard Office - - - __-._._ ____.__--_ - !far the inti pure of hI Irit"ra and sr'I cline '1'o encourage the beautification of i complaints against t.;,irf aF,be ;tnrml ro1.1 , MEETING OV-- HURON COUNTY; 1-'crs0It': hr•vtrg busincFs at this CHu t . g COUNCIL. will allcnrl_.;,t the Snicl time and place, +i1h.ut further notice, ilttllelt May 1-1, The Council of tee Cnrporation of the 1'J''25 'John E;ingland„ Clerk of Hulett, County of Huron will meet in I he Coun- cil Chatnher, Goderich, at 3 o'c-locic ice •• — ' - the afternoon of Tue,dav, fhi! 2rnt oily of COURT oh RrEvISin? June, 1025. All accounts atrainsl 1111• , , Dainty must be its the hands of Hifi Clerk Nr tier is hereby itivon that the first sit- . not later than Mt.nday pi•rcerling the' ting of the Com 1 of 1'r'vision of the A;;,.• ntertirh r,i ('aunril, essinrnl Roll of the Villrt'r orI'Ivlh for r C;i;O LI', Ht.)LAMAN, County Clerk lltn Year 1020 '!I.h+' held in Ihrw Council Chamber rt, MoI,day, ,lune 1:t,'Iitli p Iii. , Goderich, Alay 18, 1025,t All parties inletuc cdt Will pled?c• talcs' 4 'Mike and+govcrn them.elves accordingly, j' ;��Y "w • : 11E: It ,,, ...1" 1 .,r,'1 .hrct rvo�l=cap pad for tic. 'at 'fire R. 13. McGU1S'AN, Glerlc 1'�r,.r.''r`..° 11� ep.0°, • fAip. 31d book & Sta'iunery Store, Blyth, May 18, 1015 $' ry' -a ' 'r'ai' r/%, ,W' 1:1.YQ' r ,t•u rk" ,�y,• '��ly. v school grounds, the Canadian Horticui- prThose cartemplating entering the !dal Com cit has instituted a Dominion Standing Field Crop Competition to be vide, and is offering valuable silver cups held under the direction of Blyth Agricul- as prizes by those who do the mat met.. tural Society, will bear in mind that ap- itorious work toward the beatUificalion plications must be in the hands of the of school grounds during the coming seas -.Se cretary by May 25th. uu. Erich province will have its own com petition, A cup when won three times FARM FOR SALE .not necessarily in eucctasion, by any school becomes the property of the school 160 acres good level land, first-class and with each cup the council will present buildings. Rural Mail, Telephone, Might an award of merit *bich can be kept and cot aider a house in exchange, . 'Tia farni framed bythe school ftp a permanent can be bought without Owing any man- ey down providing purchaser gives secur- tee*, sty. For particulars appJy$ Tete 3tandarr,t tStIdar,,, . Ja•,. I .+ ,,, anstaaaelata almwss 1-3 OF YOUR LIFE IS SPENT IN 'BED, ' Thus the Importance of having your bed equip pert with a good n'i tttress.and spring. We are offering special values in Simmons BEDS, M ArFII4RESSES AND SPRINGS Complete Bed Outfits consi3ting -of • . BED, MATTRESS AND SIRING priced at from $1. 600 upwards. Matetl'E`- „es in various grades :front $6.0O to $29. ' O c:l,ch Springs in a variety of dilet'vCnt..lityles fr'0m M ' $666 to $i2.:�tri e;i.eh, STRETCH t RS, CIlIL1JREN'S CRIBS, ETC. at lowest mikes. • - at�Saer�xuhaeae"�IpstpcsrtStaaol: v, . 1,1V-