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The Blyth Standard, 1925-10-15, Page 104i444‘,449+04444.4+4.44 ofsoleteille 4. A.full line of Public told High Qchool.Stippliex at + TRIP, STANDARD. l tio4++ '+0+44.44++44.1.4.4.1+44'4 ON NNANONION. --..w.a.•.pW�Y XVI I. Writing Tablets. I A large assortment of Writing '1 Tablets, Papeterieo and Envelopes at THE STANDARD. i, i44444441.414444446'14444444"it • BLYTH, ONTARIO, THUD 1DAY, OCTOBER 15, 1925 wM.,.....,�..._._, ,I..I.•-IMM. '...•-T.. N'-f•,.w we -•r. +....-.. -.. r --r w...y. ......-�.. n r ,.�.y�.,,y,.-�-./,. -.••1..1.r..,• .r ».--.._ -�.... itJri.44444144-0,.44,,-ese+.1,4.4sY},},,...rY.)..;,.t.-;..•+4.1,44++40 4.4.+i'++++♦.14 YOU WILL. LOOM. ITN ONE OF OUB NEW O'COATS. in Which `'()ll \trill fieri nc \v (;ol(►rinf,'s. style, comfort and h'I'i('((1 right. • Young Mel) and 1\1en's O'Coal;-; $1 2.E 0. RE A) Y TO WEAR UITS in 11CW 1Ica11.E r '1\\'(t t{ ; € ;, well as .Chile anti (ii,ey S 1'47es, Our ri ('(;lc ,f' ('c lh:l'l('t e :1 CJ11(t('1'\\'( ar,►shit l;, iT'tl ��\Vt`a1ci's; If not or 0' Coat, you in Re ady To Wear hid , \`,"e \`,T; rt't;t'.11)11) (•(, t.o ;;Ilii, you in I','il`.ti i1 'I,() 1:111,:11, i)ii1:' 11, Caps, ' ;�ll)�, ilosl()1'Yr • ( 1r:Il,ie'r, 1\1 (tt ,icl L' ;) s• 1' tet i:;:,Iwr. l'Itptit•• :IS ,inti 8i. r+!7'i! It, ()u(:. 'i4). 'C• + 'IliF't�,4t+4„9.4•, +,4'1441.+4,04„C,r.03'.c•w4,4) 1.4.11.4'4•! ).++.!..i. 4,d'y',1++ rree; i; z. - I.:::'r1'.a::..... .1n'l A,��•V: iI '.yd ,��F'`MjtA lr't4 k�Jt'1t.-... d(J'.�Y: ,�,y 01010/111 v, i(J."(3C7t ..:, /1 UT () 7i,•y F) r ' t) ti • 1 11a.0 -,e the old "car lock til” c new.•, -A few" . ttirrt r.w . l „ ,„ and li'ftle .xr t'e 17,1Ti!I chnrfie the old weather beafel-t •car into a real auto. MI sizes and colors. COUN E!N(1LAND, HARDWARE MEP CHANT. ELYTTI, , ONT. . Local News. Blyth School Board The regular meeting of i3lyth Sci sol No16 CREAM WANTED >.. 'Hoard was held un the evening of Friday, �1 �t R J,' October tith, with Chairman Maines and PEARL CREAMERY, Milverton. Powell. t. Trustees Sims, Chcllew, McIntyre, Gard Mrs Gordon McDonald and daufth`ter, ,leer and Elliott present. will pay farmers F. 0. B. 39c. to 42c. per b. i, Alinutcy of last meeting were read andR. 'Margaret. left last week fur their home int .£ fat for all cream delivered at C.P New Li+l4card, approved on motion of Trustees Sin and Elliot t. Anyone Interested kindly send for cans and you will be assured of a fair deal. Live fowl taken every Tuesday, the fact that there is no open Beason ci$ hTrustee Chellew, that the folios ing ac - year for partridge. . t,•unuta he paid: The Sacrament of the Lord's Supper; It M. M, Kay, fixing clocks $ 2 70 will he dispensed in St, Andrew's Church_ •. Maines. unloading coal. 19 Or► this Sabbath at the morning fervice.' . Standard Book & Stationory Store supplies14 31 Make sure your nauu• k on the voters', C. Vineland on account of ht•at- List. I),m't wait to argue it out with the ing contract fi?0 00 Deputy Returnicg officer and pall clerk on tsar of coal , 2.,.3 9`i cicc.ion day. -i The atcrctary advised the lioard that A Hallowe'en 1):rnce will be held in?i he had receivcd th'-: folio ing grant and Mem.uial Hall 'on the night of Friday,. ttc•i,''"nt`: October 30 under the aushicesof the lVtiq) t ('" v`r�r'ment grant Public School,.$$ti'•7 7 le Leaf C11). (' ntitluation School giant bit 77 l Lxaurinat ion fees, •10 (JO N1r. \V. 1). M•1cl..ean has receiv..cl his sale of old lumber 12 ori The AlcdU 1 health Officer's itcport i. as presented arid this showed ' he plinth pf the School in a healthy state physically h'Ir. Joe Heffrnn returned hemp (rem rind the snnitnry condition of the sc out the ',Vest Inst week. Ile took in the bar- ietisfact.,ry The report suggested that vester't excursion and is delighted .with the Board, ;n soon a; finances would per the tripai:d exp,.rienchs cf western life, t1eit, have insi,le closets and urinals gelled. l\tr. and Mrs, A•icNeil, of Toronto Mov d hy'Crustee Elliott, seconded by spent Sunday with the latter's sister; Alrs .< ,7rustee Islcintyre, that the chairman F. A. Rogerson. They returned to the {hr,\'e the fire escapes at tie school print • city on Alonday accompanied by Mrs. Rogcrson• tem as they were showing the ravages of 'rust very much.- Carried. The Government has set apart Wednes- 4 moved by 'Trustee Sines, seconded by day, Oct. 23th, as lisp day sed has called ']'iustce Chellew that ate adjourn.' --Car upon all Canadi.ics to observe it as such ,nd. by providing fish for the family menu for ` I ist shipment of C• me It far this beamtt Parties red+ririn:; cement will make their wants known al once, at least one meal. +9uron County Fruit Orownrs. The tea terved by the Ladies' Guild.of Trinity (hutch at the hon of Miss Fan- Council an• A meeting of the Iluron County Fruit u tel' heldinthe office C u tl was ld ,Ilia. u the )n igh on Thursday evening waswellpatron- ,�, hf I 1 ized and the funds of that organization par(ment of Agriculture on Sept. 3lth. considerably augmented. 'Main matter for discuss:on was the hold 'in:; of ft fruit show fur 1 025 and it was de - Nliss Evelyn Stinson went to Toronto Icitiel that a fruit show bo held at Clinton last week where she had :u r tonsils and 'on Nov•t2nd and 3rd, similar to the one adenoids removed She is getting aloe g ,'hold in 1924,: nicely. She was accompanied to thecity. t The following were the officers for 192.1 by her sister, Miss Myra. Two weeks from today the electors • o Canada iil`th%Ve'tne upnot ,f ciding who will make and administer her laws for the next four or five years, Is your name on the Voters' List? 'eir,J .were elected for'1025.: orrimittee—Rolit. R. Sloan, Bayfield, tidetitt'Robt: Smyth; ZlintOnt George' Laithwaite, Goderich; R. I -I. Revell God- erich; Thos Fraser, Clinton; John Joynt Lucknow; E. Cameron, Lucknow; S. I3. Stothers, Clinl:;n, Secretary-i'reasurer. '1 The Y. M. C. '1'. U. will be held at the 1 home of Miss Janette Popleetone, on \Vrd ntsday evening, O:tuber at S o'clock. 1'1 when airs. Baines of At,hurn will address ;the meeting. I:veryb_dy welcome, •4+++4..;•.S•d•,a..t,..1.-1.,t,.J+.1.,.1..1.,t,.1..1.,r.•i,,..,{.,r.,,'+' ;.4.,;,"5..r..;.+'t.+++a»5+ 4+ 4 QIC w1i:i.w .res.ctu.1.1 (c,9)414,3 OUR NEW WALL PAPER FOR FALL HAS JUST ARRIVED D 200 PATTERNS OF THE LATEST DESIGNS TO CHOOSE FROM We have also a few room. lots of last years patterns at %2 price. 6r, M'. Mc.KAV: OPTOMETRIST BY. EXAMINATION BLYTH, ONT. d' ;.4 r:, Londertowo. The Community hall 13 ) 13 end purpose celebrating their anniversary pith a sup The Provincial Government has with- per and coned t on 'Thursday, October 22. drawn the one cent tax levicu last spring in Community hall, Lan eshn o. Suppe r on dance halls. The new t•x will be lir 5.30 to 8 o'clock, followed by concert per cent. instead of 20 per cent. and .till Admission --Adults 50c., children 25c. be paid by the hall owners on a flat bads. Mrs. Chas. McCrea, who was the guest of her cousin,.Mes, J. 1I. R Elliott, last week, left on Saturday for Toronto where she would spend a few clays with her daughter who is attending college. before proceeding to her home at Sault Ste Marie Mr. and Mrs F. G. Kersha'.v motored to Kilsyth, near Owen Sound, and attend- ed the Fall Fair held in that place on Oct. Sth and 9;h, It is sixteen years since Mr. Kershaw at tended a fair in that. place and he was agreeal.ly surprised at the splendid exhibit of farm produce and livestock. Ile says that, for a mail + place. Kileyth fair is a wonder. Postmaster Tasker i= now located i,t the + new postuftice on Queen St. and the pub- lic was first served front here on Monday 4 .3. ,'. morning. The new postofiice is both com modious and carries with it the best ar- rangement possible for the speedy service to its patrons. Mr. 'Tasker is desc►ving of every commendation for his enterprise 4• in erecting this ,comfortable and conven- ient building, The supper provided by the McLean Mission Band in St. Andrew's Church basement on Saturday nignt, was well at- tended considering the unfavorable weath er. The sale of the autograph,quilt by tender, Ant to .t1r. S. A. Poplestor.e whose bid was the highest. Quite an un- ique feature was the autograph quil , be- longing to Mrs. (Dr.) Milne, which was on exhibition. This quilt was purchased by her mother, the late Mrs. L) B. Mc. Kier on, 41 years ago ai.d contain's the names of many forma and present day residents of Blyth. Governrnent as,istance in the market- ing o$this, years apple crop in Ontario was annouced last week at the Parliament Buildings by I-Iun. John S. Martin, Min- ister of. Agriculture. The assistance is along two lines, namely, an intensive pub- ilirity campaign urging the people .to the bonne -grown Inuit, and aid in securing to 'kers. Under the latter heading the Government aid will take the 1aneible fortis of purchase from the growers ol25.- 1' .1. ..1..1:4+4,4..:•++.1.4.,1,4.01.., ,,a.4,0o.yY1“,aeon. ++44,+++++.1•+++.:.++++++4,44+++.31 BUY YOUR. FLOUR NOW [I WECARRY A 1 ULI • STOCK 'IT lE 1 01 LOWING LINES PURITY, FIVE ROSES; CLINTON. 131ATII, ANI) • EXETER • Improved Fruit Jar, in all Sizes. Try a bag of gr ;nula1•ec1 Sit ;ar at: a very close �t1co. FRESH FRUITS -1N SEASON . Cherries. Per ries, Ihiennas. Qran;ges and Leptons. FRESH VEG1l'1'A.I3LES. ' l _ GREEN PEAS, GREEN BEANS, TOMATOES. HIGHEST"CASH PRICE PAID1=OR BUTTER�SANDB�EGGS (r. /no CUTAMI$E , Phone 89. BLYTH, ONT 1= 0 Miss Amy Ross has returned home af- ter spending a month with her brothr;r at Vineland. Mr. Richard Gilley, of Exeter, is visit- ing his nephew, Mr. II, Cidley, Mrs. Garman of Seaford), was the guest of Mr, and Mrs. John Yeo last week. The McLean Mission Band meets rest Saturday afternoon. The hour of meetir.g this month is 3.30. Children's Day be held in Trinity Church next Sunday evening at 7 o'clock, Special music by the'Sunday School. Friends will regret to learn that Mrs Harold Dexter is confined to her bed through illness. We trust that she will soon regain her health. The bald and bobbed 'nay be interested in the report that wigs made of chicken feathers are the latest dome decorations in Paris. Something to cackle about, Anniversary Services in St. Andrew's Church are to be held on Sunday, Octob er 25th. The preacher for the day will be Rev. W. D. McDonald, of Egmondville, I3lyth Continuation School will hold their annual Field Day this (Thursday) afternoon on the Driving 'Park Grounds. See adv. elsewhere in this issue for partic- ulars, of program. Those who attended the Deanery meet- ing held at Exeter last week tsar : Rev. W B. and Mts. Hawkins. Mrs and Miss Met calfe, Mrs. Geo. Powell, Mrs. F. A Roger- son, Mts R. J. Puwel, Mrs. Join Arm- strong and Miss Ellen Thompson. Some of those who have radio sets in- stalled in their home:, afforded baseball fans much pleasure during to week in per- mitting them to her the' results of the major league series while in progress and and whjch was won by Washington, PLEASE GIVE US A TRIAL A. F. CLARK, Prop. Milverton Box 203, Presbytery of Iluron Meets. 1 An event of much interest to the neigh- horhood took place last Wednesday when the Prrsbytary of Iluron of the United Church of Canada met in Conference in Duff's Church, Walton. The roll o' neem bership includes the names of fifty-nine ministers and a corresponding number of laymen but on this occasion many ad- ditional representatives were present from the coegteg:11inns, making an audience 'its capU. l that filled the church l 0 > The forenoon seisil,n was spent in a dccussii,n of the sp•ntuai anon: of the church au able address heir g given on this subject by Rev. W. l; M Ikon. Ile wa:Y (elle ((1 by Revs Balker. Moor house and !\lc1nto 0 who dealt with Prayer. Po rsoral I;veneelism aid 11ubilizatiun of Church Forces as factors in cart) ing ut.t the church's spiritual task. At the afterncon session Dr J. L Stew- ait, of IVt st China, addressed the large auuieace on present conc'itions in the Far East. Ile showed that the present unrest was the natural result of the spread of ‘Pastern ideas of religion, education. so- cial and political relationships. The Chinese ltd by the s uc 't feat class wtC. beginning to seek the right of self•goverti• mens in their own land. They wanted the right to make their own laws for all alike, to abolish the extra -territorial tigi'ts of foreigners, to have the power of fixing their own tariff and owning all their own seaports. The ferment of these new idras had brought forth riots. disturbanc- es, strikes and even civil war. One of the ominous and -disquieting , featur;s.pQigted• out by Dr. Stewart was that th. Bolshev• ists of Russia were exceedingly active in China and that many of the Chinese were turning to them for help. This would Pres( nt a serious obstacle to Christianity u China ,,s the BolshLvicts are openly op- posed to religion Dr. Stewart's address was followed by rhe presentation of the P.esbytery's 13ud set by Rev. \V 1). Mcl1onald The con :rrgations are asked to provide for the Missionary, Social, Educational and Be nevc•Ient work cf ; he church the sum of S70,000 for}he preseut financial year which ends on March 31st nett. Mr. Millson addressed the Presbytery on the necessity for a full and hearty re- sponse to the Budget claims,' pointing his remarks with many a practical and per- sonal illustration. After full discussion it was agreed to accept the allotment and to allocate the amount to the congregations according to the number of families, on a basis that would equalize the givings per family 'throughout the Presbytery. Applications from Gori ie and Fordwich to endorse local efnion of churches were considered and the request granted. An induction service was arranged at Gorrie for Ocvtober lath and an inaugural service at Fordwich op Sunday, Nov. 8th. l3efore adjourning it was proposed that the next meeting of Presbytery, iv the lat- ter part of November, be held in Blyth, Representatives of the United Church in Blyth who atter.ded the meeting at Walton. included the following:—Revs R. I -I Barnby and G. Telford, Messrs. A B. Carr, J. D Moody, E Bender. P, Gardiner, Mrs. Gardiner, Mrs. Floody and Mrs. Duncan Laidlaw. An important chili ge in postal rates which will greatly assist business firms in Bending out printed circulars soliciting business has recently been made by re- ducing the postale to one-half cent each The new rate applies where circulars are 000 barrels of representative apples to he mailed in packages for local distribution Mr. McGee finds he has too many cattle shipped overseas with a v,ew to favorably householders. Another change in increas. and' sheep to winter properly and taker) Optometry—Its Valuo to the . Public 13Y R, M. McKAY, BLYTI1 What docs the Optometrist sell princi- pally? Service. His greatest value is his pat- ient, in determining what errors of vision are present and how they may be correct- ed. Then Optometry is not a business? Not more so than any other profession. An Optometrist is not a seller of spec- tacles. No, as has been said, he sells service. Sc:next article. To be continued next issue, ..�L__ As will be seen by an adv. in this issue, Mr. R. J. McGee, who resides on Lot 31, Con. 1; East Walvanosh, will hold an auc- tion sale of live stock on Monday next, October 100, commencing at 1 p. m, impressing the market there with the fav' ing the limit in weight of parcel pnwt two neaps of reducing his stonk. 'JI nl'flblr. quality cif the: C)nt(itlo fruit., paeka cti from 11 to 14 poundta, Olt dm out lo emanied O� sho d &PVC CoNFmEPrIoN' LIFE Ansi Pout r in -41 001. e . to • cft 0 *I C1VANGft,: General Agent, • � Vii« � ._. �• 'i• .,�1 1 1 Goderich, Ont. peek , of icor Mosta, loam peaciaL Maar Addtar SCHOOL SUPPLIES We have now in stock a complete line of Public and High School supplies: Text Books, Scribblers, Drawing Books, Loose Leaf Books, Exam. Pacts, Rulers, Inks, Rubbers, Paints, Water Colors, Compasses, Slates, Pencils, &c, The Stan;Iard Book & Stationery Store W. R. GOULDING, A. T. C. M. • Organist and Choirmaster St. James United Church, Exeter. Instructions in Vocal—Piano,--Theory Will be in Blyth each Wednesday. In. formation and terms may be obtained from Miss Pearl Gidley, FOR SALE 1 wooden 'ump in first class repair, works easy. four strokes will fill an ordin- ary pail. Will accomodate a well 10 feet deep froth platform. 1 office safe Ford & Featheratore make in first class repair, inside'dimensions are 20 inches, wide, 26 inches high, and 14 inches deep. Spaced for books and pap- ers. Price $75.00 cash. E. W. Geddes., FARM FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE 100 acres of goad land in Grey Tp. On the premises is situate a 1i storey stone dwelling. bank barn, straw barn, driving shed. Windmill with water in barn. This is a very desirable property and we will take Blyth residential property as part payment, For further particulars apply at Tho Standilrci ileal iistaty Agencyr I31yth1 Ont, L. The Automobile CRISP AUTUMN ADDS ZEST TO AUTO JOURNEYS. How to maintain the benepts of that, lugs came It h always possible to add outdoor lifo which millions receivedjuet the right number of blankets to Insure comfort. Among the most conspicuous incon- During the heated term they journey_ veniences of hot weather outingare ed out into the open spaces in an end- those mosquitoes, bugs, Tits and vari- lese etream of automobiles to enjoy out other pests which seek to annoy the thrills of life next to nature. It and devour human beings, In the fall WWI great sport----imd healthy. Tho thesee sources of disturbance have selution of the problem stated is more mostly turned to other methods of motoring. • passing their time. However, in cer- tain localities, there are other animals I n fact there are :elven to ges in that represent opportunities for hunt- nutunin motoring not always to be . Inig game, all of whieh often adds to found in mid -summer, 4.'s pevi al 1 y from. the interest of autumn motoring. u health standpoint, One of the most The scenic beauty of Canada is at notable of these k amount of comfort with Which one can travel by automo- ; kin and the fodder's in the shock. The bile during the fall season. i uniform green of .summer becomes a It is recognized that fewer motor-, thousand shades of striking colors as He are at large after the usual Vfl• to1e leaves of the trees vie with each cation months are over, not hoeaVse other in attractiveness. The poison they dida't survive but because other ivy has lost its sting. The crops have This Tourist Business. interest absorbing of the Interior Dept, in regard fifteen or twenty feet from the noz- ear with a greater agree of safety,. re;atives. Row many rersons in Canada have, value of the present volume of tourist piny on the fire from above. gilt to Consequently elle can not only drive a have more time to visit their city _ to it lies not so much in the Ilallili Zi.Q8. Six }dreams were broil mid therefor' less nervous energy but; Then there is a kick in the fall any idea of where the American city ; business but in s'eeing that Canada's' At the same time the Rumping unit el!,o natural recreational attractions aro one can proceed with less annoy- ozone which tends to invigorating of Pittsfield is? Pittsfield, not Pitts- ' was operated from below the fire and hold health. Tho snappy feel of the air is burg, brought to tho attention of he pros- ! between the two linea of attack the I ;Ince which comes from being in effect a stimulating tonic which Probably not very many. For Pitts- pective tourist from abroad no less fire was soon brought under control, • I up by excessive traffic. Ore has mare. opportunity to observe the countryI Makes the leisure hours of motoring field is not in the cuss of such centres extensively or effectively than the 1)o- Tho gravity hose lines were kept in through ' which the joarney is being and camping or visiting profitable. It as New York and Chicago, Phi:adel- minion's resources in agricultural, operation for several days until all helps tremendously in keeping up the phis and Detroit, Boston and St, Louislands, lands, in Water power and other physi-Idanger had passed, thus releaeing the taken, This condition adds much to one's pleasure. . pep achieved on vacation. , andLos Angeles. cal assets have been brought to the portable pump for use in case of ern- , , .. lee. — n I notice of prospective settlers, invest -I ergnecy elsewhere in the pork. assac meetts ors and business men generally, city of FOITIO forty thousand—is a Tho success which accompanied the pretty active centre of interest in — .0, test of this method of fire -fighting in Canada. Fire Protection in Our the parks under actual fire conditions during the summer vacation days is the autumn problem of countless folks. Its best when the frost is on the pump - This photograph, taken in 1,t)ttiri1 ten years ega, hes itet been authorized war museum, it shows the damage wrought. hy the fit.:( air tall in the city. • for publication by the Imperial The fall is auldeal time for weel:- It doesn't matter much where you end camping trips. True,. the water go, whether the destination is a foot - may be too cold for comforteblo swim- ball game or a cabin in the woods with ming, but it edit has possibilities for friendly fireplace, there are always fishing and boating., The nights will beautiful scenes, marvelous sunsets, 1;e cooler, but not too cool for enjoy- pure air, opportunity for exerciee and ing splendid sleep. When, a summer rest and they make for better health. night is excessively hot all; one can do Keep the summer secured glow of fit - is to remove all covering and still nese by motoring more often into the swelter. But when the colder even- country for pleasant recreation. Natural Resources Bulletin. The Natural Resources Intelligence Service of the Dept. of the Interior at Ottawa says: Canada has been making some won- derful advancements in the production of minerals during the past few years, particularly among those which are classed as metallic. The more com- mon metals, such as copper, lead and zinc, have shown an increase in pro- duction that has placed them among the leading revenue producers. The lead output, in particular, for the first half of the current year, has reached a value second only to gold among the metallic minerals and third when coal, our leading mineral in value of production, is included. Last year the production of lead in Canada amounted to 175,485,499 pounds, of a value of $14,221,315. In the first half of the year 79,058,295 pounds was pro - peed, valued at $6,278,810. For the first half of the current year the out- put of lead amounted to 128,298,836 pounds, valued at $11,510,955. Com- pared with the 93,307,171 pounds pro- duced in 1922, the amount of lead made available by the mines and smelters of Canada in the first half of tho current year is little short of phenomenal. The famous Sullivan 'nine, in Brit- ish Columbia, accounted for the great- er portion of the lead production, while in Ontario the Kingdon Mining and. Smelting Company's mine at Gal- etta is the largest producer. Zinc, likewise, has shown a wonder- ful growth in output. From the 56,- 290,000 pounds produced in 1922 an increase to 99,909,077 pounds was re- corded in 1924, while for the first half of the current year an output of 55,- 267,772 pounds is reported, against an output of 29,414,000 pounds in the first half of 1924. The improvement in market condi- tions, due in part to the great demand created by the radio and automobile trade for storage batteries, has stim- ulated interest in the development of some of the known deposits and has led to considerable prospecting activ.! ity. The development of the 'Notre; Dame des Anges deposits in Quebec 1 by the British Metals Corporation (Canada), Ltd., will result in a large increase in production of both metals for 1925„ which will probably exceed 3,500,004) pounds' of lead and 10,000,- (100 lbs. of zinc. The purchase of the Stirling property in Cape Breton by the American Cyanamid interests, and the discovery of extensive bodies of zinc -copper ore in the Rouyn gold dis- trict of Quebec, are indications that eastern Canada may become an im- portant lead -zinc producer, A number of the old lend and zinc properties in Ontario, the principal ones being the Frontenac and the Richardson mines near Kingston, have been optioned to American interests. It -is reported that the Federal Zinc and Lead • Co. And what is true of Pittsfield is of men and equipment up steep slopes . . where often no trails exist. Some -1 at Gaspe, Que., is doing extensive dia- merely typical. It is equally true of tinm, however, the physical features mond drilling and Intends to carry out literally scores and hundreds of Am - its plans for the erection of a mill erican towns and cities. The invasion of the country which obstruct the 01'- its summer to treat the ore from this of Canada by American motorists forts of fire fighters can by resource - promising property. Attention has conies from all directions—from New fulness and energy be utilized to goad 10 - been directed by the Provincial Dept. England and California, from the caediN:tai_utage. This was instanced of Mines of Ontario and Quebec, and Gulf States, the Mississippi. Valley y in Glacier National park in British Columbia where a fire which by the Federal Dept. of Mines, to the and the Pacific gorthwest. Clear threatened to attain sNious propor- possibilities of the deposits along the across the States there is town after' tions was quickly and effectively ex - north shore of Lake Superior, where town and city after city where in -1 i tinguished by utilizing the drop of the presence of silver makes these de- formation on Canada and how to gotl nearby I mountain streams to apply posits especially worthy of investiga- there is eager.), sought. tion, and to the deposits on Calumet What this tourist trade coming to water to the fire, six streams of good Island, Quebec, near Ottawa, and in the Dominion is worth financially in 1 opfreis4.srumrreit3,1),.eing supplied by the force Gaspe, Quebec. a year is a•tidy problem to figure out, The fire broke out in a valley near ----4) For 1925 the amount is placed at $30,-, Wavier and was discovered by Oil Cheerfully Honest. 000,000 for the city of Vancouver local park wardens, As soon as the Teacher—"Can any one in the class alone, A Halifax paper quotes an park superintendent wasinformed of Not.long ago Hon. Chas, Stewart, Nation3I Parks. has resulted in a decision to make Minister of the Interior, had a sketch wider use of it in.the future in parks map published and widely distributed The protection of the Canadian Na- protection work. showing the main automobile roads tional parks in the Rockies from fire connecting Canada and the United. presents special difficulties owing to Chop sties cannot be had In Canton, States. One of these maps reached the wild and rugged nature of the or other purely Chinese, ales, the secretary of tho automobile clubs country. Tho great majority of the of Pittsfield, and ho promptly wrote fires that start in the parks begin in back saying: tho valleys ind work up the mountain "If you can spare one hundred of slopes, steadily increasing as they go, these maps we would be pleased to the distance from tho fire fighters' receive them as we are receiving calls base of suPP:ies' and increasing a`s° daily for road maps of Canada." the difficulties involved in the taking spell 'cloth'?" estimate of $345,000,000 per annum; the extent of the fire he rushM to the No answer. for the whole Dominion. Dr. Diweittle, scene taking with him thirty men, and also a portable fire pump and other equipment. Notwithstanding the heroic efforts of the two wdrdens with axes, and grubbers, the fire had continued to burn strongly tip the slop exact amount is. The tourist trade and had covered over 100 acres whet is plainly one of the greatest business the re-enforcemehts arrived. The fu - developments that has struck the Do -1 tility of attempting to control the fire minimi in many years, and the chief with one pump was soon realized. Fortunately there was water available on - either side of the fire, in two streamrunning down the • mountain side, less than a mile apart, and tho parks officials determined to make use of the "head" of these streams to ap- ply water to the fire. Three small dams were placed In each of the streams and from the reservoirs thus formed lines of hose were laid diagon- ally down hill to the fire the connec- tions at the dams were made by means of ordinary galvanized iron nipples thrust through the walls of the (Innis, and the force of gravity in the drop of thirty or forty feet:was, sufficient to send streams of water Teacher----"Torniny, what material is the president of the Canadian Auto - your coat made of?" mobile Association predicts that CRII- Tommy--"Patr of dad's old pants." ada's tourist business will in a few years be worth $500,000,000 annually. It doesn't matter much what the The First Forecasting. The first national weather forecast- ing service was eztablished in Franco in 1S55. 60 FLIMERICKS Said a very ypung rat, You may bring me SOMC_ViC(thavUaclass oapnin n ) • (beverage) But the rat's father sint Answer to Inst wac.k's puzz:a! BALE B A NOB A R A B E croGii2E_R • Bt5$ETDRRlE Pea e - "Your wish is (proclaimed) (refused) ‘'Till the cat goes to sleep in the (3 basin for waste water) '"Unan the line write the word that is defined below it.' MUTT AND JEFF—By Bud Fisher. Sooni LAM) .;111,1,11, A Jell IN TtlE Meutes -H-.4z,r1 so Z cAN CoNNEcT r,75 watt AMOUERC OAT : A CHILLY WIND -11ALAL5: • .!w AND .1'm So HUNGRY t COULD CAT A BolLeD SHoe: 1-1v1A? Here'S nAsi kiANc.ci ! LI A 5 B 13 A Th'Sts SO(AG RtCH GuYIS LtD1. f•NY POLITC(QCSS OUGHT TO Net me A DIME AND 11-1A1''LL 13U`A-110wL 1-1oT SouP: /-1 Tr7-kt\M<s, MuTT: YOU SAVEb Me:7 A WILD citAse. SLID Me! MA "13LM Ar . Approves British Anthracite. Is tho British anthracite eoal being received in Canada in increasing quantities n suitable domestic fuel for this country? Thin Is a question that, has agitated manflife-long users ot American anthracite. The Fuel Testing Laboratories of the Dept. of Mines, which have been" testing various domestic fuels on in- structions from the Hon. Charles: Stewart, Minister of Mines, report. that British anthracite is an excellent. fuel to use in domestic furnaces. It possesses a high heating value, a very, low ash content (4 to 5 per cent,) and is easy to control, It is somewhat more friable than American anthra- cite. hut not to an objectionablo degree,' and the dust forms an excellent bank- ing material for maintaining a fire throughout; the night. A phenomenal increase in importa- tions of British anthracite hits occur- red during the last three years. Of this fuel, which is practically all cdN stinted in the central provinces for domestic purposes, Canada imported in 1922 but 105,000 tons, in 1923, 210,- 000, 111 1024, 273,000 tons, and in 1025, to August 31, 3,11,000 tons, Estimates' vary as to the total importation for. 1925, but it will, in all probability,' reach a half million tons, indicating that the consumption of Welsh and Scotch anthracite has tripled since 1922. The establishment of this fuel in, the Canadian market has been greatly; aided by the large washing and) screening plant, recently erected in Montreal, for its proper grading and preparation for the domestic market. Avalanches in tho Alps aro often started by some trivial cause, such as sound. CROSS -WORD PUZZLE ©THC INTER IATIONAL SYNDICATE. SUGGESTIONS FOR SOLVING CROSS -WORD PUZZLES Start out by Ring in the words of which you feel reasonably sure. Them] 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 squares and running either horizontally or vertically or both. HORIZONTAL 1—One who commands 6—Begin discussion about 11—Cattle 12—Destroy 14—Not to be effaced 10—Small portion of food 19—Portion of tree trunk 20—Upstarts 23—Pointers 24—Jogging pace 25—Poem '26—Gratuity 28—A fish '29—Part of body 31—Lever for foot pressure 33—Cautious 34—Wild beast 35—Ruler of Hades 36—Program 38—Looked attentively . 40—Dress trimming 43—Headgear '44—Guided 45—Observe 46—Tumult 48—Actor of eminence 49—Primitive missile 61—Away from 63—Clenche'd hands 64—Those who vote twice 67—Place In difficulty 68-7NotIon 69—Sacred to a Roman Goddess 60—Expands • VERTICAL 2—Brief satires 3—Prong 5—Stagger 6—Two•masted vessel 7—Polish 8—Lubricants 9—Concerning I0—A vegetable fibre 13—Plecrust 15—Cared for 17—Military assistant 18—Onlooker 21—Musicians 22—Wild animal 26—Undomesticated 27—Made comfortable 30—Relationship 31—Wooden pin 32—Boy 33—A Joker 36—Concise sententious exprcssion. 37—Hiding place 39—Wild equine animal 41—Flesh 42—Human being 47—Legal name for wrongs 4a—Flbre for cordage 60—Part of verb "to be" 51—Pcrcelve through touch 5P.—Maacullne name 53—Unrestralned 56—Vegetable 66----Man'a name (abbr.) Others Besides Bootleggers Wear Two-n–krt La • 'omit/6 d'•/ . A I - ,It: 7,/ 1 /,.,,/ .-. ,i'ie i r1 11/ -.....-G-.,.Oi.i--T:.t . •I1P, 1 11,111 „ I/''601I '111 (1 fi//'I/ .11II, ,) ..-,, ,,.. .-- • ....„., . .5--) 1." 011 ,11111.1 ik .•:•• • . ; • ,.•••••• J13 •••••• • r. - ••••••.- • :•;•••• -• 44/6*,,, ‘0‘'‘-`,••-• • . -.•••••i: • • • .....aa•••••• rs II•ttr6k1 011 Ig t tuNt ' I n The name. "Red Rose" has been a guarantee of quality for 30 years ED A"is good tea' The ORANGE PEKOE is extra good. Try it ! Sherlock and (`Sir Sherlock." ' knighted ho chnngrxt his name, and that you had taken that' one.' 1t is almost certnir. that no char- "I deed not say that my annoyance miter in fiction created by n living vanished, and that 1 laughed ay heut•t- author has become so internationally ily ae his pals were probably doing familiar as Sherlock hoboes, the round the corner," great detective. Sir Arthur Conan A party of French schoolboys visit - Doyle, in his recent very interesting ing London asked as the first of the book of reminiscences, Memories and sights that they wished to be shown Adventures, relates how, shortly nfter the Baker Street lodgings of the great ho had been knighted,—on account of Sherlock Holmes; but they could not quite another literary work, --he re• bo gratified, sinc(z Conan I)nyie has ,coived a bill from n tradesman that always discreetly declined to identify was correct and businesslike in c ie y the building. 111 Sputh America Sher - detail save that It was made out to lock is so well known 1.lmt a conven- "Sir Sherlock Holmes." ient new word, based upon his name, "I hope I cltn stand a joke as well has been added to the language; ms my neighbors," records Sir Arthur, clever bits of offhand deduction aro Sentence Sermons. How Glasses Affect Features.I Seven big IRAN of real rnen: ; A well known ocuiist declares that Can he smile when there is nothing molt, people ur'u wearing g'`ateses t'1 - to smile about? qday Limn ever before. Too many peo- ('nn hu be gr,nerous to an enemy ,Pio who aro obliged to wear glasses who is within his powers do PO without a thought us to the (reef Can he list superior to his trnduc..perticular shapes will have upon their ere and slanderers? ftlilK'urunce, 'Before purchasing glasses some at -1 Can ho take pride In hIs work with- Itenlion should be paid to facial char -i out parading his egotism? ucl, rislicy. The liersun with a long, Cnn he be trusted to work without Weight 11(183 shun:d hesitate before being watched? I buying gl�.raes wit11 an arched bridge:-' Can he take advice from a younger I,icctl, us, this will appear to lenftthen an With the nose Triose with Roman no:,es can im- prove their profile by having glasses ‘villirt law bridge and side clips ad- justed so that the skin above the bridge is pulled r•iight.y downwards., 'I'11ir: chickens the dein u:ung the CAN NOW_FIND RELIEF iel th,of crt' ` nose and appears to re-; dup.r: on with tip-ti:It'd no:,; who is desirous of straightening it should tvcar pince-nez and rot spectacles. The latter serve only to pull at the bridge and still further elevate the tip of the nose, (}lfaysca can be made to alter, or m wider experience? e Cnn he be trusted to treat all wo- men with respect? RHEUMATIC PEOPLE By IJ?tvinj the Poisonous Acid From the System. ltlteunuttlsn attacks people when the blood le thin end watery, or charged Ivtlil impurities, lints setting 111iece,. to n:ti r, tine whale form of the up inflammation of the muscles and 1'I(13. ,iris dark, horizontal Ilues'— joirits, Cold, wet weather or sharp such as well defined eyebrows—across winds nary start 1110 pains, but the the oval of the face will :inns to cause 1s roofed in the blood and to get shorten its length. For this reason relief It must bo treateri through the a long -visaged 1:erson should wear! "but this particular piece of humor now tersely defined there ns "ehorlock- blood, Ay it blood builder and nerve narrow spectacles with reavy rims, seemed rather misapplied, and I wrote holrnitos," tonic 1)r, Williams' I'Inlc 1'1118 are un- and a ',1raight bridge -puce, sharply upon tho subject. In response Letters in praise of ,:Sher:ode surpassed, mid for that reason do not I Amin. from perFonul taste it would to my letter there arrived at my hotel Holmes of propounding problems for fall to give roller to rheumatic suffer- l.Cem advisable to vvifISr• pince-nez in a very repentant clerk, who expressed Sherlock llolnlcs'll creator to solve en's when given a fair trial. Among preference to ipecluc:era, as the ear - his sorrow at the incident, but kept reached hint from the foto' corners of tho rheumatic sufferers who hnvo 1 bars of the latter cast shadows which on repeating the phrase, 'I assure you, the world, including the Samoan Is- proved the great value of this meal.; add lige to one's appearance by em - sir, that it was bona fide!' lands. Robert Louis Stevenson wrote eine le Mrs. Simeon ,1, Talton, Indian ; phrlsieing tho wrinkles at the corners! to him from Valllma, I -load, Seale, who says: --"For over, of the ayes, The thickness of the' "1lo had been retailing some of my two years I was an intense sufferer ; rims affects the appearance of the Sherlock Holmes yarns to his native from rheumatismand until 1 began tlto;face, Generally speaking, the darker] r�ervanta,--1 should not have thought use of Dr, Williams' Pink Pills no I the i int the smaller the face appears. thea- ho needed to draw upon anyone treatment that I took helped inc any.' A full face is made to appear thinner' else,—and he complained to mc, in a Tho trouble grew so bad that I could i when heavily rimmed glasses aro comical letter of the difficulty of tell- not move around the house without' worn. Mg a story when you had to halt every help, and finally 1 had to give up andj -- e•, moment to explain what a railway go to bed, Words cannot toll how ; MAKE CARE' OF was, what an engineer was, and so nijiclt 1 suffered, and I could not bear forth. Ifo got ,the story across in to hoe anyone conte near ale, Final- spite of all difficulties, and, said he, iy oleo of my neighbors strongly urged 'If you could 'have seen the bright, sue to try Dr. Williams' Pink fills, and feverish eyes of Sinlite, you would 1 decided to do so. In the course of a have tasted glory!" few weeks I could feel un improve- 13 ihv's Own Tablets Are a j rent Slmite and his comrades accepted 'tent, and I was able to get up, I kept ` / RHEUMATISM could not be convinced that any story all the tales as literally true; they on taking Jho pills until all truces or the trouble were gono, nod i could Help to Mothers of Young W1111 merely a feat of fancy. But to again do my housework, feeling like a Children. Rheumatism, Belatloa, Lumbago, Neuritis. manymore,. sophisticated admirers now Peron. Throe years have passed : Haut, Swenlnoe. Borah% eta, are Invariably pStomach disturbances and coustlpa • relieved by John McDonald Deeatism the superdefrctivo is little loss real— since that and there has never been Lieu aro resl••onslble for much of the Remedy,ain by Parcel ooe c,°,o, and certainly if he is not true ho the slightest return of the trouble, so peevisluless of babies. The modern " 'What do you mean by bona fide?' I asket . "'Well, sir," he replied, 'my mutes in the shop told ale that you had 1)0211 knighted, and that when a man was SALESMEN We offer steady employment and pay weekly to sell our complete and exclu- sive Moet; of guaranteed quality, whole root, fresh -dug -to -order trees and plants. Attractive illustrated samples end full co-operation, n money -mak- ing opportunity. Luke Brothers Nurseries. Montreal BABIES. EASIER JOHN MoDONALD MEDICINE COMPANY, se BIRCH AVENUE, TORONTO O. "p STQ%tM `Y//VDQWS rtso ' PAYT0R T//EMSEtVES ly Stop Fuel wane, sure winter a I Comfort xith Storm W,ndnxs. Low "Frei+ht Kid" putts, rendretaredt Cafe de:we,y guaranteed. Free price - hst end easy measuring chart, ---)'T•7', ^''HALLIDAY ' P' FIAMILTOti ought to (,lel , Lha -t I feel safe In saying that the re c wether deer not resort to so-called �_,,,, 'ler brought by this medicine Is per soothing mixtures but corrects the manonte Secrets of the Snows. Stott earl get the pills from your trouble by sweetening the little stone aeh and giving a gentle laxative that This summer has witnessed one of druggist, or by mail at 60 cents a box acts without griptng, Such a remedy the greatest exploits of mountaineer- from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Is fots;td In Baby's Own Tablets, easy ing ever recorded—the conquest of Brockville, Ont, to talc° and girara.nteed to be free Mount Logan, the highest peak in "" ,, from opiates or narcotics. Canada, which rises to a height of SICKNESS HEALED BY Every mother who tries Baby's Own evgrho COs O feet. dian Alpine Club oxpedi- SPIRITUAL MEANS Tublet8 110Co111es enthusiastic about Lion, which triumphed over. all ob- Mass„ says:—"[ hove used Baby's s Christian Science Lecturer ! flapper—" No you muffin! I paid -SHIP US YOUR~~«\. ' stades and reached the summit of Own Tablets and think then' a splen• I cash for it No Incurable did medicine for constipation and ----0:---,-- PER PRO. and 1n lb VACUU T NI; -TIGHT) the Tobacco a~Quali II i li.11 ii. .p, ei. wi.,l.ailI I ,,.,. I Not on Time. then, Mi•s, Oscar Auger, Holyoke,' Ile --"Is your watch on lime?" - POULTRY,GAME,EGGS - Mount Logan, originally consisted of ' ci ht members but two of them had Disease other' ailments which affect little, I Poisoning Plante. to abandon the attempt because of The Christian Sclenco lecture radio ones, 1 have no hesitation In recons- , rt r 'WE ©UYALLYEAR ROUND- 1 c,:'un(nL plant_, by cutting a notab mile iod"yp,'priteos-fee ShrnrcrJlleo frost -bite and general exhaustion be- cast from Massey Hall, 'Toronto, gaveniending theto other mothers." I In the side of 11 :9 stem nn+.l ineertlnllr Baby s Own 'tablets aro sold by nacdl•I al•senlc, to being pl'nctlsacl by the Aus• d l' I' t 25 t them fora ►veeh ahead - fore attaining their goal, moans an opportunity to hear fen' lis° P.Pc000N C&Co, `IMITED i A:most incredible hardships were pest time semelh[ng atahentic about eine en els or by mail acents a i t.rallan government In an attempt to nuLlNhad nrrrKf star: : aI 'fere(' b ilei icing • " 36.39 Bonsecours Margot -• Montreal ' y the conquerors of Mount the subject. . box from The Dr, Williame' Logan, who spent forty-four days en- After halt a century of growth the Co., Brockville, Ont. A little booklet, that 0 1 s3 the ysis. u desert. plant that c�aue•e.c paralysis. tiraly on ice in getting to the sum- claims of Christian Science that spirit - mit and back again, Each man of the me heieing is to -day practical Is be. !party had to pack about seventy hag recognized by material systems pounds over two hundred miles of of healing and by the older churches, ridge and glacier. Dangerous storms The lecturer, Robert Stanley Ross, of wora encountered, especially on the New York, spoke in part as follows: return journey, and only the most Christian Sclenco is demonstrating herpic efforts averted loss of life, (lint It is the Christianity of Jesus On the last lap of the ascent, when made practicable to -day. Now, as of the party reached whet they believed old, it Is showing Mankind how to ee- 1 to bo the highest point of the (noun- cape from all evil. No matter how tain, they found yet another peak long one has been. III, no matter stow towering above them. To attain this deeply ono may be Involved in sin, no they hed..to descend a thousand feet matter how heavy one's burden of sor- into a valley between the two peaks row, poverty, or cure, Christian before again beginning to climb. Science joyfully points the way out,— This final peak was heart -breaking not through death and the so-called work, as the party had to snake pro- gress up a steep snow and ice 'slope, terminating in n knife urea that led to the summit. Thelttemperatuire when they gained the top was four degrees below zero. oLISHi s coil; ►� L PORPUSES: •'I,Iokcs old Ilke New" KLONDIKE METAL . POLISH CAPO NIOKLE SHINE Tho Onto roaches, Ltd„ Hamilton Buy Through Our Catalog l3eautiful durable designs e]3ig choice, ready to install Sold all over Canada Below all others in pric For example. this fixture sella for $10.50. Our price $6.90 Send for Free Catalog Orders Prepaid ELECTRIC FIXTURE CO. F;fu'lscourt and Sl. Clair Ayes. ,'Toronto, "Leaves" of gold *and nickel have now been made by a German scientist, so thin that it would require 2,600,000 of them to pleasure an inch in' thick - nese. ' Use URII roc EYES IRRITATED aY SUN,WIND,DUST &CINDE 111COHMCNDFD fi SOLD BY DNUOOI$TS ..OPTICIANS. waste FOP VINO al's CAas D00K MVKIde MO,GNCA00Vl4 ncrease ioq1ti'g Pr�fits' Co-opdativel ?TIE Western Wheat Producers the 1 Ontario honey men and others,' have made co-operative selling n marked , success. They have stabilized prices and increneed their profits by nlnndnrullzcd grading and shipping 'methods ; and applying eMcient nalesmnnehlp and real merchandising tothe di.po al of their crops, fly these methodsnito poultry producers, too, can secure these benefits. Tho outstanding proof of this Is Prince Edward Inland, where, for the Inst thirteen years, expert and efficient sales- manship applied to co-operative market- ing, has saved thousands of dollars annually for the poultry farmers and permanently stabilized their markets, Naturally, to be successful, co- operative marketing must ba handied efficiently, flow to form and operate successfully a local organization to de. tailed In the FREIE booklet, "Oo.eper- atlon in Marketing Poultry Products", issued by the Department of Agriculture at Ottawa This is bus of over Ave hundred helpful pamphlets on farm nub. sects. To obtain it together with tom. plete ist of FRES:' pamphlets, fill in this slip, and return it post /rod to The Publication Branch' Department of Agriculture Ottawa • Ontario Nemo Pool 0 ,r • R. R. No is Ask for Mlnard's and take no other. Established for over thirty years. b.' "Caro of the Baby In health and Sick- ness+' will be sent fres to any mother on request, Cupid and a Camera. Dr, C. W, Sanborn, of San Francisco, not likely to sneak well of tlio a now that photography has given him the surprise of his life, . According to lex reports tho doctor had a breach of proviso suit for $100,. 000 brought against him by Miss Beat- rice Llchtendorf, a Chicago typist. The doctor had fallen in love witi Miss Lichtendorf, but he wan a cautious wooer, and to eacli of the letters he wrote her he appendod a postscript hereafter, but here and now. The requesting her to return the nilssive atter site had read it. This she dM. '4.i3ut she also pursued businesslike Bible tolls us that. the kingdom of God, the kingdoin of heaven, is at hand, here, now; and that now is the day of methods, and when the doctor do. salvation; that now are wo tho.sons Glared that he had never proposed mar- riage to her she produced photographic copies of lovo lettere in some of which he spoke of marriage! Minard'sLiniment for distemper. After Dark, "William the Conqueror," read the small boy front, leis history book, "landed in England' A.D. 1066." "What does A,D, stand for?" in- quire;' the teacher, "Why, 'after (ode' of course," w'ae the reply, . - •--s-- • If a boy's hair_ were left uncut it Would never grow 118 long as the aver- age girl's, as women have a stronger growth of hair than filen, of God. All of us know that an ugly disposl• tion (which is a mental state) will. manifest itself In harsh, unlovely fea- tures (supposedly a physical state); whereas a gentle disposition (which is a mental state) will manifest itself in a smiling and sereno countenance. Some. one has well enld that if fear, irritability, and hate will distort the' features, they will distort likoWiso tho heart, stomach, and liver.. Why not? Jesus recognized clearly that It Is not mere food whish disarranges the -human system, but tear, sensuality, heto, and other poisonous, destructive bollefs, 1Vrittng on pago.248 of Science and Health, Mi•s,' Lddy says: "Let un- selfishness, goodness,. mercy, justice, health, holiness, love --the klugdom of heaven=.. -reign within tis, and sin, dis- -ousel_. ,and death will 'diminish until they 'finally disappear." All of which ,indicates that mortals ,are healthy or, nithy, happy or unhappy, strong' or weak, alive or dead, In the propor- tion that their thinking is good or bad, We supply cans and pay express spirltut(l or material. Centuries ago; charges. We pay dally by express the wise' man said: "As ho (u man); money - orders, which can be -casted thlnketh in his heart, so he is." anywhere without any charge, WE WANT .CHURNING E "In the slght,of 1111101.e ,Love there To obtain tho tap price, Cream aro no incurable diseases; there never must be tree from bad (lavers and have boon any, there Hover will be •cantata not lege than 30 per cent, any. The Psalmist knew this Viten he Bang: "Bless the -Lord, 0 my soul, acid ©utter FaL .v forget -not all his haneflts: who for. B glvet.lt all thine iniquities; wino heal..owes Company Limited, 0th all thy diseases." Note well that Toronto It roads all thliie Iniquities and all For references—Head Omce, Toronto, tits diseases, not some of them. Bank of Montreal, or your local hanker. Which is the largest Jewel in tho world? The Enl3rald Isle. GENUINE ASPIRIN PROVED SAFE Take without Fear as Told i in "Bayer" Package DAVE Does not affect the Heart ■Ii 8urc Enough. Anse City ---"And where is your bus. band, Mrs. Ilay?" Airs. Hay ----"In the o.chard pruning some troea." - Miss City—"Oh, do y^ou raise your . Own prunes 1" In Canada ono out of every nine in• habitants is on the telephone. Classified Advertisements -e 1110 CAIID ICI;I'1'ISU INTI;:ASI':s LAIININO 171 pna.'r. 11'0 slow tis„ sees-. Students reit north before tl•.run eh rutirsr. 1?Mey, irwemre. N.,]h, li‘lo,ols, Toronto, Iron --two tele r Ivry(, [Anl08 ONLY 01'11 Look 1.1:1 LA1110H' / Friend, mailed lu plalu rnv"lape, free. Cool/ 2423, Montreal, i Anus \A:+•Tr.11 -TO 1)0 PLAIN AND 1,1111(1' L hewing at home, wh9lo or t,paro time; ao04 • pa: n-urk sent any dt,tnnrr, charges veld; Fend clamp for pardaulare,. National Sfanufncturing Co., ifontrrel. Cuticura Heals Irritating Rashes Don't suffer with itching, burning rashes, eczemas or irritations when Cuticura .Soap and Ointment will quickly relieve and heal. Bathe with Cuticura Soap and hot water, dry and anoint with Cuticura Ointment. Nothing quicker or safer than Cutl- cure Soap and Ointment for all akin troubles, Sample Baal Proe by Mail. Address Canadian Dopot: 'nohow, Ltd.. Gloat sal" Pries, Boap o. Ointment 25 and 505, Talcum Me, Cuticure Shaving Stick 26o, MRS. B. H. HAT SICK FOR YEARS Wants Women to Know How 'i She Was Made Well by Lydiltk E. Pinkham's Vegetable t, Compound Cornwall .Ontario,—"I am now giving your medicine a fair trial and it surely is doing me good and r I am going to keep • on taking it. I used to feel BO tired in th morning that I didn'' want to get up'•but, that feeling is leav- ing me now. I aleo 'sleep better and feel more like working. For seven or eight years I have had headaches tired feel- '',1 Ings painsfnmyback and across my bocy., I read. lettere In the newspapers saying what good Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ha done others. My husband says I q too soon, but I am not going to a taking the Vegetable Compound a Lydia E. Pinkham's Blood Medicine u til I am better and haven't an ache or Is pain. Isn't that the right way7 1 have great faith in your medicines. They must be good when those who take them speak so highly of them. Y sin recom- mending them to my friends and I will ladly answer letters from women ask - ng about them. "—Mrs, BURT 11. HART, Box 1081, Cornwall, Ontario. Mrd. Hart wants to help other women and is willing to answer letters fro sick women asking about the V'igvt.ab compound._ IS8UE N4 41---'247 Unless you see tho "Bayer Cross" on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Tablets of Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians over twenty- five years for (olds 1-Iendeche Musette Lumbago Toothache Rheumatism ir-eulalgl;a Pain, Pain Each unbroken "Bayer" package con- tains proven directions. Handy boxes of.tw•elvo tnblets cost row cents. Drug- gists also sell bottles o? 24 and 100. SNEEZING The sign that you aro catching cold, Heat end inhale Minard's and atop the cold. NAGE THE BLYi'.H STAN 1)j\1.!1 ...-(,(t I.(1 l , 1925 "Start a great big immigration movrxamt into Canada, of peop e ,not only willing to work hut for whcm prof.taMe work can be found, and all the pressing problems that now besei: our country will be well on the way to solution." 9 -What E er ybc ry S:.';.5, • Fineletus do sol But to be sure we're on the straight and sure road to our goal, let us beginbydoing some clear thinking—some hard thinking—en these twoimportant questipns : 1, What class of immigrants do we want? 2. How are we going to attract th',.:art? Valuable Lessons to be Learned from Past Failures. Heretofore we have always taken it for granted ---without much careful thought, perhaps -that it was farmer immigrants we most wanted,—people who would settle on our vacant land in the West, and produce more from the soil. And complaints being loud and numerous that farming in Canada was not as pro- fitable as it should be, we have tried to convert an unattractive situation into an attractive one by lowering the tariff on manufactured goods, in the hope of thereby lowering farm production costs, and so increasing the farmer's net. Has that plan gotten us anywhere ? In 1924, despite tariff reductions made ostensibly to benefit agriculture, there were actually fewer farm immigrants than in 1923 ! And when, against the total immi- gration for 1923 and 1924, we offset the total emigration from our towns and cities, we find that the country has suffered a net loss ! So, obviously there is something wrong— somewhere—in rongsomewhere—in the plan we have been following,—either in the assumption that it is farmers we most want, or in our method of attracting them. Perhaps it's a combin- ation of the two. Population Increases Should be Properly Balanced. In shaping our policy as above, we have certainly overlooked one very important point. Farmers as a rule don't sell to farmers, but to town and city folk. So when we - try to increase farm population by methods that operate to decrease town and city population, we are actually making - things worse for the very people we are trying to benefit. We are curtailing a domestic market that our farmers can control, hind we are increasing their de- pendence upon an export market over which they have no control! An Alternative Plan that Promises Better Succcss. Let us now go back to the beginning again, and start from the alternative assumption that it's primarily town and city population we want to attract. VOTE 4 Poultry Parasites. A long printer generally means a weakened vitality to all animals, and anything that can be done to remove obstacles and supply the essentials should be done. One of the great obataoles to successful poultry hus- bpndry Is the invasion of intestinal •piraaites. These creatures Sourish within the birds winter or summer, taking their toll unseen and irrespec- tite of Weather conditions. They are morae than potato beetles, which are hdueet enough to do their mischief in. plain view, and work just eight )eburs a day ter but six weeks of the ytiar. The intestinal parasites infest- ing poultry have a union code of their own—"24 hours per day and 366 days per year, get all you can, why worry about the poultry -keeper's pro- fits." At the O.A.C. the intestinal parasites infesting the poultry flocks were banished for good and forever eighteen months ago. How was it done? The, ltdethod.---A gallon of a mix- ture of wheat and oats, to which is added a small teaspoonful of concen- trated lye, is cooked slowly for two ho'trre and allowed to cool. The birds aro given their ordinary feed one morning and then nothing else until the next morning, when they are glden as much of the lye mixture as they will eat, with plenty of water. Tilts ls•Lern two or th.rsa draws rlur v Are 63 Col J::ILrks trlPenn and Cnily Ccmcda .;,iec'Ig ? While Canada has been lenv ring her twill, these *G3 colon i<•iea have been raising t„r ic:rs:— Alpria Argentina AustrAa Austria Belgium Bolivia Bru::il BritishEast Africa Dependencies British Guiana British Honduras . British West Indies Bulgaria Chile Chi.ia Colombia Czecho-Slovakia Ecuador • Egypt Estlioiiia Fin!and France Repub. el Georgia Germany Goll Coal Colony Greece Gurytemalla Holland Ho,tdurws • India . �a : IrYs _ Free �tale ^ Italy Japan Latvia Pr}.at!agascar Mi rncs,opotarna Mexico Petliei•taiid East {p�1e <i...„lam..,.. p1�ir s. kY LL J u.au.C•.�A 1'+t v w Lcalar.J yy.it�r.. k ci'�ta ri;r.0 re� Vin. X'cr ug,t� r: • •'rt '` �rf�• �t. �:tziot'l Ei.n Salvador S;`.Y'b—Cycat- Eplu.ne State Africa Spui�� Sw(deti n tirl .red 1,., s s Gi uguay And now even the l.J ! •':od Kingdom has begun to fad ceet her home markets. 63 Countries have been Yr..k. ing it more slits eu3.9: 'for Ca:?seder) to sell in their market.., ► �;.�'�: Canada has been mrt.hi .;.; it easier for the whole mid to sell in hers! . Have they all bkmdend? Has Cauda alone chown 'i.'✓iF4;'!:G; Obviously the way to attract that class is by switching from a policy of lower duties to one. of hi;Jter' duties. The one thing above all others that the immigrant wants is the aSSUt'I;ti1CC of a steady job at good wages. Give him that, and he will come in his thousanc':;,—ye:,, in his tens of thousands ! And in a policy of higher tariffs he will have his guarantee that steady were: at good wages will be await - ii lien. "Yes,” you say,, "but what nb:.:ttt our farm population? \Ve want it to increase toe!" Of course we. do! But with town and city population increasing, can farm population do Otiie1' than increase it•1 pro- portion? With eno:e customers for farm produce, an, -i wn a higher purchasing' power per customer due to higher wages, i n't it inevitable, ti sat a domestic supply will be forthcQrni:; to meet a domestic demand, particula:4 if we protect -farm products in the sale way that we propose to project manufactured products? A Preycc.':;n w That Shows What Can Ee Done! We have tried title! plan of lower tariffs, as a means of attr .:t ng farmer Irnmigra- tic", and we see t'li:.t it has signally failed, and we know the re. tsons why it has fa.11ed. Why not now try the alternative plan of 1ti11(�r tariffs, as (t means of attracting urban in' enig ai: on, when it seems .per- fectly clear tent i t must bring farmer immigration ill ite i; ain? Ewen if the Latter .weoc mere theory, that Would be, no \ra'/cf r.mst:n for rejecting it in favor of a policy w: have tried, and found to be b^Lrcn of lc:'.lt r. But we 1_nc1✓✓ Ca .t it is far beyond the theory stage. The United States offers a practical de eons :rc'.:ion of its success! By the plan of hi, -.112r tariffs, to benefit all classes C: )C71.`1�.t�.�I1 elle l: United States has rnana cci to a . tract the biggest and longest sustained i nmigration movement he world has ever known! What l &:toes el:ample doez Canada want? FOR HIGHER TARIFF AFkJD . FOR LOWER TAXAT y ' 'jJ ing the season at intervals of one month. The large, round worm infesting poultry may be as short as one inch, and the caecum worm only three - tenths of an inch, and one of tape worms only one -fiftieth of an inch long. Very easy to overlook.—L. ,Stevenson,'O.A.C.,Guelph. Late Blight of Potato. The damage done by this destruc- tive vino disease is largely dependent Upon weather conditions. During cool or wet seasons it spreads rapid- ly, doing great destruction to the po- tato foliage if not checked through tho timely application, of Bordeaux Bordeaux spray. The first symptoms of the disease show up as small, irregular, yellow- tail green spots on the leaves which quickly turn brown, and may cover , the leaf in two days. On the under ' surface a white mildew -like growth appears bearing the spores *filch ' spread the disease to other plants. With c11mt,t1c._conditlons just fight a crop may be destroyed in three or four days. One infetced plant will infect a field. If the weather is wet and cool watch for symptomsand, if noted, spray with Bordeaux at ten day intervals. --D_ ept. of Extension, O.A.C., Ouelph.. , • - Potato Iinrvest. • Late Bight. Late Blight effects the tuber of the potato as well as the vine, and the . disease lives over from year to year in the seed. When harrlesting the potato crop cull out all tubers with dark sunken areas on the surface and a brownish discoloration of the flesh. Black Scurf. This fungus develops small 'black specks 011 the Hul'faCo of the tuber. Such should not be stored for seed. Steil ''nd Itot. , .; This trouble' is evidence by a de- cayed and sunken area at the stem end of the tuber. When a cross sec- tion is made near the steam end a brownish ring is usually plainly vis- ible. Tuber Injury. Care should be taken to avoid bruising the tubers while harvesting. Roughly handled potatoes usually have a high percentage of dry rot, -- L. Stevenson, Dept. of Extension, O.A.U., Guelph. Mediums In 'ft'nnco. Sergeant (to .reeru11),v "Are you one of them spiritualistic nmedIums?" ductuli.: "No ;:urgeant.,, Sergeant: "i -lo! '1'hen'why .do you fa'1 In 199 It trance every limn I glvo t n nrdnr''1"---11:''rain'h V'Jnt:Lly 1 !re:ru;.Lm: ' n•n'•Ico 1'Ict'fry f r rnrn:tlte, 330 71ny 13t., Toront'aa ,14.2.4.+0+03.+•:÷14144.44++44.1.-1,:r: e',.,Y..H4+41d407•4:14,144'4+'I•+++++'& HAAN ESS AN D SHOE •r 1-1. A. McINTYRE, L. D. S., D. D. S I)l7NTlfrr Office hours --9 to 12 1 to 6 Will visit Althorn each Tuesday afternoon. 'Phone 130. Dr. W. Jas. Milne, PI lYSICiAN & SURGEON, COIt)NI;It COUNTY OF HURON. Office—Queen Street Residence— Dinslcy Street. I3LYTI1, - ONTARIO 011r1DERhTION LIFE AMINATION 5-1 vI,.1ns Ul' tithe) 1'n0(,ItI' H Local Representative Wanted. 0. It CAVANAGIH (.;r'neral Agent 'Phone 420 Goderich, Ontario J. H. R. ELLIOTT, NO'I'.111V 1'I'III.I(' CONVE1'ANC'EIt Fire, Accident, Sickness, Employt'r'r Liability, Plate Glass, Automo- bile and Live Stock insurance. 13LY'I'I i, ('Phone 104) ONTARIO, [.1 14"1' us E. DA N(' E•Y•, 11:111 it lS'I'I:}t, S01,1('I'I'Olt,NO'I'A It Y 1'('IiI,i(', (;(-)NNi;EIt. 1I ON EV 'I'() 1,0A N. Uflit'e -- (lcleon Si t'et, lii,Y'I'1i, oN'l' Sl'N HIT ASSURANCE Co. OFC;1Nt11)L, PItOtil'I:ItO1!S1'ItO(1ItI:�1 11'F It leads 1Ite 1 (4111 nmorg ('nht;dian ('ulnplt111e4. 11. It. I,ON(i, District :11 imager, (iU,ierlC)I ,T[-H)'1AS (a INNI-ll{Y, P.11C1'10NEER, GOD�RII;It, - ONTARIO Farm Si ()id( Sates tt npeolnll.)•. Ord,,,. IeWttt ten' IIt)Ih SInudttut OIsleo will lie promptly offended to, 7'eleithuae me Inteff of my expense. JOHN M. STALKER, AUCTIONEER, AUBURN, - I ONTARIO Fte, nt S cel( S dem a speeinlrv. Oetlerr left nt.Ihe Blyth Standard (Mice will IK prt)mp'ly al.tnndetl to '1'elt.phene 10 date+ at, ut)• expcuse. Dr. H. W. Colborne, PI IYSiC!AN & SURGEON Medical Reprccrlitative D. S. C. R. Phone No.=Office 51; Residence 46 BLY1H, ONTARIO MY OPTICIAN W ii l l 0 0 It u Drug Story D IZ . W. J. M I L N E, Wine Spectacle Ware aitd Accurate Lens Wolk a Specialty. . QUEEN ST., . BLYTH WAWANON, MORFr1S AND HUM, FARMERS' CLUB. Co-operative Buying and Selling. 1st and 3rd Thursday of each month, R RICHMOND, J,1S ClitIIING• Presi/Ont. Shipper C. li, Sec'y Treas. WHITE BROS., Butchers Boiled dam 60c 38 .; 4Oc 48 5Oc . Pork Sausage ...... . ..... . 22c Bologna 20c Ilead cheese 15c Cottage Roll 32c '' Lard ' 22c 20c 22c I3eef Roast I5c 20c -' Beef Boi' 12c 5c' 13reakf,st Bacon Back Bacon 4. 'i t .i, Prompt a -te.. intion and first-class work •. guaranteed in all k farness and Shoe .ver ..;; We'carry a r'nmplcte lihe of fresh pairh g. arid cured meats. , 4. REPAIR • G Beef St cak Pork 20c 2"c MODERATE PRICES. J. S1-B-.'RRY, B + Blyth, 40 Ontarion TKE 1NltICr11AM MORMENTAL WOO has the largest and mos': complete 'X stock, the most beautiful designs to (4,4 + t'• ,"."1,0,4+++4.+++4444.r 1444,+r414a►.,4r4 w,c,.s„ae..a4.64.44*4441 aa411 choose from in PLU1 BINq., MARBLE, scum AND CANAL). STEATif FITTINNG: �IAN GRANITES. We matt) specialty of family Mon. •� ,�ret°���i�hi]�l umelils and invite your inspection. .� b y inscriptions neatly, carefully and promptly done. order. BOA. A. Spotton, WINGI-IAM, • • ONTARIO Hot Air Furnaces. Corrugator -Iron Roofing and Ste anis a Specialty Orders. Promptly att n ded to J. H. LEITH, Blyth, Ont. trtitl_ ___ _ b A Electric tons for carving and letter. ing. Call and see us before placing:your tar ..wr,..w..w-orrr.arr,r,..,,a,y.wr 4 ,t'. i •,t • • r1 • 1 r - )., t ' 1 i : t.;':i • ;tit : It' II l '` '1(I ,t , :ill Flt l' ,.: ,w,., , . e/ t 1 • t / t:,1:i 1 ,t.L; e • OF PAGE 5--'t'HLr 13LYTH STANDAk t_October 15, 1325, t i. most yt uro lilt r :- ,.k ; r, ivik i .::t2aeas.vr ::y A r. ~' c (N* Ar1J',l)A produces every year l urge quantities of wheat, oats, barley, „./ butter, '.'' ese, bacon, beef, l,j ci, t^.1)I)1dS, p(;`,t;r,'e:i, "1-:a'.:; i;ced and t;iat she cannot dot:molt ,. Ilea natural outlet For the:ie pro- duct;; i:;, of i.ourse, Great Brit.;tin--the one great colljt;irinj country of tl:e wo.ld with an open market, - Unfortvl ately, neatly cvn y other country \'liii1 any surplus of foal prCt1 lei S Se'e:'1:i to w;a:"it to send its sltrp11".; to this same market. The Lemnos, of the co:- petition en this, our only market, and the cn,.rr;y and. r'.sotllcefulrle;;s of our col:lpctitors [)r', .n to impress them- solvesUpC,:l the D:.par i:.1'21.t of f1`,,t :Bite!!,- :it;.:;i; t:• .". 11 (` b:; :t is only Wi;',:;11 \ t'i y 1..2oo.1t y'.;::3 tll,.t the peal and only 447ty to grapple; with t111S 1-rreeilein h.r:; Lett (ti'a'Co'.•'Clt:,!, :i1' at It'':;;t put is:t0 ei'ieet. ''!IIS 1%,.p::I'tn'i nt 1:C1'." 1:Cii:.v..1, as do 121:;9 iney:t of CF: !ii'_,:r r; of til.:; country, that the "Li • C::i:l,;" of our a'.ricaltnral products is the rolic,' and practice that is 1.1S tl.trc;ugh the strugslc and till anstlre ui of our ri;;irifuf !:lace on the British market. „-.» means the clan lfyin rlrs'electa, e,•1,.'tiler tI:(•y ee hoe.-, but- ter, 5.Cese, (': es or att.'ti'.i "); c.. -P, lil'.o 1• ;' r'ieoet I'c ';n11 .;! i-1 a :44.ner;11 1i'ay „(r (`.) "VA! et" and claseC3, 1 i cllllli"r3 a len'; 1v1: r ierlwci?I:t below Danis::, has gri::u :11•/ ,ruc,u in the esti- meting of the l:titi,h wholes..,: buyer al it i:; ii:' ' ,ted at oily from 1 or 1:.••:; to at most 5 ',C 6 'r'• per lone., 1,L'ndredi.'C,aia lie;ui, the. bL.;t Banish. e::a(t words are not used in This i-t)proves.. est inprice LI*, of desciibialh the (r;1d'..', hitt tint is 1:l;at c:' ;,r;, clue to ' :t11it, ens 1 come )S meant, 'Hie ;)(1rpC•SC tiCIVed t11 grad - rowing very g11',::.:ly, the ;;mead nar- ilt;; i.3 thrcc):old-- ro::in; downby a ;;hil!ii or two a l;i:.ri;it until no,, it is n't at all a rare (1) :duci.'i::ionr.A. wY+('n the pi's- c-.c:lrrence to s; t' beet C`,na(il: u rtaliug d'Iccr (3 the relative qn:l;ity of i''- on a par with Lee ;;;u1;sll eetiele. pt':LuCt be is £1:ticted on to 1',liliat:,:il 'r• l'.,.t (plenty 1{ it is the "hsst" i, i' to r -`g;.. -':"-'"Canada ..vas, ;he first country L)l;)I'OVe t::.'. quelity VJIi',rC ll ".CC'.;a2:'j. 1.0 [;jade' it1lydi':e eggs. These .. n,. 3iifir',, .,, •. ;1„•.1./' (•,:•1 y :u • (,^•.+J l. .l. 'd a+;, . When products are export, intert,rotitl,.:,tl and imri.It snip- ), ,. 1 .1 t;:,-: inferior at t icie for molts, but also to iientesiic tea -Ung. v:'.eiee;, rCG'.(; ,S of'.:11 brings as n:ut:11 a3 Th: bests i'.i iirtcrior quality, clezn- !.Itc ;1111 ri:/r ;.ttit:lc, .;::(1 tIic ct•eiiit an,l nes:, and weight, c of putting the superior pro- Standardizing t- , ,- ,. „nadialt egg:, has (.I;..t 4-1 t1.'! tr.t:.te1 i'2 lost to the -one rstacli:;bed conful, .:e k'ett;Icon );;oducer C:'.0 irally (. e,......e it. -and cctl:;tinier an :'(,(Teen c:Cportcr and C".) j ' ':'. . 7,_; Trric1c , The Briti;;1). importer, eeei ha:. resulted in a r.':'::lcr leart ,; t•) i„i to confi,icrlce itl the greatly-inerea3eci ce..nand for the Cana- erti: 1'a 11:: is I' :' n; and buys more free-- dian c;g both at 11 'nuc and abroad. ;;t..',r.'.ltecd by r•reeibn7;, Other precincts tai:;ht be mentioned e,';,rr,-be dy gets to I:now where grading has workeJ t0 the great c1,.;,t eetole really look; like ndvantnge of the l:rr .!l.,;er and to the or t1'.;.:,; 1,:{'', 10 ;•I'o t, gradin;; bila ,a idvaaceinent\of Canadir,n agriculture. a! -oat 'rite 1ard'r ltioa and enet res to Already Great L'rite;tl recognizes our tAC precl•aeee the beat price. store cattle, wheat, ctleese, Ctt,7,d, apples Canada now c;r 3dcs her cereals, grass and /+:.t3, as the fest she can biiy. 1"e::;, i:'.;!, )l t2'uF ' '111pleS, o'r's, bet- It is for us to : r.1 improve our other wool and 1" ICO'1 110:,:i, 'rl-ie products, partici'! '..ly our butter and unite list e been in every case bell",- bacon, as to brit ' them also into this f',:;:11 and in .., •, c ccs. l quite i;clr1•ecliy list of "the_ best r. 1 the British market" 1 0, CVcn thole:;11 the g ':riding ry;;tctn 11:1:2 i111d consequently ;;i^ hi.,:rest priced. b^c)1 111 c' :.:: in skies cases for only Grading enable'( tt:, CO do this for t',ro cr three year:;, tl.l,a:-- cl:cese, wheat, et;.,-, and apples. becan April l::t, Y.:2 3 .esc tilt year before had fallen into >:11 h disfavour on the British n'ar'.,et ttr.t +few Zea -Land ch;'^:;,; t;es mate commonly preferred. Today Canadian cheese commands cents per pound higher than. 1'lcv, Zealand. le.'.s.t. 1,'---Grt:lfn;r began sane tinge as for c.he :sc. ',the re:3-tation of our but- " tt'r v;a: then indeed et low ebb. Canadian hiilter tot;ay, v'hile net the beat on t11e in.','1'.,:t, is rapidly it..;'roving in quality end p,aining in reputati:ln. T't. ,:': t1 r''';• --Over two years n;o the De- )-artincnt of AgricUdttIi'e begin to grade live, h ,'s al the peeking houses and 1'er,1,. 'l'hc 10 ;'• premium paid by the ;.',:ok'r'a for'"scleet" bacon hogs all er;:;ist " thick sntoc;hs"r.7s classed by utl,lrtmertal graders has done wonders to ii wove the qeality of our hogs and c'.er;'!r,;t the b-ieon industry, 1 :t Can;tdi .:1 bacon, which Ordinlr- i)ii was gttuteri t:;0 ;'ears ago frc:11• 10 to C'•adin; is lief; ing u:; to do it, for butter and bacon. • Qurziii y Couto Quality is thus the first objective for the Canadian tu;port trade, and, then steady, regular supply, It it :,long tf:t.,e lines the Department of Agti^ulture is wulkit,,; by educational methods, awl the result of this I,:11icy is seen in the growing volume of Canada's ugricultural exports Look at these figures Canada's Principal Frpor s of Fc i'in » radders 1020-2t 1021-25 Whrnt (hu.,) 129,216,177 101,761,737 1.Irrn (1,1,1..1 ,,, 6,017,032 11,029,::27 Il:,. •Il ,t,l littn lett!.)0 ,'i.li 1,908,721 l:r,'f ('tttlt• 0.'6,511 11M,08•I 11:It(nr 111,.1 0,73;,, t 1 t 21,701,4P41 ('hr,,<e (cwt.) 1,:;66,','0-1 1,269,632 Apnit's (holt,) 1,'1'•4„90 1,106,237 O;tt; (1111....)14,321,0 H 32,775,761 liut•l,y (bus.) 8,51;3,553 22,.820,'134 ,l)o (h':•:.) 3,201,,430 7,521,8'J5 116:n, Shorts and ptid4lit: ;'i (1•w•t.) 819,751 8,667,0:3 Oaln:.'nl and Itolltd Out (cwt.) 397,266 830,0211 ("nvr: tirt.l; (bus.) 170,255 117,907 '1'01,aeco (;da.) 200,153 3,531,-122 Crelun (res.) 1,279,105 8,36,•1,185 Flax Seed (bus,) 1,3.13,691 8,030,105 rer further information and publications writo 501 ,ne'er„qui''.( i,-.,',.1-,t,t'4 DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, OTTAWA EARLY UMBRELLA TROUBLES. .r A"i. menial \tidibrollas, ineltldiiig otie 6f asiti First Umbrella In London Was Pelted blue satin embroidered with gold 1\'it11 11Iud and Cabbage Stalks.I tool studded with pearls, Others were covered with beautiful feathers. Umbrellas are less carried than formerly, at least by then, and the explanation is an involved one, So many men were soldiers; who did not or dared not use umbrellas, and they t ,,. have not gone back to them. The C greater use of waterproof coats is another influence, while still further AL is the tendency to leave umbrellas behind and not find them when you returned; in fee., the code of honor in regard to umbrellas is different from most other articles of property. Umbrella users to -day might not duffer many annoyance, but the first elan in London to do so had to suffer as have many other pioneers. This was Jonas Hanway, the traveller, who died in 17821, and the gutter- snipes used. to follow lllln about and pelt 111111 with tlnld'aud ,cabbage stalks. Under these conditions It is doubtful if the uinbrella kept hint dry. The first ulubrollas had clumsy long handles and ribs of cane or whalebone, and were covered with oiled silk or cotton, The steel rib did not conte in until 1852. A laird lent his umbrella, ono of the first , ever brought to Scotland (which dtd not take to them for 20 years after' they caught on. in Eng- land), to a tenant who had trudged down one stormy evening from a cot - calf tage in a glen four miles away to pay his rent. At 11 o'clock at night the tenant reappeared. "Thes'e's lute door • - in a' me )loose that'll let it in, so Leices- I've 'brought it back, for I'nl think- ing ye'll no be wanting It to conte to any harem!" h'1 told the laird -who had forgotten to tell hint that a pass on a knob would shut it up, We got our umbrellas from the East, where they were used in the ancient 1•npires of Nineveh, Persia and Egypt. The very title, "satrap," of ancient Persian provincial gover- nors meant "umbrella fellow," The Eastern umbrella was properly a sunshade, for it was against the roasting rays of the 131111 that It pro- tected, "Lord of the Umbrella" 18 one of the titles of many an Eastern Auctioneer.. Monn"reh. Winn ICinrr Edward went The undersigned auctioneer has received instruct- ions from Mr. R. J. McGee to sell by. public auction on Lot 31, con. 1, East Wawanosl•1, comr'nencing at 1 p.m.on • . MONDAY, OCT. 1 91925 the following, that is to say: 1 cow, 4 years old, due Dcc, 7. 1 cow, 4 years .old, due June 26, 1 cow, 4 years old, due Nov. • 10, 1 cow, 12 years old, due May 5, 1 cow, 5 years old,, due Dec. 7 1 cow,, 5 years old, due May 2, .G.:steers, corning 2 years old. 73 steers, coming 1, year old, 2 -heifers, 'coming 2 years old 1 pure bred Durham bull months. old, 12 well-bred Oxforddown and telt' ewes. 'Everything will be zotd as the pl;cpriet- or is overstocked. TERMS.OPSSALE:' , All purchases of $10 ,and under, cash;' over that amount twelve months', credit on purchaser's furnishing approved joint notes. A discount of 5 per cent. per annum allowed on credit amounts R. J. MCGEE', Proprietor, Ria -HEADED Ana. Their Clu'c+'l. s Were t'sed'In Ancient 1 rescriptions. Astonishing prescriptions are con- tained in a medical book published In London in 1669, once owned by Wil- liam Penn, and recently presented to the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science, One prescription requires as an in- gredient "tile carcus of it red -hatred man (whose blood is thinned and fresh therefore better), whole and sound, twenty-four years old, not dy- ing 0f disease, but killed." The pre- cise use of this "drug" is not Mentioned. "This remedy probably originated hundreds of years before the book was written," says Dr. Julius W. Stunner, clean of science in the Philadelphia College, "Red heads were scarce in south- ern Europe, particularly among the Romans, Any light -haired men wore therefore very noticeable, and being usually from the north were consid- ered barbarians or were slaves or captives in weir, "Those •who devised the prescrip- tion were doubtless careful that nel- ther they nor\their family 5110111(1 be called on to 1111 it." The ;most drastic prescription ap- parently was the "blood of a young man taken in May," which was "dis- tilled in a small glass still," but in case the young titan could not be taken in May goat's blood was offered 215 a remedy, "The goat is a cheerful creature, swift, proud, quick of hearing, and ravenous," adds 'the book, but noth- ing is said about the young man in the case being cheerful. A euro which might prove expeni'' sive was made of rubies, "either drunk or hung around the neck." Among the virtues off this euro were those of preserving against . the plague, evil dreams, and "frightful ♦%........r.4.. 10 tl ..,.... „.....1 11... a uctiori Sale OF FARM -STOCK AND IMPLEMENTS The undersigned auctioneer has received instructions from Mr. Robt. Johnston, jr., to sell by public auction on Lot 34. con. 3, East Wawanosh, commencing at 1 p. m. sharp on FRIDAYPOCT 16TH the following, thais to say: HORSES Gelding horse, rising 5, gelding horse, rising 6, driving mare 9 years old. CATTLE Cow, 5 years old, milking, due in May, cow, 5 years old. milking, due to freshen in March, cow, 9 years. old, ^adv ed 3 weeks, cow 8 years old. milking. Pure bred cow, (Scotch) with calf at foot, due to freshen May 11, pure bred Shorthorn bull, 2 years old; 5 steers 2 years old, 4 heifers rising 2 years, 2 steers rising 2 years, 5 yearlings. 6 spring calves, 2 young calves. SHEEP, PIGS, FOWL 5 ewes. 8 chunks, 8 suckers, 2 geese, -1 gander, 50 hens. IEPLEMENTS Massey -Harris binder 7 ft cut, 1 McCormicTi mower, Deering cultivator, Massey -Harris fertilizer drill, nearly new. Massey -Harris hay loader.Fleury walking plow, Yankee furrow plough, wagon, set : ankee bob sleighs, hay rack, stock rack, nearly new, top buggy, set team har- ness, set -single harness. - GRAIN , 1000 bushels mixed grain, 400 bushels seed rifts, 50 bush els two rowel barley, 75 bushels fall wheat, 25 tons mixed hay, 2.5 tons alfalfa, Gurney Oxford range, heat- ing stove. Al! purchases of $10.00 and under, cash, over that amount 10 months' credit on purchasers furnishing ap- proved joint notes, 4 ger cent. straight off for cash on credit amounts. ROBT. JOHNSTON, Jr,, T. GUNDRY, Proprietor. Auctioneer \\'h3' the Seaside's Healthy, Why does a vis.'t to the roauide tone u:1 up so thoroughly? The doc- tors tell us it is because there is Iodine in the sea, and the spray 1rtna the Claves is full of It. So, with u1•t'ry la'oa)}) 01 air we take, we ab- sorb Homo precious iodine. The Inlportanee of iodine is now being preached by the doctors. '1'o etnphasize their contention that it is n('c'en1'ary to fitness, they point to the people who live in very sheltered val- ieys, where all tho fodlno has been .alcetl 1•rt:std the air before 11 reaches then(, Such people become weals and undersized. Su);gealions made recently for giv- ing its all more Iodine include the iodizing o1' the Water Supply. Mean- while, iodized salt, chocolate, and butter-sev)teh have been placed on tho 'Market, r• Miss; Lillie Carr Welcomed The following clipping is taken from tit' Calgary Herald and refers to a former rr- -ident of our village in the person of Lillie Carr, who was for several year, teacher over an Italian Mission in Mont• real, while home on her holidays this passed summer, she reeeived word lila' ,he had been appointed Deaconess it Central Cl,ulch Calgary, htr duties com nlencing on 5(•pt. 1st last. The followin► 1, a repot t of the rest ption given h:r b3 the p'Istor, officers and tr;tmbers of Cern. rel Church. We bespeak for Miss Cerro, Ling pleasant and useful term as deacon - ''is iu Central Chu, ch: "Tuesday e/r r.ing proved a most enjoy- Ible o e when more than 300 member: tad adherents of Central United Church ;trended the annual tally, Many address s of welcome were given the new deacon ,'ss, Miss Lillian Cait by the pastor, Ret W. Avison and officials of the eland,. t eceivi g saith the new deaconess wen Rev. and Mrs. I-1 W Avison, Mrs A. G Austin and Mrs. G. W. Chapman" Charm ng speeches were given by the (allowing, who in welcoming Miss Car. here, also gave her much useful informa- tion: -Mr A G. Austin, the church stew. ,ird, ltho acted as chairman; 1VIr, P- R. Lirecken, superintendent of the Sun- day School; Mr, Crandall, who spoke on behalf of the old (antis; Mrs. Lytle ler the Ladies' Aid, and other organiz- 1(10115, and Cecil Brown, secretary of the V. Jvl. C A , also gave it brief address. Musical numbers were given in splendid ;ty e by. the follotiing musicians: Miss Lillis 1 Rineh(If, pianist; Miss G. 13i66s, 'cellist; A'liss Jean Alexander, Pianist; ,iiss Gladys Biggar, soloist; Mr. James Contain, soloist and Mr. P. L. Newcomb Mi. Chas. Reihl has received the ap- pointrpent of issuer of hunting, trapping ,nd deet licenses for'this section. James Mitchell. former editor of the Goderich Star and fur the past eight years representative of the archives branch at Ottawa, diad suddenly in London on Mon day evening. The late Mr. Machell was 76 years of age. At the provincial elec tion of 19)2 Mr . Mitchell unsuccessfully FIREMAN'S CHIEF PERIL. Fanies a Much Wanwe Enemy Thad. Flames. "Fighting the fumes" would bet much more accurate than "fighttlfg the flames," whey speaking of the fireman's job in a big city. Smoke. Is really a much worse enemy than flame, and among firemen themselves there are three men gassed for one injured by fire. It iet, the fumes from the cargo of burning sulphur whtoh have been -giving suoh trouble to those engaged in fighting the fire aboard the Swedish steam- ship Reserve which put into tele Hutnber in a burning dondittons writes Christopher Black in a Londols' newspaper. The London, England, fire brigade is equipped with various kinds of helmets and gas masks specially der signed for use in thick smoke. Wear-; ing a liquid air helmet, a member o! the brigade was shut up for ten min- utes In a room were a fierce sulphur fire was burning and yet was none the worse. Ono of the worst fume producersi is cork. When, some years ago, s big warehouse in the Old Country. six floors filled with cork, caught fire, the clouds of yellow -grey smoke set people coughing halt a mile away. As for the firemen, they were driven back time and again by the choking: fumes. Next to cork leather makes the worst smoke. When the tannery and leather department of a big West End shop in London took fire, four- teen firemen were rendered uncon- scious by the fumes, Fire in a chemical works Is always a dangerous business owing to the peril of explosions, but the wou t of such fires occur when nitric adid is pt'esent. It carboys of this acid ex- plode dense yellow fumes pour ouf, whilh are absolutely deadly to thoao 1t'lio inhale thein, and firemen wild have to fight such a fire suffer ter- ribly. Even when provided with 811101E0 helmets they get s. re head- aches which sometimes las* days afterwards. A very troublesome type of fire to handle is one in 'a spirit warehouse. It is not only the difficulty of quench- ing rivers of blazipg whiskey, but the . filmes of the burning spirit are highly intoxicating, and at ono such did' in Belfast 'several of the firemen Were seen to be staggering. dizzily at their work. Hundreds of rats came Drawl.. ing out.so drunk they could bo picked up in the hand, . A celluloid fire Is always dangerous from the fierceness of the.•fiaines.' candle factory is alio moat difficult' to extinguislr,, but perhaps.' the worst sulJstance of all, so far as heat -4E14' concerned, is cocoa, It' burns withi • hardly ,any. smoke, but with a flame of amazing, intensity. ' The Milt 'I'lt'IQilt.. • . A funny incident ocourred at the British House of Commons the other!• clay. A tin• of liquid ,eggs, -the pro -1 • party . of Mr, Tom Johnston, who had brought it tothe-louse toi demonstrate his arguments, on ,(ti(l)l subject of the import of oertatn'food- stun, was accidentally, upset 'in the; cloak-roam, the contents trlokling in- to (mother member's. bowler heti The occurrenoe, which caused! - iauoh laughter, reminded me `,that r once Tree, the greet actor, found. 1.'. certain author pending an egg in a -- silk hat ever a .spirit atm, . Tree ' . •• said he' thought it a groat contested the ridit,g of West Uuron in the until he discovered .that it wan 'hie'. Ccndseivalive ifiterests against the late hat. Then he insisted that It was' nope , Judge M. G. Cameron. n s T e Delicious Flavor h•h drawn from the leaves of has won it millions of users. Finer than any Japan, Gunpowder or Young Hyson. Ask for SAL ADA. Love Gives Itself THE STORY OF A BLOOD FEUD 13Y ANNIE 8. SWAN. "Love gives Itself and is not bought."—Longfollow. CHAFFER XXXI.—(Cont'd.) "J'nn not ort any nut, Peter, old man! Only ----only up here, at the slack of Beyond, a moan gets a hit away from the normal. Tell me, how long is it since you left Scotland:" "Five weeks yesterday.+. "And—Bnd--are they all well?" ho asked, and the question fell with ob- vious halting and difficulty from his lips. "They are all well, I am here, Alan. by your wife's leave, and with her blessing. She wrote to me the night before 1 etarte.d to wish me God- speed." Something leaped in Alan Ran- kine's eyes --a hunger of the heart which was like a flame in its passion! IL broke up the deadly stillness of his face, banished the remoteness, brought him back, swift and sure, to the realms of living men, "My wife!. Then --then you know, Peter?" "They all know. And she and Judy are at Stair together, waiting for you, and any immediate business in life is to get you to them as quick as I can." Peter fumbled in his pocket, brought out the thin, gold -bound letter -case, and handed to his cousin the littie note he had received from Carlotta at The Lees the night before he left it. Thus and thus did Carlotta write: "Dear Peter,-lt is a great thing makes your food do you more good. Note how it relieves that stuffy feeling after hearty eating. Sweetens the breath, removes C food particles from the teeth, gives new vigor to tired nerves. Comes to you fresh, clean and full -flavored. 'b'61V1'hl'b'IU4,'W4,'WU14.'IUIIdIIIIII'W419d41'b'414,'bllu'6� The Right Way to Boil Potatoes Put the potatoes in an SMP Enameled Potato Pot. Cover with water. Add atilt to taste. Boil until soft. When finished, drain off all the boiling water through the strainer spout. No danger of steam scalding the hands because the handle securely locks the cover on. If your family uses potatoes, you require one of these. suggasEnameled POTATO POTS P fields and the spell of tho Yukon are, by Gad, he built It well! There isn't all very well and I grant you their, a chink or cranny in it where so much power in full, for I've felt it myself , as n breath of wind can get through. since I have been here, but you can't It's lined, and interlined and when got away from the fact that there ls' the stove's piied high, and going mor- a woman belonging to you at Stair,' rily, it is as comfortable and warm and that, at the present moment, she as the heart of man could desire! In is neither maid, wife, nor widow. ; March, when the cold is et its worst, And so right back you march with at the time when more temperate di- mo—this vory day, if I can tako you!"; mates aro enjoying their spring, Af- It was the right note to strike, and fery got n bud cold, the red rose in Rankine's check again. I "Ile was always out in the scrub, "You're right, Peter, But listen to watching the wild creatures, shooting, the tale of the last two years, and when wo needed fresh meat, but ho then, perhaps, you will grant that, novor trapped anything! Ile said that there aro seasons In a plan's life when was a cowardly and devilish way of to shirk his responsibilities seems not only natural, but absolutely the only thing to do, "When 1 saw Carlotta in the Man- hattan 'Theatre thnt night, Peter, and realized the impassable gulf between us, something scented to burn in my brain till I did not know who or where 1 was. I had only one object in front —to get clean away from New York, to put the whole breadth of the Am- cricitn continent—the world, if pos- sible! --between ale and the wonutn whose life I had Tiled, ' I realized 111C11—as you say. ---t at she was neith- er maid, wife, nor widow, and that the wrong I had dorso her was irre- parable. ! "I had the idea of suicide when I got outside, hut, somehow, I lacked either courage or resource—I can't tell. Anyhow, 1 had lily chance, for e, ; my railway tickets were in my pocket, and I boarded the train at midnight, ti;k that you are going to do—one of as I had intended to do, and I woke the great deeds of love and service in Toronto. I went on, but slid not which redeem life from its sadness,' alight at Calgary, as I had intended, and lift it up. God will be with you,! for there was one man in New York I don't doubt, because many will be; who knew that address, and from praying for•ou in Scotland. For pie whom it might be poisible for Carlotta —if it should be that the good God, to obtain i(. I wept on to Vancouver, permits you to bring back my husband and there 1 fell in with a Yorkshire - to Stair, then my debt will he one span, who offered me a job on his that never can, or will, he paid. But! ranch, it little east of the Rockies, tyu! I :hall be content to o\-Ve it, because 1' near enough Calgary that I could have lanae that it will mahc' you a happier found the other man's place without man. God bless you, Peter Gurvock,' difficulty. But I lay low and kept and I am, fill death, dark, and for nine months 1 was lost "Four grateful friend,there, and was nothing more than one "CA RI,OTTA IiAi`h[NE." of a number set to certain tasks. I did well, for I liked the life, and, of Having read these words, Alan! Coarse, I was at home in the sac!dle— rose to hi.; feint, and still holding the a good life for the young and fit, a !slim sheet in his fingers, walked away. life which it mass can live and keep i And Peter, understanding, sat still,' his self-respect, though it leads no - looking after him, and the wonder of where in particular, sued keeps him the whole story was upon his.soul, like. for ever adrift from all ideas of }ionto, some flood that bore him away. i I spent my days in the saddle and When Alun came back his face had; my nights chiefly in the cook -house taken on a new look—that of a stead- wagon, for we were away from the fastsoul whi•h behold.; the goal in homestead, on the round -up, six weeks at a time. I could spin you- a good many yarns about that bit of my car- eer, but they'll keep. Perhaps—who knows?—some day, on Barassie Hill, we may sit on the march dyke and reel them OM" Peter turned his head away, for a strange, salt moisture stung the eyes that had never known a tear since boyhood. "Now speak, Peter. Te:b me every-, thing, for the hunger is gnawing in my heart like a ravening wolf! Speak till you are tired, for I will never tire of listening!" "Nine months of ,the ranch, then Peter spoke, going back to the he- Keighley died, and I had to quit." ginning of things, to the summer in Alan did not say how or why, though which Rankine had left Scotland, giv- that part of his experience, and Rose ing a faithful recital of all that had Keighley's frank offer of a matrimon • happened to Stair, and those so dear ial partnership would have made no i to his cousin. uninteresting chapter. "Then I tried "It's an amazing tale, Peter, but the lumber camps, but that was the the bit I don't get the hang of fully is absolute limit! Gad! what brutes sten ! how they can afford to go back to are, herded together, cut off from all Stair to live. What miracle has hap-, that's good. The mother's sons I've! pened in the meantime?" ( seen wallowing in the pit! I couldn't; "No miracle, Alan," said Peter, stick it, I quitted that too; and all with an odd smile.. "You saw Car -I the time i was making slowly West, !lotto in New York, holding the most! or, to put it with absolute correctness,. !critical audience ;n the world in North-West, towards the Yukon and ! thrall? The woman who can d9 that! Affery. Ile said to me the night 1 put; money in her purse. It is your i bade him good-bye at the Central Sta- wife who has redeemed Stair!" :tion in New York that we should meet Rankine looked incredulous for a' on the Yukon—and we did. moment, then his fa'•o slowly flushed.' "I came here in October, and found "Bless her! Bless her, ten thousand Affery in Dawson City. It was the tunes! lluc--" j queerest meeting! I came down with "She: set, out to do it," went on Peter; the last boat of the season, and the Garvork, fir now that atonement was pack -ice was grazing her shins all the possible, he would give ft in full mea- I way down the river, and on the quay I sure, pressed down, and running over! there stood Affery.. Judy told me that, from the moment i " `So you've come!' was all he said, you left Scotland, Carlotta set herself i as casually as if we had met by ar- to do this, and because she held her- rangement. 'I hoped it would be by front. "You can have it now, Alan. Later, when—when you have something that is of more account, you cap let me have it back." Rankine gravely nodded, and operi- 1 ing the boom of his shirt, placed the folded sheet within, handling it as a man handles that which is precious to hi CIIAPTEIt XXXII. ALLAN'S STOum treating dumb animals; and it was through kneeling for n long time nt it trap to lot loose a gopher that ho got this cold. "It was snowing hard, and he got it soaked into hint, and next day his temperature W113 up. Ile got better of that, and was about again but not so strong as before, He talked loss about leaving the Yukon, and more— a great deal more—about Arizona's treasure, IIe was as set on discover- ing that before he died as other men are on accomplishing the objects of their ambitions! And the odd thing was that, after all, he did discover it just six weeks ago to•dayl" "No 1" said Peter Garvock in the utmost amazement. 'Then there has been truth In it, after all?" "1 t was all true—absolutely so. Arizona told him about the gold on his death -bed, raid when he was almost past speech tried to direct him where to find it. But he couldn't, Tho only thing Affery was able to make out was that it was somewhere near the shack. After Arizona died and at subsequent visits to the shack, he dug all about it. He took up tho floor, took off the roof, and explored every likely nook the. cranny. As a matter of fact, the nuggets Were hidden on the oVerhanging bank of the creek, just below the house. I'll show you the holo later on. It was as cunning an ar- rangement as you could imagine --a regular little thine—yet so carefully concealed by the brush and the boul- ders that nobody could have imagined that there was n covert there even for a muskrats But Affery saw one com- ing out under the brushwood ono day, and exploring its hole, found the bag with the nuggets. No! not only one bag, but three, packed full and burst- ing with their shining contents that had lain there, unknown to any hu- man being, since Arizona's death in 'ninety-nine," (To bo continued.) -----_—•;•------- Keep Minard's Liniment In the house. self responsible for the parting of Stair —but it was 1 who was respon- sible for that! I, and no other." "No, no! And, anyway, you've wiped it out to -day, Peter! By God, you have! hor though I have it in my 'power to go hack, and, if I choose, re- deem Stair in full, it is a question whether 1 would have done it, but for this boat, for the trail and the stage in winter are not for the tenderfoot.' "Just as if he had been expecting me, see! And never a single ques- tion as to why or how I had come, Ise just laid hold on me, and the next day WO came up to the shack." "But that was the beginning of winter! You mean you wintered you, When a man has been here for here? a spell, Peter, at the Back of Beyond, Rankine nodded. clean out of all the things that matter "It was his idea, and 1, well—I 1 in the lives of men, something hap- hdan't much choice, and it's a good I pens to him; either he loses his sense life, Peter—the life of the wild—for of proportion, or he is clean lifted up those who understand it. We lived like' to unimagined heights. He comes trappers on what we shot and found, nearer God, I suppose, or else the and at night, shut down in the shack, Devil gets him. When I came out of ( wo were as comfortable as any man the shack just now, I was not sure but that the Devil had me fast. You see,' home. That castle he bought in Don - I've lost my pal, and what that means i egal never held him, nor ever could. to a man on the Yukon—well, nobody He belonged to the wild) but the man who has been through it "He was obsessed by the idea that can understand," there ,was golot hidden in this nesgh- "But, after all, Alan," said Peter horhood—the fortune of a pal who the practical, "mountains and gold- built this very shack. Time•and again I he had come back to seek it, and those who knew about it took it as the harmless obsession of a chap not quite right here," said Rankine, tapping his forehead. "I3ut it .was more than a notion—he found it before he died. "I have a sort of queer feeling about telling you this yarn, Peter, for you are a chap who deals in hard facts, and you'll find it difficult to swallow,,, 1 "Oh, no," Peter, assured him cheer- fully.."We're along way from: Scot- land now 'and it's possible -to swallow anything I" could desire. It was Affery's real "DIAMOND DYES" • COLOR THINGS NEW Just Dip' to Tint or Boil to Dye 118 W'Wk.'bIMiWMd4�WAllIgNANrW ueinitucvb'O tsftet l I 1 UE No 41—'26. Each 15 -cont pack• age contalnu direc- tions so simple any woman can tint soft, delicate shedes or dye rich, permanent colors in lingerie, silks, ribbons, skirts, waists, dresses, coat s, stockings, sweaters, draperies, coverings, hang- ings ---everything! Buy Diamond Dyes—no other kind— end tell your druggist whether the ma- terlal you wish to color' is wool or silk, or whether It is linen, cotton or mixedgoods, 'Well, tho winter went on. We had a grand winter, Peter, and here my soul, in a sense, came to itself. We had hooks out from Dawson,' and we read and discussed everything under heaven, and I was as happy as a man could be who had it pa hafraid to look back' on. "There never was a day when the thermometer was higher than fifty below zero, and in, the nights it some, times fell to seventy." i.. "Can folks live through cold like that?" Rankine nodded, "It is possible, with suitable cloth- ing and a house slrfall enough to con- serve the heat. Affery's chum, Ari- zona, built the•;shnck down there, and • J 1:1t xrhtsiudlit •rnfr -644:1-64-r- ,1 1 f` RIPPLING SIDE -DRAPED GOWN. A very charming model -is this printed crepe gown in beige tone, with its rippling side -front drape in new pointed effect, The round neck and short sleeves are finished with a ruche fashioned of the material of the drap- ery, and a flat ornament is cleverly placed at the hip. .The diagram por- trays the simple deli jn Of the gown, which may bo made with long sleeves. No. 1183 is in sizes 34, 36, 88, 40 and 42 inches bust. Size 86 bust requires 4%. yards of 36 -inch, or 3% yards of 40 -Inch ,material, For short sleeves 1,• yard less material is required, Price ' 20 cents. You will be' surprised to see how quickly the garment shown in our new Fashion Book may be 'made by the home dressmaker. No expense has been spared to make our styles as rep- resentated in our patterns—the very best that can bo pg•oduced by the most competent desig;pers :arid cutters, These designers originate their pa' terns in the very heart of the style centres, so that their • creations are those of tested popularity, • brought within the means of the average wo- • • The Toronto Hospital for Inourahlei, In affiliation withnollevuo anti Allied Hospitals. Now York City, otters a three years' Course _ of Training to young women, having the required edueatlon, and desirous of hemming nurses. This Hospital has adcptcd the eight. hour system. The pupilreceive uniforms of the School, a monthly atlowanoe and traveling expenses to and from New York, Fey further Information apply to the superintald.gd. past ewasNURSES 6' -I've not boiled any garments since" "A friend suggested that I stop boiling the clothes I washed end try Rinso, which I did, with such delight- ful result3 that I have not boiled any garments since then, "I found that Rinso is excellent for removing finger prints from white paint and for washing all woodwork. "It has cut any house cleaning troubles in half and consequently I felt that it was only your due to know that R1,1150 has a much bigger work to do in our house than just to clean the dirt from our laundry." The maker-, of Rlnso receive many such letters as this. For Rinso not only does tho family wash merely by soaking—it Is also excellent for many household duties, such as cleaning woodwork, scrubbing floors, etc. Order (tins° today. Lever Brothers LImuted, Toronto. 1 R486 MAILcopy. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving minter and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Pottern Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ada- laido St., Toronto. Patterns Jent by return mats. Minard's Liniment used by Physicians. O Sentence Sermons. Sooner or later—The doctor will be paid for keeping us well, not getting us well. • —Cities will begin building man- hood first and factories next, —ileo will discover how mean 'a sin race prejudice Is. `Every employer will discover that cheap help is always expensive help. --The wise man discovers the 1180.Iessness of pretense. --The braggart gets his due reward. --Every man has to pay the high cost of low living. Germs Against Germs. Alalaria germs are had, but paralysis germs are worse, alid the tive kinds hate each other, As between. two evils, the lesser is preferable, so Pro- Tessor Wagner•Jauregg, of I3cn•lln, has. found he can wive patients from pro- gressive brain paralysis by dosing them with melodic, After the malaria germs have . killed all the paralysis germs the professor drugs the victors. The medical profession is, indeed, .bo• Matter comtug more and more a atter of bacteriology. Price of the book 10 cents tho • For leaving ,a newspaper lying on the grass in a London park a man was prosecuted by the L.C.C. and fined five shillings. Look for it on the tinfoil, It is your guarantee of/ quality and flavor. AVOID ITATIONS. a. Magic. Yesterday—a row of solemn trees, Proud and green and high ; To-day—a row of golden spires Against the evening sky. Yesterday --six poplars slim, Standing straight and true; To-day—six wondrous torches Blaze into the blue. —G. M. L. Curse of Scotland. Amongst old whist players tho nine of diamonds is often spoken of ns the "curse of Scotland." It is probably a corruption of the phrase "Cross of Seatiand," The nine "pips" on the card were formerly printed is the shape of a St. Andrew's (Toss, What does Upper Cylinder Lubrication Mean to the Motorist? It means elimination of carhop, Erie• tion and knocking, mileage increased 15 to 25%, longer life to engine, more ef. flciency and repairs reduced 50%. 'Phil Lubrication can only be obtained by using Allraelo 011. Miracle 011 Sales, 64 Richmond St, E., Toronto 2. FALL G1EANING AND DYEING need he no worry. Send to Parker's. Every facility for the most expert work. If you wish ad- vice or information on any dyeing prob- lem write us. Prompt Mail Or- :5 der Service. . Car- riage charges paid one way. ARKER?S 1 - DYE WORKS LIMITED' S J[EANERS8DY[RS' 1 :' 791 YONGE ST TORONTO wa tiaalg.anglail rn.r a,, a., i:fli'g"lah! 7 Caith.uil,:.ClaINA 14.11114L01aUtaiiil hen you dri ou }IARVESTING AND STORING POTATOES Care in Harvesting and Storing Means Better Returns • for This Year's Crop. I1Y II. C. MOORE. Tho more general ndoptlon by the. ed along on the hare conveyor chains, growers of good cultural practices, they will be bruised. Slow, steady such as early planting, closer spec- driving of the digger is important in ing, use of certified seed, etc., should preventing serious bruising of the result in better ►natured, brighter po- tethers, tatoes of excellent market quality. The dug potatoes should be left ex - The advantage's however, of favor- err;ped to the sun and air for a few able weather and careful growing will hours until they aro dry and their be lost if the potatoes aro carelessly skirts toughen. '!'hely should never be handled when harvested and rridred. left exposed, ho The market \vents bright, sound, wallhowever, to chilling tem - The pcatatcnes. Poorly graded stock lleraturc:n, When picking up the pota- shotving fork punctures, braises and toes, very el{•ective grading ens be other bl0(11ithcs resulting from care- clone if the kindly bruised, ill -shaped les harvesting and poor atorit1 fuel cull stock is left on the ground to v be picked up later, Where weather causes Ontario growers enormous ons han- losses every year. The following sag- is atllsortcrs�tean ben used in thetslecflel 1 to gestionsn should aid growers in handl- pod advantage. Special efforts should ing the 1920 potato crop so it will be made to eliminate as much as pos- market to tho best advanttt re, f 4ib10 of the unmarketable potatoes HARVESTING;, from the stock that is carried to the Delay digging operations until the storage cellnr, This will make for n vines aro matured or until they aro better looking lot of potatoes when it killed by frost. The others separate is later graded to comply with the more easily from dend vines and are sttutclard grades' less apt to be injured than when the Pickers should be cautioned against crop is harvested while the vines are throwing the potatoes into the crates, still green, Digging operations should Serious bruising results from this be started in sufficient tinge, however, practice. If the potatoes are hauled to so that the entire crop can be harvest- the storehouse in crates or bags in - ed and stored before freezing weather steed of in bulk they will be less sets in, -Usually the ideal harvesting bruised. In many cases the hardest sensor is only of a few days duration, drubbing that the potato gets in the harvesting-storing operation is over This necessitates having sufficient the mechanical grader. Tho injury equipment and labor available to shorten tho work as much as possible. c1011e them at this timo can bo mate - Every precaution should be taken to really lessened if the grader is of the avoid field frosted potatoes, No other continuous belt typo instead of the factor causes more worry and loss to shaker screen type. Padding the run - growers, warehouse men and cjealers eagrader hopper with burlap and run- tha►n chilled or frosted potatoes, Witte the grader moderately slow will As far as p08sib:e do the digging help save the skins and will make for brighter colored potatoes, on cool clear days when the soil is comparatively dry. Wet soil sticks to the pOtatOCs nnd often causes them to rot in storage. Use care in handling the fork and cd in storage. Potatoes that are wet digging machine to prevent injuring and dirty aro likely to heat and rot, tho potatoes. It is not uncommon to Growers and warehouse men should sear many lots of potatoes showing take pains to keep all lots of potatoes fifty per cent, or more injury result- that are chilled or frosted out of the ing from fork pricks, digger cuts and warehouse. Such stocks should he bruises, Such stock keeps poorly in kept on the farm, storage, becomes dark colored and is During the first few weeks of stor- not wanted on any,market. age potatoes go through a sweating Tho details of harvesting should be process. Much head and moisture Is closely supervised. A careless man given off at this time. Windows and with a fork can cause the grower n doors should be left open nights (Inv - big lois 1n a short while. Keep the ing mild weather so that the warms plow of the digging machine sleep moist air can escape. The temper - enough to avoid cutting the potatoes aturo. of the storage cellar should be and to curry some roil over the con- reduced to forty degrees 4. as quickly veyor rack. if the potatoes are bowie- as possible, STORING. Nothing but sound, dry potatoes re- latively free from dirt should bo pine - MAMA -LOOK oa 'TNE SPEEDER - GEE sAoUow oe� GOLLY ! -W PAPA WAS" ONLYMTh USNOW IN TORONTO HE COMO SNOW BETTER SPEED 'THAN To keep the potatoes in a dormant condition and to prevent wilting and the development of molds and rote a 'uniform tomperuturo of thirty-five to forty degrees 1!, should be maintained throughout the winter and spring. High storage temperatures cause a heavy shrinkage in the potatoes. If the temperature is much above forty degrees F. tho tubers wilt and sprout during rho Into winter and string months, I1igh temperatures also favor the spread of molds and fungous dis- crtses which make the skins of tho tubers dark and in some cases caw:es totting of the flesh. Temperature much below thirty.lise degrees may cause the potatoes to have a sweet tasto and darkened flesh. Chilling of the potatoes is apt to Litho place at temperatures of thirty-two degrees and lower, ,Store houses should he equipped with reliable thermometers. Many of them now in use• in potato cellars nre not accurate. Potatoes in storage require frc,h air to keep them in good condition. Lack cf fresh air may cause blacken- ing of the flesh (black heart) and sur- face breakdown (button rot), These conditions were quite common htst winter and spring in poorly ventilet- aed cellars and in large bins of pota- toes that were not properly aerated. Some of the better types of storage cellars receive their supply of fresh stir through one or two twelve to twenty -four -inch concrete flues at the floor line. The intakes of the flues are generally placed from 50 to 100 feet from tho cellar. The flues are placed be:ow the frost line so that the temperature of the air is moderat- ed by the time it reaches the cellar. The fresh air is curried the length of the cellar through ten eighteen -inch channels placed under the bins. The channels aro covered with wooden islets spaced so that the air can rise through the bins. Ventilators are placed in the roof which allow the heated moist air to escape, All air flues and ventilators aro provided with dampers and the entire ventila- tion system is under the control of the operator. Large pi:es or bins of potatoes should be provided with ventsanted di- vision walls spaced at intervals of six or eight feet throughout the piles. These walls can be made of two by six-inch uprights with ono by four - inch strips nailed on the edge. A. one - inch space should be Ieft between each strip, The ventilator wall should reach front the floor to well above the top of the pile, There should bo suffi- cient air flues and ventilation war:s throughout the pile so that no pota- toes are farther than four feet from a supply of fresh ait•. This precau- tien will help eliminate blackheart, !button rot and other forms of break - l,,,ulmuL, , f . ,r^ THE CITY OF QUEBEC AS SEEN FROM THE AIR The above photo, taken by nth -child Aerial Surveys Co„ of Grand' Mere, Que., hives It splendid blydaleye view of the Old City showing the Chateau Frontenac in the foreground, and 1)ufferin Terrace, the Citadel and the St. Lawrence River winding Its way up to Montreal, down and will snake for butter qual- ity seed and table stock. Tho storage cellar should be kept as i dark as possible so the quality of the potatoes will not bo impaired. Light causes the potatoes to green and do- ve:op n hitter taste. How to Open a Hive. We never open a hive from the front. The natural home of bees is in a carr' or ho{:ow tree, and the idea of I an intrusion from the rear seems to take then quite by surprise. As soon as the cover is gently lifted up, a puff of smoke is blown into the, hive, and the bees become completely, demoralized and net as they do in any, emergency --fill themselves with honey, —EO as to bo ready if it comes to abandoning their home, to take enough with them to slake a start in house- keeping elsewhere. Now, when fl:led with honey a bee rarely stings, and this, combined with the panic, ro breaks up the organized "spirit of the hive" that tnanipulatiol,.. are performed with ease and comfort, —H. W. Sanders. HELLO - POLKS 1 YOU WONDERPUL -"\ C1'IIZENS OF ON"fARtO -.ME BANNER PROVINCE OF CANADA -INE. PROVINCE THAT HA9 MORE BEAUTY SPOTS THAN ` A LEOPARD - IT WAS YouR TELEGRAM THAT BROUGHT Me SACK - T1it EVENlNfs TELEGRAM- THE TELEGRAM THAT'S READ tVERYWKRE IN ONTARIO - t'M GONG "CO GWE YOU A OOZE% LAUGHS A DAY 1N YouaOWN PAVOR►TE NEWSPAPER - -me EVENING 'MAMMA [ONt GOODY PAOA's BACK IN TORONTO AGAIN ti. Laugh with him every erre a °. lug in the Telegram TOYih' REIGNS in the Gump household again! Andy, the breadwinner, n has been round. He's, back in Toronto again—this time in. The ening Telegram. 1111d he's here to stay—with a bagful of new ideas, every one of them a sure laugh -producer, ' siLl At est ANDY has been missed No doubt of that, He's the most famous comic strip char- acter in the world, But the days of worry arc over. Every evening, Andy, Chester and Min will entertain you in The 1",tetting '1'cicgratn, The Greatest' :.. • of all. Comic •.Strips Now in The Telegram .$D ruIeatMor, , Von API :AN 'to rout RtOtt% N1 1 )I.,li,SS to say, TheEvening Telegram is proud of its latest cer►ttic strip, Andy's `•admirers are legion, L'veryone in Toronto -- in Ontario—knows him, t veryone is happy to laugh with --and at—this unique 20th ten• tiny philosopher, 11, his old form / Twelve Other Comic Strips and Mirth- ► Provoking J i Features Every Evening. Read in 5 out of 6 Toronto homes—Read in every County in Ontario. Toronto— ntario. ti SIX MINIJTES FOR BEAUTY'S SAKE 1 BY ROC1IJ LL ROGERS. Tho country woman who has not a Then dip the fleet two fingers of great real of time to give to the beau- each hand into cleansing cream. It is tifying rites of cold cream and cos- not necessary to use a great deal of merle aids but who, nevertheless, cream, Very little will do. Hold the values a good cotnplexion, will be glad fingers stiff, and with a firm, hard to know of a six -minute beauty treat- pressure—the Firmer and harder the went many of her city sisters rite suc- better—literally press tho cream into cessfully using at home, the skin, always holding the fare as Disfiguring blemishes, coarsened, directed, rough or prematurely wrinkled skin-- Press. --press! Ali over the neck unless caused by depleted health— and face, except over the eyelids will yield to this daily care. - where n very gentle patt'ng i:i best. Besides the necessary six minutes, Press until the arms ache! The hard - each night and morning, the requisites er the pressure the more cream is ab. for this treatment are few—a cleans- sorbed—the greater the stimulation. ing cream, a tissue builder, an astrin- It is active circulation that causes tho gent :otion and a supply of very soft- pores to throw off the clogging natter textured cloths. dissolved by the cream, These who know the how and why Next, remove the cream, remember - of complexion care warn against bath- ing—while holding the mouth open ing the face with soap and water be- and lips drawn over the teeth—that cause of its tendency to roughen and removing is as important a process as irritate the skin. Instead, cleanse it applying the cream. Tissues must with a solvent cream that will pend- not lie damaged. Lines must not be trate the pores and remove the dead rubbed in. oil and other clogging platter, NEVER USF IIARSII TOWELS. , `Vith the cleansing cream is used al With the soft cloth provided for tissue builder, rich in nourishing oils, this purpose gently wipe over the eyes and also an astringent lotion which, ! and around the nostrils. Lightly wipe when used in conjunction with the two' the neck, chin, cheeks and forehead, creams, will discourage wrinkles, ! always with an upward and outward shrink the pores, tighten the skin of stroke. Never dry tho face with a a double chin and firm the muscles! harsh towel or bath towel, of the face sold neck. An astringent' Now, the cleansing cream removed, that does not have a powder sediment: press the tissue builder Into the face, is best, as it may be applied before which should be tingling by this time, powdering. Work this cream well into the skin IIEGINNING THE TREATMENT. and let the surplus remain on face The beauty of any skin depends and neck overnight. Unless wrinkles upon thorough c:seansing before retic- are well defined the astringent may ing. Powder and rouge, dust and he omitted at night. grime, if left on, invite disfigurements In the morning—holding the face and wrinkles, as directed—press in a very little of Begin by pinning a protective towel the tissue builder and apply the as - over the hair. Open the mouth aide. tringent over this. Wipe both off and • Draw the lips over the teeth, find pull ; tamp in a pure face powder. Don't them ns far over the edge as they will' rub; tamp or pat in with a large, go. This position holds the sk{a and I clean soft puff. If rouge is needed muscles firm and taut, and when the! put it on in 0 V shape. Begin at the pressing motion this treatment (:11181 temp:ea and stroke toward the nose, for is used to apply the cream there then outward toward the jaw. Blend is 110 possibility of breaking down the I the edges deftly with the powder'puff, tissues or making lines in the face.' This completes the facial toilet and So hold this position throughout the 'also protects the skin against the treatment, l harmful effects of sun, wind and dust, Butter and Cheese Output. Tho manufacture of creamery but- ter in Canada in 1924 showed an in- crease over 1923 in every province excepting Prince Edward Is:and and New Brunswick, in Nova Scotia by 588,863 lbs., in Quebec by 0,381,860 lbs., in Ontario by 5,181,401 lbs,, in Manitoba by 1,902,814 lbs,, in Sas- katchewan by 2,626,663 lbs,, in Al- berta by 4,420,035 lbs,, and in British Columbia by 710,20(3 lbs. 1924 was n record ycnr in Canada for the manu- facture of dairy butter, being 184,- 200,903 lbs,, over 21,000,000 lbs, in ex- cess of the turnout in 1923, In the produce of factory cheese there was nn increase in 1924 compared with 1923 of 234,030 lbs. in Prince Edward Is:and, of 116,911 Ilea in New Buns - wick, of 4,662,82:3 lbs. in Ontario, of 364,257 lbs. in Manitoba, in Saskat- chewan of 20,711 and in British Col- umbia of 27,453 lbs. Nova acoria was practically stationary, but there was .11. decrease in Quebec and Alberta, both of which showed a good increase over .the output in 1922, The true purpose of cdusnt:on is to cherish and unfold the seed of im- mortality already sown within us; to develop; to thejr fullest extent, the capacities of every kind with which. the God who made, us has endowed us, —Mrs. Jameson, Through a process developed by the department of ngricu:ture, it is row a commercial possibility to keep sweet cider the'year round, The process con- sists essentially of freezing the fresh apple juice, grinding this frozen ma- terial, and thee, by means of a contd. fugnl process, separating the essential solids from the frozen water. Five gallons of cider are reduced by this process to ono gallon of concentrate. The Advantages of Co -Opera- tive Marketing. Convinced that co-operative mark- eting based on realy sound principles is the best method of marketing poul- try and poultry products, the Federal and Provincial Governments of Can- ada are giving encouragement to this feature of the poultry industry. In a bulletin on the co-operative marketing of poultry products, issued by the 1)o• minion Live Stock Branch, the author enumerates the advantages of the co, • operative method. Co-operative pout.. try and egg marketing associations ( have already achieved success in the i different provinces. They have d!evel. 1 oped old markets and are finding new ones. They increase the income of the producers by cutting down expenses land obtaining higher prices for stan- dard products. By securing capable land expert management, including a know:edge of the condition and needs of markets far and near, volume can he cont•'o11ed, making it possih:e' to cater to the exact requirements of different markets end to dispose ' of nutrketuble goods to the very best ad vantage, These co-operative market- , ing _organizations are also of great ' assistance in furthering the efforts of the authorities to standardize products and improve grading and ,packing I methods, The bulletin,;which may he obtained free from the: Publicat{dtls Branch, Dept, of Agriculture, Oitawa, tells in detail how to organize, fin - ansa and conduct these associations, Irand gives a great deal of general in- , formation on the marketing of try and eggs, ar# ar '1:. -he ewe 101116 should be supplied with a bone and muscle -making food Tt Is not Advisable to make theta )!at, SEE OUR NEW LINES IN Ladies; Boys and Mens Sweaters New lines in Boys and Mens' SUITS 6c OVERCOATS Special Offerings in CHILDREN AND LADIES HOSE For a good strong work shirt buy BULL DOG SHIRTS For a goodARES BOOTS rAur� 6--1riL 111,Y'1 ri b1INN L)t\ril'-- 1_1(.1(11 t'1 `"--" IT' + + 1':.• . , „ t1eve ,t� r.• „y l � , �, . h .. t•, , .�, w1•. , 1„ t. r�•',1‘� S. w�., , , �R n f "111 •4,0•1••••,) e....,ra ! I •y, .e }� v t� •, t.* .n .. rl ••r• w•.o•'r'J+ �• �'`� \i.wr • wit) 41 � J . ee kap 2.,oa. Vis.+ eke ' . ,. Ole ,, :t"..";"' O •4� , 1 c`ld t.' h. st�l i,"? Jri ( i• i a.-. The new fall Faltr n c bc;/•e. A Satre to coAYc: t:;' fon. o ail * the latest clefts +tt :El CP..I.. {.i •a New fall caps in the latest co cis and shape. Cis_}" f,. r�1 We handle onlythc: L est maker. �•, Queen Alexp.rci a and Cain;, ;or® + for W,cnicf, :a and King Edward `t.1 -N1 A scot for Men in 1? r. e shoes and in heavy GREB, I-aA.\N k F CRNE, ST r LING strong work Boot buy �7 strong work �oof t• • 4,s E. BENDER, BLYTH,ONT. imaignimemirmaimmiss Local News The Standard and Farm°rs' Sun, both papers for $2 70. The "Terrible Turk" will keep up his r eputation by creating a government anon opoly of opiun when other countries cup press it. Auctioneer Thos. Gundry has received instructions from Mrs. B. L. Marshall to sell iiy public auction on south 3 Lot 27, con, 9, Morris, on Tuesday, October 20, farm,, farm -stock and implements. See bills for fuller particulars. A dainty little airplane, designed espec• Tally to appeal to feminine tastes has ap- peaffd in the market in London, England It 16 being sold for $1,01). , It is a one seater and is built, the manufacturers say ,' for thin women only." Mrs. C. Spafford tt.rurned home Mon- day f rom a few days' visit with her daugh ter, Mrs. Roland Taylor. in Toronto. She was in the city to meet her daughter, Mrs Richard Sargeant. from Cuba, who will spend the winter months here. Messrs. R. B McGowan and Colin Fing land have ccmpleted their task of ccmpil• int; the voters' lists to be used at the federal elections on October 29th. These lists are put up for int.pec'ion and anyone who is entitled to vote and whose name dues not appear on the list, have the priv- ilege of appealing when, if their qualifica t i.rn is correct. they will receive the ballot. The action of the Government in requir ing the grading of butter, cheese and eggs has stimulated the demand for these products at home and abroad. Canadian cheese, partly clue to the extensive adver• tising given to it at the Wem'�Iey Exhibi- tion is regaining its favored place on the Loudon tnarket. , Milk, cream and butter are being exported to the United States, in spite of almost prohibitive duties. The W. M. S of Queen Street United Church. met at (he home of Mrs. J. S. Chellew, on Tuesday, Oct. Oth, at 2.30 p. rn. The group in charge were: Mesdames Chellew, Slater, Davis. H. McElroy San- derson and Bryant. The President occu- pied the chair and Mre, Slater conducted the devotional exercises, also giving a lai�lendid description of The Home and Work in Edmonton where Ruthenians and Ukranians are taught and cared for. This work being carried on under the W. M S. Board. "Mission Work in India'' was also studied., Papers were read on this work by Mre. Carr, Mrs. Lyon, Mre. Maines and Mrs. R. Bell. Following this lunch was served by the group in charge. Illustrated Lecture Mr. Dr J. Moore, of Toronto, gave a very pleasing and instrctive lecture in Memorial Hall. last Wednesday evening, under the auspices of Blyth Community Horticultural Society. Hie subject being 'Tile Beautificaticn of the Home Surround Inge" which was well illustrated by lan- tern views. Mr. Moore tried to impress upon his audience the importance of arranging flots'ers in a place so as to give the very hast effect. also of planting such ibv era s,a would give a succession of bloom through. • out•the season.' All wno were interested in flowers and of improving their home eurroundings were able to get a lot of help ful infoimation, going' home feeling that they had been amply paid for coming out. •Ir Moore alas took a survey of the old cemetry grounds and was able to give the Executive of the Society a number of splen did suggestions, both as to the laying out of the plot. and the most satisfa;tory Aruba and flowers that should be p'anted all of which will no doubt be seriously con ikdered by tlae Executive, Standard Standard Standard Standard Standard Standard Star;dard Standard Standard Standard Standard Standard Standard Standard Standard Standard Standard Standard Standard Standard + 1 Phone "-7S i [, \'lt:.1. 0.N.1,1r vz++moi +4'd`+4+4 -I. ,�. • ` ,,, VA.' f: �• RK' j') il; • ��, ';' �.�' �•„ r Jig f ✓ ''V' I:::: . :. ° ti 1 r�' :.r '• • ' `•;�* � `•�+' �:,I ti -4‘ re tti.::- a 1 ((.. 'U-4,i,'..f,!1. .e...../L5 ek:'‘ The Standard ClubCt bing List: A FULL .f rr r ;...7/11:781'7 ru tr..1 71, t Co••:,�+�rl':'N^ "'1L..':.• . `• and Daily Clobe .,,.$6.75 i $ and Mail and Empire... 6.75"ill '� and Daily World fi.75 and Sunday World 4.27 and London Advertiser 6,7: and Free Pree. 6,75 and Toron' o Daily Star 6.75 and Family Herald 3.50 and Farmer's Sun 3.9'.:' and Can. Countryman 3.4C and Farmer's Advocate 3.51 and W!,-1•.; Witness 3.50 and \1 ort'' Wide 3.90 and 1 v'ovterian 4.501 and P. ultry Journal 2.901 and 1`o'tth's Companion 4.50 and Northern Messenger 2.50 and Can. Pictoral... 3.90 and Rural Canada. 2.75 and Farm & Dairy 3.00 Standard and Saturday Night ' 5.10 Standard and McLean's Magazine 4.75 •-h© Llyth Standard, THE STANDARD REAL ESTATE AGENCY. We have at the present time listed with us some very desirable villa: e and farm property. If you contem• template buying. call on us and we will give, you full particul rs. The ollowing are some properties that are well worth investigatin • -- Two storey solid brick dwelling Modern Also a good stable. property is in good repair and has hydro installed. Frame dwelling on King Street with acre of land. This property is in good state of repair and can be pur• chased on reasonable terms, Brick dwe'ling on Queen Street, in good repair. Apply for fuller particu• lars. Brick dwelling on Hamilton Street. Cement garage on I. t. 1/racre of land. This property is a good buy for anyone desiring a comfortable home, Frame dwelling on Drummond St., in good repair A acre or land. Brick dwelling on Queen Street in first-class repair. 1f you desire to purchase a firm get particulars from us. The Stan : rd Real Estate d ency, BI . Ont. FOR SALE That very desirable property situate nn Queen Street North, Blyth, comprising one acre of land, on which is sitive a comfortable ten roomed dwelling. There is also for sale 64 hivi s of bees and ful. equipment for handling. Thi; is an ex• cellent chance to seethe a cf,mtortab e home and a good paying business besides. Will be sold as it stands or in part. For particulars apply at 'The Standard Real Estate Agency FOR SALE That desirable property situated on th, corner of Queen and Wellington Streets. this being two storey and attic, solid brick This property is centrally situated. For further particulars apply to Mrs. Chas. Harvey, Blyth, Ont. 1t rhot err mit. ALP-- In Auburn, on Tuesday, October 13th to Rev. W. R. and Mrs. Alp, a son, William Donald. wVL P'1 A SPPPSa 1!0,1ry �. ..t U . L....a. .•.:.a £.. I,, ( ry .� .9.1.a t ►.� F Q rte" (41 &" T Y " I' ,,t Il Irv% y - • • 0 Pfl , {)fail' 4; it., ■ • Qct tl r/ tf..Ll� M; ~a✓ .w uv Lag :WWW flf•'7 t-:471 ,1 (•ti A , , • 4 `�t►► r\�+:%t..:h '•••,'ItvJ tvis `;t'r5i.9 ,:, 4-;Au;ii. ' t J,1 '1..n a Ontario. r' '' R1,• ..,. .t• •tr .,t„. „. f' Nc 1/4I4 s' sir .f. ♦1..r" ',r/ t!/ \1/ '' ' * �r .. . rj. 'r,� •.,a .� ;t: ', 4+. .j• ‘141►` ij� f,, .1 !i• i,: f,. i,` .0. .0 .j•. IPA Uood Business FOR YOU a'=P' in ht Wilite Flannelette ' f:.1;t rz,:-Ali Jaz . . 91c Scots:_ / Loch Shiyking Flanncietie (l;tl'k ' ! ,.. `• , „ 11'.'av r quality, r',fl' '10 3; c Com:tine, Fezthcrk:•a•ccf Tick'g 5'9 5nc English Cficr'on),-ic. fancy designs ;aC inch, Nate........ .... 45 English Shirting Ci-iarraha'ay f' plain grey, Luc grey,. s1')Iendid for t1res.''es, aprons, shirts, ljl(,tlsc ', etc, ' regular 25(.'., ry t:,111e.... ....... .... 2 1 Ladies' Art Silk 1-7.cce ,lltcdc ralt'i, fawn, to :'t1{)1n, aired ale 11Hi;t1i'll' Ida a,. 45 Silk Mix Check. :' illi Neese, grey :1:11".'I1 & white, oath..' white, good winter l;t,=e, 1-t 0, 90 1.1/Ion's 1,7;roof Cashmere Socar., 7.5c, 610c Celtic's Ne.i y Vin:. err Sox CO sale 49 Ic " I: is •, ss cs Es I",,... 'p• r C.:' a ds •s 11'),. 6 c3 )t .idS C.! : -.x Twill ciLl Jenii g(rcr(k. sale ....- 59 ,.) ounce lir \1. 1\'('112:111, sale .......... 49 1 0U.1 CC: Clark " Denim 3 lil.'•lllllll \'�'C'lf;ht; Sit �'..-._ .. ............ '•, e - Don inion. Te. ti:e �°llta•firg at following sale l)riees, 23c, 27, 32, 39 Buy • your Fail s ::: Winter Shoes for ria. n xa.orn t.;s while cur elect is fairly coit2 ..e.'. . We cavry Willd !rR s,♦a `rin./.-< Martin's, Coie't: Hydro z,�tf�.R•;e� � 4.3-Lic' shoes ',',r^aa' vrca•th the money. :Norac l.)2t cr. most not so good Buy from i', 11 . ..,ti (7Y a .r' ..# ;,. ,. ! l.; iii ' j. ' ,,..- ,.4....., L,.(.11,..,,../1r L.,:e. �; 1�, V s�fy !w +.' • • •. 4 • ♦, 41 • `1. •'f ••. ,ad, f' , , ' to t< l .1 l r`7' .` .. �'.Y tJ{'� ' 3 � l 4 11, td. i .. • : 1 M t,. ixt. J {N .,•! at,. f.• �,..1e .r.'.!..t• tri .1r .,tr , .Ir ,q.,..:.7.:, 1fi '. \',< •te ..f/' "t' 0'..'41,,. ah .1.; \ ! abs air. 4 ,,, .,....•. •.' .. - 5 In '••..• i�Y�'.r�.` ilr �,, •?��'fj• ij� %ii i;i f:': !j� f1ft. ',4,. et,. %j1 f{• 7l %j. r,• f'jr i,', ir, /v. 'iv: 144, ^R 'i An • 4. + +4, rt`n r • + tF + f Y Y R "F + • 71 v.111. A ".<'",,r fl1USDAY, OC'"OJEL'1 .1 ` AT AGRICULTURAL PARK. • .• •T yy Olt ,1:03 P triel tu its 404 cis 3tfa •fit (40 EVERYBODY WELCOME ,111.11111010.a11 rsa..a.r-)..eya.I•,. 01••err_+,IIINN rmarvaacV.IJIswtFeu.*14.. rn BOYS' EVENTS Standing Broad Jump. Running Broad .lump. Shot Put Standirg 1ligh Jump. Running 11!gh Jump. Standing.] lop, Sttp and Jump./ Running Hop, Step and Jump. Pole Vault. Relay Race. Relay Race. Shut Put. • GII;L'•;' 1•:CENTS. Standing Broad Jump, Runuing Broad ,lump. -;hnt Put, . J' )ul•'.ln) ting Book 1Race. • Fifty Ward 1)ash. Club -hag Dare. 'Three Lep ):td Race. Relay Race. �.. mcamurvsrnaw+r•••assn.r„wrsw,.ss,auw.iazw OPEN EVENTS Relay Rare. 1unrun); Bread Junip Fifty Yard Dash. BASEBALL AT 2.45 P. M. BRUSSELS VS. =TH. BASKETBALL 4 P. M.. AT SCHOOL, GROUNDS. BRUSSELS' VS. BLYTI-I• IN MEMORIAM SPUIIL, AMOS-1n frnd(and loving emory of our dear husband and father: h� departed this life on Oct. 10 192,1: ; We v ached hien suffer day by day, It caused.ps !Atter grief To see Trim slowly pine away And could not give relief. Itis weary hours'and nights of pain, l is lrnbled nirh's are past FOR SALT; -Pure .•brc'tl 'I'ap4orth And in our aching hearts ""e know, • brood sow. due to lite"'r ahout Nth. 1st: He found swce, !Is! at l:r4t. Sadly tnissed by wife and daughter, Apply to Geo, Mac an, 131ytip,, r�y ICE CREAK BRICKS Certo, Fly Tox. Wilson's Fly Pads Myth and Purity Flour. Perrins WesIons Biscuits, Apex Canned Go'bds, Frets of all Kinds. Rubbers, Zirc.c Rings, Sealers, G (c):D►' DELIVERED ct ERA N?. rip a& • 4s BLYi'ii, ON 'd'IIONE 14 r. V'Jj� w ■� 4 4 + + by..✓�t1,`. 1�• • j� + 4y ✓p0,l + 4'♦ + + s r ++++++ U+44+ RUG-fi IN EVERY S12. and various shapes are ,• included in our showing of floor covering's, where - ever you have space for a rug. we -have dile to fit it. You have only. to • come , here with the dim- ' elisions and we will show you rugs in Bluth Markets. Butter,, dairy., 34 to 35 Eggs per doz price according to grade Flay per ton ' 12 0(I to 12 00 [;logs per''cwt,;: 'r 13 50 to 13 50 •Jvade rious signs and colorings ;willKmeet, both. your ;ideals t and your ideas of what is reasonable in�f;r•ie . . ,• . �'• a ,'yt�,