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The Blyth Standard, 1925-11-05, Page 1
C44.44,04,4•4.444.*.ere,sotietes,441114 I801(101 4.11111111(44. I . A full line of PuHie and I lig!) + School Supplies al. TI IE SiANPARD, 1: 44+4441.4.444444+++4444444,4.9 dip..../••••• ••••••••••••••••••1 '444,4411••••••14 ,•••••• 4040•••••••014 **44+4441+01440.444444+14t 4, IVrithig Tablets. /at . A large assortment of.Writing Tablets, Papeteries and Envelopes THE STANDARD * +11.+44.144+144444.444, VOL XX XVII BLY TH, ONTAIV0 THURSDAY NOVEMBER 5, L925 _a4V4 4 —7"lk 104••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• • ••• ...et•• -•••••4 ••• ••••••• In.••••••• 4,1P, •••••... • ^ • -•••• ,••••••••••••.11.01.•161•••••••6`.. 611.16 00.4.9.60. /1110••••••••••••1311 Me. 4414.44++.14.-44.teie1,4-i-fee.,+ rei,44.4.,1,e-e-. • •,,,er •et-t,emo.e4-4.4,e; tee, o +4444 1 $14-1.44444-++4.344a.teteeet-eait-F.,..e,e4e lei 4-,.... e -e-eietLeseee-e4-fee,40,e,,14,4-4-eieleee YOU WILL LOO i'C,' RICHT, IN ONE OF OUR NEW O'COATS. • in which you will find W C.0101'illg'S. Si yle, C0111COlt pl'ir'r (1 3'1011, \ruling Akn and Men's o'Cals READY TO WEAR SUITS in new 1-leaacr 'I'we(d:! as well as Blue and OUP -Mita is coreplete in ITat, Caps, Hosiery, Underwear, and Sweaters; If not possilde ;')uif, or O'Coat you in Re ad y To \war \viti to uit you in MADE TO ORDER DEPT, • S. H. GIDLEY I 91.ier ;;I(i Ilion, /8 mid h,(ht (4n Eli). Local News. • Monday next-- Tliankseiv.ing Day. y 1\1rs A. B Carr attended the funerilef her cousin Mrs. Fit zeerald, Of Dutigaripori on Tlittmlay lait. . • icherd Sargent, of Cuba. orlved here Saturday to !=pend the winter Agin, hs1 wit h In, mother:114s. C, Spaffen71. Nit-. Wire !Jill) and family, of Sir.a. were guests of the, the formes par,. Ite, is Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Leith, over Sunclad.e. • Priv - Government has just doubled the p:Ifeel .1. a pound- i: was live before Lool;i11;e post rates. A parcel nOW cot ten a reduction, doeen't it? - , ti Mr. R. 'el. NIcliay left on klondaltip dser hunting grounds at Deux RiNfe; 4, Ont. Ile v ill comprise one of a partOien ii in of Messrs Guy Illachal , ,s vet' cult and Andy Co, ir.bs. 4. rd. 1 '171 \\.7'eje•7„1 Ht 0 :11'1.11 ._:tizrry!'„11: f„ „ • F I IJ I L51 1.(.1 E.," : , • - • • -. •-• • , , - ;-'• '.'" , - . • - ", + • • • Y'S I. • . , ' ' r ' : ' ' ' . . • ,21 I , , .. t 'If - ' ' : • :..,i le •:-,,/e:-•/,./. ee s' • • ', ; -;'.:':/''.:*''''': '''.. ': • 1Y1 ' .'e . :: '''' 4/.1I'',e'..'f'.k.'„''.4'.e.'.':; ! r l. ' '• ,, ,' ,, ,.'e.„;: ..',•','.! ,•i, , , '. .,/ ,.•':,'-e•,.e,..,,'4,..'...,..:.:.r.',,%1;..i:-:.;,:;.',,.i'--.'.'.. ..i .e f ,4/;ie ete' . 1.e e1e:;, - '..-.... ,-,:e-. -, .•,e• ....i.ee.',-e.'.„e',-,,l.;-'e.:-ee.e.! " 0 ertiieve 1 4 ())' Ir /1 //s !•: ,,..f, :- .. - .- ---- - ....-1.-.1,4.1„ J. .,t,;" €/ii.j.,-,,,,i ...i.,-.,,.----,::., . )111 11\ Z ;,,,,,fii /4'.7.-.,,,..:._,-- --- .....77:"-_-_-.-T._ ,,:. , .1 , . / " Make th&oldcar coats of look like new. A few'r.); • • _tat& a' little time will change the old weather beaten car int -6a real auto. All sizes and colors. ••••••••••••••••••- IOW* 401•111•11•11•46,1101••• 1.441444000111111140014 COLIN FINCO. AND . 9 HARDWtRRURCITANT E.U.,Y J ONT. • 1 ttg9 VStirigager,42r.,VIZZI TM!. 11 'FAD:7 :127.;=a7; 2711.1"14 ;AK, .i.d4 Lairi..,f eeeee-e.- eee-e-e- - • *44.444.4.4,44+4.14+4,0...C1-1.4.eeeeei, ine-Hettetegott.eiie:,-1-144-i-Plee++++++44 I. 114 WE WITT YOUR FUSORIPai TO SUSFIESS And solicitit on the following basis 1:'‘ 1 ABSOLUTE ACCURACY. 2 ,,PURE DRUGS 3 IMMEDIATOATTENTWN, 4 REASONABLE PRICES. 5 PROMPT DELIVERY. Trkmilton Estate Drug Store. OPTOMETRISTBY EXAMINATION BLYTH, ONT. ‚4111 4. skt 64: The nibers of I! h L 0, L Ni fe43. will at teed divine se:Viet! in Queen Stir t lied church,. len Sunday evening, Nov 15th, Rte. IL 11, harnby will he„the 4•••••••••••••••••••. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••o•••••. THOMAS McMILLA;s1 M. P. for South Huron, SOUTH HURON. speaker. Mrinhers are it quested to inkii In one of the hardest fought Ciee: at I he bit at 6 30, • Seuth Huron has ever seen, Thomas Mc- Clinton On Friday evening last Mrs. E. Bender Millan the Liberal candidate, won t Extl." enter (anted a number of Yung ladies in constituency in a three corLered contr. henor of Mks I\ larjory 13 trilby; a Wde. i against J. J. Merner, the Cohservatre, a elect el this month. During the evenicndidate, while eg R. J. I‘,1cMillan, tie a duster shower was g ven the guest of , Progressive candidate lost his deposit. beteg and a pleant time udent by all No:1 9 CREAM it WANTED PEARL CREAMERY, Milverton. will p9 farmers F. 0. B. 39c. to 42c. per lb. fat foiall cream delivered at C. P. R. I Anyolf Interested kindly Fe n d fer (erg and you iv* I be apsured of a fair deal. • PLEASE GIVE US A TRIAL A. F. CIJARK:Prop. Box 203, Milverton No, 1 No. 2 •No 3 No. 1 No 5 Nofl No, 7 IlS13013NE 24 51 32 63 33 39 Sea ferth Rev W. D. NIcEntesh of Winghain, preached a very interesting and IVeil out. Fel mon in St. Andrtte's Cottrell en Sabbath moteing. '1'lle 'Pa - tor, Rev, G. Telford. conducted annIver- sal y etrvices in the United Church in Wingliam. A pular c proeressive euchre and Crain Ole pet ty will be held in !Memorial Hail hlyth, on Wednesday. Na. 18 h. wider the auspices of Blyth L. 0 L. Ni, Admis;ien 2:7c. This will be followed a bex social and ladies arc requested to Ink bex(s • Mrs, E. W. Geddes and Mrs. Rolgrt SVigh;man are in attendance at the Pr&- vincial Women's Institute Convention b.irrg held in London this week,,MrS,... Geddes representing, the local society -0'4; Mr.-:WIghtmah as federated represerda- tive from the district. Many of our Exchanges are advocalirg a reduction in the size of our paper men, y claiming that bills that would fit in a No. 7 e .veltee: without (t leig would hove many advantages—the cost production •Nutild be less, and many other econenees and convenience would result, The Masquerade Hallowe'en Dance held by the Maple Due' Club in Memorial Hall on Friday night was a most enjoy able affair, There was a splendid atten- dance, goi.d music and the costumes var- iedwhile many of them were quite in keeping with the hallowe'en spirit. The regular monthly meeting of the Women's Institute will be held in Memor- ial Hall. on Ftidaye Nov. 6th (Note change of date); Topic—Dr Co borne. Duet, 114rs W. B. Haehins and Mts. F. Kerihaw; hist' umental, Miss E. Mills, Roll Call. "What I am most useful fur." Visitors welcome. A formula for finding out how long you may live, barring accident, has been drawn up by an expert in such matters. Add together the lives of your two parents and your four grandparents and divide the total by six For every five years the re- sult is over sixty you add one year, or for every live years the result is under sixty you substract (me year, The answer is the age to which you ought to live. Mr, G. Gavin, of Walton, was a winner from th s clistiect at the International Plowing Me tch held at Brockville, Ont. last week. Ile had the honor of being the champion in best plowei land in sod or stubble, with tractor, open to , hose un- der 21 years, and received the trophy of $50 for same Ile also had the honor of coming third in tractors in sod. open only to those solely engaged in farming and • eho had never won a prize in this class. 914+44 e..e+.70.1,4.444.44,e..;,.1.4.4. ++4444 +44 4.44+4, 11411113• i• 014 0:4 + ffe+ We feel that he brings an honor to Wal ton atid this district of which we may be proud. ,grE57— ill BUY YOUR FLOUR NOW. WE CARRY A FULL STOCK TI IL 1;CLLOW1NG LINES 1-1- PURITY, FIVE ROSES, GUNTON, BLYTH, -- AND EXETER Improved Fruit Jar, in all Sizes. - Try a bag of granulated Sugar at avery close -7-- price FRESH FRUITS' IN SEASON C harks, 1.41rii( s Booms, Qinnges and Lemons. . 'FRESH VEGETABLES. GREEN PEAS, GREEN BEANS, TOMATOES. HIGHEST CASH PRICE," PAID FOR BUTTERAND EGGS G. M. CHAMBEItiS, Phone 89. • BLYTH, ONT CFI] ijOr Saturday night was Hallowe'en—that night when witches were abroad and mas- quraders were quite 11 evidence on our streets— the night when children enjoy themselves to the utmost. Not many Years ago Hallowe'en was the night when boys pined mischievous planks, carrying away gal( s, upsetting out houses and ev- erything else that could be pied loose 13ut this yeer very little of this was done and we trust that that part of Halowe'en demonstrations which put -citizens to un- necessary expense will die out entirely Many years ago this night was a serious ene; witches and evil spirits were suppos- ed so be abroad and boelires,, were lit to we'd r IT these evil spirits, 13ut what Mi. once a ceremony of belief has now become illi-Eca • dLED a thing of eport and the observance of Halowe'en is just u jest. oei E.4 E.4EA N. 1 90 No. 2 . • 81 No. 3 63 No. 4 63 No. 5 Nu. 6 70 43) cersearer No. 1 115 No. 2 -• 145 No. 3 136 No. 4 .49 485 Exerrent 341 IIEN• A 1•14 No 1 192 13A `I El EL I) Majority 51 37 23 741 307 181 326 RECAPITULATION, .... • • • • • Hensall Boyfi, Id McK6100 Tucl usmi li L 'Watt Hay Goderich Tp 1:30 485 311 192 53e 477 543 517 252 320 555 Stant. y' .-:., Stepiien U sborpe.. ; . • 15 92 7. 10 11 11 64 2 101 2 03 63 540 0 117 0 . 154 15 125 • 4,1 504 • • 69 13C4 )I( IC 1 Lr,or No, 1 159 13 No, 2 125 01 No. 3 78 50 Nu. 4 74 50 436 179 Tor IMIISM 1111 No. 1 68 08 No. 2 00 28 No, 3 63 61 No, 4 60 28 No. 5 85 31 No,ti 81 25 477 101 ittrereere No, 1 110 45 No. 2 81 41) No. 3 (32 1 No. 4 07 No. 5 31 No. 6 88 No. 7 74 533 HAY No. 1 No, 2 No. 3 No. 4 No 5 No. 6 No. 7 No. 8 15 0 14 19 1715 th7 8l 23 3 ti 1 258 103 71 13 57 40 34 328 38 56 26 46 3,) -11 53 205 55 26 21 48 36 24 110 28 106 87 52 81 32 72 0 77 48 43 27 27 31') (35 33 2(1 346 547 312 elopement TowNstrii, No, 1 48 No.'2 42 No, 3 44 No 4 24 No, 5 . 60 No, 0 34 252 STAN LEY No. 1 41 20 No,'2 67 19 No. 3 50 24 No. 4 27 29 No, 5 17 31 No, (15 21 No, 7 53 • 2 11 4 20 12 22 15 00 320 152 STEPHEN No, 1 52 No, 2 24 No. 3 82 No. 4 06 No 5 54) No 6 101 No. 7 • • 52 No, 8 22 No, 0 .. 67 ARA 91 107 89 87 76 51 42 452 21 28 36 185 50 38 3411 5:4 11 (13,9 5.10 491 501 187 179 2:8 11)1 328 155 .05 312 166 20 '7,1°452 152 21 181 48t5• 1670 • Majott y, fur McMjIldn- 263 '3 te 32 4541 FEDERAL ELEC; IONS The result of the voting on Thursday of last week had with it many urprises. The King Government, while hot being the larger .group. in the house, with the ail of the Progressives will be in a posi- tion to dominate thesituat on. The Con- ervatives form the larg(!group.- :Premier King was defeated as also were seven of his ministers. Quebec went solidly Liber-, al: only three CinserVativeS being elected out of PitvInce r.'turned largely Conservatives, while On - Lulu returned 69 Conservatives out of 82 sea's. The latest r:turns show the stand- ing as follt,vs; 0", ,e; ,e rt 7- 't :4.: C •••• ri Z' 7 0 ol o 5 ND CJ' 0 ca 1.4 0 "1 I-. 0 tz, 0 0 .4 0% ND 0 0 0 0 00 00N0000 000000'1W° C00 fl 0 ▪ b -i GO GI fw, 44 C1 1s2 CJI 144. 44 F. NORTH HURON The contest in North Huron was keen- ly fought out and as returns began com- ing in, it was thought that the Conserva- tive had won by a good majority, but this later v.q.s reversed. Blyth gave a very The Standard Book large majority to Mr. Spotton, much etc larger than was anticipated. The follow- Stationery Store ing is the result of the polling in North . CONFDERATION LIFE ASS4N POLICY F„. • 0 (CAVANAGH,. J.' -General-Agent, Goderich,, Ont. Zi lad Siang eVirseliii vardeolo. se yous ifiratbly laster. Name Addmi 1.1.1111111111.11.111111.111i SCHOOL SUPPLIES We have now in stock a complete line of Public and High School supplies: Text Books, a Scribblers, Drawing Books, Loose Leaf Books, Exam. Pads, Rulers, Inks, Rubbers, Paints, Water Colors, Compasses, Slates, Pencils, &c. wixonA King Spotton No, 1 63 148 No. n 65 150 No. 3 86 167 No 4 118 181 No. 5 30 03 361 750 Majority for Spot ton :378, WEST WAWA NOSH No 1 - 06 ' 89 No 2 .... 04 72 No, 3 38 58 No. 4 83 36 No. 5 • 6 • 23 52 No. 6 60 17 --- (3 00 Majority 15' 50 8 14 No. 1 330 324 for King 15. TURN BERRY 53 87 37 4,1 No. la 74 54) 21 27 No 2 120 77 20 76 No. 78 78 •58 35 33 No. 108 47 25 40 38 52 Majority for King 114. woo.. 433 319 W. R. GOULDING, A. T. C. M. Organist and Choirmaster St. James United Church, Exeter. Instructions in Vocal—Planor-Theor y Will be in Blyth each Wednesday, In- formation and terms may be obtained from Miss Pearl Gidley, FARM FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE 100 ecres of good land in Grey Tp. On the premises is situate a 1 torey 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 The Standard Real Estate Agency. Blyth, Ont. Londesbore. The monthly meeting of the Women's Institute will he held in the Community Hall, on November 5. The social side of farm life, by Mr's. George Moon, A piano solo by Miss 1'. Grainger, reading, by Miss May Hamilton. Roll Call. a game or book 1 have enjoyed. HostessesL Mrs J. Radford, Mrs Ewan, Mts. Moun tain and Mrs. Sundercock. ,e 1 -a .4 Young Tender Leaves and tips used in "It's awful for me, without you," in/j 00 fm PRIZES was standing 1n front of them, hissaid John,tai lr luulds in his pockets, just as ho used Addie trembled toward him. "1 to stand when he was a baby. IIe know. Oh ---1 know. But she's just BEST LETIERS lamghc<1 a little, bent toward her. like u chid, John. plow could I leave FOR "Remember when I used to forttet her?" and call you ma?" he asked. "That , . ,is hand over hers. unrwas funny, wasn't it?"_............ -,,,,,„:„.0,- ,.„,,,,,IP „,„....• .,„,,„hist time he said, "You don't love rile!enough, that's why,” They were! a Letter Writing Competition. ASIII IN: !standing'','"i",4; ii. would have children, too," lie said, andi The Addle began to cry. John came again and again. The Offer TIventy-Eight Prizes in Dr, Williams' Medicine Co. i 1: ' IPS beside II vuh67 ,in... late, GREEN TSA !twilight. She covered her face with 1 Some years ago the Dr. Williams = i , '' j IUP, (11(a9T8 110130; I her hands, then ran away into the' Medicine Co., of Brockville, Ont., of— r , f • house. I feted a series of prized to reeldents of J 36 ''`"''/ Their letters ceased after that, Tho Ontario and Quebec for Ito best lets e••'' - I following spring, when Almira came tarn describing benefits obtained are sealed in e.lr..tight aluminum foil. out to spend the day, she said, "I tthrough the use of 1)1'. Winnow,' fink guess maybe you heard about John hills for Pule People, hundreds of Their fresh flavor is finer than any Moore's getting harried. Folks Try SALADA. thought he was going to pick you, one letters were submitted1[t this compo ,,Fan orlun.Aowder. time.,, tition, and yet there must have been Her mother lived on for nine years, thousands of other users of the pica before slid died; their father became ivho did not avail themselves of the in with cancer and Henry had come opportunity to win a prize. To all home to carry on the form. Looking Ihrse another backletter writing compett nesse it wasyni icrhtt to her bcaluuthern skier flan is ot7'ered, '1'Itousand;i have bene father's; he never lost the use of his tiff d through the use of Dr, Williams' tongue. I Pink Pills whose cases have not been Wlu n things got to going well,_! • tot)ol'ted. These will furnish the nma- Ifenry married. He was forty et the' term for letters to be written in this time, Addie u few years younger, Ho contest. Thee( Is no demand upon !married a nice girl. 1t was right that' the imagination; every letter must. deal I a ratan should marry, with facts and facts only. I "I'm going to get me n school The Prizes. >> i again," Addie told them ono day n 1 month or so after the wedding, the Dr. Willianhs, Medicine Co., of TI3ACHE IIY EDITH BARNAD DELANO. In the little district school that weathered the winter storms beyond the crest of the hill, she had always stood head of her crass. The teacher said she was bright; other people said she was smart. Her facility with her studies gave her distinction in school, and the folks at home were proud of her. At last she was a teacher, conscious of the aura of consecration that sur- rounded her profession in the eyes of her old neighbors and the new ones near her school. Before the first half year was over sIi was conscious of something else far more invigorating.; school; but there were young gins She had a gi ft fur teaching. She,everywhere looking for tho same could make things plain to her pupils, thing—and finding it. She was the youngest of the fans- by her gentle persistence urge even' In the end she went to work for old it •olderthem • m, butpassed her nest • ,• . • + along the y, she, 1 athe most ►c.uc tan, of g Mrs, Stoddard in town. It was a big sister by two grades and was in the path of study. And nothwithstandiiig house, with lots of fine things in it. same class with her brother, who washer gentleness, or perhaps because of Mrs. Stoddard liked her carpets swept smart too. She adored Henry, 1111(1 her patience that was never ruffled and the rugs taken out and beaten. or hurried, even the big boys became, Addie grew thinner. After some years submissive to her discipline. It may' Mrs. Stoddard died, and left all her have been that her 111: ra personaaty i done, to the missionary society, ex - kept them in order. i sept twenty-five dollars to Addie. "She!" said Henry. "Why, you'd Brockville, Ont., will award a prize of always have your home here with us." $25.00 for the best letter received on It was not that Addie doubted herecr before the 21e4, day of November, welcome, not that she wanted to leave 1925, from the residents of these pro - thein. Only, to be a teacher again , .. vi►ices on the subject: "Why I Ilecom• So she did what she could to find a medal Dr, Williams' Pink Pills." A it was he who said at supper, before the whole family, the day they gradu- ated from the district school: "I'm going to work. But Addie's got to be a teacher. She's got to go es the toughest of those hipti Just at that time Henry's four chit - boys mind you, don't they?" asked . dren came down with scarlet fever, so For in the opinion of such people at that time, teaching was not work, John Moore, one dap. !Acidic went back to the farm. but a callin ranking only below the He had come in a buggy to drive As it happened, it never did seem minister's ins dignity. So to Addie her home over the muddy roads of ' the, right. time for her to leave until that pronouncement of Henry's seem- April, for she boarded with his sister Henry's family had increased to seven, a mire er more from the school. He After a time the older children were ed s thea h eaannouncement in the s, as gdawn nof t as had :,at in his buggy and silently ob-' big enough to help, and Addie began British Prime Minister to the young served the small final scene of the',' to think about finding a school again. Victoria. A kingdom was being offers school day. Some of the older boys; She tried every way she knew. Once I were making a mud slide from the the school board let her substitute for edAll rthe family stopped eating and schoolhouse steps to the road.t Addie,' as week, looked at her. Then after a moment from the doorway, said quietly: I Then Almira fell down and broke "Maybe you'd better go home, boys."; her hip. Both her daughters were their father said, "Why, yes. 1 guess; maybe that's so. Of course they appeared not to hear,' married. So of course they sent for Sh worked for her board during and covered their departure with Suri- Addle. Ahnira's husband gave her a the four year; of high school, but at dry cul'fiin;: end scrambunt s. Addie nice pocketbook for Ciu'istmas. their end she was given a little school'picked her way around the slide to Next year she went to keep house some twenty miles down the valley. ;Johnhe })uMoore's buggy. Sremlaughed a little at fe t or lshedmust earn four some money, and "My brother Henry says I'm real save, so she would have something good at training all sorts of critters," laid by for her old age. She stayed she told him. "There's nothing I like in that place until the widower mar - any better than training a colt. And Tied again. all our hens follow me around, all over She 'went back to the farm for n the place. I'm real fond of young good rest, and because she wanted to things."!see them all, especially the baby. Young things. John Moore looked; All the children loved her. Thee sideways down at her, She was so, minded her better than they did their young herse'.f, and so pretty. Ho' own mother. , could see her with the colts and the; She would not have stayed there as hens, and children. Ile was only a . long as she did, though, except for the few years older than she was, and al- fact that there were measles and ready she was becoming desirable in whooping cough in the school that his ayes. year, and one after another of the Ile was working and saving toward children came down with them. It 1 a farm of his own; some day .... did seem foolish, but Addie herself !But not yet. IIe felt himself unworthy took the measles. of her; but before the second year was; It was provoking, too, and made her over his sense of unworthiness was; feel ashamed, that after the measles borne down by a stronger feeling. she became rather deaf. Before she went home for the second; She became increasingly aware that 'Before they were openly "going to-, Henry's house was crowded loo, It ' gether." In that time and place, that wasn't that they did not want her, fixed therm in a definite re.ationship.; But it seemed better to find work That summer her sister, Ellen, was somewhere. 'married. Almira had married white She went to keep house for a very Addie was in h gh school, and lived'old lady who was even deafer than :with her husband's family, in the near- she was. It seemed --well, queer, to est town. 'Two children had come, and 1)e in a house so quiet, without any ! Almira had settled into at state of 'children. disheartened, querulous ill health.' But she stayed in that place four ;The preparations for Ellen's wedding years, until Henry's wife died, His meant more to Addie than Alinira's oldest daughterwas married, the next had. For one thing, she helped Ellen , one MIS teaching school, another was sew; and white she sewed her thoughts off in the normal school, studying. wound themselves into dreams. 1 Sometimes she helped the baby with j Before the next summer came John his lessons. Ilis name was Frank, and Moore told her that he had almost. it was stilly of her always to think of enough to buy his farm. Ile had set- him ars the baby. But that was the makes your food do you more good. Note how it relieves that stuffy feeling after hearty eating. Sweetens the breath, removes food particles from the teeth, gives new vigor to tired nerves. Comes to you fresh, clean and full•favored. E FALL AND WINTER means entertaining. You will have to think of fall clean- , ing. For a small sum we can reno- vate or dye your rugs, furniture covers, cur tains, ((rapes, etc. Prompt Mail Order Service. Carriage paid one way. Ili:UauiuIllluini iumiutinillSUiumiIIIUinolfTlInT5iiiiiiinnum RKER'S a DYE WORKS LIMITED i.CiEANERS&DYERS,. 791 YONG1 ST TORONTO 133U17 No. 44—'25, tied on the one he wanted; there were' way she fest about hint. many for sale in those days. Ile took ; After a time there were only two her one day to see the house. It need- ; boys left at home. Then the older one ed a bit of new roof, and paint and ; married, and Frank went off to col - prize of $15.00 will be awarded for the second best letter received; a prize of $10,00 for the third bent letter, and tas n v•fl •e prizes ) • of .,,00 each for the a, t t next best twenty-five letters. The Condition(, The benefit derived from the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills described in the letter may be in the writer's own case, or that of some one in the writer's home. More than one case may bo des- cribed in the letter, but every state• nhent must bo literally and absolutely Bee, Molded in the new silhouette, on Every letter must be signed by the tailored lines, this frock will be helis- full name and correct address of tho pensable for general wear, to the person sending It. If it describes the smart and carefully dressed miss and case of some person other than the small woman. The long sleeves with writer of the letter, it roust also be cutis, the trig little collar and the signed by the person whose case is novel -shaped pockets give a decided described, as a guarantee of the truth tailored feeling. With the aid of two of the statements made. kick -plaits in the front, the skirt The writer of each letter must give swings away, adding a subtle touch of the name of the paper In which he or femininity. The back is plain and a she saw this announcement. narrow belt is placed at the low waist - Fine writing will not win the prize line. heather mixtures in the new unless you have a good ease to des- blues, greens, buffs, wine -reds and Bribe. The strength of the recommeu• copper, combined with a plain color dation and not the style of the letter for trimmings, would make one of the will be the basis of the award. seasoinn's smartest frocks. No. 1209 The !`r. Williams's' Medicine Co, shall is sizes 16, 18 and 20 years (or 34, have the right to publish any letter 36 and 38 inches bust). Size 18 years enterel In the contest, it they desire (or 36 bust) requires 3743 yards of i•1 a;o so, whether it wlus u prize or 36 -inch, or 2% yards of 54 -inch ma- nor thrift!, Price 20 cents. Tho contest will close November Many styles of smart apparel may 2111., 1925, and the prizes will be be found in our Fashion Book, Our awarded as (Rion as possible thereat- designers originate their patterns in ter. Do not delay. If you know of a the heart of the style centres, and good case write your letter NOW. Ob• their creations are those of tested serve the above conditions carefully popularity, brought within the means or your letter may bo thrown out, of the average woman. Price of the Address all letters as follows:— book 10 cents the copy. With this new soap just Dissolve The thick soap -sudsy solu- tion — a wonderful even soapiness—goes all through your clothes loosening even ground -in dirt. 1209 TAILORED CLOTII FROCK. The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Letter Contest Department. IIOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Use enough Always use enough Rinso to get lasting suds that stand upafter the clothes are in. he secret of Itinso's wonderful cleansing power lies in these firm, rich suds. Rinso suds soak dirt out gently and thoroughly—no more harmful rubbing. Your clothes come snowy white. Rinso is made by the makers of Lux, the largest soap makers in the world. R-444 Lever Brothers Limited, Toronto 4,611 11 L n ..26YlIY! Great Dipper Has Changed. Fifty thousand years ago the stars Write your name and address .plain- than form the "Great I)iplpex" were not •ly, giving number and size of such' •arranged as they are now, but had the 1 patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in ' form of a cross, went back to the city Molly put her arms about Addie's neck and kissed! stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap her. it carefully) for each number, and "You're so wonderful, auntie," she; address your order to Pattern Dept., said, 1 Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ado- "Sho!" said Addie, because she did laide St., 'Toronto. Patterns sent by not know what else to say. return mail. It seemed stranger than ever, after they left, with only herself and Henry Sloths, regarded 08 among the ani - at home. Still and all, she thought, mal curiosities of the world' live all she and Henry always liked being to- gether. Even now they had their the time upside down. 'They walk, eat, jokes, for Henry never minded her and sleep while clinging to trees by being a little deaf. Fortunately, her their toes. deafness had never increased; some- times she caught things quite well. That was what happened the day of Henry's funeral. Most of the chil- dren cams home for it; two lived too far away. Addie knew they had talk- ed about her a good deal, during those bright papers. They would not need; lege. Ile worked his way'through and days. much furniture at flint. If his first settled in the city. After a year or! On the afternoon after the burial year's crops were good, they could be' two he brought his bride to sere them, they were sitting in the parlor. They married the following year, She was! Addie loved her rat once, Before they I did not think she could hear. calmly happy; but in April got the! letter calling her home. Iler mother. had had a stroke, and there was no' other woman in the family to take care of her. l 'Mrs. Hurd never recovered het' power of speech, never again could do inore than make het' wants known by sounds of which Addie alone knew. 'the meaning. After a year or ,so, she could bo dressed and set in a chair by the, stove or the window. Addie had never 1 a moment of impatience. As the toil -1 ' some months wore on, her mother came to see1)) like a baby to het'. Sometimes she would kiss het' moth-' er's hair after she had brushed and! knotted it. Sometimes she would put her cheek against that nerveless one. Sometimes she would say, when her j mother whimpered, "There now, ally baby, you Ise good and let Addie get on with her work." i,She and John Moore wrote ill each other, amd sometimes he came to see her. He was working hard, and at last,' on a Sunday, when Addie had cleared away the midday dinner, he asked'her to go for a drive with him. Iler mother, from her place by the window, made strange inarticulate sounds. x: "She don't want ane to go," Addie interpreted. "We'll just sit om the porch steps, John." I IIe told her about the house. IIe had it ready. His planting was done, I land in the pause before haying time he wanted to be marries. Addie tun- ed very white. 1 "You see how oma is, John. There's nobody else but me to take care of her. S}ie's so pitiful, ton, having to sit there like that. It must be so awful, for her." li The Value r Mustard Use it in cooking as well as on meats, sandwiches and for salad dressings. 'ICcen's Mustard adds spice and zest to cooked dishes—brings out hidden flavors—puts n new relish into familiar ditties, and aids digestion by stimulating the flow of saliva and of the gastric juices. Recipe Book Free Our new hook will show you how to improve your cooking. Plenty of recipes. Write for a copy to-day—it's FREE. - COLMAi' •l:r;Crt (Cnnac'i,)L11::TCJ Drpt. 1r, 102 Amherst St. Montrenl :',76 "There isn't a spare inch in my house," said one of Almira's daugh- tors. • "I'd take her'," laid Henry's eldest, "but when your chi'-dren are as old as mine are there's always young co[n- pany. I never know how many I'll have." i Frank was out of the room, but Keep Minard's Liniment In the house, Molly was there. As far as Addle could see, she was taking no part in the discussion; she was smiling a little, aloof from them all. Tho wife of the oldest boy was speaking. "It's awful," she said, "to think of an old person's not being wanted. Why, she's only neventy- four. She can do a good day's work yet. I think it's the duty of one of , the nieces to take her." Frank had come into the room, Iie was a big roan, and they had all been conscious) that his success in the city had made him•—wen, different. "Are you talking about auntie?" he asked, "Because none of you can have her. Molly and I have wanted her ever since we were muscled, but we couldn't take her nway from pa." Addie began to tremble, Molly crossed the room and rat down beside her, putting. her lips close to the old' woman's ear. "I tvant you to teach' me" she said, 4t • There is only one Millen Bela Makes bad complexions good and good complexions bell-er CampaMs Ian Bali Addie choked for a moment, looked off as at something afar. "Why, 1 haven't been a teacher—for—fifty years," she stud. 1 "I want you to teach me," said Molly, "to bring up my children as wen as you brought up Frank. I , want you to teach us to live the way you have." Addie's eyes turned to Frank. He ' Minard's Liniment used by Physicians. • ackage Now your grocer has the cheese you like so well in this dandy size. tt s;inti, ?ti;`,:',1'h {3t of tarii5:,r;iil.se.161rui+CdJi.1.11.1hi ,..r r It is not Ilhe quantity of food you cat but the nourishment your system absorbs which builds up physical health and strength, Bovril 1s the concen- trated power and goodness of best beef. It causes the digestive organa to ex- tract much more nourishment from other foods. 'Phis has been definitely proven by eminent scientists at the re- quest of n Government department. 'l'hat i3 why:— IL puts pEEF into y ...:&, e,g4 ,6411" ...Jr l I11A.111,11 Iia > 9Q irfP.tT.n:: t- - -•---•- - II WHY AKEN BOUGIIT A SPREADER OUR THANKFUL DAY And How the Old Club Got a Little Jolt. 1IY J, 1). C, I dropped in at the store to look in on the weekly meeting of, wha Doc Tanner jokingly called, the "Spit and Whittle Club," Nast Saturday afternoon, just as (ho boys were dis cussing Jud Aken and hie! new nut nure spreader, "Who'd a'thought," 13ill Briggs was saying, when I came in, "that old Jud after all these years of spreading nut- nure from a fame wagon with a fork would ever spend $100 for such a thing as a spreader?" "Docs beat the hand," remarked .0 light, -haired Peter Wagenor, and two it up and know just exactly how nlucll • L manure 1'rn putting on my fields, and I can be sure that I'm getting it spread evenly and well. 1 wear out - ono of those machines every two years - and 1 buy a new on,,, that. often,' "1 noticed Dad look a little wild- eyed when ho heard that, and when tho old gentleman told 1)ud that, ho paid $1(i0 for his last spreader, 1)ad , asked hint if he didn't think that was a lot of money to be spending for a spreader every two years. "Mr, McPherson said, 'I used to think s° at. first, but I've come to believe that it's the best investment I made on my farm. That machine pays for itself In loss then two year operating for the last six months o velvet, you plight say."That las statement did stump my father, "About two weeks after that visit t the McPherson farm, Dad came hone ono evening towing a new manur spreader behind the wagon. IIe'd bee in town all day dickering with Hary Jameson. IIo finally worked a deu ' with Ilarvo by trading him a bugg 'and an old feed cutter, but he cant home with tho spreader. Tho firs thing he said when I went out to hel him unhitch was, 'I don't expect t buy ono every two years, Tom, but reckon if old man McPherson ca make ono pay for itself in that ellertinge, wo can sort of make this thin pay out if wo can nurse it along fo eight years or maybe ten.' "Now, that's the story. I expec that some of you duffers got quite a jolt when you heard that my fathe had bought a spreader, but I know o at :east three of you who don't have ono and who never have had one, ane it might not be a bad piece of business If you'd go over and have a talk with Ilar•vo Jameson. He's got a new car load in and ho's pretty anxious to ge rid of them," - With that, young Tom left the store. There followed a prolonged silence among the members of the or three others nodded their heads in knowing assent. You see, Jud has a reputation of being just n little C:0:40. The boys at tho store used to pull a lot of good ones at Jud's expense. Almost every story they told on Jud had something to do with his Scotch ancestry. I re- call one of Doc Tanner's. Doc said that he had it on good authority that old Jud went out behind the house ono Christmas ova with his shotgun, fired it ori in the air, then came in and told tho kinds that Santa Claus had just committed suicide. Another mean ono that someone told on Jud ons about Jud's inspira- tion of seeing his wife carrying a bucket of water up to the house from tho spring in the orchard, They said that Jud hustled to town and bought a yoke for the wife so that eh could carry two buckets at a trip instead of only one. But this particular day, while the boys were disco sing Jud's latest lapse of regular form, Jud's second oldest boy, Tom, came into the Moro for a breast -strap for a harness. Asa Brown saw hint first and, giv- ing the rest of the boys the wink, called young Tom over. Now Asa himself was never accused of being what you might sty:o a spendthrift, but then, it's usually theso real tight old weds who like to tell how close other people are, I guess they think that, in that way, they draw attention away from themselves. Well, anyway, Asa called Tom over' and said, "They tell me you've got a i nice new green and ye::ow spreader out to your place now, and that you boys all put on your Sunday suits' when you spread manure," "We'vo got a new spreader, that's; right," answered Tom, good natu•edly, . "hitt you're all wrong about those Sunday clothes," "What the heck ever induced your father to invest in a spreader at this stage of the game, anyhow?" asked Asa. "I never knew that you young skates over there on your farm ever ->broko so many fork handles working..., that the old man would figure he'd save money by buying a spreader." "Oh, we haven't broken any fork hand:es lately," replied Tom, "In fact, the only fork handle that's been broken on our place in tho last year was the ono you broke when wo threshed last fall, and Dad always insists that you were leaning on that ono when it broke." That sort of turned the laugh on Asa, for that's exactly what did hap- pen over at Aken's last fall, Tho joke ons that young Tons himself had switched forks with Asa at nob; and I had given him nn old fork with n rot- ten hand:e and when Asa used it to help hins)elf down off the wagon, it snapped, There's lots and lots of gratefulness around, There's still a nut or two upon the ground;(! We gather color leaves 811(1 woodsy things To brighten up the parlor; Grandma sings Her old, ole) hymns out of a happy heart; We have a flay at school and I take part; Mother' makes camas and crocks of mincemeat too And gives me all the fussy things to do Like seeding raisings, slicing citron up And smoothing butter level ill a cup. We're all right there at church, Thanksgiving Day, And hither httts his eyes, I s'pUse to pray; The preacher doesn't hurry as he would If only he could smell our turkey goad. But we get horse at last, the gravy's made, And Grandpa s;'.ow1y his long grace has said, The plates are heaped and we begin to taste And not a single goody goes to waste. 'Phis being 'Thankful once a year is nice But I'd be Thank -fuller to do it twice! Harvest Festival. o Saint Bridget's door stood open wide, o A rare fine smell there was inside c From fruits piled up for what they n call c The IIarvest heast, 1 —When I was small Y I smelled that first. Eh! How1 sat • And sniffed it up then, till the fat Old beadle gave my head a gout P And said,'"Stop that, or yo'; l go out!" II lovo that smell, 'Tis ono grand blend n Of all things that wo do tend. t 'Tia apples, ov'ry sort and kind; g And wheat and oats, which they do bind In cunning little sheaves, to go t On Parson's desk there, in a row. And 'tis great purple grapes, and green Ones too, and piles of clean Potatoes, and tomatoes red, 1 And giant loaves of new -baked bread, And marrows, onions, carrots, plurns— Tho scent of all these creatures comes In ono strong breath, that fills your heart With joy and peace. —Thera is a part, So I've heard tell, where they use smoke In church each Lord's Day; they be- spoke His blessing that way, so they say. But I do think Thanksgiving Day With all its fruits is best. And why? Because Lord made then all, says I. —B, M. Powell, A Thanksgiving. I offer thanks for home and clear ones -4s in it, - For friends long cherished that the years have tried, For viNlago streets where peaceful homes stand dreaming, For 11i::s' blue splendor, and for meadows wide, I'm thankful for deep woods so calm and silent,. For giant pines upon some steep alone, For sunset's glory, and the hush of twilight, For shaded cloisters and deep organ tone. I'tn glad that little children know and lova me, That I can welcome shade as well as shine, And humbly do I thank the great all - Giver For priceless heritage, this land of mine. 1 "Spit and Whittle Club," which was tlnaliy broken by Peter, one of the sprenderlesa' farmers. Peter rose quickly to his feet, and remarked that ho had better to going home. With ono accora some unseen spirit moved tho other members of the club, and they, too, ;eft, without so much es suggesting that at future sessions the platter of ,fad Aken and his manure spreader be further discussed, "NO", I':i teal you about that spread- er, if you caro to hear the truth of the matter," Tons went on after the lough on Asa had died down. "No one sold Dad that machine, It- sold itself to him." That sounded like n queer sort of statement. Nobody said anything, and Tozn went on: "You all know the McPherson farm over in Hoyt township, You all know, too, that it is considered about tho finest farm in the county and, wheth- er you know it or not, that farm is held up as ono of the high producing farms of this province. When I was at the college taking a short course last year, tho teacher s kept talking about soil fertility and the methods of building up worn-out land, and they often spoko of the McPherson farin in this county and explained how Mr. .-McPherson had built up his land from practically nothing, to one of the fin- est farms in the province, simply through n systematic fertility pro- gram and a herd of ,dairy cows. "I camo back home this spring and toldy father about thia-,McPhorcon farm and how they did things up there, Dad listened at first, but after a while,ho got tired and told me that ho didn't believe all that those teach- ers told alwut tho p;nco, and so on. Finally, I persuaded him. to go over, and vis'.t the place with me, I wanted to learn more about it, and I believe that he was just a little bit curious himself. To make a long story short, wo drove oven: "Wo had quite n talk with Mr, Mc- Pherson, The old fellow seethed glad to tell us about his place, and how he had built it up. IIo took us ever his fields and explained his system of fer- tilizing. On the way bacic to the hots we went through the barnyard, and there we saw his. menthe spreader standing under tho manure shed. The old gentleman, stopping a minut), turned to Dad and said, 'There's the most eelnah:o machine on my farm, 1 cru:trove hai',e built this placo up 'Silage Taint in Milk. Now and then off flavors have been found in mi:k from silage -fed dairy cows, To determine tho cause and the cure, the Dept, of Agriculture Initiated experimental work. Thirty pounds of corn silage fed within an hour of mi:king gives tho iniac fed an odor objectionable to most con- sumers, With a ten -pound feeding them is but very slight ill effect. Silage made from sweet clover, fed in as small quantities as five pounds before milking, has a disagreeable effect, Not over fifteen to twenty pounds of corn silage, or fifteen pounds of legume silage can be fed twice daily, even after milking, without imparting a plainly discernible flavor and odor to tho milk. 'rho slight taints may he overcome by aeration of tho milk. 1n this case, oven with sweet -clover silage, it was found that fifteen pounds fed twice daily did not permanently injure the commercial value of tho milk if aer- ated when still warm. Spoiled silage, even in small quantities, will injur- iously affect the milk, Green alfalfa fed at the rate of thirty pounds one hour before milking produced very pronounced effects upon the milk; in fact, objectionable flavors and odors were present when this pre- liminary feeding was reduced to fif- teen pounds. When the alfu'lfa was fed three hours before milking, the taint was still appreciable. Feeding five hours before milking failed to show any effect upon th•3 milk, Tho light feed consumed immediate- ly after milking caused no noticeable reaction to the ensuing milking. Strange to state, a heavy feeding, thirty pounds, immediately after milk- ing seemed to bring about some im- provement in the flavor and odor of the milk, The conclusion reached, therefore, is that green alfalfa is a more satis- factory soi:ing crop if fed after miik- !ing. With green corn, the case is differ- . ed. Twenty-five pounds was taken es the usual feeding and nrilk from cows receiving this quantity just before milking was sampled by numerous persona, and but slightly off flavors, if any, could be detected. Corn fed after n1,i:Ming had no effect upon the milk. iu i► L1'• PILLS boa eaesvres Obeying Instructions. I3ug---"I guests I'll bo pinched, but —By Alix Thorn. 'The Farmer's Thanksgiving. Tho earth is brown, the skies aro gray And the windy woods are bare, Tho first whito flakes of the corning snow Aro afloat in the frosty air; 'But the sparks fly up from the hick- ory log On tho homestead's broad stone hearth, And the windows shako and the raft- ers ring To tho lads' and lassies' mirth, Tho farmer's face is furrowed and worn And his locks aro thin and white; But his hand is steady, hls voice is clear And his eye is blue and bright As he turns to look at his sweet old wife, Who sits in her gown of gray, With the cobweb 'kerchief and creamy friils She wore on her wedding day. Ho bows his head to the laden board And his guests aro silent all: "Thanksgiving,.Lord, for the sun and rain, And the fruiC on the orchard wall; For the silver wheat and the golden corn And the crown of a peaceful life—' The greatest blessing that Thou canst give, A true and loving wife!" FIXIN'S FOR THANKSGIVING BY 1RENE 11Uh1E TAYLOR. Even though the housewife may follow a hobby of searching for tie+ new dish or novel illenu every °the day in the year, when it conies t Thanksgiving there is only one menu and tho traditional dishes appear un the table of every real home.Tho menu is us set as the laws of the 141edes and Persians, and the 011:ydifference the country over in the food served Nies in tho cleverness of the cook in seasoning and dressing up the various viands. If you haven't lost the appetite that honors the pinincst dish, you're surely going t.(1 enjoy this Thanksgiving din- ner, with all its fixin's and trimmings. To begin with, there's the turkey. Everybody, of course, knows how to roast it to perfection, a'.1 crispy and brown and juicy; and each one of you no doubt has your own pet idea about how to stuff it too. But do you all know about sausage ()tufflng for the king bird? If you will take one and a half quarts of et.alo bread crumbs and mix with them one and a half cupfuls of fresh pork sausage pleat, a snail chopped onion, ono teaspoonful of poultry seasoning, two tablespoonfuls of finely chopped Parsley, the juice of a lemon, and one and a half teaspoon- fu:s of salt, you will have something pretty nice. You may find it neces-, sary to moisten the dressing a bit to make it hold together. It will make! sufficient stuffing for any medium' sized bird. r ° PUMPKIN Poi DE LUXE. When the sauce has been poured over tho potatoes dot them generously with butter and place the dish in ai moderato oven -350 degrees—and cook till the sauce begins to caramel- ize. Though you may have turkey and mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce, and all the rest of the fixin's from soup to nuts, your dinner won't be a real Thanksgiving one without a plump homemade pumpkin pie. You will be sure to have your own, favorite recipe for this one kind of ' pie, so'it won't do me any good to give you mine, for you wouldn't try it for Thanksgiving anyhow, But have you ever tried making the rust a bit higher than usual, to hold a circle of tiny cream cheese balls? These are placed about the pio at the rust edge at intervals to allow the crying of ono ball with each cut of This white-haired lover he bends to e kiss s Ilcr hand in its frill of lace pie. And the faded rose, on her wrinkled' cheek, With a proud and courtly grace; And the snowflakes click on the win- dow -pane And the rafters ring above And the angels sing, at the gates of God, - The words of the farnier's love, —Minna Irving. It's come to thankful time again— Tho yellow corn is shining, And every purple autumn grape Can show a silver lining. Peppermint to Test Boilers. 011 of peppermint is used to test steam boilers. If the pungent odor of the hint escapes It incicates a leak. A holler which can Nolte the smell of the oil Is said to be capable of stand. ing any ordinary pressure. SO, LET POPPIES GROW FOREVER IN REMEMBRANCE OF OUR DEAD Oh! those poppies there in Flanders,, with their startling scarlet gleam, Iiow they stand as mystic symbols of the mighty, glorious dead, Every blood -red fluttering petal is an emblem of each dream Which cach boy had dreamed in boyhood, but, cane sacrifice, instead; So, let poppies grow forever—in renleinbranco of our dead By the memory of their valor may 0111• hearts, to -day, be led, To tho living, valiant, heroes -who, for us, have fought and b:ed, Let us prove that we remember those long years so filled with dread, And that memory reaches weary marches, solemn tread, As we"buy (with grateful memories) poppies, poppies, glowing reel. —LILLIAN McMURTRY, A Home -Grown Thanksgiving Dinner HOW TO CARVE THE TURKEY 1. Place on platter, neck to :eft. Cut off leg on side nearest you. soparatc+ the thigh from drum- stick, and cut each into two servings. 2. Cut off wing on side nearest you. 3. Starting nt top of breast- bone, carve vortical slices of white meat. 4. Servo one piece of dark and ono piece of whit.! ! meet, upness rt preference is exprt.s:ed. Servo 8 spoonful of stuffing also. Gravy is passed. 5. Carve enough pieces to serve all the guests Before starting to serve, t.0 that a:: illy bb served at nearly the same time. (I. When one side is carved, turn the platter around and carve tho other in tho same way. Good pumpkin pie has to have its fresh pumpkin and eggs and good country mirk and all the rest of it; but have you ever intrigued the fam- ily by serving each portion with a whipped -cream rose adorning it? To make them, sweeten tho cream and squeeze it through a pastry bag. There must bo cranberries in some fornigsler other, that's sure; but they don't always have to bo just cranberry sauce. They may be made into jelly or sherbet to lend a delightfully re- freshing note to the general color scheme of pumpkin shade. Instead of a largo dish of jelly or sauce, try moulding tiny portions of either in wine glasses or other small containers. These may be grouped to- gether on a platter and one of them slipped onto each individual plate. Or tiny jelly molds may be used around a molded gelatin salad, whic}i may bo served from the table. A gela- tin salad made from finely slivered cabbage and celery makes a very good Thanksgiving salad. And after dinner, whi:e the nuts and raisins are slowly disappearing, those most concerned—if they can ex- prsss themselves by that time—are surely going to vote that the cooking and eating of a Thanksgiving dinner is anv-thing but a lest art—in their particular home anyhow! •" with salt and brown slowly in a mod- erato oven. It is rather difficult to suggest a menu wnielt will suit all sections of the coume y, but the one given below is elastic and calls for very few sup- plies which are not home-grown. For the centrepiece, hollow out a pumpkin ani- fill it with fruit, ever- greens, pine cones, branches of bitter- sweet, bayberries, rosehips, or other available berries. Place on the table and surround tho base with ferns, autumn leaves or sprays of hemlock. MENU. Tomato _Soup Whipped Cream Croutons Celery Ilonre-Made Pickles Salted Nuts or Buttered Pop Corn Roas. Rabbit and Savory Croquette or Baked Fowl and Potatoes Core -slaw String Beans Cranberry Je:iy Perri' Salad Rolls Saltine Crackers and Cheese Steamed Carrot Pudding, Hard Sauce Coffey candy Many of the dishes could be. pre- pared the day before and reheated just before serving. The soup is mado of canned tomatoes and meat stock, a spoonful of whipped cream being added to each plateful just before serving. For the croutons, butter, very lightly slices of stale bread, then' cut to form small blocks. Dust lightly! GA30LINE COACH CUTS DOWN TIME, What was! first tried out'ns an experiment has proven In the light of actual t';;cts a great aucc^ss W1•011 1110 gasoline coach C,P,ite service betweou Woodstock and St, Thomas was inaugurated e:'.ly this mewl'. Under the schedule operating this car the running time between these towns was redu^ed by thirty Minutes and members ROAST RABBIT. Wash the rabbit well in soda water, lay it in salted water for an hour, then stuff with onion, celry, or chest- nut dressing and sew up. In a baking dish place one sliced onion, a few :cloves and whole peppercorns, one l diced carrot, and one hay leaf. Rub the rabbit with salt and pepper and place it in a pan, putting fat here and there over the rabbi. Sift a little flour over the top and pour a cupful of stock or hot water in the pan. Cover tightly and roast, basting fre- quently. When ready to serve, place on a hot platter and garnish with cur - 1 rant jelly. Savory croquettes are made thus: To one quart of hot, freshly -mashed white potato add a teaspoonful of salt and ono teaspoonful of poultry season- ing, the yolks of two eggs and one-half cupful of chopped nut pleats. When the mixture is cool, form into round balls or long croquettes, roil in fine dried bread crumbs, then in tho whites of the eggs, which have been nixed with two tablespoonfuls of cold water, and again, in the bread crumbs, When ready to serve, fry in deep hot fat. These can bo prepared reay for fry- ing the day before. BAKED FOWL. An elderly fowl can be used for this dish. Joint in the usual way and pack closely in a stone jar or casserole that has a close -fitting lid. Add it revel tablespoonful of s1t:t for one fowl and cover th3 meat entirely with scalding hot' milk, If the fowl is fat skim - milk will do nicely, Place in a hot oven and after it begins to cook let it simnel' gently for from three to four hours. When ready to serve thicken the gravy, with flour and cord mi.k mixed smooth. This is good serv- ed on hot baking -powder biscuits, split open and placed crust side down on a platter. . For the pear salad, lay half a can- ned pear (cut lengthwise) upon let- tuce :eaves, arrange nuts on the pears to form eyes, nose and mouth, Add a .tiff calad dressing around the round end of the rear to form a cap and under the narrow end (the chin) add "cap strings" made of sliced sweet peppers or pimientas. Steamed carrot pudding requires one cupful of carrots and one cupful of potatoes (pared and sliced), one- half cupful of melted butter, three- quarters of a cupful of brown sugar, ono cupful of flour, a few gratings of nutmeg, one tcrspoonful each of cin- namon, salt and baking:soda, and two cupfu:s of raisins, Put the carrots and potatoes lerough a fine grinder, twice. Add the other ingredients, mix well, pour into ae buttered mold and steam for two and ones -half hours. IIard sauce is delicious with this pudding. It is made by creaming one- third of a cupful of butter. Then add ono cupful of powdered sugar, one- third of a teaspoonful of lemon ox - tract' and two-thirds of a teaspoonful '4:" ,, ry,, . l..x,... (3.1((13: 1..�tT. i. 1...(_.11..•....1. SIDE-SPLI?TING SPORTS Y. :ItE6REATll')N$ T iI11'r MAN ft., [!.y RO.! it, People In England Have Got. of run Watching "Suffragette Race," "Elopement Race," and "Hot, Bolted 1igg" Rate, Alerting every 3ea+on witnesses the. introduction of some amusing, not to nay ludicrous, novelty' in outdoor 14p4rtn and pastimes, says an Old Country paper. A flaw yo'RT's ago there was quite en' original kind of coulpcl(tlee at the Liverpool Polo C'lub's annual 'show and sports, held xi t.hildwall, Hear that city. It was an event for c:)iupetlturs ut both aexes, and was 'mown as the "suffragette race." Each male competitor had to walk t.0 the ceutre of the ground, where a tally in waiting assisted hint to insin- uate himself into a skirt. With the sauce graceful aid he had also to don a blouse or cloak and a flat or bonnet, afterwards opening an umbrella. Held by grooms, ponies were in waiting about twenty yards from the starter. As soon as oress- ed, the competitors had to mu to their mounts, get astride, and race found a,ost, At sate aituilar spurts on the Other nide of the Mer'eey there was a novelty in the form of an "elope- ment race." Competitors were, of course, of the orale persuasion, and what each had to do was to ride his hors(: from one end of the field to the other, pick up his "eloping" partner, and ride with her in®is saws buck to the starting point. 4variation of this kind of race was brought oft at a certain West (rt Eugland river regatta, There were ten competitors, and at a given sig - Pal they had to launch their boats, row to another one some distance away, In which ten ladies awaited them, and earry the damsels off. One bold, bad man actually essay- ed to carry off two, and wa.e promptly tumbled bled into the river, to the great delight of the spectators. Strange as 11 tuay seem, this did not "upset" hint in the least, and he was speedily bac: in his boat, pulling for all he wen worth towards the winning -post. Two or three couples came to grief ou the way and had a ducking, which did not damp their ardor, while it seemed to add greatly to the amuse- ment of the onlookers. '(trues on foot are always produc- tive of merriment, partictflarly those ira which the fair sex are the con- testants. A novel match between women over twenty-five created no :)null excitement. They had to run a couple of hundred yards, take a needle front a cushion, thread it, and put twelve stitches in a piece of call• (:o, afterwards returning to the start- ing point. There were a great many pricked fingers in this competition, and the trinners t wa a womavt o f�ty. Another event that never loses its novelty is the egg -and -spoon race, It can always be relied on to provide Great fun, and, with variations, in always most popular with the fair sues. . At a Sunday -school treat near Liverpool, some time ago, there was nerace of this kind with boiled eggs, eninuEs the spoons. The competitors were girls, and they had to run a kundred yards, carrying a hot boiled egg in their naked hands. They were at liberty to change it from one hand to the other, which most of them did very rapidly, but (;hopping it meant disqualification. Ghanging the egg as they ran, hot as Ji was, proved a trying operation to most of the girls, and only three out of eight oaceeeded in holding it to the end of the :ace. A bottle avenue race was intro - deiced at a fashionable gymkhana tweeting at Long Island, New York. The bottles were placed on tke r<;'round to form a lane, through which teams of blindfolded girls were driven by young risen. . The object wee to knock dowry as !Ow of the bottles as possible, the team upsetting the fewest being de- clored the winner. Ip ordinary cir- ciintetar:es girls require tactful han- dling, but nothing to compare with what they require when being piloted between two long rows of bottles, while a crowd of spectators ars shrieking with laughter. World's Largest; Carpet. A carpet weighing twenty-one tons has been laid down In the foyer and is eLaurant of a leading London hotel. It covers a floor space of halt an here. Seventy men were required to handle it, and it is believed to be the largest in the world, Igor the first time in the history tit carpet -making, sixty-four Oriental rugs Were woven together, Sixty-two came front Persia and two from Chine. The weaving was done by rug -workers from Samarkand. 'According to their custom, the e%orkevs, before the growing carpet was allowed to encircle eacn rug, atvose a piece of colored rite fibre ei'escent-wise into the heart of it, to ensure that all who tread then( shall know perpetual Joy and felicity. Auetralfa's 40(110 lirides. Australian marriages during 192E included 483 brides under seventeen ,rear's of age, the youngest being only thirteen, and seventy-three women of :Sixty-flvo years and over. The oldest bridegroom was eight -six. 'Among the young mothers was a child of twelve, while six girls of only thirteen years gave birth to children. ,Referring to Infant mortality, Dr, Jt W. Springthorpo, president of the Health As octatton for Women and Children in Victoria, stated that Aus- tr'alia land lost 122,473 children un- did!' the age of five years between 1918 and 1922. "►04444 •:-e►• .44•,+. .0,.15.,,4;•1 0+i1et Australia's Capital Across the world another city of Washington is to the making, In the and of the 1. tg troo the anvils ring tnd the huiuuere heat, and there is ueing built a great Federal ca piled for the Commonwealth of Australia. It is by deliberate design that Can - berm Is to resemble closely \Vash- ItI gun. The sponsors "t the evaeur3 capital made a careful study of many beautiful Pities before concluding that Washington was a city after their own hearts and suited to the noede Of their country. Not the im- mediate needs, for Australia In young and sparsely populated; but the fu - 'tare needs of a great territory, a cbu- tineu,t of immense wealth, vigor and promise; a land that in time will be one of the world's busiest and richest, The State of New South (\-alt's, fol- lowing the example of Maryland x11.1 Virginia of more than a venture; apo, has ceded to the Federal Govettt,l;ent a rich distriet of approximately 1000 square mi '•s. This urea includes the territory asround Jervis Bay, an al- most completely landlocked harbor of sufficient depth and size to accom- modate the entree (British Meet. Bun- ning hack Into tine hills t't'onl this lino waterfront is a corridor of Federal territory conneeting the city of Can- berra with the port. Canberra is seventy miles front the sea and about two hundred miles south of Sydney. It lies about half- way between Sydney and Melbourne, which Is a proper arrangement, since both of those great cities aspir- ed to the honor of being the capital of the Coutmonwealth. The site of the new city Is still almost virgin land, "bush" they call it out thero. It lies in a lovely landscape of rolling and sparsely hooded plain, with clear air and wide outlook, encircled not too closely by rounded trop -clad (tills, In the distance the blue slopes of Mount Stromblo are visible. Can- berra, like \Washington, is to be in territory completely under the con- trol of the Federal Government. It will be as free from the interference of stnte politics as is the District of Columbia, It will Le laid out as nearly like the city on the Potomac as the physical features of the site will permit. Much of the surveying has already been done. There will be the great circles from which radi- ate broad avenues, tree -lined and spacious, The Parliament Building will surmount a hill, and from this national c".tire will stretch wide streets upon which other public buildings will be erected. As with \Vashington, the plans for the Australian capital were drawn up by a foreigner, the difference being that while a Frenchman drew the s for as f r the American capital city, an American—Walter 11, Gripin of Chicago—drew file accepted plans for the Australian city, These plans pro- vide for city containing within -it- self sources of interest and recre- ation, rendering the Inhabitants Indo• pendent of external conditions, Thera will be three great ornamental lakes; much spawn devoted to public parks and recreation grounds; a market; civic, educational and residential sec- tions, and so on, The Ausjrallan builders have not been content to fol- low Washington blindly, but have profited by our mistakes, says the New York neves. The most beauti- ' ful and fa,sh'fonable residential dis- trict of Washington is far away from Capitol 11111. The Australian Parlia- ment 1 as prevented the possibility of such a development by holding all the land within several miles of the Capital. No freehold title to land within the Federal area is possible. In this way the speculators in land values will not be able to repeat the PAGE r1---T'I1E IDLY"1 H S"TANDARI..I---•.[\rover. 1'(r l , 1925 OTHER 1';'O1'1,1:';;' 1 N!it` ,1• t'R;'' ~01110 'I'h104', \\'e .il• 111+1 .10014 .'.bout flat; . i'il, !'a:' c:;4! t1'• !o In all afnr,lt flat., will 0;111 111 1(11111 t'' Ili.; Soirees fop of 1,,:e, mainly 1111 11,,,'41111t II1 the 0iit,110, 1' ,u'„ it'I';1111'4, tiler , ?, , , In , !I 11111!1, 1011:i ;t1:Ill10;10+ lu 034, S',11:, ei Ow 11,'11• Il(11 ale i)rel',!tit- 1.111; illilul';Il;„111;. 011e, . n for 1iI1 firs!. r. u„ ,.:•I yt.:i, is t1„1wn f, 0111 (1110,•~, 1ho 1;,'130 '1' of th,' :\0111 y ('(Inrrl1 or ;1'13:,1 u! ' Tee This tlae, intr11,1d to itlao;orale :1 ne\w socio((. 1t is flop .d loot 11l1 cathedrals thet ((etre of :(1113; hill grace their i )\V r.; It their 011'11 vnl- ble: ,.. „1111 re:;erce the 1'ntun ,iack or the 7i ,I ('re<:; of et. (.c(((ite 1,11' the :Kitt. ler,e,cee end tether t'.' , :; of epee I ie,e 0t ..gee, :11'1'.'! dance \'13th flee lav(. r.nll r 1 ” (:1 any pet, nn er Itl„t\ with .. c' ;,l .11 .;! ,: at til,, 1 iy to !I.:0 it !111 11', 1!11!1 t.;.0 he tic v u on lie or Its lit)1, • s 1 hen ;lie ll,:l(e of Nor - foil; is I;! r .•'.1 :l.',' et Arena, I 1''11:- tle, Sues, I!<::: Clay e:(,•n 1111 , 11'0:11 111, 31!;1, pall 110, talil '11 ; I is (1):;e1\I Ut 1111(1' 1; till, ly liali(nl:tl 11., !,• , (1,' - part fi 1 ' :';.!'1.:.)h((I 1! . to :''n- eral, 1?' de.:,'111 r:; a of lw red, white, 1:;111, c,'1'h.5w ,:i; l 011!4'; auft Ft1,14,,It ,:ir.• rte 111,' 1:;,1.' of I„ (1!111(~'. If, for in•:t:.ue1, yeti r':!',, to lave veli,;;i i i a 1?,,'', ;, u I,;11.'1, to he ill order, tree 01111 h :11: u, 'I he correct combination 4;11:4,41'4 iii 11: t'1 i!:I;til flag, 11':i the 11, 11 1:,'�. ;!n 11oyal Standard v., to 111 (lftio!1 end 11 :1:;( a1. deti:lnc,•. 1t is pnrpi1 1';11!1 n 1;111;1 r11 fold !11 the I1tf11(il,', z'I:•luuullted by a crux, n. ;yo1,1e of Ilh' 11(•41 11"11')01 fI nlurrl,v:'r, are (11018!''1?w( \wir110111 1)e - Ing illtlfcative. 'i'h(y have het n cre- ated i11 rtt:;rly as li;t;)fl0z,(1•,1 0 f(4:shim its 15•''1'(., 1!;1-R\' lIutlLe 1131_.; ill 0111' 111e1'- ('ila111. S(I'\1110. A hood 11(rlance is til'' "du -'10r" of a certain (1;'111, U:i; i':;'i0 t1310 was I he tt':,1 6'lag of St. (.......a, Ce.erae, 55-1:11311 is identical with the do:, el 1 n admiral in tilt! navy. Ong, day the admiral (nr1101;tf(liIl_! a C''1't:lfll 0111!ie0 `;!\4 in harbor one of the firm's ohil.a flying its liou:gin 11.:g, \:ll' 1'('llpe !! he sent a1 ulessa,:e to the c1(i.:ain, ordering hint to remove it iluniitlial, ly. 'I1:,' skip- per had to ob(y, but he was not defeated. T\w(nty 111 01110 Titer the (lag had been down, it \vas run up ;'.gain, with a blue ,silk h;,ndlc lrhlef sewn ill the middle, nod illio 1Sa8 ,tltertwai'ds the 11011,4e flag of the (Rein as ton:; as it existed. Well-known national fia!'s wer13 not ('reared in tido casual manner. \\'hen Napoleon (mule Italy it kiniuloul, he tl,'eidt'd to have a flag hili(((, while distinctive, hhou!(1 indicate, by its clue resemblance to tilat of France, the source to which it owed exist- ence. '1'11( result nail the tricolor of green, white, and red. This flag, though suppressed on the 0o\vnl'all of Napoleon, was revived by the Italian Nationalists in 184 3, and, n•ith the ;t(lcjitiou of the arms of Savoy, ae- cepfr:(1 by the King of Sardinia as iho ensign of New Italy. Perhaps the most, elaborate, aril ihel•"fort' Ino01 peel'(('. sin';, national flag is that of '1'1!) 't, bs can ;e, apart t from the wain (11'sian, \Ohio]] is cur- iously complex, the ;,pace:( in it 111''' filled up with alternate triangles of red and blue. 'i.'h,i Canadian (lovernin' nt. is con- sid, ring the lite t :iltil;tl:le (1,..s'42.11 lh,, Canadian natlulu:l flag for use , ashore, The Canadian flag now authorized' is used only by Goverlr- meut-uwnrd vt ,::;els and other ves- :;els on the Canadian 1(Ctntry. In the former case t1!,• 11'.:, i4 the Blue Eticllgn with the (Tufa(:tan tu'nls 111 the 113', while merchant vessels on the Canadian re'2ir,ti•y use a si!;lilac \\'lt T 'rO't'rr!i 'ri'i,r,. C»;1 Y•Lr;\'1)Erf4 nv INnlh, '1111111. 'I (11'1 .1.'P Do, Iii, I. 0p,41 l 1'4 1',1111 '1'11111," 1 11 111' t114 111' • I; 1.11011' nnmil,:r:, in til,' 1•r,Itt ! 1' I :1!le :(11( 1', �, •,, '' 1 . 311 ,, I'le •, rr .'illi:: 11 rl'lw(:I,'!!) 1,11,114,11,r 0, 1' I II 111 \4 i 1::11117 14.1 tr1,1 ;,.i the ,l',•., Iti:_i;t 1,111 e!' 1't1e'1(1! i,l ,• 1.. 1 �,, ,a(e,l 11!'• t'. 111,!1 H 11.;1 111:',1 (I::•— ;"141 t t ,n (,1' • :it)... ., --1'11111 the 1: :1 (111,::; of 1 ' 1,1 \wor:'1li)( \\.•;1;.,',!:'r':1'v d 1❑ 1,1 (He, ce,. Egypt, ,10.1 • ' 111'`. tray to It 111(1) 411 ('(0,1110, •:1, (a(il:l, Atlsll't,ii;i, it - and miter hl;:''•.:. la in(101 34 rejoice in .14,11 4,;:1:119 ,•t (l 11'1,:14), 1,',.P:I', j ,, 1. , .'11 .;,,',.11'01(1 , !opt (, 111,1 de- • Cr;11, Il:' 1101'!1, Ii(' ye,!- I;tl,le 1Inn:4 1! y (: 1111, ,:1' ':'13:i1103 (1I' ,11•: ,,, „ Ci :, ,.•i:;, bir:10, 0401 1,. '.I ;'fit; lr, ;; t I; i , 1 1 J...., 1'e- • ,. 11 r,•,;(1.,1111 (Lc ., ,04 hl(t- I e,,.,a theta ((11,1',41 1110111 it is 01,(.'11 ;' the 11 diene :; of l'ir'a (flat ter!, 1!I • )'01i, (','.l 011(11 • I!::' Indian.,, 1)l 11:'111.11 ('t)• 4' r1'. :1 1.11' Ile('•:;, 11 11 of 1'1':11! 1; ,' I!et I'll, ,!! •i. !1 an 1!!,1':(0 0'.tl:,•'t: 01 1434 11,' I,1' ;'II: 1 ..130(1, tie , j 'l, ;1111 l0 00 1 0!1' 11 _ .1. ,,,_ :11)4,.1:11. 1 'r ry lf. ,1 ' 1. 1, ;l pt,""t, i,, root - 'Ie 1, !.11111:; ter:' r of 111 , ,r:,' (1f 11 t' l i(rr i l , 3 it 1i ;4 1'. , .; 11'(1:0: 1 li11 . ,•1• 1;,!,1,,.1, 1- I: • 11 111: t,1; ,•I t', a)(1 , •Is a 1: , elhe, : :i' -f''1' (11 " alts' 1, l• •Ir,: ll`;u if, h' le 1. 131'1 'd in !'',.(i -,':!•.7:I,:•4.1,,,',0 • 0!,1! 1? , (' 1' lit: I',4. ill r•''•'1, (v,';' if he O. • ,.. ') :'1: the 1''' 11: t 1!;,!t! •1 to '11 :1'„ t.1' 11,1' , 1. 1. marry, 4', 13(1(1• t•, 1. '1'14,.1.3, a 1•', .• . ,3 not 1101117,' 0 \V4,1i. 1',111 ((.';1;;111 11. I'!:r 'y..1 (•,111,1' r::. ,341. 1,,_:'1 (1 nn 10 1'11 1111! ,'' Il fol' 11'0 113:44:,14 31''1• 111„11 1'111.1 ('i) 1'•h,:t 111,:1 1:' , 11!1' c?:f,'f i,4 I b" 17"1111 01;:1 (11113: 11. OH" 111':4" 1('1 Ili -p;).' of (11'• :111111h Artietlean In 13,,1'; I.• 40 felt;!(( Ilipir 1)•„r• into the ;101 0101 110'•3 (11113' 11'I (!-!"11, 111. f!, til'' it,a10 1.311 t ,,f • t Werth A 1' ''w Ila", ado, 41'rilt', a 0:1 ;c Lortilon panel., a y 1(011 r,• coil. ,'Int' ‘lite 17 ,11 01111 4 '1•(11 3 !1r 11.1 till:i f11oc'i'rat i!, 114141 1111' f)( 11(111 01!11 e,l,';:1'•';l (1 C' 1',11:11 (•(11;•;':(1)11 t':,r 1:11 11110 l' 111'.:.1! it. Co.I'!; 011,x'!' it con1,;111('1 It' )!e'l.ilor ''I that Cyr tea^ a .I' .11 full of the 1.8;1 ('111i10l1 Uf 111,1,'aif 13 13'.•11!:1, 5t'! ;p1!" l 1':,:Ir.r1 "'1 1111y, the ('0;1e(t''•0 1.'•,1!11 ::'('U(1Il, fl:t' 111, Ulle- 1(le0'' " f:•j('nd'4 101.1 !(`;,1 the( r.. tietll04' 1030. 1) t1 (1„y t':((.111 adyi1•ilr' f{''t'1 1.i ) Ill 1100, 0'1, •1i,•,,! (11!;1'1' 111,,•!1 I,. ,1•( va!';',:•I' .''.11:11''' far wr,.`,(!t'1' !0 )► r'.1r,t:!.1 air' .,'.• •;:t. }`40 i,:'','y 11'„ 4:''.-•l;:tr,.,u e: '3;1; I 114” 1!'.! 7 edit:(•!) ('.'!i1' !.4:11:,•'4 .'.l 2(1. q:I ie,1 f"('. ')l (vpll'•; l,i lh!.; r tamp w; ; 411:1 guinea'0 loin:her rnre sh114'p to ('tj1 1''58 1e1(t irrit of llr'lli' S it! lit ;;!ride. Ge - (30. ;1:ally 1!'1!11 i; (((1111,'":1 al. !'. 0 :1 (ted Ensign, Sine year; ago it was, rpt ('4P:ru, but the price :its 1)•.t.:l up pro'ide(1 that, the lied Ensign, \willt. 110 l,i h as ,1;',1'.;(1, the Canadian [4,11110 lrt the 11y, be flown Th"re aro s"1'11 (11117 :'r1,itl(,1''1 of over the oCice of the Illgh Com- tirr'xt Ilritain which 1)l �,y b1' 1)a:;:,(1. tnissionc'1' in London as 10,11 a:; over '1'11,' 1! °: 4'1' of l tl,i 1 Q7;.; Canadian offices abroad, but the flag Oen wwa.tet•i(;Ir'••';l weir'•. `1:,;1'13 Was never authorized, er:,I'.;00 :113-1)11 valuable, t' at le;' 1(1.1. Washington tragedy of grabbing all •— ------ 0(111!; \wlr;h a1,e111 C�, w'hl:r' ,1113 land near the Capital and holding It , Mille the +::1 1►1'. I elssee)i. ,; lr ;l at ,-,L 1' ': ":'!e:; at'such prohibitive prices that. the I e ( home 'builders will go elsewhere. The way to will beck our lest 1'1'33' ti) ,{;10 a':co•d.r1g 17, its cutl•.li4. . . Canberra is n0 dream city existing ' sporting supremacy is to 11(111!13 more I ;.'•,, ,.' of ills ;;'11'1,7 i':".e '(1 111 0, only on paper. It has begun to viae. milli. J This, in a n!ltel!e 1, ie the view rut i'"":'1' ,),13' 111:":1 w!til The Duntroon Royal Military College for\vard recently b Pool, Hear.; Gen- ;:;'! ! 1 1w It.r! 01:400, 11(11 vel; 'a! 'tole, was established there several years , ago and is in full swing, This Fed- )nod• of the ['nlw:.'r;'ity of Lnn(10n.: 1 ! _14, re;!-1)(')\wn beth; w 71(111 ;:;Irtut 1 11 ish W He claims that lir11 1, mt"11i again "l1 nn11 dell 411(1 ,C1. ""(1'erA college the Cat Ioint of i !� \'1'I".' E;ltnl'p 1'i 3!1('11 bo(((ll 1!140 Australia, The Royal Ausl,ral'_an produce champ1CIO if our ft.hl('t(•,; t t ( g '(1'1:;:11(11 �111tt':! 1'( C');'1! !."( hti 1:, 11.. for !1111( ,'4104) 1'40041'»; 1,' 111 (1 leg out thirty or forty finisher( mid- rho valui! ('l' milk in building Up ner0- Iii 1 45, 'feu 1': r;; v0lo;'l It' nnc0 a"( Naval College has likewise been turn- t n 1 f ' 111 1 1 shlpmen annually. This academyIll ons and muscular ewe,- , "tuft; (:401 t.1:eeralri:t, (,sail In sltpnort of this ;.henry, Pref, 11114,111 x'''14 each, ',vI,lle! 413".1. 1,i' capieituated on Jervis Bay, the port of the ' lic'n\vood insi4111(0 0 the fact that Jack , 'Lev/ n in the 0:3;111 31.:31' 1:1 WC,rtit lit - capital, The Australians are setting Ito about the erection of their new ca f- i , a vonviuc+'tl tuflk ruusula- -- ` - p 134 50 is t'iikmuller, 1044 world's tal in no piecemeal fashion, but are1)cftlio,N1 1111; 1111•('' planning in a broad and far sighted I chn111pin:t wlminel', vlhile the 11('an- " dlnaliau atl'lctes 1('::red notable 4 11ns1;,'nda wrathy tell.(( 1.11,'1(1;ct.h way. The needs of the future are ; •Olywp:c Gain('s sitects':'-'s as the 1'131- t ei ~-I:1-I:ry Cnl)e'l1:31('0 1"'"'1.1 111 1:n- congidere,d in everything done, There has already been completed, at the ; slut et a training in which milk fig- i :t"u,ll c :l' (!i 1(1:1 ie 4' !11, their I r.10- tired very prominf.ntly. tions. 0(4(11 0 one, 1111'.'1' i1 \wol'(fexp thelace of several millions of dollars ; Aiil;Ely, Indeed, is 111111(. Now, it to 1,111, 13 0 \3111(.'; n10'i.rl' in the largest po er house in all Aus- sp seetna, It is the Ot'i1:nuln's best lie' \wa:(n 1(3'11 rl, I)ci':rlr. Aus- tralia. There is a waterworks sufH-' friend; a 13('11111(~ ago, rr less, it was13(,10,' ";:;';.-, he 1;;!id to t,�llovv (.fent for a city of two million people. ! the ally of the diplOnl:lt.iht, 'These ""lir r, "0':40 you 11011(:1 it that It will be years before the. cityrea; \y(!1'0 hard of., (103'0, hitt it \v<..r, rlutll!v" 111 la ;w h>:'1 a. fnc' 111:(' car hull has sethat toperection, but Australia (discovered by some wily atate,min! ferrf7_'I'Y" "Why, wet; " the al 10i. ).d has set out erect a clty'w111 sohy rte that,,, if he drank some 0)111 before , it:.i:ted, "111(1(1 141 1101110 lik(:le0.4." the great country that she will some daybecome1 going out to dill 110r, he was able to � "Take off your coat," E11011 it'd the . ! Beer) a gttill'd 11po11 fits tongue, no 11';;141 (,1)13, • ",1100(I3''8 going 3 t0 say The Prince of Wales laid the car- ! matter lune much alcohol he cou tllt.r,y s 14440111,41 illy due anti lent away neretone of the Capital building oh; mimed with it." his recent visit to Australia. A big manufacturing or industrial elty will be situated on Jervis Bey, under the jurisdiction of tate Federal Government and within Federal terri- tory. Other items that are expented to add greatness to Canberra and its port are three train lines of railroad, an abundance of wool, wheat, (neat, fruit and coal, a Harbor described as the "finest, safest and deepest natural harbor in the world," unsurpassed cli- matic conditions and continuance c the unrivalled prosperity which Aus- tralia is now enjoying, tirnlle! Every laugh that rings out purely Makes the world a bettor place; You've a smile about you, surely; Wks- not wear it on your face? ..,..'.1., ) A Judge. A Couple. A'1 Is (well-known, /1 nl3rieans are fond o1' tacking official titles on their nanires. opec net a 1111111 in Chicago," said a pl'oiiiliient, Ie:nglielonan, "who called himself Judge Brown, and I ventured to ask hit) 11 he were It United States judge or It circuit court "Wall, I ain't neither," he answer - e(1, "I'm a judge of ho ses,',' Left Enz. More Acute, . In most people the hearing of the left car Is morn acute than that of the right. This is the reason that 109at of no tilntosf, uncoisclously use the left ear 1'iheii tla• i)11Gilillg, Few words in the I'inglir.h lan- guag;(! are SO frequently misappiied a;;' the o!0rd enti'ele, IL le from the L!ttn 11c1:pula," a joining, A man 11)10 his }wife 1)1'1? properly "a collide"; 110 are two hound:; when strapped to- gether; hilt 1 wwo (gee (11'0 not It cou- ple. Two rabbits or two ducks are not, (:111111'!:1 Wldell alive and i'llnning about; but when killed and tied in' The ((rat veemel built on our Paeillc pairs for sale they bec01)10 GI)0ples, C0111it 1e18 launched in 178(i by Cap- , --------------- tali) Jelin iilcaren, •a noted navigator Sill Have to limit Their 1.4'000, told fur trailer, It was a vessel of forty tolls. __--_--- ((leer In milling, tiati,r., 1':411 i:y'y 1'tc:iiva to Thema r'(s,(4, '1'11' 3' 410' sum, le Anoh, all of 1111'111 01.'1:0 ;IA It et lel' I)wt'r, 111111 10,4 C,11'''y 1t'; 1111 lust:Ives, \ellted A. c .144(1" 111'!1\'1 tl, '1 0: a!',: 104',', 1)101' and quite fi'7ll'- f, ea '1'!!ev wear 04 1;11; 1, 0,4)' 1,'.'1:1 and • 1 1 131,, :; W1'.0 11;,11,1', (::141 (1 up t(1 ,.,/„ he money - 4, ; 1.. ('3 1(4,11(4 0' , ri • ,, ;Ind 0,1 1111'~ ha 713 (11'ift 1.0 'i' •'.11 l(, 11(11 pi,1i111; 11'1,:, t'., 11' 1,'1• c (1044'~, anti now 111 00. eel, 11\' ',timbers 11,:;11 •:11(1'•. 1 11, 71 1,t. et 11!11(:1 it; :Ila';:yo 1t•ant- ill„ ',It 11 11,' 1010 11 (1i•tiee1.'r to ,,••; (11 1'(0 1011'11: ; IR ,:1,'1' i:1 1,(01.3;- 14 i1 wlt4ieli to prod:re a bit 11 I1:.r 1,021'0 \\;(,41 t 1•111,1 1 1'0110 1' •1!:11' (11' Bale.';ICs tlll'l'at('11,; (11113 l'. 1'(;11!1 1(1(0.'' 10 111 li 3!11:'1, so, .411,11 tb,' linutl'!,'ll,," 111311 all 01 ?WI' C'2l111 l:; are ''((0(41 I.1111111, 111•• 11;1,,:?,I•• til, ;'it, the :011/111 '10(1340 opt , a 1'','t. Ill 1.he 0101, 'i ietiluti 10 111. • ' L,3,11, •)'ill: 1, of li. , i;V 1„ l' 1!(lired; only 1': it 111,1,111: (i by the 1;i\- a. ;it- a,Ilii, ,'e 441 1,:11.''1' 1)I'U1111.aIlt, to 1, ; :,3 i1''• 3,') ou ,1111;.0(!, 111111 Ill lilt. 4 Hi !I0C interest at the fall, !' ., ;' 'l iu til rut)ee i4( r n:',rlt1). (11'(111131( d u 1,'11.,1:1 • ir.101 the capital lent, 1;110 petit 444 tel' to the 1)11101' 1,1::,''• 11.:'1 01 elle (,,111,41!11;; 11)011(14 set 0 lit'' 1'.:'01111 1, ;I it 111;', (',1,03(4' 111!! (li el' 1,1i11 \'-fl, l',' 1:is 13('11111 ‘works. ',1 111, 1 i1(1 are (titl,'r:. of 111:; tribe, for twit( 111 (:'111p1,4; 11,'11 1t 10) 0111('1' ;41 .:41 au' \1811(11, 1''1'el,1 tl ' 1:,:11(':1 114^0';r'! 10111,0 11 11 , t 11:11. b( u::,': 011 1ric 1110( of (, 41 1.,,_'!"1 \\ '0,11 '11%1':: 01',11((' felly Il, :,:,(lie I'1 '1 be 0 ,;l0o 115 ' 1 1 .';bel' 011(1 1311,. 111"iJ;" ,v,'o 1,11(1 11,1'0• \1•,'a,1l ;t , .t' r4,,' (1'3,0( 111111 u. I t!• y :301111' The ( 111 111_ of (41(13 is ti!'! (1 , in/ of all, 1,.11,1,' any defaulter vine, fails to ll:ty lntt.rer;t duel A (11:3;7 of nut] thrr'a• r, 1i I1,,11; 11 ,h:' 1;1;13: ;111(4. 111' (10,14 not I11, 141!411 his v11014e,i are r('c(iv(•,1, n ul h,nbuli,; hang around Itis 1)04100 or at tfie t:sites of tile mi11 at 0 caaveiit.•1tt opportunity; ttt- 4„0;: hint 111111 theil' lune; Fti0 4.5, (',fens~ -lending in India is wide- . spread, a hop, 11:1;0 dfcu as,. for which 1 ,,re 1111 ; y 1'E. Lin 1,,111.0. '('Ire l�al,uli 1:s at the buttal,) "f ;til 111'' !4'"Il61e. L'.Ini:;l► 111!11 ft too. lirfli'l► end !ile l: ;''it to tit,! country' ,would be !nc,i,lcul;tble, Allow hint o remain and centrlereial integrity ,5 ill 14) trout bad to 10Urse, Shaking 'lhing:i,tdrl. Reports of (:nrthquakes lit Great 01.11(11(1 are l(1111aliy dismissed as be - of no importance, 'Phis is reason - 0113'. b( cause, co1111011•ed 11111 00(11- i teles such all Japan, where an earllt- 1,uake o0(3)110 012 the tavern,' once It day, Britain escapes very li4;11rly, The earl( t'enlora felt not long ago at Itedruth, for 0101111ple, did no More t..an rattle a tow \vin(1ows and Ms - ;odes, several chimney -pots. Yet the 110(11ber of earthquake shocks recorded in Great Britain is Very 11trg,' indeed, 1)r, Charles Davison, of Cambridge, hs,s given up all his leisure in' he laot 'tLwl;i-Iles years to 1111 investigation of England's little earthquah(4: His (';t(alul::u' begins with the y(01' 974, 1(1(1 flees right on to the present clay. 11. A, i\lcIN1'17I'I:, 1,. D. S.,I). 1). S 1,1'0 rlv,l, (Office hours • (! to 12 1 to 6 1\1i:1 visit A,,I,II►Il each '11105(111y iif,erllul)I1. 'Phone 130 1) r, W. Jas. M i 1 n e, I'I IYSI('IAN & S1.lI;CI',ON, t'OI1(r,:I,:!t (1)(1Nf'1' OI'' lin Rot.: Wirt' - 1)11(131) SI root l!.l.id(nce 1)1nslcy `lIrrrt, k1.1"1.11, - • (JN'1 Al;1() 0'1 'i Ai”' (Zoll 1'i i C1rlItiv11G,��1 f1i 1'I:\1:: (I1'i,01,1 1 1 1901i/11 1 SH I.oc:'I .111 !)n !•cn'al34' \\'ar.l((1 1). 11. (.•:1V',\N:1GIi G' n "til Aifent •1'11111113 1211 (;alcli('il, O 0;1r6 J. H. R. ELLIOTT NOT .1111' I'II'1,14' ,1'; ('t1N\'1;1'.1\('1'11 c, ACC. dent, ,'i(In)csa, Employ( r'e 1,irll,i!it\', i);ate (I,,t'•s, Automo- bile and Live Stoc•l; Inquraucc. 131.1' 1 i 1, ('Phone 104) ON'I'MW). li"1' 'M 1';. j.).\ N('i(; ', 711,11!111,"1111 I1,N'1111( I'I'(►l(,NG'I'AI(1' I'1'N1,1(', ((,N\'l:1'•\NI;i':It, \10\I:\' TO (,(IAN. llli,'e- (elle 1,11 Si1vet, 10,11'1 I, (►;;'I' \I LII'I; .iI 1',1\1'1; CO. Ill' 1':!\111111 1'l3(1s1'I:I1(11'S r II !vide III, !;e',i ;, (e, 1: ('anl.'Ijsn 11. 11, 1,O'‘(i, Ih•t1i1:l ilr,nl,R'5I oderich 'l'I.j'11l `‘, (;Q'"tiN 1:V', j 1.'CT ONL.i ft, t�OOt-11�.N, - Of:TAt.)C) I'ul'I 1 S ,'): ` •.,1'v 11 .1). r,•d13' ()Hui' left, RI till' it ''i, :I,tilrl,u'l I1f(i'1' 411!1 (e) 111'uu11,111 7011'1,41, ,I to, '11 fr1•bn11e 1110 111)' 4'Xilel:Ste, JOx-1N rI.'l. STALKER, AUCT1t0tiEE1?, rtUEtI/RM, - I C1f4TARIO ! (' , ; S e,•l, ti 001 t1 '•1(1.1„11 v. (►1,!' 1;.4 f'. al the 1t (tit t'•I11.i,u'4I OIlii',+\till bl r ,1110,1 'r 7(1(('710.1 Io 'I e1:l''1,)nt' 111 1(1 1111' Dr. H. W.. Colborne, P11YSI(:IAN & SURGEON Medical Rrl)rescntntivc D. S, C. lZ. Phone No.— Office 51; Residence 46 13LY111, ONTARIO MY OPTICIAN Vd41(e0l(11 Drub tore -4 I) R. W. J. 1 I LN E, Fine Spectacle Ware and Accurate Lens \Vol'k a Specialty. QUEEN ST., 131.,rril 1110 worst period recorded appears to have 01:11 about 1750, \viten Meru II�At+t rdl I11�14t1t(�1I A, 111111,71 (msec five notable earthquakes. i1 I�i\oa 1' IASPIS IS E11Y A smart 4110131` was , experleat FARMERS' CLUB No,timtpant on St. Patrick's s DayDay, in 4.116, and (real confuslol was caused In the churches, for the earthquake Co-operative Buying and aceurred at half -past ttwclve, and the SE'11i110' :lay was a Sunday, The (((01;1 deti4ruelve earthquake 1st and 3rd 'fhursday of each month. ever known in the Old Country 113 alt( to 1)11114 talcoii place -lit C01011e8- '''r in 1hi;l. In the 101011 itself more than four churches and six chapels 4..'re Injured, w'"1it4t at Ahherton lett; than half a dozen chimneys were left standing, The number of (0(10(lnakes In L'reai Ilritain recorded by 1)t'. 1)av'1- 1oll reaches the astounding total of rlev'>;!1 hundred 111111 ninety-one, or an average of more than one a year. Origin of "Itod fu Pickle." ' 30iled Ilam 600 11 I{ICIIJI11S11, President. ,1ds'C1;JII�Ii Shipper C, l\, T,111,011, I,IIII, Sec'y 'Teas. WHITE BROS., Butchers lumual olaughtet' resultant fl'oITT the British shootinx 0,11son, has Inn(; made the brine tub necessary 115 1t means of eliminating loss and waste. To rural 13ritain the third j:un0'ty in Nuvou ; r was loth; l:unwii 119 "Salting Sunday." In bygone days !'u! 8altin;;s along the 11100(34 coast timers valuable! properties, for salt be - Ing then obtained by evaporation only, the deposal, from 'the tidal wat- ers y! ter after year, amounted to no (•(;fall (7uant)ty, Year after y'0ar to 110 E;altin!:,1 cane the farmers in their 1)11; lumbering waggons, bent on lex- cl.nin ;fng their sttrplun live stook for 1110 neces';ary Preservative at tho theft current fate of one sheep for two bushels of salt, It can he un- derstood from thin how the spilling of malt came to 1.e regarded with superstitious feelings, and ' to bo d7'"n,r0 unlucky. Another old say- ing; "I have a red in pickle for you," also originated about this time. Chil- dren in thorl(1t(illys were sternly dealt with, and a bundle of twigs was quite often 1(711)1 1n soak in 11e family brine - tub in order to render it supple. , First '('case( (Milt on the .Fncllh). 1111Mall races that 111111 have to Aunt their food are 111(1 Bush(((el( of Age fca, the Pigmies o1' ihu Congo, the Eskimos, and tribes In tie Malayan foreetti, Tho British (dol((((l now contain 1611001' to the value of about 19%,(1, WiNCI-IAM, • • ONTARIO 'reokf •st 13acon 38 4Oc lack Bacon 48 5 Oc 'orlc Saaussge 22c 1ologna 20c -Ica cheese 15c Co! I age Roll 37--c , Lard 22c Liecf SI cak 20c 22c reef Roast 1513 2flc 1313(1 1301' 12c l5c Pork 20c 25c We carry n r; nlplete line of, : cel' and cured .meati. ?ll WINONAM rONUMEN1114 WEN• has the largest and most complete stock, ihs most beautiful designs to choose from in MARBLE, SCOTCH AND CANAD- IAN CRANI'I'.CS. We make a..specialty of hamily Mon. 11nnent4 and invite your inspection. Inscriptions neatly, carefully and promptly done, Electric tonls for carving and letter. ing• Call and see us before placing your order, 1Hol)t. A. Sputtioll, PAG w...w.w+rw.-... ,r. v.+.w.r.r..,,.r.w..-r,r,.«....«,....«.+.w....-..a..........«.«»+.mw.-.,....�.�r .r.+. Jur an cat i, tcio•.'' are 1:1':I;t2r of fall ac:, -.1 1 r ..;•.x c y / 1:I_ rt L,i.l (fly_ y vari.''i s both for coo .i.i�.; �;.'ltl C.'.!��"t Buy fro..n it j_','I.0\;Y.: r "!:(; leen. .1• 1.10 `;, „tr ,.., G.,\., i ::risfrr x`11!': irili_'.. J t) ta.saar..•.xaRaew.nrc+w•+.saa.w .1111.41101yv.-; mcz •:x.11 xa.^ ,. x•+,,.tr, a..k+tri+:•.,xe wns..casr.:.aar:. x.x11..nr✓..t..•a. �.- i • .!.1 ? , 1.aa,t6 .mow%AO- J4.) aptc.oti-cui- iS✓� ' ..!,:.1t 4V, -c' J 1 i f :t f fi' ...;/,041124) -;,(.fi() „• 1<Ga,' �v .%� '1 & Q p• rd• i Standard Bookicrciy Escre, Al , i .. 4011. • i.d.ri a ,...,.,,1,.401114.641.011014 -r•1,/.bi•. WUY r a4Mn•''..:� y1, , . ,.u., +,i,,. uiw,Y. ,I .1t1.11 ,. 1-IL13LYTH Myth t'cho(►1 Report 'ANDA1W-NuvemU&.i .i, 1925 'flie fol :(,wire i; the standing td 11.(1 pu- pils of Hoorn III -- I', S, for the molal. of (ktoh( r. A:1cl'Us indicate examina- tions nis;td. { Sr. IV lt•Ir1 \'it::,ill ..... Pearl 11'1111:ons ...,.... . ..... )1 I:li�a Alarlan. , ... )1) Loi:; I((,1,ilss1.11 7I I /or lit hy 1'111)lettone117 (_ lenn `' 1 I it i -y l'i r li. 1 la! Vey Davi, ............. J;, 1', ►'Il.r 5ct nl;e,.ur z Not Armstrong z, 1,(11111 le 1 urines x l'.1!Icl 1 ayfur x x. Jr. IV Pauline Annie I;,II r. 1:;I. j ,II. I; .it,U.il ... (11 V, 11;1 I N y r,r (_'1:13 turf S.o ,t ,lurr:,yrrinll;(,.ur x. 11'0 i;n,;tun licN ,;, ono knows where to look for it. ll.0b Culni'I; x x, 11'her t ISowcn x x x (t ,til ul A Anion, Teac'1: r 11'llllu and (ireen Itt'p411 (`t l'unset 11 for O..1.1) I. I'.:: 111 t1,' 11 aa,rllll;;(alll'e l.f j( lwel)ery, lou :no u, v,;ltil.t', reading, cltat\iug and the u',ual alloy for gold 18 cord), r, but utl.l mem.. Pas:- 611, 1lurr,rs 75. in ula.king white `old nickel 1:; u,ted, Sr. 111 '1'111; ',mines the while color, ;:rad, ut 4., th' ,=,I:ee till!' Il1,tli,.1 111n gulls harslet' :'tett lits l'e Ii -i tie, (!feel gulls 1; it (.0111'6;1,4 ion of raa'ioli:4 alloy's that 77 11:''.,' :( I. 1-!, ;Icy to eo!e,' IL's gold 11( ‘valid l.l<,Ie............ ....... . .......11 e,re('a!, 9!11''1' 1)' iitJ, t111' 1'10:.1 hall ul't- ,\:(eery 11 t,l10:is 1I ,x Stl,l; " .."... . I'n+llseorererl Tr1'n',Itr'. Tr) a•orlll advenlurers 11!e follow - Ing hItlllrn 1i ;i nit'''s !Hoy prove a Iuri,: Trinidad is belleted to he "a Who, of t re .... r(' (." ',III II of the wr'nllh of no.. i' i'! :.I of Ilse �r,tllh lel 11,11 rltle:1 wa3 e.Illw,•',r(I to that Island lay the to a rovers who 1)111n- d,•r' d the 111aa!nl,1nil, in gre'It cav- ort' In the cllirs on 11,x' Anel:10nd Islands Iles the cirri, rnl 1; : 01, tv111ch w•I:t wrecked int 1i. r,fi, ,, `11 51).000 mortems of gold on Imo rd l+ 1 t !(nOwn ilia,. the 11eIk is still 1',1111!11 +h(' calve, hut expeditions from Air'l1r:411a and New Zealand have, been !,:;1.11,,(1 by 1110 undertow mill the l:rellt e= nlll,•ri. Somewhere In the Fant Rives', 1' S A., is f 2,(ioii,000 to gold. It It:.; l:ln there since 1780, when the 1;rltlrll frigate Ifnzzar, carrying money for thn rnynl forrrs engaged In the Arn- ()rlcan war, struck a rock (1,pr,:=111) the upper end of Randall 1rIan11 :10(1 sank only a bundled yawls from the ;11e1'n, I.ri1'1'I'h of romance, leo, tend fond for eluants In the thought that, on the mainland of 1'on:;ul:t Is n great flim' of gold hldd( n by Sir 1'rancis Drake after he had racked 17 taro city ur t1I'' sante mneme. 'fele 11 tr,,asuro wan nr,V0I rct-rlevcd, nd no (,'setts} 1.cs. ..,. ..., Glary Li LI11011..,.,. Flank 1'.11i(411 I(lull on I.}ui1........... ....., ..,(i ;'ill fr 1' 111 • pll('J1hr+e, i ll',y f.Yel•y .II::rCI'lial 1111.! UI'...... j;, nIal;IUf:letllt'ill.: Jelwellt'l', ll ,, %C1', has ht:t ((1',11 1):Ii',ictilal' tll'(Je,'YM. 1.,,;,C0 s I\tl lLl; 1 1 Flu( (.'ircula,iro; Library. C.tll Gamy, Th:' Ilr"t &arc la !Ing library of G',, viler:' tip r0 i:. ars record was e'stah- l;tr!led at liuluflrrullue, Scotland, In .S'_' 1 1/ 11, 11 1110tTal •Llditionn to 1;^:tun of flogs. 1'; I:;;I: y 1,1111011 JllidOr Cla,:A 111 1. Clare 1.1run;(1un„ ... , • .. • . • 1;01dcn Li 1 k .,. 1':.Iunl fender 7'= ;,orae valuable information relative 1.IItett •.•..•.•....07 to 11e importance of adding mineral Ilt.usc . . . ............ . . . .........ter • matter to the usual grain rations of Seiiur 2 1 lo; has b:. n s;,carcll at the Ac;atsulz \rl:on Naylor 7'i l 1'%xl(,'riulenl 1'ai'iu during the last Ed: ie Taylor tv,o Iv inters, 7.3 '1'110 1a11l:::i;11 illi:stun, 113ed wan I•;bel llatwhin; 7'J cnlnpouc(1.o!' grot:ud hone nlcal, S ,lutltc'y 'Taman (I1 pounds; ground charcoal, 5 pounds; Batik ftl(I Icy Gil ground rock phosphate, 5 pounclo; Alllcbrd Cole 6; and salt, 3 potludn, at. u. ",)St of 2.7 Kalhlt(n Loon...... .......•.. t o'its per pound. It was it'd at tho t'- 1 rate of 3 pounds to each 100 pounds j Roberta Craig; (,ti of weal, R. ?McNair, r - 4,-+.1,.1.4,.;.�.g..1,.3.4 ,,•p0.,+ J.,;.{..p.p,}•F•t.•1.,w.;, e.... 4,;.-:-: a,•b•I.1':• :•,; ,1 .p'i,1.•'r.1-"A'ut.�..l" I Primary Report for October } i r') , , Pte"' �'-'• . 0, - /'A �r t� •x,11 �, . !. ! JR. ll -Velem 'feller. Evelyn Wif iy i„r Air •') �! I { w + I,+ `meq` / x1, j� ^r g >• r, I man, isabell Cunlln4 Irene I3rutisdoi. G tt 4+,") 3 YL' `' LP G t.a. i The following is the report of ll, S. S .t, deity,' Bair. No, 16, E 1st 1\'awanosh, for the mooch ul ' Ir. -t �r«�y a,• ,� FIRST-- Sl' Donald A1c11i11an, Alice Leith, p .,.• tA' ,, + ••, (t ober, Those marked x missed exam ?:,.,,. Ii t' i r rt. 7,4. v ��..:) Annie Crai„ Wallace Bowen, Duncan • , , Munro Tom Ilaggith inalions. Prompt ai i:r.tntio nr•'icl first-class st-class NVGH'l: i PRIMER A Kenneth Lyon, Rely Sr. IV I guaranteed in all i-l.arness and Shoe rc- Annie Straughan,. fls' ,� 13 ivies, Edwin 131!, Dais Barr Irene Cole Jr IV F pairing. �. Ton). Coll', •n Physis 'Taylor, Sr, -. -• t r 13 lrc.nc'1'aylor Ernest Robinson. School Report MODERATE E PRICEr IMac Vincent x ......, .q II I jr. 11 3' Lena Alunru, Jars: Kershaw, Jack Bow'e5, L••••..•,•,.••.,••••, � >.: .•� a: Beginners --Billie Riehl, Everett Scrim• i' �•,•^^^^++ f\ r '..\ •� •1• ; Gladys Cross x �S •� , � kms. �`°�� 1;J 4 geuur, Russ'Chucll, Alice 11a\\bins' Marie Vincent x 7;1 J. E. Babb, 'Teacher, I Sr.11 t Blyth, - - Ontario, t •. •� Elmer Gross Ili 4-•d•e•fir-!.•h-h,;.,t,.7r.: ----;. ,•,..:, t.,l..;•.... ,.•>:•...1*41, M` -•A•41,46 14, v.- •..,r,' �..•4.t., 4.4)4.0"1.01 I Wltalt Makes a Tow!) Ruth S (jt) ,' I t raughan lieu, is a short editorial clipped from' Clare Vincent x ... • 7 • a: cxch Ingo, and which all of us in Blyth I Jr. 1I might well read ponder over and act up;•n Marjory Toll . Verna Viccent...,.,,....•. ,.,.•,.•.,.,..,. ti( l ' What makes a town anyway?'' Is it ' 1 erne Snell `- -t t�� ,,,, ,f ,' ! the weafth (videlicet] by the ht nes and "•'" "" '• ""'.''75 .�t-t c�( �, J1 ��rty li`� 0, ! splendid store buildings? 'these may at- I Printer- Matg,tre \ ircent, Murray •i r, ' ? ,t„ !" 3•, 6 1, �'t I. r test the st 1b,aty and the dual of certain 1 Johnston. Ida i I. Stalker, Teacher, Garr�i,.a,te ..,.you .,..,�.C. J.1'f all 0(,eel.- an]. s STT21.11.1. . .11 1 1. t`i G' • t Hot Air F i linC; - f!, fl �rcr.(e , G r ®r1e1s Promptly lt ,- Blyth, Ont. Phone 12. peddle, but they offer no great inducement 1 Report. for Sept;-mber and October f .I to commercial and moral progress h it 1 LT, S S. No. 3. Those markt d x wtre the spirit of good order and law observ- absent fir one or more examinations. ane&'? That is a factor only, The sleep. ! Sr, IV -Olive i lealy, Lewis Kthy, Saul lea incl hwn'ets that dot the country may Fear. have this spirit in ral,k abundance. 1s it' Jr. IV- Marjorie Young, I-Iara1J the schools and, churches? Alas their Walsh x Bert Fear, Earl Craig x, Johnny number ever increase but they d.l1't make Phrlon. a town- they only culture it. l5 it the �;� Sr. lIl"-A'lyrtle. Young, L .ala ileal}', geographical IUCaln)II, the location of Lite . Gordon 1' eldy x, couUtiy surround ng, the slapping facies- ; Jr, 111 -Anna Gra: by, Irene 11'11311 x, That very 011 �tl'Ible properly situate on 1 tics, file natural advarla(;L i Nuns of Wilfred Sanderson x. (;etch Binet `col th, 131\ Ill, ccinprisin;;1 these are esset:1Ul, Well, what is it that •1,, 11 -Jimmie McGill, x, Vestey Kcl- \Ve have at the present time Ii::tcd (1110 ;000 (d tares un wvhich is situate 0 makes a town, anyway? Just on tiling- ly x, Clarence Kelly x, with us some very c!csiral)!c villa e' control lul)11 1(11 ronnitr.l c)twclling, I'I'ete l the unify ul 1110 people the existence of at ' � allsn for sale 5 I hivt s n( bees and full , E. Logan, Teacher. and farm property. 11 you content- I t q:i .° l"rcpi sur handling, lin(;, flus is an cx cumnlon hand w'I'ich cau.cs business and template buying, Cull on us and we crllcit (bloc(' l(, sccule a c, mho table social enemies to put aside all cilfleter,ecs will give you full p:lrticul rs, 'Chet home and a gond paying basiness besides. when it comes to boosting the town. No O1=tomtary-Its Value to tho following are 5)nle propel ties that are I Will he soul as it stands or in part. For town ever made real progress in the way Hub.tc well worth invcstigaliu� -- i I) Ilfit ul;alrs 'ap')ly at 7'lle Si,indald Ileal of substantial su:cess without the get to- E1 R M. 1'ichAY, doesBLno'fI L.lute Ag Icy - An ethical Optometrist not feature Two storey solid Decd( dwelling 1 to- gether spirit unanimousiy adopted. It the price of his service? 1\'Ioc':crn Also a r,nod stable, Tbi. ; has rejuvenated old hulks of towns that a Club No he is not able to so even if he ha d property is i0 good repair and lass 1 The �,�t,11�ia1"( Cru K! were yawning their wary into endless steep the desire, which he has not. hydro installed. I .@� It Inas infusul new life blood into the l'io'n the Oplometrist's service has Lo brick (heeling on Queen Stl0cl, itn i binr1ist' heart of conunercial life 4114(1 made thriving definite, nixed value berme the nature of good repair. Apply for fuller partial.cities out of paralytic villages. Natural the service is determined by an examina• hos,advantages coulee for much ar,d pruspct i1 y lion? cannot be built open shifting sands, but l , • Brick dwelling on 1l,,nliltorl S rect. No, until the examination is compllttd f any town with hat! a chance can be trade . Cement galea;' on 1 1, nc►e o Standard and Dr:1y (;lobe 6,75 no idea of the nature of the service ae- y to expand and thrive whin its citizens land, This praperty is a 1;nod buy fur ! Slan(18rd and \'1,,1 and Empire(:,75 join with cue accord in the baosting pre. quire(' can be knclvn even to the Oplcn:e- ' anyone desiring al conlfortsb,e home, ;Standard sold 1;:\sly World 6,75 grain. trist F•,r that reason he cannot suet' Frame dwelling on King Street with Standard and Sunday \\�orld...,,.,,, 11.21 prices in advance, ' ?, j' acre of land. This property is to Standard and London Advertiser 6,75 good stale of repair and can lie pur- ; Standard and. Free free..•.,,...... 6,75 i chased air reasonable terms, I s1ar:'dard and Turonit) Daily Star 6.75 hranc dwelling on DI uiutnond St•, I Standard ,and Family Herald ..... ,•„ 3.50 in goad repair 32 acre 0 land. 1 Standard nod Fatrner'S 5411) 3,90 13rick •clwclling on Queen Streets in l Standard and Can. Countryman 3.40 'Standard and Farmer's Advocate 3.50 first•clss repair. If you deist' to purchase a 19rma,' Standard and W 1.1:1; \'Usines 3.50 gek„particula(s horn us. Standard and \\IDri,' 'Wide MO Standard and I tHivterian 4.10 Tis(: Stant'ar:1 Von! C..,.lto S1,tudard and t' 1.l1.ry Jaurn:tl 2.90 A'tctt=('y' Standard and 1'mtth'sCompanion- 4,50 131 , Ont, Standard and INorlhcrn Messenger 2,50 Standard and Can, fictoral,.,,,,,,,•., 3.90 FOR SALE Standard and Rii'ol Cunadn...,,,••, 2,75 Standard and Parol & Dairy 3.00 Thal dcslrublr propci(y situated on th'. Slandalyd-and Saturday Night 5.10 corner of Queen and Wellington Streets' Standard and N!cLcan's 11'la azure 4.75 this being two storey and attic, solid brier( g This prop"rly is centrally situated, For further particulars apply to i FA0 7 Z34iii Standard, Mrs. Chas, Harvey, I3lyth, Ont. ! T1 IE STANDARD REAL ESTATE AGENCY. FOR SALE LonclAssburia. Mr. and Mrs. Shaw, of Waterloo, spent the week end with relations in the vicinity Mrs. A. Wells is at pi Mat visiting the home of Mr, and Mrs. T. Sampson, Pal- merston. Mr. and Mrs. Deward, of Sirs ford called on friends here on their way to Walkerton, Miss S. Sampson, who has been visiting fri:llds here for the past two weeks re- turned on Friday to her home in Palmer - sten. The ar niversary service will be held in the Melho•Iisl Chul'ch next Sunday morn». FOe. SERVICE Ing and at night. The fowl supper will Young, pure-bred Yorkshire hog, hee be the toll )a'd g Monday night. Sl 00 payable at time of service. Lot 15, concession 7, Morris, Louis 1-lolleneer. 'Phone 4r1 -r1 "The turkey crop throughout Wester Canada this year will be a short one ac- cording to information which has been re- ceived by the Dominion Live Stock Bran, ch at Ottawa front Its representatives in dilTerent sections. A prolonged cold and wet spell through June played havoc with the hatching and rearing in Manitoba. de preciating not only the number of birds on the farms but, also their quality. In Ontario the crop will be almost normal, although poor .weather in the early part of the season has resulted in a number of small birds. FOR Isi;Rt're1?s 1tl.N Di?RED. Curious Conditions of Anclenl I,er►.ens Hard to Fili111, \\'e Int',' in :,u age of !deli rents, rat}^s nn UI(I country paper. They were hneider In the uld days, though (,I the cen(Illinns of ancient lea.,es !sled have It, en (lif)irull enough to IuI111, '1'I0e Itw 1,4c1(s eon 0111 Many an III' !:enc„ of hl fall;;'! conditions up - un who 11 (01:11', lewd to be held, or even :,:111 are held. For !llslanc('•, one Solomon All field held Luel,-, ul. 1t,•p!;Ind raid A(lertun, In tient, 1:11;'., noon condition that, a,, ell, a an I1.• king sllotltd cross the hes, the ,:1111 Solomon shooed acCoul- pin;• him and "hold 1113 head," slou',d he have the misfortune to be 11;111;• m'ike's: held nl:ulnrs ill return for tie service of curving for 111s 11aj('oty 01 annn:(I feasts, or serving Elul, or l''larding ills person. Tho lord 14the u;;11,1,r of Ilonnhton, CUnI- Ih.rl'u:ll. was obliged to hold the king's r:t!rrup whorl he mounted hes her:' in (':IrlLlle Castle. The lord of Shirelit Id had the duty of looking :,Iter the hitt .2,'1; l;lundre03('i, In addi- tion to tura:airing the gallons In the royal household, and dismembering condi Aimed criminals. 'I'o 00 ll''' a 110 \w It for Ills 111 :$ty; to pros -rat him with a grey hood or cap or 0 white 'n:lgn whenever he warred in Scotland; to attend with proper 01111 , 0 horse, sword, lance, or sIliple how and arrows, whonorer Ihrir s(•rvlcr's were required, were (11(1 d01lers Unposed upon other' nnulor I0rd9, '('h(, service of cot'nage, or horn - blow ing, was very coni !non, ehpeclaily In 11 I, Border counties, subject as they were to frequent Scottish rains. '('1e owner of 1<ingston Itussell, Dor- set, had the very peaceable tusk of counting the royal chersnlen, and putting them hawk In a hag when 1113 Majesty had fielded his 00111', l'hI're is a large estate 10 York- t,llirl( which lw held on condition that Ili,: lona mt pays a yearly rental of "a snowball at rnidsnnllner and a red rn00 at, 1'lu'Iotlnas " A queer, old-fashioned condition was attached to the holding of the manor of Lea310I1. 'This was that the Tenant "should find for our lord the Kin.; two arrows and one loaf of oat bread when the sovereign slitnrld hunt In the forest, or F-:lstinoor" Geoffrey F'rulol)rand and his heirs hold sixty acres of land In Suffolk as long as they pay the sovereign a yearly rental of Iwvo while doves, One of the safest holdings Is that of 0 certabt Scottish duke, who re- linquishes his right to his estate only if tho weather should ever become warm enough to melt the suow on the highest peak of the highest mountain Of Scotland. Por over seven hundred year's the Corpuratlon of London has annually dlschaa ed two quaint ceremonies - the cutting of one faggot with a hatchet and another with a billhook -as quit -rents to the sovereign for certain lands still supposed to be held by then in Shropshire and Middlesex. Though nobody now knows where the properties stands, the ceremonies have never been forgotten. 1=. •1 Britain's Wild Beasts 0.• It 1s a not uncommon boastthat one can walk in perfect safely throughout the length and breadth of the British Isles without encounter- ing any wild or dangerous annuals. To believe this, however, is u big mistake, says Tit -lilts. Not long ago a female otter at- tacked three pewits who were fishing in the Eden, near Appleby, York- shire, They retreated from the river bank, but the angry otter followed them for about a hundred yards, and was only kept at bay by their rode. The 1•nd of the battle took place ut stile and Involved the, smashing to 0101113 of an umbrella with which a stranger managed at last to frighten the Otter away, Tho viper, or adder -is our only venomous serpent, 1t Is to be found 011 over (creat. 13ritain, from Corn- wall to Caithness, and it can be iden- tified by the fact that it only pos- sesses teeth on its lower jaw, the upper jaw consisting of the two poison fangs rued their reserves. It I); 0111011 smaller than the more com- mon ringed or grass snake, which occasionally exceeds six feet In length, Vipers average barely a foot, and their smallness adds considerably Io the danger of stumbling across 110111. It I9 useful to remember that a viper cannot strike without coiling, ;old should never therefore be held by the tall or Middle. Selzo It by the head and It Is helpless. Carnivorous badgers are the only hear --1i1,, quadrupeds 10w found In tho British Isles. Their dlsposlttone, ho\wc\'er, are by no means ferocloua, Mid, as a rule, they are less frighten- ing than 'frightened. Easier to 1,wcate, mainly on account of their offensive odor, are polecats. They are the gluttons of the anitnal kingdom, for they eat as Much ail they can, and klri a great deal more 11:111 they eau eat, They are red rags to gamekeepers, with whom they are in constant warfare. The wild cat of North Scotland, which also omits an unpleasant odor, :shows greater fight. When thor- ((1L,h1y 1'0113ed it Is a formidable op- ponent, and for Its ordinary everyday requirements thinks nothing of kill - Ing young fawns, Disking the anger of the mother -deer, 1t lives chiefly among ,wild woodlands, Making its home in hollow trees, rock crevices or burrows In the earth. Grey seals frequ(nt the rocky islands off the coast of Ireland and among the Shetlands. The bottlenoso whale sometimes visits seaside die- trlcts on the east and south coasts of England. Porpoises are compara- tively common, and dolphins chase pilchards and herrings through the English Channel. The killer- twen- ty feet or more in length - feeds Mainly upon other dolphins, whales, and seals; its appetite leads it blind- Or•igln of Nautical 'Term "Isnot," , ly-on occasions, in fact, to such places as the Thames off Battersea Tho nautical "knot" Was originally ' porn! an actual knot on a ship's "log line." thee, most intoresting of all, Ilse This In hien tools its name from the blue whale is sometimes found among log of wood which was used by the the Hebrides, This Is the largest anl- old-tlmo mariner in measuring dis- deal 1101\• in existence, and it sponte Once, Presuming the sea to be with- higher than any other whale that out current, a log thrown into the ; ought be met with In mid-Atlantlo water will remain stationary. Ob- or the Pacific Ocean, One molester vlously, therefore, if it be thrown ‘which canto ashore measured ninety over front the bows of a ship, by the feet. time the stern !noes It, the ship must Tho largest wild land -animals are have travelled its own length In such- the red deer of Exmoor. The walk - and -such a time. The log, then, was Ing tourist ►n Devonshire is frequent - really the first way of determining a ly astonished to come across wild ship's speed. The next step was to herds of these deer, shaggy sheep, attach a line to the log, the line and shaggier ponies, "To whom de being knotted at regular Intervals of they belong?" he wonders, as ,ho so many feet. The log, by this time watches them turn at his appearance of a fixed type, was thrown overboard and scamper madly away across the Hutt 110 line allowed to run free from lonely tracts. (. a reel. At the eyed of so many se- , A closer examination would Have conds, the whole apparatus was haul- 1 revealed Identification marks . on ed in and elle knots that had been ' many of their backs. Once a, year, payed out counted. The ship was I usually in the early autumn, the then said to be travelling at so many owners of land in Exmoor, Dartmoor, knots. The distance between the and the New Forest can claim all the knots, as well as the number of ae- i wild, unowned cattle that have conds during which the log was over- ' strayed upon their property, They board were regulated, so as to make it easy to work out how many nau- tical miles (which, by the way, are divisions of degrees of latitude and are rfther longer than land utiles), the ship was travelling an hour. And though to -day the modern log is a complicated clockwork apparatus, the old term is still used. Invoking the Law. - Thero Is ono London bookstall, half in the street and half out of It, which Is well equipped to meet thiev- ing youngsters and . others, "Yes, ser," said the proprietor, "when my boy Is away or asleep, 1 do lose a book or two occasionally. That's why the volumes on the front shelves are put loose -apart a little - so as I can keep my eyes [41)0111 me - se(' out• When I catch a rascal • in the act of 'pinching,' 1 drop this worthless old book onto him." He proffered hes missile. It was a bulky tattered boardless volume, lashed together with twine, and weighing several pundit. Its title - "Laws Against Petty Larceny." Hls Pall The Bishop of Chelmsford likes to enitveu his conversation with fre- quent anecdotes, One he told a friend of mine the other day is amus - Ing, The 'bishop, it appears, 1\'aI driven(; through a West I•Illnt street, and had occasion to ask the way of a ragged little boy, "1'11 show you," the boy said, and jumped up on the footboard of the car, Arriving at the church ho was seeking, the bishop was met by a pollee onlcel% who asked the boy what ho was (1011g, "O11," retorted the urchin, jerking his thumb towards the bishop, "It's all right -els a pal o' ntinel" must not drive the animals thither; but they must be on the land of their own accord. Then such as can bo captured aro branded with the owner's mark, Our Thunder Ration, Thunder lsil't ono of the popular features of summer weather, but it comes along occasionally, whether we like It or not. But tow people rea- lize just how many thunder -storms there are every year in the world. From records taken over a num- ber of years at over 8,000 etatione, together with observations made on board ship, it is calculated that, on an average, there aro sixteen thun- der -storms over every 200 square utiles of tate earth's surface annually. This means that the' world's daily ration of thunder is 44,000• storms. If each of these storms last an hour, there aro 1,800 thunderstorms In progress In different parts of the world at any given moment. The approximate number of flashes of lightning that goes to a severe thunderstorm in temperate climes or to an average storm in the tropics, is 200 per hour, In a Loudon sub- urb, during a thunderstorm, 08 flashes were counted in twenty-eight minutes. So the world's lightning for ont hour works out at 360,000 flushes, and the average number of flashes per second le n hundred, Oostermongers. • A costerutonger "was originally a seller of "costards," apples brought from, holland, the Dutch name of which is from "kost" (food) and "mord" (nature) -that is, "natural food," Costermongers are now itin- erant dealers in fruit, Hall, and vege• tables, It Is said that there are 30.- 1000 contermongers fu London alone. THE PRINCE NAMES A BABY Dilater trteIs have been experienced be'sti)we'd a kiss -•another unexpected • In plceity by the ',tense of \Valet+ du- duty- ou the bride, ing hie prolonged tour in Africa and At ono little town the Prince soul South America, but they have flavor agreed to play a round of golf with ft in any way deer,', sed his good spit!(:+, local champion. 1)n his liaised ut Ihe, Indeed, 80111s- ,+r then; little trials Milks the Prince Lound that tin euor' have afforded iti royal Melee's,' a mous crowd ut all Forts rued con.litlone geed deal of , musement. 1''o1• ex• of persons haat a seltltfled on Tho anl1•e, nt a villas„ on the veldt In course to \(•(mobs the match, Thin 51'its South Africa, as nu'lve woman showed somewhat 1fyeoncerting for his royal the I'rincv: with some pale her child• highness, who never plays up lo 111$ r,+n, six boys and one baby girl. best torus before a big gallery, The interi)re:s,:• Informed tho Prince With Midget Clubs. of their names. 1Vhen he came to the : But thorn Ovals another circumstance bully gala he toll tho Prince that tho etilt more dieconcerttng -his royal child \Vn; yet umlauted cool that the highness• found that he was expected «rather would feel deeply honored If to play not with his own clubs, but rho Prince would nate her, with a weird culle,tton of "Irons" not The r'i1 eel took th. Prince cone More than as foot In 1in't.e plc telt' (;back. hie was for a moment 'rho friars put up with a bad der (1u'ao ueprepnrcd with a suitable sug• feat with the hest of grass,, gratefully - gcstleie But Ills royal highness was accepting the strange clubs that were oily nonplussed for the briefest space, presented to 111111 after the match. Ile s.:tgt•,r,:4ed the name Dawn; it was Tho worst trial that befell was the roc: ived with delight by the motaer long delay in ('hila, necessitated by and the baby waa so named on the the unexpected heavy snowfall in the ,Andes. ''halt delay meant the total s1.ot. It was a fairly frequent trial of the upset of the Prince's program 1n the Prince during hair tour that the Buys Argentine which hail to be rearranged eatapart to give 1:1n1 a rest from 1110 try cable. keeping of public engagements, had to This ryas a necessarily difficult task and kept the Prince's secretarial be satcrlticed in order that he might liter attend some entertainment got up un- at work day and night, The Princeexpectedly, himself Tenetlned up ono entire night :settling the d011(11s with 111a staff. A Klee for the ('ride. ; A great trial to the Prince in con- The Palace of Justice at ieicarnu, where the security puce was signed. 0t10 of these little entertainments 'lectern with u11 his tours has been the It woe the first time since the war that the German Ilan flew beside those w'us a teethe wadding. Tho ceremony long train journeys. His royal high- ! of the allied nations. hut been hastily arranged to take ness' restlessness of dtspusition makes place so as to coincide with the • hint detest sitting still for hours in a ed athwart our bow and we athwart Prince's arrival at the village. train. He wont play cards iuul does The Prince anticipated being able not like reading. 'When It is prattle. her stern, while the holo that each to take a day off and enjoy some hours,' able tho Prince alights from the royal of really needed resit wheal he reached special and takes anything from a fit• the village. ; teen to thirty utile walk, while the But on his arrival he was presented , special 1s sent ahead, During his pre - with the invitation to the wedding; he sent tour the Prince In this way has at once agreed to accept it and duly walked several hundreds of miles. A GLAD DELIVERANCE By (George H. Cormier. captain. 'I meant to give it a wider berth than this,' - '\Ve looked toward it with n kind of Interest which i havo no desire to feel again. it bore northeast about fifteen miles. 'All the afternoon we lay becalmed, • Innis, In the fog closed up us If In quicksand, We knew that the pirate would put himself in pursuit of us as speedily as possible, but to do this ho must go In stays or wear, and would not gather headway for some minutes, \Ve heard Ills blocks creak and rattle, heard him ease off the sheet of itis heavy main- sail, and square in the long yards up- on his foremast. But we, too, altered our course. For half an hour the suspense was As to the pirate vessel, tie w•o saw nothing of her after the squall, 8110 probably never righted, but sank with all her crow. Sees Taurus Companion o Sun. The astronomer Luyten says the sun !a moving through space at twelve Money. and it half miles a 80e011(1tutvard the Money, money, money that jingles 1n my pocket, To bray a golden locket Or a house that keeps the rain out, t-* M'^•-•• The Automobile WOMEN SHOW IIIGIi SKIIA, IN MOVING AUTOS, Thera is considerable enjoyment forstraLor from an nutonu►l►ill revvi"n a woman in taking out the family 011r station and have hire teach her, These during the week whir the mon folks men n.e often glad to do a little of are at business, for a Litt:e drive int•/ this- work, and one should nvt, have the country and getting away from the great difficulty in finding such u per- dai:y routine of housework occasion -Isom n:ly, If a Woiiia11 knows how to drivel The best way to make a ,begia„1ng she w•i1 doubtless make use of the is to have the rear of the car 1'ic1ced car for errands, meeting her husband up and the front wheels blocked so nt the station, if the home is in the that there is no danger of the car get - suburbs, or taking the chi:dren. Lo ting away. When learning to operate school. A car will come in handy an automobile the first step In to ho- miny times. come familiar with tho engine ----how According 10 statistics, ono woman to start and stop it—rued how to con - out of three, of those families having trol speed automobiles, knows how to drive, This, FIRST Ala TO BEGINNER, I believe, holds good only in the coon- Regarding starting the engine, con• try—not so much in the city, There stilt the instruction book that came is no reason why more do not drive with the car, and If that is not ob- unless it is beeatuse nobody seems to tainab:e, secure another from your find the time and patience to teach local dealer. 1f 1)0 cannot furnish you then( or they are "going to some day." !with one, write to the factory and Perhaps the family housework seems give them the motor number and to postpone the start. With the pres- ent day it is nota difficult thing to learn how to drive. Only n few years back if ono did not properly manipulate the clutch one would situ( with n terrific jolt almost enough to knock the driver through the windshield, but nowadays tho mo- torist can almost let tho clutch in without taking her foot right off the pedal and she will not receive a jolt, although this is not a gond policy and will in time injure the mechanism of the car. 1NSTRINTOR ALWAYS iIANDY. 1f the feminine driver's husband or brother wia not teach her, and 1f she is still anxious to learn, and if_.she is not near a good autombilo school, which would bo the best place to go, she can engage the services of a good chauffeur, or, better still, a demon - far off slily Toga, and Is taking our ►lanets of the so - Measurements of !nr system wit Gm stars outside show an apparent Or n gow'u 10 gaily flout --- terrible, and then hope revived, but , elution In the opposite direction. But sial. may it never bay for Ino a friend. 1t was only to be destroyed by a cone Ohl Captain Bradford, with whom I though occasional breezes roughened plots, dying out of the wind, in tits, case, of one star In the constel that has shown at material increase Ill the (vette at a distance, and toward !ellen :sleety, looney, money so much will Canada "Should the cola( endure until rho li l,on Taurus, the bull, 1)r. Lassen thatbin 1925. The Fisheries Branch ones sailed, was wont to relate an ad- ; night there appeared to seaward the" (lads this motion absent. Tho only money buy— � of the Dept, of blatant and Fisheries ventuco of his with a pirate off the I upper Canvas of a vessel, standing In, passing away of the fog, what coati explanation ho fines for this Is that this flues, great and bibs(' reports that the fisheries productioal Isle of Pines. It happened long ago,, save us:' 1Vo were eight leen, with Jewels roto Wad olden, fiS we judged, toward the land. sin is moving In exactly the same dl• for the first half of this year exceeded when the spot was the most dreadful , two cannon, against eighty taco, with , 1'lca.5ure tuft sial fiol(ien, resort of villany to he found t« th©' "That vessel was a pirate, we had n dozen cannon. !rection and with the some speed fps for of Inst by over $ti`'•I,000, b_'intX But cannot buy n sunny day. , , tubule world. I good reason to believe, for, although "Soon there came the sound of oars, I ea own sou and is a companion to neatly $J,78Q,000, The increase was "I was before the mast 111 the brig ;her distanceolet from us made it el',os The pirate's boats were looking for us. 011e' slut• , largely In cod, salmon and lobsters, sibleDluncy, mune atone that many taus, tho Tatler representing nearly ono - ;"and we were lying es to determine her character, or Uur ca ►tutu was a fain who never in- --- •--o - Y Atlas," he said, even her rig, the course she alts sip 1 and die for, third of the falai fish caught for the 1:ingsh n, Jamaica, when piratesvited lunger, but whose nerves were And the weak and wistful lie for, were hung there. Some of them, as , each steering caused a to look at Prevention of Crime, f rst half of the year. It must bo steadied by It when It came. '('hat's all so tussle, they stood un(..er the gallows, nolle each other with very sober faces, ex. � here to the guns, then, Ile •The best time to save the criminal Compared after(1a11 things worth whsle, remembered, however, that the open could Father hope only from the ex " 'Some confusions that were enough to stat.rt is before he l►ecomes one, , season for salmon on the Pacific coast seems, lightness of the breeze she softs—"a l except the two lookouts, I 0 may 1t never swerve mo from hill.( You take charge of the ,ort side, Mr, It costs less—savo8 mono tingeis not included. arai one's hair on end, and after this very I Y. heaven., seemed to have, I Greense,'(fleece social machinery, institu• So much for the fisheries. The mines little was thought of in our forecastle "\Vo had two six -pounders, and lie sickled to the mate, and patience, Y,—Ceorgd Elllstou, but the danger we must always be sub -1 these we loaded. 1 remember how the I'll stand by the stnrboalyd. Hark! dons of all kinds, of Canada have n•90 been showing joct to whsle at sea from such wretch- f = Prevention is always more import - They a some bili production. For the first half powder and the six penal balls and hey sue close to us. I y es as we had seen strung up with their "The fog was breasting and we could asst than reformation. TUi'nin Day I1ito 1Jight. year of 11125 the output was larger by tho grape and canister !coked as we Cringe and its solution is lar e a = over six million dollars than n year shoes on, brought thea•, up from below and pial now see for a hundred fathoms, r 6 of It might be supposed shat. a forest _dollars, At night I tvunld lie in Ins bel•th matter of efficiency in child-protec- ago, or over 90 million th Ad- As the captain spoke, the 0fal'3 , them down near the guns. tion, fire would turn night Into day by its vances among the ineta,s were gen- and think of R. What a horrible thing That evening the fog did not set In. sounded very near,''hen a vales, cried huge illumination, but such a llrcfro 1t appeared to n1e, as vision after vis out in Spanlslt: The criminal was once a child. Sal- 1 I (rel, Goad rose to at new record, ]pend The night continued clear till almost „ 'LI 11rl rantlno! I,1 hrignntlno,,, 1 vago shou:d begin farther back, duces so much sn►1{e that. the Optics.' passed rho high mark attained in the ion rose up in' my imagination that daybreak, and the anxiety with which 6 We can ruin boys to n nor site, Is the effect over very large areas. first half of 1924, Nicl(c1 production such miscreants should he out on the And Instantly n boat crowded with Y g 1 "f by 1 lonely ocean, CRIII[I11Uhlfi awful cruel - listened peered through the darkness and exanlp:e and companionship. A recent big forest fire near Lfake was well maintained. Copper was up 11slFnecl made the long hours dreadful Hien came shooting out of the uil.,l. Iluron was estimated to cost shipping , ties where there was no hand to stay to las• usturbourd cf us, lat million pounds. Silver showed in - ties companies $50,000 by reason of their + creasing values. Zinc followed the them! And sea in that Wer Whale a moment was that. Captain .._. y teS601H losing so much lingo !u the trend in lend to (1:most double the "Al Inst the fog came, and sunrise who lies Brewer one quickly °� T' ::' ::':: ` w ell a person feelse ' stoopedto the 51x' ::{[':5b' 1<:%:S f:>+':r'i.'>:+:>:` ?i ilii: n[:j :lass<ri %' : vousness hi followers. A feint breeze sprang 1 soon ->Y�:;:y:;:.<;.: <:>::; 'dense blackness, out ut recorded in the first half ot• asleep,I sol eye ':i awoke when he ought to be pounder and rain his eye along its top, 1 Oregon, some ears u and the bra moved along al the Al Portland, slat d, fi y 192,' Cobalt production continued to brig a ,s.n I II would see it almost as a certainty . p' 11 r. (lull, our second male, 9lcod close �s:' , }, :::<:;> rate of two ore 111 tnets. flow glad , ,A t ago, atll lights lead to bo on day and ;improve, that,soon or late, the blood-thirstyby his silo with a burning port and ;'; : • ';.'x,:.`:: ;.`::':::: '` irf"although i i , I we w•eree to he making hetelw'a se al •�'..... •rr: s t< night. for a week, it was mid- I (,ensile often boasts of he► great swung It to glue It lata The captain `''`": .., s,. 1 monsters would cross any path' plough so slowly, '. to ��:'+ summer, as the sun was completely' resources and n 1 atrent: with good elevated the breech of the gun, then s%' n<::.:: <:,' z„„ el out with ucrld and douse .l P Y After a time, getting a freight of „ , '" "Pirate or not, there e w'ns has day one blots n a1Cil rum .» :c<;4;:;;;':.:.::.:: ''';.:.<,...<:..s .' reason. But resources lying falloWd sex hundred barrels of J n1 lowered It just a little, The glowing <.'f.smolt°. chance In n thousand that the vessel ,;, :,1 .. ,. _ satisfy few wants and contribute but we sailers for Havana, arid, as our match was almost. louching the ppty ;; - � ' Even navigation thousands of miles I e had seen, now that tura were clung :..,o, .: < ::.:..: ' "' :. ~i , = little to the actual wealth t a nation. course would take us around Cape St.' in our bearings, would full !n with us d g Antonio, at the west end of Cuba, we ill that thick atmosphere, would undoubtedly pass within sight 1 "Sono of us were a:oft, rigging out of the Isle of Pines. I the foretopmast studding -sail boons. "There was much fog in the Carib - where you bought your car. Having ',calmed to start the engine, the woman should become familiar with the different sJ:ecds, which vary with the different ears. Most care hove the standard shift—Ilrst speed, left back toward the side; second speed is right forward; and third speed is straight back; reverse is left forward. In other words, visualize the letter r'H," The upper left of the letter "Ii" is reverse; the lower left Is first speed; the upJ:er right is sec- ond speed; and the !ower right is third speed and the lino drawn ncross the two parallel lines is neutral. If n woman will try these things she has made n beginning. to learn how .o operate the family automobile. The number of women driving cars ice in- creasing rapidly. Many authorities say that women slake better drivers than men, They arc more careful. Canada's Natural Resources Harvest. The bountiful crops which the Cun- ndian farmer has this year 'reaped and which have made his heart g:ad are, fortunately not the cn:y harvest cr.fe<;::- ' out at sett has been seriously inter- ' It is through the development of ro- „ 'Me!' he cried. a '>;�"�::<.'�;; >�,'�_.•.-;::;':� _ ;.;.:. fered with by the black musses ot1 sources that prosperity conies. "The whole loch felt the shock as <� far;:;;:;;;.¢s `>'^~°' 5111' l that have been blown from t the cannon weal ori. The heavy;`':>:'::''':: ranging over man square miles lire i fi fi Y charge of routed shot, grape. ,ld cants •' s.,x:S'.' ,,' ,:'x:", ..:..:...:._...:. >':..r;cY., of forest on the mainland. (low' much better we felt, uuw (hal Ll►o ; �<,.r:,.f�:�>.:>..;,'.� Your Mind is a Garden. tor struck 1110 heat I11 elle hos and ::;x� j ' y.� re.}� x- r. �e.'hj � bean Sea, coming up generally at ,:',.�<� ,� ��*:�,{;.:` xF• ,�� brig teas moving and we could be do- I raked her fore and aft, Si,)tering live 4 >'• � � evening and hanging about us until , i •''Y.vvyT :`, '�f�� - Your mind is not at all like a ran- ge next forenoon,and yo ing something to help her along But or six feet wide, it. swept before it s ";�` ';#`r'; (, '.,;;;..:. ;:;; ;, <: `,.S si' Ingrained Hostility. late intsuddenly we stopped in our work and chino—all tendo and aulou►atic, strong with every one was the appro. ever)' man of her crew', • „;F,..,<.�. �;;�.;,..•,,.,,,...,".:. ,, �,;� },; '1'•ho proverb about leading a horse Mk any doctor and he will make this looked around tvllh n stari. My heart l "Such t' ;. •,,; :,1 :<'k , to water Is illuetrised by this story of plum to you, he[131011 of pirates That, whenever to.I SI1Ch was Dlll' F.e1L:e of relief (hal %}may:t' >','!. �errt.� became lute ice, A confused sound of ' S i rs > „ !'wo old women, living 1n an English No,our mind Is more l ward nightfall we had made a vessel I the foremast bunds cheered (vastly;'YX, >r::::;r Yo like a gnrdeu., voices at first reached ala, and as wo but the captain was not the Ulan to ;„k ;:f ; ';, , tu ''' 1,1 e who land sustained n mutual in the distance, even our captain seem i 1 { i". I t 1' ' g ' It is tl►o use you assists, of it that erg to Peel re:levve as the mist castle tassel our heads, n 101)50l•schooner' crow till he was out of the woods. At ,!►`.;i,,;t; >r.,'i; - quarrel with zest for many years, counts. full of Wren, loomed through the dense' w:hc , x. N;Y �.' , _ .'after taking an Immense amount of you can grow these fine plants in rolling Duel• the water to shut her from once his stout rummer was al wars(, rf� �•,<: 1"? r�'` .a w r fir= fog, not thirty fathoms trout us• and ho was just sending home the last c t reef ;: _ trouble, says Sunbeams, the vicar of your mind—garden—courage, initlallvo sight, "She was off our port bow and stand- ; �' the parish succeeded do reconciling imagination will -power, kindness anal "Light breezes and calms made the of the canister when the waste, frc;n i t, s ;r~� ;, x` 1 I ing athwart our course. And what tt; the other side of the deck,called bur y ° -'{ ` f`it}'t tr<` ` 'the two old women, He even induced knowledge, p passage long and tedious, and It was crew she .had! Seventy or elPllly z�•� �' �' ��l,t ,,a`n �'r �5';. � ,• �, Bat until ten days after leaving Ju rieclly out.: I thento meet melt: the victimize roof. You can have a garden of Ideas nasi shaggy scoundrels, that looked fright- ” 'Here they�'`�' I Its his (ll'at1'lllg 1'Oonl they shoos{ hands, skills and efficiencies. What a gili'detrl maim that one noon, as the fog left I conic; Here they r,,,,,,�,,,�,,,, us, we saw, off our slnrhoard beans, a fully nntr(lerous as we caught sight of come.. l After nn embarrassed silence ono of Newton must have had! Or Daa'wln,1 them tl.: rnl'gh the mist. _ i I_o '1 et ltopnsl,lr hay, elle:;(. :on of (hem sold: or Huxley, or Veverhulme, m• Pasteur,! number df mountain peaks, apparently , Neither ve:ael was moving faster I We loalcrd nrmrnd, as 1l r. Green, , tl,e :,lure u!s of %osteal, one time vice.; "Weil, Dir•;, Tyler, 1 tvlslt yon all you or Carnegie! far Inland, while, nearer to us', a Zine in almost insane excitement, threw I 1• of dark treetops apper.':ed above the Ulan the ordinary walk of n man, yet himself down to sight his gun, Quick. I ruy of Ireland, who succeeds Earl wishes me." If you let your garden alone 1t will! before the crew of either recovered , iy he gave the order to lire, end off heading as viceroy of India. lie was I "An' who's saying nasty things go to weeds and 6mass, That Is the waves. " 'That's the isle of IPnes,' said rho ;trout their surprise, the schooner pass I went the slx•pounder, the charge former governor of 13engrll. I now i" 'snapped Airs, Tyler, usual crop, Jeff's Rehearzal Was Indeed Realistic. 4 MUTT AND JEFF—By Bud Fisher. t AIN'T SIT?INC, ii-GUEsS PRCT•CY: L'VC- BEEN OARED To PLAY TNe- t.ateNDING foLC iN A FIVE Rect. ptC'tuRc CNTtTLCD- FROM RAG% 'r©RIcHCs 3Y 1)RCssING ATN OMC X:\1�11 SAwG A LoT os, TIMC As vey'RE GONNA SHooT T1 -%c FIRST SceNES ARo+JND TNe of2NGR1 • t'CS) 'CLoZ-leb IN RA s P•/Ce TNc evTufac I3PoKeN tN SPIRIT 1 Ot !APIs NOT PASSED My Lips + roR Eeurt DAYS':/ 1'100 sloe: I c nttl-y . Jvsr TD KILL T1-te TIMC 2'LL RCRGARse SCCNC oNC; �To •1' INI<?NAr lie, SCION OC-' A No131.c-. FAMILY S11ovLD tome ib TNt S": see { D BO1)b.. YIEN AN D WOMAN Get More Pleasure Out of Life and Are of More Use in the World Than Sickly, Rundown People. '(here aro people who lack the red I Help for Nervoua People. blood to glvo cola' to their lips,! Are you pale and weak, tired most warmth 10 their hands and brightness 0f the time, out ut 1►rt11tl1 en slight to their eyes. 7'110.911 100110 Ilrn easily end' valiant compote In schCol, store or shop with tho moro anergellc,' 'l'hetr blood be- ing thin they tiro nervous 1111(1 do not Bleep well. Arising In 1.11e morning ulu't:frl's11e4I they begin each day bad- ly told mlav much of the pleasure of r-Jiv1ng, '1'1, i)eco►11e naive and ('rlergetle, like most red•hluodcd Canadians, these people need a blood -building tonic, J\ tunic Ihnt gives strength, that re- vitalizes weak no'vett, that increases the appetite and olds digestion will put color hi the cheeks and lips and 81'10 vigor to tho step. '!'hut means new Joy In living, increased usefulness and longer life. \Vhere over you 11nri a person who has taken Ur. 1Villlanls' Pink !'ills faithfully you Ilnd an enthusiastic friend ut the tonic that hurl )00(10 life meat more In tunny ways, '!'hese blood -making pll:s have been used by three generations of Canadians and In almost ev.2:'y community, however snu111, can bo found these who owe health and happiness to this fatuous household remedy. Weak and Run Down. "I wish from my heart I could per- suade every person who Ls run down In health to glvo I)r, Williams' !'ink !'illy a trial." 'I'Ilus writes Mrs, Louie \ 1(011011, Oak Point, Man., who fur- ther says:- --"About a year ago 1 was n weak woman, suffering from It run- down system and Iulpoverl,sheil blood. Any little exertion would cause my legs to tremble andmy I:earl to throb violently. 1 could not Hweop n room or walk fifty feet without being ex- hausted. '!'hen I began taking Dr, Williams' !'ink Pills and after laking Send for These Health Books, only six boxer; I an ns woll and strong Two useful books, "ilu:ldIng Up the us ever, I can walk and rt:n without'good," turd "!\'hut to Eat and 1[oty to slopping every few 100011(LS gasping Eat," w1!l be sent free by '!'Ile Dr. \Vi l• for breath as previously, 1)r. \VII•; 1101(1.9' Medicine Co., 13ro:kville, Ont., !lams' Pink t'1:b1' will be m)' stand-by If you mention this paper. in rho future If ever my blood 110048 I)1', Williams' PInl( Pills are sold by building up again, and I shall always all dealers 111 medicine or will 1)o sent lend pleasure lu•recunlmendIng then! by 01811, post paid, on receipt of price, to anyone needing a 1011!)•" 50 cents per box. s. Polish Cops Study Languages. —' exertion? ,ire you nervous, 1.9 your sleep dis• lurbed 1'o that rest dues not refresh! you? Is your nppetlte purr, your discs - Don \veldt and do you have pains after eating? If you have any 0f these sylllp101(19 you need the help Of such a reliable tonic as 1)r, Williams' Pink Pills, Iteall what Mr. W. W. FY311018, of Cal- gary, :\Ili., says of (his tonic. "After returning front overseas," writes Mr. Francis, "lay n'h0Ie sy,,teni W1(.9 111 a badly run down condition. 1 became nervous, irritable, pale I.nd lost weight. Of course I was given 1rcat- 1110111 and recommended many tonics, some of which i took, but with no up - parent result. At last i could not even sleep. My sister, who is In Eng- land, wrote and urged ire to give 1)r. Williams' I'iulc Pills it trial, and I can ,sca'cely say how glad I ail that 1 look her advice, Aly friends were surprised at my complete recovery, but I as- sured them it was due entirely t9 Dr. 1VIIIiams' I'Inlc 1'11!.9 and 1 holy 01way; keep a box on hand In 0080 of emer- gency." Keep Your System Toned Up. 1)r. \ViIItanl9' P11111 Pills assist d1' gestIon, correct the lassitude, the pal - ligation of the heart, shaky nerves and the pallor of the taco 8(1 11)/H 1)1)11 Ise the results of Obit, Impere blood. Try I)r, Williams' I'Inlc Pills for anemia, rheumatism, neuralgia, ner- vousness, Take them as a tonic It you ire clot in the best physical con- dition and cultivate at resistance that w'lll keep you well and strong. Get n !lox and begin this treatment now. The Frontier College. PollF'i) policemen are being taught The first calendar of the Ft miller foreign languages. Thus', Proficient College stripes a new uoto hl educe - in 01 her tongues besides their own . (foil. This institution endeavor; to wear on their aril the first !otter of ' relate, all Arts course to lite, and ig the name of the outer language Spoken, therefore designed to open the door of opporl:Inlly to manual and oilier workers, hitherto neglected. This Institution claims, and with 11 good deal of reason, that too many of our young people have been sent away from home to acquire an oduc"tion. This 1111s detached then) from the busy work•e(•dtly world, and unfitted them for the dally round and common task of earning a living and helping their families and neighbors. 1''ro.itler College has broken new ground, and studiously It V01114 competition 11'1)11 the older 11miversl- ties. 1t seeks to creat an interest in 1110 homestead, farm, croup, shop and other forms of isolated employment ,-1) long overlook ?d, There can be no question that the time Is ripe fur such it university, In a country like Canada where !manual workers; are needed most of all, and whore this class will nettle in large numbers 111 the future, it Is 00(:0.9.9(11'3' to bring education to the worker rater• er than lake 111111 away from his \ort( to obtain an education o:sewhere. For matriculants wi'o have tl)s, amb'.tlon, ene'1'gy and capacity LI. study clone, courses Of study are autilned therein, Uso " SimeLda' Crescent Ground Sawe) their teeth areol evr,n thickneaa Ihroughout the entire lenccth of the saw, thus makingbinding Inlhelterf impossible. CrescentGrind- ing is an exclusive Simonds fenlure.tlmonds Canada Saw Co. Ltd. sero DUIMPai ST. W., 1011ONTO Y,IIC..UYe11 MONTPtM. T. JOHN, 14. y ,r,. Jn .. J.IIIn� ri.S 1'1' . ulI II.li rrd„u YI• 1 I I Ui "Crucial Grand” Lorne Tooth Croat Cat, N. 22 1.344 begins the moment you board a Santa Fe train for C::1ifo •onyour waya !UflflV, scenic /wonderland ra Fred i Bey diniatig service another exclusive Santa Fe feature Enjoy the outaof'doors this winter. take your family ' % Californiabstelrates are reasonable trey 1T send you jar picture plan? U. (T, noberteon.' '1'rnv. Pani, Agent le. T. Hendry, (renornl Agent Santo Ire By. 401 Transportation 11'4g. tyI llet!.nll, 1)1011,, Pitono Main 0847 suit ^�tmessesommegimmuusa '—I3r1an Brown. A Poem You Should Know. Flowers Get Seasick. "The Happy heart." I Plovers, in 001111110/1 WI II human be• '1'1101110.9 Dekker wad a contemporarylogs, suffer from seasickness. 7'111341;1 of Shakespeare nod a poptllr'r !lout and l'ar:1011le11y the (u,5e with daffodils, druu►uli t In his (1113'. ('bur!(t1 Lunlb vinlel.l mill 11.11..) of the villt,y, To raid of 11111): "1 In hail poetry efl(lI1gII k''''I� (t)(' o In );1100 c;lndlll0a re)1u!rrs for anything," and It. In Hutto certain n grr:il (1,'341 of Inseo)1ity. i'hr rt l!"st um( 1110 rimming song would not Illlve Iis)'ue 11a111' k one of the main wand- : I,y':. and 111 this the Iluw1 I„ die trate ! r . I. They are kept is (1!) even teal - Art 111011 Dour. yet he;•.t thou g.olden'1(('r,s!urc, Wit huul. 1).1(1,1', 11011 ilii' day (.1 sweet content! Art thou rich, yet Is they p!Ox(d? O Pu(1!rhn1(nt.! 1)ust thou laugh to sec how fouls are voxel! TO n(1:1 to gn1d1,11 1111 111101H, golden numbers? () sweet content! 0 sweet, t) sweet ' content! 1\'ol•1t apace, apace, apace apace; 1I)0lim labor beau's a lovely face; 'Thum hey )111013 nonny, hey 1101111] 11011(3! (1,0) 11)0 a'unled. Then They are ii:unee 1 inti, ice.{ 101(1(1 per• \valor, The effect is magical. \'i ty soon they oro in.tl(!ng the ' j r. en - biome redolent will) t;tetr ('(1118) drink 1110 waters of the crisped 61)1'11187 O sweet content! Sw1111111'81. 11100 Irl w't ullh, yet silliest 111 11 lite own tears? 0 punishment! '!'hen he that patiently want's burden hero's, No burden bears, but Is a king, a king! 0 sheet content! O sweet, O sweet content! Work 010(0, apace, apace, apace; Ilone,;l labor bears a lovely face; Then hey 000113 nonny, hey nanny 110(1113'! Light Brains Are Good. Anatole Prance was a tall and well built man, and the weight of his brain, which 1H given by ilegault as 1.017 grants, did not expI'cn.) Its quality, 'I'I►e average weight of the !stain bruin in English tables is n little over 1,3110 grams and in 1''rencch text -hooka 11, given at 1,300, so that the twain weight of Anatole Prance nus considerably below the average. It is obvious that in IhLs 00)30 elle 00111111011 belief that the weight of the bran hears rt definite proportion to the 5(.01)0 of g01110. wt13 1101 exeulpli- tied. Autopales of distinguished men reveal so many variations 111 the weight of the brain Nut 1.o deductions oven of a general chancier can be made. Itegault does note thnr the convolu- tions of the brain of Anatole Prance were specially marked and the fur- rows deep. As it is clear that the con- voluted 0011(1111(111 of the surface ad - slits of a 1;d'c:.t increase of the gray matter without the sacrifice of large additional space, so 1t is reasonable to suppose that the cumber 811(1 extent of the convolutior.s as well RB the ('depth of the intervening soled should bear a direct relation to the lntollec• tulul powers of the Individual, There is evidence from the 0011- sidorallon of ninny post-mortem ex. O111111a1100s that 611011 Is the case, .and tho weight of the brain of another great Frenchman, LIal1Ibelta, Is 1)0111g quoted in support of the generaliza- tion, as llanlbetta, like Anatole France was found to have a comparatively light brain, with Many well defined Coll V0111(10118 801)0 rated by (seep said, Testing a Tradition. Near Ullensalter, In Norway, is a grass and tree•growi tumulus, 60(1. high and over 300ft. in diameter, Dateless legend says it 0011111!ns a stone chamber in which aro the re- in a 1116 e - i na111;; of 1111 unknown king, lying on t( couch between two white horses, In 1870 an attempt was 111(1(10 to open the Mound, but after several perilous falls of tons of earth and sand the ex- cavators abandoned the work. Archaeologists aro now preparing to slake a fresh attempt to test the truth or the tradition. -------0 __.._ — Sammy Knew. "Why, Sammy," 6111(1 a father to Itis and due prevision will be made 80 U1at Itttlo son, "I didn't know your teachclr whipped you Friday." "1 guess," replied Sammy, "If you'd been in lay trousers you'd know'd Il!" candidates may: w'a'lto their examina- tions locally, Perhaps one of the most interesting features of tho Frontier College Is the fact that, no boy or g11'I living Iu the city can wI:1 n scholarship. These are offered as a premium 10 encourage a "trek" back to the hand. Substantial fellowships running from $100 to $500 are offered to youug men and women who go to the frontier and combine manual labor and a few hours of teach- ing with private study, This 1s r•°mo- ttling decidedly new 111 education and every fair minded person interested in 'Canada will wish the expel'Imeu1 suc- cess. - 1euller information may be obtained by writing to the Frontlet College, Toruli lo. WE WANT CI-IURMNG We Supply cans and pay express charges. We pay daily by express tnouey orders, which cin bo cashod anywhere without auy ,charge. To obtain tho top !.rice, Cream must bo free from bad flavors and contain not less than 30 per cont. Rutter Fat. Music, the Great Civilizer. Bowes Company Limited, mule is the greutest'clvillzer !n tho world ----its language 1)3 universal, Its magical effect Is the sauce, to black or white, red or yellow. Il can nth: the emotions of every. race, .""Isr lIl the world with song by every 1110nu8 available. het music be broad- cast, ns it were, to the remotest parts of the earth, and the beneficent 000.91).9 will be, more beauty in lite, greater prosperity In tho world of commerce, lege. unemployment In rho' 1'(1111(13 of labor, and is golden argory of good -will! 10 )ren of every rico and In every . clime. • Now the word);, or, to employ the metaphysical term, the thought; we cntortnirl every clay, are. being 8(111'1'1 up according, to our belief in (!'tot, and as w^ Accept or refuse then''; so in 0111' consciousness being formed, Toronto For refel'ences—Head Office, Toronto, Rank of Montreal, or your local banker. lEstabllobed` for over thirty years. OO TIHACIIE Bathe the face with Minard's 1)I water and place a pleco of cotton woof, saturated with Minard's, In the cavity. C IIARO SNC BABY You have been intending to try "Red Rose." Vihy not now before you forget. lf4 The ORANGE PEKOE is e.lctra good. Try its Artificial Niagara Runs All Trains in ,Switzerland. AGAINsi C0EDS 'I'ukine n leaf from the rich haul( of 10)10)1, (lie 11%1'8 have jib t (4)iii'leted un (1!)1:1ci:(1 Niagara I''.rl:s which will produce l:uungh t'Ieclrtcal im..er to operate :11l of Ibe )',111.1 In St1'itznr• hand, 1,00;:).(1 at an itllttilllo of 6000 feet In the Swiss Alps, the falls were put lulu operation the other day by the canton of 1'a10(.9. The falls :ire sllghlly higher than the American Niagara. covering an area of more than 250 acres, the dim 1:; 15 feet Is 011(1 1)01)1.9 39,000,000 ('111)1810 381(113 of wl.ler. 'l'lirte' years were reipCse l 10 build the dant, which rust. approximately $12,500,000. 'I'b0i.sau 18 of 11)0111.1'; Have 1!41'0(11e i llu►Ikind has long npin'c('tittud the c'onvinc'ed tlu'oug:1 the actual use of ; Posvoy, possibilities in ululiilg; wafter, - the Tablets (hart there is nothing to I'I' llP l',' is ample r'videuc(J of thea fact In ((1)1(11 111(1)1 In hanishing cuastijOUh)11.ls early dr'velupnleiil of the water )111)1 Indif:estlan; In'euh!n0; up 001(10 wheel and In his attempts to harness and simple Iev.'rs; exp( Illhg worrlis l !Ito tido, and even the w'aveO, '('110 (n- and malting teelh11.g 11t,te ea -y, Among 1 ('1'e'n3ing (lnphasls fn 1'(0.111. years on the thus: ends who praise liAby's Own bulli .911'1.0 of (he Atianitlr on Ute de Tahl.'ts fs 11)'13. Alex, J. I','rry, Allan- velopment of hydro e!ei'tll,: power is 11!, N.S., who says:. --"1 always keep all earnest of what III(' luhlr'0tt holds, !Baby's Own Tablets 11) the house as r\nd the creation of aritllidal 800000,9 I know 0f no other medicine for little of 811011 power as well arc the harness. 1111th( to 010101 1110111." Ilog of natural waterfalls are euglucer• Baby's Own Tablets are sold by, lnlg feats of which ingenious man may medicine dealers or by mail at 25; well he Frond. cents a box from The i)r. \Villianls' The great advantage hi "water fuel" Medicine Co,, Brockville, Ont. for the production of power that it d .1811 be used over again, indefinitely. \\lien a ton of coal 1.3 101010'1 11 1H gone The World's Best Joke. fitrl:ver, Lel after the descending \\'halt is the world's best. joke? j water' runs through tin) turb11les, ua- it is it't about some Run';i mother. tor( plr1ls it up into the 811' again. The / moisture will still he evaporating into I"r!thc•r In It lvllmt Poi sail t0 mike. ' the air and the rains (ItSee:1(1 ne Into Tor is it what one colored maul said the ,streams, long lifter our great coal I to 01001/11,1' 111.111 (luring a 0,'341 gale(. , belts shall have been exhausted. 7'he world's best jolt; Is "Per Capi- ta." Ask for Mlnard's and - take no other, Hero Is how per capita is deter lit 1110(1: 130'11(0 has ninny 6111(21g 3 tribes, A min has n nnllllon (101110;1' among them the l.ikits, who foio;v Another 111011 110511') fl (111)1111', the trails of W1.d pigs and ;lye upo't 1111) according lu per capita, the rho roots which t.hesa animals grub wealth of rho two leen 1s $500,000 out of the !round. apiece, By Keeping lial)y'M Own '1'aIJlets in the !louse (,l A11 Times. To g,pnrd IIIc baby against colds nothing (1811 cynnl Ilnby'el Own Tub• lets. 'flo' 'Tablets are a mild laxative that will keep Ile 1i111e ane'; stomach and bowels working regularly, It 1s a recognized fact that here the sto- mach and bowels are 111 good order that colds will not exist; that the health of ow IIltlo 011! 11.111 be good and 111,11 he will thrive and hu happy. Mlnard's Liniment for Distemper. The preparation of a En:'°a'P:ul con- sists in 1111 analysis of till the different types of customers and the framing up of the arguments that are best suited to convince each before start- ing out on a rtip. Going over the sales list, if you please, and finding out exact:y just what people he is going to visit and sizing up exactly what wi!:' best suit each of then!. PUZZLE, Find SANTA CLAUS First 4 Prizes each a Wrist Watch 100 Prizes of each a Fountain Pen Hundreds of other Prizes If you can solve this Puzzle and will sell 14 }'ro:en Perfumes al 10c each, you can win our of the above priva. Will you do this? It Is very easy. If so just mark Santa with an X and Fend it to us at once and if correct we will send you the Pcrfuut to sell right away; �C.391fo ravrnu �1or(' ?,,V,'110n1 roil t Selfalt Specialty Co, Del' W Waterford. Oat, \Vit is the wine of inle:lett and is nature turns it into vinegar. 1,1.4 )..(J 1.1.W KLEANALL AUTO POLISH RENULLL TOP DRESSING The Capu Fu)),)e,, u.l., II.,nun,n SHIP us VOURw»•••• POULTRY,GAME,EGGS, - BUTTER AND FEATHERS "WE I3UYALLYE..IR ROUND' lVrile codav Jo;' prieess -,1'o Atilaraulee then: for a Il 'ck ahead P.POULIN CO; LIMITED Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Rheumatism Colds Neuritis Neuralgia Headache Pain Toothache Lumbago DOES NOT AFFECT �. .,7ii �EMHd.dARrRT � Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proven directions.., IIandv ''Eiaycr" Iloxe3 of 12 tablets . ••�� �` Also PP,0ttleo of 24 and 100-•-Druggietd. Aspirin Is the trade ninrk (registered Irt Canada) nt Bayer 111011 frtelurt' of Motioacetle• nchienter of yallcylleaeld (Acetyl Sai!oylle Acki, "A, S, A."r while 1t la troll known thnt Aspirin utentI(11arer muuufncture, to mist, the public naalnat Imltellontt, tilt 'I'ahfets ut Layer Company will be clamped With heir orient 11(11e math, (bo "Buyer Cruse.',:. • Classified Advertisements LEARN ELECTRICITY. ' 01'11.9i: IV 1'l(ACT1em, ELICTlliCA0 J rev:n,. r(I.e In )our spare Ilene at home waI 3,1 to tarn a btu ealarr or 110 Into bndneu for , 1.1....it 11111. 1'..r Erre IralnInu book. 101rpcu Lb tri .�l ,'0111(11.3, 11114. N, ('rarfnrd sl., Toronto. �) A1.1;118' 0111:118. WHITE Mit C114,1,40e1n and 1111 of WI d none Hubbard O'reu Com• 7112 Gh,s 1Veet, 'Pronto At the Railway Station. A penny In the slot ---down come The roasted peanuts, crisp and brown, And with 0 whir of soft gray wings Tho eager pigeons flutter dowry To eat from out the tender hands Of the (!unlet 81;111'1, ,titanding there, Each nluni1it , waiting for rho car— A k11111 old man with snowy hair. Ile little knows the picture fair, The music sweet, 1 bear away Upon the noisy train to town To linger with me through the clay: '!'hose outstretched hands, that gentle. face So full of love for helpless things -- 11ow lino a high!! What music sweet, 'I'lia; 01.10.13 of whirring wings! --Louella C. Poole. NURSES Th. Toronto Hospital for Incurables, In efnlleticn with Bellevue and Allied Hospitals, New York City, offers a three yrars' Course sr Training la young women, laving the required education, and desirous of becoming purees. Thee Hospital sea adopltd the eight. hour eysttm. The pupils receive uniforms of the School, a monthly allowance and traveling taprnirs to and from New York, For further Information apply to the Buperinte•Ident, IPA Refreshes Tired Eyes `u,Ite Murine Co.,Chlcngo, (orlst'eCurcrook A WOMAN'3 SUFFERING Relieved by Lydia E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound ' Verdun, Montreal, Quebec. — " I am one of thousands who have taken Lydia E. Pintchom's Vegetable Compound and 1 have great faith in it. I can safely say it has relieved my troubles and I shall never be without a bottle of it in my house. Since my last baby was born I suffered from pains and backache and would feel so tired I could not do anything; in my home. Since 1 have been taking the Vegetable Compound and Lydia E. Pinkhain's Blood Medicine I feel so different, i recommend it to all my friends and hope it will cure other women who are suffering from the trou- bles I had."—Mrs. Tiros. H. GAi(DNER,' 821 Evelyn Street, Verdun, Mon.treal,' Quebec. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound is a dependable medicine for the new mother. 1t is prepared from roots and herbs, contains no harmful drugs and can be taken by the nursing mother. Its worth in restoring the mother to normal health and strength is told again and again in just ,such letters as 'Mrs. Gardner writes. A recent canvass of women users of the Vegetable Compound shows that 98 out of every 100 women taking the medicine are benefited by it. They write and tell els so. Such evidence en- titles us to call it a dependable medicine for women. It is for sale by druggista everywhere. C ECZEMA OVER FACE AD BODY Nearly Driven Crazy By Itching, Cuticura Healed, "1 was bothered for a year with eczema all over my face and body. It was in pimples and I kept it irri- tated by scratching for it nearly drove me crazy itching, and it kept me awake nights. " I was treated but It did not help me, so when I heard about Cuticura Soap and Ointment, I bought them. I used two cakes of Cuticura Soap 'and one box of Cuticura Ointment and 1 was healed." (Signed) Alton Booska, Charlotte, Vermont, Sept. 16, 1924, Clear the pores of impurities by daily use of Cuticura Soap with touches of Cuticura Ointment as needed to sd ,the and heal, Cuticura Talcum is fragrant and refreshing, all ideal toilet powder. Hample Each rye. by MIL Addrroe Canadian Depot; "Btoubouce, Ltd., Montreal." Price, )loop 2r,,. Ointment if owl Ede, Talcum rho, Culicurh Shoving( Slick 20c. ISSUE No, 4.1--'25. .14•11.......... remmageasi—Emen SEE OUR NEW LINES 1N Ladies 8c MEN'S SWEATERS NEW LINES IN Boys 8c Meal's Overcoats ASK TO SEE THE NEW Leather Lined Overcoats for New Suits for BOYS AND MEN ASK TO SEE OUR $15.00 For Men SPECIAL OFFERINGS IN Ladies Hose, Men's and Lades Coats at $1.00 8c $2,00 each. WANTEED FARMERS DRIED APPLES PAGE S---TilE BLS 1'H STAN 1)A1lP----Novembe1' r 1925 x+++4,++++++..,,,, � 'fir �f r wl^ ti'r wry + + 'Jr win + + ..,, ,, HOBBERLIN inn ++ + 11 I �1 ,►/ ',` \, .a� �b X41• C7 �.1:. r , .`. , . w 1 / • 1 w1 + + �i\...'I`I\%►\7►✓+\I��,C�;CE�;�Cir3;���?;r�c F�t�r• + 1 E. BENDER, BLYTH, ONT. Local News (continued from 1st page) • No. 1 Majority for Nits. S. 11. Gidley is visiting Toronto and Lcndon ftitr.ds. No. Trinity Church Ladies' Guild will hold No. t sir annual Chicken Pie Supper with their Bazaar, on Dect tuber 5th. Further par titulars later. Would the party who took the brown checked coat from Mr Robt. Johnston's I No. 1 the night of the Auction Sale, kindly love No. 2 • s ttr.e at The Standard. No. 3 Mr. John Johnston and family, of ; East 0 4 ..... .... Wawanosh, have moved to town and tak• . o. en up their residence in Mr. T. C. IvicEl• No. 6a No 7 1 la 2 rit* r.t.ri:r King ':.. BRUSSELS • Majority for King 1 GREY ray's dwelling on Queen Street. During the absence of Rev. G. Telford next Sabbath, who will conduct Inaugura Services in Fordwich, the morning service at St. Andrew's will Le conducted by Rev W. D. McIntosh, of V ingham. who occu hied the pulpit last Sunday morning Rev E. F. Chandler, of Walton, will preach in tee evening. The annual meeting of the Iluron Coun ty Children's Aid and Humane Society will be held on Tuesday evening, Novem- ber I0111, at 7.30 in the Baptist Church, Goderich. Officers 1<i'1 he elected and tenons given. The County Warden and others will address the meeting and Ian- trrn slides will be need to illustrate the Hor!.. The Public are invited. A movement to embrace all the count• i in Western Ontarie in a join -hands in fight to check advance of the corn borer is under way by Goverranent officials of this department of Agriculture. Plans are n w being laid to launch an extensive cam paign in the counties worst affected which will call upon the assistance of every farm t and tire general public as a whole. Remember that the annual Fowl Supper and Concert under the auspices of the Wernen•s Institute will be held in Memor- ial Hall on We. nerdiay, Nov. 1 1th. Sup- per will be served trent 5 to 8 p. m. after a hick a splendid prcgri in will he given, consisting of numbers by Harvey McGee, comedian: quartette, duets, solos, elocu- tion and rtadings, milli the laughable ':otncdy entitled ''Pumpkin Ridge". Ad- miaion- .adults 60c., children 35c. Not for many years has the Presbytery of Huron met in Blyth, and it is, accor- dingly with keen satisfaction that the churches involved are looking forward to the meeting today (Thursday.) This meeting. which is' to be held in St. An- drew's Church, begins at 10 a. m. and con tinues during the afternoon Addresses will be given by a foreign missionary on fur - furlough, by Rev. Dr. D. C. McGregor. of St. Andrew's Church, London, and by members of Huron Presbytery The meet Ings, both morning End afternoon, are open to the public and all who come will be mace welcome. The ladies of St. An- drelv's Church are preparing to verve din- ner for which a charge of 35c will be made Wesley Church, Clinton, (formerly N1+thodist) ared Willis Church (formerly Presbyterian) as the result of the coneum- rntiition of church union on June 10th last, have unanimously decided to hold their eerviccs ae one congregetron and thus carry out to the full the ultimate goal to which church union aimed. Both church- es Have been in existence for over 60 years end:their putting into action the princip- les of union should not only strengthen but; enable these congregations to do greater work in future. The church will retain the services of Rev. A. A. I-Iolmes and' Rev. J. E. Hogg to the ernsl of this yea, when the former will be superannu- iated. The action of Clinton churches should be followed at many points in Canada where the overlapping of Union 1 Chilrch congregations is derogatory to the FOR SALE—A number of Scotch Col- epir;iit of union and a useless expenditure lie pups. 5 weeks old. Apply to John 01 Mont' y. Lamont, 'phone 22.10, Blyth. Ont. 80 53 89 '222 94 70 8; 56 87 90 97 673 Majority fur King 365 (loul;tttcet No. 1 61 No. la i0 No. 2 70 No. '2a .._..• 66 No. 3 60 No. 3a 56 No. 4 91 No. 4a 74 Nos 40 No. 5a 43 No, 6 No Bea Advance Poll 76 66 54 4 811 Majority for Spotton 396 }iLYTI} 74 53 No. 1 No. 2 127 Majority for Spotton 161 %atINIELD No. 1 70 2 .. 43 . 71 4 43 5 119 6 ... 78 s f82 Majority for King 210 110 WICK NI. 1 '23 4 6 6 71 r9 37 05 221 24 40 3e 51 40 39 20 ails 110 101 81 91 59 98 88 79 93 66 81 152 120 8 1207 118 110 228 . e ►9A ��' • 11,; tra.1 )? • le Iy I ti ' W �r) erg t"i .iI.\] r 1 - '\ 1 r: `4 4% 4' r ++ '+ 4 ce +.1..1,..+ + (i.+ + .1, 114' ev eI.' 'I' .t:. � \ .t. Ft/ .e; 0 Tailoring The new fall scivplc:s are here. A large sange to choose frown of all the latest cloths NEW CJIFS New fall caps in the latest colors and shapes. EpOI' S We handle oInl'r itl-lt:best makes; Queen Alexandra ond Gainshoro for \Nom e. n, and ling Edward and /1 scot for Men in fire shoes and in heavy Ph1oes. G R E l-3, HAW THG R NE, STERLING are nt.• A FULL ASSORTMENT OF Fresh Groceris s ti rujts and $ • Canned GoOds WE MAKE A SPECIALTY • OF BULK M_EAS t COFFEES R. J. PO1JLLL Blyth t. 'PHONE J, Os M Ontario. . Our Final Clear - 111g Sale 00111.. lflOfl CLi Ft..\\,fr L. 9 3 IT WILL BE MUCH T O YOUR ALV .i=:...i.') TAGE TO PUR VFI- A .12 YOUR WANTS EARLY. • W EI HAVE A BIG STOCK BUT DESIRABLE GOODS WILL DISAPPEAR QUICKLY � ./1 y r HE GIVI1 YOU A GOOD SE- LECTION ION AT THE CO•MMENCEM'ONT OF TY SAL'' ;� r...., -A q t� T t.1 i rnrrt .....ti `(Y 1, r'1.iJ '' 1 t i Ss. Iii `av: c11 or,. r„:?-) DIY % M " "4/ 'ii' % ;D'' 'r.L/ VP is✓ ++++++++++++.4-4-44+++++++4.43; ' + ^rig + r . w . + .�¢.�..4 .4 .4. + I r , + + + + i 3; �!''11l''Y 'tit`')Q 47� f �Y YY ff MORTGAGE SALE OF FARM IN NOTICE OF '101\NSI111'OF 11CLf.E1T. 11''t"' P utsuant to the Pr;w'(r ( f Sell(, crmlt:in• d in a mortgage, there will be olfeicd 11:r 1.ale by Public Auittnn at the Almon l louse, in tt,e tswn of Clinton, on Friday the 13th day of N.wrnlber, 1923, at 12 o'clock, noun, the fu.lottire valuable farm being corrpc,st d nt Lot Nnn b, r 34, in tne 10th Cone(ss:(,n of the township of Hail. tt On the premises is a Mime dv(1 it g 09 v, ith a stone foundation 2:)y:10, one and a half storey tram; Icttche!n 13e 1) one etor- r y barn 5202, dt iving shed 18x10 girt 63 pin 25x40, thtee acres of orchard. three 58 springs and well, fences mostly wc.ven one,= 1 The front of the farm is somewhat hilly hut the back 50 acre's is first elms day loam. The hilly part is good clay land, but s'.an stone. There are about six n:' s( ven acres of good timber. The loan i; situate about 2 miles fain Londsboro and about 7 miles from Clinton. Terms of sale 10 per cent. at tient of sale and the balance within 30 days v ith- cut interest. 'l'he prop:rty will be sn'd subject to a reserve bal. For further particulars and terms of sale apply to McPherson & Mal, ins 29 Downie Street, Stratford, Vondrlr's Solicitors DATED October 23rd 1925. 59 15 10 512 3 02 93 84 68 86 199 178 142 156 97 76 55 69 564 64: Majority for Spotton 76 NAST WAWANU' I1 N0. 1 53 2 $3 3 90 4 73 5 47 Majority for Oing 100 MORRIS No, 1 2 3 5 27 85 ' 39 40 35 546 240 '96 41 67 - 72 79 59 ' 74 89 6 234 6.1 510 380 Majority for King 130. COMM( Mt No, 1 3 5 e 70 28 103 69 55 02 53 24 179 165 Majority for King 84 Total Majority for King 94. ect-plati Stet meta Serf i11i1<z� 1..1 ;•. ''.narrm 1 SIMPLE RELIABLE. DURABLE /iVEXPA7/a/VSE' GUARANTEED 2.50Upords 'I'll E Standard Boake, S 1 ti 114)5? ('1)' <<; flehoul & UI)Jhli('N Ii.LY'I 11, - -. ONT. FIRST I'031' - Voters, Lists. 1025, MunicipJlity of the �a Village of illyth NNotices is herr by Pluto that 1 have! calm plied with section 10 of the Voleis' Lists Act and that 1 h tv; 1)'sta,.1 up at my 0Iflee at the Village of l3yth, on the 'Lith day of October 19:7), thc•'li.t of all the persons 1ntu',d to vole in Il;: f Aiuc- icinnlityfor Alerr,hetsof l'atl•arurnt and at Mudicipal Elections and that said hst renta'1 5 then, for inspection. And 1 hereby call upon all voters. to take immediate proece dint's to have any, errors or =visions corrected accord r g to 13ty. Dated at Blyth this 2319 clay of Octo- ber, 1925. JAS, D. M(X)DY, Clerk of 13:11h. Bluth C,'larire,t. Rutter, dairy., 34 to 35 Eggs per cloz price according to grade [lay per ton 12 0Q to 12 00 Hogs per cwt 13 50 to 13 50 STRAYED Strayed front the premises of the undue signed, 81n line Morris, on or about Oct 14th 3 black 1 red and 1 grey yearlinv cattle. Information as to 11.eir wit, re. abouts will be app[,`,ciatcel by the under. signed. Chris Rogerson. w'» . „ CARD of TII;ANKs The undersigned desire to extend th i thanks to heighbvis and fi tends lea• tnen ,y' ) kirldllelts and untny expre siun`t of sy'Ill r f palhy during their recent bet -ow tont to ' ri the death of the late Nelson Ric hot rid. 'l'nc family. MONEY '1'O LOAN- We have a few thousand dollars wh eh we can place uu first mot (gage, farm of village property. The Standard Real state Agency, FOR SALE- A number of young pigs ready to nmvc i`1 a couple of weeks. Also 0 a number of cows due to fle;hen in Nov- ember. Apply to 1Vm. McGo',van 'Phone 70, Blyth Ont. LOCAL SALESMAN WANTED -To represent the' Old Reliable Fonthill Nur- •eries". Big demand for. stuck, Start now at best selling time. Exclusive terri- tory handsome free outfit. liberal terms, Stolle_ ,fir Wellington, Toronto letter tteeeketre' COWAN In East \'teawaraosh, on Friday, October 30th, to Mr. and Nies. George Cowan, a daughter. ICE CREAM BRICKS Certo, Fly Tox. Wilson's Fly Pads Blyth and Purity Flour. Pei.Tins 8c 'esfons Biscuits, Apex Canned Goods, Fruits of all Kinds. Sealers, Rubbers, Zinc Rings, 4A 4e v5' 4. r 4+ GOODS DELIVERED + 4. r:7 n JASI lkil_VTI9, ONT 'PHONE 14 1091/1211in A..6 X, 4114.4' ,•tiltrIlliMartgrASSII >r ilii C.t 3:10, a . 11 • I, RU3S IN 'EVERY SIZE and various shapes are included in our showing + of floor coverings, where - ever you liave space for a rug. we have one to tit it. You have only to come here with the dim - elisions and we will show you rugs in various designs and colorings will:meet both your ideals and your ideas of what 18 reasonable in price. ^^ �� �� fes• - . 1E ' L4 MA J 3 .k 1 J.. "�,u.at:C. �..ja.L'SLl SLS•. y,. p �+ tt itom)t 'dtr. kr.:}tiri► • a 14 14, 41 4+ li..•'.• '• owl. w.+