The Goderich Star, 1934-01-25, Page 2eery
ot
-ittotsoNt,
. . ' •
• Othi IOW
cOUNIT,
_
One More the town ot Ooderielt we)s
mu the ComitrOlthrl4
CoMeit Under', haliPier AnaPiees. thin 0i
tbe. ceelssion of its last cOrt*ening,
Huron lsoPe$ that such an experience
never be mita*
' • **rest centres in the new method of
:selectings warden. Some difficulties of
the neis arrangement whereby s chair-
man •is to be Ousters in- open totincil,
bliVe \been pointed out but, by the time
this paper is in print the Oen Will hate
been. tried., ,
It is our -belief that the hard headed
rePreSentatives fa hard headed, sound
PoePle will have overcome ell diffi-
culties and har. chosen asatisfaCtory
vsarden without undue trouble.
• There b no major issue before \the
. body which leads to thehopeor a short
sets Ott and prompt disposal of nem***
business. Reorganized treaturers."
Clerks' offices will doubtless be an aid to
eXpedition of bitsiness stitholigh the
44$4.
,xibikLty
womezt With eoeiSeale have tried to
stake ne sort ot_suPattaoh eut 01 the
bt)" he is, but bit
about his Wirt tir'e
that he ehts44 be tailed',
h niUns ut. *Mune In,
,
StateMalit 9(
31411 100
oeturt*01
-h*ebirraeimue$401--
• nlY-ievilli OS* *it stit'
elgt br the, rector. • poty
-1114 /04% 40fle outaidethe reetOry,
the
.. 0 ' why 1, .izI
2 $91.0.g." ' PAY%
hat . IS so ''',
.n y; 7StisineSS: is it:<?oct. in our
.ctt*' , cg.)1P1.t ,"' '-04074 *.. Pilf.,
of
not ,.4.fr
M." "La
11.* not oar), "The OPOU
was snow" Tlae
ari, with Aire 'tit
if
reltrettOie allerlfige Or funds Made fhb not saYg It was a
. g
necesiary but very .iireat credit ,is due OW, 4I was a dislual.'filithire,"
Rev; ,mr. unis.,,the,x0004 for the Ours 1..) 0 110t sot fini., toured the OM' trY *4,
. „
ale and detenninatiott he displayed In 414)Orve the habits of th'e Say.
• ,,,,
' ' ' . "4' Iii' t lt,14,”
Ming the, Joh ,anct tor the hie* ealim "lie C °ens Pt the "1" *
uJt
atter as
ft
le moaner In Which 'it Was ;Wiest out "Ise. -11-0alin
• * * ClovernMent.-Prontallice. *end ,ayls
table ern, not ,gtIVser-Ment.,
It is to be regretted that the prortun,.. Protege. Pronounce Prosteseha, 0 a*
dation or so maincradio almounosrs itt in no, both WS OS in day, prirlcipal le -
so dePlorible. The Omit; to cent on .1ast syllable.
a man. Pronounce -the letter u es though .1rrevocable. a Pronounce isrevso-kasbl,
ft were 'co. This has Well OOmmented 1 aa ln it, e 'tut in let, it unstressed, ae-
on kintiMerable' times and while it has nilt 4"nd
Contractor, .4ecent seeend, syllable,
an unpleasant 'sound. to Casuidlane aP- not the%ftrat.
Pears' to be an accepted practice In the .
Mausoleum. Pronounce mo-so71e-um,
United States. But when One of oUr suss 40 sr sem second 0 as in gm 0 as
own announcers pronounces Sir William in. inc. Principaraccent on third sYllable.
Unlock% name to rhyme. with mullet; the , Palestine. Pronounce the 1 as In val.
limit of patience has been reached. entitle.
The Chief,Justice eertainlY 'sloes net nse Words Often Misspelled
such a prommclation himself. Surely Twelfth; not twehrth. Opossum; opo
there is Some way of securing greater
untformtty in such matters.
0 * • 4.
_
Someone ill ottawa is entitled to a
etst....deaLOLArerItts-_-APP,a.„,M4.17.....1Ltt
„.,..:,,Aer4,04i:goteslat_ilieect with eendirourarosuods issts, sussoiss. 'ss *um au;
tarn,. triaibittation_ct: _
other titan & hishlY C0.111Pefent Mai.1 hay printed, lavishly illustrated book
to straighten out. entitled "'Canada 1934."
Just why the 1034_,Instead_ of 1933. is
THE RADIO FIREBRAND
not clear, as' it gives a somplete picture
of the eountry up toDecember31, 1933.
usuahy such a pitblicatiOn Might be,
„expected :in thehands of the public
about IVittreit, 1935, when it would be of
U* einicelvable Value W1t:n:120e it is, re.
ceived on the 19th 01 January; 1934. It
is 'ft,most admirable piece of work of 18$
pages dealing with all phases of Cana-
dian life and.. carefully indexed.
• 4Ee ittai congratulates l�nyrn�us
authors and,whoever was responsible for
its extraordinary proraptstess.
• 4
We have alWayShad. a deep espiU�r
ltoaievelt as a man endowed
with untbital ability, foroe and, \ love tor
hg-telic4mien. We Should like to See
win' for bis own sake hi his, battle.
--Ur better llvineconditions tor the aver-
age ;jut. `.
a.tt It is dif5cult° to reconcile his
use of rather Coughlin
as arnbuth-
p3ece with his avowed wish to -extend the
.band-ot fellowship to all peoples. The
-Detroit -Priest-is. tee itimlocierate-
;statements regarding the Anita and par-
tkubutt oreat-Britain, The sooner- the
.-Arnericen:peOphs eee- that there are two
4*to the war- debt question the better
ft* *114.••'-IrOr that _Matter Great Britain
• . has*not.reitudiatest'her debt tO the Unit-
. OUR DUMB ANIMALS
The ibise and the Ilard Time*
(FrOm Our Dtimb' -Animals)
17. 11. Department of Conunerce
•hat recentlY -PO/Wed iv carefulfy pre-
§t4,0114,m414., Tztucr c9ugh2in pared booklet entitled, Ws"The Farm
•ei uratrutrize a few of ite
Putt it She)
statements.
*WM. with the Attitriettritt (rti a be* „
Defors tne taming of tractor, auto-
WhiCh Atit12i410 feet "11Unrea'truck and 'automebile, it required aP-
11021sib2e and hatg itittbimted tier Wen-
I
proximately 18,000,000 acres of crop land
ofileferrh,sg further 'paymentsuntil ts produce hay and 'grain for the horse,
,
• some Mere rational settlement can be
arrang.4, If the: American record
'debt PaYnietit Were Perfect her -Ookess
r-
nesi. As it Is there does not seen, te
•
!WY desire to approach the question with ,
autplusea have meant decreased prices
,for- these fitriti_products,..greatly loitering
-farm ,ptirehasing power, 'and the "redues
tion itslhe latter has deeted)the entire_
country.
_The.-...mininnun, figure of 18;00
atrei released by the decrease in horses
and mules between 1920 and -1930 is tut.
yearly 0,006,000 bales
'a. cotton; half thre usual crop, or 250,-
000,000 bushels of wheat, , About one-
ha.14,1a.St ileVembeii .itassettles( third of the wheat clots or 4121,,000,000
down, to the tsaniusion 'of some In*etS, bushelsof stinoont-inntareot-
t4 be Jud.a 4Ulet old' norniiii Wain Or
is it Unavittl and we have become used to
itf
and About 3,000,000. acres of plowable
land for his pasture. With the displace-
Ments of the horse:by the inachine some-
thing like 11,000;000 acres have, so re-
eas -yes surp uses of v ous
crops and livestock; in many crops the
StOell
Fther Ciughlirs appears -to be appeal -
1O tut emotion rather than to yes/ -
non. Prebeisly there are Political fortes
Worklomewhertirithe_b_ackgroundi: ,
EDITORIAI NOTES
Thia_,Virtter4.411lleh Started. off' With
It
kit Over 12,500,000 hogs it year. In the
three years abate tbfse figureti'were fur-
hect-byt-it; 1038-oetuitsit is
Ive
surpluses hoe inereaaid 'In magnitude
4nd.' the,adverse effect* have *tan*
eleefa j'inii0 Pties'!" 'ranch 111°" gerl°Uss
dos
that I** 21,000,060.40res.releated haVe
all been IOW, tO raise 'otteli, wheat end
corn; the acreage has been *need
iniong many Crops. The result rd the
study, however you look at It, at least
rah* the '4•140.0001,' Uow tar has_ tile
abieldoninent et the hole and
Placement by the Machine been respOri;
'OVA s'
o•
21. In • • ro
silt by "beer presumPtiOn, ea,e, PO'Wer in
*0r14 '0040 1i4.4.,t1 04104 one 111*
arititgonistio ,attitude toward
Oimit thittirc int4es it difficult 10 un'
deretend ho' any Oariadian. van' listen
,
-10 lihn With pimento, „
• • •f• •
• total butt -her* ,,were* Ming 9/.50 per
litmd:red weight for higs hat week, 'Tv&
ivinaricedsisivarlecover the ittiv4rico
'Which 'Were 4h, ,veghe .eh-kv...elct,,:vifeeis
". it is good news for time farmers
lat hoe hoga audit The exPect*.
s is that price* will 'keep Up. The
'from .)itogland i'aid to be
itnog with 110 -Sign .of 1a, letup
5. *
tanyrwonder why ihe ton�. or editor*
PaPera is not hither than.
It US lite Iteat re000 that the Weeltly
hmt ter Mcire tO do.than lltse Isb
dutiet701 the iitteitti
0 enumerate but ne.
to t .he *dike In
h as they
hi* .0* lob
fltm wonder Vett the
aa
*'
*,
0,
t •
P. two as, QUartel; two re, one I. pis -
appoint; one s„ two p's. Compromise;
Ise not • ize. Mucus (noun', %Sumas
(adjective).
Synonyms ,
-----Feasts-sfestivity„-
•
revelry, JolItflcatIon..
Pitiftsis-pitea 2ttspat-hetiep-abjeets
era e, sorrow . • • —
' Example, sample, specimen, standard,
model; pattern. •
R.etrench, reduce, curtail,
,decrease, lessen, economize. •
Plant (verb), seed, set, sow. '
Pov.ter, Ability, efficiency, energy, force,
strength.
Word Study
u y great conceptkm re ected
"Me a word_ __three times and it is. gennt.......• Wel •
yours." ssuss. sUPerior talents, in 4i
Let us increase etir vocabulary gave no security ofc°11tiC d t
* •
by mastering one word each day. Words - • •
for this lesson:
cuimmay..i peftainwg 0. the jatoen, The Irish long since earned a repUta-
tion tor curious phrasing. ,
or cookery. "aly culinary knowledge is
ted.„ _ story Here
islrearr:samitahingge.-_,I.tpneted-
an oici
witit-
PROSAIC.; dun; commbnplace; kirl.
none
teresting. He leads a very prestoz 044t:Aconlitirn4milit,,an.ftreYetitittdrinir
o a 1frlend how
PROPHST/C; pertaining to a prophet
„Hie voids hard he had drank' the day.before, said:
or propliecY; predictive.
bore a prbOetie significance ." "Alit my dear bnr my drink
better than half ol'em fora long time,
SUPER,FICIAL: comprehending only
butat loft tincllng 1 c,4aul4 nal
what is apparent. ; shallow. "Her super- flier 4°
nor stand .1 walked away and ran home
flezzeial rilintrisdnitcot11;d tanovit ngrga!thep th_e_potetsr .1.'xit as. 4a,et, • as 1 !ouide, _
thle tor bit at ph110100Y,
hie been 4e
ed Oyer and over !won in the lives, .141
Ot US who are 10liger lit /the 'fir** flush'
.or youth.
1.84 ts., it Oems,
av 41-1,*
Or'
to ftich
ateir eifte* 00'0 !OnInAt 414,11#7,_
therefore, faiiet.‘witdom,,,,and :lio:c41141
or, race Ws ,tetter guard itgairdit:groas
abititlitr thanmthe7bri9litett talents *
the Weed." •
ftesillit the Most shining' egaMple to
p the truth' or this Wile the late Pres
by Want "voMPO.414 tO. fOrtivitn, ePtnieli
that Wll*On POisiested the most Protennd
intellect or any president, of 'the 'United
'Stites. . was said to have been 'prOrte
to alOornees Iron his cabinet, having
on-
ly 'Orle,asiVisar, Col., House. The reason
is liticribed to having been mentallY
a0.,f$r advance of his colleagues that
soon discovered that. he had nothing
lit•common with,' them._
And yet he:. Made what was Possibly
thes most antsaing; 'Certainly the most
disitstreus, mititalos of any president of
' his country. He went Europe to par-
ticipate In the Pettie Cortference at
Versailles. There he aponsored the
League ' He was tottti_ly,..out
of Ilia element :and was made to look
ridiculous :when he tried .to play the
Iother' Man's game. He Was no match
foroClemenceau and Lloyd. 'George., He
also- lit:00104y Misread_ the minds AI- his,
own people at home who. not only re -
,pride, tliey :tilat:4,r,!1,
•
A • •
'
e ptomeqfu6ar, o
pudiatc4 the League 01 Nations t*ut sent
WIleon o an unthnely grave with a, bro-
--- .----
ati'Aes:hitif-iis'-r-Prisfoiiiiiisietivialist
of his Own- surpassing ability he would
have *Mined at borne and from the
rare and lofty air of emoteWashington
would Probablyjaavelsee.n able to clidate
a far 'Alder:peace and-watild-have_sensed
the bitter opposition Or his countrymen
to the League of 'Nations* time to spiefll
himself the hunsillation• of having this
• . .
Success Ban mg 0 eration
1.011M11
The Bank of Montreal places at the disposal of
its Clients a nicidern, efficient service, in every
(Jepartrnent of domestic and foreign banking.
•Eatabilthed 1817
TOT4-1.- ASSET -S -.IN EXCESS 911 $75 0,000,000
. • • ,
Croderick Branch: R. C. WFIATELEY, Manager
44,44.04.4,50. „,
14.4 .14
driving out or away, 'Ite ixpuisive • *
power or' a new affect1en,"-4haliners. are now considering the Alraanack
ir(INGENT,', Valiant' * sherPs Onas. tor ism The orange in the use -of the
tion, as of the tastesmell„ or feelinga. letter "1" for 15l 15 coming into effect.
"A. pungent odor filled the room." The front page is printed with the s used
, as we use it Oils the contents ' are as
rioted- -111-1-the-foregoinfveatraotts-Th
were- doubtTess rul-a of gratomar er speis
ling, designed to cover the proper use of
the letters„but they are riot obvious from
perusal. 1114 ',instance the word "groM"
its the first sto itt this column is lled
with two. Vs." whereas most words-1%71th a
double sibilant are spelled "fs." How-
ever, it's a long time since this form of
went out and if -would not
-
easy to find out the why of it now.
• The, Mor,ningAlter _
In lionywoOd. they're telling p1 a star
who, the morning after a .vikld drinking
party, _woke in.a state of it
physical
and mental despair, bid • at .least
own room. Ills pet kitten was meander-
ing aeross the floor;
"Great viicat cat" moaned th,e „stiti
ferer, "don't stamp your feet so!"
,*
_
. Christmas Hope
ilefore -the Sire-cri-Christmas
youngish ladies were chatting.
"Mollie," said -the prettier Of the Wo,
"would a stoeking hold.all you want for
Christmas?" • • ,
-74o7*the itther, "it- wouldn't
But a pair of socks would."
_ • -
• -* "As Itheri:See-Va!"-
A young- islander, repatriated trent
lonely St. Itllda, to the mainland ot Scots.
raiwor---dropped4ro
MOtor car. Looking MO it with: sur-
prise, he several times exclaimed,' .44
picture e ra*- fatlierP! Still,..gitaing and.
tuierintts-110-catried--IAttonus:sindAtiti
it, but not before his wife had deteated
Jilin. • •••
Secretly searehingsit Out the •tilsosget.ed
Into it with equal attenishment and then
said. '''9011. I needna. jealous, She's
no beauty" ° '
„
•5,* •
ot *Hy
sible -tit the farmer's, qv,erpreductiori.and "How rild you coMplie' your great Att.
107# prices at Whith he lias had to- Sell tionary0" the lexicographer Wit* iisked.
his ,PrOdUcts , and .4* ..contributed, to the
difficult tinsel of the lad tiiirsitatss"?.•
ArnOisg the many tains* Or tho dark
diik*thr,ugh *liteli'lhe 'fernier* and all
tiw'rest of. us hive been *sing, it ter.
tazo- ttem as- it the tarnieftil int*
hitthislg ttri .horaes urthuekattl..,:_the
lattnees, stripping.oft the.harhesis Pinang
off the :cellar and then Saying:AO him
goodbye might not have beealtogether
the Parter ecenomkt. Wisdom.
tiltlatt 04* WA% and atiranlIktig the
skin. rutitantoo flower. . Cool is
. • 1
• ... 4. • - •
.v•
1 -WHAT OTHER
'EDITORS' SAy
Hanover Post: One of the transients
who stopped over -night at the Cobourg
lock -up -recently, wrote the following
verse in an inconspicuons place on the
-
Bound -for the Harbor of Ztowhere,
Headed for Port Forgot; •
• Feared and hated -an outcast
• Craving a resting spot.'
Gleams' there no welcome beacon,
• Looms. there no friendly land,
For the soul that wes mine died- in me,
• For want of a guiding hand.
Greatest Snap in the World
(Bowmansille Statesman) „
Every oncein a while -some clseerful
individual. reiiiarks to us, "Well, now
that the Paper is out,, I suppose you. can,
bake it easy for three or four days."'
try editor has -nothing betiteeit
press days. Business rims alongis auto-
Matically. 'whert paper bills. come due,
money drops off the tree with which. to
• -them...___BAbseribera vie with e
other to 'see who can pay the farthest in
advanee. .Advertisers ittat beg for addi-
tional sPace, and the way news hunts up
..the editor aist? Pieasarit-W. content -
plate: ,
• There 15 snioethintatrangeabout-th
. • ,
the, organization" of the the driv-
ing orce which brought.the farmers to -
&her in: 'a spirit Cf co-operation un-
equaled anywhere else.
• All his -life aft ardent advocate of co-
operative selling of farm -products, Mr,
WoodswassiesponSiblestor the-tormation
of the first y,theat pool in Canada, the,
Southern L- Alberta 'Wheat Producers'
Association. spite of the opposition
• ,the -premier of the day -Herbert.
Greenland, .-the--first-ALF.A.-prinse--min-
ister-Mr. • Wood successfully organized
an Alberta wheat, Pool. The 'inoVernent
spread throughout the "West until the
d
three Prairie Pr
pvin s ere te , and
Mr. Wood became the wheat pool's first
President.
It is no secret that Mr. Wood could
hays ,been Premier of Alberta when lite
Liberal Government was overthrown .In sesz
1921, but he always disliked public life..
Be preferred to be the power:beh1nd-111e
throne, as Ise has been ever since, and
still is today. .
•-s
• Woniss in children. work havoc. These' -
,pests attack "the tender lining .of the in.
testines and. If lett to pursue their rav-- '
age,.s undislurbed, will ultimately perfor-
'ate- the Wall,.because these, worms are or
the hook 'variety, that cling to (Ind feed
upon. Interfor_surfaees„ IVEiller's-WOrns
Powders. Win -tint only- exterintnate theie
• worms, of whatever variety, but will-
-Serve -to--repair the_ injury the' have -
done.*
• -•
The potato production of the -
United Otates as estimated on Dec._
1st, is 31.74„ Minion Ibusbela- as corn -
pared with. 357.6 million bushels int:
In 11119, it' is noted that there were two,. way news Heins act.- When. the paper b
nut the -editor slmplf geed to •Icds'Ilest--
and ions baCk. in_ists.olutirs *king ViSe
and _Waiting forsnext-weeles press dar.
---The-daysbefore-press-days„-Peopl
'Wore the Office door, and then file in
eclitwes of- the sun itrid-fivo of the moon
all inviiible in the British Isles. „Ilte
Royal family teiriaina, thirteen.* number
and 'the table of sttarsstetsbillirand re-
ceipts were as in. 1817. Later on, as the
lull burden of the •Nitpelsofik Wars begalij past the. 'sleek and tell hint all the news,
to-be-4dt, thehe grew- #ew.--tO-
coine 14, btatien'on trade and. tonusi
no parrallei ,With oth owls -times is
marked,. our own 'younger generation
the -week.. -41e-writes in -fifteen;
or twenty *nits% takes it beck and
hangs it on the hook, -The compositor
takes the Copy and shakes, it over th
Dr. Wood's
wt,
-Dry,-Hacking COugIi
Nearly Choked Nor
• Mr*. 0.11 haat
a _terrible dry, hacking cough which would nearly
• choke me. •
I tried -all kinds of medicine to get rid of it, but
: they nester helped me and nay _cough still ihung on.
Norway I then tot a bottle of Dr.; Woisra Norway Pme-Synips
and in a few days Iny-tough was all gone, thanks 10-
Pine
this medicine.
of 'Dr. Wood's' on hand.'
oyrup ' Price-, 35e a bottle; large family size 65c, at all. -
drug and general stores; put up only by The T. Mil,-
burn-C-o..--Liinitled„----TorontovOnt.
/*- ....ors* Wit.
NO—RAlS
d0c* net reineinher When there Were no , type flies. Into -place and .after a be*
taicei an theatre tit*eti, no stanipa on tye filet hit* place and after a few
cheques, rio tax on tkkett to baseball br Thumps by the, foreman, the forme are
hoCke* or not any .such ready tor ,the press,againL
thing 4544 income tax or 'talet tax, Out to goo, down and dePOsitt some more
there, wits such 4 thrie.: Ult. not easY to .nioney h.), the•banke "
,have4faltli. the_hinhan we _it Is the sgreateet snap in. the cattalo",
. . .
that there are dill *hat .raight gue. ' •
'calltd vita pationi In the World, 'so • •
' blhaSthat they matt -rot War in sOite Athereies Giand` did man
'ar bekre their eyes of • •
. „
What wOH, ha4 c4:36Fi.ileteh,ersPeaPle.s: th. tole lod*oupictPrettreme- Pre -13116:1u' Pilitors yien.artha eonoeano_f
111;,.......011 • • 4
political scene Henry° Wise Wood
"Whlift, We live let. its vvell for •
former President of the United Farmers
erb:
I *
"Cih, it was something' 4ke having.prov
* • . A • of Albertitcls englled.itt
wissoas Ice lives les us .h.ve. wen _or
quiver vdth. Ones wif woe, led° •be- pretecting the interest* of the era (if
to 'Another.
, 313tt *Vet' so Arlieri he lights
„ _ hudeath .11 1.ills his province et the age of 74 years. -At
* --•*
Rtietrktea
"Do yen now where little boys go
ho %Witt. On tilintlaV !shed. StiudaYI
tic3*01 teacher Of :,Iter class:
"lres'Ill,4 rePliedronts little Weal. ")rt,
the side et the‘iiike *that's got a IWO:
.treeS. But you csn't got, girls' ain't al.'
lotted.' , ' .
Ali
• 6 , •
door befO*re it be burnt out" the.-le°71t eenlretit14)1i "j'e '11.1P.A*
_.* * • 7 , the vt'Oraii foxtrots' leader
An *orient iruttm, but one whichin a aerY Silteeh 811-°Nceti .thst wht14
we never heard: before. .
•is no longer president,lie is still Nho
chief" 'to .50.000 laimets.
Mr. Woad was barn in Yfissoari,, but
inOved with his tionq tt). "qui, *bort.
I
ly after -the turn of the 'century. in, '
1911 te became A nittUrislixed pritish '
etihject- and -during the nett few yew:*
laid the ftaltiOa4Pa ot a Skilikal. Party
' whioit ha* been .in. power in -Alberta Mal
101., Istr., 'Wood Was the, ge,niutilteffhld
morning dew. Safeguard* Mid beantitite ,
the - ' Moat ,aettealk..tottutia. akin. 14 had eheked 'lieraite Wat• dead--
*tato; cOrn;ileatona!tit elquisite .chrerrn there cottid, be no.dotibt about that.
Adds 4i, -Sitirtie *deli to the lidthed to her tying gasp., ItOir she
wetrien, Inva1u.b. tee sOrteldrilt cold --cold as 'ow .una , a ,a04th,
titoor. and .whlt.. Tet itt his ,00tt,.ibt..100.14.00t, 0,411.004,.
Otiet • he, ltleted 'hit. ..
Ottith tint,. *
at.* 41
cuitimion.
sal*
itt
Not 'fist *hid.
that mysterioui stranitertli
"tome kind of Investigator:"
'allrorkkhig for the.. goiterntitentY"
"i doubt It, He keeps pretty busy.,"
merit *lie Seeped, sPhttered and *eh to
UM *44.
"lust little Patithee 04,11 111*1
John," reviiiked hie Wife from the
* 5.
Pe,4 1
-4, N. .10 •
,
TS LONGER"
ASITARV SW11E-SS COAL
FROM COALSPUR AREA
THE LOWESt PRICE IN HisTollY
rin, 1
er tOn
0:..pER-TONIOn'4;(11,...CASO
for K,..IfEATER or OAK,
.4
:TherreP�r Distina etas* of -
Albeitet-Dothestic 'Croat,
FOOithilia Coal is the Leader 111 tile' -"cities Field
as Listed and ii.corninend'erf by, tite.
Standards Board:
Atk for it by natneand ,b6 assured of satisfaction
- •
EtUY' CANADIAN COAL
lye ErniAnyment tiztCanatlian Miners antritiiilivoyreere,
Ordir*Tod. Ciinada** .Clinikerleas tool,
VOR, SALE BY7'
Illhossost
4 .
Antittiditia, Poca
A
H�*i Store
r3,
9
77
.34
I ,r
tf
74