The Brussels Post, 1927-8-17, Page 2WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17th, 1927
Duck or Hen Qr
Why is it that duck eggs are not as popular as hen eggs? The only
reason we know, is, that the hen ADVERTISES just the moment
she Jays an egg, while a duck keeps quiet and hides her egg under the
straw. We try to be like the hen. We try to tell the world we have
a great line of building lumber, dimension etc,
All No, 1 5x B, C. Red Cedar Shingles (Edge grain]
All No. l Extra N. B. White Cedar Shingles
Alex, Murray & Co, Asphalt Shine:dee
Cedar and Hemlock Shiplap and hoards
Siding, F'iocring, Ceiling, 141uuiuiilg, lite.
Dressed 2x4 Hard Maple for Hay Fort( Tracks
1 1-4 in. Pine Wagon Cox Luntie2e. Esu.
Let's not hr,„ Ducks
Gibsoo CHF "IP "orv
Phone No.30 E DELIV1IR
7 '
,...�,.»....,moo„ _...,..�...
l
Sunday School Les: J.on
BY t' H'LRl.F_S G. TRIM i_'.l.;Lt.
(Editor of The Sunday School Tune;).
BIRD PR(YrEOTI ?N.
Sea Gull Is O,te of the Best Friends
of the Fanner.
Birds and their relation to agricul-
ture is the subject of an article by
Hon. E. 14 harrow, Minister of Agri-
culture for British Columbia, With
the exception of a few pat•ttaraphs,
the article applies to all the pro-
v(nc,•a, Due exrepted paragraph, ap-
plicable l0 a maritime 0011111lY,
s1.011ks out for the situ gull, which
. the writer atmos "is one of the hest
fr1, ads Of (110 fernier and should to
well protected ut British Columbia,
. L:.. .i Lc .,a- .: );;bili during0the
tall, waut.•r and sln•iu•', 00 (;elms 1!,-
' land trout the immediate come ;1119
ether pt cin and teen it follow., til
pewee, tl maria x many ina,cls dor
-
"W.; 41111:,,.• pe ra"d,• of the year, just as
the cru1 does."
:111 tui zr-.+tory birdli, whether in-
s'etko i ur ,:, ,1 e01„rs, should be
011 plot-t..•d. Many of the itt:•tt
tivet'rrin I nd. at•,• to is. found all Ile,
c;naly , orchards working front
do;, -light to dark and then 1;3;
til,, hot•tieutwti:'ts a e•onsideruble
aainult of 10010.y thiel( wtild have
i„ be .p•mt in cleaning trees ei insect
GOD'S PROMISE TO DAVID
Sunday. Aug. 21. — Chroui;Ic•> 17.
Golden Text. -
'fhy th; one, 0 God, is for ever and
ever; a sceptre of righteousness is
the sceptre of Thy kingdom. (Heb.
1:8.)
Is it a worthy impulse to d:sing to
honor God? If we have twelve('
much from Him, is it right to wish
to give much to him; If He has given
us a beautiful house, is it proper that
we should wish to give Him s beau-
tiful house? And if we Jind that
others have a desire to honor God in
this way, is it right to encourage
them to carry out their wishes?
The answers to these questions
seem obvious• enough, yet we may
be mistaken in answering then(.
David was mistaken, and a faith''ul
prophet of God was mistaken, as
they attempted to decide these mat-
ters in the light of their own entirely
worthy impulses, A worthy impulse
is a good thing, but it may lead us
into serious error, It needs to be
checked up by submitting it to God
Himself. David had built a Royal
palace for himself. Hiram King of
Tyre, had assisted by sending cedar
timber, with masons and carpenters
(I. Chron. 14:1). The Rindom of
Israel was established, and growing
steadily greater and more powerful.
"David went on, and grew great, and
the Lord God of Hosts was with hint
And David perceived that the
Lord , . had exalted his Kingdon
for His people Israel's sake" (11. Sant
5:10-12). The palace of David must
have been very magnificent, and pro-
perly so.
Now David says to 'o t1l:11 the
prophet: "Lo, I dwell in a )hetes- of
cedars, but the ark of the covenant
of the I.or l remain -;h turd •r cur-
tains," His meaning we, e : dens.
believed he should Lula a tempi,
worthy to ,L'slt,r the :e• : and henol'
God. He spoke uultu'.ir
are not told that he had pity •ci .lout
Nathan answ,red
"Do all that is 1n thine hear.,"i t
tit;• prophet to the King: .I :r •_,o,1
is with thee.- And we ::re not told
that the prophet had pray -,i ucit
it.
Though there did not 1,.•a.; to
God about this great matter, Gd.1d: l
speak to th•.'n:. When 1... :Ire about
to go ahead with some worth. im-
pulse without consulting God, Ile:
often lot tg1, h firs us 1n nn nl
taken plans. We read tint in. 11
night of the clay when D-lve,l ;toed
Nathan had t±elk,_4 '.ogetinr. 010:1
said to Nathan: "Go and 0.11 D.rvid
My servant. , . . Tho halt not
build ,lie a hous=e to 4101: in. " Then
He tells favid why, au,l it b 11:,01
thc, important Ie• -i"11 of lr:.titi, r• .for
Gee1'* lee'ding. ft was nut •1 n,•a
11 10 0pL for tie. Km,. r+ r h it.e,9
waited long sold patiently in. hi•:
promised Trot:•d,nn; hot It i. : to
for,- 4 yen the 1,- ;one we have
teamed well. •
God reminds David that 110 1111'1
never yet spoken to any of the: lead-
ers of Israel, sine, He 44rms* d0t7llt
this people into their land, about
building Him a hou,=e; but He ha±
"gone from tent to teat, and 1'ronl
ono tabernacle to another," When
we remember the explicit ill't Lel tions
God gave for the tent of meeting and
this tabernacle, we sae that the build
leg of a house or temple o.f woe: hip
should have been a natter fur His
leading, as He now made it.
The rebuke to David is a very
gentle one: and then God tells him
at great length not what David le
to do for God, but what God has
done and will yet do for David. It
is a marvellous lesson in grace, not
law. It is an Old Testament fore-
shadowing of New Testament bless-
ings; a type, in God's dealings with
Israel, of His dealings with the
p sts. Manners ttenl,i do w.,1l to rr• of
11 sting sates for birds in the 'iciuity
their fat,,a 111(9 undoubtedly th*Y
would find them of groat benefit.
The majority of hawks and uwis
Ire 1,rneneta1 to the tanner, although
at braes it may :tem. al• that some of
%r them do a eonaid, r::111e amount of
damage to the poultry In the barn -
Church.
Note that David was taken from
the lowliest place. "front the sheep-
cote," and lifted to the hi;:'hes: place
as a line, even as the Christian is
lifted from sin and death to th • very
Throne of God in holiness and re•
surrection life.
David is assured, moreover, that
what was mistakenly in his own heart
to do for God will be clone by his son,
who shall succeed him en the Throne.
Solomon was to build a house for
God; and he did so, as we shall see
in a lesson of next month.
The lesson passage is verses 7-11
ts one of the seven great covenants
of the Bible. These are explained in
the Scofield Reference Bible on Id.
Samuel, 7:. 8-17, and 1•un from the
Edenic Covenant of Genesis 1:28 to
the New Covenant set forth in Heb-
rews 8:8, The intervening coven-
ants are the Adamic (Gen. 3:15),
Xoahic (Gen. 9:1), Abrahamic (Gen.
15:8), Mosaic (Exod. 19:3', and
Palestinian (Deut. 30.3) .
The Davidic Covenant is described
as follows: "This covenant upon
which the glorious Kingdom of Christ
of the seed of David according to the
lies'h' is to be founded, secures:
"1. A Davidic 'house,' i,e., poster-
ity, family
"2. A 'throne,' i.e, royal authority.
"3. A 'kingdom,' i.e., sphere of
rule.
"4. In 'perpetuity,' ie., 'forever.'
"5. And this fourfold covenant has
but one condition: Disobedience in
the Davidic family le to be visited
with chastisement, but not to be
abrogation of the covenant. The
chastisement fell; first '•n the division
of the kingdom under Iiehohoam, and
finally in the captivities. Since that
time but one Ring of the Davidic
family has been crowned at Jerusal-
em and He w•as crowned .vith thorns.
Bat th;: L)aoidic Covenant is immut-
able, and the Lord God will yet give
to that thorn -crowned One, "the
:'nror,e of His father David' (Luke
1:"1-2 Acts 2:211-82; 15;11-171.
ACCIDENTS anti COMPENSATION
11: July the Workmen's Cfmp at-
,.tt m 19,1,1 received report.: cuv-
csng ),2111 accident's, this bean!' a
1• as the month of .Tune when
tm,re were net 0 ac Id nts; but th'
(intr.. ,or luf • of thld year is 'Mahe•?
'ham July-, 1''20. The fatal t est
nttlm :nunl,er. ei thirty—live, which
1 1 -rease I l u,im twee the eml.,,r
in tied' month heir. forty -* .yen.
1'11 • total 111 ,1. 0? .to; ,r,1 -d by the
\iee:fa:a.- (.nes ❑:.,.i ;u 1.inal'•1 in
.ili. .. r, .7±;.:,1:1.±;1, er tytticil
wt0s for i 'Orli laonsati±/ll
for injured workers ant 881.42.07
for the ,G<;,1 ,tire. 3 he total b •'(tut,
011)1.fe d in .Jr,_',,t 927, i,nlo nit a to
I ..,.11, •t-1,1 Ft,, rely 1,:...
year .8w:ie,lle r.qd.
seeeeir, 1 t:i arc:, 0,1,•. 1C.
I;, :tl't.aey, <;,•,*-i' 1 ;LI•uul•-,,' of the
L r.hs.iirL1l A,', id,111 1't cy, 01)11• .t s.o.
ciatious, called attention to certain
hazards 00 th-- :eu=nn. An employee
of 0 11111)! sal En,tern Ontario fell
from the dock :o the water and was
titownc•4. A traveller, -while driein0
in Western Ontario, turned i,ut to
allow another car to pa::<, his wheel.;
et ruck soft dirt and 011' car 1014 over-
turned, pinning him ele1•rneath and
killing him. Another accident, :men-
tioned because of its severity, hap-
pened in 0 metal worki,ag plant when
the operator lost his right hand due
to the helper letting the hammer
down while a plate was being insert-
ed in the machines
It is hoped that the number of ae-
cidents reported to the Workman's
Compensation Board in August will
be reduced through the exercise of a
little: more care and caution on the
part of all concerned.
Yard:,. It should. however, be borne
in mind that rinse birds of prey skirt
around hedges and fences, destroy-
ing hundreds of rodents.
Woodpoelters have been brought
into diseraee very often by people
who do not know their habits. The
woodpeckers are among the best of
the birds for the protection of trees
twin insects petits. The woodpecker
takes care of the forests, and with
his well formed bill is able to tap on
the trees and Lind many boring in-
sects which would otherwise destroy
the orchards and forests. This bird
does not attack the tree simply to
tear a hole, but when he Is tapptug
he is there for Insects,"
A GRATEFUL SEAMAN.
Surgeon Reminder of Operation on 14
Sailor 'fliirty Cea,•s .1„o.
One of the surgeons of a hospital
in Middlesex, England, recently re-
ceived a letter from a sailor remind-
ing him of an operation performed
thirty years ago,
T0.ere was brought to him then a
boy of 11 who had never been able
to move his lower jaw. Of course he
could not talk or masticate, and he
had 110th* prospects of being anything
but an object or charity.
The surgeon decided to operate,
and was entirely successful. The boy 1
grew up a normal being and became 1
a merchant seaman, and he never
forgot to be grateful or lost his wish
to repay the hospital. Thr other day 1
he arrived at the hospital and asked
for the surgeon; and was told 11e was
away. Deeply disappoint^d, the sailor
lurned to go, but not before he had'
handed to a hundred dollars, a sum
which, he said, was only small in
comparison Sita his debt, though It
had taken him a long time to save
it. Thr.n he went home and wrote to
the surgeon, reminding )tint of the
operation, and saying "I want to
thank you fat making my itfe pos-
sible, for without your nkliI and aid
my !ire would have born hardly worth
levan;."
Whatever disappointments this sur-
•_, on may have had in his own life
hw•,• was cnm),nsution for them 1(11.
IL• made a nip's life worth laying, so
:las uwlt 1't, was worth living.
V.'ut,•at Your Step.
yl st pe'• , u da,lce badly; 19011'
;1 on,
.s ,-'e 0 -
1 . ,end 111' 41' rhythm is
wtnn_.:,citl 111,•; •?'are they lose a Int
of 1110 plea ere ni' ilawdoz-.
In hi., 11,0 '. "Model( Pal 1roont
Dancing," ‘.'101 ,,r Sylvezder gives
11.1 t' v tie tole ^tint11:'1 Sr, sometall(:-_..
kw•p your muscles tint.
li:'n't 11 11 11011 y'nnt• .11011lll,•.,•n o1' move
fur arms:; keep thein p,rl\ oily stall.
!:••i. cit: 11 he,a1s 1.1' ieh tile floor wh,•n-
cy'.r it. f,.e11 c•„atfu*table and mantel
to do eo. Aiwa s ,laucc in time 10
't t.leaac, •mol keep your fret abso-
' 1, •m • tt tl lit,
twit - 0•.,,,a your 1.:,. 11,.', 10-
;
her ,, a-,1 tae pass,: tine
'•z p
102en by the man s tun lti
ui. ,citu1;11 i1.110'111.t. rad roil
!•p1' ,'trill -'nit. Penin
• Ides, )'j, 11 nlnyine Etirw:u'd
-:•1: or 'entp•11:0,) the weight. :,f
,lA• heist' isles)'-, Always 90 forward.
. rl t r. :l .,•,le 1•r with the When,
em ; ,,, c 0:1 1'ol1ov; 1110 c011
t ei:e L II•aeu ::))Lout utnkinc,• Ill:u-
• 1 11e'a;1•e to oilier dancers.
1' ate 111' l:;ave0' 'rtvist.
:\,.. illi ll,e•r: of 1..icke13:4.' .1,-riv, U1,
o!' ,1in•I' 'I'st•1a1.'s 1't0eluiahie
1, eaty IN :1:41: tar mon, NN 0.1 .11inT.
\v
Southwark, and
Ile' i'•. fii ;uilin,t','7l'li aro 444e4414W1'x to
rr••i'nn•e 'til•, lt, 11'11d interest in a
11::'1 til no' W1•410.4011.4411)„ which w':'s
r9:''' l sena• 111404 :1011 for poor -law
pn rpu..• , it. ,vas: ileo hone in
of 1 14v,'' '0)1151, 0111 the
Irnnl whirl( the „roil was
ialll, d Into I lie basin held by the
gtblaug hands of the pauper boy
is now In the possession of the bor-
ou 7)1 council. 1t was also in t.h1 lo-
"adiy or Slant Street Workhouse that
Little Dorris spent her childhood
days.
The "(blot" Question,
ilesirning in a body, the matron
and nurses of the hospital at Mare -
king, South Africa, did so because an
African surgeon operated on a Euro-
pean girl. The nnrr1l object to tak-
ing orders from a native 'trod to stand
by while he is operating on Euro-
peans. Protests have been made be-
fore In consequence of nimilar prat-
tices, but the nurses allcgo that nd
nodee has been taken of the corny
plaints. The doctor qualified in G1aa-
tm(•+-LOOK. AT YOUR LABEL j l ow in 1910.
±4
- THE BRUSSELS POST
MOTOR CAR HITS
BUGGY; ONE KILLED.
Miss Evelyn O'Hagen Victim of Ac-
cident in Greenock Township --
Brother and Sister Injured—Latter
In Teeswater Hospital—Driver of
Car Held,
Kincardiu', Aug. 1 L—One young
woman deed, a taster=el'inu:ly in-
jured and e brother, suffering )rueful
though leas .severe, hens was the toll
(:dein in an nrc•ident '1)4 ..1.1"t114 ; on
1111• 2nd come-ainn of Greenock
Township, in which a 0000)' ctu'
:•-11011 into a buggyEvelyn 0'-
1beA1, ;;e 1 2.1' daughter of John
O'fla!rrn, n flhr 11th contest,' of
Greenock, , d:'ad, her sister, Mar-
jorie, aged 18, is unconscious and
grits ' ;ujut'4 in Teeswater Hos-
pital, while a brother, Morris, has 0
broken collar bone and a badly cult
head and fate.
All three young people )care occu-
pants of the buggy and were a11 their
way to attend a barbecue being ;riven
at lint) dale by Panner Gao9l'ow•.
The motor c•01 was (11'ivetl by ,To web
Lippert.
Proceeding East.
The buggy was proceeding east
and the motor car west aloft; the se-
cond , nal c0nc<•asion,w hick is an m'din-
111)' conversion toad of medium width.
The buggy, it is staled, had no lights
and for some reason Lippert failed
to se. it, in time to avoid .1 crash.
The three young penp-e were hurled
from the vehicle with great force.
The buggy was completely demolish-
ed.
Mr. Lippert at once gave all the
aid he could. Dr. :McAndrews, ,f
Georgetown, who was visiting with
Father Goodrow, was quickly on the
scene and rendered first aid to this
injured, while Father Gooclrow, af-
ter visiting' the scene of +he accident,
hurried to the O'Hagen home, e)
which the body of the dead g'srl had
been removed.
Dr. Gillies, coroner, of Taeswrte:•,
was summoned and after viewing the
scene of the accident, decided to
hold an inquest.
There were no witnesses to the col-
lision other than those directly in-
volved.
The °'Hagen fancily is erominent
in the neighborhood, the father being
a well-known farmer, smile the
young people were also widely known
and highly popular.
Held on Nominal Charge.
Walkerton, Aug. 12—As a result
of the fatal accident near Riversdale
last evening in which his motor car
� crashed into a buggy containing; three
young people, Joseph Lippert is be-
ing held In the Bruce County jail
here on a nominal charge of reck-
less driving pending the outcome of
:the inquest next Wednesday,
Following the accident, young Lip-
pert, who has been in Detroit, but IF
!at present home 011 vacation, did) all
he could to render assistance to the
victims. Ile was later placid under
arrest on the reckless driving charge
!by Provincial Officer Widemeyer and
brought to the, county ,fail hec'e to
await the outcome of the ingpist,
Sera•t. Melville, of the Provincial
)mice, with headquarters in N'itrh-
n,r, is also working on the case,
Lippert is 21 years of age,
Dr. (Mies, of Teeswater, curorlc•'
impaneled n jury who viewed the re-
mains
r..:lins of Miss Evelyn O'Hagan early
this mort,iu',• and adjourned anti)
next Wednesday, Drs. McCue and
ytalkee, of Walkerton, performed the
post mortem examination
'rho three young O'ITa fns h -al
rived recently from St. C..1 1:111114110S
for 0 visit at 'their ]tome an Green-
ock,
Condition Improved.
'i'e,awat,n', Aug. 12 — Some fire
provement in the condition of Miss
Marjory O'Hagan, seriously injured
in the accident. near Riversdale tart
night, in which her sister lost her
life, is reported tonight by Dr. Gil-
lies, who is attending her 11 the '1'11es-
water ilo=pstal. Dr. Gill: s .;aid situ
had improved from the sotto of corn-
plel0 nucnn.;ciousness in tvltiah .1;he
0111s ,111alittod to the hospital, to a
comatose condition, and he believes
she will recover it mese ('(1111plications
new not apparent develop, 1M1iss
O'Hagan is suffering from head in•
Parks, although Dr. Gillies :loos not
think her skull is fractured,
Paddock For *.Olympics
Charley Paddock, one of the grent-
,ist sprinters in track history, will be
a candidate for the United States Ol-
ympic team in 1928.
Lipton in Again,
Sir Thomas Lipton plans to issue
another challenge for the America's
Cup sometime next year. The chal-
lenger will be named the "Shamrock
V."
Long Walk,
Willie Reinbold walked from New
York to Chicago recently to establish
a new walking record for that dis-
tance. He made it in 17 lays, 10
hours and 15 minutes, actual walking
time.
15AAK 11'ALTON S 0 O'I'T 1(11: GONE
16role a Nntitbe,' of iloolte awl it 1'0l -
nine 4)1' 1'nemy.
'1 o literary people the news 111119
Isanit 11•alton's cottage at tilialloa'-
fot d 111110 Stafford England, I,tnd Its
been butut will ,,,ece w1111 a ,.e use of
•thnust personal it .'"0110 C0u1p1 at
Angler," publish) 1 In 1653, t as neo
such 0 with, 1111.1 , nduring popularity
as to 111raiv 1110 author's nilly•, w•urita
into 0111) spud,•. t!, 1114. there we. how-
ever, tvhn will r II the feel that the
811101 1(0) 101' pi'uee • 1 biero'vphie r of
nolle' of the mi.,. 11,1, a r,ortlri,:4 ' 0
it' age. Il'ld,'11 1 W.'11 Oil. 0dl1lh'-
1111n11 01' 0..11, 10 anti
lie 11rd front 1 1'^ 111!'), :11
\\'nl•dawortlt s e •,tulHui ,an,ne1
tvh'ttlh 000111 the (silts( c1n41.1 1100,4::
"Thu )'rata.•,[ wherle,• the pa tr
Was shaped than U•area the lino:: of
ill.'.` • 13,1,4 1:1e'11
1)roplh',1 1'1oa1 :In air' ,i 'Slo=t."
ll'alton wrote a tau akr of loss nht-
ttblr n•n1ka lncludau e volmi '
Inagua, and r; r,ie of ile• W1'14441'1: ,.f
his age' tY 1100, p.4414144;4 44y 1111.1.11,0 a
ratios than (:)lulu :11...0; :;0 vino nr-
1es cull by. '1'I: •
ford, 1vl,hd, bad recenliy beer. 1.5,•'4•.
ed With tt Shan -i 11.0011,9 ruin', v„0C
the• r,•tieat lu lvbirll \\rear,, 1,414'4•11
1V414:11 he left 0 11 •.-1,11 110:di ••is
career in 1,0;:4,,11 to luaucii.4 in 111 •
freedom. 114 Cni','' 1011u1•y :.nd to '•w+1
a lino” vele noc,r he 0,11 iu,'lim d to de
so, which, wits not .1, !d"111. Fortun-
ately
lln-
ately Ute valuable r. l•,•. :100,1' i0 tie.
1,1119ut (-,tie11,, wort, 1,...,0 0.01 ,1 w11. -r1
all bel 1111• well:, r;e •1•1.t1.oy0d a
few diets ago.
Old Yet Yoltng.
Judged by the chronology or this
continent, ours 114 an old land; judg-
ed by the chronology of the Mother- ,
land, Canada is still young.
It is 4010 years since ,John Cabot,
sailing out of Ilristol, mime to the
Gulf of St. Lawrence and the coast
00 'o
Nova Scotia. ,elle, Htoirt• '47.1, was thee
on the throne of England --the man
who slew lliehaed III. en 13osworth
Fia,lcl as related by Shakespeare In
his well-known play. 'Thirty-seven
years later came Jacques Cartier
from -St. Maio, France, and Ids voy-
ages of 11:,tt and the following Year
are reckoned as the discovery ut Can-
ada. That was in 1504-35 thirty
years before the birth or Shake-
speare. Champlain founded Canada
when he built his habitation on II„•
side of Quebec's promontory. That
was 1n 1603, live years alter
Jaines VI, or Scotland had been
crown• --d King Janes I. of l:a;;laled
and the crowns of the lac iengdom::
were united, alt1loilx11 the 111440n of
the noveri !n0nta elle' not tate lilace
until one, hundred years later. Dili e
such as lit sae heal,' ('antic!.) upl,etn'
old but in 011history 010 ih • .tic -•::r; -
111n1 19.3 lutes fret,' her newern
histelg',
3 ted I.neee sone,
The origin 74. "Auld 13(1 Syne,'
is'',h 1.1.•,(.117.1.. Ateouh„=, CO I,nn-
Ti 131,1li1 ,. 1 son•, 1010110 d to IL:
"001 'It" e!' cotiand. Minot' in a he
1,•t• of 1711".:;aid "Ono sung lu -re
I have 044/1,—'An id 1.1111:; Syn,.'
The ah' is but inediocr •, Obi-- •d
old sun;:— whieli 1',:s 1101,e. leen :
print nett voi in \18. until I t
(town front an 1'id Ilan',; :'ingiu;', :.
en:nr;h to c•,•r•ntmenet any nit,"
cording to 000 :400111,11 100411
110W01,...:1', 1.110 1 alt.:.::! 'air t,
file song Is 01, ariably. kt 1<
not the orlci4:na tine ,thic;l
prenonncr41 to he mediocre, Intnit
adopted from an old Low -limn '
odY. This was • nii,i, 1, '1 1t,..
Lad at idich 1 'tla:•s," and 10 Gn ,'0
C(.)11(1•40«t1 of R± I1 it appears 11:4 "Fir
Alexander' D,a'e Strathspey." :9,; 1,
the words. add* our tins)ltnrif y, the
probability is that Yen: -s tau ;1111(
three—•(with 111,'ir nee, of more ten-
der sensibil 1*- - m ea•e (added by the
poet to the older ant.
,r,,7 —L001( AT THE LABEL
cihe
ell r 11
in
Lit
e
EECODWIE
There is magic in that
word "Home" which
never can be forgotten.
Did you ever stop to think
how few homes wou'a3 be
ecu? -ed unless Sof??ecne
saved money?
lire invite your Savings Account
and will arrange t0 ac'0'411t
deposits by moil when required.
�";• tier ,°-o t
y x
1
a, Lt/iisoN,
ESTABLISHED 1832
Capital $10,000,000 Reserve $19,500,000
Resources $245,000,000
11:15
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.4, gQ.44,+ °'.�'0 ayy� ,Qnar„
3,t MY LADY'S 4.4.
+,yp COLUMN. +
HAIRLINE HAT
The hair line turban in fine French
felt promises to be popular for early
fall. Brimmed hats taste less width
than summer ones.
FALL FAIR DATES
NEW JACKETS. Atwood
The short Hussar jacket will be Bayfield
Blyth
popular this fall with collars, :efts
Brussels
and edges outlined in astrak=-n or Dungannon
other fur. Exeter
-- Goderich
SOUR CREAM Gerrie
I' n 1
Sept. 20—•21
Sept 27-2g
e. Sept. 27--28
Oct. 6-7
Oc:. 6-7
Sept. 20-21
Sep;.8-1J
Oct. 1
stowe Sept. 26-27
London (Western) .. .Sept 10-17
Oct') -5
Sept20-21
Sept. 29-30
Sept 27-23
Oct. 6—'7
Sept. 22-23
Sept. 19-21
Oct 4-5
Sour cream should be cherished.
Dressing made from it is ideal for
cucumber and other salads and, just liucknow
seasoned, it is tasty on lettuce.
OATMEAL COOKIES
When using oatmeal for cookies
or pudding, put it through the, meat
chopper. It makes a more digestible
product. — —
LUXURIOUS WRAP.
Lelonb lines gold lame moire with
rich summer ermine and fashions a
cape lura)) that hangs in luburiou;
folds.
EVENING BAG,
e1 'Lipper evening bag of black
satin has silver soutache brai.l ap-
plied in all-over fan design. A pearl
ring with silver tassels close it,
VEGETABLE BOX
The thrifty housewife will keep a
box for fresh uncooked vebetablcs,
as the ass and heat wilt end toughen
them.
Mildmay
OMilverton
. Mitchell
Palmerston
Ripley
Stratford
Teeswater
Toronto (C.N.E.) .Aug. 27—Sept. 12
Wingham ...............Sep; 22-23
Zurich Sept 26-27
Largest in the Minors.
Baltimore is the largest city ja the
!United States supporting a minor
!league baseball club. -
i
Canine Epicures.
Ailing greyhounds at the Whitn
City ('ace course n: 011gl.ut i are
served eggnog of brandy, mills and
eta. fierause of their 401901), bod-
ies. 1'0101(19 chefs cook the dog's
meat carefully and bake special
brown bread, They also prepare om-
elets that most 01011 would be glad to
get.
PREMIER BALDWIN LEANS TO DRIVE
LAST LOCOMOTIVE OTIVE I RIME MT. ,
?'„:'.�:?,'$i'`s... ;;z: :w�•.n...:.:`,ti ' <�.: .•a•
4�.:1•r u,. ..:•...,,•al...:a, :,s`s'JS : s�'r a37.: ee
The Pet. Ron. Stanley Baldwin, the British Premier, took c short course in engine driving at
Pickering, Ontario, on the new Canadian National locomotive, number 6120, the largest and most
powerful ,railway engine in the British Empire. 100r, Baldwin, when visiting Kingston, Ont., heard
that this titan of the steel rails was an a11 -Canadian product, designed by Canadian National ltailway
engineers and built at the Kingston shops, Early on Saturday morning No. 6120 was attached to the
Royal Train to haul it into Toronto to mark the opening of the new Union Station, Mr.. Baldwin,
although busily engaged in the preparation of his speeches, halted In his work to make an inspec-
tion of, the engine, eventually climbing into the cab with tate engineer:', IIe showed the keenest in-
terest in the manner in which the big locomotive was handled when travelling at high speed, and
worked the various levers controlling tate engine, "It is a wonderful piece of machinery and should
be a source of pride to the Canadian designers and builders,” said the Premier on leaning the loco-
motive. No. 6120 is one of forty engines of similar typo that are being teemed out this season for the
fast passenger and freight services of the National System. When in regular service they will run 510
ealles without ehange—•the longest locomotive runs in the Dominion,
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