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The Clinton News Record, 1925-04-09, Page 3
LAKES NA GESTIOI despatch `:rorn ,Navigation on Lake 11uro. was un- olCcialiy opened Thur slay afternoon When the smalleteomerr John W li3oadman entered the lake bound for Alpena, Mich. °despatch from Sault Ste, iM are, Mich,, ays:--With cosshn-..ted warm weather, gossipy it marrnc circles centres around opening date of navi- ation for this section of Great Lakes, Conditions this year are steady and favorable for anearly opening, with Chances- that little trouble' will be p rienced after a. passage is mane While reports indicate heavy ice still holding at the strategic ,points at Whitefish in the upper river and around Lime -Island in the lower river, the sun during the day is honeycomb-- ing it very Cast. It is rumored that the steamer Ilar- vester, will make an effort to :get through the river, leaving., Chicago the ind of the week. If the lows raver is made, equal chances for getting through to Lake Superior lie Sabre at 21,4 en or rye. ,Some figuring ;WOO dello t 3 cents ,from the head of T,akoiStrperior^-to Buffalo and tonnage may be placed al that figure. ,The freight market in other lines is very A despatch from Cleveland, ' 011ie, says:—Some chartering' for opening shipment was done in the Lan Su- perior grain trade on Thursday., A small' carrier was placed to, dead' at Duluth for Milwaukee at Oki cents, and it was reported that a steamer of medium size was named to take a cargo £torn' Dul'iith to Georgian; Bay quiet., A despatch from :' Fort ViWilliamr ay --As far as these two ports are concerned navigation ,will be open. by April 13. Tb:e ice'brealcing Lugs start work on Monday, cutting channels through the ice, the tugs Whalen and Strathmore doing the work. The block, of ice bet.veen Isle Royale and Thunder Gape has broken up and has drifted out into the lake. The ice field is about 50 miles long and 15 miles. deep. ' A'clespatclr from -Winnipeg says:- With '56,000,000 bristle -1s of grain in stere at the ,Road of the Lakes, and with a total .available'capacity of 64,- 000,000 bushels, e,evators at Fort Wil- liam are faoing the possibility of con- gestion, as opening of navigation ap- proaches, 'At present the Canadian Pacific Railway Company alone is sending a daily average of 332- .cars of grain east from Winnipeg, but it is pointed' out that about 150 cars of this wds absorbed by millers in the Lake •6f. the Woods district, Since the begin- ning of the year 20,114,526 bushels of grain have left' thehands of farmers, on the prairies, including 17,136,138 bushels of wheat and 9,007,388 of coarse grains. WESTERN CONDITIONS ARE UNUSUALLY. GOOD Preparations for Grain Seed- ing Reported from Many Points. A despatch from Winnipeg says:— With the prairies almost cleared of snow and weather conditions unusual- Ay favorable, f ttners p15111 points M the 'West have commenced prepare- -Lion of their land for the 1925 crop. ,Wher`l the ;floods have not been troublesome plowing has started on a small scale, while scattered districts report seeding operations underway. Manitoba farmers have been the first to report progress along these .lines, seeding being well advanced by several feriners around Douglas and Gretna. frhis marks the earliest'atart in Man- itoba for many years. Reports from Central Saskatchewan indicate that seeding will become gen- eral 'Within ten 'days. :Plowing has. commenced along the Goose Lake line in the Tessier and Harris districts. Favorable reports come from Al- berta, the land being reported in ex- cellent shape for early cultivation. Provided present weather conditions continue, operations will be fairly general next week' g 7. . Throughout the three provinces the winter's- precipitation was well up to the average, and good'moisture is re- ported from altpeiirts, with conditions favorable for rapid germination. TILLSONBURG PLANT TO CLOSE ITS DOORS Bore en Milk Company Unable to Operate Under Existing Market Conditions. A despatch from Tillsonburg; Ont., says:—Like a bolt from the bluesto both farmers and town folk alike was the following notice handed to the pat- rons of the big factory of the Borden Milk Co., Limited. "To our patrons. Owing to market conditions we find it impossible to con- tinue to-eperate the Tillsonburg fee- - toryand Will therefore permaanently close the plant on April 30th, 1025:" ' FoIlowing the war the big plant; was 'closed for several months, but fol- lowing .negotiations with the Board of Trade `and former patrons the plant was reopened with the assurance that it would remain open indefinitely, and in fact preparations were under way to add thousands of dollars wortli'of new equipment. As the plant is one of the roost valuable ,and finest of its kind in tho Dominion, with a large cold storage, it is believed that the property will change i,iarrds within a short. time, The Mari of Balfour opened the new Hebrew .Tlniverslty is Palestine on April 1st, before a world wide assemb- lage of notables. FIRST OPERATION ON HUMAN FOR EMBOLISM a Barren Land Transformed . Into Fertile Soil A despatch from New York says: -- A' Waria ays:—A'°warn% current called El Nina, or "The Child," because it usually comes • Passau, in Bavaria, soon is to have before Christmas, swept southward the largest church organ in the world. along the west coast of South America Builders are,at- work reconstructing before the great organ tri the cathedral there. ingreater volume than ever solar - The organ.is being materially g known, bringing' with it torrential R:od. Its present -sixty-seven stops .will showers, Which visited parts of South be increased to 170. It will have five America which have not known. rain I manuals, thus achieving a register since the, days of Pizarro, in 1651,' ac-1hitherto` unlrnown in church instru- .cording to Dr. Robert Cushman; ments. Murphy, .Assistant Director of the! •—te- American Museum of Natural His -,Wembley Exhibition. Will JE IISI-I UNLVERSITY DULY INAUGURATED Earl Balfour Opens Seat of Learning for Hebrew Stu- dents in Jerusalem. A. despatch from Jerusalem says:— The new Hebrew University situated on the summit of Mount . Scopus was solemnly inaugurated in the presence of 7,000 persons in the great amphi- theatre mphi-theatre' on the side of the hill. Thou- sands more, unable to.gain admit- tance, had to be turned away. A dis- tinguished company was"' present, in- cluding representatives of more than 50 leading institutions and academic bodies in all parts' of the world. The inaugural address was deliver- ed by the Earl of Balfour, author, of the "Balfour Declaration," in which Great 'Britain set ,forth her policy of encouraging the creation in Pales- tine of a national home for the Jews. hours before the ceremony began the narrow, dusty road leading to the sum - 1 ] mit of Mount Scopus, was black with. vehicles and pedestrians, the throng comprising largely Jewish men, wo- men and children. Among .those here for the occasion was Lord Allenby, conqueror of Jer- usalem, as he ad of the British forces in Palestine during the world war. The River's Vindication. It's^ true'. I've gone on the war path, I've smitten yourcities and homes,, I've cranked the walls of°your stately balls, , I've threatened your spires and domes. I've' spoiled your gardens and orchards, I've carried yew bridges away, The loseis told in millions'of gold;. �. The indemnity you must pay. But had I not -cause for anger? Was it not "rote to rebel)? Go, ask of the springs that feed me; Their rock ribbed heights can tell. Largest of Church Organs Built for Bavarian Cathedral • Go to my mountain cradle, Go to my home and see, Look' on my ruined; forests And note what ye' did to me. These were my silvea bowers, My bade of bracken and fern, The spots where I lie and rest nie E'er to yeur valleys I turn, These you have plundered and• wasted, You've 'cliopped,aud busted and sear - red, en Till my dome is left of verdure bereft, Bare and llfeless and charred, So I have gopo on the warpath; I've harried your lands with glee. Restore :with ears my woodlands felt And I'll peacefully Row to the sea, —F. W. Nash i_u Canadian Life and Resources. , Eat More Fruit. It has been definitely ,established that iodine is an essential to health, and that in it we have a new elixir of life. Lack of Iodine in the blood Is responsible for many ailments, Melee. Ing goitre. This lack of iodine is termed "iodine starvation," and to edunter its effect It is necessary to absorb iodine ditto the system. Thebest way of doing recently of studies of this le by eating plenty nf,fresh fruit, tory, who told ocean currents rothe coasts; of Ecu- Re -open on,the. 6th of May vegetables, and common salt, Nature odor and Peru, from whish he had "'— : realizes the need ell Iodine, and we un- returnned. A despatch front London saysdo much of her, work by refusing salt just re El tureurned housands of miles Announcement was made on Thursday and by peeling' and boiling our fruit of desert into paradise almost over- that the Empire Exhibition at 'Wein- and vegetables. • inight, according to Dr. Murphy, as -it Nlay w611 be Theopened exhibitionhe opei ed on tided, and during the aarxitsnworth was Caused millions of hardy seeds which bleApril 23 last year•, and was closed on realized? as .a first antiseptic dressing. had lain dormant in the ground Nov. 1. The receipts for the season Raw iodine should be taken only In through decades of iirovth to sprout were not up to expectations; hence reasonable doses, and always; under and grow with an incredible vigor. it was decided to reopen the exhibi- the supervision of a doctor. Ina week brown and red landscapes tion this. year. " had been painted green, and Dr.) anion Yen COUNTERFEIT BANK NOTES FLOOD CANADA "HE WEEK'S AE' LetiueeS 'Wanted t0 Watch TORONTO. 1 hlianoked meats—Hams, med.,: 32 to Man: wheat No 1 North,, .1.62-4x; 33c; cooked hams, 46 to 48c smoked urz<°sncy as igesult of• � ei No. 2 ,`North tin 571%1; ,:iso, 3 North /rolls, 22 to 24c. cottage rolls, 2•i t4 De'Velo,iments irl Quebec. 'tO.533i,, No, 1 wheat $1.48We I25c; breakfast bacon, 28 to 30c; s o= gigIan, oats --lea ? CW,' 571{sc° No 3 cial. brand brealcfnct'bacon, 36 to i0c A despatch from Montleµ- ay A. flood of counterfeit Canadian U iVo 1 feed 50s' c 0 2 feed' a N CW, 52=Y,r; orf as No. '1 fe• ed, '53Orc; backs, boneless, 38 for 44c. bank notes Menaces Canada. Confiscation. Al'l the Above elf'. i bay ports. ' • of a clumsy,. amateur counterfeiting Americancorn, track, ri'onnto—No, plant and the arrest of seven men a1 2 yellow 3125 Ieged to have been concerned- with' its l Mllfeed—Del:, Montreal freights, operation "by the Mounted Police' on bags included:. Bran, per ton, $26; Thursday, do not in any way solve the shorts, per ton, $28; middlings, $33; issue, Beaudry Leman,. General Man- good feed` flour; bei° 'bag, 32,00, ager of `La Banque Canadienne Na Ont, oats—No. 2 white, 38 to 400. Ont,' wheat -Na 2 winter, 3L32 to tionale, and other bank officials` de- $1.35; No. 3 winter, Trot quoted; No. elate. 1 commercial, nominal, 'f.o.b. shipping According to Mr. Leman, the plant points, according to freights. located byethe- Mounted Police at L'A5- Barley—Malting, 67 to 72c. somption had never seen the light of Buckwheat—No..2, nominal. circulation. Witlia face value of up- RYe—No. 2, $1,06. to31.10. ward of :$150,000 and in denoniina- Man, flour; first pat., $9.50, To - tions of ten dollars, two rooms of: the ionto; do, second pat,,39, Toronto. house were practically racticall papered with the '%bills"' But the bills, it is con- tended by bankers, `would not fool a child." In the Meantimethe other plant which started distribution of Banque Canadienne Nationale bills some two weeks ago is still operating, it is stated, That _is shown, it is said, •by the deposits to -the banks in several sections' of the province, and these hills are sufficiently cleverly executed to escape deteetion, exeept by highly competent tellers., Simultaneously comes corroboration that counterfeiters are busy., getting rid of $100 bills purporting to be 18- sued by the Imperial Bank of Canada. These to a value of .$300,000 turned up in London, England, recently, and then it was discovered that a batch of 329,000 worth of them had just -been reshipped to Canada. At present there is a division of opinion as to- whether the Imperial "notes" are ',being made here' : or abroad. Police opinion inclines tothe former' view. With regard to -:La Banque Canadienne. Nationale, there is complete. agreement that the point of counterfeiting is in Canada. `Paris Surgeon Removes Two Clots of Blood from Artery of Patient. . A despatch from Paris says:— What is hailed in the French press as the first operation on ?r hr.rraiifor embolism wet 'perfoi'me1 successfully by Dr. P. Moure, the som_ef a famous 13ordeaux doctor. Dr. Mouse, who has already perperformed operations on dogs and guinea pigs, Lied' me the artery entering the arm of his patient, which was obstructed by two. clots' of blood. lie opened rthe artery, removed the clots, sewed up the `vessel. and re- moved the stricture which had result- ed im.the arm being almost bloodless e for several days. Shortly after th aurin assumed a normal aspect, . Hope. is held out by doctors of'the Vacuitycuity of Medicine who witnessed the opera- tion;' that :surgery :nay also 'cure phlebitis,. Bullet Imbedded in Tree for Nigh a Century A: despatch from Saskatoon says:— Workmen building shelves in the new Customs long mom liege discovered a lead', ball used in the old 'muzzle -load ing guns of a century nee, imbedded in a piece of board. hes estimated the ball enteral the wood when the tree was some 60 years old, and .although a portion of the piece of hoard is missing, malting an accurate °stiSnate impossible, it is .be- lieved the iced heed been buried 75 or 160 years. Murphy and his con. p • Campden Denner, caught hundreds of Unkr7noWn Person Sends fish in the -Streets ,of the desert oil Gift to Benefactress town of Telex*, .where rain had not - fallen for 34 years. This town was A despatch from Pembroke says In an ensigned'lettor Mrs. John Rol - Rea of''Beacltburg received five crisp 'ten -dollar'' bills. The note, without signature, contained the words, "For a kind deeddone." Mrs. Rollins is et 'a loss to understand wheece the let- ter came. Song of the Sower. He shall never be alone, Who is brother to a stone: Who is sister to e, tree - Shall have pleasant company, He shell wait with holy pride Who has made a field his bride;, Who has • scattered seeds' afar 5 -hall hold converse wtiil a star.. Vlv an Yeiser Laramore. iri a parched plain, as lifeless as the Sahara, when the scientists first saw it, before Jan. 12, when "The Child" swam down the coast, but on March 7, when they reached it, the horizon was oiie of grasses, flowers and foli- age, and the town was a Venice, with myriads of minnows swarming clown its canals. The rains, torrential and contirtu- ous, which came down for weeks 'after the arrival of E1 Nina off the coast, had interlaced the whole desert with streams, connected them with distant rivers, and carried billions of eggs from spawning places to cover the desert with minnows. That was the theory of the explorers, although the natives said the fish came from the ocean. - Forestry and Water -Power De- velopments Provide Cheap Newspapers. While many means a ed for the dissemination. of news, telephone, telegraph and radio, _ cannot over- look the fact that the t distribu- tor of news is then aper, says the Natural ResourcesIntelligence Service of the Dept. a Interior. Back' of the newspaperands Can- ada's natural resource forest' and water powers. Newsy is -,compose ed wholly of woodpulp,certain other chemicals being used n the pre- paration of the pulp. In order to make the woodpulp a large amount of power. is used. This power be supplied at very low cost, for reason that the product is a very priced ma- terial, a- r' l newsprintbeingto-day to Sa news o PY by the nulls ata little over three and•ohe- halfcents per pound, estimated that a paper mill req 100 horse- power for every ton o daily capacity —that is, a one-hundred-ton'nrill re. quires 10,000:hoisepo This power is supplied largely thr the develt opment of some of agnifloent water powers. man people realize the s end Not r N Y P P P with which newsprint is made. Ma- chines have bean installed within the past few years that will make a sheet of paper 284 inches Wide, and they are running at the rate of 800 feet of paper per minute. Taking the wood- pulp in solution on the screen at one end of the machine, it is being wouhd on the roll at the other end in about one minute. This width of paper is divided into rolls of the length re- quired by the different sizes of news - re used the we grey ewsp , I of th stands s of Newsprint only i l moue must the 1 low sold It 1s tires f war: through our m Cured meats-=10»g.clear bacon, 50 to 70 lbs„ $1,7.50; 70 to 90 lbs., 316.80; 90 lbs. and up, 315.50; lightweight; rolls, in barrels, 344;. heavyweight'. rolls, $40 per bbl. Lard—Pure tierces, 20 to 203a ; tubs, 2014, to 21c; pails 21 to 2114,0; prints, 2243, to 23c; shortening tierces, 141,3 to 15c; tubs, 16 to 101/ic; pails, 151/. to 16c; prints, 16i/ tc. 17c. Heavy steers, choice, $8 to` 38,23;, do, good, $7.25 to $7,75; butcher steers, choice, $7 to $7.50; do, good, 36.50 to :$7;, do, med., 36 to $6.50; do, net, $5.50 to 36; butcher heifor8 choice, 37 to $7.50; do, med,; $6 to 36.75; do, corn., $5.50 to $6; butcher cows, choice; $5.50 to $4 do fair to Ont. flour -90 per cent. pat, 36:40, good,$3.50 to .4.75; ;canners and cute in bags, •Morntreal Oa' Toronto; do, bulk, t $ rs, 2.50 to$2,75; butcher bulls, seaboard $6,20. Straw—Carlota, per ton, 38. Screenings -Standard, recleaned, 1, o.b. bay ports, per ton, 328. Hay—No. 2, per toe, 313 to .$14; No. .3 per ton; 310 to 312; mixed, per ton, $9 to $11. Cheese—New, ,large,- 241/2 to 25c; twins, 25 to' 2531c; triplets, 251/2 to 26c; Stiltons. 26c. 01d,; large, 25 to 26c;twins, 26 to 27c; triplets, 27 to` Butter—Finest creamery prints? 36 to' 37c; No. 1 creamery, 85 to 36e; No. 2, 33 to 84c. - Daisy prints, 28 to 28c. 'rlggs—Fresh extras,,. in cartons, 36 to 37c; loose, '34'to 35c; fresh firsts, 331to 84c; splits, 30 to 31e. Live poultry—Hens, over 4 to 5 lbs., 20c; ,do, 3 to 4 lbs., 18c; sprin chick- ens, 4 lbs. -and over M.F., 24c; o, corn fed,`22c ; roosters' 15c; duck lin $•s 5 lbs. and'itp,, 22e.' Dressed poultry—Hens, over, 4 too lbs., 28c; do,'3 to 4 lbs., 22cspring: chi • ckens, 4 lbs, and over, 114.1f., 35e; do, corn fed, r 32c; roosters, 20c; duck- lings, 5 lbs. and up, 27c; turkeys, 35c. Beans—Can. hand-picked, 1b., 61/2c; primes, 6e. , Honey -60 -lb. tins. 13eic per lb; 10-13. tins, 13%c; 5-1b. tens, 14c; 214, lb.. tins, 151/2' to iGc. Maple products -Syrup, per imp. gal; $2.40; per 5 -gal. tin, $2.20 per A Sheaf, af. Sage Sentences.. There are all sorts of ladders, by which to climb in the work', hut, so far as we have observed there is none of them that does not require tobo scaled one rung at a time- "There itre-'P1101e is plenty of room at the tap," they say. Therefore help the other fellow to reach it with you. Talking about ambition to get upin the ,world, we ;have noticed that it is most often realized b3 the -chap who. has the "energy to get up in the morn- ing. Never nake`the mistake of thinking that you :have to use dollar signs; in order tgopell success. The fellow who regards a jab as nothing snore than a meal ticket Is in danger of going httngry. The survival of the fittest is, in large degree, the ruse of life,: but remember that it Bee withinyear, power to im-ake yourself flt to survive. • TYPICAL MINERS' HOMES.IN CAPE BRETON WHERE WAGE DISPUTE HAS BROUGHT GREAT DISTRESS mine near. Gla o Iia Cars Breton, with t gr sue o The above photograph shows the road to number two i n 5 y, 1 tical miners' hooses. It is In such settlements as tlris:that groat distress has resulted from the cessation of a typical : , work due to the dispute lsotweendye seal miners and the''l3rliis111ampu'oSteol Corpoiat:orr. ,be 111 -clad and poor! welds/Led families, arc being sltpplied .with reagro rations three days a ,week. • 11 y good, $4.50 to $5.50 do fair, 33.75 to 34; =bologna,, 32:50 to $8.25; feedin steers, good, $6.50 tti.'31;_do, fair, $ to ,$6,26; stockers, good, 35.50 to 36; do, fair, $5, to $5.50; calves, choice,, 311. to 313; do med,, $7.50 to $10.50; do, grassers, $4,50 to $5.50; rnilch cows, choice, $70 to $80; do, fair, $40 to 350; springers, choice, 375 to $90 good light sheep, $8 to $9; heavies and bucks, 35.50 to $7.50 good ewe lambs, $15 to 315.501 do, pied., $13 to $14.50; do, 'culls, $11 to 312; spring lambs, each, '$10to:$14; hags, thick smooths, fed and . watered, 313.70; do, f.o.b., 312.50; de,, country y points, 312.26; -de, off cars, 313.60; select premium, $2.59. MONTREAL. Oats—CW, No, 2, 64c; CW, No. 3, 58c; extra No. 1 feed, 532c. Flour, Man. spring; wheat pats„ firsts, $9.50; seconds, $9; strong bakers, $8.80; win- ter pats;, Choice, $7.30. Rolled oats, bag 90 lbs., 33.55; Bran,' 326:25; shorts, 328.25; middlings, 334.25. Hay;, No. 2,. per ton, car lots, 314 to 315. Butter, No. 7, pasteurized, 321/2c; No. 1 creamery, 31' to 31•%c; seconds. 30 to 301/2c. •Eggs, fresh specials, 39 to 40c; fresh extras, 38e; fresh firsts, 36c. Potatoes, per bag, car lots, 70c. Calves, med. to good, 36 to 37; do,. cora., $5, up; hogs, mixed lots, $13.75; gal.; maple sugar,' lb„ 25 to 260. do, better quality, $14; selects, 314.60. '. papers. When we can put in an enjoyable hour or more reading ournewapaper, et a cost oftwo or three cents, let us not forget that back of the paper, and providing the rites materials for its manufacture, are the forests and water:powere of Canada. For the benefits that the forests confer upon us let us reciprocate by guarding them against fire. Lawn and Garden Require In- door Taste and'Comfort. ' The modern home -owner does not stop with the interior. He goes tar- ther ancl thinks of 111s garden and his lawn as his outdoor room to be fur- nished with the same taste and corne fort as the interior.. One may have only a small plot, but this niay be inade a- beautiful carpet of grass, with perlia4s a tree and a grouts of tenths or eveigseeps^, •am its furnishings- Others will 'have suf- iielent area to form several outdoor; rooms, compr.is'ing a sitting room with lofty trees for our guests and our own comfort; a drawing .;room, : where choice flowers'and plants are the pic- tures 'on tile Walls; any lady's boudoir, where lacy vines and carpets of flow- ers appeal to the esthetic side of her natm•e. Fortunate are we when the kitchen garden has also its allotted space where ,good things to eat griiw and mature for our satisfaction, It Ls. 'seen that oat' grounds'aro a very important part at cur bone l!fe. i To stop with the building of the hoarse woriid be the greatest mistake from) every point 00 view, for it universal -I ly conceded that a pllace well planted is' from a roar estate poiut of view worth 111501%`°' more because of that planting. Like the interior Of. the living -room; it requires tire furmlture. First, tiro carpet of grass and -clover rnns,t ,be laid, then in proper ,sequence the 'trees and shrubs, or the larger picco of frn'- nitui'e must Ue properly placed, ;and, of Coif'se wc-krpe't' om 1 t, e timet' touches with olfrashioned bailors, the loonies, iris, 1000, 6,11l10:0 folCi the uranyl other ,olil-Ljino x.01, 11 01 Spring on Our Hill.. The spring has come to dui hill, . Digit above the town; Gray winter snow from "southern slopes Has muted. and Tun down; The earth looks dead and soggy; The trees leek bare and dun; But it's spring again on .our %till, . For—thee sep's•begun to rum! Chickadees: still swing, ; heads down- ward., From the big pine near the door; We've not heart] a single Tobin, And we sh'p't, for two weeks more; The nights are clear and nipping; Days grow longer, one by one;. Of course, we'll have show 'flurries yet;,; But—the sap's begun to run! The river in the valley .' Inas spilled over, ice•fed, free; And meadow elm% rise lonesome From a tideless, sky blue;eea; There's no softness in the' air yet; But—pails flash in the sun Where our children tapped the maples- ' begun, • For the tap's G n io run., -Katherine Swill Oakes. She Wouldn't Go. A. captain and li1e chief engineer, tired of endless' debating on which one _ of them the ship 'could more easily 413s- penes with, decided to change places for a day. The chief esoended to the bridge aad the skipper dived into the engine -room. After a couple of tours the captain appeared on deck eovered with oil and soots "Chief!" he galled, "yew will have to come down here at once. I can't make' her go." "Of course ydu can't," said :the :thief. "Shes ashore." Solution of last weeks puzzle. atom ©Qq mat m0 mime Ammo cumuli '"_ ipQo i T" 3• N rti:ll�©� T'.s,4��1© a,RIJO©�31,i, _ tet �00a ©tyOCJ�®tE��� w,_ MUMUNU ®v ,..,dQo�®cls. ;French Toevn as Undertaker.. Tih3 lithe town of'' Crulsery, 111 Prance, ince hitgone into the undertaking haziness" For t3 1L wilt give a71750719 wino- wants 11 ,G ' a 1r e1usa burial. All over the town, gayly -colored peace 0 announce that it 15 chsaper Le get a municipal burial than it private one, CROSS WORD PUZZLE 6 15 16 3µl �0 48 4)- '+9 53 55 HORIZONTAL 1—To exist 3 --...;Strength 8—Part of verb "to be" 10—A tree 12 -incendiarism 15—LlmIt 17 -Part of a circle 13 -3 -Alighted 19—Self , - 21—Because' of 22—Student 24—A. vessel 25 -Dictatorial 27—A game -29-To cut thinly 30—A leguminous plant 32—.Looks furtively 34—Fabled narrative 35-1n the middle 37—Territory 38--Seeshaped '39—Stylish 40-0tsease of animals (Western 43—To lure 49 -Be silent 48—To fish 60—A. small spot 61—Barrier 52-'-Ftieclamehlal 54—To trait upon, 55—Fragment 68.—Scholarly 09 -Writing fish%_ 61—Consumed 62—A weapon fish 64--A number 65—Clothed 67 -Succeed 69—Td perform 70—A c!Well,ng. 71 --Grose to ,.' r ®TH6 INTESNATIDNAI OVCOICATE., VERTICAL 1—A kind of meat 2--•Ex!sts 3—Clemency 4—small unit of measureinent 6 --Large room. 6 --Test 7 -Towards 9-A satellite 10—Clover 11 ---Worn out 13—A strip of leather far sharp. ening 14—Sekiess 16 --In worthy roomier 20 -To feel the way 23—Indebted to .26—Places of learning 28 ---instructor 29—Perceived odor 30—Heaped 31—Village-In England noted for ite famous raco•courao 33-64ethod of cooking 85•—Angry 38 --Possessive pronoun 41• -••Path 42—Lightly covered 44—Lacking warmth 46—Ask 47—Vlow._ 40—Bound by feudal service 61—Provides food 63•—Mash 64—Rock' 5 65—A 'poet h.. 57—Ta 58—Frozen dainties 60—To weave together 6• --Meas of transport ebbr. s n a