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The Seaforth News, 1931-06-18, Page 7PAGE SEVEN. JUNE 18, 1931 1 nm., Ar.nr vac ,. la. iaiv ve ,a. THUR'S'DAY, DO -X IS WONDER SHIP' navel more luxurious and swift than Jules' Verne's most imaginative flights of fancy is embodied in the DO -X, giant :flying yacht., 'It is an air mailman, a self contain- tied unit in which the traveller may eat, smoke, sleep and live much n, he would on a traus.eonflnental train, or an' ocean Litter, The 'biggest of the Dornier W'als-' nnuch larger than the .whale after it s named—isthree deck which t. is n n e trite of its thick, wide affair. S 1 P d ti,litgs; whi•clt spread 157 feet froth tip to. tip, it still is as large as a med- lum sated yacht and au its air our -to neys it is roti Very much on the Same Y plan: rude as an air The DO -K s not intended. r lice for'tan's-oceanic ser- passenger rt. c ,ice: `!While its •inventor, 1Dr. Claude Dornier, planned the Atlantic flight 'sardine to demo+ stra'te that it is quite capable of such a daring Undertaking it is t providetitin primarily designed o and comfortable transportation ,ort routes such as between ' New York and Bermuda,..or New York and Palm Beach, The ehip is designed to accomm- date, normalcy, about seventy pas- sengers comfortably, although in its ge y, g initial test on take• Constance; Switz- erlaad, it carried 169 persons. How- ever, the nece'ss'ity. of carrying add'i- bona! fuel on the trans-Atlantic +t=ip reduced tike passenger capacity to 15: On a route such as New York to Bee- muds the notifier gasoline capacity. ,not would Be sutifefent and 70 passengers could isbe carried srOccup 'Public quarters Occupy the main deck. It the extreme fore part of the 'season light but sturdydur,aluniin hull is the anchor and cable for use when the boat is in •harbor, abaft that is a wat- er tight. bulkhead, which is, used far storing baggage.: The next compartment is the bar, and behind that is the smoking room, The bar is equipped •'watch an electric refrigerator, and •the smoking room room with electric cigar lighters. Rich mahogany panelling and con- fortable upltolstered oheira create an air ,of luxury. In these two rooms the passengers may while away the hours, d'rinkfng,' talking, smoking; and coking ou through portholes on giant, ocean liners a. thousand Eeet be -'Erred low- The sleeping, and !Eying comport- ment is next, with seats similar to those of a pullman on both sides of an aisle, 7d Feet• long, which serves:'.nt as a promenade, The seats are con-:• vertible into beds at night, This par- tion also is beautifully panelled in mahogany.• Tltree portholes atlo'w a view from each,pairOEseats, and with their draped curtains they give the effect of being on board ship. Meals are prepared in a kitchen equipped with electric ranges. Wash- rooms are complete ill every detaih even to shower baths; Abaft the pas- ,,,. sengers' stateroom are the crew's quarters. The deet: below+ is Occup- led exclusively by fuel tanks. Four cylindrical containers hold a total of about 7;000 gallons of gasoline, en- ough to give the ship e. cruising rad- ins of 1;000 miles. The highest deck is .devoted'to the operating mechanism. Forward is the `pilot house, with dual wheel eon- troll and seats fpr two pilots, Each pilot can bank the plane by turning the wheel in front of him; he can steer to right or left by operating the rudder with foot control's; and he can cause the ship to ascend or descend i, mooing the stick" to which the (heel is attacher! backward or for- ward. A wheel by the pilot's side enables him to throttle the twelve righter, simultaneously, Behind the pilot house is the chart room, where the captain and naviga- 'tor p,lo9 the ves'sel's course: Farther off is the engine room, �t+here myriad indicators and signalling devices in- Fortin the engineers and tnecliatiicc nE the performance of each of. the 625- motors, Directly abaft the engine trout is a soitud.proof caniparttuent in which is housed a powerful radio station. There are receiving sets 10r all w=ave' lengths from 20 to 3;000 meters, and l n sending sets. One is a tong wave set capable of operating bet- waveween 600 and 2,100 meters and the other is a short wave transmitter with a range of from 30 to 60 meters. antenna, 220 feet. tong. nuns out Then below the ship while it is Hying and is rolled up w"hen landing.a ;Mounted above the great, wing on six nacelles are the twelve motors. Six operate tractor pto.pellers and six a „ "pushers. A11' are water.cooled. They can be reached by mechanics.. from inside the !Ilene for all ordinary re- airs ut ordrnar Hight. Frown the na- p y vigation roost a .gang'w'ay leads to the thick wingand front a catwalk in the using the tttechanic can reach, Phrough bhe nacelle, any inn on one end as well as the other, and atter being used, it has a mutilated and dejected appearance. However uniniporteat a single can may appear, there are millions of dollars of actual pwing in- capital investlel in the eau' dustry, and hundreds of millions of cans are annually filled with fruit end vegetable's in Canada. Every 24 eons require a wooden case; and the Can- q adian output would :require enough lumber to lay a board walk, two feet wide, from Montreal. to Vancouver. The scans,' themselves, as a writer has said, would make a ribbon from To -'as ronto to New Yark, dawn to and the Panama Canal,' upchiefly Vancouver and back to .Toronto: This is done in a break• number of canning: Factories, in fruit and vegetable grow- itt'g districts, Funthermore; there are lobster canneries, salmon canneries, canderies and a .number of large pleat -packing. plean'ts also put o'ut enprtnous quantibies of food in insignificant little tin can.' Think to the men'in the avoods, in the inconceivably lumber' mills, box factories, in the m'ines, and all down the line before the act of canning the raw commode it -is even commenced. ingthIndustrial yp activities ,occasioned by the demand for cans and boxes are morn ons in themselves,, sad yet there' are the art- fits who design the labels, the en- ing gravers who make the cuts, the litho- graphers who print thein, and the who provide the power; all obtain •employment through the in dustry known as canning. This 15 all—thousands of persons work- ing 00 the land grow crops for the factories,. thiousands of fishermen are, after season, catching the fish, and there are few farms in Canada which do not sooner or ,later provide some animal or fowl .for this purpose. This is all preparatory to the can- ing operation, More than sixty years ago at Grim- sby, Ontario; a small canning factory was •opened, .but• that was only the be- ginning of the industry in Canada. As Ear bark as 1765 5pallansane— Probably an Italian—discovered that liquids could be kept unchanged by the exclusion of air, but history cred- its a Frenchman, Nicholas Appert, with the first practical knowledge of canning. Appert secured a prize of- by his Government for the en- couragemetit of the art, and ,about the same time, 1810, an Englishman, Pet- er•Durand, secured a patent. for the preservation of fruits, vegetables, etc„ henmetfcaldy sealed cans. Appert been working on his pet scheme since 1795, and it has been reported that twelve tin packages containing 'French peas were found in the wreck of the Royal George, w*bleb. occurred August 29, 1792, Someone in a quiet way might have ' been preserving vegetables prior to 1$00, but that date, or shortly after, is usual.( Stated y y ,as the beginning of the. canning in- dustry. During. the decade, 1815 to 1825„ Ezra Daggett introduced the idea iii the United States, and with his son- in-law, in 1825, secured a patent on the use of the tin -can or "case" as it was called. Although Daggett gets the credit for putting canting into practical use, Israel Winslow, a sea- faring man, is claimed to be one of the real fathers of the enterprise on this continent. In 1839 William Un- derwood began to substitute tin for glass, and from that time on" growth has been phenomenal, for the Re- Public now boasts several thousand canning faotories, producing cans of food by the billion, In Canada the early records go back to 1867, when W, W. Kitchen started a factory at Grimsby for pre- serving fruit and vegetables. He ob- tained a processor, Cyrus Moore, from Baltinvare; but after two years the factory was sodeL Fish was probably canned in this counbry before Fruit, for it is said that in 1839 Lipman S. Treat engaged the parkin 61 salmon at St. John, g but, two years Eater, moved his plant .to Eastporb, Me. In 1876, on the Fraser River in British Calutnbia, two'small canneries pat up 347.85+ one. -pound cans of salnwn, which really marks the beginning of the fish -canning industry in Canada. Along the Atlantic shores. however, 'lobsters were bean canned in 1870, in that year three canneries put trp 591,500 one -pound tins, The first meat -canning plant to operate in the Dominion was prabaal the Canada Y Meat Produce Company, establish- ed at ,Sherbrooke in llfi4, It operated for about five years, and finally dia. continued business because of a lack . of suitable cattle to. supply its needs. member of the Company, mov- 1877 establish- ed to business. eel a busyness. aUe mit !Such was e :beginning of an en- terprise which has meant so much to alt classes of people, but, like other industries in Canaria, it has outgrown its old clothes and has become a- most irre'cogniz'abde through size. The year 1883 was one many can- will rctneMber with regret. The g supply of .goods became enormous -kind and ilii market,was limited. Packers crit prices, and only those with con- siderable capital 'said oods of p g doubted quality survived._ went, under the turbulenh .vial co'uipetftfotl of poor prices, an a few in the busines's °td -day through that troublesome Subsequently the ruining udu, British Columbia and .the Y9i creased of d biaa then the o{rment of the prairie provinces need for food of this ]cin ed a nee eupotteflon ' became . possible, ever, the packers stan'dardis the goods as well as the price: after some efforts a company the Canadian Canners Ltd. formed in 1903. We have 'written tten of t ancial or economic features canning industry in the past, enterprise has depended'upon from the beginning,. and sci this regard has been of Ines service. Yeasts, molds and ruined many a can of produc many a canner as well. These creations, half animal, Ball plc small would' wo retic places to the detriment goods. It was thought at on that the exclusion of air w=ou feet reservation, but this via partially true and correct y the couiteuts of the cans ver sterilized by being heated to tb point or a higher temp Corn, 'for instance, must be sul to a'heat of almost 250 F. in a retort in order 10 effect steric Not until the end of_ last were spoilage problems work through a partial knowledge teriology, but in 1896 Frescos Utrderwood, one a professo other a prattical canner, studs cessing on a scientific basis,, at dern sttecessfal rennin; realty from that period. The end is In Britain it is claimed that m electricity, a been sterilized byy haps ere many decades are nu as past, radium rays will sl these little bacteria •in the e render the contents immune tc age and decay. As for the can itself, there h wonderful progress in its m ture'and decoration. At first cut by hand from the plate and he was a master workm could make from 6D to 80 ca day. Enoug:hesoldet was then one can to contr act and seal under the modern system of facture. Allen Taylor, in 1847, ed the stamp can, which was ed iiiiprovement. Two years Henry Evans Jr. of New brought out the pendulum pr making can tops, 'pad inveertf invention, improvement aft provement, have gone on, ti now have the key-opearing c ceived by a man renown as man. The label on each can els; scuts a wonderful enterprise i Artists, lithographers, engeas• • mechanics are constantly ruga producing these decorations can, which, without them, we pear very unattractive, indeed, labels are undoubtedly a wort and are a wonderfully intfuen tor in ,selling the goods. Years ago the Dominion t mint recognized the imports the business, and, desiring t( Canadian 'houses on an equal creole footing with the oar other countries whose .produc government inspected and` passed, and in the year 1907 operation the '" "Meat and Foods :Act." This Act provide' au stringent and thorough systetor spection over alt meat cannin Lishment which did business of the province in which the teemed. This, combined with dent machinery in processing alntos•t eliminates the neces handling the materials. with hands, and the cooking in sl tort:, readers the contents tl It' clean,. U ICAN�E IS LIKE. WHAT AH HURRICANE ter- i1d moods is a ter Nature In her w7 rible foe, whether she raves noisily n the screaming hurricane or rages' ferocity the blizzard: with cold pictur inifune Words can picture only feinitly. a battle with a hurricane, but a letter who with her Fq- written be s woman1 m'ily passed th• rough a storm that it over 'South Carol na, conveys swept ` of a striking uvprCssion.of .he terrors that night; g About eleven o'clock Sunday night n doors began to blow the shutters and o g and: bang. G. and 1 got up close them,but not a lock 'would hold, .so -through we ran from room to room, 'bracing them with furniture, for they, are all double leas' doors, odeirings on. the, g piazzas.. The wind and rain were so P terrible that we were soakedwecl sed ' a moi nerve for as Jest as we closed u t anything it root open again. .On: the front piazza there was a wooden swia'g targe enough, far two tied t.with a' rape;. it. G. hadback • been a but ft mcg+ht as well have thread' for all the good it did. Three if the chains snapped the same way, but the fourth held, and that demon- against 'the Krouse ac thing smashed ago breaking in shutters and - windows, wood and glass. We dared not go near, not evert to enter the room out- for splinters and ide which it swung, o p were flying everywhere, wmechanics At last, through my crack, I saw a line ,oE white, long swirling f amthe Sash 'furiously ageing the steps.ef the house. We knew we must go., A louThe mile back on the island there was a house; we must .try for that. G, fought the wind, and succedd in get- ting under the cottage and cutting the rope of the children's goat=tlte house is set ten feet from the grad Iles, The party—nide of us—ran ou p P y for our lives: A furious wave fairly leaped at us out of the dark as we fled- s• Itis useless to try to imagine what a hurricane is like!! We fell dawn and into rushing rivers. You cannot conceive of the mystery and, horror 'of our flight. T fell twice with Eugene in my arms; the second time my breath was knocked out,' K.implacable had to take the child from the and support E. besides. The servants staggered along with a bundle and satchel cotitairiang valuables, hurried- ly gathered together, 'Through the inky darkness and fierce gale we fought our 'way. E. was brave and undomplaining, and the children were splendid; if they were frightened they did not say so. In absolute silence we staggered on, soaked to the skin,. with the wind blowing at ninety-five 'miles en hourl Sometiumes we crawled on our .hands and knees; sometimes we staggered forward like drunken Wren. By now we had gone habf a anile, and reached the street -car track; but there was yet another half -mile to go, G. then took ,E. and 1 'ugene on ahead, and left 'the rest of ue sitting on the track, 1 with Tot in my arms—poor little shivering th'ipgt After au inter- minable time, G. returned and took the twao children on. The servants. went of as best they could. Soon I was left atone in that awful darkeess. 1 crept aloirg the car -tracks udtii 1 came to a roof blown across them, and lost my bearings. '1 Just lay flat ' down on the ground in the sand, and looked up at that midnight sky, a- gains't which I could see two great trees swaying back and fatale—almost. y gAnalysis, touching the ground each time,—and 1 found myself wondering if, when they fell, they would kill me outrightby just break some bones and make me a cripple, Q was past caring whet happenecL At last G. came. PIe had a roan with him, and they eachnookl one of my. arras and carried me. along be- tween them. Certainly the Lord was good struck us coot a piece of flying debris. struck us, although the air was .full of them, I simply fell into the house when we reached there, and was given .ahorsepower then last, which I sorely `needed, and then we all laughed at the way T look- u ed;- lt'fy -'hair nvas full of tan'd thee lied caked into it, and my face was a etrattge color, like, an Indian's. 'There` were only two beds in tiie_hotse of our friend. in uric!, so the fanmflyy and ourselves took turns for three nights 'sleeping on the floor, The storm lasted twenty hours, and calledthe wind ninety-five miles they e r but the wind- ua e ,broke 'at an hour, g g that speed early in the night. Men oiti.a vessel in the harbor said it wascut i thirtymiles' an hour: pne hundred and done." 3, 'Leh us break their hands der; and cos away their cords from us. These avords, supposed to he spoke en by the powers in arms against Miscible discover to us the true ground of o 'p'ositio t; 'enamel the P 4 . y, g iris of re'belliot s 'nature to submit to +the obligations of divine which cross the ititerestst and a restraint upon the desires of O ions arethe most men. Corrupt affech •ett enemies of thrust• and et ate a em es their language is;—""We will not have this man to reign over us." 4. Ile that sitketh ata the heavens lot .,h,: the Lord slver! have ,S them to derision. r - By -hese, and such like exp es frequently • ' ur in the s ons, which requet y eec scrip ire we are taught, le a lang- . 1 .ttg g gage which. we understand, because borrowed from ourselves and our manner of showing contempe, how 1i ° the schemes of worldly po octans appear to him, who, sitting upon his heavenly throne,surveys, ata dance 'shorter n y y ,g whatever Hien are doing, or.co trio- ing.to do, upon• th earth. This is the idea intended to be conveyed; ' and from it we are eo separate all 00- tions of levity,or whatever rise ma o y offend, when applied to the 'Godhead, though .ad'herin'g to the phrases as in use among the, sons of Adam, 5. 'Then shalt he•.speak unto ''them in his wrath, and vex them in his sore displeasure. 6. Yet have I set my king upon my holy hill of Zion. meaning is, that, . byouria P g out his indignation upon the adpon caries of Messiah, as formerly upon those of 'David God would no tess evidently ,convict and reprove their Folly and impiety, than if he had ecru- silt' thus spoken to them from his eternal throne above: —"Yet nate withstanding all yotu rage against hint, have I raised from the dead, and exalted as Head of the church, my appointed Ding Messiah; in like manner as I once set his victorious representative David npoir• my holy hill of 1Sion, fn the earthly Jerusalem, oats of the reach of his nutnerous and •enemies.." ; THE 171oLDEN Tl EASUrY 21, In the day of trouble 1 will call upon thee, for thou wilt answer me;, r —1 calm Ixx�tt. 7) Tt en shalt than 'uitw1l1in call, and the Lord shall , answer; ,thou shalt cry,, and he shall say; -laws, (lay i i'i I amo ITsa,ilo c 9). The Lard to rich unto all who call upon him; th ,, a - ' and ,it shall come to pass, at w h t soever shall call ttlp'on the name of the Lord,shell he saved-4(1faet ii, 32.. Ants nu .1. Roto. x•12, 13, 19). • , oat 'cr and ..the Lord 'shall s y, —Theeth, and hearetlt, olid tiebiwereth 'thein out of all their troubles. (Psalm,xxxiv, 17)• The Lord is nigh unto. all that call an ,cxv. 18 . The ippon !rias QRsal 1 ) of a .righteous m'an :availeth prayer 'ch •.lames v, 16'. mttcl • (J ) What encouraging assurances are i, How these, ,H.ow can 'God deny ane any thing, niow, that I pray Pore He leas word; his'Son has • tvrrh'as- passed eve his p ed event' blessing; the fI•oly'Spirit in- spires the prayer, .the word 'holds it forth,' and the prayer of faith lays hold of .it, and a'ctua'lly receives it, Prayer , mouth of faith. If thou wilt have is the t intich, "open thy mouth wide," and it ehafl be :filled. Who then s'h'ould not be stirred up to pray much! 0 what Eoo'lishness`is .this, that we have noth- ng, but may abient all .f Tom (God, and Yat. are so loath to pray much, and pray right 1 Prayer makes the darkened cloud withdraw, Prayer xercis the ladder Jacob saw, Gfves everfse itoe faith and love, Gives Brings every blessing from above. Resbraining prayer, we cease to fight, Prayer makes the :Christian's arinour :bright, __ And Satan trembles ,when he sees The weakest saint upon his knees. On .The Psalms. 8t', su'bstituttn Messiah for 'David g the gospel for the l'aw, the church GhusGiau for that of Israel and the enemies of the one for those of the other, the 'Psalms are made our own. Nay, they are with more fulness and propriety applied now to the strb= stwice, than they were of old to bhe „shadow of good thitvgs then to come" (H'eb. x. 1.) And, ltheretore, ever since the comanen•cement of the Ch'risti'an era, the church hath chosen to cele- brate the gospel mysteries in: the words of these ancient hymns, rather than to compose for that purpose new ones of •her awn. For let it not pass unobserved, that, when upon the first pealicatioi of the gospel, the apostles had occasion to utter their transport's of joy, on their being counted worthy to suffer for the name of their dear Lord and Master, which was then opposed by Jew and Gentile,, they brake forth into an application of the 2nd ,Psalm to the transactions theta be- fore their eyes.—See Aots iv. 25, Tire primitive Christians cons•tantl_v fol- lowed this method in their devotions; cud, particularly, when delivered• out of th•e hands of persecuting 'tyrants, by the victories of 'Constantine, they raised God for his goodness, and the glorious success and establishment of Chi:lee religion, no words were found so exquisitively adapted to the purpose,'as those. + * * * Psalnt II, David, seated upon the throne of Is- rael, ndtwithstanding the opposi- e, tion made against him, and aiow•. about 'to carryItis victorious arms amonsst the neighboring heathen nations; may be,supposed to have. penned ithis, as a kind 'cf inaug- uratfon Psalnt, 'But that a "greater than David is here,' appears not only from the strength of the ex- which are more proper- n h ly ap:plfca'ble to 'Messiah, than to lyprtip o applicable David himself; hut:also Eton the citations made •iii the Naw Testa- meta. le treats, there 1-3 OE tla$ op' position raised both by'Jew and entile; against the kingdom o'f Jesus Christ.; 4-6, of his victory and the confusion of his enemies; 7-9 after hie resurrection, he \ re c11es the os el; and; I10-12, p a g pg calls the kings of the earth to ac cert it;depotrciu vengeance age 1g ainst those who shall not do so, blessing on and pronouncing al, a t s g those .who shall 1. Why do the heathen rage, and the people imagine a vain thing?. 2. The kings of the earth sib themselves and 'the miners take counsel together agonist the lL'ard; and against his au- pointed, saying, Tile 'true David is introduced, lite his .ancestor of old, expostulating with the nations, for their vain a t- tempts to frustrate the divine decree THE GARDEN, The gladiolus, as an inaposing and gorgeous sum'mer•flower, has no corn- petitor: It has reached a stage of perfection that it would seem useless to try to hnlprove, yet hybridizers are forging ahead producing new features, coax- acteristics and calorie What ishad considered most beautiful to -day may seem comneotnpd�ace a few years &hence. •The blooming period of the gl'adi- alms is July, August, and 'September, the months of greatest "heat, There- fore one can preserve the bloom mu'ah longer by, removing •from the platrt. Although .they are beautiful blooming g } in the garden, they ace extremely decorative' when cut, In fact, the _gladiolus is first and last a crit flower. Anyone who has not felt an in- describable thrill at the beauty of soine`of the •presen•t day varieties when arranged artistically ie a suitable re- eeptacle has a most pleasing emotion yet to be awakened within him, \T'o'twyithstanding its beauty, it is a flower for everyone. for the most eat- isfactary thing about it is its absolute suitability for amateur and florist alike. For this reason it is growing in popularity in leaps and bounds•v :For •the benefit of the would-be grower a few notes on cultivation would not be a•mass, 'We will begin with "Do not:'" ' 'Do not plant your bulbs here and there among other flowers, Do not Plant close to any other flower or shrub, as the latter will take the moil- tore and absonb'the plant nourishment faster than the bulb. Consequently the bubo iarely uiattnres to bloontiu g stage• To produce good flowers 11 is best to plant in double rows about seven inches apart, according to space atin command. The bulbs are placed atom six to 12 finches apart in the rows (strong gnawing varieties 12 inches) lbs i !anted Four to six and the bu p inches deep. • 'A cord run along '•rhe outer side of the dOtible row and fastened there with an occasional stake if the row's are tong, dvolils plants firmly against 'wind and storms,and Pruning Roses. To prune bush roses r•eutove all dead wood first. Cut out all weak shoots that start from. the ground. Leaving sufficient of the stronger ones, Then aiack about two-thirds of, the Length of 'the last sea'son's lateral or side growth, learfng shout spurs rev* inches' long at the base of the lastOne 5easan'a growth. Leave one or two strop young, cite -year canes, that start from near the ground each year to keep .the bush supplied with young;; strong, vigorous groycth. Very old wood three or four .years old may 'be opt 0111 to urate room for the young. :growth. Stuffed Peppers 1 cup cooked ham (ground 1 cup cooked pork (ground 1 cup Corn Flake crunths %/ teaspoon salt pepper Few grainsP Pp 1-3 cup tomato juice 6 green peppers 1\'Iix ham, pori: and Cori crumbs. dinisten with roma Cut stern end from peppers move seeds, :Parboil three and fill e peppers with stuffing moderate oven (350 degree 30 minutes, Yield: 6 serving Note: It is not necessary Y two kinds of meat for thi Two etips of !fail will make torts recipe. - • An • f�fidacious !household remedy— 4 DougdasP 'Eg}dptian. Liniment. Brings med+ia e; relief ,to' 1'ain'e Karl, and nn' t. Also ,relieves musateer th:eumasieg: w'e (lamination, burns, scores, corns and warts., Cause of the Depressi p. Hard times only whets you when you play, is the nodi People Have tots of money f, meat but none to pay the NARN- $5,00' TO $10,00 DAISY Earn part time, while learning fol hawing big pay trades: Garage work, welding, barbering,. hair dressing. Po- sitnfoHers siti ns o; en. Information free. .icor o p pl'oast. service' frontCoast to A. • l Doniiiti'ou Schools, 79 Coos , W., v eep, Toronto: • �.(side, p in his favour. The two verses are -'cited, Acts iv. 25. and elms expound- 'ed.—"Lord—of a truth against thy `holy child Jesus, whom thous hast an-, hoinked, both Herod and Pontius Pi- ,re late, with the Getr:ules, andethe pro- ple of Israel were gathered together, for to do whatsoever thy hand and thy counsel 'detenirined Before to be ' CONQUEST' OF THE TIN CAN+ - A single tin can is a very insignlfi- cant container, with a top rind a bot tam. It may also have a label on its as most cans do. It will stand Mrs. 03,r -own (reading tl• Paper) ,"John, it refer; here .;'unmen taking a man Fora t of a ride?"' Browns "A slay ride, my All mothers can pub away anxiety. arditi their suffering ,children g g when: they 'leave Mother Grave's' W'.orni 'Exterminator to give relief. Ifs effects . are sure. and, lasting •un= Want and For Sale Ads; 3 Many ers of d only lived period. ,try in :Oil ilt- devel- creat- d and How- e the and. known was he fin - of the but the suience' ince in tunable bacteria e and s'trang'e nt, and rk in of the e time ld ef- s orrly only when e first e boil- erattrre, bjected steam ization, centauy ed out of ble- ared r, the ed pro- d pro - fates not yet. irk hes at per nu; aughter sit and o spoil- es been - anufac- it was I tin, an who ns per used on a dozen tnanv- invent- a decid- later Jersey, ess for oa after er im- ,til we Ott, con- Zimmer - r repre- n itseI'f. :rs and gid in for the old ap- Some of art tial fac- Govern- nce of place ly far - kers in is were narked, put into Canned i a very nofin- estab- outside y were the .mo- which city o:f human eam, re- rorough- Flake to juice, and re - minutes bake in F.) for s. to have s recipe, a delic- on, pay, not :rn way. tr amuse- ir debits. e news- to sante •ide, What clear." times 50c