The Huron Expositor, 1930-08-29, Page 3I 14"I , :��, , . �, ," � �blf -
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'he gttnI I he mo�un %,*A QLh 7 � � ,
rules a t .e.' . .1 .1'emplayment Memorandum for t I I I , :il 1. � I 41. 1
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' A in. greater nux uted s xeject- bor government. F& . � ,._ I I
taim', an Wb ,A,, irybddy admires I ..
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. "Toach me to ,distinguish between , `srs than, he prese I . . ' J ... T 0 .. I
.1 "Teach rue, to, bel. QW.Jent to -the Place bas beew .taken. oviw by -hireil Sir 4 04W,al . . OS11. . fi S . Ial,,�dr plolymignt Jigeretar I . . � .' r, ,. �' , �, I �,
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-e; but now -their operatives Ore ed -by the cabinet in such a way as to Am- he it on. gooil,�-,w ,tl� I � . 11 1� . _ � , � � ,, :, i
veintiment and, �ser ality, adu&. hefor me, with poll . ,� ; ,� I . 444 I'VI
0iment, . , , I I ��
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. er w4ge-p,Wd emplo-yees- of the bootleg rule ,out any other practic,able alter- 'friend, and floe,'glike, He madle, . .1 . . � . 1�_,., ..", 1,,,�Ih�'.-�.,',, _V�Rm
ing ,the ,on& land . despising the ath � , � ":, " I'll , ". 1� I 6
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. "Tea,dh me, neither to proffer dlc4tero. The standa-Td W898 in native to the po,licyof rthe udni'stei,�f Wms6lf a leader',a"his fellows by" � 1 � _ tk,N�
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I to receive cheap praise., . the Tennessee mountains is six dollars unemployment, the Rt. Hqn. J. H, sheer ability; I -.. ,. 12 the �;� p ... . � . '�.�P�. �,��,�_:� _:,;�,,;%: ', ,q
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"If I -am called upq1L to, suffqr, liet a day far the. men, who operate the Thomas, In the ,apologia forhid res- front % I . .� . .. ,,, �T
, .. � rank, avlang .no.- -quarter and giv- .�- I " .. ,'Q��,'�k , . .
'Being -only em. ployees, with no ignation, hesoored a persona, triumph ing -none. 'He has6:'4, gift for looking .� I � . I ,:,� 1, :� . -I,,, � ,�,�151� , I,
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me be like a well-bred bearit tha,t Voes Stills. . - . . 0 , , . ..., .1 1;�,' 0
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away to suffer in rAlence. property to defend, these men are sel- that will ha -a permanont effect On a situation in. tlie- face; hei �ossesses . " . . I . I I :1 �, � � -, � I . I ,.' , 1; " �.�,,.�;�,
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44 The bootleggers' and determination and lie is . . . Z � , ". � . ;, �, ,
Teach me to Win; if I may - if I dorr� apprili6nded. ,his career. He held a paicked house courage .,., __ . . � . . . ... " 1,W Rg
rasy not) teach me to be a gooh IOg_. spy system is go. *6arnp,lAe that notice of corninions for, an hour and a lialf- as shrewd as they ma'ke 'em ill Wales.' I � I � � , : ', I "
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.,w . . is likely to go ahead of a raid; bence, he hold the,members as they have not "W. Thomas owes'none of 'MS guc� I � � - " `11 � q , I
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"Teach me neither to cry for -the in QO Majority .of cases, the raided been, -held beforel in- -the -present par- cess in, We to his �,irth and upbri - . I � ,,,
still, is found, - deserted. . , . I I'll 11 , �1%
mioon nor (to cry over sjilt milk." - Ilament. R1e spoke wtithout notes, ing. Born of laboiring parents in I . I . , I `_�,
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. For -this reason few arrests are though he ,wandered, through a -maze Newport, Wales, he was educated at I , I 1,-, V., I , �
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- , in A31W Is of detail m explaining the ,proposals council schools,,. - commenci . I . :,ew. I -,
made� -though the mortality ` " ng., _ work e I ''. I., ,'�".. C',
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' heavy, Ynnhappily, the destruction. of in -big memorandum. I 61A as an irrand I'll � , , I .. w�. �,:�.!" , -
1 4 when, nine yoair�ri - I � �� .'P
. JAN�TS DILEMMA . even groat numbers of these secret 1Thert,,,y,of,Sir OmmId's rn�,Inos,n- boy. ,Having a loaning towards me, . �, I % �:'.'1111111111 ,.
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.1 . Teut e -f- dum �On 'Unemployment is -that he, sub- ch4n6bg, he secured( ,a job with the . . "t , * �;Q
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. As soon as jane saw -the calendar plants has but a small, detet �. , .�A'l
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. feet upon the illicit distilling. Maney mdtted it to Ramsay Macdonald, and Great Western railway as an engine T1% 1 fie , � . . 1 �
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Con that it was ,her aunt's hirth ". : � 1. . . ,( V! I
- in bletter hiding places.' favored, the proposals it contained. Man and. finally to dTiver. - t . I . , ,
-alized " with a sinking aen8a is readily forthcoming for renewals big impression wag that the premier clemer, rising stage by stage to fire- t
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day. A inoment's panic bef she Are Noticeably u. ,� 'reS. 1'1�
ore IModern conditions and inventions But the counsels -of Philip Snowden It was,11owever, as a speaker and . . .
. ." saw the way ,out. A Long Dista a have done much to revolutionize the and, J. -IT. Tho,nias were against them. organizer that success first came, and, I ' ' . . . . � t �� ! .
call, solved the problem and plealed . ' # ... : ...
wild-catting branch of the bc'Otleg- The effect -of the famous, speech, how- as a member ,of parliament M[r. The charm and grace of the NeW Fashions in , - �'o
. .1eT aunt.more than -any gift. gers' business. A stout truck can go, ever, ,has been to, rouse Premier. Mae- Thomas is in his proper SphoTe. He . . I "I'll", . 1". 11
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.0 — over roads where the shackly wagon Donald from his absorption, in foreigm knows everry move on the parliament- !�,�.&; ��
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Women's Coats,. with their refre . , ;�. .
, of the old-time moonshiner would col- alTairs and,to cause him to net with ary chessi board; he has a ready wit, . . ,,shing innova- ,."777
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� -o like the deacon's one-hoss shey -n.d,, at the igameof repartee, he leaves ions an , 1. . .1i 11.'�,,.�-',
NOONSHINERS laps . - less lethargy in regard to matters at a d novelty.features are now being sho I I
Telephone lines criss6ross, even the hom,e. W_n ...,.
hisopponent nochances. He is among , I .; -
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-emote mountain regions and ,even 'Sir Oswald )&sGey comes down to the best bridge players at Westmin- lt
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. red- in the ele, ster, he knows a good, dinner when he . .�, �t
-past, before it became. -a felony to be wireless does its turn now and then. the house perfectly'atti in our Ready -to -Wear' Department. _'i.
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found -with a pintbottle of hard liquor 'Many of the men, -now operating gaiit sad diignified. style of the club- sees -the menu, and he is probably � -, �..: ,-;,�, ,�' �
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in one's possession, the illicit distill- the stills are doubtless, the 90TIJ� Of man who earr afford, to be on good more than any other rminber of the I I'll . . .11
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A � i�� �,� , _' I,
ing of corn,. whisky, ivariously known moanshiner fathers, but if so they -are terms with everybody. A modern government in -sympathy with the po-1- New Lengths— ,New Lines-rNew Color Tones.' ;,' � - �,�`,`J:!,�,�
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locally -as "corn," "old earn ... .. wild- regarded, as, degeneiate sons, for the figure, elastic, -light and strong, a icy of Mr. Baldwin. . . . I—. �.,-, ��<",;,;!.".,
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cat" -or "pine -top" had the status Of hired erperatives of the present time modern face, eager, sensitive and ner- As secretary ofstate for the domin- . -_i�'�,��;', i
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an institution in the southe and ions, Mr. Thomas looks- like becoming The radical changes that are featured assure ,"�11� 11,;?.-,;�,��,
.rn Appal- are looked down upon by the rnoun- vaus, -are in- -perfect -keeping , 1 .� 1, ,,
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nchians; and the distiller's indust17 tain t1weIlers---:perh-apg because they harmlomy. Now that he has cast of- the most conspicuous man in the �' , 74 I "', �
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was, from his, point of view, rather a are -hired. For your true mountaineer He is already you .... -_ ,11",
fice, from him be will, no, dioubt, give British gavernment. of smarter new -styles than we have ever . ., ,���,, ... �
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necessity than a matter of choice. Has is nothing if not a dyled-in-the-4wool vent to that perfect gift of repartee one) of the moist travelled, as he has . � � . "'.
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-isolated landhol,ding in t5ie mountains., individualist. - effective- visited many parts. 0 .the, empire, 11 ,.,�,.��,,�,i
and the poverty of its soil, restricted and invective which he has shown before. Won't you inspect ,these new .... � - N,�,,�,
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Under Present conditions in. the ly restrained, for some 12 months. and, he gained valuable experience as " ,; . _A�.��,�"
'him to a single I'money crop," namely ni-cimtain districts of the South the bolonial secretary in- Plremier Ran-aay .. , 'Ii?, i
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corn,; and the marketing of this in its enforcement units, are at no little dis- .e. Xacdonal&s first administration in arrivals at your early convenience. I,"
� natirral state, over long distances and advantage. In the old, day's if a still . 1924. It is, not gengrally known 'chat I I �',,,�'-' , � .
by roads more or less impassable for was destroyed, the moonshin3r hardly . TOPICS IN BRIEF some time ago he set up a private " . �.. '', 11 "I ��, I
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wheeled- vehicles during a fair half had means to Teplace: it. Now, witil AV% � �,;.
committee ofitreasury and colonial ex- I . "
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of the year, could be accomplisbed the stills capitalized by outsiders, they Most people believe in law andor- . .. 1 _$55,00 - . "��, �
only ,at a loss. - der as longas, they can lay down the Perts to work out -a scheme for im, Pr'ces $10.00 t%i : .-:_,11, ,
are quickly and easily replaced. I trade as an alternati,ve to that . I ''. ,::.
Under'.these, conditions he was like- law and give the ,orders. - Otta,-, peria I �-,� .
Then, too, tfie topography of the � of the Unionists. Mr. Thomas, ' is I � .1. �, i� ,
ly to provide himself with some metal re-gi,on interposes great 'abstacles. (Kansas) Herald. r , �_'
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No vieTe man can ever understand watching events, in the Reaverbrook- I . 11 �. I i
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� for his "copper," and some empty Vast ,areas in the southern Appalach- Rothermere and Baldwin camps very .1 ,7..
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barrels -to be satwed in two for tubs, ian regio ,ca -im- why a woman will pay five eollars . �"' �
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n -are still practi Ily In 'kings that give the closely, and he will be ready when, the I ... N',
and with this primitive equipment1he eval wilderness. To police these for a rair of stoc I A 0 .� 1
-orn, us- mountain wi I many in- impression that she isn't ,wearing times carnes. . � �14 ��,
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would transmute big surplus c Ids, which, in Allocation of loans- for the purchase = 71
ually an inconsiderable, quantity, into ,stances, begin -at the very,doors of -the otockings-Arkanses, Gazette. tha,t of vast quantities, of raw materials .111, ,
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a small army would be rL-quir- It is a strange co � empire countries is one of �Mr. . �, I
a more easily transportable form and 'cities ni,men+ary STEWART BRU.)., SEAFORTH
I ' the head n`cver'begins to swell until fro' . ,�1111
thus solve his, problem of existe,nce. ed. tlaat, Thomas, favorite policies, and his ex -
He was well awarethat he was a law� And thus far, the army has not the mind- stops growing. - A I L ";
. I perience and, information on the sub- I � ,;, " I . I �
breaker. But he did not admit that materialized. ,11 Constitution,. �� - -_ M - -_ _____ I .
his whisky-malung was , . We understand from the advertise_ ject at the present time are second, to I � "I ... 11
,marally
wrong. As one mo-ons1iner said to .0. ments, that the college lads are at none. Also,, he is in -a position of ,�", �
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Too: 4C tests paramount importance as head of a ,� , !". .
My gran1pappy's least .plassling their cigarette __1 -_ --- - ------- __.— 1, �
gran'pappy WHEN YOUR CHILD . with- g-reat ,success this, year.-ArIcan-, great government department that 1. I . . .. .... ,I �', I
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rnaae whisky out'n his corn and no- will be responsible for running the .,
IS FEVERISH vas, Gazette.. . I . persons she wished to torment by This is going stxaightback-as, for I a black hen, all were deemed potent "'
Abody said hit war wrong. Theri them ial conference. He will be, ' . .1
. . . I means of puppets: a form of magic the matter of that, do all supersti- lam:dng the Colonists. If a horse 4
fellers in Washin'ton done made a Mvking highwarys 40 feet wide 'mper in I.,
,,, i
lavr a-&ayin' hit war wrong - but Give Him Baby's Own Tablets. wouldn't. chang,e- things much, except the chair during all the P'rinc'P'a' found all over the world. tions -to, the fetishism, of the savage. I neighed, someone would die in -the di- , I_ I
� I
. that busels would expand to .38 feet. meetings, and he can be relied upon The Salem trials seem to have, be- The red color of the silk cord is be- I rection of the horse's head was poi-nt- , �"
that don't, make hit Wrong by the : ,,,
.. I The bealth of babies and little to enter upon his- duties with a wide �
Bible." children is subject to rapid changes. -Kenosha (Wis.) News. - , ii mind. gun with a West Indian negress nam- cause red is, everywhere among sav- ing. If .a spider brushed your faCe.4. . .. I ;. � � i
Apart from ignoring the revenue A heathen, country is one in which ope ed Tituba, who, belonged to the Rev. age religions a sacred color. Blood when walking in the woods at night, . % % r I - ,
Thus the mother inust 'be on her the pay -roll can, be transported wath- 'Mir. Thomas and the British people Mr. P,arris, of Salem Village, and who was life- -blood was magic; the colorla ghost was following; if in the day- ..... . . ,
. laws, these moonshiners differed in guard'. At the first sign of feverish- generally are looking to. the Iniperial excited Mr. Parris' little dau-hte,rs of blood I was magic-sci ran the sav-1time, a -stranger was coming. . ..... ..". .
no appreciable respect froin their non- out a, arniored car.-Brookilyn Times. . . . Nut- 1 M � .
ness Baby's Own, Tablets should be The b,ek_to�th,_f,,m mavement has conference as providing a unique op- with her stories of voodoo practice. age mind's argument. I meg was warn for boils. A horse I . ."
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'stilling neighbors, sharing with them given -this may avert a serious ill- be,en a complete -success. There are Poltunity for a free and open discus- They and a few playmates met ,to And to -day enlightened nurser. in, chestnut was kept in the pocket for � , I
ithe virtues ,of a primitive. people, bog- sion, of tudy "palmistry, magic and recro- modern hospitals, -no less than general protection, and is still so kept . A
pitality hIgh, wide and handgome, Tioss. now more backs to. the farm than, ev- , -all the aspects Of ,the unem- 5 ..-.Ii
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'Concerning the Tablets Mrs. Nor- uyment question. "As I have ex- mancy," and. excited by their stu4y, mothers who have learned the cus- by people who would deny they were . ,
honestyas between man and man., de- er be-foTe.-The Thomas E. Pickerill 111 W
man. Lee, Uxbridge, Ontario, says- Service. amined it," Mr. Thoinas said a shoirt began to alarm the neighborhood by torns from their mothers, carry new- superstitious. ,�.i
,cently strict morality in tho field Of ,, My little boy, now three years'old, "everything the Ur,�ted rn babies upstairs first to ensure The Puritans believed that such ills .. ., 4 I
sex and more or less deep religious ilt iis those who have tried It most time 'ago, contartions and outcries. The village bo I '. , .
was not at all well, He was feverish frequently who aye convinced that States possesses, in material, resoure- doctor declared them under ap evil their rise in the world,,not only with as blasted wheat, molded beans, wormy 11,
convictions. Law-abiding in a goner- and had no appetite. I gave him marriage is a failure. -Arkansas Gaz- es and wealth. is possessed within the eye. The child -ren, pleased with their money in their hand-, to bring wealth I peas and mildewed, corn, drought, . � � " ...
11
al sense, the moonshiner still believ- Baby's Own Tablets and he was soon ette . aydbit of the' British Rmpire. It is public importance, had fits in church but, in same parts of the, country,1 grasshoppers, caterpillars and other I Z I
ed he had a moral right to make his 1 would not be without * fortune awaits the genius who because of that knowledge that I, on a)id drew terrified crowds. with 9 n their heads, woes were sent by 'Heaven to punish , I I
corn into whisky if he so desired, and well again. A . I behalf of the British Government, say omething scarlet �o . ; .. _.
the Tablets as long as there are young car, succeed In crossiing the bomling "Who is the devil's agent?" they to keep them froin harm. I Such offenses as wig -wearing,. dress � :.1 .
he was willing to fight for that right ��, , �
rty. And children in the house." pigeon with the umbrella.-Lmisville that we intend to enter the imperial 'were asked, and named Tituba, a bed- And how many of us pick up horse- 1 ornamentation, sheltering Quakers I ... �1.
and in, defense of his prope e to consider every problem I I
when, he fought, he fought to kill. Baby's Own Tablets are sold by Times. conferenc ridden beggar woman named Sarah shoe-) "for good luck?" Our reason, and not paying ministers. ��' ,
.11
_,_ medicine dealers or by mail at 25 aue. get- on its merits, unfettered by prejudice Good and an aged mental deficient for cherishing iron, though we may I If you doubt that we -still use magic , i�,
In that alder day the revenue Wonder if people will cmtii I 1,
cents a box from The Dr. Williams' ti farnous at a rate fast enough to or ,bias, and prepared with a ring -le- called Sarah Osborne. The, women not know it, and neither did he, is foi-mulas listen to children counting , .., 7 ,
ficers -searching for -hidden stills' in ng find- a solution I �-,
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. spatisfy the testimonial ad demand.- minded desire to try to were tried;'t-he waive of'hysteria and older than George Washington by out, �.A.
,.e the mountains went prepared for of the problem," excitement grew; the whole* courtroom many ... .,�,
,
Quite wide from his .-*. ' .. �1
pitched b�.ttles. Marshall -County Banner. thousand years. As late asl Z
belief that he had a moral right to ig - Over 13,000 new laws were passed The wheat situation- has given an was crowded with people telling the 1769 Washington'& diary mentions the I Rena meena Tnina mo, 11 ". . �
. More the revenue laws, the mountain- MOSLEY,-A BLUE BLOOD KICKS in America last year. Thefe seems added impetus to the British " "' tales of spirits in the forms of -yellow arrival of Josihua Evans "to put an I " Catch a nigger by the toe, � I � . � 1.
�,_
to -be an anirple allowance for break- party's campaign in favor of maldng birds, of dogs, imps, cats and the rest. iron ring on Patsy" (his step-daugh- , .
eer's sense ,of property value made bulk purchases of wheat from Canada �
"
him desperate. To stand aside and - OVER THE TRACES age.-Glaggow Eastern. Standard. The children became the autocrats of ter, Marthe Curtis) as a cure for fits. 1 or' chanting "Hickory Dickory Dock, .". L� " 4
see,the plant that had taxed his slen- California -has -not as yet been in- and, the -other doniinions, and the e,- the village, accusing -whom they chose. The iron ring, like the, iron herse- the mouse ran up the clock." They I
A
der resources, to make chapped to piec- Dark, debonair and, determined, Sir vaded by the Mediterranean fruit fly' tablishment of a government import They gr�w bold enough evon to cast sho,e, like, the shears which, laid in'are -using the "shepherds' score" or , I I I �
. I
Oswald Marley, Dart., is the exact op- which is 'bringing distress to Florida. board. A scheme on these lin" will '. - on Lady Phipps, the gover- the baby's cradle, kept him from be- prebistoric numerals of the Celts ,
4es was a farte he was apt to r ' t . I ' suspicion I
egis it is understood, be presented by Mr. nor's wife, and on John Alden's son, ing stolen -by the fairies, as may still counting "one, two, three, four." :1� ,
wit)i small Togard for. ibis own life posite to ithat which he was intended Is it possible that the Western or- . 11 I : "
and, none at ,all, for the lives. of the to be! -He is the antithesis of ,his singds have no insects appeal? -The Thomas at the Imperial Conference, %vh.o war- brought to trial but escap- happen in Wales, are helpful because "Hickory Dickory Dock" is a corrup- ,� �
.:: I
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,destroyers. upbringing, and, the negation of the New Yorker. when speculation in wheat will be ed. t1ley are of iron. When we "see a tion, ,of "bocera, cocera, dik"--eight, 'Ah.
family traditions he inherited. All One -of the Oddities, of Wall Street "Stan1ced &"-owing the necessity fo,r The terror lasted six -months. T�wen- pin pick it up, and all the day have -nine, tenandboth are remembrances I..
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One revenue, ,offilcer tells this story this makes him, a personality of out- is that it is the dealer and :not the the creation of a steady demand at a ty people, were, put to death; eight ,0�d luck," we are going on the r�awe 'of th4'day when the Druids or their I ,
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of a pre -Prohibition raid, Informa- standing interest, and the uncertainty - .r who is called broker. _D,1_ fair p6ce. Pew Englisihmen know qwung in one day on Gallows Hill. ;rinciplos�that iron keeps away like "counted -out" to find the will of 0
tion ,had. come in poiniting to the ex- custome More about the grain- situation than Scores more lay in prisons all over inalignant spirite. the gods for human. sacrifice. I...., I.
istence of ,a still and the officers went of his political aotions in the future I -as News. _ � ;� I
prompts a curiosity ,that keeps ,him How comforting to To -fleet that the does Mr. Thomas. He conferred at New r, ,gland. Suddenly the people Among the niost persistent super- In "Mind in the Making," James �.
in search of it. At the moonshiner's ever in the limelight. ordinary oar you have is the wander- length with the Domini -un Government came awake in a revulsion from their stitions are those based on the habits Harvey Robinsonsays the human race I
..
cabin only two children, a girl of ton, Born "in the purple" 34 years 19', ful one the ad describes�Birming- on the -occasion of his last trip to absc,s-sion and Governor Phipps order- of animals; 'many still affect the life has lived in savagery praicticaby the� . I .. I
and a -boy of seven or eight, were Osi�ald. oMisley, as befitted big rank, ham News. I . Canada, and,offt,cials, of the wheat pool ed the release of all charged with of renvote coniniunities of the United whole of its existence-. We hRVe, SO .."
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found. The girl would -have nothing was educated at'Winchester, and from .Ohio State j,,mal: uo,, of the visited him in Londion some monthr. witchcraft. States. The hair of a dog, the skin, to speak," been -civilized for only a '; I
to say, but the boy told the offkers . I
that ,big father was at the sliffl. He therehe passed to the Royal Military somewhat disillusioned, brides of this 'go- From the outset Quakers were ac- of a snake, the pelt of a black ca�, few minutes. ,
,�,
even agreed, to tell .them where -the 00111loge, Sand'huilst. Agadii� as be, neigbborbood wonders if Lindy snores. - cured of Tnagic and sorcery. In the the black 6-oth of a bog, the blood of No wonder old superstitions remaint ��, I
,
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fitted his, rank, he was gazetted, to Ile Another assignement for the report- umirner of 16-56 there arrived at Ros- ',
still was if they would give him a I �,,
dollar. But he insisted' that the do,_ of the crack regiments -of the British ,,,.-T,I,,d, Blade. ton a company Lj� Quakers, aniong �_ .L-'- - -_ -.--. - --..- - - --- --- _ �
-army, the 16th Lancers. His parents With some autoists the turnover is It is not what men think of women, them Mary Fishei and Ann AwAin, a "
. Iar be paid in -advance. ' ,
.,, at this, staLre mdA.t well have can- �4.i_ 4-U. -11 v1 --4A- but what women think of each o er manied woman wi five childTen. . -1""'.
11W%T do you want US To GO Vnaw,. co I - � �y -F. -
asked the offieer. grartulated themselves that everything rnme,5_-Unjon. that gives spice to life. - Sir John Both were. thrmt into prison., accused
"Jost ,cause fu;rriners"-the moun. foy young Oswald had- been carried Out A girl and a car are much alike. A Poster Fraser. of beang witches, and "stripped stark
tain word for ouitsiders-"a-goin' down with proper ,decorum, and that he good paint job conceals the years, but naked, not missing 'head nor feet,
.
to that there still don't never come was launched upon a career that would the lines tell the story- -Zan Francis— searching betwist their toes and
Anake him a figure in -the aristocratic co Chronicle. I amon-gst their hair, tewing and abus-
I back." er -had the simple qnd, exclwive social life of England. 'Ph, Book-ofAhe-Month Club idea GOBLINS THAT GOT US ing their ,bodies in such a manner as
The -old moonshin There was money in abundance, ,and can bal camied tOo far. We lhave, modesty will not ad'Viit to mertion." .
virtues ,of the mountaineer, among
them the virtue ,of prainise.-keerping. , the baroinetcy that was coming to just been invited to join the Necktie- The Piiritani, when. they came to This was done, with the hope and ex -
One, lawbreaker, for instalice, Wag him dated from 1781. There could, a.JMonth Club. -New York Evening the New World, were burdened -with peetation- of discovering "the devil's
' 4 -
Par
therefore, be nothing ofthe "noaveau'l 't. More s iritual fetters than they te- mark" upon theni.
sentenced to -serve a term in the chain , Pli
gang. -Six months, later, when the about Os*ald. The old-time girl was usually a alized. Though they could -be Dis- Mary Dyer, a comely woman,
4 first -snows began to powder the sum- All went well far a time and then clinging vine. The modierre girl is UIS, renters if they wished, they could not mother of three children, was, on her
mits of the ,Grft-t*Smakies, the Judge young -Mosley discovered. that politics u�ally a rambler -Louisville Times. free themselves from old, pagan be- way to join her husband in, Rhode Is-
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Teceived -a letter from the convict. It were more congenial -than the army. It would,,b, interesting to'know how liefs ,and superstitions attributing su- laind.-when ,called ,before the Gove,Lnor
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. was a petition fot a, furlough of ton In 1918, at the age ,of 2,2, he was m�a,y millionis of 19vullons of 9ago-1-1110 permtural powers to creatures of air, of Massachusetts and condemned to
el6cted to Parliament flor the, Harrow the people -of this prosperous country earth and, soa. death, together -with William Robin -
I days, pathetloally eloquent in its Mis- vi,�'jsjon of BEddlesex as a 1�true blue"
speilling. Would th� judge let him off per diem just driving around Cotton Mather, spokeenilan for big van and l4arsmaduke' Stevenson. All
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for just te . Tory of the country squire school, "" ree wero hanged on Boston Comm -on.
. :r .days,? Wia&r was COM- ch he remained until 1922. looking few parking pladels. - Ohio time-, is remembered always as the tb
. , 'Idtat and, as su - of the Salem Vil- ,The recent "hexerei" trials in York,
� Ing on, am ,his... ife:�and_abl State Journal. principal instigatol
o y I-_ , But, during those f6ur years, Oswald . -
i alan in the calyin with nobody to c. had begun to, think for himself, and The, only ainbition in, life a parper Inge witchcraft trials. Now, a witch Pennsylvania, revealed the fundamen-
. . -their wintor Wood. ,116 W,012M "CeTtaill . I napkin has is to get davm off a dinee'4 was, a person who had, sworn. a com- tal capacity of the folk mind for C011-
shaToll come, ba& ,and serve �ut ,hi, he Ventured outside -the amits lap a:yfd play on -the flooi.-Kay Fort- pact with, the devil to aid him in, his tinuing to believe in witches. In 1929
.
. I s of �4,9 earlier training. 1
.sentence. I I .1 ,activities against God and the Church. as in the 17th, ,and 18th centuries.
- '
Thefuriough war gfvft, and1na,ad, erl,n& but he munlaged to get .himself ,Even if 'you can't tell a mother and The devil as a rewa4#'on40Wed witch- tbe,re are Obstinate "pagan." minds
&tuwaq , ,To-( Reoted, for Rarrow,-in 1922 as, an her. daughterapart now, .their-, is very es. with certain unedrdily powers. A which ,go, in fear of 'Witches, and whicli
time, true too his ;vroW,,.'. 'he t . . '. . , P.
, , , - . Npdapondlient. Thig 9�vd him- i1he free' little that you cauft tell, them to- witch e-ould lloauso- ihft and women buy ,camly (the book has gone
. iinizelf UP. I ,." ,.:r , van atu,
; afto". gave 1 ", 0m: of atti,du. that-Im tod- and, ge,th,er -,
lVe mountain wbiieky�of that oldbr' ,- Kay F, es. to pine swity," thTa*4hem into.fright- through nunoerless printed editions)
.
A.- wm a col. less Xquid adie wfiol- 4ting the two years that follorgvedf AJm4grJft1n1g haVlsbecome .go oxtrava- ful.,yeahvitlalon's, c1%-2&-1h,rtA-P 'Subject the, "s.novolc ,'book" John Guo�rgro Hioli.
. P he"didi something .that wtu rtaiii1v ant that it, is now almost as liard, to them, -to every sort P . I... PHOT6 at qjmu
'.
� li 4Ue4m., It *a,g -raw und, fte'ty t6 got b , 9 " , disfts- man's "Long Lost Friend." This a ..,
,Ift4ft:4o, his rank. Ito went. live withth no, inconie as without one. ter, -,ov4n tp death ,i%�Lrl 18"lied,
- 'the d4lized. pal0,t,9FWi* a fRiht OMAY ,16' 111. L 64A , I � 'IiacaA, ot-treme to '(1W 110 preactical manual 9 "white" witheratt, Lake with Plegal Guardians
,
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,Ar4ffi�o*,fikh. *"1ts only qdalit I .po the —Louiaviflle 'AThes, —�**hvo were s1b`M6d1111M niale) Far instance- "To win every game
. y fq, , , 'A,r�
I . . Maligne Lake injasper National Park is the latg6st glacial fed lake iothe ,,,,
I �..th#lp :-bebOfflft a "true roWl Soc� The ehetgy wAsted 'by wompn puR - eool&ttiuMorm �4hot*flf Int& t1w IWO- eagaged in, tie the heart of a bat .1 Rockies. its natural beauty unspoiled, it is a veritable toapet forth- 9 , 606
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It I , 4.'., '. 1. "'k t?" 0 1 - Afi, 11' "' It 066* ofIrb,lidtion broke oka 'State Xournpl, ' 6Ad Und JAP#dt kk that 4 % arm., and yov will win every garf* L*e twiiat�, , . . � , ,, . 11:.
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