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The Huron Expositor, 1940-07-05, Page 6
• edicts Great Future For British Empire e.a0eorge F. Beverley, who writes tine flollowintg preddotvons, is a former .l'ebident of H•ensall, and who attend- ed s_ebool 'in Heesa11 and Gunton. He maw' •resdides in Canton, -Ohio), The iolliotwdng prediction or pro- Ipbecy is smitten on the 7th day. of the sixth month, 1940, which is the third day of the new moon. The writer is the author of religious and scientific books. It is written in the indtioation of the power of 7 against 6 (Rev. 4, 5 and Rev. 13, 18), also the knowledge of certain ancient zaysteries, The prediction should come true at least ,S5 per cent. There is not suf- ficient sign to predict war for the United States in the next few days, but another sign comes in on t•he 17th which shall change things consuder- ably. The- U.S.A. shall prepare for war, but preparation is often prevention, 1941-1943 inclusive, shows a change of Presidents in the U.S.A., Last half 1941 ,er first half 1942 shows the death of a great statesman. and politician. in the U.S.A., causing great • sorrow in the nation. In the present war the British Em - Pipe shall pass through many. great changes: The world is changing to get ready for the last 500 years of .the Millennium, 1954-2454 A.D, This transformation of the earth takes place between 'Halley's Comet ap- pearance of 1910 and 1986. The Brit - tea Empire shall pass through great changes, but this does not mean her downfall. The • British Empire has 'a great future. Germany shall win the war in a, nae :Lanai way, but only to a certain de- gree, but refill be the looser in •a s,pir-. ritual sense, 1940-1941. After these great changes,, before this century ends, the British Empire, the United States and all America shall be bz'eat- er than ever.. The U,S.A, shall not oome to the height of her glory uaitil 2000 A.D. These ghat changes Great Britain and the British Empire take place in 1940-41-42; lesser changes in 1943 and • 1944, 943 shows the end of Hitler's power, but not the end of Nazism. It shall continue in varied forms. 1942-1943 shows discoveries in as- tronomy. By the year 1956-57 it shall be definitely known that there is no life of man on Mars (man is a spirit or soul with a natural bo.dy). Such does not exist on Mars. An --inferior life may he there. A reptile king• dm' is the life on Venus. 1944 shows the eard orf Mussolini's power and 1950 the end -of his time. Stalin shall continue until after 1944 and shall be spoken of later. The 1000 year Millennium began in 1454 and ends 2454 A.D. The half way point is 1954. • The earth now prepares for the' last 500 years. Wars, pestilence, earthquakes, eruptions, famine, revolution and reformation shall prepare the earth for the last 500 years of the Millennium. The earth is now well 'on in the act of this great preparation. The greatest evangelist in a thousand years shall come. His pripcipie work' shall be 19442 to 19.56 A.D. The whole• earth shall be in three great divisions. The Western ,Hemi- sphere shall be the land of- Chris- tianity (freedom). Europe shall be the land' of infidels (dictatorship). Asia and Africa shall be the land Pr pagans. There shall remain to the end a sprinkling of the Christ Spirit throughout the earth. There shall remain a' trodden Christian path across Europe connecting the Britisih Isles with the • Holy Land. This prophecy domes as a comfort in time of trouble for the British Em- pire, though due for great changes, shall not be destroyed. When you see 'these predictions coming true, kindly rergetaiber the writer. , Yours sincerely, GEORGE F. BEVERLEY 316 Third St. S: E., Canton, Ohib, U.S. Nature give, to every time and season some beauties of its own. Patience is. bitter, but its fruit is sweet. -Rousseau. • • I ,st .t ate Address, $.r_ • . At the uiOng4 g sitting of the Insti- tute of Pnblgc; . .!sins of the Univers- ity of Virginia, Lathrop Stoddard, who this recently s'penit several menton in Germany ' as epeeist], foreign corres- 'pond'ent and aas` just brought from the prase a book entitled "Into the Darkness: Nazi Germany Today," spoke on "Nazi ,Germany as the New Sparta." "Hitler and t'he Third Reich," he said;. "real be best visualized as a superb -battening ram, smashing its w'tay to its ambitious goal by force- ful means, and that is •only another name for war, The German Army is' : erely the brazes spearhead of a na- tion organized and co-ordinated for war in it's every part, I returned home convinced that the world (had sen nothing comparable since the "totalitarian" militarism of ancient Sparta. "My sojourn in this new .Sparta was a repellent and depress- ing experience, But the Germans are not supermen, The secret .cif Nazi successes is .sheer hard work and selfawaorifice. If we Americans will work as (hard in united, disciplined endeavor, we 'can do it without sac- rificing our basic institutions and idea'la." Individuals' Merely a Cog Mr. Stoddard then poinated out the leading ideals of the Nazi movement, chief of which, according to Nazi- plinaseology, is "the common weal a- bove the individual advantage," "The individual is' little more thana cog in a machine," he said, "Indeed, the very word `individualism' is anathe- ma. In'cred'ible regimentation for ev- ery German is implicit in the Nazi regime." , Ae, a result of masterly pro•$pagan- da, Mr. Stoddard said, "an entire peo- ple., 80,000,000 strong, is welched into a living juggernaut of Mars -human 'Nieto/7 has probably never seen its equal." Jtohla C. Dewilde, research associ- ate, economist and Central European expert for the Foreign Policy Aseocia-` tion, spoke on "The War Under Hit- ler," and confirmed almost every;,. thing. Mr. Stoddard had said about the Nazis. He asserted: "Unques- tioirably, the Nazis have been • suc- cestsful in capturing the manses." They gave little people, be thinks, a feeling of importance, enthusiasm and confidence. -The young people;" he declared, "are imbued with the new order. They (have been made to feel that they are' part. of a great and growing movement destined to sweep 'r. ,fr a? lf. til � ��e�1, ,��><,e' .�� � `til �. b o1� e ,�•r,tie E PQSITOR CLASSIFIED RATES 1 C per word Minimum 25 Cents Addition .l insertions° as -law as I/2 ..cent per vword. �xE 4- s 1. 4.' WENT PIGS ! �eC\ti¢o%. q wee .bei oS �e ti' ,"s .4 a 'hone c Seaforth - - Ontario 1 „wry} A j� �y�/' �'iy' "�""""r'� ttuR, oN EX PQ$I T Q .., f Hogs [Conversion ToWiitshire Bacon To ,enatble the •public to understand the relationship between hog prices and ;expert bacon prices being paid by the Board, the followdpg in.form,a- the earth. They have willingly gone to death for their Fuhrer and his conception, of Germany's mission." Mr. Dewilde says the war brought ,the German people more unitedly than ever •around Hitler. And he be- lieves' that even after a complete vic- tory "the fund'amenta'l political and economic eoaitrole on which the Nazis' totalitarian •rule rest would continue. These are the sources of their strength, "We in America must frankly face the prospects of a continued Nazi rule for several more decades. And there is no ,guarantee tact tale drive will stop Meant at Europe's frontiers. We must be prepared to combat it," said Mr. ,t ewilde. The afternoon sitting was devoted to Spain and Italy...... Robert Gale Woolbert, 'assistant .to the editor of Foreign Affairs, speaking an "The Prisoner of •the Mediterranean" pre- dicted` a rather inglorious future for Italy. To be a great power; he thinks, a state must have four things -- e greait industrial plant, power fa- cilities, a military spirit and access to the open] ocean. "My thesis is that Italy measures up to none df thee criteria;" Mr. Woolbert asserted. "Italy will al- ways be the pmieoner of the .Mediter- ranean. "Mussolini," he went on to slay, "is also the palmier of his own policies. He ,has, cut himself off from •his natural 'allies, so he, has no_other alternative left but to throw +himself on Hitler's mercy and become the Patt'er's •gauleiter for Italy. If Hitler wins it die`s not seem likely that he , will let Mussolini have impeded . con- trol over .any of the three,outlets to the ytediterranean, Italy will get po- ly s much world trade as doe's not every-„ with that of its, Nazi senier part'ii,ea.,' S ain's Place in World Jay t'Al, • at, foreign correspondent in Spain th ,Ing the civil war there, spoke of The Iberian Peninsula as a Battlefield of 'Imperi•alisms Old and' N'ew." • There • was a very lively paned dis- cussion on Spain's place in. the pres- ,ent conflict and the conceni seem ed to be it would not havench to win from a Hitler triumph. A feature of the institute was an ad'dre'ss by John W. Wheeler-$ennertt, a distinVisaed Englisthman, lecturer in international law and relations at the University of Virginia, given on "The Future of Great Britain." .In moving wordsthe speaker declared that Britain would fight on to the very end' of its strength and the urg- ed America to take up Britain's heri- tage. as the defender of freedom, if Britain i.s destroyed, The audience responded to it as to to appeal that has yet been made, -.Jelly Time Now is the time when preserving gets away to, a good start. ,airs of jam and jelly made from Canadian - grown fruits are seen cooling on kit- •chen •tables to be stored away, for winter. Once in a while a batch of jelly just refuse's to set or is thicle gummy.. and tough,' or having 'set to a, perfect consistency, is cloudy or to dark. welly failures. are • not • necessary, The Consumer Section, Marketing 'Service; Dominion Department .of Ag- riculture offers advice to prevent such trouble. • Care in selecting fruit is important -a mixture of slightly un .erTipe and, fully ripe fruit gives best flavor and consistency. A• little added acid some times is necessary. Lemon juice is common'1y used, a!llowing'1-tablespoon to 1 cup of non-acid fruit, but 1 cup of rhubarb cooked with 10 cups non-„ acid fruit gives, exoellent results. When fruit contains too little pec - .tin the commercially prepared pectin may lee added, in Which case the di- rections given by the manufacturers should be followed exactly. Too much, water added in cooking fruit • makes unsatisfactory jelly, as juice onust be cooked along time to evaporate excess water, and thisex- tra, . boiling destroys some pectin, darkens color and spoils flavor. .Telly should be cooked to exactly the con- sistency when two separate daops form on the, ledge of the •spoon and run together a "sheet" off ,the spoon. Sugar crystals 'usually are the re- sult of too muolt added eugar, over- ripe fruit, or ;over -cooking of syrup, thereby reducing the proportion of juice to sugar. Occasiond.li.y crystals form, as in grape jelly, from the tar- taric add contained in the grapes. To overtone this the strained juice should 'be allowed to stand• overnight 'and carefully poured' off, leaving any precipitate before measuring and adding sugar.. Cloudy jelly le not well strained. Heavy Canton flannel, or flannel, or four thicknesses of cheesecloth make good jelly bags. Mould for ferment may appear in spite of 'barge sugar content of jelly if jars 'arnot thoroughly sterilized. They should. be boiled for twenty Minutes and removed from the water with tongs just as- needed for filling. A thin' coating of paraffin may be poured on while jelly is hot, but this will break away trona -The edges as the jelly cools, and- another layer Must be addded; to seal perfectly. A piece of string laid elvers the jar between these two . Layers makes .it eaaiter to remove the wait when op- ening for use A paper cover over all keeps the efiurface clean and aid's in preventing 'spoilage, "Weepfing" fel Is sometimes 'seen, This means t: at eyrir'p appears around or oozes through the wax. In a storage place too warm' or too damp moisture may collett and cause "weeping." If thio+ ededition is dis- coVered before any actual spoilage begins, another baler Of wax may be Nivea over, taking care to rotate the las s'lig'htly, so 'that' wax Mayr" be welt' tip err/and .tiro tnrsldre of the jar. • tion is provided: '- Weight Relationship It is important to understand that there are four distinct weightswhich must be taken into consideration:• 1. Live hog weights. 2. Hot +dreslsed carcass weights. 3. Cold dressed carcass weights. 4. Wilts1 re weight's. A 200 -pound live hog at the pack- ing plant dressing 75 per cent will. yield 150 pounds of 'hat dressed car- cass. The average (shrink of 35e' per cent will reduce .qhs carcass et .cold weight to 144.75 pounds. Out and trimmed into Wiltshire sides, the sold weight will yield 115 Pounds of Wiltshire. This, statement shows• that when the Bacon 'Boatel is paying for Wilt- ehire ;sides at .seaboard, :they are •not paying ,on. the basis of a live hog weight of 200 pounds, nor on the basis of a dressed carcass weight of 150 pounds, but on the basis of 115 pounds of Wiltshire sides. The Product of a 200 -Pound Hog The following breakdown shows the transformation of the live. hog into Wiltshire sides: % of • Pounds Products 200 lb. Weight -Hot "Dressed Carcase 75.00 150.00 Heart and Liver.... 1.75 3.50 Fats 2:13 ' '4.25 Casings .62 1.25 Hair - .40 .80 Blood and Waste .. 20.10 40.20 The average shrink from hat to cold, weight of 3aa per 'eerit, reduces, the 150 -pound carcass to 144.75 lbs., 'when eut finite Wiltshire sides, yields the- following products: % of Products 144.75 lbs. Wiltshire yield 79,44 Head Tendterloin Leaf '(Lard Kidneys Tongue Feete Tail Fat Neck Fat Blade . Bone • Brans Trim Scrap Pounds Weight 115.00 5.95 8.62 .85 -1.23 2.60 3.77 .35 .50 .70 1.01 2.40- 3.47 .40 .58 1.66 2.40 1.15 '1.66 .40 .58 2.85 4.13 '1.15 1.66 .10 .14 100.00 144.75 It will be seen from the foregoing table that a 200 -pound hog yields on the average 115 pounds of Wiltshire sides and a number of other products. The la'te'r have a varying degree of value at different times 'and at dif- ferent points in Canada. At present the Board .'is paying $17.70 per 100 pounds of A-1 grade sizeable WiI-tshires, delivered at sea- board. Th,erefere, the Board is pay- ing ,for 115 pounds of Wiltslhires, the product of a 200 -pound hog: $17,70X17.5=$20,35 In addition to the $20.35 received by the packer for 115 pound's, of Wilt- shire,- he has by-products for sale or a:anti bac turen into other products which shave a value of about $1.60. Therefore the• total gross return is: $20.35+0.60.-121,95 If, for example, the packer pays $12 per 100•..pounds for a carcass of 150 pounds('hot °dressed' weight at Toron- to arid, in addition,: pays $1.00 prem- ium for an A Grade (Select), it would cost $19.00 at the. plant, and $19.00 subtractedfrom the above return of. $21.95 would leave .a difference of $2.95. Aocording to these calcula- tions, .the packer has $2.95 with which to pay the cost of buying, killing, cut- ting,' caring, holding, baling Wilt - shires, shipping, loading, paper, ic- ing ar heating to prqvide for lose. due to bruising and rejections, and to take care of plant supervision and overhead, and to pay freight on the product to seaboard, The following table shows an .ap- proximate distribution of costs based) on data collected froth, the packing industry in Ontario and as of Toron- to to seaboard, insofar as transpor- tation is concerned: Items Cost ,per hog Allowance far bruising ,and re- jects $0.21 Cost of buying, killing, cut- ting 0.91 Cost of • curing, holding and balling Wlltshires, includ'inig plant 'supervision. and over - 'ad 1.46 Shipping, loading, paper, icing or heating 0.09 Freight Toronto to Montreal, including re -icing 0.42 $3.09 With regard to the above expens- es, these may be more or less as be- tween one point and another, and will vary from titite to time according to existing conditions. Per example, -bacon moves from various eastern' paints and from paints as far west as'' Edmn'o'nton and Calgary and 'each point has a differ- ent ifferenrt freight rate. Another vatting it- em is the credits from killing and cutting by-products. Fresh beepro- ducts may sell well i'n suab cities as Toronto and Montmeal while at a number of other points in Canada the. quantity 'ptcoduced cannot be consum- ed lOca1•ly. Such produet has largely to be frozen and Shipped to other markets. The following table illustrates the difference in freight costs, and, by- product values at three representa- tive poirvts in Canada. Freight Rate Preslen't valu.e9 to,Seratoard of By-prodetta per 11'be Per Hog ToTomato$000.37 • $1.6b Winnipeg .. 0.83 1.21 Edreont'on .. 1.21 1.20 Therefore it is ob)vioua that it is impracticable to lay down any aheo- lute sc'heaule of caste as 2iietirrea byr pareke{ts tit' sam,q `absolute tablre of eredr its bectruge Of the varying ' value of ,by+proattet. So'..fer We have been dealing Sole- lywith the Prodtltt in d, selelat big and top grade A-1. sizeablet. teeth', far which t tip Wee hat, been, paid by the Mrd'. 'lrh:ere1 are e't4 eflteen • First Wornan. (aou(ttitaued from Page 2) woman ui z Imlbltc life to ,have a hus- banld and a, family', 'and' for. a man' who is Inpolitlee to have a wife and a mtu'mber of ebildlren. .There is noth- ing like a famlily!, td' keep your Idea of youreielf 'bialanced. I came back from a trip the ofber day," she hangar- ed, "and ae'ked ,n y h'usba'nd whether the ;had kept the account of my Speech in Montreal in 'Thursday's paper. He hadn't even read- it, let alone put it aside for me! The children, ,too mean to be'.. interested in what I am doing, but they have a lot of other things to think aboutthat seem to them very important." • • Active In Public Services Their mother is active in all. the finest public services in Canada. Tihere are ,the cotntstructive sehdlanthro- pie and welfare causes, the Ottawa Welfare Bureau, of which, she is a direetor, the Salvation Army and the Y -W iC44.4 the National Council,' of Women; the Women's Institute= -she is a life member of a branch near ter summer thole at St. Arvdrew's in New Brunswick; i the Victorian Order 01 Nurses. Her greatest Lost Cause is that out- cast War Baby of the world. . conflict of 1914-18. •Cairine Wilson is Presi- dent of the League of Nations' So- ciety of Canada. That comfortable, well-fed, happy people do mot look on at the distress in Europe today without daring some- thing about it le, a view so natural to Senator Wilson that .she,, never questioned her own obligation to act. She is Chairman of 'the National Coananittee on Refugees and Victims, of Political Persecution. It has not been an easy task to thread a =way through the political maze that has surrounded ,the refugee question everywhere. Countries with unem'pl'oyed of their own, with under-. no urisbed children in their poorer districts, have their own troubles'.. Senator Wilson has not protested 'this ,fact, nor 'tried to shove across• on an uinwil]•thg group of officials an ill-conceived, 'hurried plan. She has simply pustherd+ ahead, one step at a time, relentlesisly edging her way a- long to meet an appalling need. LoVe Her' For This Work Today she sees under her a well- adeanced scheme for bringing into Canada orphan childrren for adoption. Canadians have loved her for this work, and have rushed to offer homes flor all the children sae has been given permiseion •to bring into the country. And it has often been (homes with low incomes. that have most pnomptly opened their doors. She is seising a ooentral fund tlo stand be - bind this venture, to take care of unforeseen- possibilities, to meet •t'he crises if a welcoming hcine today be- comes ran economic casualty tomor- row. It has been slow work. For a long time the Committee was "Senator Wilson's Committee," always run- ning out of fundis,.' always saved by a cheque from the Senator. She plug- ged away to make it, a national af- fair, not just a personal philanthropy. Meanwhile, a steady stream of practical kindness has gone out from this generous, woman to innumerable •refugee families. Senator Wilson's appreciation of What the persecuted, hunted Bream of Europe's intel'lige'nt, thinking etitizeaysl ban contribute to any new country like Canada that glee's tame' refuge must have furnish- ed courage to al] who felt it. She go?,ts on and Ion being, interested in theta, and fits a practical .ways --with' shrewd suggestions, careful advice. Senator Willson thinks the best thing about' being in her political pont is the opportunity it gives her of seeing at first hand how things are done, of learning •aboat the coun try's economics and legislation: • Her own' speeches 'have became more and rnorepeaked audiench es. HerS nate •appoint information for 'her ntmeni_ '=-made ten years aaoa-is for life. With dignity and poise she is doing a creditable job as Canada's, first wo- man senator. She . says prejudice is such ttha.t a w'om'an in politics still needs to ize- better qualified than a mean for the game past. So she e pests to work as ,hard as any of her confrer- es, , if not a ,little thard'er, She works quietly steadily, with Sier own 'set of values as to what is important. She is a topflight. Public Housekeeper. irk quip - -t(pb "• �. +tu ekr�eQ 4 0.dtR e4. cameo th O0l septa liquirt 1e» 1' &afpaon, lQmeo.es „ , atAr414aa NOQ irrlt�{ 41 me ttONM itelu4 .$ 81EQ,Rrlo�glgi> hmpj xPPB 9C 0 I• offosec 1L 0000 1.40,114 90141` HOW WOMEN'S INSTITUTES SAVE IN WARTIME BRITAIN (By Kathleen f9omtynghaml Greene. O.B.E.)' A Women'' Insttitute-its frlezndlt call it "our W.I."-to a counrtrywoa mew's club. The first Women'$ Instdw lute in England was a Welsh biro. ft was fo tuided in 1915. Now, in May. 1940, the Women's Institutes in. Eng- land and Wales number more tbant five thousand.eeven hundred. The Institute idea began in Can- ada. It was a very sim+plc idea; that women living in the country Should unite to work fqr themselves and for,,. . other people. This slower -witted is- land of Great Britain heard of the movement before the last Great War. It might have spread here in any case. But war, and the need for growirig more food at (home, gave W.I. a. defin- ite reason for existence and, in early,, like, a Government financial blessing. It is easy to forget just how rural were the mural villages of England., twenty-five to thirty years ago. There were no motor buses to link village to village, and village to town. There were few cars. Town tradesmen did a •( not dash moulndi country districts de- livering ,good. The village house- wife had to trudge dusty miles to the market 'town, or huy in the village shop. It was the shop very often, selrling anything said: everything, from bacon to a packet of pins. There was no wireless'. On the other !hand, old country drafts were disappearing, with the traditional country - dance, and the rnumpning Play. I do 'not know if the founders oA W.I. in Britain saw themselves as saving the beat of the 'old While they started the best of the new. This is what they (have' tion," Institute mem- bers want good country housing, wa- ter supplies., ,proper sanitation and se en. They can make .: their voices beard quite 'loud'ly on such matters. But they are also keeping alive know- ledge of erossestitcb, quilting and weaving and other similar lovely handiwork of the past. They believe in the arts as well. I have been, looking down the Diary,. of Events for the National Federation of Women's Ivrtitutes in May `and! June a year ago. "Singing Festival in Berkshire . - Handicraft, Exhi- bitionn le Carmathen , . ° Knitting Conference in Cambridgeshire Drama 'Festival in . Durham Folk Dance Festival in DerbyshireH . Plain Sewing School in Bucks!" • Perhaps the most remarkable .rias covery of the movement has been the hidden acting talent of the ordinary country woman. It is less extraord- inary that W.I. ,actresses are at their best in Shakespeare. Shakespeare was a man of the soil. In spite •of a distressing film -made eruption, of "0. K.sa and' "Says Vous" among the Younger generation, 'his language is still the authentic English tongue, The deeper, purpose of Institute work as 'hidden in the words of "Jer us'alem," the poem 'written nearly a century .and 'a half ago by the vision- ary, William.' Slake, and sung to Par- ry's fine tune, at every Institute me'etin'g. It is easy to • laugh, at the': skinny nehoohnistress and the farnn.- etr's fat wife, demanding their "char= iots of fire" and their "bows of burn ' ing 'gold." They have not, yet . -built Jerusalem In England's green and pleasant' laird,'• But they are making a; start with the job! , Now has comae dnother war and with it, naturally, the quenching of a good deal Of W.I. activity. There Brae been no .great Annual General Meet- ing in Londion this year, to fill the , Albert Hall with W.L delegates front every part of the land. Here, and there Institute Halls have been tak- en''as First Aird Posts, or for other. Government work. The blackout ,re'gul'ations Made evening meetings difficult. But the war has seen W.L, as a whole, returning to its first sphere of usefulne's's, as' producers and preservers of food. Through the Institutes', and their Produce. Guilds, .the 'Governamenrt has asked oo'umtry'women ,ail dv'er Ale country, not only., to 'grow as: matt (Continued 'on .Page 7) other grade's, selections and weights with 'dlifferent'.pracee. There are also other grades and weights of hogs. The foli'owing table sets forth the dif- ferent prices per 100 pounds which the .Board is paying at the 'present time for the varfoaie grades, select- tions and weights of Wiltshire sides' at seaboard: Light Sizeable Heavy under. 55lbs. 55-65 lbs 65 lbs, up A-1 , $17.50 $17.70 $17.30 4. 2 .. 17.10 17.30 ' 16.90 'A-3 ,,. 16.70 16.90 16.50 13-1 .... 17.10 17.30 16.90 13-2 .... 16.30 16.50 16.10 13-3 .... 15.50 15.70 15.30 On the blaeia of ,the 1gradeer of bacon ordrinlari'ly* produced from Canadian hogs, the estimated 'price for all .bac- on figures out in relation to the above table of prices at about $17.29 per hvadred for all gr'ad'es. The real character tof a man Is founds out b $ this amusements. In every'thin'g the middle course' Is beet. -Plautus. #:41).' / eveacket of ry 10c FL\i-SF?iti ' WILL KILL MORE FLIES THAN SEVERAL DOLLARS WORTH OFANY OTHERFtYYX1LLER,/ 10c Bt .Qf aaa . r. ©ear, gaiiclk" Bare, WHY ehea p. a� '4 PAYet, e:r Cover or General Stor MORE 1141 Siii*• P> Y P CO., HA1111L1`01N va+iT xa ata, - THE Wim' e , a EWS is, wit.teaho �' i, 8 , l q, a i 1 'la THE CHRISTIAN LIEN E .MONITOR :tl „1 rn i oral daily Ncwoi qj ri if tg rid min on the ro`"r'!d!s el aeqq,, .. �,1! s:l[oatta adt minion oettrre br alneitf si dqs e eels. rerrettive y ,lith that,gr . lncltd111. ing the; Weeklyi d ctIom, men arra •1l sus ',laic Cit l yy,,tlat► 8 ague' Publlebin Bodily 1 ods, I'N-Sllasy 'Street, Boston, Rss ttu II'ldI' etn;ieiiabter for eubseiint�ttljton to 'Mie Oppal ' Wm* Msiiitt�e�r tot Sitarddr941ts1tre. 60 In ibloing Deeming! neetl3$ lr ear *Lim. a axil• fgti stile - <;i,,./" r _i,^//✓`ill.'i.i✓.'i,Yy,' ' y,'i.✓.'• -".: 'i -r t