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The Blyth Standard, 1925-03-26, Page 1School I4JIpliCS. A full line of Public and High School Supplies at THE STANDARD, 44444444+++++++4444 VOL XXXVI nbatb, meriting Table. A law assortment of %bins Tablets, Papeteries and Envelope, rt THE STANDARD, BLYTH, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1925 4444444444+++444+44+++4.+4+•t++I4+4++++++4444++++++4++ 141. ertki 1E41 If_AILI are our CREST CAI'S FOR SPRING. Also the new FELT HATS in Fewest i a c' cs and shapes. With our range of Shadcd'Slripes, Farcy Suit ink's; as well as indigo rd Grey Serges. We can outfiit you from head to Icor, in 11:e latct, with, WHAT THEY WEA R TODAY Just in, Easter Neckwear, SJtitt�, IJcsiery. Ready -to -Wear Specials in 50 suits, newest Models and Cloths $22.50 up. 20 Top Coats newest models and Cloths $1 8,50 You will understand Well, in a pair of cur DERBY SHOES bIah-Scotch Contast Concert, The varied program presented in the Memorial Hall on the evening of St, Patrick's Day, was a deeded success v awed from every standpoint. The various selections di:played perfect training, fine talent r nd good choice of characters. Although the judges decision favored the Scotch talent, the I. ish were nut far behind and both aides presented a very delightful pro- w am ro•gram to a capacity house, The costumes were tipically Scotch and Irish, fur kilts and plaids predom- inated among the Scotch and the green and shamrocks r:monti the Irish. Great praise is'due the captains, Mrs, Russel Richmond for the Irish and Miss Mary Milne for the Scotch. Iu every way they brought forward the presenta ion of eaci, number to its full value. • S. I--1. G into half•hnur program fur theeriods, 'fhevening wc 4 Irish opened the evening's entertain• meat with a selection by the Irish cr- chestra consisting of six stringed in• struments and the piano, The pieces 4+++++++++++++++44+44,+4.44+4++++4+++ ++++++0++4++++•' played were tipically Irish and gave a good atmosphere for the first half hour program. Barry McElroy, in the cos• tume of a young Irishman, gave a de• lightlnl solo, accompanied by Mrs Mc. Elroy on the piano. Barry h.,s a strong voi:e and dear enunciation for o young a singer and his number was veil applauded. The comedians, Bak and Floody, appeared and deligh cd the audience with a humorous duct giving the true origin of March 17th as St. Patrick's Day. These comec'- iams in the iole of Irishmen prow, themselves real makers of the laugh, for they se it the audience into pro• onged spasms of laughter and ap• plause. The next number was a color Ful and well presented Handkerchief )ance given by Mrd. Walsh, Mis Mary Kelly and Mr, Wm Craig. This number was both picturesque and typ- ical. Indeed it was tru;y Irish through and through and drew much applause, which we cannot deny was well merit- ed. In this dance the trio was ac• companied by the Irish orchestra. Mrs,- C. Fingland next favored , he audience with a aoloentitled ids . a Little 1311 of Heaven," • Her costutne was quite in keeping.. with.her,rin. `which was' well executed. Mrs. Fing• land is one of our talented singers and sang this difficult selection with ease. The double, mixed quartet to consist- ing of Mesdames Herrington, McEl- roy, Hawkins and Miss Mary Cole, ,ssisted by Messrs Somers. Hilborn, Floody and Watt, was a novel select- ion and was received, as it merited. much applause, A recitation given by Melda McElroy in Irish brogue, por• frayed Pat in a very Irish position. Melda is talented and certainly did herself justice a; a young Irish coleen. This recitation was followed by a quartette of small boys namely, Barry McElroy, Howard Leslie, Edwin Ben- der and Cordon Lyon. This number was certainly very humorous, the ++++++++++++++++++++++++++4++++++++++fi•t++++++++•>M++'1.9' quaint Irish costume and the song Clothier, 11'1 rn;Ind Boys' urnisher•. Phone 78 and 86. 1►1 h' Lll, 0081'10. 11031101111111611 iltrlf is considered the, best by all the lead- ing stock men everywhere. A trial package will prove this to you. Po.u1try . PeCialS and onics ALWAYS ON HAND. COLIN FINOLAND, HARDWARE MERCHANT. BLYTH, \ONT. le,..s..+imirre111 No30 they appeared in full Scotch dress and sang their well applauded number. by Mra. Cole (nee Sara Milne) and AN ENTIRELY NEW STOCK Another romance picturing duet given Rev. G. Telford portrayed Scotch ro- mance in its best phase. The teasing Off► but sincere Scotchman and the anxious hut truly sincere Scotch lase. These two singers also rank among the best 1Paper and their number received general ap a proval which was well merited. "Loch Lom nd" that old familiar Scotch song was sung by a male quartette of Scotchmen namely, Messrs. Poplestone Leslie, Leith and Telford. These sing ere are all talented and took the differ ent parts well, Their voices have vol• UMC and blend nicely. The applause they received was not misplaced. The Irish next took the stage for the last half hour of their performance. This second period opened with full chorus "K Harney." The large num- ber taking part in this chorus make it difficult to sing but it was exceedingly well executed and by many proclaimed the most beautiful number on the en• tire program. The Irish certainly had it over the Scotch in novelties for they introduced several, One being a piano trio by Misses Pearl Gidley, Louise Herrington and Mrs. H. McElroy. 4 "Phis novel trio was certainly pleasing +444+•44++4444+44 • 144440110.0110000004141000 to the audience, Another delightful — number was given by Glen Tunney when he sang the solo 'It's ;he Irish g©1CDPI lr in Your Eye.'' We do not often hear TRY A SAMPLE Oh QUR Glen as a soloist but v, hen we do it is , [ always somethinggood The Folk T1 JA.i� .IND CO Fi�' 'MAMA Dance given by se of the Continu-) --r- ation RED ROSE ORANGE PEKO °TEA, arson School girls, proved that with , SALADA GREEN, BLACK, MIXED the "Irish Jig." These girls have be -1 TEA IN BULK FOR SPRING Come in and see our various designs. REASONABLE PRICES R, M. McKAY OPTOMETRIST BY EXAMINATION BLYTH, ONT. training a non• Ie'ra person may h dance I come quite accomplished dancers and. i = UNCOLORED GREEN JAPAN, er the supervision of Miss Goldthorpe't ENGLISH BREAKFAST TEA IN BLACK. I and this dance was as good as the best i mbar on the program. s. Hawkins sang a solo as the next BEAN COFFEE number, and as always, received hearty applause. Mrs. Hawkins has a voice ,= HIGHEST CASH PRIG PAID FOR BUTTER AND EGGS " ; ' of fine quality, great volume coupled i with sweetness which places her to the fore among local vocalists. Melda McElroy again appeared with another delightful reading and put the audien• VUIr • ,IUIr +IIJIJIr 1�LJMr rlidil i ce in good humor by her pertrayal of another incident in tie life of lame green ., iris: men. Pat himself, next , ppeared in the person of Mr, James TINSMITHI�Tgr; �.�'FLU B1NG',' Dodds; He excelled in his solo "Pat 'STEAM FITTING McGee" for he certainly can put hu- MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE, SEAL presentedBRAND COFFEE 'WELL'.ROASTED G. M. CHAMBERS, 'Phone 89. 'BLYTH, ONT mour into his character songs and is an artist of no mean order. He won Hot Air Furnaces. Eavetroughing, fully merited applause. The coriclud• ing number of the Irish program was a Corrugated Iron Roofing and Steel Barns. humorous solo given by Mr. Leslie a Specialty Sholtz. In a very short time he gave . the audience the happenings at an Irish festival in a moat laughable and con• Orders Promptly attended to :Ise manner. He certainly deserved the applanse he received. .The Scots returned for their last half hour with an opening number by Phone 12. the Scotch orchestra, This selection sent almost everyone copering, even as ccs°ooc;000cc�.�e5oc7°���Q•- • ____ some Methodists began wiggling their - ���" " ��'��� toes in harmony with the delight- HAVE fol Scot►iah tunes. Misa Katie Laid- R OWNERS ii �� made the young -10 into a very laugh law in her Scotch reading, presented a I ARNSS ° A N D S H Q E causing quartette and the audience touch of the Scotch temperment which Buy your tires this • certainly took the opportunity to use delighted the audience as evidenced by Spring at mall order P/.I a 7 their laughing and applauding powers, the applause. Miss Laidlaw is mss• in your home �' The •first period ended with a short trees of the Scotch dialect as her read- prices , ,NG town. .� - Prompt attention and first-class work dialogue presenting the Wallace broth• ing showed. The next number needs "� ed in all Harness and Shoe re- , ers, Irwin rind Ro!'ert, as an Irish no comment, for the soloist, Mrs Cole, DOMINION . gentlemen and an Irish housewife and (.nee Sara Milne) has won a reputation 30x3 j Nobby Cord Tires $ 9.00 ✓ widow. Robert is an. adept at por• es a vocalist which is very high. (She t Royal Cord Tires $11.00 MODERATE PRICES• fraying his Irish opposite. that of the is a talented singer, with a Well trained 30x3/o y Irish widow, and Irwin is as skilled in voice and found no difficulty in sing- presenting tires are not seconds, presenting the Irish suitor. The first ing her intricate( Scottish selection. 1 but new stock guaranteed firsts. . I half hour of Irish program ended with She appeared in costume as a real ' much applause, much laughter and Scotch lass. Mrs. Frank Marshall en- 1. Ontario° tertained the audience with a. humor - 4.41.4.444.1.444.444++.1.4.41 well meiitr:d praise. ++++,+++4+4++4444•!~ 4i44+*•4 110440414#+4+0.44.+4 ''The Campbell's are Coming, Hi, obs reading of events caused by a mss- , Ohl Hi Ae." Now it is time for the unde►s:anding a slow Scotchman, Scotchmen and women to do their Her dialect and Telivery were excellent •°�^ ',hare, The first number was a bare- and the applause she received.. hearty. weed chorus or ratner a medley given An illustrates song in which' Miss presented until the judge ,Mra, Lun. ,y twelve Scotchmen in full•dress--- Alice Rogerson was the so oist, de d of Kippen; Mrs. McCall, of Burs. SECURE FOR 1925 alts, bare knees and all. This num• lighting the audience with hey fine cal• salt and Mr. Jno. `Stewart of Belgrave •;er was a well received as the Irish ent, Her singing was much appreci• returned with the decision in favor of ,rchestra Thad been and proved a suit. ated, The tableau part of the illus. the Scotch. The score by points and AUTO ible•opening number, len„ing a change rection was a portrayal of Scottish r percentage stood as follows: I ,.,f atmosphere to the Scotch air and home ife. Mrs. G, D, Leith and Mr. points percent. LICENSES i scenery. A reading given by Miss Robt, Wightman were the "Oid Folk”Scotch 206 73.57 ' .- ate was a wonder in dialect, Miss and Effie Logan and Alexander Elliott. Scotch 248 72,94 Pate has the real Scotch twang and the lad and lass. although Alexander .._._ ..;I►e. certainly erg to the audience r ea Scotch won by decimal 00.63 p. c, who loudly applauded her "brew wee lassie, ►he would not because she be•, J. H. LEITH, Blyth, Ont. pairing. I'+4 Blyth, .40.64r2d.t . ' atfu civ ,J ai a, qe.vQ wt"" —.4t4- — 4to- •1 . `itaigAtafiMAr.a►,eullry ',A4L4) .G &4J JAMN4 P4a, ..t.W a Fabric Tire 50x3% at.....,$7,00 a 30131/5, Cord Tire at $7.75 30x3/ Tubes at $1,60 and $2.25 These prices are strictly cash and a charge of 25c. extra will be charged for putting a tire on. REPAIRING OF ALL KINDS C_ KERSIIAW'S GARAGE, BLYTI-I, ONT. �.M..ew� N.M.. d l' h d I did hisbest to induce Effie to be his -- piece," ''The Crooked l3obee" sung Issued her parents needed her, Miss ' by 'Mrs, Kershaw and G. D. Leith lent Howitt, as a S,otch lass gave.. a very Mr, J. R. Cutt, of Sarnia, Mrs. Jqs :t touch of Scotch romance to the pro- delightful Scotch solo to an accornpan- Cutt. Mies Tena Cutt and Mr. E. Tay gam. This duel was an excellent itnent played by her sister.; Mise lor, of .Goderich, were guests of Mn (lumber given by two talented and 1-Inwatt, displays fine talent. in all her and Mre, T. H. Taylor on Monday, iW• t"S; 1. 4 we!I•suited singers, Miss Taylor, of singing and we trust that we will hear English farm immigrants to the num j •=�+V "'o'�''�� v' r-� . ?3elgrave,,dclighted the audience with her rnore often than in the past. 'I'hc br of 500 will eventually arrive in • rr�S/�r I .40 , ''"� ' •+er Highland dancing. She dances 'concluding number by the Scotch aide London for distribution in Middlesex, �` Ikea true little Scotch lass. and in her , was given by Miss Taylor, when she if the plan of two booking agencies" of She to Englatrd are accepted by John Carrell," of lot 5, con. 8, and the south M Standard Book &Stationery Ston'', r� new h .comer froth , the land b f Itlhe euY ntire app ed a Scottish dance to the immt ration officer. of lot 16,con, 7 in the Township of (oval of the audience. In Mr. Farrell a inThese forme are offered for cheather,:,'Miss Taylor's talented danc all her dancing Miss Taylor showed recent of personal letters from the M rru, trig was accompanied by her mother, skill, ease and grace which is not found Brits h Passngers' Association and the cola to close up the estate of the Isit'e. Mra. as. Taylor, ames Smith if not sold they will bo J The next number, in every dancer of the Scottish clan. Bettie Perkins Passenger Company of J For prtticulato uet g y � Swanacb, Welee, Both these firma •rented tot' pasture. FOR SERVICE--- Pure bred York- FOR SALE --A quantity of clean lwas a aesics,ll obel Coming and little Brun her, motherat the pianoompanied by apply to r pa.,executors.si hire hog. Prize winner at Toronto Timothy and Sweet Clover aced, home elate they can supply 500 farm hands Smith I Apply to David Carter. deon, These two lassies paved them- I ' During the absence of the fudges ' rown�. _.,J •_►__.. i ...c._� i._,t. r_:_t. -..A e -,.►,a. !'.,,,.,,,I..... .,...., and will land them in Canada in time Fair. Fee $1125 at time of service gr.own.., , �, ,, __r..__ .....t.. c.......t. FROM A. G. SMITH, WINGHAM WHEN MAILING ALLOW 5 CENTS FOR POSSAGE NO CHARGE FOR TAItINO YOUR AFFIDAVIT ., 1,41.41. 110106110 0.111141.404•40.111.111* , FARMS FOR SALE 100 acres of land being the south • I. The IC1ICIOUS Flavor drawn from the leaves of G'.LENTEA. has won it millions of users. Finer than any Japan, Gunpowder or A . Young Hyson. sk for SAL1ADA. Judy listened while her aunt talked �stl al I�� on, The ore talk she could hear, /; perhaps she could get her bearings the . more quickly. The one dreary, indis- putable fact standing out in front of her was, that she had built all her hopes on a false foundation, and that. tL the burden, $o far from being roiled away, or even shared, was merely in- creasing in size and weight. For the first time, nbsolute:y, the sweet, sound grain in Judy Rankine'e 11600 nature seemed to turn to gall. She toed herself :he had not deserved this. "I don't think I had better come up to The Lees, auntie," she raid, as they drew near the turning in the road which led directly to the lodge gates. "Peter might find me there, and feel 1 imeelf under the painful necessity of turning inc out." "Peter would not do that if I was in the house my dear. And Ramsay exceeded his duty to -day. It surely r Love V 1 \es itself was only to Alan the orders applied. You must come and go as you used to, and I hope you will." Judy shook her head, as she gather- ed up the gloves she had taken off me- chanically with the odd *ee!ing that gloves seemed to embarrass and ham- per her movements. (To be continued,) THE STORY OF A BLOOD FEUD I3Y ANNA] S. SWAN. "Lova gives itself and is not bcught."--Longfollow. .e Sic GREAT INCREASE IN TEA CONSUMPTION PTION L,-- . l . Judy bethought herself of some yet. Won't you wait and see mother?, Tho consumption of tea, it Is esti- shopping she might do in the town,I I'm sure site would like to hear what mated, increased in 192.4 thirty-nine but before she had gone many steps,, you have to say about things. Are ttr:i licit pounds, The price, as a re - she was confronted by The Lees eur• you walking? Won't you drive back sult, may go to 41.00 per pound, but rlage, standing at a :,hop door, Lucy with us, and go over the hill to Stair?"I oven then, tea is the cheapest bever- its only oc'upant. She would have turn- Judy did not answer at the moment,'' age in the world --aside from water. 1003 ed back, but to her surprise, Lucy for her attention was riveted by two---..e.beckoned to her vio'e•a!y, half -rising figures costing up the street together,' USE YOUR MIRROR. Froc from her seat, with her hand on the side by side her brother and Carlotta .>Two classes of women do not look (Handmade Vile of Dotted' n:t'riag"e door,.^ Carlyon! into the mirror often enough: Those o , Judy, not unwillingly, stepped aside An intuiliot� which was quite un -,I' Simplicity is the keynote of thin to speak to her. erring caste to Judy then, for indeed who are too busy, and those who are: too tired. In between these two classes dainty frock, suitable for all oc•, "I was so awfully eorry about this the wholetruth was written upon there is a vast throng that looks but casions and cool as summer breezes. :nftereeon Judy!" said Lucy hurried- their face=!does not see, To be well dressed one wSleevleless one plea slp onttodress ly, for, if she had a soft spot in her "Look, I.u, y --t hero they are! I, must have the sense to look,the tour-' In itgracefulr folds guntderitf arms. , it was for her cousin Judy,.,. on don't war;1 to eee Man! I must run •:' heart -whom, in her young�cditys, shee had, into thi; shop. 1 don't suppose he will age to see, and the wisdom to know, Pretty round neck slightly gathered: bestowed that . arda�ut hero worship; Stop to sp:ale to you, but if he does, just what to do about it. Stores are, Slashed at shoulders. and finished centres of temptation, and most wo-' with picot edging or rickrack braid which so often heep5gira out of•mis-I don't tell him where I am!"p tends to beautify the model. Sum• Wren who buy have spent too little , chief of another sort;-- "It was Peter's --- time in considering. Your mirror is peer silks, voiles or g,nghants are • orders; and mother. hated doing it— good for this becoming frock. Girli;, • CHAPTER ix. your best friend at such n time. It dress No. 1003 cut in sizes 6 to ',mortally!" will tell you the color of your hair, 14 years. Size 12 requires 21 ' Judy looked fearlecely and coolly cis siNet IN. eyes and skin. It will tell you if you, yards 36 or 40 inch material. ; • into her cousin's face, After one startled glance at the two belong to the "tall thins" or the "short' ' "After all—I didn't do anything!"! figures coming up the middle of the fats," and whether or not you stand! Pattern mailed to any address on "We know that,of course, but Peter. , 'receipt of 20c in silver, by the Wilson etreet, Lucy hastily alighted and fol correctly. Moro than that, your coir- Publishin Co. 73 West Adelaide St., .was in a ,most frightful passion, ane! lowed •Judy into the shop. For will tell you if you are well pro-� Toronto. g ' he keeps on beiuf; in It. 1t is really Mrs• Gai•vocl,, busy matching portioned, It will tell you the length;rr ir received. mailed stone day as - most disagreeable at The Lees, I do; some siiks at,ytis- counter looked up of your waist in relation to the body assure you! But, Judy, do tel! mei• —"~ what has happened, for, of cour;,e, � 1° sur surprise, (length, which is -so important at the "They haven't got what we want,' present time, When these facts have Tell Us Another. Peter didn't say much except that the Lucy," she began, then, catching sight been revealed before the mirror, all 'There was once a pugilist who hated engagement was broken." of Judy, her stunner changed. I the gay colors and the extreme lines publicity. "I only heard it dock said Judy When she would have turned her, in the world will not lure the wise There was once an Irishman who de - which , "at the ocdlc House, from back as if at a loss how to behave,' woman to make a mistake in her cline:l to have a row. which I've come this very minute." Judy marched up to her boldly. I selection. "Ohl"-0.-- I citement and wonder. "Did fou • see turned thek f ^"0v`R eee se Lucy'g eyes grew round with ex- "How do you do, Aunt'Isabel?" she i said, and when the shop -assistant' urne front counter to see or, '; Miss Carlyon, then? And was it she' something else Airs. Garvock had ask � /i '' who told you?"I ed for, she added, in a lowered voice:. `'7•1't :'� �; >! "No. I only saw Mrs. Carlyon. But „Don't think I am permitting you or ,a�`c jt is - quite true the engagement is Lucy to cut me like that! What have. 2 `Z broken." • 1 done, anyway? Why, nothing! It is' eili4,, IF', — moi ��.- ui��I • '"And a fresh •on6 made—:with Alan," said Lucy in a low, rather dif- ridiculous, and can't be allowed to q "r go on." Ye Olde Village Pump. fic"Goodult voicheavens, no! That could Judy spoke bravely, but her eyes "Oh, shucks, the pump's frozen up never happen, Lucy! flow could it! were disturbed, the color fluttering in again!" They haven't met more than once or lien cheek. � , twice!In spite of herself Mrs. Garvock For Sore Feet--Minard's Liniment, "But Peter and Allan quarrelled smiled, ,,The whole thing is absurd, andl about her," said Lucy perplexedly, most painful, Judy; but we can't talk AN INEXPENSIVE FINISH FOR "because Peter told us—" ,•. FLOORS. Q-----. here. Will you drive back with us?"1 „ „ , "That might quite easily, be. Prop- •«I don't mind if I do," assented Here is a method of finishing floors A tube railway is proposed for ably Alan spoke out rather candidly i Venice. It would cover the length of Judy, with a glance of apprehension which is cheap and very satisfactory, about Miss Carlyon,"said Judy. But towards the street door. I for the longer the floor is used, the the city, a distance of eight miles, both :tone and expression seemed to When the shopping was -finished, better the finish becomes, It requires , falter, as W she felt less assured. and theystepped out into the street one bar of araffin°shaved into a ket- Big opportunities seldom come but," Lucy,"far• more. ' J p p labelled. "Oh, gut, said i once more, there was no trace of tie. Place over a fire, and when sniolt- than that has happened. Peter said i Alan—much to the relief of his sister. ing hot, remove from fire and pour quite clearly to mother and me than and his cousin. I into the paraffin seven -eighths of a Alan and she had fallen in love with "What if we meet Peter?" asked quart of kerosene. This makes enough one another, and that, for that reason,, Judy, almost maliciously. '"Will he to finish two floors. of the average Miss Carlyon had given him hack his' stop the carriage and bundle sic out?" size, Apply to the floor while hot and promise. Don't you think—don't you «Don't he silly, Judy. Peter never rub in. Use a hone -made swab, made think it all very strange, Judy?" comes down till half -past five or six by Wrapping cloth tightly around a Judy was perfectly conscious of the o'clock. Get into the carriage at once!" mop -stick, In a few hours go over the wistful note in her cousin's voice, and, "After you, Aunt Isabel; and, floors with a polisher. Good for wood made no mistake as to its origin. But please, let me sit opposite to you." ( and linoleum, it might be dangerous to be too sym- rs, Garvock made no objection, ___ pathetic at the moment. A1 and several people who met the cardA CODFISII DISI -I. "Strange? It is worse than strange,' riage evinced no surprise, for, of Codfish As my dear.l It's incredible ot be/m; dis ace.- -. course, as yet no oneroutside the in -i following mat delicious er �oFreshene andd sin- I have had some indisputable evidence.' mediate circle knew of the rupture mer in clear writer until tender, Drain, between Stair and The Lees• Alan has told Inc nothing at all, and, "I suppose you can throw some light Make a saucepan of plain milk gravy, I am feeling rather sore at him at this on this horrid affair, Judy?" began pour the codfish (shredded) into the very moment,• I haven't 'deserved it! Mrs. Garvock at once. "What does gravy and boil five minutes: Season "Alan has changed in everything Alan mean by behaving in this extra- with salt and peer to taste. Stir in but looks, I think, Judy,", said Lucy, ordinary fashion?" i one minced mane pepper and -_one "I don't know. I heard the news tablespoon of chili sauce, Serve on ' from Lucy for the I QAM first time, about triangles of crisp toast. Sprinkle tt ten minutes ago. So you can imagine chopped hard-boiled eggs on top, This what I fes when I was turned away is a tasty and satisfying luncheon (or t •from the door of The Lees!" I supper) dish, t "Dear me, that makes it all strang- er than ever!" said Mrs. Giirvock mus- ing:y, "But do you think it possible "a ter ever meal" " that be could ever marry Miss Car- "DIAMOND D DYES" y , lyon after an affair of this kind?" Judy persistently shook her head. "I have no ideas, no cpinions. I know nothing, Aunt Isabel. Please don't let us task any more about it." "But there is nothing else to talk Beautiful home tlyo- I' about You r.en imagine how it is m tug and tinting is nt The'Lees, and the frightful passion ;;i guaranteed w 1 t h i Peter is in! If you have any influence � Diamond Dyes, Just Iover him—and you used to haven ` , ,ifi''r• dip In cold wcter to good deal --I wish you would task tor"` �' 'yf' tint soft, delicate I him." I " '!l1 shades, • or boll to "I will' talk to him!" said Judy, with dye rleh, permanent n little snap of her lips which indi- ;.; ,,`:�? colors. leach 15•cent cated a most unusual bitterness, "when ' p'contalus dl - he talks to me, but not before!" ' Factions bo simple any woman can dye �� r.._ ����� li �� "Alan has behaved very foolishly or tint lingerie, slip, ribbons, skirts, in his own interests. It would have waists, , coats, stockings, been fur better not to complicate sweaters, dressesdraperies, coverings, Bung• things at the present moment, and be- tags, evbrything new. sides, it is hardly decent, I think, to . Buy " Diamond Dyes"—no other have just buried his father and be kind—and tell your druggist whether nt,tnnntt in+n enilv,•n+' 4114. bin.! 'nil i,. ,1,,. ....t...1,11 vnu veldt In enl(ir is R'nnl There was once a man who thought he was paid all he was worth, There wad once a glad with pretty ankles, and who didn't know it. 'There was once a father who liked to act as night nurse to Iris offspring. There was once a p'ost'oflice assist- ant who said "Please" and "Thank you!" There was once it man who gave more money each week to his. wife than she could spend, There was once a wife who, In argu- ment with her husband, hated to have the last word, There was once a woman who went to dress and s'add s.ho would he ready in ten minutes—and was, !Parents,- encourage the ,children to care fortheir teeth, Clive them Wrigley's.' It removes food particles front the teeth. Strengthens the gums, Combats acid mouth. Refreshing and beneficial! P82 'S'CAL'ED • TIGHT KEPT • RIGHT COLOR THINGS NEW rayoatpsrr taMerY.� If it happens there is no Mar- coni Agency in your town have your dealer write us, We want you to have a demon- stration in your own home of the Marco niphone, master radio re- ceiver. This can be arranged through your local dealer, Also send your name for free radio booklet "PD," The Marconl WIreIe s Tcl. Co, of Can., Ltd. Montreal. Halifax, Toronto, Vancouver, St, John's, Nfld. 4 3L -25 MI aft.— ty, "I'm always so proud of my snowy bed -linen —N says Mrs. Experience ► "When guests come, especially! My sheets and pillow cases are so snowy'white, and have that fresh, sweet smell of perfect cleanliness. "And I change them often, too, because they're really easy to wash—the way I wash them --with Sunlight Soap. "The pure Sunlight suds quickly search the dirt right out, and leave every single thread sv.,ect ancl clean. Only a light rubbing niay perhaps be necessary at times, Then a good rinse and everything is as spotlessly white as your heart could wish. "For clothes, dishes and general housework I always use Sunlight. Every bit of Sunlight is pure, cleansing soap, and so it is really economical—and my, how it docs clean! Sun, light is so easy on the hands, too!" Lever Brothers Limited, the largest soap firm in the world, make Sunlight. u r AtSoap The spirit of fait play always leads Use Horn Sparingly. a contestant to recognize his oppon- Try to drive with using the horn as ent's shill, little as possible. A sudden noise tray stop pedestrians in their tracks rather Minard's Liniment Fine for the Hair. than warning them. •//1•41•10^ , ..rn,. woman m.o. :1.1'a'1,U°' anlcing by Mai1 The security afforded by the Province of Ontario Savings Office, together with the facilities extended by every Post Office in Canada and other countries, make it possible for everyone to deposit their savings in this institu- tion. Interest is allowed, compounded half -yearly, with full checking privileges, • The confidence the rural communities have shown in this Savings Office is indicated by the large increase in de- •posiO, which are now over $20,000,000. All deposits are secured by the entire resources of the Province of Ontario. Remittances should be made by Post Office money order,. bank cheque, express order or registered letter, and should be cddreased to your nearest Branch, where they will receive prompt attention. Province of Ontario Savns Offe HEAD OFFICE: 15 QUEEN'S PARK, TORONTO ,P Toronto Branch Officeo: . Cor. Bay and Adelaide Sts. Cor. Univers!' y and Dundas Ste, 510 Danforth Avenue. Other Branches at Hamilton, St, Catharines, St. Mary's, F'omorokke, Ottawa, Brantford, Woodstock, Owen Sound, • mos .4.61.1.fimporsomktomm....11111.061......r.OrMr.Mml The, name "Red Rose" has been a guarantee of quality for 30 years TEA' is good tear 61 The ORANGE PEKOE is extra good. Try it 1 Surnames and Their Origin PATTE R SON VarlatIons—Pottison, Padden, Patten, Patton, McFadden, Paterson, Mac. Patrick, Patrickson, MacPhater, MacFeat. of branches of the Scottish I.Iighland clan Alaclitren. Aiaellattter and 111ac- Peal oro also found Hs the equivalontit or these names In the nigh:undo. TOWER Racial Origin—English and Wells. Racial Origin—English, Source—A given name. 8ource—An Occupation, Tito family name of Patterson is one One of the origins of this family to which neither lite English, iho Irish 1101110, the obvious one, hos been di13. nor the Scots 01111 lay exclusive claim, cussed in a previous article. But the 11' they" ore to he found evidences °I' name t10+ not always trace back to its origin III all of limo countries. such a form (18 "Roger do la Tour," There are however, certain of its Often it is traced buck to a form in variations which van bo idlocated de- which the "lo" Is present, but the "do" finitely I.0 ono or another of thee Is missing, And this does not indicate countries. to tho philologist that the 'threes) Ts° Immo of itatelchsoll 18 one of "tower of strength" was commonly ap- the least common forms of the name, plied to individouls in those daps toit while It is found, there 114 pretty Deeper soarch, however, reveals an good dvidenco of its E1g lisit origin. occupation, that. of the "tower," froni The given name of l'atrIelc, or "Padwhich the name hos C01110 111 many in- reig" and "l'arulg." as it occurs III stances. [facile, with dm addition of words Tho "tower" of the medieval period meaning "son of" or stleseentlanit; of," was a specialist In the tanning Indus - of course, the origin of the family try, who whitened and prepared goat name. skins and other soft leathers, 10 sorvo Tho Irish name Is "MacPlialdin," de. as raw material for the glove and shoe rived front "Pahlin," which Is one of makers. the diminutive forms of Patrick, and It takes but a slight change In the Is round with Ilt 111 the nickname "Pad. vowel sound to transform the word Os" Patterson, Paulson, AlacFailden, "tn,wer" into "tower," though it is one Padden, Patten and Patton all occur of those tricky little changes which is as anglicized versions of the Irish likely to throw tis off the track, per- m! 1110. ticularly when we aro not familiar Patterson, l'ateraon fled Po 11114011 with the obsolete word. also occur its stralght English develop. The term "tawer" also was some - !wogs of "PatrIck's•scn." Braes applied to bleachers and finish. Paterson and Alel'atrick tire nanteti era of lInx. MARCH WEATHER DANGEROUS TO BABY Our Canadian March weather—ono day bright, but sloppy, the next blus- tery and cold—Is extremely hard on children. Conditiona mako it neces- sary for the mother to keep the littlo ,ones Indoors. They aro often 'confined to overheated, badly ventilated rooms and catch colds which rack their whole system. To guard against these colds and to keep the baby well till the bet- ter, brighter days come along, n box of Baby's Own Tablets should bo kept In tho 110080 011(1 an occasional dose given the baby to keep his stomach and bowels working regularly. The Tablets lire a mild but thorough laxa- tive which never fall to, regulate the stomach and bowels and thus they re. Hove colds and simple fevers and keep the baby fit. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or bymail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, He Wondered. They talked so nice about him, They pulsed hint to the skies; They said they loved Ills genial voice, The kindness in his, oyes; They'said they oft remembered • Tho noble things, he'd done; They vowed ho wits in all things The city's. favorite 13011, ue lleard their praise and plaudits And then in fear he stricl: "They talk of mo so nicely, ' I guest3,1 must be dead!" She—"You know George M. Cohan said he'd rather write tho songs of a nation than mako the laws." "He—"Well he knew that nearly everybody hud respect for songs." Carnegie on Poverty. 1 was born in poverty and would not exchange 118 uttered memories with the Hr.:lost teSCOlonssire's f3J1 who ever losothel. What doc,s he know about father or mother? Ti',Icso.are woe manse to 111111, Olve me the life of a boy whom lissEnso is nut, 0, settin- y,tras, wgc..,rwonut 0, cook, toucher, singe! and HOU fill In oae w1to:.3 tatii or Is guide exemplar 1111(1 friend. No 8P1VIII11.14 betweeu. 'f'hesa ttre th,o boys who are horn to the best for- tune, Some mon think that poverty 1.3 a dreadful burden azIKI that Wealth ler.ds liapp:mos. What do they krow about ft? They know wily ono side; thoy imagine tho ,olier. I have lived both, 0111 I kntiw there Is very little in woolth which can add to hu- man hapyineos beyond the email com- forts of life. Millionoiree who laugh 11113 very ram. My experience is that. wealth Is not to take the mullets (sway. Supplying London With Water. A waterworks which will be the largeat In the ,orld 13 being built six- teen inlles from London. Tho remer- volt. cove723 ems, and hers a ca- pacity of 30,133,928 tons, or 6,750,000,. 000 gallona, drawn from the Thames. Three meters with throats 6 feet wide Faso In 100 gallons of water (lolly from a great intake chan- nel. Rollier-sluicee 6 feot by 5 fast send thsl water into u draw -off tower, Mantling In tile recervoir, whence, it 1.8 nickel down the steel throats, 6 feet wide, of threo pipes, tul to over the embankment Into the main, for (die use of Isondon'e millions. NATURE'S WARNINGS Danger Signals That Everyone Should Take Seriously. 'The Tobacco o 'Virg amaommone 1 1, 5perPackae • a.130 72.1.h. TINS MANUFACTURED BY IMPERIAL TOBACCO COMPANY OF CANADA LIMITED. 1 Alvan T. Simonds Economic Fountains. • ..Classified.Adveriisements, Prizes for 1925. !Few things are lovelier thtn (contains • To encourage the study of Econo- Inles two prizes of $1000 and $500 aro offered by Alvan 'I'. Simonds, Kest. dent of the Simonds Saw and Steel Company, of Fitchburg, :11assachusetts, for the best two essays on the follow - Ng subject; "Your Prosperity, and Mine." The contect 18 open to all resident: Se'dota in life can beauty be so free„ Ho dimentauss:od. from somplosIty . And Coarly wondrous, as a foundiing star. — \Visite water 6-tabbingat' a hlud sky far Or fif.ag ever in a crystal tree • I11'1th frozen fire in all Its veins, to 'see of the United States and Canada. its Shutt:ed by winds1 ii b a17a,labow. bur. • ••'• gr - is hoped that It will especially appeal ostrel, y the miracle iirpa»es thio ' Silvery utterance of sec ret ' Spending the sl:ence In a radiant rotti. As eloquent to tired souissas a kiss. A fon»tain is, flashing above the earth Pain Is ono of Nature's warningsto business executives, .assistants to business executives and students of that somethin3 is wrong with the body. bus1ncs8 omi commerce. Indigestion, for Instance, is character. !zed by -pains In the stomach, and of- Contestants, who are not well versed ten about the heart; rheumatism by 1110(11 ('3' In economics, are advised to study ele- works, dealing with funda- sharp pains In the !Atha and joints; headaches aro a sign that the nerves !newels, and to read articles on economic subjects In newspapers and magazIne3. The essays may be en- tirely original or may bo based, In warning talcs tho form of pallor, Ivhole or in part, on books or articles. breathlessness after slight exertion, el flictelste L41)attItleerhop(1:1t(181 alsndfoalritoilevieetml, 8 rofile11;1. palpitation of the heart, and loss of appetite. WhateverT form these warn- beglit‘e'eenssina footnotes% ys must be at least 2500 Ings take, wise people will not ignore the fact that Many diseases have their words in length and should not exceed orlgIn in poor blood, and that when 3500 words, They must be typewrit- the blood Is enriched the trouble dis. tenrialensiprolzneolnveinsnlidnegoefsstlai;sp, aper only. 111)011 pay - appears. Dr, Williams' Pink Pills aro most helpful in such cases because meat of the prizes, will become the they purify and build up the blood to property of Alvan T, Simonds. The judg Its normal strength. In this way It es will be onnouncedlater, tones up the nerves, restores the lip- They will be selected from experts petite and gives perfect health. MIMI in economics, business, and related Hazel Berndt, of Arnprlor, Ont., has activities. Their decision most be rte. proved the great value of this mod!. cepted by all concerned 118 final, eine, and says:—"I am , a young girl This essays must reach the Contest Editor, Simonds Saw and Steel Com - and have been working in a factory for the past four years. For two years pony, 470 Main Street, Fitchburg, I had been in such poor health that at Massachusetts, on or before December 31, 1925. or stomach aro out of order. In some ailments, such us anaemia, pain Is not so prominent. In this case Naturo's times I could not work. I was thin and pale, and troubled with head: aches and fainting spells. I doctored nearly all this time, but It did not help nie. My mother advised Me to take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and after using them for a while I could notice Earliest Cross -Word Puzzles, an improvement in my condition. I used nine bexes and can truthfully say that my health is restored. When 1 began taking the pills I weighed 97 pounds and now I weigh 114. I feel that I owo. my good health to Dr, Wil- liams' Plnk Pills and hope other ail- ing people will give them a fair trial," You can get tithe pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents n box from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. 'Phe editor of an American diction- ary declares that something very simi- lar to cross -word puzzles took up much of the time of the Hindus and Chinese 1,000 years 13.0. The Indians who lived in America before the arrival of the whites used to play a crisscross puzzle with gralna of corn each marked. with Borne In- dian sign. . It is probable that tho Indians brought puzzle working to America from Asia, when then was a stretch 01 1(111(1 all the way. • "The crossword puzzle of the pre- sent Is evolved by combining the anagram, the acrostic, tho rebus, and so on, with ancient magic squares," —Wilbur D, Nebit. the editor says. "It is also closely al- lied to chess, and is poslhly an earlier Best Training Place. form of that gam, The old-fashioned home, said a re- .7h magic squares played nn fm cont speaker, surpasses all modern portant part in the oecultissn and mys- schools for the proper training of the tioisms of the Middle Ages. They wore man—bile, blood, phlegm, and black young. Home should be a place whore known to Madam and Chinese, how- bile—which were regarded as related the theatre has a rival In Noma games , over, before the Christian era, and to (but not identical with) the four and home companionship; where the were IntrOdliCed Inlo Europe111 h Father of Medicine. The foundations of medical selenCo were laid in the early part of the first century by Claudius, Galen, Ouden was born at Peranium, in Asla Minor. Ho spent Min 0 years at Alex. andria and later wont to Rome, whore ho wrote a work on anatomy and even performed dissections upon animals. Ho considered that disease was largely based upon the four humors of radio may bo heard, but not to the ex- teent]t century.' elusion of family story -telling, reading and conversation; and where good Tho last hard pull gets us over the music Is always to be found, vr 1 Ono of the huge traus:Allantic litters Is Shown.in dock at Hadifaisafter coiiipIcJn. a i;lp front the' Old COuntry, caz6Ing returning Canadianand •;,,ftiftra trehin nen ninkina their. first rksit to Me Doininloti:' elements—fire, stir, earth, .and water— being supposed to have characters similar to these. Thus, to bile, ns to ilre, were attri- buted the properties of heat and dry- ness; to blood And air those of haat and moistness; and finally black bile, like earth, was said to be cold and dry. Colon supposed that an alteration In the duo proportion of these humours gave rise to disease, though he did not .constilor this to bo • its only cause. Tints cancer, it was thought, *might re: slat from an excess, of black bile, and rheinnallsin Nein an excess of phlegm. Ho regarded old ago as resulting from a diminution of the fiery and aqueous elements. Hence the 110008. city of Iceoping old people warm and giving them hot liquids to consume, Where Female Rights Prevail. The ants aro described as ,commuts. ista, because the individual interest Is merged in the comniunity, Thoirs Is a female rights colony. The workers 111'0 [entitles; the soldiers aro females, the flumes aro females, and there is ono queen mother for theta all, who Jays all the eggs for the colony. Tito males are but -mates for the young queens. Tho man who does nothing does semebody.„ • Minard's Liniment fo SNP Ibilm•••• • Strange! Clocks in Irish provincial hotels, are not noted for their time -keeping quail. ties, They are kept more for orna- ment than use. A traVOlier went into the coffee- rcom of an Irish hotel. The maldsof- all-work was dusting the mantelpiece. Suddenly the clock began striking. The maid, MO n look of surprise, turned and s'aUl 'There must be some- thing wrong with • the clock, It's go - Ing!" ' — Typewriter Music. In order to get the proper effect of the various sounds when shrapnel breaks and scatters, a French soldier who has composed a new symphony, entitled "At the Front," has called for the use of twenty typewriters In tho orchestra alongside he musical instru. ments. For Sore Throat Ufle rnard's Liniment , U -A ROA I 'PA ItCE1,14g ; D-7 Ii131 '1)eitelfes,.$52, McCreuryinClfethinn, Ontario: •••• •-z,••••• . ' . . . • . FRE • ,CA TA LOGUE,- .s e. joiap, Hi), ten 0 V;,, ne,y . . and • .k I.fltsre'dFlfi•gs. :11:110V,tig4 k:v41111c,"i: bp.t. s•• ::•,..,,..- ;111cre are 0I113' AO, bridges o‘ter.,tho Themes. betwNul the', sea . arid( sten. It is now suggested thats-nino new ones silitoshl be bui4 • to relieve the congestion of traffic:- • . , . Driven and forceful, [want 1tui und --George. O'Neil. • * • , The "Queen of .the !gi,r1 chosen during recent festivities; in Tunis as the most beauti tut- girl, in the city, had to renounce her throne because of protests .by the Mo.hicmine= don populations' They- objected' to her violating one of the' precepts 'of-tho Koran by showing her;. face hiffiiite crowds. Hotel. Atel::rritifeiT; • America's , Smartest Resort Hotel. Famous for its Euro- pean Atmospherp. Perfect Cuisine' and Service. r • Single rooma from $5.00 Double rooms from $3,00 European- Plau - • New , lryd/ tatric and • • Electro - Therapeutic ,, Department. IMSTA VP, TOTT, Managei. • Improve -Your pearanve, More Phosphate. If you want your complexion to clear, eyes 1v -brighten, and elcin in become soft and 'smooth, Thin, nerve-exhausqed people grow strong on Bitrci•Phosphate and gists guarantee it, Price $1 per Arrow Chemical Co., 25 Front St, Toronto, Ont. drug- pkgel East, DANDRUFF' ' • • - Minard's cleanses the ea1,opens 'the pores, .stiinulateti the -hoots Zif the hair to new activiryfr' Rtib. ffilnerd's Into the' scalp four tInts • a •weelt, • :•• • • ••• Beauty Of -Skin A114,11air .Preierved:k Cuticuia Use Cuticura Soap' for daily toilet 'Mir. poses, with touches of Cuticufa (Wainh as needed, .and have fresh, clear skin and thick, glossy hair, *They are ideal fqr the toilet as _is also Cutirtua lval• in for powdering mid perfuming. Willi. Each Free, by 1411, ,sAdfirmix Cnnallir,p Depot '" Ontleura, 1', 0, Dos 1011,'Ilootreql. ' Price:1..14)11p 26c. Ointment 26 and 60c. Talrum 26ct INIF' Try our new Shaving Stich. • ALLTHE' • . •`7 I I Nerves Gave:16Rest Relieved.:„4 Lydia: E. Tink,-' hiim's Vegetable Cdinpopiid medicine ei at.s born liarrowsmith;Ontario::w"I lxioh your beibro7my • it was a great: help to me 'asi was very poorlyuntil I started jj ta osttsle • as thOng11;1, was lire,' opt all, the,ther,t,nd • would .:!tnIt e fainting My nerves would Lotlfer me untili kel-,' little 1'61.; di) or iiti-wah filen& thittice L'Sflia , E. PinkhRtfite. \lege: • ' table Conipou'ncl, anitt only took alto, . bottles ti :it -helped ole wonderfully „ , would recommendit to any'Svbinan. I' nm doing -what 4 can,•to .publish this good medicine. • fiend that: ittle book you sent me•to•any one Lam help). You.' can with•the greatest.of rpleasure.nse my namo in.rogard tho Vegetable • • , Coinpound if it will Ban% to help otttc.irs.!' HAnvErlduliGAN,R, R, No.2,-• Harrowemith, Ontario... , . • ,• Proved safe by millions and prescribcd by physicia Neuritis Neuralgia Lumbago Colds 'Headache Toothache Rheumatism Pain or • Accept only "12mr."'EacHsm which contains proven ,directions. Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12- tablets. Also bottles of 24 and 100-1)ruggists. Atiptrin la the trade melt (retisterm In Canada) of nater Momifneinro of Mononeette aeldeater at Halleylleaeld (Acetyl Salicylic Add, "A, H. A."), while II liwell known that Aspirin meant BaYer maunteeture, to Runlet the patine against Imitations, the Tablets Of Buyer agape/ i11l b� attnt4d with their aeuerul Wide mark, tha niter Oro." In a recent canvass of ptiechnstA.8 or Lydia' E. Pinkliktn'e• Vegetable: Cony -- pound over mama replies were recelvad and -98 out of evory 100 mid they tad been hol ed by its use, This medic is for sale by all druggleto. I 9titiE Not 12-,---sth. .• ?ACE b --THE BLYTH STANDARD—Mal eh 26, 1925 4444.Ob+e.4N•j - SOLOMON ISLAND.3. Poland NUTS F IUC)tli THE AMAZON. Native Mutt Watch Warily for Fear Broil Nut Found Only lu Valley of ot Infringing Some Taboo. the Lower' Amami. , , - , ELEVEN YEAR AIt • OLP) COMPOSED To�� re - The taboo is universal throul;hnut Nuts have 1n recent years become AN ORATORIO. w y the Solomon Islands, and from the the chief export of the Amazon Standard se day of his birth until his death the Bion of Brazil, and, as such, are likely Youthful (;hty Is Helen Standard 0,014+4404444.4.410+940401.44444 native must watch warily for fear of to remain until the other natural Another outhl'rn infringing some taboo, knowing that Products of the district--lhnber, Douglas Arlan' Who May Ultlruate- Standard Pohlad has progressed wonderful If he commits one of these .;olechuns c•Aeoa, an.; so forth --receive the j ly Enrich the English Irurguage--- standard rrineo the termination of the Great his liver will swell up and ht' will die. attention they deserve, writes Scot -A Might Snug, ' Standard War, and la no plsee Is the change A place or an article tray be taboo, land Liddell In a London paper. Standard Pere ,noticeable than la Warsaw. eo particular reason being advanced; Figures speak louder than words. ; Doris Sidis, the infant prodigy of it is just forbidden by those who eon- Hero are some: In 1923, when a re- Stardarcl Perhaps the mast striking building trot such matters and it becurnra cord crop'was f~athrred, 34,000 tons a vow years ago, is nuw toiling ob- Standard iu Warsaw is she Russian Cathedral,' tehoe. In Malaytata clump of hushes of nuts were exported from Mangos, acutely in a store, or was when heard i Standard erected just betere the war, and now or a particular stretch of Keach may Itacuatiara and Para to Europe and ot. His vast erudition, acquired with- Standard being taken down by the indignant be taboo, and the penalty of tree- the United States, The nuts require out effort at an ago when most boys Standard and independent Poles. Naturally, Mss on these localities death. a considerable amount. of "head • are painfully learning the difference Standard The "salt water" natives aro not room"—without air they might de did ttre!y do not want to have any remind- permitted to enforce such abominable teriorate—'so that their freightage is between capes and isthmuses, Stdrrdaid everRussiunoeeupation. An old adage customs, but In the interior the con- charged according to their hulk. One hire little good, although it in pop- Standard AIRS to the erect tt(al, if the Rue- nine witch doctor still exerts his tin of nuts has to pay 21.1s tons of stole that he will draw dividends up- Standard a.'aue erected a cathelrel in Roman malign sway• fralght. As a ton wot,r,ht. from Manaus on it later on, While by no means Standard (' �thollc WarRaw, they would lose The women cultivate the native to Liverpool costs £G, this means 1'++tand, but that when the Poles took girders of taro, yarn and sweet po- that each ton of nuts actually coats all infant prodigies become illus. Standard it down they would lose Poland. Yetlain, prepare the food, and generally £15 in trnn: portation fees. , trlous we believe that their chances Si.+ndard ;Oe Pelee seem willing to urn thedo all the heavy work, _ The freight:Ere of nuts to Liverpool ' of doing so aro rather better than Standutd risk, writes Elbert Francis Baldwin. Grass girdles constitute the sum of works out at. over 11,01, per pound— the chances of infant mediocrities, ,nlnnilurd In area Poland U almost, as large feminine attire in Malayta, and there and the forest dwellers have to b+' and nothing is commoner to learn Standard as Vranee, and in population le more is evidence of some manufacturing paid for their gathering; and the d clan three-quarters as large. We skill on the part of the women and river traders have to receive' their think of France as an ofd, confine- Mime taste in colorization, prnflts; and still large merchants in t•n:,ty going coneern, with very post- Bracelets, artnlete, necklets and Brazil have to receive their share of , t'•, a policies. • We are apt to think earrings, as well as nese rings and the percentages; and the barge own - .•r Poland as a new -old country with skewers, adorn both sexes in Malayta, ers have to receive dearurrage for r.ither negative policies. But Poland and in some parts the toilet boasts the sl';ring of the nuts until an ocean IS working towards positive ends. of nothing more. liner eornes along to take them off; , whole - During these years of new national While the old cannibals of Ma- and there are the British whole- eristeace the Poles have eetabllehed layta were still living many attempts Qalers and retallers—not to mention e. real eau ocraey In their incorrigibly were made to ascertain the origin of the %minus railway companies who nrietoeratie lane (there has never cannibalism. The argument that it transport the nuts to all the corners been any regi middle class here, was due to the absence of animal of the land—who, ton, have to be though one is now developing), a de- mocracy o- food will not hold good, for there was paid their separate shares. It Is a umocracy so genuine as to need no an ample supply of fish and pork. wonder that the nuts are sold as fillip of Fascism to keep it strong. On the other hand, there were not- cheaply as they are, Twenty cents Like some other countries, bow- ed cannibal chiefs upon whom the a pound, indeed, for nuts that come over, Poland suffers from an sasses eustom grew until it became an ob- 6,000 miles, of governmental functionaries, char- session. Generally, howerer, men The Brazil nut Is found only in the aetertatie"alike of noelallstically in- were eaten as an act of triumph, and valley of the Lower Amazon, The clines new governments and et else one ot the bitterest taunts that could tree on which it grows is one of the older and arietocratieally iatlined. be uttered was to say, "I ate your' largest in the forest, The pod, in Tire 'xeeea moat all be cut down here father," or, even worse, "I shall eat which are one or two dozen nuts, is as elsewhere if each country's tax- Yeti."'a hard wooden ball, larger than a able wealth Is to support overhead There was besides the belief that man's'head. It is difficult. enough t;uvernurental charges. Otherwise In eating the liver of a fallen warrior toecrack a Brazil nut at table; a there will be general bankruptcy. And his courage entered into the eater. hatchet• is required to open up the that, In tura, can lead to 'wittiest! The question of administration is not pod. anarchy. a very important one now, though The gathering of Brazil nuts, from The Poles hare eetabltahed come doubtless it will become so as more February to August, is the work of (misery education. Alt rhtldren up white men settle on the coasts. the bank dwellers of the Amazon, tuft years ot age have to attend The wild tribes live In the interior, who wander through the forest pick- tt.e Nmol. Though thousands of new and they have ceased to swoop down Ing up the fallen pods and breaking wlioelhouses have been erected, there upon the more peaceable natives on them open with hatchet-like knives. i ee not enough yet, and the children the coasts, and they do not make any ' As Know an they have cnllceted a auf- ` ±'are to be taken care of in two or raids upon adjacent islands. ficient quantity to fill their canoe►;, . ibree shifts. Their Internecine wars were a they paddle down to the nearest river In walkingabout the Warsaw blessing In disguise, for they prevent- boat. station and barter the nuts to tercets I am iatpreaaed by tbe many ed the natives from falling into a local traders for cloth, tools, and so bookshops. Their windows, contrary lethargy which has beset them since forth. The traders, in their turn, to these of similar shops in other the arrival of the missionaries. ';hip the nuts by river steamer to (-hies, are tilled with text -books and In former times a tribe had to'flght Manaos, Itacoatiara or Para, where ether serious works rather than with for its existence, and that brought out they are put into large covered novels and lig ser literature. This all the qualities of energy, courage Lighters and kept until the arrival certainly tadieates a popular desire and self-sacrifice that were born in of an ocean-going ship — usually a far learning. One alt se's Many stu- the native character. A tribe had to Booth liner. dent cape about. Warsaw almost work hard on its plantation in order At Liverpool—the only British port sterns a stud at etty, to lay up stores for a siege. to which the nuts are sent In bulk— The Poles have established univer- Now it prefers a happy-go-lucky the nuts are put into great sheds, tart suffrage, without distinction' of existence of travelling from village and here they are placed in sacks «x. The lower House of Parliament to village, spending the time feasting for delivery to varinus parts of the le elected by citizens over twenty-one .and dancing. Doubtless when the country, and, indeed, to many parts years of age; the upper, by those interior of Malayta is explored it may of the outer world. c+vrr thirty. When you consider the Prove to be rteh In minerals and ores, tack et political ezperienee of moat and the savages will give way be- Earthquakes at Sea. of the citizens, you, are surprised that tore the advance of civilisation. A big ship on her way acrose the tare franchisee bas funetioeed as well Atlantic rcceutly was suddenly jarred ase It has. Por the future, compel- Tatting as an Art. alt over as if she had struck a reef. sop, instruction will spread abroad Fine talking is a precious art en- Af first her officers believed that site general intetligenee. tinting several different sorts of train- Ind bit' a derelict, and were relieved ,The teles have established an ing. Most of us are "too heavy on to find that this was riot, the case, army --.and, under French 'guidance, the snaffle," as the English say. We Presently news carne by wireless that a' notable army too. In great part lack the ltghtnese of touch that goes two other vessels, each about sixty 1114 £routler is not naturally marked to make up successful conversation. miles from the first, had had equally NA' defenee. In addition, Poland lies Now we do detest the parlor mono- alarming experiences. Then the cap - 1411 -ten two Crowning, threatening logulet who takes the floor and talks fain knew that what he had felt was ce ossi, Germany and Russia. More- dismally for an hour about some- the shock from a submarine earth- nt<er, little Lithuania, on the north- thing we know nothing and care quake nr volcanic explosion. viipt, has a grievants with Poland nothing about! We hate him because In 1869 a ship, thirty, miles off 1 use of the Ambassadors' Confer- we desire to take the floor and talk the Chilean cheat, was lifted as if a ate derision giving Vilna, the an- dismally about something quite div- giant had seized her under water, c' t nt Lithuanian capital, to Poland !errant that other people care noth- and shaken violently. In 1877 nn - 1 . $auae the town's population is fait abont, other vessel crossing the Pacific was In crwhelmingly Polish. Renee, as a And there Is the blighted soul who shaken twice in five minutes, while 1 tat reeutt, the peoples across three- persists in telling stories. True or front the depths came a sound like q eters et the frontier may he said btherwtrn, The trne ones are usually ,llstant thunder. In Noveniber, 1893, t ; be- distinetly menacing to Poland. the Reddest because they have no ti lari~e steamer was passing Cape ,Tttrre Is thus need of a Nighty point ot all, He is no worse Iban Verd, on the African coast, when she ti rine4 •armed forte In this country, "the life of the party" who attics began to shake al' over and roll and Wien though, Mkt the present army, everyboey questions and never waits tumble so violently that everyone tt; costs half of Poland's revenue. The for an answer. And the bubblesome, rushed on deck, The weather was Pdlielt array is the bulwark, not only laughing, uneasy soul who wants to dcact calm and very hot at the tints. o r,Potand, but (whether one regards know: "Well, what let's do now?" Sorn':tintes these under -sea earth- hnland as a wall or as a bridge) of The very fact that sober persons q,,;tk e; throw up va;,t waves, wrongly F,' rope; it Is vital to the peace of after an lee water dinner atilt per- - called "tidal" waves. Of the Chilean flea e, and that means tbe world's slat in listening to speechmakers is coast in November, 1922, a wave inea►ee. And what attractive soldiers a proof that we distrust conversation was se great that it flung a largo ship the Poles make. for anything except preaching or the Recently I new some of them ar- transaetion of affairs'. The newest -inland he over a railway a bridge, The shocks may cast up Islands, riving at their barracks: the military , inventions of mechanical pianos, In 1931 an island of this sort Ear,.' band preceding, playing the beautiful phonographs and radios are really in the Mediterranean, only to sick 'Polish national hymn, at which all our confession of Inability to converse again. while in September, 1f,01, an the bystanders uneovered. In their with any degree of mutual pleasure. inland rose and va.niahcd in the Gulf military movement the soldiers seem- ; None of them are so widely used for of Mexico. ed' to unite something of German reeasonable entertainment In them One of the most. frequent resnll:t solidity to something of Italian alert- soiree, as for tricks to keep the call - of these submarine frequent earthquakes ire sleets and elasticity, ! ers stirred up when they come in for the breaking of telegraph r.ui,Jcs, The Agricultural Poland is richer than ! an evening.—McNaught's Monthly, yearly bill for this sort of thin;; runs is eommonly supposed. Production wr acre, while very Irregular, aver- 1 When Men Wore Fancy Buttons, into many thousands of dollars. ages as high ae the average for all j Buttons played no small part in ' Europe; moreover, in any normal ' the adornment of our grandfathers, Deadly Soil. year Poland raises a large surplus and according to report, buttons aro , At n recent inquest I1. was stated beyoud ger own requirements. i coming to the fore again in response, that most of the lockjaw cases treated As to the else of erope, Poland fur- to fashion's fancy. Birmingham, the at the London Hospital come from Mattes an eighth of the world's' rye ,home of the button industry is turd- I Essex, where the soil is apparently and over a fifth of the world's po- lug out some exeeedfngly ornate glasrt ,I suited to the germ. Actually, all intoes. The potato exports, one ' Rolla are the breeding ground of dis- buttons. Great grandfather paid high I ,,ase germs, Aright s>zppoae, would be prodlgiotts, ; prices for hie coat decorations, For int, as a matter of fact, the internal instance a mein named Bisset has loft Iu the New Forrest, there is a spe- c'ortagmptlon Is proportionately great- ' on record the fact that the buttons 'hes of mould, used In orchid cultiva- er. tt�an in any other country. , Not Kia wedding coat cost $100 and tion, that is well known among gar- onoaly,ia the potato a main food for ;were of his own painting. ,Ile did a deners as being dangerous, ;It NM - were but atao for beast, while much :good deal of fancy paintings for Mat- tains microbes which,' ore obtaining nfthc crop goes to make alcohol, ' thew Boulton, of Soho. "The elegant nrcess to the blood, set up a pecu- els, and other potato produete. poison - paintings I d!d for him," he mentions, liarly,virelent form of septic, poison- tt restrietio'ns have forced the ,, trig, front which recovery is unlikely. P were on glass, about the size of a Similarly, l what !s known as aza- Sinner to sell recent bumper 'bait -crown piece, with pearl devices crepe 'fa a congested domestic mar- , in the centre on different colored lea peat,"a line vegetable loam found !tet, at prices barely affording an even in certain Midland districts, carries toile. They were set !n steel for break with his production into Po- Court buttons, the size when flntshed germs equally potent, Many nursery- leu;<l. ;the Is now the sixth largest ' of a Spanish dollar, I general! bad men will handle it only with gloves. vnnetd producer of sine, and in Con- a guinea Per button." y —Old Country Exchange, tinental Europe the second prodecer ,Y- r� T�; w a,7rc and Club -1 d; k 3) ,4T� �l I��� � r Ph9)I6IES li`lttck;' 1'lt,`;,ll,1' l l(tlt,NrtTAit ;' bit g List: tom', t'('N1'l�;YANt,'l;lL, ; W:( . N' TO 1.1) N. and Da ly Glebe .,,,$6./ 5 ;aril's - Qui t.o Si cut, 111,1''I 11, oNT and Mail and i:'.mpire,,. 6.75' end Daily Word 6.75 and Sunday World 4,27 ; �I'N I,II'I? .i«I'Il,l\CI'; CO. III' C,iN;111/.. And 1.t.ndoii Advertiser b.7`1 i'li1'' i'I?llllt�ti & 1'Ittn;111'Stilv't' and Free FOC,- 6.75 It leads rlit 1;1''+I 11mo; 1, l'Ittrr,�ltar+ t • companies, and Toros' o D iiry Star (i.7y ; and family Hereld 3,5111 II 11. 1,0N(, I+ieiceiet 1luniti, i and Farmer's Sirir 3.91, 6'u+lerich and Can. Countryman 3.411'; __------•_---..-_.---._.._-----•--•-.---..,. and I':+rrner's Advoca'e 3.50 J. I-1. R. ELLIOTT, and W.el'• Witness 3,50 N'tt'I'.tlil' i'I'I;I,It..' c'1+N\'I�:\,\Nrt';It and \\ .,r. `Wide •3,0f Fir r, Acc:deet, Sickness, J':niployt is and I:' hvtcrian .... 4.5(' I,ir+bility, Plate (,lass, Aurones and i' Litry journal 2.9(1. bile and live ,`duel: Insur.,nce, and l'atlh'st'utnpanion 'I.50 131.1''111, ('i'Itone 104) O'�l fAl�l!►, and N�►rth':rn Messenger 2.50 and Can, Pictoral. 3,90: -- -------.._ and Rt'r..l Canada 2,75 ICA. Mc1N'l'Yl?E, i. D. S., D. 1), ' �t and Farm & Dairy. 3 I)0 r,,.x rt, r and Saturday Night 5.10 Office ()vie 1\1.Kav's Druz' Store. that a man who has acquired tame Standar and McLean's MagaLine 4 75 ' (ifi.re hnur 9 to 121 to (i was notable when a boy. It is true I that their rare capacities are riot as G r lt�th Ctaiiaar'd, 1��i11 visit lirrl►+trn each 'l-uerday a rule plain to all, but few boys who �' ' ►'') crnonn, distinguish themselves in later years -�- —____— -------- �__ _--__-- i 'Phone 130 puss through adolescence without at- tracting the attention of some ob- r. rtn Ir r !�c, fig; r�p1} p',��ir(. servers who predict future celebrity Nit Wrii1 SI..�'R �'lONVIIc� s AL lti �uat, for them. Dr. �'rtr. �t�►!3. Milne, `This has been parttcularly true of , has the largest and rhos' complete i PHYSICIAN c. ` uR(11 UN, musical and literary gerlittees. The ; stock, the most beautiful designs t+ , t;0I;(1,,J;it t'r)1,N I 1 ul" 11111to, , ...a. ••••••••••••••••••• of ;coal, white she bide fair to be- Awful! be - coins the first producer of salt. A Baker's Dozen. ' Dad (sternly) : "Where were yon ,Of Polish experts In 1,23 coal took A baker's doyen is thirteen for ' last night?" first' plate, textiles second, and semi-' twelve. When a heavy penalty was Son: "Oh, just riding arouse with Sleighed metal goods third; of Polish inflicted in England for short weight, Borne of the boys." imports, textile raw materials took bakers used to give a surplus num- "Well, tell 'em not to leave Mit Disse and finished goods second. ber of loaves, called the "Inbreed," I)ad: their ha "Wel ,in the ear." in ' both exports and imports metal to avoid all risk of incurring a fine, Germany Is represented by about The thirteenth was the "vantage" Asp!rin 'I'abltts. halt. loaf, "To give a man a baker's doz- AU In all. Poland is a very Iran~ en," in slang phraseology, is to glvo Aspirin tablets numbering up to Pertain factor in European economics him a sound drubbing, i.e., all he , 500,000,000 aro consented In Grout WI 'in Ftrrapetln polltleal life, deserves and ane stroke more, "Wain every year,—Answer'. plan who is going to become a great I choose from in poet usually writes verse as a child, and the man who is to become re, MARBLE, SCO'i'CI-I AND CANAD nowned in the world of music usually IAN GRANI'hh:.S. shows his bent at an early age. If Ito Is to become iin unusual performer We make s specialty of Family bion It !s necessary that he should begtr' „meats and invite your inspection, young In order to master the tech pique of his art. Not many com- posers, however, have begun as young as Nini Rota Rinaldi, of Milan, who, at twelve years old, was a composer, a musician and a can - doctor. Italy is almost as proud of hitt as of d'Annu.nzlo, and musical authorities • agree that his work shows not 'only rare promise, but a WINGI IAM, ONTARIO achievement of which , most adult composers mliht well be proud. At the age of eleven this Italian mite composed an oratorio which he call- ed "The Childhood of St. John," and MY OPTICIAN those who are competent to pass at opinion on it declarer that, it is an es- aeintlally sound and remarkably musicianly piece of work. For a child of eleven to compose an ora• torte of any kind would be wonder• ful; to compose a good ono bur'ler& ou the miraculous. One would suppose that It would be easter to conduct an oratorio than to compose it, but Ntnl did not find it so. Indeed his reputation received something of a dent when he under- a Specialty. took recently at Turcoing, France, to conduct an orchestra of 250 pieces QUEEN ST., BLYt.Ct through "The Childhood of St. John." His admirers say that the boy was not to blame, but the mus!- duns, or rather, Ronne of them.• WANTED After he had been conducting for a few minutes some rather disagree- able sound began to make them- selves heard from the orehestra. The youthful conductor glared at the offenders, but that did not improve matters, It was evident to 'him that some of those whore he was trying to guide and inspire through the mazes of the oratorio had lost their way. He probably cursed and pro- tested as is the fashion of the tcrn- perarnental of various age and finally after five minutes threw down his baton and resigned. With great dif- ficulty he was persuaded to respond to the demand of the audience for au explanation, and then he made a speech denouncing the players. He refused on any account to make a second attempt. Nini's mother, who wishes him to bo first a boy and fr:ur- teenthly a musical prodigy, is the only ono who was pisaae(1 at the out- come of the concert, and it is not. likely that the lad will appear In public for some time to cotne, , Another youthful genius who hag recently come to light is Helen Douglas Adam, an English girl, who, It is hoped, may ultimately enrich the poetry of the fingltsh language. Site began unusually early even for a ' poet and between the ogee of four and six composed the following lines: 1 "Night came sighing and all arcuncl was still. The crimson day lay dying behind the farthest hill. I sarr an angel with a snow-white flower, And he pulled the petals off, hour by hour," Inscriptions neatly, carefully and fl lYS1�:1;11J & SURCCON promptly done, Electric fonts fur carving and letter, Meeical Reim -scow ive D. S. C. R. ing. Office over R. M. McKay's Drug Store Call and ace us before placing your Phone No.-- Office 51; Residence 4.i • lio11t�. A. Stratton,. urdcr. ' 13LY LH, ONTARIO Giles - - Queen Street Re -idt ncc D;nsley St rest 13LY'I'I 1, • (ftvI AR11') Dr. FI. W. Colborne, 'I'II011 AS ()JIMMY AUCTIONEER, QODkRtGH, - ONTARIO Fai She .res R ri+ecl tlty. ()i,i. +' Irfl. at Ilse Itl;ll+ St to t+u l 11111++' wilt he prur,,t++ly' aitet+(it+t to. T1.1.,;T1.1.,;,1114)116,e (..e Wince Cite mu) Slav i.tl�.•,+.tt. r,+yyeexl.et►"e. DIt. W, J. AZII,NT� , JOHN M. rT'AI�ICE 'a AUCTIONEER, AUBURN, - I ONTARIO Fine Spectacle Wale and s sot, a • I•ecl,+ir i, (hal, to It It t.t +h : it yth SisreieeI 011ie will i►t Accurate Les Wont 11 l'l'clpuuo 111 This has the ring of poetry about it, thotr'gh the figures are not new Nevertheless they are remarkable as coming from a lisping infant whose ncquaintance with poetry In genera; tuust have been extremely limited. Between the agen of eight and ten the little girl wrote ' the following verses which are better than. the average magazine verse, to say the least:— "Do not sing of the restless day With its wiles that steal men's hearts away; Not of striving for wealth and gold, These things are empty and dry and • cold; Not of the battle fires shining bright, Singer, sing me the song of the night. °'Sing of the heavens solemn and vast, O1' the moonlight mantle o'er earth that is cast, For voices sweeter than now -born flowers Whisper to me in the silent hours, And the mystic darkness to me is light. So, singer, sing me the song of the night." At our Blyth mill all the ^hoice Maple, Bass and Sort Elm logs we• can get, for which we will pay cash oli first and fifteenth of each month, The Geddes Tyson Lumber Co., Blyth Ageng Wanted to sell "Community" Products—Bread and Cakes, The agency for this fa- mous line of superior food products offers a splendid opportunity that will add prestige to your local trade and bring you new business. Local advertising is part of the service we provide suitable agents, Write for particulars. E BROWN'S BREAD LIMITED TORONTO .FARM FOR SALE 50 acres of land being South part of lot 25, Con., 14,.Hullett. On the prem ices are tituatc a comfortrble frame house in good conditton, Barn 36x56 with stone stabling and corrigeted iron roof. stone pig ren and lien house, About i4 acre orchard and about two acres of good hardwood bush, land is situated about 2 miles from village of Blyth and 2% from Londes- boro, Thos Lyon. R. 'R 1, 13lyth, J. C. HEFFRON, Butcher. Boiled I lam 4kl c l3reakf st Bacon , 'k 13ack I3acon afic Pork Sausage 17c Bologna 2tic Head cheese 1 )s CO' Lige Roll t25c 26c NA Lard 20c Beef !Steak 20c Re Beef Roast I5c .I8c Beef Boi' 12c 14c Pork • 16c 20c Beef, hind quarter I0c 12c Beef, front quarter 9c 1 Ic WAWANVSii ASID NUM FARMERS' CLUB Co-operative Buying and Selling. 1st and 3rd Thursday of each month , R RICHMOND, CI'MiN(i President, Shipper r, lig `I't111,1111, Scc'y 'rreas, THE S'T'ANDARD R1: AI. ES'T'ATE AGENCY. We have at the present tirne list cd with us sarr:e very desirable vil;rr_c and faun prnpc►ty, If you comers• template buying. call on us and we will give you. full particul rs, Cl e following are some properties that are well worth investigatiuly:•--- Two storey solid briar: dwelling. Modern Also a good stable, '1 his property is in good repair , and bas hydro installed. Frame dwelling on King Street with •:1. acre of land. This property is in good state of repair and can be pur• chased on reasonable terms, 1, 'Brick dwe'ling on Queen Street, in good repair. Apply for fuller particu• lata. 13rick dwelling on 'Hamilton Street. Cement uarage on 1, t, % acre of land. This property is a good buy for anyone desiring a comfortable horrtc, 'frarnc dwelling on Drummond St., in good repair acre o' land. • Brick dwelling on Queen Street in first-class repair, • If you de; i c to purchase 4 fermi get partict,lai' 'torn us, Tho Staittl:rt't1 Real Estate R Blyth. Ont. • . Bluth Markets. Beware of Widow's VW'cods. . "A pretty little widow gave me a Rutter, dairy,, 32 to 32 box of cigars for my birthday." FOR SALE -500 hushels of turnips Eggs per rioz 24 to -25 "Beware of widow's weeds, old Apply to Andrew Sloan, , Huy per ton 12 060 to 12 00 wan." Hogs per cwt ' 13 50 to 13 50 • ellIMMISIS • 4110MIMS 4111111.111120416111101115111 We (0► i 1— We have a good line of books by the following well ifncwn auth- ors. Make your selection while the assortment is complete, John Buchan, I cbc:rt Wafter, I-1. A. Cocly, Rex Beach, Juicy Canurk, Agnes Laut, Ethel ,M. Dell, IJirgv all Fordyce, P. G Wocfche>t.l't:e, Ar,I ie S. Swan, Jack Ruthen, Ralph Corner, John Owen, Joseph Hocking; Ft'irer Hag.gart, Baroness Orczy, Jar>iies Oliver Curwocd, Florence E rclay, Peter B. Kyne, Ruth Fieldirg, Frank Webster and others. REPRINTS 85 CENTS A complete line of Public and High School Books and Supplies. Magazines and Newspapers. The Standard I3ook & Statioiiery Store, Phone 104 PAGE 5—TIiEBLYTH STANDARD- llrwrlock. ' 11.r&d Beacom is at present hcip- I i,.g Bert Allen to make syrup, Mr. aild t rends la l rentertained Wednesday evening, NIr and Mrs Alex McEwing enter- - rained cumpauy on Friday evening. ll'liss !eagle IVluun visited with Mrs. 9 i.cu Wdll the Ialtcr part u( Ilic week, Several of the young peup'e ul Her- . 0:k arid vicinity el tended the Forest• ) els' "A, 1-loine' in Kinburn on Friday ;I, Nibs Lien Suell, who came home from ,i ' the Wcist oh aeanint (,1 the ill health e :al her inathil Nil,s. Christopher Dale, has feint ly been visiting relatives and March 26, 1925. "AS SHE IS N]'O1(F.►" Our Laneunge is Full of Pitfalls for the Pulite Foreigner. An enthusiastic Frenchman recent. ly wrote of a pretty Englltih girl, who had roused lila admiration; "She Is a young lady of great mizzen top- mast," 111; succeeded In unwittingly being vary funny tndeed. The word he wanted Was "obit," but the French "tongue" Inas rt nautical cleaning uu well as that of "aptrit," and the Frenchman had been unfor- tunate In hie choice between the eiternalives. l.qually guileless was the Gel'malt cobbler In a southwestern watering - plan; who affixed this notice to u pair of bunts exhibited In lila window, "scarcely creditable! 78, 6d." The Hindu 18 respouttlblo for some • amazing translations. Ono young um - , i five student tranatuted the firm two Mr. Ed. (V1cMillrin, of Porous Jn., Rees of "!tock of Ages" Into his owu is visiting hie si,tcr, Ali:.s uric, and (cogen, so that, rendered back again Into Engllah, they read; brother, Wiliiein • 'j the rcgul.+r triedit,g of the f'anticis' "Very old stone, spilt for my benefit, Let �sort myself under one of fab will 'met. in Ur, t4'lilne's 11 I, on me uI ( �i�inursd iv t;f (.moan, April 2nd, , t your fragments." -11 2,30, Ful attendance :cqura!rd. i A well-known Swiss, clergyman, xpcaking to a British congregation In }:erne, threw bib' audience into con- vnisiuus by fervently saying at the cud of Ills speech, "God kipper your worthy pastor!" This rewiuda one of another Swiss who, Wilding "gaud -bye" at the sta- tion to saute Lnglldh friends, startled thew by baying "Farewell! Good voy- age! I expect you will be jammed [roto ze danger." Ile meant that he 'hoped" his friends would be "pre- derved"y front danger during their Juuruey, SWI33 hotel -keepers, however, car- ry off the paler for unpremeditated :inter, where he had god position, Minor. This, for Iltxlanee, Is how ' have returned to town. and he has ono well-known hotel le advertised !opci,ed up his gar,ge for birrincss, I In a Swibe newspaper: [Vb. Chas, Lockwood had 10 close lite Hotel is a favorite re. Bort of thone who love Hellard.. i his br:rbcr shop for u fc.w days his' 'Those who are In search of the Ione• week, he being confined to the house lineae are, in fact, flocking to this an attack of lousilititis. but on hotel front all the fore -quarters of Tuesday he we, able to resume busi- the globe," ;nesr agatti. FOR SALE A quantity of timothy seed, White 131ussom sweet clever seed; Unbelieving outsider may Not Enter also a putt bred Uut11inl bull I I mon- I Brahmin's House. th3 old (weight 1000 lbs) at a re:von• «'bile the Brahmin may he per- ib'e price. Afply to Henry Pierce, fectly pulite and friendly, In a dig- , tlitled way with lits occidental bre- Myth, Out, � titer, it Is probably harder for an The W. M. S, of Blyth Methodist , unbelleviug outside to enter a Brah- Cliurch are cclebral ing their Silver ithIn'a house than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven, jubilee no Sunday, April 5.h. Special One is sometimes made welcome in :,rrtnons and rnu:ic are arranged for ' the courtyard or upon the verandah Inc following evening they are put.ir g plat au a'special honor, but even then on an cntmuinrncr.t including a Faµ- one is uneasily co11mc1oua of the cant entitled "-The Spirit of Eisler"purificatory trouble and expense of We he'vc bot u Onlar 0 wheat bran fur :ale at $311.;10; shunts at 1,32,00 and 0 Law Grade I. lour al $48 (1) p �r ton. II(.:once and see tit ae (reds. 'l'ilsy will (feast you. fill )c)r11 & Leslie, The Blyth Egg Circle arc ready to ship eggs. Persons irltetl�.Jllrg t0 binp / I ,rill leave their eggs 41. 13.uaer's st'ne. Puuhttg is cxpectdd 10 slut soon. It, C. NSG 'wan, President, M 0 BLYTI-I, ONT coNEEDea 1**Costistallo gins* asp maim OF FADM$TOCK AND IMPLEMENTS The undersigned auctioneer has received instruct- ions from .James Cuniing to, sell by public auction on Lot 4J., Concession 1, East ,Vawanosh, commencing at 1, p, m, an Friday, March 27 «X111e following that is to say:— HORSES 1 matched team mares, 8 years old, 1 brown mart, 6 years old; 1 driving mare, 5 years old. CATTLE 1 pure bred Durham heifer, due in April; 1 cow 7 years old, due May 1st; 1 cow 5 years old, due in April, 1 cow 4 years old, due in June; 1 cow 8 ,year's o'd, due in April 1 heifer rising 3 years, due in April; 1 heifer, 3 years old, milking, '1 •heifer risir.g 2 year,, 7, heifers rising 1 year. PIGS. POULTRY. 4 chunks pigs. 50 young hens, 2 hen turkeys and gob- bler IMPLEMENTS. HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS. Massey -Harris binder 5 ft cut; mower, 5 ft. cut, steel hay rake 10 ft; 10 hoed seed drill; 11 hoed fertilizer drill J3 tooth Massey -Harris cultivator, 2 scufllers, 1 set harrows, Finery plow No. 21, manure spreader, Massey - Harris; wagon, set bob sleighs, 1 cutter, rubber tired buggy, turnip pulper, grindstone, 2large barrels, anum- ber grain bags, a quantity of hay, 100 bushels seed oats,' 0, A. C. Number 72, 100 bushels seed oats, (Little Wonder,) a quantity of mixed grain, 1 set brass mount- ed show harness, 1 set work harness, blow harness, chains, forks, shovels a.ncl other articles too numerous to mention, 1 bed -room set, a number of chairs, hanging lamp, sausage grinder and filler, a quantity of dishes hay fork, ropes, slings and other articles. TERMS OF SALE All purchases of $10 and under, cash; over that amount eight months' credit on purchasers furnishing approved joint notes. A discount of 4 percent. straight off for cash on credit amounts. Hay and grain cash, JAMES CUMING; T. GUNDRY, Proprietor. Auctioneer r. and Mrs. Terrance 'Tierney, been in Turemo for liter past GOOD BRAIIMINS ABHOR MEAT. PENSIONS FOR POLITI(TANS. ESR TMO MAIlfIAQRI9, Fortunes ini (totby Poor MWedding Pe tiny Reified Soon After Ministers. Birth. Marty people aro under the int - ter, atter e s >Ol,klmo baby M reasion that a British Cabinet Mtn- born It is promised by lei parents to ar,r, nn rellquiahing office, auto- ' the 111(1. child .of some of their lade/illy becomes entitled to a pen-' (deeds or -neighbors held In high Ion fur life, loaf ea If he were "an esteem writes Christian Leden ' a -Lord Chancellor, Thte� ledge Ie mutually binding, . An ex -Cabinet Minister is not ellg- and 1(ardIy ever disregarded, so that ,btr for a pension unless he has given an >l;eklroo's dertlny aa to wedded life It leant tour yearn' Service or its Is settled born the beginning. equivalent In an office of the first By 18 or' 17 the Eskimo girla has class, xi: years' service In an office reached maturity, and thenshe pre. of the first class, sir years' service In an office of the second class, or ten years' service In an office of the third class, and unless he declares that hill private Income le insufficient to maintain his station In life. There are, moreover, only twelve political penslone In all, divided Into three chines, the maximum rates of which aro £2,000, £1,200, and £800 re- spectively. So an ex -Minister may or niay not draw a pension. It was so In the old days, The Duke of Newcastle refus- ed one, notwfthxtanding that he had reduced his estate from £26,000 to £6,000 In trying to Induce people to support the Government while he held rQ[ce, On the other hand, the elder Pitt, his colleague, accepted a pension. lie could hardly have done otherwiae, because money melted in his hands. His appetite was so capricious that there were always three dinners in course of preparation for him, so that food should he in roudinese when- ever he felt inclined to eat. When travelling, too, ho did things on the grand scale, During a jour- ney from hath to London he shut himself up In an inn at Marlborough for some weeks, and very soon he seemed to have an army of ntten• dente, his Beery appearing every- whero. Curious travellera c'tecorered pares for beraell her first long - hooded coat, or amaut, the kind her mother wears. This is a sign to 'her affianced sweetheart she is ready to marry. Perhaps he Is away at• the time, but word reaohee blrn of her step, no he Marta forth; to claim her. As a matter of form he shows little Impatience In getting her. He deem not tell hie errand to anyone, and out of courtesy no one mentions It tibial, but the purpose of hie journey is thoroughly understood. He does not to direct to his future wife's carpe, but stops a day or so In all the camp. along bin route. When at last he reacgee her *Ill. fly he dove not always go to her•par- ents: igloo right away, but probabtr takes up" his Abode in the enowbouse nr tent farthest away (roof it., Now and then he moves to a house closer, Ignoring all the while the real object of his journey by discussing only such universal topica as the weather and` hunting, When finally he enters the home of hie future father-in-law etiquette demands he shall wait for some time before mentioning his errand. He la silent for a long time, and atter he has begun epeaking he wafts still" longer before addressing any remarks to his bride. Site on her side, feigns great indifference to her suitor. Much formality and a great deal of realet- that ho had insisted that during his ance on her part Ie gond through as stay in the inn—one ,of the 'argent a matter of etiquette before eho fin - In England—his livery should be ally takes her seat with him on the worn by all the waiters and stablo sleigh and they start on their honey - boys. moon, which means the journey to Disraeli, too, drew a pension hie home. (£2,000) for years, though he was There are no wedding presents, not a poor man. Like both the Pitts, but apparently they, are not missed, he received much financial assistance and the fact that there is no further from friends. He bought Hughenden ceremony does not make the union out of money given to him by Lord lees .stable. Tho honeymoon to a George Bentinck and his brothers. rather quiet and speechless affair, In recent times there has been and It Is only through shy glances similar lack of uniformity, Generally that one dlacovers a smile on the.face ex -Cabinet Ministers have not taken of the other. Atter awhile they may a pension, and, if not wealthy, have draw a little nearer together, and solved .the problem of getting a live- finally rub noses—their first demon- lihpod In their own way, Thls move- atratton of affectign. ment was strengthened by Mr, Asqutth'a action after ho had been ROLLING ACROSS EUROPE. Home Secretary in Mr. Gladstone's last administration. He returned to Extraordinary Journeys to • Win his work at the Bar,thereby causing W which in verybeautiful and im r�;. which he will be ttlo Innocent ecce -agars. p - siun, In a lured llouxe the Brahmin r much comment. A few weeks ago a man Started sive. The public is invited, Admits- is less particular, and the younger 1 But some ex -Ministers •have drawn on a journey from Amsterdam to siun 25cts, ' generation, living In the capital apart I pensions for long periods. The moat Marseilles by the strange method of from ancestral sanctity, may some- tenacious was Mr. C. P. Vllliera, Who rolling'on his head;'hande, and knees, The Wumiin's "►lissionary Suci ty times be visited on equal terms. { died a Tow years ago at the age of Ho meet make morethan a million met in St, And-ew s church basement, As regards eating, the Brahmin's ninety-three. He represented Wolver- nomhreaulte to' ieacb, his destination ' n Tuesdayafternoon The Bible ritual squeamishness applies mainly hampton for about forty yearn wlth- q by ]antiaty 12,th, 1926; ,and ,his Reading was taken by Mi s Lou a to cooked food, about which the out once, It la sald, either setting speed is three miles a day, + books of the law are precise and ' foot in that town or speaking In the In early days, Kemp, a friend of r Terrington The subject being '' er• anxious. Of fruit and confectionery House of Commons. A statue of him Shakespeare and himself, An (rotor, , vice the highest aim in li a thus :haw•_ (not made with eggs) even the mid- I was erected in Wolverharnpton.dtir- danced all the way from j•ondon to. ing the I rue love in the heart." The tile -aged and orthodox will usually lug his lifetime,,Norwich Socie y.acccpted the respor;sibility of Partake with you. J As an ex-Cabine( Miniser he drew There are several caeee of people clothing one boy, age 15, in the fife What further accommodation 'la a political pension . for some fort found between friends upon occasion Years on the ground of his small who Wagered that without cI corer tic Indian School. Mrs, Kershaw gave a certain dlbtichce without clotng. i ver I ul account of the rotivlh o cannot, of course, be said, but gen- means, and yet left £90,000. An amusing lnetanee ld that' of 1Jb* Y g er 11 lth d Brahmins h Of J t h therehasman who bought a cab and cut the less angry work m I,rdna, liartltolo elerenth 1s the capital commandment been a change of opinlonon political bottom out ot'it" Inelde the vehlclo blew be ng the first rnias.onary in A. 'fry this matter, anti a very tremendous pensions. Formerly it was consider- he took" off hill clothes' and stepped a y w modern t o late years, however, D. 190, The Uut,h came next. For one It Is in view of the acetal and , ed quite right and proper that a elf• p through the ho1'e' he had made on to material danger involved in the ticlan who,had served a certain num- the road; thin he walked through until the nineteenth century was work breach of it,her of years should take one; but now : London unclothed and et concealed again revived, Carey being the one to On.the other hand, all Brahmins the propriety of such a thing to from the public gees, T lay the foundation stone. There arc who have not passed the sea are questioned. About 160 years ago a man under - now 5000 in ssiorl workers and 70,00,- resolute vegetariana. Here is a prin- j Public hostility to • the system Is took to crose'the Thames in a butch-. 000 141ahornmcdalis in India, Rud- elple which they will not willingly ' so great, In fact, that not long ago . or's tray, using nothing but his hands y ird Kip;ing says The Fc undatian of break le the sigl>,t of God, The first an ex -Cabinet Minister gave up the to propel hie strange craft. Ha ac-. ' sight of meat cooked for eating often pension of £2,000 that he had drawn conlpllshed his trip In safety, Miro . !Alan Society s rotten, due p.inc p• tills then( with physical nausea. i for many years. It la known, too, recently a South African made *a 760-• . a ly to the lower position of wom',n, Meat -eating sometimes prevails ; that when another ex-Minleter sur- miles Journey pulling a passenger fit;. The Presby, terian church is responri a among; them as a Seeger vise, with rendered his pension he was really a rickshaw. for 3,0111,600 Math. n, The subject 01 the fascination of a. dreadful stn, in need of money. In the last century a naval cmc. This happened chlefiy, I thought, for April meeting is "I-fonan" undertook to ride a blind horse 'ter among the modernists of a genera- ,either Weather Wisdom, a given distance without touehln f The debate b^twcen the Presbyrei- tion passing now, the first generation the reins withi n Y, P. Society aid the Me pedis( of the modernists. For the fano- , "Bed at night to the shepherd's cents of a younger age the notion of ; delight,• title by'cutting"hand, , Re die the reins in h;)tiara P attaching thorn to Ilia feet. Y. P. League, took lace in the Meth- odi t char h ort Monday evening of this week, The suhj�:r t of debate was Resolved "That men r:pend ono. e t'me an? mon•.:y on their pleasures thou �o women". The a(frmat've. was upheld by Alexander EIl:ott and Harold Jen- kins. while RuthVinc:ttt and Eddie Dougan contested on behatf cf the negative, The ,•cornnlittce o'' judge; consisted of Mesdames W 13, HawkinsJ. 13, Watson and Miss Metcalf, All did well and are worthy of comp iment ing, In giving the decision Mrs Wal - ion said gre,t difficulty had been incl.in arriving at a conclusion, but they had decided to award a half point for some minor consideration and had de• cided in favor of the affirmative by a half paint. The decision was popul,�r and received in good part as evidenc- ed by the beautiful spirit and graceful words of Ruth Vincent, who moved a vote of thanks and appreciation to the judges in most appropriate terms, Sev eral other items of interest were pre- sented during the evening from mem- bers of both Societies. The audience was Targe, crowding the school room. Miss Worsell, President of the League, presided with grace. NOTICE TO DOG OWNERS NOTICE All arrears under the old lighting IN MEMORIAN Notice is hereby given that all dog system must be paid by the first of taxes roust be paid on or before April April by order of the council In loving memory of our infant 1st. The following rates arc applic- R. [3, McGOWAN, Clerk. daughter,Jearr, C ristena Garrett. able; 1 dog 2 dogs daughter of Mr. and. Mrs. Alvanlcy $2 00 TheCradle. ' Garrett, who passed away March 22nd 4 00 McCILL--In Godcric]. on Saturday, 1924, aged 2 months 15 days: 1 bitch,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,„,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 5 00 March 14, to Mr, and Mrs, Walter Just one year ago today, 2 hitches,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,„,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 7 00 McGill, of East Wawanosln, a Since our wee darling passed away. Splayed bitches tame price as dogs, daughter. 1We herd no moan, but saw her smile, Tags m Ibe had from Chief of Police Just before she died, awhile, Ferguson,FOR SALE—"Colonial'' ronge. They laid her in her casket sweet, By Order of Counil., Will burn either coal or wood. Apply And now she rests at Jesus feet. to Mrs. John Barrett, Morris St, Blyth Ont, wine Boomed to have somethingel Red in the morning is the ahep- this romantic dreadfulness, but that herd's warning," of meat was merely horrible. This is the oidE ngllsh rhyme, but Tho Hen and the Egg. the Idea it expresses is known In nearly every country in the world. At last one of the old, old qua- Even the ancient Egyptians and tions which I have been asked at Greeks had sayings similar to the least a thousand times has been an- above. Furthermore, It Is scientiflc- swer'ed. Hitherto, It has been regard- ally true. Red skies are really ed as unanswerable, weather forecasts, "Which carne first?” runs the If the atmosphere is clear In the question, "The hen or the egg?" evening or morning the sun's light To Prof, Conrad E. Tharaldsen be- is rod because the blue, of which the longs the honor of having solved the ordinary white light of the sun 1s problem. I will give you his own made up has been absorbed by the words, as addressed to his students great length of atmosphere through at , the Northwestern University, which the slanting rays of the sun Illinois. have to pass, "The leen comes from the egg, and In the evening tho rosy light of not the egg from tho hen," he said. the sunset lilnnnlncs the clouds on "I realize that I am settling Ina the eastern side of the ak y. rather off -hand manner one of the shows that the clouds have gone This by momentous questions of all time, but and are taking the rain with them, my researh work compels me to give Thus we get red at night, indicating this answer, fine weather. In the morning, the "The , hen carrion the new germ cells which produce other eggs, and, rising sun beteg in the east, the light presumably, now haus, but all hark illuminates the western horizon and back to the original germ cell," its clouds, which are on their way to This information may not appear lis, We need not be shepherds to to carry us much further, but it is know that it the sky is red and lower - useful, at any rate, to find Bonneone ing in the morning we are in for a making a definite statement on one good "soaker" before lunch -thee side. And, mince 1 am sure I cannot comes. make a definite statement on the oth- er side, I shall accept 11. And I hope all my readers will, too, and save ere future trouble(—Anawora, Auto I3uslneaa In America. The annual automobile cost in America, not including interest and taxes, is approximately $8,000,000,- 000, according to an estimate of of- ficials of the Firestone Company. Tho largest item is depreciation, which is estimated to be $1,800,000,000, Of tho First Water. "This milk of yours has not been particularly good lately," said Mrs, Fratchle, ono morning. The milkman looked hurt. "1 can assure, madam," he said, "thia is milk of the first wate>C." Tho Irish Answer. The horse attached to the car In which a tourist in Ireland was being driven was about, the worst specimen of its kind, At last the tourist said to the driv- er, "I say, Pat, yours is the worst looking horse I ever saw. Why don't you fatten him up " "Fatten hint up, Is it?" queried the Irishman, "Faith, the poor baste can hardly carry the little mato that's on hem now," "King" of Aua. "King'," of Aua, a small island off the coast of New Guinea, le a white man, who was educated. at Oxford >I nglaud. As a result of a lost bot, an 'Amer- ican had to wheel a perambulator from Albany to New York; while an- other man wan wheeled through Bos- ton, also in a perambulator, .dressed as a baby and holding an enormous feeding -bottle. , Hietorlc Beauty Spot. Crieff, ,in the Highlands of Scot- land, is regarded as one of. the most beautiful spots in the British Isles, and was greatly beloved by the novel- - 1st, Charles Reade, This• district ie also of hoary antiquity, Stone and bronse instruments, records of a' by gone age, have been found 'there. ' Muthill, throe miles from Crieff, le the site where the Romani legions under Agricola defeated the British leader Galgacus and 30,000 men. The Earls Palatine of Strathearn, "lead- ers of the Celtic party in Scotland.— • tribal kings In their own right," hold Courts at Crlotf ,from the earliest times of which we have any record, but modern Crieff may be said to date Its rise from the opening of the first rallway In 1868. Weaathfeet ;Boy In Brit fin, The richest boy in Great Britain Is the Duke of Norfolk, who wae'born in 1909. He is Boon to learn exactly how, wealthy he la. Although his father, the late duke, died In 1117, the task of proving the will' and valti• ing the estate is just being oomplet. ed. His fortune is expected to total, about $86,000,000. The estate comprises about 60,004 acres of land and includes Arundel Castle in Sudan and Derwent Hall in Derbyshire, wltli Beech Hall in Sher. held - and Norfolk House, St. AIM Square, London. Obvious. Lawyer --And may 1 eek Why you Want a divorce? Fair Client (astonished) -7 -Certain., ly. It's beciause' I'm married; -.4 American Legion Weekly, - - • . Addrets communications to Agronomist, 73 Adelaide St. West, Torente 74E1AIN TOOI,-; ON VAIN. es, jach-plane, draw -shave, woud "Alan tvithout liothile4 chisels, brace and bits, a grindstone or with tcols he is all."---Cariyle, emery wheel, two saw -horses, and a , work -bench with vise It Forty years of observation leads'C, oe must useful and ec01111111iCal vise 111.' to believe that the average farm for farm use is a regular blacksmith's is 1"'"fiY "1"i1)1"'d with 1.11)11. t"18' vise. Small cast-iron vises ore too Not as much its a good sharp axe fragi:e to Ix, of much use, can be found en some farms, If II outside of Nvorh_bench 011d saw. could have but otic tool I would choose 1 norses, which tille Call make for him - the axe. l'he first tool usedby man! t1 toe cost of the above menti011ed W az; an axe made of st it is the, tools is about $')Fi at present prices, fundamental tool. In grandfather's day, n set of farm implements consisted of plow, spike - tooth -drag, wagon, homes:, and it few hand-too:s, rnhes, forks, hoes, and ..eythes. tio about the only repair too:s required were an ilNe, 111011key• Six per cent. interest on th:.. above cost is $1.50 per year. Saving of a half day in a busy season more than pays it. The more mechanically inclined farmer 'night, add to the above list such tools as, forge, anvil, (kin -press,. wryneli, jack-knife, n chis. -,d, a brace hack -saw, pipe wrenches, jack -screws, and bits. taps and dies, spirit level, trowels, \k'ith the present-day implement soldering outfit, and cobbler's outfit. c..itiipinent, which may include tracH .\ certain amount of raNv inateria:s tors, motor trucks, automobiles, wind- for repair work is as essential as gangplows, disc -harrows, put tool.s. Inch boards, 2x2, lxd, 2x6 and drills, binders, huskers, and, 2xki scantlings are of frequent use, ihreihers; it stand:: one in hand to Neils, from carpet tacks to Fix -inch good facilities for making quick spikes, but mostly Stl. size. Srew, mid inexpensive ftpairS. riVet,S, 1101tS, tilltS, WaSilerS, vi re and \Vo all know of men who spend hoop -iron. J'aints, linseed oil, tutpen- many a Italf-day every saintlier tieing tiro, putty and glue. to and front it.) \VII and paying sonie,;ne Farmers netd to bear in 111111(1 that it dollar an hour on repair \vork, that cit,y ‘vitges are excessively high tVIICI1 they could do theim-ol es :it lioi,i i mpared with his own, so that it is lea the time that they silent on the good business on Iuis part to do his road, if they hail tvith to own repair work in so far ;IA pOsSible, OM the work. !so that ho may retain those high WilgeS Tools most ne,(1.(1 are axe, pet- for himself, Fanners are olitaining knife, monkey -v(11. fair price.- for tbir products., hut hand SalVt steel S(11:11T. ("):(1ciie1,, ha Ve to pay too much for what they scrc\v-driver, J& piu, piii,e11- buy.- N. ('lark. - N : bt'a LI 1 I ful varieties, that have been in cultivation for a few years, at. very moderate cost, ---Can, Hort. Council, 7 ---4:---- - POULTRY. The dahlia has bc«inie one of the It is 0 serious mistake to crowd APRIL FOOLS HOLD A PARTY no),:i.s, of garden flower,,, Those who, ., pou.try of any age into quarters too have not been keepibg in touch with small for their comfort and' well. the development of this flower would being. The results of crowding young lye amazed at the shades, form :111*cl-ticks ore particularly far reaching, size of the modern dahlia. It is April Fool's Day is the jolliest' the last game play Nuts to the Nuts, because next, year's income depends DAHLIA CULTURE 1321 a., • OM- 111100.010.•••••• A SMALL BRICK AND TILE HOME DESIGNED BY W. W. PURDY The use of brick and tile In tho construction of the small home is becoming more popular every year. It makes a warm house in winter and cool one in summer, at oftentimes a cost not exceeding ten per cent more than a Well- ponetructed frame house. The home hero shown was • planned for an owner who desired the above construction, simple de- sign, and a minimum cost. Care- ful study of the floor plan will re- veal "a number of interesting fea- tures and will show that the plan has boon carefully studied with n view to eliminating waste room', each room serviug a two -fold pur- pose. The entrance is direct into a oun-roorn, off of which Is a closet largo enough for bed and dressing room. The living room is a com- bination living and dining room, The fireplace has been omitted and a built-in seat with china cup- boards placed across tho end, The kitchen, while small, is large enough to provide the necessary space for cupboards, sink and range, as well as built -In pullman sot. The refrigerator is located in the small entry and can bo filled without going into the kitchen. .1111•011•1•111.11•11.11••••••••••••••••••1•141.1...1111111•1.111111•••••111111,11••••11111110.••111 The rear bedroom has a sized wardrobe which can bo for closet bed it desired. stairway leads to the second where one fair sized chamber has been shown to be finielied, togeth- er with an equal amount of stor- age space. If desired, too, the largo bedroom on the first (Icier can bo used as a dining room and the storage space on the second *Min •••••11 irYik •k OW= • THE PERENNIAL PEA ' ••••••• The 'perennial pen, resembling 't'he • annual sweet penin habit of growth nnd form of flower, is u very desirable vine for covering n fence or ecreenlnie• verandnh, It is a native of Euro- pean woods, but there are ninny culti- vated forms differing somewhat in color, It .hes n long tap root and is therefore difficult to trail:31)1nd lifter it is once thoroughly established. It may be grown frdin aced. The seed is often slow to germinate. Germina- tion is hastened by soaking the seed fir a few hours in a weak solution of sulphuric ecid, or even in warm water.' After it is (MCC established it self sows, but not sufficiently to make. the plant troublesome if reasonable car,dk is taken to remove the surplus new ,plants should they appear year by year. Although perennial pea bloom has no fragrance, it is an excellent flower for cutting. While the bloom fades to n lighter shade after being tut, it does not become objectionable CLO CIO i‘intil it is actually dead, A bowl of perennial peas arranged with Baby'e ceieM fer.P. 5;0 e7eci Breath (Gypsophiln) makes a very oxen. . ,IDsle>f• 01)11:0eUt t8Y t hell! te eotn. e cTihnecugtrogNivetiheefius I ssoprvalsg:s with buds and foliage without risk of destroying the appearance of the vine. Like the annual sweet pea, the per- t enniul pea blooms from early summer until well into the autumn, There Is n pure white variety and several ver- iations of pink, magenta, and purple. Tho perennial pea is ono of the hardiest of perennial plants and very good floor be turned into an extra bed- easily cultivated, thriving nlmost anywhere, even mom; rocks and boul- ders and in poor soil. Like all other The Tho basement contains tho usual flowering plants, however, it responds floor laundry, furnace room, etc. Using to good treatment in the matter of hardwood floors with hardwood soil and position. It is a good trellis trim in the living room, pine to plant and is adapted as covering paint In the bedrooms, it is esti- to such wild, rough places as n rock mated thnt this Koine can be bull'. garden, where it scrambles over bush- andes described, exclusive of heating plumbing, for from 43,500 to es and stones. It succeeds in shade $4,500. and grows rapidly when once estab- lished. Although there are different Pepor• BY BEATRICE PLUMB. en y- oui hours of the year. It's'Each one is given a paper sack con - doubtful if any floWer Can surpass the largely on the pullets to be raised this then that laughter is contagious, taining twenty peanuts. On the floor, dahlia in these characteristics. With' coming summer. What an ideal time for your party! about twenty feet away, is another proper culture one can have dali...las In estimating the capacity of colony This verse will make a good invitatiOn sack, empty. The prize, n walnut, is blooming from the latter part of July, brooder houses it is well to allow one printed on foolscap paper in red ink awarded to the one who first eats all until well into October. The rapidity! square foot of floor space for each and folded into neat dunces' caps: tis peanuts. A journey must be made of introduction of new and improved; three chicks when it is desired that varieties in recent years is a revela-! the chicks have optimum conditions, They say there's one born every between the eating of each nut to put tion to amateur and professional i On this basis the house will be large minute— ; the shells in the empty sack. I Games over, take the party to a gardeners alike, So well has this :enough to take care of the pullets Don't know how much of truth there's specially prepared room for. refresh - flower advanced that a test plot for, that are to be raised to laying age, in it! .1 ments. Doughnuts and coffee,nut it has been established at Mimico,1 , provided the young cockerels are sold Next Wednesday night we'll have a, bread and peanut -butter sandwiches Ontario, under the supervision of the! as broilers. party— I could be served, Your guests must sit Canadian Horticultural Council.IIatches should be planned to fit the An April Fools'!—and here's a hearty on stepladders, tables, high stools and These grounds will be used for trying available brooder house capacity just And real -for -honest invitation out different methods of culture as. as closely as possible. Often it may To join our foolish celebration. Ibexes. The table centre should be a bouquet of cauliflower surrounded by well as the proving of new varieties, with a view to registration. be advisable to put an extra fifty Please dress the part. (To put you young beets, carrots and onions, be in some house rather than to wise, nestling in a bed of parsley. The dahlia requires a rich soil, well operate an additional coal stove. The craziest guest will win a prize.) 1N +, OW, go to it! I'm sure you'll have prepared, and one that will not only Under no circumstances, however, Two vacant -eyed scarecrows should the merriest time! retain moisture, but also drain quick-; should young chicks he started in 4'. I receive yqur guests, They must greet ly at times of excessive rainfall. In flocks so large as to average more Combatting Enemies of the each newcomer with something fool - clay soils it is recommended that coal' than five chicks to each square foot ish, like "Many batty returns of the Rose Garden, ashes be thoroughly mixed in to help' of floor space, the drainage. It is a mistake to plant day!" or, "With every good wish for ice-•----- The rose plant is subject .to many each year the whole clump of roots a bright blue year!" Tack up plenty enemies, both insect and disease, Mr. Shipments of Argentine of laughable signs, Near the door from a plant of the previous season. Wm, Hartry, addressing the Ontario tt e. . where newly arrived guests will see , The individual tubers of the clump ui a onven ion, gave ia should be used as separate plants. It Although without a doubt exporta- it first have a curd reading ',',Good-bye, experience in combatting the rose is well to select the strongest and tion of live cattle to Europe from the • So glad you couldn't.coine! At the enemies in his Stop, look, and garden, in Huron best of these, Each tuber should be Argentine is bound to have sono ef- foot ofthestairs, County, Almost immediately after cut from the group with a sharp knife, feet on the market, it need have no il,vhistle . At the head of the stairs, setting out a bed, or with older plants, "Thousands escape safely—you should being careful to see that a piece of the marked discouragement on Canadian even before growth begins, it is nec- crown or eye is present, It is the , shipments. It does, however, indicate werrY• essary to spray the bushes. Mr. Har - eyes, as in potatoes, that produce the; that for the future we must look for ; When your guests are ready to set- try recommends for the carly spray sprouts and the new plants. i keener competition, which can be over- Cc to the program announce that, Bordeaux mixture with ten per cent, Another system of starting theli come only by steady maintenance, and since this is an April Fools' WV, arsenate of lead, Rather than to take plants is by the use of cuttings. The! improvement if possible, of quality. It, only simple games will be tried. Theithe trouble of making the Bordeaux group should be started into growth will be noticed that a cablegram in firstold favorite will be Musical' mixture at home, the commercial pre - at the beginning of March in a green.; Sic daily paper recently announced; Chairs. See to it that the fun is fastIparation is recommended. Green house or warm window. As soon as! that 150 head, averaging ()vele and furious until the last; chair is aphis, a very troublesome insect to, the, young sprouts have three pairs of 1,200 lbs., thefirst shipment in 25 won by a triumphant guest. Then the rose grower, can be easily com- leaves, cut just below the second pair,' Yea", had arrived at a French port,' present the prize for the first person batted with n nicotine spray. The and place in a two-inch pot, using a and was thought to mean a continua-, who lost his chair.The prize could be commercial preparation known as compost of equal parts of loam and i tion of such consignments. Apropos, nsmall doll's chair with the inscrip-IBlack leaf -40, procurable at any drug sand. When the cuttings have filled: of this the following comment in the, tion, "To Blake up for the one you I or seed store, is easily prepared, the pots with roots, they should be' January market report of the 1)omin- lost." simply by adding water according to removed into four -inch pots, where ion Live Stock Branch becomes of spc- The second game will be a simple the directions given and a little soap, they may remain until it is time to, cull interest: Nut Hunt, Give each guest a paper 1 Mildew has always to be combatted plant them out after danger of frost! "Lord Vestey in igiving evidence be- sack, promising a prize to the ono in the rose garden. The American fore the British Commission on food has passsed. The soil, when removed; who finds twenty nuts in five minutes, Beauty, Mr. Hartry finds, is very sub - prices stated that during 1924 the from the pot, should not be disturbed l Of course there aren't any nuts hid- ject to this disease, Much trouble but planted in a hole carefully pre- profits madoby his company on their den, and presently someone will say from mildew,, however, can be avoided pared for it. Argentine shipments of meat was less so, Present this scmeone with a shiny by euro In watering, that is to avoid The dahlia requires plenty of room. than 50c per hundred. Heavy handling, tin mug inscribed, "A bright gift for watering' the plants in the evening. Rows three feet apart, and the plants rind labor costs were mainly respon- a bright child." By this time your Watering should be done either in the three feet apart in the rows, is close sibie. Sir Edward Vestey, brother to, guests will suspect a hoax in every morning or early in the afternoqn, so , game, so try something different. that the plants will be perfectly dry enough. When planting, it is well to Lord Vestey, said that during the last• cover the tubers with sand to prevent six months .of the year their .profits' Craziology is the most side-splitting before the sun goes down,—Ontario rotting. A handful of sheep manure were practically nil,.Referring to,know, the present high prices of beef, it was game I Have the boys and girls' Horticultural Association. and a springling of bonemeal placed. draw from different hats cards en in the bottom Of 'the hoe and mixed given as ir reason. that -the Continent which ' yeti have previously Written i, ' The'n Europet Corn Borer. with the soil that is used for filling in,i is now taking very large quantities melodramatic sentences describing ac- Burial experiments were conducted will briequal to about 1,250,000 cattle during ng 'on a plant rapidly, It is. time Here are some typical examples, by the Dept. of Entomology of the 0, well to drive1924. This has created a shortage a stake beside the plant: "Flinging himself on his knees beforct A.C. in which 1,800 corn borers in at the time of planting, This will be: and low average prices are riot ex-; every girl he met, he *groaned, 'Sold stubble and stalks were covered by needed to support the plant later on, Pe- ' again!'" "The car skidded and rolled the plow to n depth of five to six le The dahlia plant should produce'but ! over." "The dog barked," Tell your Inches and then the soil cultivated and one stem. If more than one comes Getting Rid of Weeds. - guests thnt when you say "Go," each treated in a manner similar to svhat up, leave the ,strongest and cut the The way to get rid of weeds in one must act out the sentence written would happen on an ordinnry farm, others off. If exhibition blooms are small grain, hay and pasture fields is on his curd, doing it continually until Tho results, as determined by cages wanted, disbud every second shoot the to get rid of them in the seed supply, you call "Haft!" You will think you placed over the plowed area, showed whole length of the stem. Careful That is, sow only clean Red, are in a madhouse, At tho word "Go!" that all the borers perished, not n watering is essential. The ground Sometimes it happens that you find ono guest will groan on his knees, single moth having been taken in should never be allowed to dry out. youreclf forced to use seed with it lot "Sold again!" Another will skid, any cage. This, and similar burial During the growing period occasional of weed seeds in it, and in that case, whim a third will bark like n dog. experiments conducted by others, have dressings of sheep manure and bone- the thing to do' is to get the lends The craziest performer should receive mado us feel satisfied that we aro meal well worked in, will ensure lux- out by screening. There are seed as a prize a one-way railroad ticket to quite safe in recommending plowing uriant growth. These fertilizers should graders on the market that will take the nearest insane asylum. • as one of the great factors in con - be kept a few inches away from the out mustard, huckhorn, etc, These Two more games before refresh- trol of the corn borer, says Prof. stems of the plant. The dahlia in graders do not cost a great deal, and ments and the judging of costumes. Lawson Caesar, its most modern form may be regard- one will pay for itself in a year or so, Hold a - Cabbage Head Relay Race, --....e......._,-.. ((1 as an aristocrat Of the flower king-. e_____.e. , Each contestant mud carry on his It has been said that progress lies dom. One can pay long' pricee for Brake Tests Should Be Made, head 4' small round cabbage, Tho triek ip thinking well of your business, and Ilse newer creation' or secure very Always1test your brakes when start; is to;reach the goal and return with- most women consider it a privilege I Int" anti lintra thnm I nenno.tad frnnitant• Mit anillimv the Vegetable cabbage rather than a.duty to pass o».heliful varieties of the perennial pea these have not been clearly defined, The Silage and Sour Soil. variety Elbus is white, Splendance I am not disputing the idea that, is dark purple and red is claimed by silage makes acid manure. I believe; L. II, Bailey in the Standard Encyclo- it to be true, for we all know that, pwdia of Horticulture as the best silage goes through a chemical pro- form but does not come true to seed, cess, and it seems quite reasonable There is also a striped form, Other that this chemical change should be trade names are Albi fiorus, Grandi- passed on to the soil, because we know fiorus, Grandiflorus Albus and Magni- that manure loses its plantfood by 'ficus, with large richly colored flowers. heating or .1ying in, the barnyard in Most, of the Canadian nurseries warm weather.carry the perennial pea in the various ,.; of annihilation ,upon -it, but while roc-, ner that we should pass the sentence The silo is not such a criminal sin- .,:varieties.—Can.r,.Hort. Councp. , LABELS Also recognize its faults and use it ognizing its good points we should only where the good points outweigh 7 !IA .'i' ,,. ,, t • ,A Nose ItIngs. Write for , 1ahne:vsiteoci kandl.splIset for r s c a I e s. Taltooes, .1iletien Bands, null We, sheep and hoz the faults.—D, M, leetehum Manulacturing Co., Ltd., Ottawa, et --.. ....---....— Box 501W. 1' . The farmer with several sources of income is the one who is reaping the largest profits. Seed Potatoes New Brunswick Grown and Govern- ment Certified, Irish Cobblers and Green Mountains. For sale at the following prices.: Peck, 50c. Bushel, $1,60 Bag, 00 lbs,, $2,25. Special price In lots of 5 bags or more, No charge for bags or packages, Can sell you Ontario Grown, at about 20 per cent, less, You will have to order early as quantity is limited. Cash with order. H. W. DAWSON P.O. Box 38 Brampton, Ont, Use Crescent \lid Ground Saws; their teeth are o "Crescent Crsond" even thickness Laa:s Tooth ihroughoutthe entire Cron Cal, length of the saw, thus No, 23 makingbindinginthekerf 1.24 Impossible. CrescentGrind• Mg is en exclusive Simonds feature. SIMONDS CANATtlt SAW CO, LIMITED Vineoater MONTREAL Si, Join, N.D, 1 .11.11 111. 4.1111. II i.1•16101.1 mi 111.11111 11111114.11. Send us the name of a Bank or Loan Company that won't assist in Purchasing a good Pure Bred Sire. EVERY framer ought to Imow what his farm is making for him and which de- partments, If any, are not paylpg. To this end he needs a simple record of receipts and expenditures, along with yearly In- ventories of land and buildings, stock, machinery, feed arid supplies. The Department of Agriculture at Ottawa • otters, fir 10 cents, a "Armor's Acoount Book." Only a few entries from ti mem time are needed, Bend 10 cents for the Account Book and • receive also "Saalonable Hints" and our latest Ilat of free publicationo. Fill In and return slip, post free, to The Publications Branch Department of Agriculture Ottawa, Ont. 1rti12700 "its, 0100 01.40 i ft Slit" itt"..0;..littitti*”...,iiii" • oPtric Ar0.0•01.1.0“,444•Mitittt.1" Post Office Province II Ma Automobile Funnier Than Fiction. A ceflaIn young man heroine a mem- ber of •the Frennh Civil Service In 1922, and front that time a hat, u coat, 11 U Y ACC1'SSORY Al' III .'IME. and a pair of gloves at 11TH leak bore ! J Practically ail automobiles conte in distress, A rope can aim) he utie.I mut° testiniony to bis existence. This 1 1 by his regu• car`s cylllpped with such urlic',es as intend of eludes if there are no chains evidence was confirmed ` he.ud;ight$, tail lumps, windshk'.da, end the cur is Stuck. In fact, rope' lardy. In collecting his salary But, iip curtains, speedometer when wrllpped'thout a tiro is superior otherwise, be was never Seen or hoard suUn .cwlr tlu nlule lvu Incl I�ltof platltsl►Is + be readily ead iyuect;uonted lyN►u vrl Ilcu01:11e1 'S I thtsy r+,1�lW++i11111 f rr;n(��(►+►ug.nncl i(s nhti++ lop (hoer, side 1 very of muddy of at his office. i I ur told burn. Then there isi gt;thely a to chins in tsandy lnvolvekl Unit or uecossily 030 HubJeet I are hold over (int trio fultowhtg r„prin I, cur,l.f!'• from .?h•¢ p►n.repb phut the t tool outfit fur use 111 keeping the car piece,,, An extra set of electric -light •Ito w•nH lruusforred to nnaUlur otllce,i more. 'lowing' seer. • in good condition and for rnahllll; bu;bs and an extra electric fuse should and theirlis (pa hat, exalt, Butanti o'therwlSe, there ed i ul I dingproducing 11ott only ashrubs knowiodge c f the , Stratification le thefor torn ap llultu Toe terse of newly propagated stook q minor mechanical repairs. This den -I eine he carried, f safety,it* Ind., calls 110 change. Eventually, It. Waal tollu l(lue of propc)gittIng but a know• ! the freezing of seed to help crack the 1M a ,silhjl'r 1. wo.rl.liy of brlef,coltstdt►ru• erully includes a tire puuip, jock, lire In the interest o li(u, Ur,linurily lite sajodllnK+or rout• I'e )air kit It variety of wrenches to l Ill the interest Of safety, u wind- �n�ccr, sadists ll`.:) btusytUoluhtenluthe ! h(luntat llht',IIIHOIYeai. the nature idea seed (IUI'a01'ylllUtaflU{CU le fu1�UWl'tl I(111 I�I11,lIIlKN " ICrA set. Un r• ill milieu '• I S rain or snow fa n11n1081 a nereasity,, ' tit the t artoua nuts and er,lH, oil can,o(llcc. IIS bane out by the fact (,hut certain ! Soe.i Is generally H+►can lu Ilght ') „lose, sufficient recta b�inR given to grease gun, (;crew driver, magneto- when driving in Stormy. weather.; _ ,, I ! p, u,1ow proper 1 The, nuthorit!ea •w ee) uhocltetl, and pb11141 caul be lure )aq((tcd auccel.yfully ,only boll and shun 'kl.rtt;ud in til!' ' develx)pnlent, Frequent cont adjusting wrench, an instruction sng book shoal( absorbers are often foundredy resolved that the young man taut bo by the sexual or c-.'t0•tl method while � fall I9ul ground nthau1d be inn Hied '1 nd churnul;-1) +MIIIlvcUfun 1v Uh 01LLLoty and some other things, varying with- deerel{Hu the shock from rough I( 11(M �SWI'y 111 ill.O I,U1: } Bumpers fore and aft are uroads.! Ing . punished. But the only two pusHlblo others which will not (.otic true t<► with straw or leaves to give pratt,rl.fuu ger if lila young the ,cilr. p11nullr'hmeuts were (! s'ml �:,l!1 uud re l.yl1e from rood nnlHt be propagated by der ng 1 to winter, Cold frames make slu'ulrs • are • to make Knell growth. Aflcr this, one can consider then iii popularity, bo! (LUCt1O) In grade, Tho lion Scented ion grafting, budding, culling, or 801110 a good bud for rtarting Heed. ' Hit^11,H :height nt+tetra bo lull. in the numerous additions whirl► may bei suggested t+ include ries which might _' severe; as for the Hrc+)n+i, hie •young other of ihu asexual metlledH. I Hunte of the evergieet► t9trubH are (sono glare in the ta(((les ler more • !nude b • wayof tools and devices! include a wrench fooilatH i man was nlro.ltiy In ihu lowest gra (1.; it 1S nal the purpose of this adicly, grown from Seed In tide rounl>;v, ul t?an Lhrr;o'.yccus'.{++ ihriy will have a S + Justine. Ignition interrupter p n whirl( some motorists consider lest(-; Ignition brushes, Several. I'Inully, the Gordian knot war;, cut - Ito c,utl!no In detail the propagation I though the majority of 1hotu are fay: t�,l,;l, 1)c'y to simIlfih ,l► .long la c)rcwtr+ able. 'These may include a trouble ono set of gn ! the yrning alae was• prunlotod, and mgthods for a.11 Iype H of horticultural t purled from 1.1110 )c. a cvunt,r. VY 1 1 Ing trill . to lass .111. ti p extra spark plugs, cleaned and ad•' 1 111(111) attachable t0 tl socket 011 the wiled readyfor use,' half-dozen valvol then imnlu.1_111111 !utely ruJuced to hili form. 91)1'lll)r, but merely to drew attention !Inbar 1H cheap tu)d 'ihv climate more N'll!('h' 11nLLlin tht,lll tirror irue,;plant.ent, 'dash, stop light, motoinete1' sun visor' j ' Of 9litlU3, W Ll1tl il101'0 rununcn ways uud lu elle' fuvarabh+. I:vergt ocn tiee111111RH 1'lt \01111111; lam vet been ::ctrl I'CgLLrdfU$ ' '; plungers for inner tubes, squirt can examples of shrubs on whloh those 1 quire shading during their euely life the producing of new. varieties of lubricator, trunks, spring covers, spe-.full of oil, box of assorted .nuts box!' sial license holder, mirror to enable Hack Saw Makes Rougher. ntellu>lrt are used. and are very ilahle to damp off if tine t'hruhs, Ordinarily thele ere the re the driver to see what is going on in of assorted cotter pins, box of assort- Ll the CUHU of sexual propagation cull bus not boon disinfected. Sowing ; milt of crirM;;ing tN'u varieties 'within I ed rep Screws, box of llssorted wash- The roughening of an inner tribe the Held Is ltinlled to pleats( which are the Heed thinly in sandy soil ural grow- tho Species' feted of -growing the: seed ia••.. tho rear, timescope, gasoline 1;ruge,; C1,n n spool of soft iron wire and u that lb to be repaired or a cone clutch crock, radiator shield, hydrometer forself-fertile and consequently will collie Ing the HeedJinge wiUb a minimum of I which l produced. If proper pl'ocuu• ';7; y !roll of friction tope. Once these mat- llnlug or Ui'nito bund lining that Is ll true to typo front Eot)d. Surae of the water w111 help to galla an extent to 11onq have been faker( to lustre nsec- ' testing the buttery, radio outfit, rigor' ters are attended to the motorist can bo cleaned can bo readily cion© with I! the grower Hl Uuld ex• ; s lighters, tout wurnlers told elaborate' a tool mode from un old ouch saw ,more common t'hrnbH grown from seed chock damping off. coa�fu! cry r:, c �' free his mind from the: 1etails, !aro the Ilterherrles, Vlburnums and cer- Probably the moat common method lied 5O!1 ht:Y l thea ishie;h would cum- .- li 11t for linlohsina 11 is easy, hew- blade cut down at one end to fit a fllo K' 4 I Lain of the hluwtllorns. With horde of producing Aruba is by cutting+. bine the characters of the two) p?rttmtn.' ever, to loud up the buttery with too handle, This will he found handier, many devices which operate by Slee. Natures Change of Clothes. ilioro convenient and durable than an which are contained in a pulpy fault Almost any plant can be propagated itr; 11i oil's. oras ..skre:e•'sliveroo• in'itv'tr''luaati - o trieity. When it cornea to tools ono Thorn must be many 1►Co1)lu who� It fa necessary to thew the fruit to this way although in conte C0Nts bot• !Huy be pl'oluct�1l at 1011 may then be abrasive HllbHfa11C0 Such as sand or I ferment i! caller that the soli may ter methods, have been devised. There • propagated asexually., should aim to have plenty for ordi•' have actually seen It toad get out of emery paper, „ fury requirements. shin, Hill, end, arrayed In a brand -newer --- aro various types of cuUtings, trio most I Ocoarslvually IIOW'` Varieties pray or - which sus ready grown under'CROSS WORD PUZZLE popular of which ure'fhe hared and soft iginate from buil spurt,, For no aa - wood cuttl•nga. ' parfait reason 11 C0rtxin twig 011 u Hard wood cuttings aro usually i bush boart11g green leave;• leas show •1 2. 3 4 5 -11_,...117 8 9 10 11 taken In the fall from well ripened ; a rod or perp a color, • lJsua'ly .these 1wood of the previous t'eason'. growth. 1 F'ports tem be propagated asexually - IL 13 14 15 16 The wood should be out !ne;le pieces t and will come true to the type. There from 5 to 8 inches In length, literally 1 le,t.'un1,u evidence 'to :.;row that vtfrlu• 17 18 with three or four buds on each, There tenons c'011 he liroiucea by gratft.ing tit • seems to be no great difference as fur' different cteekll, but Oil; Is not fo11 s :'. . pro 12 23 'zy as ability to root is concerned between ! ed to any extent In the pruduLt+tton et ,'.. `. cuttings which are takon through a horticultural shrubs, zb Y 27 IA 29 3D 3 bud and thcse which have their first , ' • t a'� Method of Produciii;g' Horticultural Shrubs •arw..w+w+.. Y 'Ily 1'luf, A.. 11. 11act.euila'n,.4'A,C. leer the ('all. 1(ii ticullural C'ounc'll, For instance, u good selection of; tool, will include everything that is' heath, proceed to swallow his n.cl likely to be needed while on tour. Thie 13 not romance, but plain fact. However, such nccessoriea should not All reptiles shed their skin, but not be allowed to take up a large amount until they have acquired' the tond'e . of route, They Fh(5u1d be capable of habit of swnl'•owing the phl,one. The being packed in such a small place reason this change of clothing is not that they are not constantly getting in witnessed more often Is that reptiles - the way, The special toots furnished seek privacy for the operation, as Ily the manufacturer should always be tYah11.,d it Is 1n process they aro handl- curried along end taken good cure of, capped, and might be at the mercy of as nothing else is Ilkley to tinct quite an enemy. so well the needs that may arise. Every bird, ion, changes its clothing nt least ou(0 a year, The moulting of CAKRY :.l'1'PLY (1t' LINKS. 1.110 old fe•ather�i tj• done without thiel(, You can never tell whet the weather fuss, and n'aturo gives every bird a ;s going to be nn hour after you leave now rigout in a very Short time, re- ,, your garage for a drive, 'I'o be caught; newing color and texture according to out on the road in a storm is not un -i breed and variety.. ^t,1111lion, In Such 1111 event you might Yoi11' pony; year dog, and year cat be facet) with the necessity of putting also shed their clothes and grow a new ' an non-skid chains. This means in' slat, and so do all wild animals. Both the first place that it is very desirable tit fit and !•tyle nature makes an ex - to supply your car with such chains.; cement and efficient clothier.' IlhseCls Though these are in good condition, In the larval stage also east their when leaving the garage, after run-; skirls,, and always there is a new one nillg a while over rough roads at a underneath. Seine's+he:ll1sh11 do the fair stice+I, some of the links may wear, canto, through and begin to thrash against; the laud guards. This is anoying and The Land of Big Timber.' is apt to be damaging to the mud Recently an official representing the guards. This. means, in _.the second Dominion Government 'came to BO - place, that it is desirable to 'carry a Mit Columbia with an order In his supply of links and a chain tool so pocket Jot 125 pieces of• squared• tilii- lhnt.t.he' broken ends can bo removed ,ber of unique strength and record di - and broken links can be replaced. (louden, to fill an extraordiaat'y ea• Some motorists would not . venture gtneering t:'peclflcatIon. • { a'' without a folding pail. Perhaps To give so1110 idea of the size of they have had the distracting experi- these timbers the total board nleasyi•ke- encc of climbing up a. very long hill moat of the 125 pieces approaches one to find the water in tho radiator boiled million feet. They must also be witlt- away, . While the cooling systems for out defect, ' ' automobile engines to -day are very A search of their limits for treep to• efficient and while it is only hi ex= produce these huge stt•cks ' wiltt'be ceptional cases that the water will made by prominent B. C. logging firms boll out of the radiator, yet when this and there • is 'no doubt but that the occurs the results aro liable to be dis- "goods" will be found, and delivered, estrous. While tire troubles are less Tlto incident 111'ustrateu,,the wonder - end less in evidence they do occur once fttl quality of British 'Columbia's tial - in a while, To jack ,up n wheel to ber stand. Only the Douglas fir area change a tire, on dirt and sandy roads) of the Pacific Coast could Ori an order especially, is something most difficult. for timbers of such strength, size and Tho jack sinks into the loose sand or s'oundnose. dust Instead of lifting the car. If you At the same time, only the costly have handy a block of wood an inch modern equipment insitgled by the thick and about six inches wide and loggers will enable the logs for this a foot long it will be a ready solution order to bo yarded' '©ud 'transported to your. problem. from the woods, hall only 'the up -to -tile' TAW ROPE 15 FRIEND IN, NEED.' mI1111te;111lehIUery of the nrattufacturer It is not cosy to keep the )lands \s^l l per1111t tlleii•'sawing•anti squaring I to the required' dimension. clean ' while working, about n car. y, Grease and grime get on the 'hands shocked the Bishop. • ," and oil.•is often hard to avoid, There• A. bishop was paying a•vlsit to a cer- 'fure many owners carry.a small bag! Iain parish and decided to address the of waste or rags. Then it is desirable ! children of the Sunday -school, to nave a three -in -one or similar tired I•Io had noticed many large bllLs valve tool with which it is possible to ' about referring to "tine ,Bishop's vtsl- removo the valve plunger, clean UIl I tation," and accordingly began his talk the threads in the valve stem so that' by caking the children the cleaning of the word "visitation," "Please, sir," replied a young urchin, "It's a plague sent by Provldonee." Red -Light Gloves. Luminous. glove are being worn by motor•'drivers,'In Paris. A red light showing on t110 back. of the outstretch- ed hand is switched on by bringing the thumb an�d.foreflnge,i' together: the plunger may be properly seated, and trim the damaged threads on the outside' of the stem so that the cap wi;1 screw down tight. The valve stont.may .become battered in chang- ing a tiro so as to prevent air being forced into the tire. A tow rope. is another useful acres- �l: ry. You may need it yourself or it may be used to help n fellow motorist MUTT AND JEFF NeAtab A !NQtSG LAST NtGitr- IT UST itrkkid eel.)FMGC'l'TINe BAcic FRof'\ lila C ALIFO(2NIA 70 HORIZONTAL 1—A great Island N, of Canada . 7—A synagogue ruler whose Baugh• ' . ter walk raised from the dead 12—Girl's name 13—A city In Venezuela - 16—Suffix, meaning "of the nature of; like" • 6 --Toll 17—A cape ell rho coast of New- 7-A container foundland B --Like 18—A tambourine 9—An excursion by any means on 119—An entrance or passage (min. conveyance .Ing) 10—A city of east -central New •20—One of the churches (abbr.) York '22—Achieved 11—Fixed In opinion 24—Preflx.moaning "from, out of" 14—Uncooked THE INTERNATIONAL SYNOICATI. VERTICAL 1—To shut out 2—To conform 3—Front 4—Suffix used as an adjective termination 6—Man's name (familiar) •26—Personal pronoun 26—A kitchen u.tensII 28—PrePosltidn''"' ' ' 30 -Close to, by • 32—A wgodland deity 33—Merciless 86—A wading ,bird 88—An entrance way 40—Man's name (familiar)' 31—A city of Ontario, Canada 41—Kind of ahlp Columbus eal.led In 32—A olty In Punjab province, India •• 42—Relative pronoun 34—Reduce In value 43—Fiber of a tropicatAmerican•. 36—A receptacle ' plant 37- .A vessel for holding liquids 46—A laborer on a Mexican estate 39—Interjection 44 -Farm product 45—Seedcase 47—Possessive pronoun .49—Cover of a receptacle 61—A Targe group of South African tribes 53—To utter heedlessly 65—To vex 57—A lump 58—A high mountain 59—Prefix meaning "th(ougll" 60—To tell tales 16 -To peruse 21—A Small bed 23—Girl's name (familiar) 25—Standing at the beginning 26—A step, a dance 27—Despotism 28—Liberty ' ' 29—A color 46—Ago (poet.) 48—Sorrow or suffering (poet.) 50—A weight (abbr.) 62—A stay -rope. 64—Middle (abbr.) 66—Preposltlon 56—Part of verb "to be" 68—Member of a City Councll (abbr.)" 60—To exist,. 61—A country of 8. E. Asia 62—An Implement for separating graln'by beating 64—Exclamation of regret 66—Possessive pronoun 67—A military title 60—Man's name 70—To summon and gather together 71—A province In east Canada 61—Purposa tt.; 62—At a distance 63—Liquid (abbr.) 65—A cavity or receptacle G7 --:A degree (abbr.) 68—Name unknown (abbr.) bud farther up the ,tett, although Animal. Centenarians.' many growers favorthe farmer meth- or!, • .'The greatest ;l e that can he attain - Success in rooting cuttings depends cd, by the curious specie:: of ,ulMulti on the production cf cantle over the , vartes'Coesiel eibly. AuwuK mammals ' lower and of the stick. Callus 19 al the •icirge animals usually live' longer spongy material lull down by the ac- than the mall our+, •bit t.' this' law ...la • dotty of certain p'.ant cells in an et- not valid among Malls, the parrot,. for , fort to close over the cut and 1t is czumple, roe ehi;lg the salto.; age as the • from dila callus that roots arise. Cal- eagle. losing can be hastened, by burying rho Spiders live cue to two years•; beet:: les have beeic epi prlsuners fur filo yearns. The (1110011 bee often lives far five years, while the, working hoes • ually`li'Ve only sus ire weett;l: 'Ant( have not so likely 1p became-actiV•o tole been kepi_hi:captivity;fr)r'1ifteeli years,` ' soon. These cuttings may be planted wIttle the toed baa b2en'1.'nmwit' 'to at - in the fall as soon as they Kaye •calx twin • feetao)(F ;rs; 1'A turtle was kepi ;used OT they may be shored Ina cellar ,in •captivit). for 150 .years', ((tide 'J1a ` • ! over winter in boxes of moist awduet specimen 1n que.,tion May have* bean... or sand and. set out In the spring, .• 300years old. Many of the common .shrubs ,(tell as . The' age of of birds tom wn'bi!st.. The ' Deptzia, Wiegolia, Forsythia, I-iydrnll- huisebo!d +ock 11vc► • Ilfseeil to tw'cnf,v' ' goo and Spirca aro ueually pro}1•agated seal;,;'•tile gcoEp' and. fbe`'e:•1er-diick; by iiia inuthod. ... 100 years; the• 5W,•taLI, '102 }'nary; ilie .stork, seventy; the falcon. 1GS;•�. elle' • • Hardwood cuttings are sometimes golden eagle, 104; the b!ackletal,'eigll- ' used in propagating evergreens. more teen; the canary as muse,( , particularly those types which cannot as twenty - bo grown true to type from seed. Since four, and the parrot clout 100 years; Of the' mammal:;, the hurHe shales evergreens are usually slow in rooting ,forty to sixty 'years; dor (;beep, tired- ' 1110 heel and mallet typos ,of euttiq.g ty;'''thd dog, tst'eonty•eight; the cat,• •• are often used. 'These consist of 'a twenty-two; and the e.lephitut end' Liu sma11 portion of the aloin stem along. Whale' 200 year., with the cutting, the tdett being to pro- r. vide an extra supply of stored food on T—"'=` which the cutting may draw whir© it ,The Potato on Trial, is forming its cents. Ordtnarlly ever- r'' Its (sack people' a hundred }'ears. to green cuttings arc set out In tire fall discover that l/otatoes'were good 'to and given winter pl'o•ty�ctl'on, . •':Gold ea ,• flames ,ore often used for this purprase. 14 1728 an attempt. was tied(: to In Soft wood cuttings may be (n1(011.111 [reduce potatoes rota - Scot lan(i, but early summer from new weed. Tey they were denounced from.tlle pulpit aro usually set 1t1 a propagat.fng bed of on two„ contt•atllctory .c•ouu,ts--•t.iltt•t sand and ere keret sheltered froiit telt© Uliey ; Were the forbidden fruit, the e'u,u and wind until rooted. 'Phis nie'tl►= eatt�_o cf Adam's fall, They Were llc• x1' IH tlstlalfy practised ill the 'Open- •cJlsed of eaiisli1q'1Qprosy cull fever, house or in frames'. Cuttings. should .___._ .;,_,4-._r•,• .• , ..• bo pinneel out ns soon Ms they have ' ' Not Honey' In the Flower. reeled. ' ... f , ITolie3', aft such, is ,not present in the Grafting is used as n means of, pro- flosi'er, .lett Is• a substance. •that has Mating' 831110 roses and some o&•til© been parlinlly digested Iy'thc'.bee. evergre.ens', Will moot shrubs, ;tow-�_• • __,�,- ever, results can be obtained more • •,. • .• •' quickly by using cutting. Budding, H A B 1 T 5 11 M A SIT E R whic.11 is really a form of. grn.ftir.,g, is •, • A R E H 0 v C L. >': 0 il E 1150(1 .011 roses hawl'harfls,.JllQCi' and. ,• SIT ' ;` E i. 1T• the vnrlet:el types' of floivi�ring`plant, T Mita method Can be meal on alniost ; •' • E :G any typo 1;1 s'ltrub ani:1 Is 'Varticu"arl'y. . — A useful In the case o1' rare stock tie 1t cuttings upside down In moist sand so that rho root end will be exposed bo a warmer temperature than the rest"of the cutting. In Lill, way the huM arb NIU'T' SHOULDN'T CONFUSE JEFF WITH SUCH is economical of material, • ra PI Another method which Is sometimes h tlsc:l Is moun;l•'laycring, T1::s consists of milting hack the bush F'everc'ly to force the (leveloonirnt of u►une!Cu8 young shoots. At the sante title soil 1s heaped up In Ube centre of (ilio bueli • FANCY WORDS—By Buil Fisher. =AND teLteve ME,Mv'CY ([ WAS some TRIP: SAN DIEGO'.: AN::; SAN bleGo,11-(Ates The I'l.at.ei PCRFECt cLIMATE, UNDO-RsT•ANbt L:r GUC-SS'(ou Mvsr VlAVe HAD A QULLY TtMC- DR(Nh1N6 IN THE 0Z0NE. r. 't ��Idltdti ih fweu., 1. DIDN'T NoTlc TNG 1JMkG •o(!he- PLA«) Dur ti lulls ONG QLotl< •E(�ot'� 'Mc of Por a 47/48 • 6yj NEW GINGHAM DRESSES Splendid variety of checks and styles. Sale price $L29. NEW GINGHAMS We never had a better assortment see the new patterns. NEW CREPES, VOILES, AND BROADCLOTH In ail the leading shades, SPECIAL OFFERING in many lines of CORSETS. E. BENDER BLYTH, ONT. Local News PAGE 8—THE BLYTB STANDARD --March 26, 1825 Continuation School Exams. FORM 1 Nellie Fear .......................... 88 7 e price being paid for Stella Richmond80,8 heavy horsin Ontario is $150, Jean Laidlaw. ...... ...„...„.„.„„.......„ 74.8 60 sheet foolscap pad at The Stand, Ena Parsons 74,2 and Book & Stetienery Store. 15c, ;Hazel Leslie 72 4 Mrs. Chas. Bell and daughter, Mise Eleanor Jackson 71 Madelene, visited with Toronto friends SerailHowatt 78 3 78 during the latter pert of the week. I Kaceeth h CCowan 64 4 64 3 .63 3 '.i. Cole. for a couple of days last week Bessie Weymouth62 Miss Helen Smith, of Hensall. has Wilmer hell ......... . 59 2 returned home after spe %ding a week Leslie Poplestone58 3 with her sisters, Mrs, A. Smith and Stuart Robinson56 7 Mrs. Jno. Craig, Morrie. Moe Taylor„., ........... ......,.. ...... .....,... 56 3 The Maple Lea' Sewing Club intend Dea Be554 holding a Progressive Euchre Party in Donnald Gee ddes 55 4 Joe HeEfron • 46 6 Memorial Hall, on the evening of Fri. (lay, April 3rd, at 8 p. m. sharp. Tic. FORM 11 trete )5c, each. Harriet Taylor 81 Beit Gra74 A scientific worker has recently Aug- Amy Parsons 72 7 t;estt:d that all motor gasoline be color Thomas Stevens 71 8 el red to dietingish it from otlier fluid Irene Govier 70 9 for which it is frequently mistaken. Alberta Richmond 70 I thug caueing eaploeion and fires and Annie Parker 69 4 sometimes lots of 1;fe. Vivian McElroy 67 Rev T. Wesley Coeens. of Lucknow Gladys Fairservice......66 4 will preach in the Methodist church. Ephraim Gray,................. ..... ......„,....„,66 4 here, next Sunday morning and even• Gordon Jenkin*6o 4 ing. Rev, A. C. Tiffin takes the ser. John Denholm b5 i vices at Lucknow, Mr. Cosene is a Kathleen McElroy 59 brother of Mrs. Tiffin and will stay at Mary Kelly 58 4 tile pareanage, Jack Noble 55 7 `Remember Jas. Cuming's Archon FORM iII Sale of farm•Stock, implements and Mclda McElroy 87 household effects et hie farm, lot 41, Alexander Elliott 84 Con. 1, East Wawanosh, at one p. m. Loretta mealy 78 9 this Friday, March 27th, The sale David Craig 76 µill be without reserve as the proprie Janette Pop.eetone 75 tor has rented his farm. Kuth Vincent 73 7 To Mill our own flour. convert our Alyce Rogerson 73 5 pulpwood into paper. and in other Annla Gartett .3 way, lu' n our own mateiidle into fin.Herald Jenkin,71 4 ialted products is a true AII•Canada Stewart. Young67 9 not policy, It is buArneaa to sell to Janet Cowan „,.,, ...................•........,,67 Dorothy Bryant 65 8 the; United States that material which 64 8 %+orld give employment here to many Florence Suter....,,,...,.» h'ueands of people, Will Pollard 63 7 Fergus Kelly 63 1 s the Methodist and Presbyterian Norman Floody 60 5 chairchee have both decided to enter Hazel Pctis 60 5 tit'United Church of Canada. there ida McGowan 59 8 wik be two congregatione of this body Harry Baker 52 5 in•'3lyth. The Methodist church will, John Fraser 40 dr;ir June 10th be known as ''Queen Si ;et United Church, Blyth." This wbe: decided by the Official Board ata Calvin•Taylor runt meeting. Mies Alberta Taylor. of Detroit e W, M, S. of the Blyth Metho. Mich,, and Mr. Witham Calvin, for- odiEt ( hurch are arranging to celebrate merly of Brocton, 111., but who fur the tht Silver Jubilee in connection with past four years has been wuiking fur %lir Society. The day chosen for the Fold Motor Co, in Detroit, were %hiss, interesting occasion is Sunday, united in marriage, Saturday, Maid' April 5th. Further details will be an• 7th, by Rev, R. M. Cr Leman.. The trounced later, as to the preacher and br.de was a daghter ut the late Chas. thetharecter of the week night service and Bertha Taylor, of Gudeitch, and tube held during the following week WAS formerly Mrs, Normal. Knox. of Detroit. '1 he groom is a son of Mr; and Mrs, G. B. Calvin. of Brocton. an.; in 1919 graduated from the Paris High School and taught school in that vicinity for two years before going to Detroit. He has Ince been working for the Ford Motor Co, it+ the purclias ing Depertmei;t of the Highland Park plant .,nd is follow-up man for the pur chasing'agent of braes, metals, bronze copper, etc„ and works in the main Many of our readers will be inter. office eeti'd in knowing that the late Wm. .._____. Ret►nir, the founder of the wIl•known Seed House that bears his name, was Superintendent in the late 90's of the The annual meeting of the Blyth Ontario Agricultural College at Guelph Bowling Club will be held on Friday. ii college from whkch some of Caned*'s March 27th. in the Commercial Hotel; foremost farmers and stock men have at 8 p. m. All old members kindly graduated. There are doubtless many be on hand, and any one wishing to agriculturist, in this vicinity who re• join are requested to attend. , member Mr. Rennie as a lecturer in Agriculture whose knowledge of farm. ir.g end Canadian farming conditions, .. . .. r . . • The Minces Eugene and Aal:ie Grd. Glenn Tun njy ales, of Belgrave, were guests of Mies Audrey Bryant the English are becoming a nation of whole meal bread e_ ters. Sii,ce t .e pronouncement, a little more than a yep% ego, by theeminent surgeon, Sir William Arbuthnot Lane, that white Wad is probably one of the cause, of collier, the bakers of England have noticed a great decrease in the sale of white bread and an increase in the consumption of whole meal products ATTENTION BO LERS FOUND—watch. Cue No., 830248, t5 .,Mar. Rirrin Mnvement. Ano,v at ++*+++,F+++dr++,'r++++++,F++4x ****'AE**$E*#***'.IFaiE****3IE****$* NEW SP'RING 4• SHOES GROOERIES IN THEIR BEST QUALITY Shelled Almonds, large size, unbroken, sweet We have placed in stock some of the + ' * flavor, per ib 65c latest and most up-to-date styles in ' c Shelled Walnuts, are sound, whole, nice flavor Ladies' Shoes for Spring and, best goods 65c Summer wear. + Apb's Shredded Cocoanut, freshly prepared 4 * and wholesome, per lb. 40c See our Boys'School Shoes and Men's Heavy Work Shoes. We + -* Thompson's Seedless Raisins, sweet, small, handle the Greb Heavy Shoe + thinskinned 2 lbs 25c for men. .. * Saxonia Lemon Peel, slightly sugared Ib40c + Saxonia Orange Peel, slightly sugared lb 40c j + Saxonia Citron Peel, slightly sugared lb60c ilk c1tps + 'Seeded Raisins s k 15 c *` + Foley's Clover Leaf R lsl pkg :A:1; 4{F is A large variety of New Spring Caps 4 * Greek Currants recleaned, good for home r: have just come to hand in neat + 4 baking, lb 18c c: patterns at special prices + * Choice West India Molasses for cookies, etc. � � � per Can 15c �c + * Bee Hive Corn Syrup & Sugar 5 lbs 50c VI. Dod�S• Redpath's Icingsugar, no adult'rat'n 21b25c c. P g.� + Mocha, and Java Coffee, freshly ground lb7Qc '�; Phone 88 �3I,YTH� ONT �, Rideau Hall Coffee, 1-2 lb tin for 33c . ++++++++++++ ++++++f+++++x rleitiitet11,41%1114,1A,111111,11,11% Peas, extra sifted green peas, per can 18c 1%,Y * Tomatoes, cooked whole, delicious and appe- •`''C * 0 ay r * tizing. per can ..20c 0`i' 040 Campbell's Tomotoe Soup, per can 18c 414 ' . * Olives --Club House, Lunch Queen. 15. 25, 45c *• 0 * Olives--Libby's Queen 15, 45c, PA�. 1 e lin * Lea's, Celebrated Sour Pickles.. 20c c ,A.C t Salmon at 15,18 25, 28c Puffed Wheat 15c , Puffed Rice' 18c * Bran 'Flakes 15c ft CANNED GOODS, FLOUR. * Pan -dried medium fine Oatmeal 4 lbs ...25c $t• Blended Black Teas, specially priced at E )x. Macaroni, ready cut in short pieces; pkg 10c '!' * Christie's Soda & Swebt Biscuits, always fresh * Bean & Westlake's Sweet do are delicious Sweet Corn, Golden Bantam and Sugar Sweet, of per can 18c OF FRESH GROCERIES, * per lb 60, 70, 85c Vk AND PROVISIONS.i _ o F.OPLESTONE c, R. j. POWELL & GARDINER 2 T B13rth • •• Qn.tario 'PHONE 9. * ,, � �• , ���k�#��' Myth, - Ontario. *****4*********** * ** till, itiltiviVivitylvt, livivilvt% VOA Rennie's Clover and Timothy; Seeds are Sownby the Most Critical Farmers Everywhere OUR Clover and Timothy, Seeds are grown tri Districts supplying seed that is test suited to, our Canadian climite, and the enormous increase in the demand for Rank's Seed G due to three outstanding features; Purify, Qualify and High Germination We highly reaw ,mend our, tradn 4i elhr • following 'adores: Rennie's Brenda of Medium Red Clover—. All Northern Grown Rennie's Brands of Mammoth Red Clover All Northern Grown Rennie's Brands of Alfalfa Clover—. All Ontario Crown Rennie's Brands of Abtte Clover—' All Ontario Grown t Rennie's Brands of Sweet Clover•— All Ontario Crown Rennie's Brands of Timothy -•w All Northern Grown ., Order Rennle's Clover and Tlmoihy1Ssati from your local Dealer; or dlr.d fferas. w11brius RENNI& iturran 'Cor. ADgr,AID!'� and JARVIS Su. TOFONTO 1J yod cannot blain locally, please wale u, globes your Dealer's edition. Rennle's Seed Annual—the most complete Canadian Seed Cataiosue•—free on rnjvut., CREAM! CREAM!! for our New Creamery HIGHEST PRICES PAID Special 39c No. 1 37o No. 2 340 /. o. b. your ataaon SHIP " DIRECT FROM FARM TO FACTORY" AND RECEIVE MORE MONEY Write for our Shipping Tags K +++qtr; r+*+++++++++++++ +++u + ICE- CREAM BRICKS . ,4.I + .+ Kelly's "'ep" Bran + .Apex Brand Canned Goods, + + Cream Cheese. + + Campbell's Soups + p � + Asparagras Tips, + + 'Roman MVleal:. . + + Iodized Salt, + + Bulk Dates, + + Maxwell House Coffee = . + ++ + Brooms 35c, 50c,, 60c $1.00 +' • + . Blyth and Purity Flour'. + + GOODS DELIVERED 4 W. JAS. SIMS, + •�A eLYTff, ONT'PHONE 14 4 ' ii�� , +44fl 1"++++++fT++ ++f +f+,++f Can. We Be Of Service To You Yon may require some article of furniture, or .a floor covering for "your home, Take a look at our stock and ask us to supply 'what you require. We will do our beet to please you. Swift Canadian__ Co, ' � + Es � � kit JE ` IY..it� iiIA/ ,one,„o,w npnt_ Toronto