The Wingham Advance, 1920-12-09, Page 8�
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i CURRENT COMMENT
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WINORAX ADVANCE
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t. The" Practical'Work Of 4 Miniug Sch0101
-
pA= pOWCy SUOCEEDING, I eut opportunities our resources pro
, vIded, and these,would be undiseOver-
ISIr John Willison. T"GntlY made an ed r should'we, fail to support this pol-
anteresting -statement to the 04:11Rdiall ity. The man who created a great
�Club in which Ile contrasted tile Industry and turned raw Material Into
vealth produced by agriculture and wealth, benefits the whole people,
Industry, Insisting at the same time even it lie do a -mass some -wealth.
on the necessity 01 co-operatioln, be- Sir John quoted -Robert Blatchford's
.parable of capital and labor. Tw4
tween them. *Tlia vrliole controversy savages fought for a canoe. They
ale considered had been distinguished "wero both hurt and the canoe ,Wag
,by a lack of can,aor and at Infornia- damaged. Had they co-operated In -
tion. The experience at Free'Trade stead of fighting both could have Lad
I 3�-ngland had not been different froill canoes and gone fishin.' r
that of Protectionist America, and
the whole ,situation was capable. of A WORLDr OUT OF JOINT ,
. explanation by the movement Of POPu- Nothing has been more unexpected
�
,lation. from the country to the cities. in European politics since the war
Mechanical invention had displaced than tile fickleness at the -Greek elee-
band labor, To say Viat as many torate. Venizelos is easily the great -
men should be employed on a than$- est -man in Greece and her -greatest
and acres as a century ago Was as benefactor for generations.- NO has
veasonable as to SP,Y that as luany enlarged ,her territory after saving
-printers should now be employed set- her from the alliance with Turkey and
ting type, as before the linotYPe Was isalgaTia which -Constantine would
.
invented. Many -villages and towns ,have led her ir,to, and in reward for
Xad decreased in size and he knew ten all this they turn him out, threaten his
. villages -that had ceased to exist. life, and call for tile ;renegade Can-
hotels formerly. exist- stantine- Is it a matter for ,surprisEr
ed there was now no house .Where that the United states -refuses to be
I facts ex- mixed up with European affair.$ or
.. MiLeals could be had. These get on with
plained the loss of thousands in every that Britain arranges. to -
The tendency of Europe at- '
L
,idered I Russia? f
-county before farming was cons tragedy ,of these heart -
at all. Tile Idea that production had I ter the , like the dog
not Increased or that it was less prof- I breabling years to return
itable had, uq ground in fact. M.r. to its vomit and tile saw to its wallow -
Duncan Auderson had contrasted 1832 Ing in tile mire, should convince the
and 1920 and declared that, while least, or the most, worldly�wise that
farm helP. was scarce, with the in- what Europe needs, and perhaps the
troduction of machinery one farm rest I the world as well Is not mere-
. 'hand could produce as much as ten ly change of government, a different
formerly did, ,and the work was far economics system, or a different soc-
niore economically and efficiently ial order, but a change of heart in the
done. This naturally effects a, Te- people themselves as well as in the ,
l duction, in population, but does not nations. The world Is I distraught ,
materially effect production. Sir and there is no unity of consciousness,
John doubted it any country in the In -humanity. The -symptoms in this
h Teal wealth nation or that, of boycott in India,
as the farmers of Ontario, and ad- Sinn Fein in ' Ireland, Bolshevism In
* dueed the fact that the banks of On- Russia, Constantiniam in Greece, mili-
'
tario now had deposits exceeding , tarism In Fro -nee, and the domination
those of all the banks of Can d t a of ,the drone spirit over that of the
a'a "
generation ago. Money ,could not Worker everywhere is not to be cured
now be lent on farm mortgAges. I by: any political ref arm. The evil
AChattel mortgages were as scarce as I lies deeper, and is accompanied by
passenge . r Pigeons, .and he doubted 1 -terrible symptoms like the famine -
that farmers had been the victims Of Ithreat to '30,000,00 lives In China and
excessive taxation. Nothing was I to millions of children In Europe. It
'Worge than to force people on .the I one looked out over the world as one
land when. by -crossing the border they might over a farm, he would sa.y It
' Who is to .speak
- were able to find every form, of I in- was falling tcv'6'ruin.
dustrial -employment. There must -be I tile word of power and set the na.
a policy -of developing all -the differ- tions to rights -again? . .
.
____ __ - - ___._________., ---
' WASTE 'PAPER 11100-M SUDDENLY
, PAINTED HORSE WAS COLLAPSES. I
I
. Mills Refuse to ,Buy and Seller iNow
� TRICK OF SWINDLERS Guts $5 In,stead of $25.
:R I ACS 'TRACK CROOKS OULL, OFF Few commodities -are 6 . ubject to
such widetluctuationg In market price
SOME WEIRD AND FANTASTIC as Waste paper. This has always
STUTS, IN CR'MES`r OF beenthe experience of those engaged
in the scientific reclaiming of waste
I TORFDOM. paper, rags, etc. 11
The Central -Criminal Court in Loll- At -the present time waste paper is
. don has been for eleven days engaged worth a fraction Of the value it had
. In ther investigation of five charges of even a month ago. The waste Paper
turf conspiracy and fraud, Involving boom has .collapsed.
tales of racing tricks and like of Up, to a, few weeks ago buyers lol
which -would have taxed the brain at waste Paper, were paying as high aE
tile most imaginative of'sporting nov- $25 a ton for it. Idustries and othei
elists to conceive. All the ,charges Institutions with large quantities ol
rested more or less upon the* substiL commercial Waste for sale found theh
tution of one horse for another, but by-products a good source Of revenue
mity and The waste paper people -were glaid tc
one was invested with mingei gel
daring of -a very special kind. 'Pay that price as -they icould .
r Briefly, it necessitated the paint- -%round $45 a ton from the Pulp anc
Ing of a well known horse to irepre- paper Mills.
sent one which has no existence, ex- .NOW tile Mills refuse to buy. The3
copt as described on allentry form for are determined to break the wastA
a certain race. The plot was laid to paper market. Waste paper cat
rake ill Money in bets, and its sue- only be sold at about $20 a ton, whicl
cessful execution -required the trans- makes it Impossible itor those in th,
lormation of the phantom, barge "n 0 business -to ,PSY Much -over .$5 a tol
one that could not lose. The can- I to those I ' whom they buy, OW
fil hiTnioes a 'large business b
,spirators were resourceful enough to Tm w
do It, although it meant the trans- waste paper has announced to th,
mogrification of a, good bay mare with firms that supply it with waste pa
several distinctive marks to fill the per.,
description of a brook cock supposed NVaste ,pa -per Is a, commodity. Lik
to have been bought out of the army every other -ilommoditY Its price d'
'for nineteen guineas. And the scheme 11ends on the law of supply and dc
was tile more brazenly impudent in- Maud,
e substituted -horse had "We're glad to buy Waste paper -
only a few months previously actual- always glad to get it from ally Sourti
ly run ovc-r the same course On which For Waste paper Is our business.
he wag to perform In disguise- AIF,ut If the Mills don't ,want it,
1vith some kind of dope not 0111v loses its value. And just lately tt
was a bay mare turned into a brown, supply has far exceeded the deman
but a w1ifte brazean. the forehead and "Conseguently prices have dro-
,a white fetlock were ,effectually treat- ped -the boom in waste paper V,116
ed in the same way. Thus laked, the hag .come to an end.
mare ran and, of course, won, bring- ,,Nli,tu,ally we can't pay more thi
Ing profit to those Intorested In her the market Price.
ie several thousands of "So the price W,* Pay for Waste 1)
pounds. After the -race petrol, and per has dropped also. frc
. . peroxide served to restore the mare "More than that-tes dropped
to her former state. In tile. mean- war -time -standards to a far great
. time, however, another small diffl- oxtent than any other .commodity i
-culty had been got over, namely, the know of.
buying in of the mare ata ,conmider- ,,prices to -day are only halt or ev
able price -it was a selling race she One-third of those that ruled ti
won -for, of 400urse, her connections months ago."
had, in order to keep their secret, to _�
,goo that she did not pass into other I DIF'PICULT TO LEARN.
liands. With the ,ownership of .tile
animal unchanged there appeared to ,The ,(,illileso pock�t dictlonary c(
be every likellbood of tile fraud parm- i taillk,, no, less than 10,000 characte
irig undiscovered. So it did for some I which one ,,just learn Ir order
,
time. Indeed, it inight have remained 1,Clain, any real familiarity with i
.
buried, but f or. the indiscretibla Of -ane 'la1llgu,o ge. However, an acquaintat
cf the partiog to It in U110thOT matter, i,wit'.1 three of four thousand symb
and tile fact th'A so many pnople f is all that the average native has, z
wero m?v.r4sarilY In the GOCT(A As to ;,s said to be Possible to get al(
rctider a dlqelo�,uro 41111108t inevitable wi,lb, a vocabulary fif 1,000.
j,,jjec, F
,uspielo,l wais aroused. 8__j;,_ __�_
VVI,eli laid .011 tile trail tho detee- IRIS14 LAO i 0�8.5,HOU
tives qu,cl�!y expi�,y,v.d a sorles of LIN111NO).
jlc�farlou,,; transactions, Which hal.
-been Itspired by a man arainst WhIm Irle4h lace 19, lio,v.r making Its appe
.
,
tjloro were -already convictions far , ance ft"! alowe'llold liapils. Many
fr'-U01. Thts, pinson, who Was Pass- the new piece&. allow tril'alill'ag of Ir
Ing unds,r the deserfpMm of & gentle- croellet Insertions, borders And Mot
man rid(!r, was TLOW St�qnt to, prison Trish la,ce, 1=1101!0 and wo-qvs Qtft
h � Ingly Well� RS Well as linen.
I , .1 I -1,
�i; 00*t to =I A 1, t';n'ding th�o "Zvm_!!�_!,
&.ht . ,,,A�1,U M& - . ._*&1WWAft1-d= e� M�
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The* Wingham Advance
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. Published at
.HAM ,doNTARIO,
WING,
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Every py Mornina.
uro
Th, �
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A. G. SMITH, Publisher,-
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Subscriptioll TatOS:-011e year,- '
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$2.00; six months, $I.00 in advance. .,
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' rates on application- -
- Adverg'Ar.11g .
Advertisements withOut specific di -
Lesson XI., December 12,
rections will be inserted until forbid
WHAT THEKIN-Qu0M OF HEAVEN
and charged accordingly.
(Changes for contract advertise -
is LIKE.
ments be It' the Officl) 'by noon,
, 'PhIntaYText-Matt. is: 44-53
Monday. �-���
*_
Golden Text-I'The kingdom of �Iod
_______._ -
Is not eating and drinking but right-
eousliess and -peace and J;y in the
BUSINESS CARDS *
Holy Spirit" (Uom.* 14: 17,.
Historical Setting.
.__.._.__.�-- .. -w
.
Time. -A. D. 28, Place. --Galilee.
�
WELLINGTON �MUTUAL. FIRE -
Dal,ly Readings. .
,'Monday December G,The Worth
INSURANCE Co.
of the Kfngdom (Matt. IS: 44-58).
' lUstablished 1840.
Tuesday, December 7�-Gradual
-Head ,Office, Guelph.
Growth (Wark 4: 26-02). Wednesday,
L Risks taken on all clAssiis of Insur-
[December 8. -The Kingdom Spiritual
able property or' the cash or prainium.
(Rom. 14: 13-19). Thursray, De-,,
.
cember 0�--The Hinkdom of Trath
note system, .
ABNER CO-90NS,l Agent,
(John IS: SS48). Friday, December
Wingham.
1N --The Promised Kingdom (Luke
12; 27-34). Saturday, December 11.
t__--------- ---- ----.-v
,-The Kingdom World-wide (Luke
13: 22-30). gunday, December 12. -
DUDLEY HOLMES
Proclaiming, the Kingdom (Isa, 62:
6-12),
-ADDISTER SOLICITOR, ETC.
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. . ` ..... R.,��jj:�:� "..'.., :-�.�'�`.i,,-.�,-.-"M � ;:" -, -Block, Wingham.
% .� .. ,i��'.ij%,, i'..: �, ,`i�,*-' ,:�',:i .�i Terse 44 �Mayor
. _. 0, , �'%i, .1 - We continue a study Office,
-.,..-",-. �,`.`�%j::-::�J IMO._ i�:�,�*;.,�,�'i, '*`-..�� in the parables of our Lord. It Is ,, - - __ _- ----- -
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'. - - � MW . M , - 11 *:';:j:�:;:��:::�::::;::.;!:: -t- hidden treasuies. Where there are
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��Iii:����i�i�j��!��j! ,?., ':;i,ti;':*;*%.,:� 101-1., no -banks, treasures are often bu R. VANSTONE
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l���i:ii�i��::��iii!��l�l�ii-'�i.,.i�i"��i�:!���ii:?��!!...,.'-.�., I ,� �'41%." * ....;.X .... _'. .,..�.�'..,::, ...I- The Idea of the parable Is that the ,
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- -:44: ..... , . V. ... .A5� I t abundantly re- BARRISTER AND SOLICITOR.
:;:;�:;;�:�:::;:;.:.:.*.:.%:.Z.:� 1 .: : I . . . . . I. A. . .....�0:: . . ... ...... 111',-�� N..... ,.,.".,.::,%:'%:,,.,.�.::;:;�...��.s.�,,*.�,i,.�.I I kingdom of Chris
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�.,�. ".... .. U , -��.--,'iffi��.§:::-x:j. ',-.:,.:�f:�;:::%%::;,;:;�:�,,�,.�,':�'.. .. �:;ilg:l�ii�'l.i�iiii�ii".'i�i"���'.1-1-ii>�.i;.". - money to loan at .lowest rates,
. . mi!�.;01X% .. ` --::*1 K :%kf�;:;; :KI:i�i:?.iKii,�::i* i;;1. wards the Individual discoverer. I
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... . , 1*1.�' 0 kwi�ii','.�",,'�','.i.�i,�"-�,,,� i��,'.' There is also the Idea that as soon as
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.....'... .,�� ��-,-,;�,.:-:",;,-;-;-:�:4.��A.,� 1 ..5. ,1_:. we see tne r c ne.ss a a S -6
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�$;V§7tl. ,;!,�.--.-, i% . .1 ,% dam we should enthuslastical,ly em- .
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. .:.?t:�;�::;:.::n.:.:.:-:�:z-,,;;;-:;;;: . ... ,.!�01 NMI'-
., ., . brace, it,
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V -...% ;:; ... I, .. : .., 1. Verse 45. Pearls are probably speci
,
. . . . . ;;:;, _ 141 N -1.1w : -...-,,.--., , X....'..
� .
� . ,..... fled because of their rare value, and-
& , __ I I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........... "I'll...'... the teac4ing ,of the parable is atmed
t1) 111ining %tude . nts ready to go underground in a coal mine near Sydneyq to emphasize the Incomi3arable value
NI.S. I � ,f",... K_- . I of the kingdom of.Christ.
(,I)) Students examining the great landslide at Turtle Mountain, Alberta. I .1 .,. �N� N, . . Verse 46. '-The fact Is also �stres*s- I
,
wages and thus acquire at least a ..: " rvV.. � 1, ed that lie who sought the peari Of
,., �
, Iffl, (
I Not very many years ago a great fair part of the money needed to 'et N great ,price found it and ,possessed ,t
many people lookbd on an education their next year college expenses. himself of it.
at the University as unnecessary and The second year is similar to the . . . . . . . .. .. Verse 47, 48. The knigdom is like
that . �j` .:,. a dragnet, or seine, in that all kinds
. : ":,
.. . "
the work both .. :
X ,:. ,;..
perhaps even harmful for a young first, except . .:..-:` .
- � -� ,
:..."
cticki is more ad .:; . of a)eople are gathered Into it. This
.; :�i .. .
man proposing to, enter business or theoretical and pra �:ii�:!�, , I is distinctly a missionary parable.
manufacturing. The old professions vanced, and these first two years are "I ,-...-..-M.;,0..,
of Law, Medicine and the Church the same for all Engineering students �, .;I.r '�*/
..
.,I gf,g,Km
I-.,. �ffi--§. Membership In the church Of Jesus
.__ - ,.�.
=,.�.. -.1.1r,11.1-, xi,::-, .�,, careful
,_
were, of course, different. and de- no matter what ,;�Zl/ M. Christ is nootoo a matter of
manded college training; but fitness ject they propose to practice; but In , , selection, riches, scholarship, social
for success in even the greatest in- the third year, they specialize, and ,.% ...... .�
nolortakings the miners give a considerable part I � ,z..., IN ., position, or even reputation. Christ's
, "I appeal will be answered by all.
I
I , .
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dustrial or engineering u .5� .
,
I was commonly supposed to be best of their time to Mineralogy, Geology, ,I, ".., � . Verse 49, "The sea is the world; -
gained by apprenticeship in ala�office etc. The practical work at the end 11 X.: those who dra-w,the net are they who
or works. and the boy who left school of this year is still further 'special- preach the gospel, and the angels will
,at fourteen to run errands iind sweep Ized and is in the form of a travelling . gather in -and gather out" (lmatt. 13:
out the office was often lauded as school. Sleeping cars are chartered . 39-43; 25: 3.1-03). The final count
having outdistanced his rich neigh- for a month or more, a diner is n- .;. and account- will be rendered before
:
necessary, and the � I
bar who had' "wasted" four or five gaged when ;- the Judgment -bar of God.
years in learning a lot of theory, and party accompanied by a professor .,-.,� : - : Verse 50. There is plainly a doom
with it acquired habits of luxury, and and, � a small group of competent in . . . . . . . . . . . ,;. j: . :";;;: . . . . . , �;:- .. awaiting the purposeely wicked.
-ii-- ..�. .
,
a sense of his own superiority to structorsi Is taken to some important I .. ., . ...... - . . ,i: Hhere nave been strenuous and var-
,j:
�i%
..
mining district. About one-fifth of . .... tons efforts to eliminate epunishment,
_:i,.... .j. ..
other men ,.:�%...
. it the time is given to practical field ,�i-.: �;. but the 'Bible teaches both -punish-
T�e ab ' -..:;1X:,�1.:. .`-i
ove belief was due In Pa -another fifth to visits to :1 ):?.*X.�: - . f, ". �,,� ment and reward,
.
� , k
->.�:*Pl , � Versus 51, 52'. The Jewish
to ignorance of what college life Geology :., V. , .: scribes
really is., and In part to a f allure to I Ore Dressing and Metallurgical ... CR i i
I
distinguish between the old and new plants, and the remainder to actual - . knew theL Moclac ,la,w. Christ's fol -
methods of teaching. Fortunately, visits to mines carefully selected in ',ewers must know the laws of the
time has cleared away much of this advance so that the wid6st p.ossible kingdom of heaven. They will set
misundorstanding and has proved to experience can be gained. The stu- . ". � .;.. � forth the new and also give the true
, ..,
all observant people that nothing can dents go underground, spend eir :�� ......'.. ��� .... I ... j,".�.:. -.1 `..'I!�.. ... ...... . . . . . . . ::: . . . . . . . . I'll,
� , . . . . . . . . . . ..... . ��� .......... teaching of the old. ,
equal a scientific education as a pr,e- time watching, and if possible work- Versus 51, 52. The Jewish scribes
any branch of advanced ing, with the regular miners, and each knew the Mosiac law, Christ's fol-
paration for , (3) Students operating �L Rock DrIU
industrial work,, but it Is doubtful if day after returning to their tKavel- , lkowed t know the laws of the
at Phoenix, -B.C. � I ra mus;
even now nderstandr, ling home they compare experiences in of heaven. They will set
d write up notes, under direction tban could possibly be attained by ng
just what Is done by our Universities an t either of study or of forth the new and also give the true -
In training young m6n, for the En- of the staff. At one end of the any amouu teaching of the old.
. gineering Profession. school proper all of the men are practical work taken alone. Versus 53 54. Our Lord's brothers
,
Perhaps no clearer Illustration of given opportunities for employment This Mining Field School wali in- were not in'the number of the twelve
the modern method can be found for the remaindeV of the summer, in stituted at McGill over twenty years (7: 5). - Of his sisters nothing is
than in.the teaching of Mining En- the mines visited, and thanks to the ago ,and has since been carried on known. �
I gineering as given, for instance, at broad-mindedness of our Canadian without interruption, except that'it Merses 57, 58. it is jea.lousy that
McGill. The students begin their Mine idazkagers (many of them old was'eurtailed during the war. The prevents a prophet from having honor
course In October and spend seven McGill graduates) the students thils extelat Of ground covered.' may be in his own ,country. OrdinUlly a
months attending classes in Mathe- get invaluable experience, and at the gathered from the fact'that British � man Is better rec6ived by his own
matics, physics, and other fundamen- same time earn very substantial Pay. Columbia has been visited no less kindred -and associates, but not -when
tal subjects, and in carrying out ele- The value , of this very practical than ten times, NOT& Scotia six, New. he appears as their superior.
mentary experiments in the labor&- summer school can only be fully aP- foundland twice. Michigan and other - -
.
tory Then. after the spring exam- preciated when the men return to United States mining districts three - HOW TO ADVERTISE.
their fourth and final or four times, while Cobalt, Porcu- �
. Inations they go to a camp in the college for . ted to a study of pine, Sudbury and other nearer min- I . Decide on your plan and then
tountry, and do practical surveying -year, which Is devo Ing fields, am almost always touched "strike hard."
� for four weeks. This ends , their the advanced technology of Mining. distant parts., ' The story is told of a man Who had
.- Dbligatory work for the year, but they I Matters which might otherwiRe be on the way to more In aff- audi-'
I p.re urged to spend at least the main difficult to understand are quickly The IllustraUens which accOMPanY a message foc everyone
Ill machine appreciated, the Interdependence of this article have been chosen �; Z��Lk * torium. He wanted to tell the peo-
I .1 part or the vacation ghter side of the excursions, and ple about his attractive proposition.
I on Surveys or other on- theory and practice are made clear, the it as to add that no part of; He went to the man at the door and
. - and the students complete their it is needle
I ginecring enterprises, and it is Big ,,I-Jow much will you charg(
� pificant of the earnest spirit of the course With a more mature and bal- the course at McOill to more populati I said:
students that fully, 80 p.c. do this, anced understanding of their profes- than the "Milling Trips.1t . . 1. me to whisper9l' I
.
I %ud,dt tbo same time earn 909djLsional dutle.s. and responsibilities I . �'?� . � , ...- "I will charge yo � U $5 to whisper,'
__ _ . - . q
� I I __ - .aid the doorman,
L . _. --- ,- i "'How much will you charge me b
I ' LIG11TING THE OCEAN. I andb1t,he others Along the belly in a In the case of the "argyropelious" we yell?"
I don raw. - have recognizable "photogenic cells" 111 Will charge you'$25 to 'Yell." 4i
I These are veritable bull's ke, ft
I ___ , I eye Iamp8 each of them with a double- like those of the firefly's flashlight ap- The man decided he I would ta
� . le - . I whispers.
1 How Certain Maxine Creatures convex ,�s Of crystal-clear substances paratus, I When you are spending your mone:
11 I and a reflector behind. a mass of ONE WEEK'S BEEF for advertising, spend it for "results.
Illuminate the Water. I The light is emitted by . When an expensive malling ,or larg
- I cells in the rear part, While the pur- space is needed it is penny-wise Pol
I pose of a reflector W served by a Ing -
0 'On still n1glivt in tropical waters the I trolls All There is In Cold Storage icy to "economize." When outsid
I sheet of white fibrous tissue. I aid Is needed, such count6l. should .b
w sea oftimes is illul4inated as if by fires 1 Vach lantern has a muscular arrange- In Canada. secured. "It "Pays." .
�- of its own. Every breaking wave -crest ment for ttirning it tills Way pr that, . I I .
- looks like a flame. An oar disturbing and Is conneeted by a nerve (enteringi . Although 63, N1. Degulne, chief I
at the back) with the central nervous
I. the surface seems to dip into Molten - system 'by 'which its mechanism is 'How lang would t116 foods in cold the Boulogne Fire 'Brigade, rowi
metal, swimming fishes leave wakes manifes storage to -day last us If every other from Boulogne to Folkestone In Ill
It I .tly controlled. Thus in all ineans otsupPlY were closed? Probab- hours and 25 minutes.
.0 of brillia'at brlghtne��s. i likelihood the fish Is able to turn its I ly Jew ,people could answer. . __ __
1. The phenomenon is due to the pres- I liglit4 on or out at Will. I , Compared with the holdings for 00- ' =IN,
)_ ence in the Water of innumerable mul- .A.nother species, has on each side of ober, 1919, ae,pording to a ,statement I =, 'I I I
% titudes of illinute animals, each of 1 it,g head a double lamp, with ref'wtor"- by the Dominion Department of Ag-
' e f
which holds up its thly -torch, so to I tile two painting different ways, That -riculture, our presr.nt storag a beef .
is to ,a,,, OnF. of each pair of lanterns as than it a COUNTER
M speak, to,contribute to the illumina- I ., _ I Is 13,642,955 lbs. le. 1,7,s, all
points upward and ahead, ,valle the - year ago "or only "Sufficiel
tion. ' downward. While' other ';1ou'rees of suPI)Y faiI,ei, to Meet
a-- Marine creatures of many tribes.- other- I.,; directed
crustaceans, Jolly fiSheS, cephalopods, throw -Ing a bcam forwar(l and ill. th, the domestic donand forCUlIghtlY more .1�
. I
IW fishes of various species, ete,carry I direction in Whiell it is f0ing, the than one week." ughterIng3 are CHECK .
or lights Some fishes IlaV0 luminous rish I,', able to illuminate tile bottom ,,However, present sla
over �L,bieh it Passes ill search of food. going largely dircetly Into eolislimp-
ve disks'on their heads; other have Will- I I statement f Q
Inous spots along their sides, and fat It is InteresLing to Observe that th,3 tion." the Department's . f
�11 others are covered with a lulykillous buIrs-CYO lanterns here described aw addo. "Only from 30 to 40 Per cent 0 1 Boala
constructed on the sa-,ne principle a,; the visIble kill per annubi dcos actu-
va, slime. modern Wa are agents fo,., the Apple -
The "angler" fish has a regular torch the best and most Ones Of ally go into cold storage bcMre enter -
for a back fill. enabling it to see while human Manufacture, Nature thought Ing into domestic co1i,saMPtI011, and a lord t(lounter Check Book CO.
out tile problem and produced tht� in- large part ct d(imestic dem!'."ta Is In. ,,,� e 0 our samples and get
, local trade ruld 11�
looking nut for victims which its
I light, I,; expected to attract. Another volition long ages aga. variably supplied by - ' price,4 bp;ore ordering.
fln'lly species The light of tb� illarine torcli-bear- froni farm killing�,. 11, VIOW Of the
� , f ound only at great . onibined With 11H C E,
e*,L,, and ,ante.,ji-earriers ,�;ilvoriy- 6old- 11�,avler O.wrat!llr, costs, e 'Wingham, Ont. "
1`11- depths, f-arries, (gi, the end of its. nose .
rs,' what loo,r�s like all ejectric light bulb, en, or sOmL1th11c6 gr0olligh) is cold tile lower status of hide,,, and the more
ight-Illumination without h0ftt- It unsetti,ed condition of ,,.he, overaeas - 0411111111111111111111110aw
- - .1 I -
to and which ,serves an equivalcn' Pur- 1: solution of a problem - _
. ., market, when con*4)ared with condi - .I.- � I -
e reprooents the t to date
.,vhIch scieller. bas trip - tion of the market movemen 8
Leo It 1,q in the depths of the Odeall that 'd in vain to puz
zle out In othel, words it is light with. have ,been well taken ,care of tLt fair -
DIS tile really remarkable liglit-bearilig ' , employed in ly firm prices" --11 Condition of affairs DR
, out waste, the energy 3 of U . 0 L ALOE
nd fishes dwell. Theirs is a realm of Inky making it being wholly expended In ealllsidering the steady retail pricol M MAR"T C .
1119 * darhiless, into whith no ray of day- illumination, Meats, which Is tile "9014011 mean" for ,HAS opend Mer ,0ffIc6 In the
light penetrates. If they are to have it producer and consumer.
lig,11t, they niust furnish it themsOlVe% It used to be thought that this lig t ,FIFI.,o iSLOOK,
11 y possible glimmer, was due to tile presence Of phosphorus '__'_ I I
cmd, to catch ever: the term "pliosphorescellecoo, A Portland gardener nalued Hines Near the 11*10tel Spullswiok.
most of theal are provided with huge -vvAlOnce, btained a quarter of a ton Of On- tit e 1,
ar. eyes, . I.allg ago that absurd notion was ek- has 0 er of an ounce Of 100clalist In 1)'seas" of
d. The best thcorY at present long from a 011it r,ye ,
Of .-Most re-n,rlcable In this TeSI-0 Of PlOde' I lqoso and Throat Special ati
.all unown deep sea fishes is tile, is that it is attributable to some sort seed. br3 village of Fe ,6 tion, given to Diseases of Women I
Ish llenlic -substance secreted by the In t, ngghl, VlAna, ill
Ifs. ,,argyropelicuq," WI)ICIL carries a C'011- of el oxygen colues sole industry if; the, makilig of earth- Children.
04. Tile 02 dozen lanterns of large, size.- allitual, wbiell, who" -Flosidenoe Phone 1151, 'Off ilte 'PhO"b �
ntract with it, _ ve� out light. t,,n ftnd ellinaware. � .11
0ae Oil caell ride, in front of tile eye, into to ,,I s .
. I
%Al . �- I - ,
�, futty mow - W%t_ I - - _- I. . .- . I tx wp* " - -.k,6.,"_ -
� .1 ... lawowwwow-o"" _. - 111111111111111111111111111111
rnv%t ___1A, IT Istak 11210111 1111108b" -Aw -6 ihlimiwlmgww��
- � es�
_______________ .
12111kV
ARTHUR J. IRW N
D.D,$., L.D.S. -
-Doctor of Dental Surgery of the
lennsylvania College and Licentiatc- .
,f Dental Surgery of -Ontario.
'lased
, Every Wednesday, Afternoon.
-office in Macdonald Slock.
__ ______1
DR . . Go H. ROSS -1
Graduate Royal College of Dental
Surgeons.
Graduate University -of Toronto
,Faculty of Dentistry.
:),F,FI,CE,OVER H. E. ISARD'S STORF-
; __.___________1 I
. ALY -
W.. R. HAM'
B.Sc., m.b., c.m.
Special attention pa -id to diseaseg
of Women and Children, having '
taken postgraduate work In Slir- '
gery, Sacteriology and Scientific
Medicine.
Office In the 'Kerr resIdence2 betweeni
the Queen's ,Hotel and the SaPtist
. Church.
I
All business given careful attention.
Phone 54. . P. 0. -Box 113.
I
)-------- -
I
DR. Hu"'OT. C. REDMOND
,M;R.-C.S. (Eng),
T :L.RX.P. (Lond). .
PHYSICIAN AND ,SURGaIO-K.
(Dr, Chisholm's old stand).
) . . . y
DR. R. L. STEWART
, Gr�duate of University of Toronto,
Faculty of Medicine; Licentiate of the
Ontario -College of �Physiclans and
Surgeons. �
OlFFICB ENTRANCE. I
Second Door -Noorth of Zlailbriga�s
. Photo Studio.
JOSEPHINE STREET. -PHONE 29.. ,
I
- .
'
I SELL
I Town and Farm propeftles, Call
and see my list and get my prices. r-
0 have aome excellent values.
I I 1. G, STEWART
I WING'HA,M. .
r Phone 134. Office in Town -H-all. , '
, 11 -_ _ - -_ -
a .
-
a DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN
6 . I
I'
.
'111;;1Z
( % , , , " I
)f I . . ! Y I I �
d %
le CHIROPRAC
-3 Practice is confined exclusively t.0
,Chiropractic, the only and original
,System of Spinal Adjustment. Ef- '
fective In 95 per -cent. of all -cases.
"Chiropractic Locates and Reflioveq
the Cause of Disease; Nature Heals."
J. A. FOX, D., MO.
Also fully qualified. graduate. lif
Ostecpathy. Phone 191. .1 -lows 2 tot
5, and 7 to 8 pan.
�_____ - - - ____ t __ _ l
� .
SS PHYSICIAN
'. OSTEOPATHY
I
DR. r. A. PARKER
,osteollithic physician, only qualified
ostc,onith In 'North HuTon.
Adjustment of the spine is inora
� quickly socured ftud with fewer treat -
W ments than -by any other method.
_!�__ Blood pressure and other examina-
I tions made.
, R All diseases treated.
OFFICE- ,OVVjR 'CHRISTIE'S, STORE-
. I J__-.---- ---'--- ----'--'------ . __ - __
'
I
DR. IRHA KENNEDY
iar, Phone 4.
en. Special attention glvPn tit) tile
Lild diseases at women slid ("hildroll,
I offlides formerly atcupled by the Ila*
tall DR. J. P. KENNEDY.
.
,
I
"I'll, . � .........
� "' , -1 1-11,11, -1
I
II
I
I..
�
N
A-�
�v
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19