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HomeMy WebLinkAboutPN1926_12_31,. ., -u'� ° • . K n. %d^e. ,s:. w�a .. , a„ y w'#: i� , s :^ S d:',n y�e'�r.T°•.;p' s,;, .=+ s,."• „ ; * a . g ' �.'�^ - • s .�+ .r.y.. •`u M . .:.:,... :.,+. .. :�..x. Y., •ti.xs ,,,,;.yM1, a; "'t• ..a, , '.. . ,. >.r . a .. c.. •.*•:,t't^vr .<.,. , .-,. :.�•^• . °.:q -,;R 4 >.:,.� ., C... M..ur�,�,:..:• .:.:«. a'..,•,k.. ,.. `°,'K..• .-.*� a •r: 't;r.i^' ,:,�. :m.:; ,�r- 'v?.:i.r ,x ., •.a.-.:. .. '.. ,, c ... ., •,�{"4' .x ..: ,s ..:" }'l-. r.> ♦Pic •. r s 1a 95' J .. • .R.+. ...r.-. +y..,i 'w a- .-.Y .r:. . ,.. F V. �+t .� ".•v 'o.A;� . a s.F . -. ... e . •.;.:. .:. . cos. .. .. -.'' .. �A+^..r% .. i 1:... : S^:.^, .. ... , .... .. s -- - •I - sass..,. ;, . ...,�• .,, , ,•,, - . 'PI C No EWS KE I .. _ . _ . No. 17gERIN(, ONT.,'FRVOL. XLVle DAY, ][)FC. 31, 1926 cam: •�' >Mlsf•M�•ffRl �rataei. C#=ON=Z �i44t= - CLAREMONT ,---AUNBARTON. .... GROEEI�I�TOOn S&W MJU SUI &Uket Thomas Dawson, of Cedar Grove, At the Community Hall next Sun- Medio*1l +► has gloved to the Stalye farm. day school meets at 2 p.m., church Mrs. Neal and family, of Toronto, service at 3 pin. Start the New _ IMLE. FORS?TH h. Dp.,aDiirector spent Christmas' with her parents, Year right. You are invited to be A� opeo*s. � John and Mrs. Pallister. present. The pours people meet - ga by appotatm�leat The roads were never in better con- each Thursday at 8 p.m. ; C laremont. Ont dition at this time of the year than A high-class concert will be given, EWtablished 1898 ' Fruit Baskets of, all dfscriptione, the are now, although very icy. under the auspices of the A.Y.P.A., �7 O. MoHINNON, M.D., L.B.O.s., l� . satabar�n, m,mnb.rof tae oou.s• o� including qt. boxes, pt. boxes, The Cooper and gWard families in the Community Hall, on Thursday Headquarters •Igmtoteos eau ars.aa. of oatarlo liesotlab held their annual Christmas gather- Jan. 13th, beginning at 8 o'clock, by r jrat Ntstl�ufo aslea*eaota' Crates and Baskets at ing at Walter and Mrs. Ward's, the James Esplin Concert Co., of Tor - Oat" "a reddease. neon�am. -- - lowest pricey.- Among the Christmas visitors were onto. Come and spend an enjoyable FOR f E E D g � L00908. •Shaping and Tarring. :' I Miisea Eileen Cooper, Helen Dawson, evening. Admission, 35. cents'; child- •; Elizabetht Graham, Clara Neal, Lucy ren ;5 cents.' E. OHBISTIAN. Barrister and Kiddie Kars, Sleighs, Office Stools Dawson, Clifford and Mrs. Pilkey; CORN l &Sdidtar Notary Public Bu. Money w Messrs. Gordon Gregg, Donald Raw- AUDLEY OAT$ j whole or ground r .a. south d'ing,Coart Hoase, Whitby. 851y Salt For Sale sore, Thomas Hortop, and Teter BARLEY FEED LL Q. BROWNING, S. O.. Barris. Scott. Walter and Mrs. Pratt spent the BRAN • uv, solicitor, Public. Anaea'Bit.. -- OHAS. A. WHITS. HIGHLAND CREEK. holiday in Galt. SHORTS ts..�d,atd� .e`t of [+a�r�'c°' nn"d" sweet' �8uccessor to late W. Q. Barnes — - Miss Doris Gee is spending a week SCRATCH FEED �+ 1liitiiy. Daae phone 388„ Office phone 382. Phone 8420 .or writs Locust Hill, Ont.. A New, Year dance will be held in in St. Catherines. for poultry SBATON & ROSS-Barrieterd. So- . Morrish's Hall, Highland Creek, on Fred Woods is spending a few days CfidCKED CORN {' ton, northern Ontario Building, sac Wednesday night, Jan. 5th, under the at his farm in Muskoka. foepoaltr Toronto. y J• Beaton. J. �• auspices of the Women's Institute. Miss Burnett is visiting her cousins J. D. F. Rosa. Adelaide 27e7 Middleton'& three-piece orchestra, of Mrs, S. Puckrin and family. I have a car of Cereal Feed which _ Toronto, will furnish the music. Dane- Several of our citizens were nomin- - I consider the best value for uYs., solidbon etc.. sus a1s confoa- • ru*eral �WC40r mg gins . Lunch ated for council honors on Monday. feed I have seen ora ong - -- --. "y Life Butldiag� corner Y and Rich- and provided. Everybody welcome. Come Thomas and Mrs. Puckrin enjoyed time. It will pay - aaaea 9b .Toroetc. Phony Main 1390 and Main ms0 P�etenng o�sx open Monday and Wed- j,��A�BCLj Xnnbal•rwer" and have a good time. Admission, 50 a family re -union here on Christmas to try it. aes6ay evemny.aad all da Satatdey, including cents. 9eturday evening. Phone ck. eeoo. sit MOTOR SEdR$E A fatal accident occurred on Fri- D Miss Gladys Puckrin. and Miss WHEAT sad BARLEY Wanted. lDetat�l �r M�NT, �t• day evening last in -which Robert Eunice Squire are spending their Chopping Mondays, Wedues. Bull, a farmer livin one and a guar- Christmas in Buffalo. days Fridays. Phone 9'14 g y DR- D C. Smith, Dentist, Stout! ter miles north of here, lost his life, Several from here attended the Mis- s vine. Honor Graduate of and an Oshawa man, E. Dixon, will sionary meeting in. the Baptist church Chicago and To- -�a Uraversitin sad the go�.sl ot- be charged with manslaughter. Mr. in Whitby on Wednesday evening. ]Dm W Surg4wm. Phone odke 1111. R 'nu Bull was• going east with a load of Mrs. G. Winter and baby returned 11016. rZ tnd, appointments. My Roofing Material! hay. Dixon -coming up behind in his to Torontg with her parents, Mr. and BLAgE B. BEATON. D. D. S., Oakland car ran into Mr. Bull's wagon Mrs. Hansford after their holiday Graduate of the Royal Coletge of Dental causing the unfortunate man to fall visit here. t=oas and Uns— tq of- Toronto. Office 5 z British Columbia Shingled on to the 'hard v P o+er Murdock•& Goafectionery atoms, Whitby, pavement. He was Rev. A. R. Sanderson reached a 1Diee hours 9 to 12: 1 to 6 ao, lad.'phaoe e. 8 z " " picked up I121consCloua and rushed t0 Fpler►lid sermon on "Citizenship' ' MYy No. 2 3 and Sz " St. Michael's Hospital, where it was Ideals" on Sunday. He stressed the r N. DALES, L. D. S., D. D. S,, seen that he had : sustained a bad support of churches as the greatest uJ • Graduau of Royal Cdleat Dental sur• fracture of the skull. He lingered safeguard this growing- country has g.no.and the University, of Toronto Office TORONTO ASPHALT alcove D. A Scott's atone. Claremont. Out. until Tuesday when he' succumbed to for its democratic and free institu- Ji. tilBee hours. 9 a. m. to $ p. m , Satur% 9 a, ROOFING his injuries. In a most cowardly man- tious. Special music was furnished • to 1 0 m. Phone pare 1406. 1, Murray's 18 in., 82 in. and 38 inch ner Dixon hurried from the scene, by the choir. IT ERBERT T. FALLA ISE. L D S.. widths, 4 in 1 Shingles; also but a broken radiator cap that puss About fifty friends made a surprise . D. S. Graduate of the Royal College or Metal Vs11ey and picked up served to identify the car. attack on Grasmere Farm on Mornay 9lmoesl abovSlarge J. S and the Untnes e. of Toronto. Ridge Roll. In the g g atmove J. s aahaoa's store, l�eker,ng, Out. 8 pursuit of the offending mot- evening and took possession of the boun 9 a m. to 6 P. m., or by appwnt• orist, Constable Smith Tisabled two house for several hours, when games rat Phone Piet 8700 ~sly Material, or will ive price on cars, but succeded in getting his mart. and songs and speech made things finished lob. --�-- merry, after which a splendid -lunch D*ny�+���j('� - GREEN RIVER. was provided by the guests R. Win- �:� 1L ICKE ING ":� Mr . Flo McKay visited her ter then, behalf of the friends, made - LIZABBTH RIOHARDSON-Suc- ,� Floyd Y Pm'' `.m.no�Of tnto �o.o Pure Incur saes at L �� of a eats on Sunday. Coleman an address Parlor La p to Fn M. and ?- scala i evading. a4a Mr. J. Smith is sojourning in the Mrs. Chapman, that day beltsg the _ village at shallPresent.20th anniversary of their wedding. JP'08TILi., Lloeaeed Z otloeear, Mr. Marshall Turner, of Regina, is . sea oeaarr&e ei Let end osrodw Aae• visiting friends here. ..r Aaasrra erne 0 m r o . ams m e thank Mr. Shirard of Oshawa, visited Um wMe DUNBARTON. it.BBATOIP TOiYNSHIP t3I.8B= with his sister Mrs. Cowie. Mrs. Pizer has migrated to her Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Duncan took in �w0"Wer. �aor� 111060 serbu� -1 the anniversary at Brougham. Mwinrs. Christina Anderson is visit- ee s�m•as .e "laser sf >rantass L► Yolu Mr. Pennock is draVing togs in pre' ing her mother in Nova Scotia. ' Cas. r� - partition for his spring basket rush �7 M. YAW, LICENSED, AVO- Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Fuller, having Mrs. Bateman alld Family aye visit- M. for Yort.Ontario and Dsabm for your, patronage been on the sick list, are much im- � her parents, Wm and .Mrs. Ben- Ceeouea AL baba of solea attso6ad nett. an. Tarin. re..wable. Dew Sar :.fes may be Proms Mrs. Elva -Annis, of Niagara Falls, ZrargW .: NEWS' Omcs. 8a0 and Indapm- in the past and Tie case reported recently as small asst *aooea. Whitby, Out. els pox has moaerafed somewhat, it be. N.Y., spent Christmas at her home �e+��� R trust you may ing chiclren pax. We are sory to report Mrs. C. uljI Eft have a BrightThe Ladies' Aid held a very success- files ill with the flu and a lame ful bazaar recently, the- funds of bacx We buy and *ell, furnishuotation@ which went towards the new o We are pleased to report Miss Ella and information on all Listed and and Prosperous placed in the church here. Annan recovering from a serious ill- 3alisted Mining Stwk& Parents who allow the misbehavior 'We will be pleased to advise what New Year of their children to go -unchecked n�ss. Kc - stocks. to buy or to hold. or should not murmer when stranger We are pleased,to see Grant Mc- what *tock to sell. ALVIN BUSBBY hands deal with them. Hoping all Caches, of Chicago, in our midst Olients are maks mons F ng y by will tura over a new leaf for Rtue New again, a number of visitors spent following our advice. MOHERING Year. ,ow long experience in mining. ex. _ti's are forced to draw Christmas ds.Day is our midst with tandi over a period , of twentyV j w attenraon to Qie removal of the sign Team allows as to sound advicee DO YOU w• � from a .post at the western entrance Wm. and Mrs. Nicholson and Miss on the investment feature of a mine your house heated for half of the village, by some irresponsible nhyBarrie. pent Christmas with relatives er the epecklative feature of a proms the coat of opal ? person or persons. Travellers from a peetive mining venture. distance having passed $trough could Miss Florence Annie, teacher her $OLLUWAY, MILLS 1t CO. If so.ol sinstal one of the Instant has recall the village by Warne 'when ills Fort .William, is holidaying at her Members of Standard Oil Burners in, your range, or' sign was present. Its return to the hOMi here. Miss Helen McCowan, of Scar stock Exchange. an International Oil Burner former position would be appre:ciat• Miso' Member* of the Moutreal in, your furnace. ed, is holidaying with her cousin, Miss Mining Exchange. • ''` Helen Thom. . 4Mco and Board Room, Ground Floor, Gall and see them. STOUFFV ILLS. Chas. and Mrs. Annie celebrated Metropolitan Building,--- their silver wedding on Christmas TORONTO. ONTARIO W J. GORDON'S, The appointment of the Stouffville Day. Congratulations. Ph�nee :Adelaide 8971 and 837: Church Street, postmaster, is expected this week. Mrs- T. Chester and Mrs. Pherrill, Agents Wanted 231y Pickering Jos. Nedick, a welllknown resid- of New Liskeard are visiting their ent of Stouffville, was buried on Fri-, sister; Mrs. Alex. Thom. Before......TIME TdBLE-Piokdue a Billow day. John and Mrs. McWhinney ant withT. R. Train* going Eaat dou tie follow*,,,; Rev. A. McLellan, of Claremont, ily are spending a holiday week with • No. 10 Mail 7.58 A M. was a business •visitor here on Friday C. W. and Mrs. Holmes. 28 Local. 1159 P. M- last. Miss Fanny Annis, of Highland +he Old Year oomes t0 a Sunday train, 6.25 25 P The merchants report a splendid Creek is spending the holidays with y Xmas trade, the weather being fav- her grandmother, Mrs. Jean White. l Le, We take this Op- Trains going .Peet' due as follows- orable. George Burnett, of Detroit, and Al- a. No. 29 Local 9.22 A. M. --- icy of thanki=g 27 Local . _ '144 P. M. _The official opening of the new rink Ian Burnett, of Sudbury, spent the ial O[Yr friends for their ••• 9 Mau' 9.21 P. M. took place on Wednesday evening of holiday with their parents at Dew Sunday train, ' 7.42 P. M. this week Drop Inn. patronage. H. Ward, of Chicago, sang a pleas- W. B. and Mrs. Dunbar and son Foregoing is according to Standard -•+.-- time. ing solo in the United Church on and Misses Higgins, of Toronto, spent Sunday evening. the week -end with the former's par - 'We extend most ELM DALE MILLS n number from here attended the ents here, funeral of- the lata Mrs. D. Forsyth, Miss Jean lileason underwent an at Claremont on Tuesday. operation on the adenoids and tonsih hearty eood wishes OXWQ Roy Curtis lost a valupble robe from on Tuesday morning, and, we are his cutter while in the United church pleased to say, is improving nicely. for a --- ads. This is the second robe Roy Rev. J. R. and Mrs. Fraser anra has .lost. Miss Margaret held a very pleasant .' Merry Christmas Fpr Pastry use StouffviUe is in the O.H.A. this "At Home", to'the members of the _ Our Royal Brand year, with Thos. Birkett as manager. congregation on Tuesday afternoon ,e • • a,nd a The first game was witlh Whitby on Quite a number availed, themselves of - Tuesday evening of this week the opportunity __to become better M PPy A, •Sterritt Y .)larnitnre Dealer and Funeral Director Phone 1800 Fickeringr - Ontario at your grocer's. Farmers who have wheat get your flour made from your own wheat. We can grind it. Feed of all kinds -Chicken jfeed, hen feed, chop, millfeed. - Chopping every week -day. - sai rT. sroog�voo� held in the Mennonite Church foorina few weeks by Evangelist MitGuire, in which great interest has been shown by the attendanee. The Old Home week celebration win be held for four days, June 80th, and July 1st, 2nd and 8rd. Over $600 has been collected and with the expected donations from the council will amount -to about $1000. As money talks there should be some shouting on those days. , W. is. C ,. 0Q.AL�Z_ , a. A good supply of Hard and Soft. t Coal on hand. Also as upply - of Kindling Wood,jw; stove length.." 12tf Phone Pick. 1709. _ DONALD MUNRO, PICK'EKINQ Wlitevale The Service Garage, Edi Motor overhauling, top and aide our- taro repalrin�g - ti Battery Servlee-Ohaatgtng and overhauling. a,Ft t All work guaranteed. Flat rate service charge (Phone 6610 Mark. Centrals W. E. BERRY Maas, CoM Ad F- �z F. A. REESOR,� Nut and Stove Coal and Coke,.alsa All -Kinds oi- Feed :. ;. Cement, Lumber,.. - •Lath t. Terms: Strictly Cash A New Year's RESOLUTION t _A , . `Guard Well yotr health' What more important resolu- tion could you make than to safe- guard your health? Timely pre- cautions against the many small ailments which. occur from time to time prevent them developing into serious illnesses. Bring your proscriptions hereto be filled and be sure of accurate dispensing by a qualified, experi- enced druggist. A clean bill of health will be your most valued posesseion. Allow me, at this time to extend my thanks to ell who have eo cur Aiellts ,wwlrv%rnaA snw ttf-_ thle_ C" acquamrau w'zn mus. eraser' mu4ity, and that 1827 will brie A choral class is being organized at yon good health, much happiness Dumbarton under the able leadership and great prosperity`' is the hearty of Mr. Passmore, a man of high abili- ty and wide experience in choral work. The first meeting will be held in the L� basep ent of the church on Tuesday 1V C * IDIL. B �- evening, Jan. 4th, at 8 o'clock- Any e . (fines, • • ;r who are interested in vocal music in , this and neighboring communities Druggist and Dispensing would do well to come and join the Chemists class. The terms will be within the ONTARIO- reach of all. PICKERING, - . . o a .A' •'. .h,. -...'f, 1'. �. . �...'... .�. r ..... . _. •. , .� `.. _.. - .� � »�._ .. .- a- _ -.. �..�5-n. _ -.... ..u_<,.q..._ .-.<. .. .I . ,-.,�..y 'Ytlw...,��i.aw...--,._.,.rn.. .. .R3'v �...kf ', ..60""x..:' „i�`'k'b+nn.. °Y5+.],�` •4F�?`h`,a��+;r'.. ..�tti�a7•`5w.,}. p,s••' ^,;�z._rfe$r'`,-z icy. h: :w+$�aa..'..`st. r •'. a"u. .�a'c .. loos. �-a'�xx•., �g� x'3`av'w:^I,r.Fe .. y_s ':: ',�"''�=.. ,..es•e': �:'?59"•, '?e.'.. 'y .. �G+'�.•. 'Y�-.- orb -v;: .. ., .. .....,<t- .1, .•3 A,;, .,.+. 'k.. sem. .r .'�'"'`-•'s _ aw :. , .. -': c•. ., .. -,y",, i ..ri L .. . » ,.0 i.•;n2., ...v ; .,.. i, -•4M ...., .. i •kr•�in., ^•� •w.. �"� '..''r,, . '-••.S , r �-, 1 W: -•s- x � .r. .-' ..•" :,t,., .. :.,t... .'• ..`��-.�`�i.. - .. v. a..,.:: '�+. ._✓a,. ,.,,,.,�,. it:rra^ls : tea �Y.� 4"'�e='a �'': Fyrt ,. •. , .r _.. ew ,i4 _w:: ,.. ,, ♦r'. av �:,.a .. 'x'1, -Y:?" w �:. , ..;. •, 1�'•,^�',+rY-- .y ,x; 1. _ :.,j '. h.. r.. ^` •t'' ..A": i s § .+tv.c:... �` . ... •.. X' .,:,,.� ,s i;S , �, .a..,p-,. Ta.[? :' .^"Rf. ...-, .... ..#♦' '. Y,•;'''. ,tt c� tPL .,-*.^.. •?. y.. �,0• " . '..^ •..^ ]'... ..a: ' T . � . S .. :, _ i• ',': y ' .r »« ♦ .., ' .: '.. � '^ .fel j?I' A P •--•.-a_3'i_' _ "�:T . .: .-,....• «�: .,... -: ..,�-. ,._:. ,.Ludt:' •.. a •-v.�-,,. ? .:. -. > '.. r ?CBn e, � � , ^'.r. !Cx..'j .9; 5 � � '�.< •.� , • .d'`" . ,-. _�-,-�.-.d..:�a. 7WE LASE - j NORWICH COUPLE } KILLED BY TRAIN _ sTM. SEDAN AT LE � � r m�� �° ChriSEaraa .Tourney &Ought E -c x Fatal Termination by Level. Windsor; Ont., Dec- 26. -Two young the engine of the car actually 'sta:led Windsor mea and a young woman, the or'the machine could not be moved , Crossing Accident. ' $ancee of o� of them, were hurled to over the crosaing, which was s:i ' ppery Woodstock -Mrs. W. E. Maedel of death this afternoon, when the sedan because of ice beneath a Iight snow + I Norwich was instant:y kilted and her : ::. In which they were riding stalled on ; covering, probably never will be;husband, W. , E. Maedel, received in - the Canadian National tracks at the, known. Persons on the platform at ` {;; • juries from which he died several "'Tillage of Puce, 20 mites east of Puce; -which is only a small flag sta- ! °` hours later, when their automobile Windsor, and was struck by , west- j tion, saw the auto drive on the cross- was struck by a Canadian National`• bound Wabash passenger train No, 8, Ing, heard the whistle of the orb -rush- Railway passenger train at the level- " ' _*nrouts from Buffalo to Detroit. The ; Ing passenger train, and, turning, i ?� _ crossing on the provincial highway men were kilted instantly, -and the girl ' were horrified to see the big loco- between Eastwood and Gobles, six ? died two hours later at Hotel Dieu ; motive, its whistle shrieking madly, ` ml:es east of Woodstock, about 2 p_m»-- '� jwe, and brakes grinding impotently, crash " i on December 22nd. A The dead into the standing car. Mr, and Mrs. Maedel :eft their home '. _ —___,HAROLD PURSER, 21 -years old, The impact was terrific. The auto y y in Norwich shortly after noon and r1828 Ouelette Avenue. I was tossed 200 feet to one side of the i 9K . u s� were proceeding east to spend the AUBREY HAMMERTON, 1128, tracks, a mass of tangled wreckage, �{ � � �� ;s, ? I Christmas holidays with friends ana g Church Street, white the heavy train ground to a stop r >, relatives when the accident occurred. LILLIAN BARKLEY,•19, Detroit. several hundred yards further on. ' ' ri They had just got onto the crossing r Purser was a son of Gordon Purser, Rescuers hurried to the spot at once, W� w,; according to members of the crew, toember of a Windsor p:umbing firm,' but oould do little. Miss Barkley was when the passenger express came up , rnd Hammerton's father is A. R. breathing slightly, but . was uncon- behind them, the engine striking the flammetton. Young. Hammerton and scious. The two men were dead, both NEW OCCUPANTS OF GOVERNMENT HOUSE rear of the car. Both occupants were 1 f ,Miss Barkley were soon to have been bodies being disfigured. A private Mr. W. D. Ross, who has been -appointed Lieutenant -Governor of Oa- thrown out of the automobile, which 5 in-arried, ! ambulance brought the dying girl to tarto in s'uooes ion to Col. Henry. Cockshutt, and 1tilrs. Ross, Both Mr. and- � landed in the ditch a mass of wreck- �. As near as can be beamed, the three. the hospital here, but she passed away Mrs. Ross are natives of Nova Scotia, but have lived In Toronto for several age. Mrs. MaedeI's head struck a young people in Purser's car started ' without regaining consciousness. Cor- years, - heavy , fence and she was dead when t for a drive after dinner, proceed- oner Dr. C. W. Hoare, of Walkervil:le, _ .— _.-__� _ _ i picked up by the train crew. Mr. ' up the river front road. Whether will hold as inquest to -morrow. Maedel landed alongside. the fence and f -- -- - -- CANADIAN GOVERNMENT PROTESTS his head was also serious.y injured. I° �T(� ll�r5 to 12c; tubs, 13 1/6 to 134; pails, He was taken to the Woodstock Gen- e T jS 12% to 1834c; blocks, 14% to 14�'ac. eral Hospital, where he died about 5 E Heavy export steers $6.65 to $7.50; RADIO PIRATING IN UNITED STATES o'clock- without regaining conscious- ,, ( heavy steers, good, K25 to $6.50; M` TORONTO. butcher steers, choice, 06.50 to $7.36; _ nese. Man, wheat -No, 1 North., fair to d $5.e5 to $8.25 do,Ottawa. - Pirating of Canadian Canadian wave of 329.5 metres, and ( Mr. Maedel. was swell -known busi- $1.47 % ; do,g �io. 2 North, $1.44; No, 3 North, com $4 to $15; utcher heifers choiceradio chane:s b United States was vindicated by a United States ness man in the Village of Norwich, $7-G_ r to ood, $5.60 Y having lived there practically a1 his do,-f$i____�g court, Canadian broadcasting stations Man. osts- No. 2 CW, nominal; No. to $6; do, com„ $4 to $5; -lint the torn inter_ life. He was also for several years 8, not quoted; No. 1 feed, 63c; No. 2, cows, d to choice, -$5 to $5.26; do, radio listeners of the Dominion to des- - feed, omina'_; Western grain quota- corn. to med., $3 to $-l; do, canners fe�roadcasts from London, Ont, are cil. He was between 55 and 60 years Aeration and bringinga flood', corn- -bona in c.l.f. porta. and cutters, $2.25 to $2.76; butcherof age and Mrs. Maedel was about the i Am corn, track, Toronto -No. - 2' bola d to choice, $4.25 to $b ; do, plaints to the Radio Branch of the almost comp:etely spoiled by hetero- ; . i same age, They are survived by four y yeL'ow, 91c; No. 3 yellow, 90c. mad„ g$ b0 to $4; dc, bolognas, $3.50 Dept. of Marine and Fisheries. Ac dyeing from the Zenith station �►t , Millfeed-Del. Montreal freights;; to $3.86; baby beef, $10 to . $11; cording to Lieutenant -Commander C,' Chicago, and stations throughout sena a -bags included, Bran, per ton, $31.25; , feeders, choice, $5.50 to $5.8.0; do, P. Edwards, Director of Radio for the Canada are simi:arly affected by;"- Isiorts, per ton $33.25; middlings,' fair, $5 to $5.25; stockers, choice, Dominion of Canada, the situation is riva.s in the United States broa4cast•' 440,26; good feed floor, per bag, $2.30. $4.75 to $5; do, fair to med., $4 to steadily going from bad to worse. `ing on the same wave -length Aviator .lids Long Flight '` Ontario oats, 50c, f.o.b. ahipping , $4,50; milch cows, $70 to $85; spring- Under arrangement with the Un -The Canadian Government Radio in Zero Weather Points. ers, $90 to $120; plain to med. cows, lted Staten Det of Commerce, Can- , Det is takingthe matter u in a ' Ont. good mil'.drg wheat -$1.28 f.o. $45 to $66; calves, choice, $11,50 oda is supposed to have the use of friend; way with Hon. Herbert Hoov- Sioux' kout, Dec. 26.—Captain c' b. shipping points, according to to $12.50; do, med., $7 to $10; do, com.; PPS' Y. Y Log p freights. and grassers, $4 to $b; lambs, choice, seventeen waves, six exclusive and er at WAshington, with a view to H. A. Oakes comp:eted the last seg Barley -Malting, 8C to 64c. ' $10.54 to $11.5+0; bucks, $7.50 to $8.50; eleven jointly with- the United States remedying this very unsatisfactory of a 1,700 -mile flight from Peterboro, $uckwheat-75c, nominal. iaheep, choice, $6 to $8.50; do, heavies, stations, but since the Zenith Radio state of affairs, and It is hoped that New Jersey, when they landed here in Rye, --No. 2, 90c. - , $4.50 to $6; do, cu:ls, $2.50; hogs, Co�ration . of Chicago flouted the an amicable settlement which will be a Fokker mor.op:ane Christmas after- t Man, flour -First pat, $8, To- thick smooth, fed and watered, $10.75; order of the •United State3 Dept. of 1 fair to all concerned may be reached noon. They :eft Peterboro Dec. 16, ionto; do, second pat., $7.60. do, f.o.b., $1,0.26; *do, country points. Commerce to keep off the excluxive I within the next month. making the flight in stay stages. The Ont dour -Toronto. 99 per Cent. $10, do, off cars, $11.15; select prem - twat, per barrel. in Carlota. Toronto ium, per hog, $2.10. -'- -- _ - - last lap was begun from Camp Borden ' b,5b; seaboard iq bulk, $s.bb, _ CANADA CONSIDERING I World War Pigeon Hero i Dec. 21, but forced landings, because Cheese. -New, large, :.'0 to 20%c; MONTREAL. of -blizzards and- cold, delayed the twins. 20% to 21e; tri •lets. 22c- Stil- AN AIR MAIL SYSTEM' Dies; Helped Save Battle , n Oats -Can. w -eat., No, 2, 774c: 1Vo, l plane. The p:ane will be used by a r" tons, 28c. Old, large, fSc; twins, ..6c; 8, 69c Flour, bion. spring wheat pats., - ' transportation company in service to ari�eta, 2Fr. Old 9ti:tons, 28c. $ Paris. -One of the feathered heroes the gad flie:ds. The flight is consid- ' firsts, $8; seconds. $7 b0; when oak- Postmaster -General to Make utter -Finest creamery prints, 44 , I rf the great war -a carrier pigeon, , 'to 4bc; No. 1 creamery. 48 to 44c; No, ers , $7:30; winter pats., choice. $6.20.. Definite Announcement in , cr¢•d notable because made across open -2, 42 to o. Dairy prints, 34 to Sbc,. to $6.30. Roiled oats -Bags, 90 lbs., j which helped save Verdun -has just- country in temperature mostly below ' M.M.Bran, $3L.25. Shorts, $33..b. Near Future. 1{ died of o_d age. The bird had a wound 7' Eggs --Fresh extras, in cartons, 72 ,-- zero. Middnng3, $40.25. Hay -No.- L, per .,Saint John, N.B.-Pro sols. look- stripe on its leg band and was one of to 73e; fresh extras, loose, ?Oe; fresh I Po i -=----v--- firsts 63 to 65c; fresh secands, 38 to ton, car Iota, $14.50. i to the establishment of an air the governments pensioners, havinga� Cheese -Finest wests:• ISL4 to been given a home f a grateful na-' 89c; fresh pallets, 62 to 53c. Storage mail system in Canada are undrr con- 8� by a oxtrsa, 45c; do, firsts, 42c; do seconds ' 18s4e Butter -No, 1, pasteurized, Y tion. .Snow FaUs at Vancouver, i ' 14014 to 40%c. Eggs --:-Storage extras, sideration by the post -office depart - $9 to 87c' 47c; storage firsts, 44c; storage sec- meat, Hon. P. J. Ver.iot, Post oast@r- Through a barrage of shrapnel the White Christmas on Coasts Poultry, dressed -Chickens, spring ends 39 to 40c fresh s ecials, lac; Gcnerai, said at Battu 't, in an inter- Pigeon in 1916 carried a message that `may squabs, 1 to I% lbs.• 32 to 38c; da,: � P kept Froideterre Hill from being ca spring, over 4 lbs., 90 to 86c ; do :fresh extras, 65c. view over long distance telephone. P 8 P- Vancouver, B.C., Dec. �8.-Real- sprl V 3 to 4 lba., 32 to 35c; do,} Veal calves, $10 to $11; grassers, "The matter," he added, "is only Lured. In an order of the day the dents of Vancouver and the lower ' spring, 2% to 3� lbs., 30 to 33c; $' in the tentative stage as yet and a de army cited the piseor for "having mainland of British Columbia enjoyed do, spring, 2 to 2 � lbe., 30c; hens, i maintained communication with the ! a white Christmas for the first time+ finite posey has not been adopted but quer b lbs., 28c; do, -4 to 5 lbs., 26c; we have it in hand and expect to make front lane when 'all human means in many pears Snow which feel an w`I t1o, 8 • to. 4 lbs., 24c; roosters, 22c; Veteran Author -Engineer a defiinte .announcement in the near I failed." ' In its flight through the bar-' Thursday to a depth o! six or seven _ turkeys 47c, geese, 28c; ducklings, 5 p��s Awa in Ottawa future: raise the pigeon was hit by a shell inhes, although quite soft, remained �' Beans -Can. hand-picked, $3.6D. to - -- y A fair trial, he Faid, would ,likely be splinter that carried away its claws. !over the holidays under a temperature;. 90 bushel; rimes, $8.46 to $3.60. Ottawa. -J. H. E Secretan veteran given the carrying of mails by air- The pigeon will be mounted and plat -;that hovered between a minimum of °�-----•i3 ed in the Verdun war museum. Ma Cts-Syrcp, per Imp- p probably ; gr lepras and amaximum- t el de - $2.80• per 5 -gal., $2.15 civil engineer.�uddenlyuhere on Dec. first, bit if conditions and results ---- - green above zero, to the great delight = r lane, retool on a small basis at _ _ { to conteur, died =2.25 per gal.;gs- warranted it, the system Likely would Canick's Leather Output Iof the 3ounger residents. To -day the ma, :w su r, lb., 2b 28c 22nd, aged 7 He was for many be increased. Largest in Five Years' snow began to disappear rapidly _ Honey -80-1b. tins, 12% to 13c; 10- years on the :ur•.-eyinrg staff of the - g _ !•under a rising temperature, rain and 1b. tins, 12% to 13c; '544.. tine, 13 to Canadian P"i is Railway under Sir l's'eet' 18%c; 2%-117. tins, 16c. Wiliam Van Horne and was associat- Coal Famine Gave Half Of Ottawa. -Canada's leather industry _ 7 3.40 to 4.b0 r doz. s the- to show improvement ac- Comb honey—$3.40 $ per I ed with the construction of t e England a Chill Christmas Smoked meats -Hams, med., 28 to !way. Disabled by rheumatism in the y 1 cording to reports issued' by the Do- Ice Cream is Sold 80c; cooked hams, 42c; smoked roll`s, late 90's, he visited the Yukon and, minion Bureau o! Statistics. The 6c; breakfast bacon 82 to 36c; backs, Windsor, England, Dec, .26.—Even value of the output by Canadian tan- at BCIOW Zero ' later -wrote a number of books whichy aeries during 1925 was $26,141,217, bon e:esa, 33 to 40c. His Majesty was affected b the coal j Cured meats -Lon clear -bacon, 56 are -considered authoritative of the famine, the result of the long strike, an increase over the preceding year Circle, Alaska. -With the thereto- g >to 70 lbs., $23'; 70 to 90 Ila. $21.60; period, .. which gave half of England a shiver-! of $485,542 or two per cent. Prices meter at 40 below, ice cream so:d1%0` irolli, Ila, and up, $22.34; eavyweight ___ 6__ Ing Christmas. -a`olla, in barrels, $42.50; heavyweight •• ,• � for all kinds of leather averaged about rapidly at $1.75 a quart here to -day.' • "rolls, $89 60 per bhl. People are hungering for the rest The King and his family had the same in 1925 as in 1924. There It was said to be the first shipment Lard --Pure bhl.a, 14by to 15Vsc;g enough- coal for their fireplaces at were 104 tanneries aperating in Can- of that delicacy from Seattle to any tubs, 16 to 16t/sc; pails, .16�z to 17c; truths taught by the Bible.=Dr. Sandringham Castle, but the cars Of; oda last year. point within the Arctic Circle. sprints, 17% to 18c; shortening tierces, Campbell Morgan_ coal which His Majesty ordered for', _,____ _-__ __• _._--- -- --- •;_T: _ __ -_ - goo aged'del poor persons at Wind. AUTOMOBILE WRECKED IN SIXTY FOOT ONTARIO LEGISLATURE OPENS 17TH _ _ Cor were delayed and discovered the any at sidings at Nuneaton. At the ~ - King's special request the coal -way PLUNGE, OCCUPANTS HARDLY INJURED I rushed to Windsor and arrived in ! time to provide a continuow fir a-fo most of the King's wards. Toronto. -The Brat session of On- form of strengthening certain* girder -__.,... _ _ _ Hamilton, Dec. 26. -Edwin B. tows iron; Dundas Road to Brantford _ facto's 'Seventeenth Legislature will supports, and will not be. completed Gastle, his wife, and an 11 -year-old Three cars figured in the accident, t I daughter escaped death as by a mir- One car was stationary. Its o'.vno until Jan. 15 at the earliest. The Canada Included on Beam open - open on Wednesday, Feb. 2. An an (corrin session, it is confider". fes ode before noon on Christmas Day was adjusting chains. The road was ' will run considerably longer than did Wireless Communication •rsouncement to this effect'was made g y � iwhen their automobile, in collision ;ry. bI!. Gastle was upbound. A by Premier Ferguson guson following A. two-� the last, which occupied less than Sydney, N.S.W.-Experiments Lav- with another vehicle on the Ancaster, third car driven by bliss Gladys .hour Council with his Cabinet, eight weeks. g ung proved the feasibility of beam: Mountain, plunged over a 60 -foot ern- I _3rown . cf Ancaster, in which Nli: s The February 'opening will mark Besides the (',overnment control pol- wireless communication between Great! bankment and was wrecked by rude Barkfield of the same village was a pas of the first official appearances `fey, various important taxation re- Britain and Australia, the Marconi' boulders. I passenger, was downbound. of the new Lieutenant -Governor of the I ductions have been promised by the Co. ex Cts to inaugurate` service on Miss Gladys Blown and Miss Bark -1 ' As Loth upbound and downbound _ :province,. W. •a e, o s ceed Ila Honor Col. Harr Cockshutt, now announced. A reduction of $b a commercial sca o between t two j other. car, also were injured. Miss the automobi'e driven by Miss Brown, Harry countries, beginning in Match. a, ..in office early next month. Mr..Ross, per year in motor license fees has al- Communication with Canada will Brown Suffered a broken ankre and' it is said, skidded and crashed into on this occasion, will execute the time-' ready been effected by order -in -Coup- Probably be opened some six or eight injuries ''to her back. Their car did Mr. Gast:•e's car. The latter car was tj -,lhonored formality of delivering the cil, but the Legisisture wi`:l also have weeks afterwards. d not leave the road, swerved toward the edge of the steep :-Speech from the Throne. The identity to • pass tho increased municipal in- _ v--_; . •' Mr. and tics. Gastle and daughter embankment, Mr. Gast:e nisde frau- 4 of the House members who are to come tax exemptions, which the Gov were flung from the c'ar,after it turn- tic efforts to stop his heavy car, but move sewn a rens in a ledged -itself io asset, World '& Oldest Legislator on ed over once, and luckily escaped being it snapped off three. stout highway ; wiZ not be made known, it was learn• and will also have to approve the cut Duty 8t a. OttaWweight -when- stn ran over the cable, and plunged "ed from the Prime Minister, until i in the amusement 'taxes, which has it turned over a second time. Strange to the boul ars many ee _ ..aftei'the first of the new year, i been announced. Canada has what she believes to be I to say, they were able to walls to the The top of the 'car was crashed in. a While the House opens a full weekThe new Par:lament when it con- the oldest legislator in the world. He top of the embankment where another Both doors were torn off. The front earlier this year that it diel last, there vanes wilt he the, first one based upon is on the verge of one hundred years car passed and conveyed, them to i whee:s and the engine were also vir- Is little doubt but that the inaugural redistributed Ontario. In place, of of age. He is Hon. Goerge Casimir' Brantford, where they had Christmas'tually demolished. Mi Gastle suffered cereanonies would have been held stiiR the Ill members representing the old Dessaulles, who was born in -1527 in dinner with friends. scratches and bruises. Mrs. Gastle earlier had not some necessary alters-, constituencies, there wit be 112 mem- Quebec Province: And he turned up The accident happened near Bul- complained today of injuries to one tions to the Assembly chamber Inter-! bars representing the new alignment for the Senate sitting, walking in pa- n:er'a ice cream par.or on the }ons arm. She was unable to raise it. Her r :fen These alterations tab the. of the ridings. aided. bill which the Provincial highway fol- daughter escaped with minor injuries. F -_ r ... . .. . �1 . i µ � Xf M'y:�. .'i f A up ..' ..c.. .a .;;'Ds...'•Y ^._ t -.',:. �, y,-, Y , •.p.. r s4 -.# -.. ....i.. 'y„„i• ... ..... :.... .-. -"' -, .•.s, � �... +. tlf•" , Y.. ) .F' :w"�'• L r '"�' ti . ' i 'r,a. '••ti 4 '•,,,._.,s�4•,'`-..,''s=�' .•e" '4%..'S.. iq t rl" i_ ".,t.� tl. ••,'4• ��'._ - ... :e. �.. ", �.•..,, ..t:lt,s ••h..t ICTROLA STYLE: FULL. Cd8- . ;.,,,.....,,,.: - . r.. •• -'.:,.; t .Y _ .. ..: is C .. �. ��Yi• ,.,Sr.r .. z.. - ',- • '.. '•CS! -rte .. �.., ..4 • •.. Y M .f'^ t A'k �'..:.,.,,.. . _.: �; •: . :. " . 1�. '�i?K w' M1 1 +5.. r 4 tf 4 , ,..,+_, ,,•v.:� .1 1.7'''- „ ...+,, N" L'• 'p „k z•L,;. d. • ! N�. .. .. ., . . .i�w r• .' A Ra. .r,4C.-• Md. a .... • .. . .. .. ...ice' •-� �, -�•. .'. Royal East, Montreal. � �, !r .d ♦1 17'• 3, call:.t infallible wouid -n improb-; r. \ - �-- A Map of English able, Wehave not ia..iknow- i „d Literature. ledge or infallible judgment, know-' _ driving out constipatfoa and indfges- seen them. Elizabeth said quietly, as dean - The time has been- At hN Pochapa, tion; colds and simple fevers. Con -'though she were passing along a y` . not wholly past -when the words - )RK Won PEt)FLE Find New Health by Improving i1 you feel run down, it means that :your blood is.thin and watery, that '_your vitality is low. You do not sleep _weld and are tired wheq you rise in _ the moaning. You find n,o pleasure In your meads and arae Iistlees and dls- pirkted at your work. You have no Imergy to enjoy yourself. Thousands of men are run down by _ anxieties of work. - Thousands of wo- men are broken down by their house- hold toil, with t•lTed limbs and aching backs. Thousands• of girls are pale, list- iese- and Without_ ithout attraction. It. all means the same'thing-thin and wat- ery blood, vitality run down, anaemia, poor appetite, palpitating heart, short breath. Do not submit to this. Get new Vincent Richards, "Babe Ruth," Suzanne Leng:an and Wafter Hagen ji t t: tory of Literature will redouble the in. ;.,. blood and with 1. new vitality. Where oa the roof garden of Vancouver hotel just before Hagen played his exhibl- • ' • • it ,Uig tel of the book itself. ' 1a no difficulty In doing this. Dr. Wil It will be worse thaw useless to offer "" h Vo tion match on the new Langaragolf course at'Soutancufer. Ill Pink Pills build up and enrich, either to young or old a guide to the the blood, which brings with it neer health and vitality. The man, woman � D beauties of Literature or a handbook or girl who takes Dr. Williams' Pink NE I,IMFOR QLD! plias is never run down. Their friends to literary appreciation What can be dome Is to provide, on whatever 1 _ scale, a ronspectus or map of the long', 2 OU06 how energetic they are, what a -- --of-- Literature as it flows fine appetite they have and how much Wonders of a Clever Craft. t through the English landscape, pre- �+ they enjoy life. pared by writers • whopleasure in You can get these pills through any It is not so many years ago, writes flesh-oc5ored they are made of a Bps. se Q9y��,_ol_.ths two-sided kind, and -• - dtsaier-ter-medleiner--or-by-ma)1. at 50 a London journalist, when, ff anyone ciao kine, and with the usual 11aea on - _ - -- - ' —Dente a boa from The Dr. Williams' lost a leg, they ham -either to face -the theur, have fingers which, with a move t1074 who have the necessary restraint to � •! Medicine Co Brockville, Ont. Hfflong use of crutches or wear a anent, pick up a tumbler, fork, knife praise few words, and the •necessary int --+a-- — wooden peg stump leg. And, if they or even a pfu' The two forefingers I cur scholarship to &�'a iniormsUtoa-a* ately and in the right proportion. The Forest Lagoon. Moet an arm. there was but the choice imove about and close on the thumb But once given the true Intel- At the end of the straight avenue of of pinniug the empty sleeve across in quite natural fashion. lectual wand-arlust, a map like this ' their chest, or of having a wooden I Another type of arm has as adjust - may lead us far ? ds forests cut by the intense glitter of the i stump -arm with a hook `at the end or !able ratchet, operating a split hook river, the sun appeared unclouded and i In this voyage we are ezploiers c. dazzling, poised low over the water a dummy, and uaeIebe hand. That will grip and swing) s gold club, _i We may. travel aver known regloas, .. I,•nri—rhT1_oii_l—anSthi&�¢�----.•r' that shone smoothly like a band of A11 that�ho_w_eses - �r�shang®d -bet but even la those there ere diecoverles metal. The forests, somber and dull, If, now, you had the mtsforiuue to Ica;e ! movement of the arm stump z9laes the to be made. The map we now draw IL leg, you could be fitted with one hand to the mouth, These sidentifie will not be one, that can be bought ry r stood motionless and sL'ent on each with which you could, literally, do limbs must be. seen to be bel2eved, A SMART RAGLAN COAT FOR side of the broad -stream. At the foot THE JUNIOR MISS. (even from the beat profeeeioasd be. the ,big. towering trees. ttvngless' everything, and none would know you and worn to be fully eppreelated. And had an artiflcW member. You could an arm weighs but 22 ounces' + carve o ,the record of our own ob. fir 'nips, palms roe from the m'ud of the nark, run, ride play golf, cricket, I Today's artifiMal eyes have not s ! Soft woo:en material makes this eervatione, and traced upon the chart 4 j 'bank, in bunches of Ieaves .enormous ihockey-ani thing. A b,000 miles 1 rized. glassy, lifeless appearance. They 1 Serle' raglan -sleeve coat, The com- of wbich we alone have the secret ' unci heavy, that buss unstfrring over Portable armhole is always a joy to I and the use. It wb-1 not be a map of , world tramp was made recently by a match, move is perfect conjunction I the brown swirl of eddies_ In the with the regi member, and dilate and the growing Qtr). The tailored ookllar our own island merely, but a survey man with ea arilflclal leg' ` I Which !s convertible may be fastened the inhabited world. ]ror though ttillacss of the air every tree, every y These legs are made of duralumin, a ; contract in company with We natural t � , Feat, every bough, every ten of i - t closely about the neck as illustrated, , we to modern Europe have not the light but immensely viscus meta', ere. i or left open. The large patch -pocket honor dine to founders and benefactors. creeper, and every petal of minutes Every joint -in the les f+ on bail bear. :desert;. W. J. Wilson and Co:. of I � g � Pce r.' blic"oms seemed to have been be Ings, and at:t2re hip there !s a "unfver• ( Bt'dford Row, London, w•bose art:licial I and wide tarn -back cutis, together i ws have the acids donde of the peat 'witched Into an Immobility perfect and 1 with the smart cut, make No. 1074 a for our inherh'ance, and OUT literatures 81ta1. histo an moved on the rivet I sal" joint shich eaablrs onp to turn limbs are dzscribed above; -told me tical and eaai•1 fashioned style. � are today main streams into which �! idle leg and foot in any drrt*ctlan. I that. to Dae of the last parties of Ars- i p y y but the eight paddles that rose Haab- standing the leg is rigid. If, after am• tnalinns to return home every man i Cut in sizes S, 10, 14 and 14 years. more ancient rias of thought bass Ing regularly, dipped together with a putatian _at the hf'p, the wearer de- had one ur more of these artificial false 10 requires 2.a yards 86 -inch, or, flowed . doan as tributarles.-IFlfsae•y g single spfas'h.; , while the steersman I sires to sit, a slight pressure releases w'ondere, and of the crowds who '2% yards 64 -inch material. 20 cents. Nei•bolt, In •'Studies Green and GTiay." _ a swept right and left with a periodic the knee and hip joints. unci a s'e%t 1'anytbimg! w•atcbed them embark not one noticed ' The designsillustrated in our new and sudden flour'ish of his 61ade de- can be taken 1n the moat natural man Fashion Book are advance sty.ea for 7f!tte Giving. scribing a gllnting semicircle . above j ner: Unlike natural joints, these in-' - .,the bonfire dressmaker, and the woman - hfa head. The churned -up avatar frothed ! A Chestnut. or girl who desires to wear garments Nae was not only the smallest gen3otis ball -Dearing ones do not get die dable for taste, simplicity and oh13d the second grade, but she alongside with .a confused murmur. I stiff with age. gout, or. rheumatica: -) He- -"Ah-darling, as we pit togetber 1?en p y seemed to have lees of material sup The mea poled in the chording i economy tvifl .find her desires fu}fl)led a And there fe no rubbing or weight at +, nnder the spreading branches of this In ohr tterns. Price of the book 10 p'h' and comfort than the other child- waterr The creek broadened, opening the point of amputation. wherever 1 soothe fres I declare ori my honor that pa out tato s wide sweep of s atagaant I cents the copy. ren In fact sometimes else hardly %4 that may be. The w•elght of a full les , you are the only girl I ever loved. ii. had enough clothing to attend school lagoon, The forts receded from the. Is but three and a halt pound's, _and i Sbe--"You always.say sucb appropr•f- ( HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. i marshy bank, leaving a level strip of the contours of the body _ take that ate things. Paul, This is a chestnut- , Write your name and address plain- f Ot �} �is111e arrived at $cook. bright green. ready grass to frame the _ neatly dressed in a good school frock. d fly; tree"' ly, giving number and else of such a lovely little cast and a pretty lit t14 reflected biuenees of the skr, A fleecy I Arms are, more wonderful then Ings. ---o-" -- 1 patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in bat. Everyone spoke about bow niers - pink cloud drifted high above, trailing,, .rhe lifelike hands, perfectly shaped, Minard's Liniment, -ever reelable stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap She looked in theca, but it seemed to et' the delicate colorings of its image un- __ it careful) for each number and Y Nes the Roaring leave, sad the slivery 9) be a tiYryetery toad she Dame to have'i blossoms of the lotus. A little house, d bo Patter Dept perched on high piles, appeared black i - In the distance. -Joseph Conrad, lq, address your or er n , l them Nellie seemed to want to tell. Wilson Pub:ishing Co., 73 West Ade-' I but appsreatly had promised not to, laide 8t•, Toronto. Patterns sent by, veral days afterward the teacher return mail. i and the mother of Elizabeth, one of a, 's ]pIMI GRAI1iOPHONE. -----4 Nellieo.a$smares, were d scuseias CHILDHOOD COASTiPATIO the chikdsen The reacher spoke ab how nide NeViis was looking the I&A a. $ ' ICTROLA STYLE: FULL. Cd8- _ r — f feat dayik j d how. happy she was that 1% INET, plays sip recor4s, 48 $else- " en fufalitble guide is of academic fat-; �RI��/r_7G�aaf��$: tiona, automatic. Value $95.00 fox .QO �araateed. Poiaenn,.8AILMnnat - ; pori ance only. That say function of', Royal East, Montreal. w �, !r the human mind should deserve to be' Tablets_ The Tabkets are a mC�d but I lag laeident She had missed several aR call:.t infallible wouid -n improb-; thorough laxative which never tail to ( pieces of Elizabeth's outdrawn cloth - �-- A Map of English able, Wehave not ia..iknow- i kerning them M". Gaspard Daigie, De- i Ing and had asked the child if she had Literature. ledge or infallible judgment, know-' _ driving out constipatfoa and indfges- seen them. Elizabeth said quietly, as dean - The time has been- At hN Pochapa, tion; colds and simple fevers. Con -'though she were passing along a y` . not wholly past -when the words - cer•tting tem NIrs, Gaspard Daigle, De• I secret, "Why, yes, I gave them to "Pleasure". and "education" seamed to ikaow; It is never sate for any man to; ". . i }err. with. one another. But modern main, Que.. w•riteF; "Baby's Own Tab -'.Nellie? I couldn't wear them any - benetlt to my f more and they just fit her." - thought is recovering tot -us an old and , lets hav been of :great little boy who was sufferlag from con- I ---:.-- almost forgotten wisdom. We are pates In the limitation belonging to , '� learning to see ellueatiou as the stipation and to Jiges0on. They quick-' Pay Up. him now he is in the Gushing .Young Pupil- -"Ah, profe* - ..rn JCti growth of the human powers... .Just s ;'• �••? 41 as no one can for long devote himself as be:ongs to -a method of trial and or." I if ;' even to a game without beginning to by medicine dealers or by marl at 25c •all to jou.' box from The Dr. Williams' Helicine i Profe3sar of Music -"Pardon me, j take an llhtereet in the technique and '' r. e x i Il even the hdstory of it, so for any child mistake before we make it, and ap- who is really a reader the time will d _ _ ---e-- y 6=4'when the technique and the his n t . Do not submit to this. Get new Vincent Richards, "Babe Ruth," Suzanne Leng:an and Wafter Hagen ji t t: tory of Literature will redouble the in. ;.,. blood and with 1. new vitality. Where oa the roof garden of Vancouver hotel just before Hagen played his exhibl- • ' • • it ,Uig tel of the book itself. ' 1a no difficulty In doing this. Dr. Wil It will be worse thaw useless to offer "" h Vo tion match on the new Langaragolf course at'Soutancufer. Ill Pink Pills build up and enrich, either to young or old a guide to the the blood, which brings with it neer health and vitality. The man, woman � D beauties of Literature or a handbook or girl who takes Dr. Williams' Pink NE I,IMFOR QLD! plias is never run down. Their friends to literary appreciation What can be dome Is to provide, on whatever 1 _ scale, a ronspectus or map of the long', 2 OU06 how energetic they are, what a -- --of-- Literature as it flows fine appetite they have and how much Wonders of a Clever Craft. t through the English landscape, pre- �+ they enjoy life. pared by writers • whopleasure in You can get these pills through any It is not so many years ago, writes flesh-oc5ored they are made of a Bps. se Q9y��,_ol_.ths two-sided kind, and -• - dtsaier-ter-medleiner--or-by-ma)1. at 50 a London journalist, when, ff anyone ciao kine, and with the usual 11aea on - _ - -- - ' —Dente a boa from The Dr. Williams' lost a leg, they ham -either to face -the theur, have fingers which, with a move t1074 who have the necessary restraint to � •! Medicine Co Brockville, Ont. Hfflong use of crutches or wear a anent, pick up a tumbler, fork, knife praise few words, and the •necessary int --+a-- — wooden peg stump leg. And, if they or even a pfu' The two forefingers I cur scholarship to &�'a iniormsUtoa-a* ately and in the right proportion. The Forest Lagoon. Moet an arm. there was but the choice imove about and close on the thumb But once given the true Intel- At the end of the straight avenue of of pinniug the empty sleeve across in quite natural fashion. lectual wand-arlust, a map like this ' their chest, or of having a wooden I Another type of arm has as adjust - may lead us far ? ds forests cut by the intense glitter of the i stump -arm with a hook `at the end or !able ratchet, operating a split hook river, the sun appeared unclouded and i In this voyage we are ezploiers c. dazzling, poised low over the water a dummy, and uaeIebe hand. That will grip and swing) s gold club, _i We may. travel aver known regloas, .. I,•nri—rhT1_oii_l—anSthi&�¢�----.•r' that shone smoothly like a band of A11 that�ho_w_eses - �r�shang®d -bet but even la those there ere diecoverles metal. The forests, somber and dull, If, now, you had the mtsforiuue to Ica;e ! movement of the arm stump z9laes the to be made. The map we now draw IL leg, you could be fitted with one hand to the mouth, These sidentifie will not be one, that can be bought ry r stood motionless and sL'ent on each with which you could, literally, do limbs must be. seen to be bel2eved, A SMART RAGLAN COAT FOR side of the broad -stream. At the foot THE JUNIOR MISS. (even from the beat profeeeioasd be. the ,big. towering trees. ttvngless' everything, and none would know you and worn to be fully eppreelated. And had an artiflcW member. You could an arm weighs but 22 ounces' + carve o ,the record of our own ob. fir 'nips, palms roe from the m'ud of the nark, run, ride play golf, cricket, I Today's artifiMal eyes have not s ! Soft woo:en material makes this eervatione, and traced upon the chart 4 j 'bank, in bunches of Ieaves .enormous ihockey-ani thing. A b,000 miles 1 rized. glassy, lifeless appearance. They 1 Serle' raglan -sleeve coat, The com- of wbich we alone have the secret ' unci heavy, that buss unstfrring over Portable armhole is always a joy to I and the use. It wb-1 not be a map of , world tramp was made recently by a match, move is perfect conjunction I the brown swirl of eddies_ In the with the regi member, and dilate and the growing Qtr). The tailored ookllar our own island merely, but a survey man with ea arilflclal leg' ` I Which !s convertible may be fastened the inhabited world. ]ror though ttillacss of the air every tree, every y These legs are made of duralumin, a ; contract in company with We natural t � , Feat, every bough, every ten of i - t closely about the neck as illustrated, , we to modern Europe have not the light but immensely viscus meta', ere. i or left open. The large patch -pocket honor dine to founders and benefactors. creeper, and every petal of minutes Every joint -in the les f+ on bail bear. :desert;. W. J. Wilson and Co:. of I � g � Pce r.' blic"oms seemed to have been be Ings, and at:t2re hip there !s a "unfver• ( Bt'dford Row, London, w•bose art:licial I and wide tarn -back cutis, together i ws have the acids donde of the peat 'witched Into an Immobility perfect and 1 with the smart cut, make No. 1074 a for our inherh'ance, and OUT literatures 81ta1. histo an moved on the rivet I sal" joint shich eaablrs onp to turn limbs are dzscribed above; -told me tical and eaai•1 fashioned style. � are today main streams into which �! idle leg and foot in any drrt*ctlan. I that. to Dae of the last parties of Ars- i p y y but the eight paddles that rose Haab- standing the leg is rigid. If, after am• tnalinns to return home every man i Cut in sizes S, 10, 14 and 14 years. more ancient rias of thought bass Ing regularly, dipped together with a putatian _at the hf'p, the wearer de- had one ur more of these artificial false 10 requires 2.a yards 86 -inch, or, flowed . doan as tributarles.-IFlfsae•y g single spfas'h.; , while the steersman I sires to sit, a slight pressure releases w'ondere, and of the crowds who '2% yards 64 -inch material. 20 cents. Nei•bolt, In •'Studies Green and GTiay." _ a swept right and left with a periodic the knee and hip joints. unci a s'e%t 1'anytbimg! w•atcbed them embark not one noticed ' The designsillustrated in our new and sudden flour'ish of his 61ade de- can be taken 1n the moat natural man Fashion Book are advance sty.ea for 7f!tte Giving. scribing a gllnting semicircle . above j ner: Unlike natural joints, these in-' - .,the bonfire dressmaker, and the woman - hfa head. The churned -up avatar frothed ! A Chestnut. or girl who desires to wear garments Nae was not only the smallest gen3otis ball -Dearing ones do not get die dable for taste, simplicity and oh13d the second grade, but she alongside with .a confused murmur. I stiff with age. gout, or. rheumatica: -) He- -"Ah-darling, as we pit togetber 1?en p y seemed to have lees of material sup The mea poled in the chording i economy tvifl .find her desires fu}fl)led a And there fe no rubbing or weight at +, nnder the spreading branches of this In ohr tterns. Price of the book 10 p'h' and comfort than the other child- waterr The creek broadened, opening the point of amputation. wherever 1 soothe fres I declare ori my honor that pa out tato s wide sweep of s atagaant I cents the copy. ren In fact sometimes else hardly %4 that may be. The w•elght of a full les , you are the only girl I ever loved. ii. had enough clothing to attend school lagoon, The forts receded from the. Is but three and a halt pound's, _and i Sbe--"You always.say sucb appropr•f- ( HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. i marshy bank, leaving a level strip of the contours of the body _ take that ate things. Paul, This is a chestnut- , Write your name and address plain- f Ot �} �is111e arrived at $cook. bright green. ready grass to frame the _ neatly dressed in a good school frock. d fly; tree"' ly, giving number and else of such a lovely little cast and a pretty lit t14 reflected biuenees of the skr, A fleecy I Arms are, more wonderful then Ings. ---o-" -- 1 patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in bat. Everyone spoke about bow niers - pink cloud drifted high above, trailing,, .rhe lifelike hands, perfectly shaped, Minard's Liniment, -ever reelable stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap She looked in theca, but it seemed to et' the delicate colorings of its image un- __ it careful) for each number and Y Nes the Roaring leave, sad the slivery 9) be a tiYryetery toad she Dame to have'i blossoms of the lotus. A little house, d bo Patter Dept perched on high piles, appeared black i - In the distance. -Joseph Conrad, lq, address your or er n , l them Nellie seemed to want to tell. Wilson Pub:ishing Co., 73 West Ade-' I but appsreatly had promised not to, laide 8t•, Toronto. Patterns sent by, veral days afterward the teacher return mail. i and the mother of Elizabeth, one of a, 's egoon. _ The Inner Light. _ -----4 Nellieo.a$smares, were d scuseias CHILDHOOD COASTiPATIO the chikdsen The reacher spoke ab how nide NeViis was looking the I&A a. $ ' The question whether conscience is , _ r — f feat dayik j d how. happy she was that "".t " en fufalitble guide is of academic fat-; Constipated children can Sud prompt she was able to have such warm cloth- ` pori ance only. That say function of', relief through the use of Baby's Oar 1 tng: The mother then told the follo�c i �, !r the human mind should deserve to be' Tablets_ The Tabkets are a mC�d but I lag laeident She had missed several aR call:.t infallible wouid -n improb-; thorough laxative which never tail to ( pieces of Elizabeth's outdrawn cloth ' able, Wehave not ia..iknow- i kerning them M". Gaspard Daigie, De- i Ing and had asked the child if she had ledge or infallible judgment, know-' j i' driving out constipatfoa and indfges- seen them. Elizabeth said quietly, as dean led-ge and"judgment furnish the rnate- tion; colds and simple fevers. Con -'though she were passing along a y` . sial for conscience. But one fihing we sF :'; cer•tting tem NIrs, Gaspard Daigle, De• I secret, "Why, yes, I gave them to ikaow; It is never sate for any man to; ". . i main, Que.. w•riteF; "Baby's Own Tab -'.Nellie? I couldn't wear them any - benetlt to my f more and they just fit her." igo against his conscience. To admit that conscience partici= f = ?._ lets hav been of :great little boy who was sufferlag from con- I ---:.-- A. pates In the limitation belonging to , '� stipation and to Jiges0on. They quick-' Pay Up. him now he is in the Gushing .Young Pupil- -"Ah, profe* ,p all things bunion is not to admin .that we have only such copviction of right - + I ly relieved and beat of health." The Tablette are •eold 1 nor, if ever 1•rnake a pianist III owe it -i ' as be:ongs to -a method of trial and or." "' ` by medicine dealers or by marl at 25c •all to jou.' box from The Dr. Williams' Helicine i Profe3sar of Music -"Pardon me, j r•or. R•e learn by our mi-stakt_,-, but there is that which warns against the, '' r. e x a Co., Brockville. Out t young lady, my terms are quarterly mistake before we make it, and ap- r Y _ _ ---e-- y in advance." plies the lesson afterward in terms of . An Incomplete vote. { admonition against recurrence. Not only in the physical world, but much -<< The great English universities re- i Parliament, just like' Ol%i?�T % �I17P.J' V s - more is the moral life of men, there turn members to ( operates what Matthew Arnold called "a ' * the borough cities. But the election is traditionally a viva voce affair. The I 1 st nadir bnl.dees• aid p j, uf+todaYeflir+ Power, not ourselves, which makes for righteousness." The merging of; _- voter littoncea+ his choice, which Is nn�, rig but7a�esagtn g Pro uael . illuslra$bs�d. that Power not ourselves with the r` thereupon registered by the eAectlon _( power lost is ourselves in 'the realm i cl'in'k• gesticans. Ss Toe of moral action Is the triumph of God ! Sometimes the praclfce has ids I Q +tUsdoust SwilifteG" working In its, while we concurrently i ' amusing side. In the faatous election , In' which Gathcx-ne Hardy ousted Glad- 3" Aatlar•e at w.. ' and freely work out oitr own salvation.. - w : s - stone from one of the seats for Oxford romato. oat ,. "The spirit of man is the candle of University t.hiere was a dispute over ; % the Lord". is an ancient af9rmation, dei '')closing the kinship of our sense of when Herman Trelle, of Wembley, ton, he located on his original home - hen one vote given by a graduate who was with that 'which determines the God. The ie ♦♦ Alberta,commenced homestead- that he stead of 160 acres. He now farms 800 and in ten years has made him weak In asplrates- He voted thus: "Glad -4 mean Throat Husky? very essence o[ Dandle Ing in 1920, he confessed But acres inde endent, in this new Agri- 'Asci}," _ dim at best, but there is always light for the next step. vary little •a mit farming. when the awards were made at the self cultural area where millions of aeres land await settlement. Gladstonr's supporters claimed the! Minard's Linemen ves qu c relief. Rub it on the throat , invi=t n' Thane Is constant neea•.to- <; ` 1926 Ittternational Live Stock Expo- sltion and Grain and Hay Show at of good still In the sixteen years bf the It vote. "Oh, nes," Bald their opponents, "he and chest. at: -the importance of loyalty to conscf- the t encs. Spite of all the evil things that Chicago, Herman Trelle had broken national competitions at -Chicago this is the fourteenth time the award never flnishell Gladstone'." evil n:efi have done in. good rnn- a world's record; he had won the championships in both wheat of the grand championship has come "That. may he" was the retort. 'but science, those is no nth:: hope for grand and oats and was the fiNt exhibitor to a Canadian. Trelle's prize-winning I he nevex began hardy.' ♦ . :human lite than an intelli,enf and to win both of.these crowns. wheat was of the 1Margiia variety, I i '.;.courageous loyalty to the light within. The new wheat and oats champion was at Kendrick, Idalio, 31 years which was originated at the Canadian Government Experimental Farm at A�j'g `IIVANTF.D •� �_�_j� O� . - - Tharp, ultimately, mast nue listen for T- 't and came to All, with his Otte Wa by Dr, Charles Saunders in ----�_.- >ra„r@r Rd� w� rhe categorica rmperaitv`e .ot atilt-' Immamtel fia•nt wrote and spoke. In renta in 1900. He was edacated at iofrom the 1904. It was a sample fon a-613=acre field, which about 4,000 where for very profitable hrnlse-- that way God workv withio, while tee dmonton and graduated University of Alberta as a civil ,yielded bushels or a proximately i 0bushels to hold neceswtt • Write quick for work out the stable character which the best hope• engineer. During the war, he served Canadian Air Force. and in the acre. His prize-winning oats were Victory strain which yielded about territory. .• !C,oldsmlth Bl^os.r -.�. `•+( all- is oar own and world's with the 1920, while on arauney In the Peace 150 bushels to the acre.-CaAAtdian 2t Dundas St. East Toronto ISSUE No. t-'27 ;•fineezinpl-Use Minard's Liniment. River country, northwest of Edmon- National Railways photograph. !1 • W ru•9i—5yha,.•�'t < nC.�r�? �°'F"N`•i".d"2,�hi '��;'4L`"lpi+!� � - 5' R•"'*r�.%J' dry rt �:�.i�,,.":�a'e•- -J t� -. �' :•,..,-- :,},^++•„r t •4... ' - 4' ;� e'P :Yr:,,S life ,c - �, �.f: •rt vy's r' • f� IR' :' • PI'S .i • - � I ' � � � - T �ii�i5 } •LT3per Yesr , 31$stii •paid iu advance. tine Sin;ted. Skates. and Crest • stela $1.�o in advance. i JOHN MURKAR, Proprietor, • Township NOf')inallaaS — Pursuant'to statute the electors of Tuwnsblp Picvet'inK, in the assessment settlement. He thqugl;t the ects. fur a' reduced taxatitrn ProeP were not bright. Thought the best men should be sent to the County Council, -. _ .. _ __ 1 1Z.:,tori kit a: be2agcalied Cllou�ht it too late He thought ktt wi►s x in a lroudp thing fora -luau iii public ltf�-tn 1•eci4tictsad, It made a uia i of bila. If he was un- able to ben eziticiszu he ��as uuHt fol I public pu-ittoo. '�3e did nut think done their full duty to.%vazds the town-'� ship in the equaliz46on-ussesswent agreement. He thought Onlythe _k.J. . While, again 6tated that he •wue a candidiitia for the posltioh o1 second deputy reeve. E. L. Chapruan swted .that he was in the tizld for the positiuu of saco,nd deputy-reiry k g dates h sdsitlettred excepting ptgng G M. il the &Far• sytb for the reevtship, G. L. MiQule- � tun for lit deputy-reev(a, J. A....WI3i.te for LLd deputy•rerve and E. L. Chip• rn+tnHnd R'. J, Tiziacr as rettnciliors, ! RICH R SON'S -:- G. R. o C R -,q r r? He9't quarters for- - d - h 'Coice ldistffa-g fan les _ a, T " . (Oranges,- ?Mixed N gilts,, GrapeB, _ -��� - Cn i� E'S, [� f� aZi��n. , ; O -��+ �� - F1 +�. Etc. c. 1' tc.. a - } �. 99 i � _�l ~'� C� t. iL the of met Township Hall. Brougham, oa AIOn• P g veru best men should be seat o th:e County Council to prctect the.town- election, A. J. Taylor, thanked his mover - day, the 27th inst., the clet� D. R. Beaton. for ship's interests. He thanked his I am agent for Che %Vorld's Gieatest • ''t' presiding, the pur se of " nominating candidates for the poli• mover and seconder. Hugh Pugh explained some items 'Separator. "The Renfrew," Stoves, Scales and - Oil Engines. Fie' try's• - To adl A Merry Xmas and ' tion of reeve. 1st deputp•reeve. 2nd in. the Financial Statement that might famous Flows, Points, Grain Grinders, actions for you; let us guard - • - - deputyreeve and • two • councillors. - 'When the time had expired for re- be misleading. H•e adv`dcared-the erir of a constable to find out Wheel Barrowsetc. Brantford hinder twine and second- $appy (; •Year ceiving nominations, the following pluyment dogs that had not tags and have them hand separators. for sale, I persons were nominated : FOR REEVE' dealt with. Most' of the damage to dogs ^'" ROBT. DEVITT;00"' t the exceedingly wet weather it was ' impossible the - G. M. Forsyth, F. M. Chapman, sheep' was caused by Toronto that did not Nati a tags Much of the BROCGHAM K' CHAR D N so Adam Spears, R. R. Mowbray, John bad roads was due, not to the council, Phone oQ5 Pick. s 'Forgle. F, H, Richardson, Hugh Pugh, but the failure of farmers to turn out in the Heid for municipal honors, 4. M. Forsyth, being re -called, re- - James Todd. to 'do the work. He also referred to - -- --' FIRST DEPUTY- REEVE G. L. Middleton, ,G. M. Forsyth, James Todd. the county engineer's commissionon tocsnship work. Thought.2h per cent' not too high. Pickeringi"H�fidware'Stor-- e SECOND DEPUTY -REEVE James Todd, a former recce, and some of the other speakers. . E. L. Chapman, J. A. White, James 'again nominated for that position. as - -- - concluding Mr. thanked the -Todd, W. H. Moore. well as the other positions, stated : matched pins Aiding and thatched - FOR COUNCILLOR As the houi was late he would not go I floor. Will -make an excellent' W. J. Turner, R. Winter,. W. H. deeply into the discussion ofniunicipal The best policy is to•buy useful preeents for Xmas Gifts. Weetney. E. L. Chapman,- James Todd, F. H. Westney, Murray Bat rett, matters. He favored young men en - tering municipal pocitione. He- had We w''olild sugeet a few of our many licti3 : Hockey Skates, Sticks and • A. J. Taylor, Elmer Powell, Wm. A. already served the township seven good things for the festive Pucks, Kiddie Kars, Wagons and Sleighs, Flash Lights, Knox. of years, and that experience should be Safety Razors. Pocket Kt.ives, Silverware, At'the conclusion the nomination _ thblgathering resoitself i r*. 0 of value should he decide to stand again for a position at the council ICWAMPOoiNG - Pyreza'are, Sonny Blue Graaiteware, a Pair Warm bGloves. or Fauutlets. t• 1liittA,- SU c meet ng an on mottos , board. Economy Should now he con- t weaton was elected to the chair. Fol- sidered its township and county mat- '.' Bowing the usu#I custom the members tare, as taxes are becoming so heavy, OUR shampooing is of the council of 19'28, were called W, J. Turner being nominated' for thorough, being upon. to give an account of their ste•v• the position of councillor, was next done by a method ardship arias the year, called upon. If -there is to -be an ; that invariably sends -• Adam Spears, the retiring reeve,.election, he would be a. candidate, but the patron out with An Electric Iron An Electric Toaster An Electric Hot Plate White Cap Electric Washer 1900 Grsvity:Washer ' 1 ; was first called upon. -- He' extended would not be the one to cause an ` renewed life, vital- A Coleman or. Lantern g the sympathy of the community to G, M. Forsythia his bereavement. his election, A. J. Taylor, thanked his mover F o S A L E t ity and brightness. 1 .Lamp, .-mother having died on Sunday after and seconder, asked the new council full use of our banking service. •'Look Your Beat" I Bridges Committee, being called upon account thr a lingering illness. As chairman of to look after the roads in hie part of actions for you; let us guard - t. gave-ao expenditure& bridge*. On $ your capital, let us assist you in ' . •the Advisory Committee of the County Coun,.il he went aver the expendi-ture. the township, but�was not a Candi. ;'the purchase of more and better R,O.SE ��RIE I Agent for International Farm Machinery and Repairs. - In that department there waa an over. date. J M. Barrett. beinrr called, thanked t the exceedingly wet weather it was ' impossible the BEaCTF CC LTC RE' REFER Our Motto : We have it, can get it, or. it is not made. • 'draft of about 818,520, sad in wiping his mover and seconder• but was not _ BrockSt.,, Whitby k. out this amount this year it made the County taxes very high. He then " in the Heid for municipal honors, 4. M. Forsyth, being re -called, re- ERFECT Phone 3SI J. S. +�� BAj DoN - PIC��►�:+1�1�G Qe s _ ,ggave a detailed account of the ex- ea- the bridges. lied to some of the statements made �y D.QWN aa8mmx 4ana V,d-gaus.Tq ulTNoo.xg a` used as a gra'►n and. feed ware. •diture on county roads and 'in Spears some of the other speakers. tiR with county matters. As chairman house. Corrugated iron. roof, - -- - concluding Mr. thanked the �}, L. Middleton being recalled. of the Finance Committee he went into the County Court matched pins Aiding and thatched electors for the confidence imposed in thought that they were unjustly floor. Will -make an excellent' a him during the past six years by electing.him to the council. He was now re t iring from municipal activi- critised for their work at Whirby. ` - — vities. G. M. Forsyth. the retiring first deputy -reeve. and for the past two two F o S A L E t 0 men in this locality make _ years ebairman of' the ,Roads and full use of our banking service. Bridges Committee, being called upon account thr At eiherr Wcod Station - ARTICULAR actions for you; let us guard - t. gave-ao expenditure& bridge*. On $ your capital, let us assist you in ;'the purchase of more and better n toads and account of C N. R. LOP1.11 t the exceedingly wet weather it was ' impossible the _ .. REFER fully understood and_well served to get all work done _ of your -prosperity Farmers are invited to avail them - now by opening a selves of our local manager's advice- that was intended, consequently there ERFECT is a larger surplus on hand than was A frame buildiug about 20x40, - AST D.QWN aa8mmx 4ana V,d-gaus.Tq ulTNoo.xg intended. r. Forsyth then dealt used as a gra'►n and. feed ware. tiR with county matters. As chairman house. Corrugated iron. roof, of the Finance Committee he went into the County Court matched pins Aiding and thatched the ex ndituree of Cil. He fought strongly against the floor. Will -make an excellent' With Xtna9 so neer at hand we re•foreetrauon scheme in the county garage, workshop, stable etc. are getting ready with lots o£ yin face of the heavy debenture debt. Hedepiotedthe fact D. N. REESOR & SONS, good things for the festive the scheme was Reason. adopted. ,fie then went minutely into . MARKHAM, ONT. j, the .ependituree of . tete various de- ur J� PesLy+Cherrywo Christmas Cake. a ' •talents. w ppoose trimmed, Roc Pln ud- Ph. - to the paying of the entire 18,000 = overdraft chis year,-- than increasing - -- ' -- - - NOtSC® C2 ea c dings, 90c 'each._ Scotch Short Bread and _ greatly the County tax rate. He cnticieed the smountpaid the County , . / ppi1C1t1O11 fOT DZvOTC@ Fried Cakes. .Engineer,- The question of equalize Csnriles, Nlits, OrRngea, Grapes. tion was then discussed. The efforts that were made by the representatives Notice is hereby iriven that Evelyn stockings and decorations of Pickering township to get her May Bateman of the. City of Oshawa; -for the Xmas tree and rite house. _.rights in respect to county taxation in the County and Province of Ontario _ - ` was then explained. Mr. Forsyth �) _ stated that he was a candidate for the accountant, will apply to the Parlia- ment of Canada at the next Session Wedding Cakes a Specialty. position of reeve. thereof, for a Bill 'of Divorce from s•:. G. L. Middleton, second deputy, - her husband, Harold Victor Bateman, _ - - • reeve, being called discussed the in- -now now of the City of Windsor, in the _ y creased tax rate, which 'is about three times what it was Ta or 12 years Courky of -Essex, formerly of - the ' ago.. The township rate, however, City nc Oshawar in the County and Province of Ontario, tailor, the ' ihad not increased during that time, !the increase being due to increased ti Found' of adultery and desertion. .RAO�� 33raultR,0,0 Im .4 Cir q` II n ' Rolls. Talo Surfaced Light- Weight - 35 lbs. COMPETITIVE QUALITY fi Medium 'Weight '.-'45 lbs. FINE QUALITY . Heavy. Weight - -55 lbse -EXTRA FINE QUALITY y Extra Heavyweight 65 lbs: SUPER FINEQUALITY 7 .Roo�C Lu9W Brm' lord, Ont o - Stock Carried, Information Furnished and Service on Brantford Roofing rendered •by :. F. J. Prouse, - - - Pickering J. S. -$alsdon Hardware, - Pickering._ county and school rates, over which Dated at Oshawa, this 29thx day of€RYt thetownsbip council hoe ad contfol. April, A.D., 1926. He was not opposed to the re=forestra- JOSEPH P. MANG'AN, f i HONE 003 tion scheme of the county, which he 4 - 'Oshawa, Ontario,' - ,N,,qPICKEti NCS Ili thought would, prove a good invest• Solicitor for applicant. 12-16 - ment. He also touched upon the _ - - equalized assessment of the county, . Thought that Pickering's interests bad been safe -guarded: As, ebairulan of the Contingencies Committee he went over the expenditure in that de- partment and other experidituies. He was a candidate for the position of first deputy -reeve. 'John A. White, councillor, discussed .,the various items of expenditure, in- cluding relief, bonuses for wire fences, snow shovelling etc., over .which he bad charge. - On account of the large lamodntof wire fences that have .been erected the amount of money spent for snow -shovelling had greatly de- �creased in recent years. He was in she field for the position of second .,deputy. reeve. and he called on the 'electors of Pickering to vote for White and reduced taxes. Councillor E. L. Chapman, chair- man of Damages to Shee Killed by expenditure on sheep killed by dogs, -Moet of the expenditure was due to the sporting dogs owned by wealthy Tot -onto men who have come into the township to reside, but whose neigh - bore decline to inform on them. He s advocated that a constable be appoint. :.led to round up those doge which have :not a license Lag and have them de- etroyed. He thought that efforts td Fw nn— main toward Padua - tion of taxes, and thought that pros. •• .pecte were good for, a reduction. He was a candidate for second deputy. reeve. - F. M, Chapman; nominated for the Wosition of reeve, was called upon. e criticised the action of the County '(Council in Increasing the tax rate to suck an extent. He considered Pick- ering township was Imposed upon. He ptrongly condemned the equalized «` !Z@7Z8r`IOIl�� Cileon's of Guelph •now - offer you a perfected furnace-pipeless M��„�-,.--......•..-«- �� or pipe style—at a sensational price. The first revolutionary irri• �.�-N--a- provement in home heating in half a century—low-priced, efficient, quickly - installed in any home, school or church. Costs Less to Bay— Less to -Use The new Gilson "Magic" is built of,Tungiten Plate. Transmits heat THREE TIMES faster. Patented air -blast burns all the gas and smoke. New type cone-shaped gtate gits more heat units out of fuel, lectric arc welding seals the furnace tight as an egg against leaks of gas, dust of smoke. Barns ' Hasd or Bolt _Coral, Coke or . Wood hard coal §lone a, you get excelltrit results from any kind of fuel—soft coal, coke, oil or gas. You enjoy an extra saving by using low coat fuels, Write for .. Easy Pay>afent Plan A moderate payment down in• stalls the new Gilson "Magic." Learn all the features of this new Catalogue, sketch plan form's, estimates and full information, gladly sup• plied without obligating you in any way. Act at once—this is the time to make plans for heating your home properly. - D. J GORMLEY, Durharton Phone Pickering 1506 Gilson Mfg. Co., Limited 9510 York St.. Guelph J • 9 A `!R Pro"essive Farmers used our Being Fifitacies .'M/MANY of the prosperous men in this locality make full use of our banking service. Let us conduct i116nancial tra>ISs- ' actions for you; let us guard - your capital, let us assist you in ;'the purchase of more and better stock, or other -p�oductivc under- takings. 'The interests -and requirements of agriculture are fully understood and_well served Lis the cornerstone _by 'this bank. of your -prosperity Farmers are invited to avail them - now by opening a selves of our local manager's advice- ravints account of in -all matte.rswhere money is branch- Itmolved' TM H D.QWN aa8mmx 4ana V,d-gaus.Tq ulTNoo.xg " aa2suzyQ ,Gua&' 'H f"-ilougag Xqi?qM tiR «` !Z@7Z8r`IOIl�� Cileon's of Guelph •now - offer you a perfected furnace-pipeless M��„�-,.--......•..-«- �� or pipe style—at a sensational price. The first revolutionary irri• �.�-N--a- provement in home heating in half a century—low-priced, efficient, quickly - installed in any home, school or church. Costs Less to Bay— Less to -Use The new Gilson "Magic" is built of,Tungiten Plate. Transmits heat THREE TIMES faster. Patented air -blast burns all the gas and smoke. New type cone-shaped gtate gits more heat units out of fuel, lectric arc welding seals the furnace tight as an egg against leaks of gas, dust of smoke. Barns ' Hasd or Bolt _Coral, Coke or . Wood hard coal §lone a, you get excelltrit results from any kind of fuel—soft coal, coke, oil or gas. You enjoy an extra saving by using low coat fuels, Write for .. Easy Pay>afent Plan A moderate payment down in• stalls the new Gilson "Magic." Learn all the features of this new Catalogue, sketch plan form's, estimates and full information, gladly sup• plied without obligating you in any way. Act at once—this is the time to make plans for heating your home properly. - D. J GORMLEY, Durharton Phone Pickering 1506 Gilson Mfg. Co., Limited 9510 York St.. Guelph J • 9 A `!R 3!1 W _"T9 I M�_,A M_; �Wlx 0 F TM P_" F ;40, _8 CLAREMONT; Lyman and Mrs. Pilkey agent Christmas with relatives rk- abel McLellan is home for ham. .1 , . ' Ge6ige Cooper Nova Scotia Shingles the holiday@; ­' Coal.. X ves in Va' t S II 8 Ma�Ey­ HarrisCmiss _W, Hi�ath aad son were in -To= pe and son Frank, Chr stmevi with relativesinGalt G41vanized Steel Shingles. spent Xontaoa Ttie8day, Aurora. for salti. at _Joseph Timms spent.-,, Chriatmas- - Miss Be, ssis Oraham of Uxbridge W have, been local best quality on T. PATERSON'S - CLAREMONT agent for the Massey.Harris pay with his brother at Raglan. spent the holldaX with her par MLss Myrtle Thompson, of To. ent8 here., Call and get prices. Company aid,13,01itit d2e haln.d canto, was home for the holtdays. George and Mre. Bentley- spent r pa t ro George and Mrs. Miller, of Myr- the holiday with the'latter's uioth-, patrons e, of Yle farw THOS. A. 1AW1 -tle, Man., are home for the winter. er. Mrs..Lynn. N.W.STAFFORD era o he district. and O. A. and Mrs. ,OverlandT. P. Shirk spent a few days All M. -H. repairs ker)t constantly ,.facuily are holidaying in. London. dui ing the past week with.friends Marble and Granite Dealer. on hand. Wm.- Coates left on Friday to in Vineland and Toronto. Cemetery Lettering etc. 41spend a motith� with- relatives in Morgan Pugh was laid up for a First-class work We also have the agency for the THOS* F. SCOTT - Mono Road. few d,r, with an Ftttack of the flu guaIranteede Luther Bowes, of PeterborO, but is now able to be around again' inngston Road d Pickering Goodyear roducts, Indad. g -ptikes etc. CLAREMONT, ONT, KianPi spent Christmas with his mother, tThe party who borrowed the Mrs, Readman. East Townline. L 'A I block from the Balsam Ed. and Mrs. Perry. of WeotTo- Pheone Whitby M it 32 gravel pit is requested to return G. & 'A. T W Dealer in Ford Cara, new and -.-Tonto, qpent Christmas with G6o. same ponce and save trouble. 27-40 P. O.—Whitby R. R. used. 31y PICKERING, ONT. and Mrs. Morgan Miss Margaret Macnab left on Miss S. E. Evans and brother,Massey-Harris Implements and ,.Monday for Toronto, and on Tues We wish many Repairs. Ralph, spent Christmas with Gen. day, accompanied by. Mrs. Sam .1 'And Mrs. Morgan. Sharpe. of Uxbridge, left for Cali- �Green River Life and Car Insurance. Customers a James and. Mrs. Evans spent fornia where ttiey.will spend the ;A Christmas in Toronto with Chas. winter. -Basket Factory I Phone Clare' 5102 A Bright and Manufacturers of and Mrs. Grant. Out public and continuation Miss Libbie Smith, who has been schools }ll re -open on Monday laid up with a heavy cold, weare after (JhriBtmas -vacation dur Prosperous All kinds of Fru -t Baskets, Maple -Leaf Mutual Fin pleased to gay is recovering: Ing which both teachers and pup- - New':- Year Berry Crates, Insurance Go. John McLellan, electrical engin- ils have been thoroughly enjoying & w of Detroit, is spending week Cheap rates Por farm and country ser themselves. FRANK CHIDLOW Farmers'Bushel Baske I. with his parents at the manse buildings. Skating on Now Year", night, The ratepayers of the village CLAREMONTj ONTARIO Windstorm Insurance or: buildings, loo every Wednesdoy and Satur. met Mondav evening for the par- Clothes Baskets. wind -mills, Silos etc. P of nominating candidates for day evening. Good ice. Band 'Frank Pennock Automobile Insurance the position- A IRAdiin-tinn ki I attendance. t� _. -_ 11�_ . . . of all a. Mrs. A. J. Chandler and 'Miss being required. - A large number Proprietor From August the 15th to Se tem ,Phone Markham 1604 FARMS FOR SALE were nominated, but all retired ex -Atkins, of Toronto, spent the boll• ber the 15th. I will make a day with the former'i parents, J. Luther Pilkey and Win. Jones, reduction in sleigh shoe prices. Write or phone H. sod Mrs, Beal. who are thus elected by acclama- ED BOWMAN Clarence and Mrs. Pengelly, of don. The two who are elected Bring loyour sleighs and wile the have the power to appoint the benefit of these worth w ile Brooklin. spent Christmas Day Wall ..Paper 20 WHITBY, ONT. with the latter'e parents, Thomas the third member. reductions. And Mrs. Paterson. Mrs. Evan@ Ward was taken to L ORNE REID See -the * e, 1926 Sam - ples at Bin The The Fuller Bruh Co., Wellesley Hospital. Toronto, on Monday. We hope the treatment CLAREMONT before buying. ..-Limited rove beneficial to her. Over 5(X) samples to choose from !9prove Y. P. U. will hold its' New CLAREMONT at 10c per roll and up. 'Lill We desire to have a residenb CREAMERY Varnishes right prices. Year meeting on Monday next. A complete line of Paints, Oil"dd The program for the coining representative of the Fuller months will be announced at this and hW Company in Pickering Estimates cheerfully given for all b for immediate work. meetings.interior and exterior 7 townships are buy Highest price paid for P Wm. Gibbous and daughter. decorating. C eo 0 r ght now Ili -Mrs. Crewson sod her husband Cream at the hrFaltmag'presents in large quaz_ andchildren, of Toronto, spentCall or phone 1813 Claremont titles from our salesmen and we the holiday with the fGrmer'8 'Claremont Creamery' have a very extensive line of themis mother, Mrs. T. Gibbons. articles, incluliog Ivory Sets. Tor - The Claremont Choral Union W. G,,BINGHAM toise Shell Sets and Christmas on Give us a trial and be convinced will resume their. class work n IWW", AALPw P novelties as well as the household Wednesday evening, Jan. 5th, at &inter and Decorator cleaning equipment. Our business Lusch 5 C sold is ft has always been good In this dis- Clarem 7 30 o'clock. Anyone wishing to Claremont, Ontano join the class sow given a I C01W and Lmda trict and unless you are a highly special fee. respected citizen with a car, dotrb Next Sunday is Communion Sun- apply for this p9sitiou day in the Baptist Church. - The if you are this type of man ap. ifiret communion service of the :1 ply in person to Chaq. FL StQue New Year should be of special in ..H a .Wa ted RN Colonial Bldg., 13 King 8Z spiration to all. The membersW est, Toronto. 1woold do well to make & special r t: -effort to be present. The pa t will bring New Y(mr mas"ge: quantity of Clover or Alfalfa' ATTY The Christmas tree of the U nit- STANDS FOR THE BEST day sunning `-ed Church Sunday School held in the Community Hall on Wedues- HaY•og of last week was well ,attended.—The roads and Ohe Weik_- .,ther were ideal and the children ..HARRY .,ARNOLD .-.all in fine form, and played their jporta well. A witty address wan Cgleman " given by Rev. E. Orsborn of the Samoan Phone 6100 A Baptist Church. About eighty ty dollars was realized and the Snn- day School is greatly indebted to Pickering, -.Ontario ...the training committee for -their 'efficient work. F. M. C 0 OTE R - Installation ceremonies were' :.CLAREMr7-T Litter- Carriers, Hay Carrierse sarried out in Brougham Union Pumps, Door Tracks, Cow Maaonic Lodge on Monday even- Agent for Ackerr 'n'i� Quality N Bowls. Pressure- Systems Etc.. ing by Wor. Bro. Thos. Paterson, Act the user. Harness. lt*wili:pay you to get my prioeson aasisted by Wor. Bro. A. G. Clark, of Pickering. Thft.f9llowing offi. above before buying elsewhere. FRANK J. PROU M.—W cere were Installed: 1. P n B.ro. Rev. A. McLellan; W. M.— Never Sell'Giain o PICKERlNG, ONTARI43 S. W. -to 'A SE W. Bro. Howard Malcolm; I -.Wi I F� Tomlinson; J. W. ---Bro. Dr. N, -a Dull Market I "Steph*eneon; -Bro. R. J. How; S. D.— Bro. T. E. The Pickering J. D.—Bro. Malt. An- o' sell derson; S. S.—Bro. Hugh Pugh; J.:Than IT DOES not always pay It Viguance committe, —Bro. Thos. Scott; I. G.—Bro. S. grain as soon as the threshing is -,finished. If yon have p my 'many .: - --. ti LloydJohnston- O. G.—Bro.. Fred re a good crop —Aro. I. F. Dopking; and the msir'ket is depressed �eb the bola Eiins; Sec'y he object of -this Association Treag.—W. Bro. D M. Morgan; D. T1 n if -Customers local n;anager of the Standard Bank and arrange a loan Until a LuvLc of C.—W. Bro. M. J. Wilker. An lessen stealin and prosecute the felous, bystersupperwas enjoyed at. the -` :dor their F i R"t fayorable situation presents itself. close when the brethren wereahl'y entertained by' the ' Claremont patronage- YEA Our rMan'ager is alvtays glad.*to dis. 'Masonic Male Quartette, with Mrs. 11 Members lifivilig property 64010a oommusdl addresses cat* immediately W91 may metabee Ward at the. piano, @use such in confidence. given and toasts responded of Exentive committ". e during re g by the- newly elected officers embership fee to visiting the . ri-I . Z Tickets mar be bad trona she Preeldont w, and ng brethren from Picker - secretary onapplies"On., ii;ir and Detroit mod others. —L. D, Banka, 0. S. Palia-t One of the pioneer familiis of Tast Exec. Com. Pickering Township was bereaved STAN DARD BAN K er, X., S. Chapman, Pickering, on Sunday morning last by the ,year CANADA - passing of.Mrs. )Daniel Forsyth. PICKEFING BRANCH—W. F. Law, Manager D. Munro, Jas. Richardson. _9. Forsyth was the daughter ofand "13—Brchev also at kiin, West Hill, Whitby Pissidentl the first white woman born in the TQwnsbfpof Pickering abd she -'Wish M. herself a llfi-lo6g resident of the Pickering She, was for - many 7 EHY7 --- 7 -- year, active member of the .0 - eather Goods store I an years, as Bible. r -HARNESS N -I Baptist Church serving as -orgftn- ist for seventeehand _`A..Merry,C is mas'.*­ class teacher And as president of r supply of, quality Hariiess 'and the Women's Mission Circle'. Her all a Our Parts is now complete. .death, in her 81st year, at the -.8OOTS—GREB :SHOE homeof !1'etr daughter Mrs Brodie, foilowed-no protracted Ill- We have a lirge stock of this Fame L4 'Ag Boot on hand—unbeatable ness which has confined her to her W New, for hard wear and tear. bed for several years. She was Ox. REPAIRING; p're-deceased by her husband A- HAPPY -NE AEAR teen years ago, but is snrvived by .--Tear We maintain our established refutia- two sons, .Robert E., and George tion* for repairing all kind: Malcolm. of Claremont, and two Vo our many' Customers' harness and boots. :11' it daughters, Mrs. (Dr.) Brodie, of Claremont, and Mrs. Fred Madill, Do A, 8 0 0 T T UiGlii BRADLEY.' Call at -3. FINGOLD'S of Toronto. The sympathy of Harness -maker, 'ONTARIO the community Rhone 1402, is extended to them and to all the other relatives who monrn her ioQ9. CL&REMONT -�Vxq;psx -11_1211:1! ::1�1; � �� wy p' -wants Rp.­ 4 N 7 A 1: You mam"t drag me into ft. No bmr,; tion' a. detective. Leave it to to inferred that you did the Peeipsing- inWfl1IIIOu It at the but window." "That, -wilk suit me all right as the crime specialist of the paper," said as Knowles. "But this isn't your dic- V a tated paragraph, is it?" "No," r:ejoined KIJslne. "I shall' call ORANGE -your office at neon to -morrow I in at _Iww.4WRAD0N UU.L'00 PEKOJE & and give you that for publication next! BLEND BEGIN HERE TO -DAY. Larkin. She was noddin': and soil- day, v rna ing, and then her creat young The jii list looked at the detec- Samuel Honeybun, retired English'o ti countryman, finds his rain gauge filed rang out, vanquishing al obstacles:ve and chuck'ed: "Cute chap. Want with blood instead of water. And "Why, of course, Unc.e Silas, that's to get me away by the first train in 0en comes news of the murder of— what .we 'must do." �,the morning and prevent1my possible Sir Francis Lathrop, Sir' Francis' Klyrie turned away, making his researches in'this benighted county. daughter, Margaret -had planned to back over the plank bridge and- so to I Well, have, it your own way. I'll pr6b- Tel marry— the road. If '.Mr. Stampage WEks the I ably get more out of you in the long her fatli' gir:'s uncle she was in no danger from run than I shou*d out of myself. p4erfectivbalanced—sulperlminftavour. We Sir Guy Lathrop against er a wish and. suspicion is directed him. p tsxg_�thei." toward Sir Guy. But— But why on earth had she klosed off . In the morning the pair caught the Heredity. A Chinese I.W5 Adrian Klyne, private detective em- that ghastly screar-.0 ear: southbound train, and Klyne Day. •'-ployed b Margaret, works on the My Dear one, theory that Honeybun may, know On the train he sought out a seat was, g:ad to see 2)1iss Adela- Larkin! I'm no biologist; I-cam't by himself, and half an hour later he i the! Explain, the structure of a plant The heirs of one day are as ffla� something of the murder. To obtainboard it after crossing from a each other as are twin blossoms frsomJ1 loses as-- branch line:platform. He had regard-! Or talk in strange and curious 'term evidence ' po, the pear -tree. There i$ no nese Rev. Char.es Danvers, and takes up ed the iretil6val of the press man from Of protoplasmi; and of germs, his residence at the inn close to La- But this Is plain as plain can be tell thee. The mornings are passed; the scene of possible mischief -making -throp Grange. He leaves suddenly 70 as. a shade more desirable than leav- t That boy of mine Is much like me, in the dutibe, that come to all women, the who have the caro of a bousehold,-" when blood is reported found in tf rain -gauge -gauge of Si'ss Stampage of Ru: Ing �kdela in the house of her Bieister� the afternoon* I am on the telrraes. uncle. It was a Kase of choosing the When on a chair he flings his hat Aon, Suffo'-k. There he meets-- with thy sister. Ted - Knowles, reporter, returning least of two evils.' I'm sure no stranger taught him that. o slow, Mal -It and I take our embroider7l 11 on Stampage w that, she had departed from Tho" dressing tactics, oh, 8 from a fruit:ess ca No b;er se, and -sit upon the terrace, where w101 is�cuss the latest angles rn z huxMIT, her my triltmte his mot day pass long .hours watching* the, peopI4 mystery and agree to meet agait,� ever it might'be, finished, he con-, Were not acquired; but yesterday in the valley below. The faint blue; later. gratu:ated himself that he was re-! I used to dawdle just- that way I smoke. curls from a thousand d.we& NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. 'ieved both the contingencies from The two men parted, Knowles going that had worried him. I me him living o'er and o'er Ings, and we try to Imagine the lives _QL_thDso,_w toward the station and Kbyme &',ong And as he settled down Iii tthesm6k- ,t So much -that -;-was- f P, -ho dwell .beneath the moil His 70ots %Ing compartment at the side of the That maddening indifference to trees, We see the peasants In. their .th-, road marshward. rice -fields; watch them dragging then '.1quealched in the @!oppy mire, the star repo -ter he found himself an- The little things he ought- to do '3,!Ind-dTiven drops from his cap-peak�l nosed to find that If Miss Larkin had Should be corrected, but I know rich mud from the bottoms of the% would- have 1 did, as he does. long ago. carnal for fertilizing; hear the shrill -Jislinded him, but he kept on to the remained at Ruxton it whistleof the duck man as, with long! rw been the greater of the two evils be bamboo, he d,rtv-es the great flock of dates of a fairly large house. lilt There was no 'vegetation or shrub- had apprehended the night before. He That love of laughter and of Mirth bevy or coppice to veil a pdu-cks homeward or sen -ds them over more stealthy i had always prided himself on being'Came with him on his day of birth. the fields to; search for insects. . We reconnaisante, so Kyrie marched bold- able to eliminate all human Interest in many a fault and many & *him'" see the wedding pToceeslori.Par below, .1y up to the weather-sca:ed front door, In the pawns in his games. It lowered r Pee myself reborn in him. and can but faintly follow the great ... I and pu:*ed the old-fiashioned bel his self-esteem to be glad that -a girl .Esti It's unfair to scold 1 lad chain. There was a -ong wait before' not wholly free from suspicion was in For merely being like his dad. covered chair of the bride and tho —Edgar A. G i uset train or servants carrying the posses y the door was cautiously opened by a; no personal danger, sions of the now home. -sleeves and So early was their train that it was The summer wanes and the autumn hefty young man in shirt not till they arrived at Colchester that I bi-, Is upon us with all Its mists and shad - a striped waistcoat. He had t they were able to procure that day's Immortals" of France Ban oops of a prize-fighter, but one of his 1� ows of purple and grey. The campho in a sling. The WArce of Planet. It contained the phoned re- Cemetery Eulogies. arras w" trees look from the distance like great the blood? port of the wild-fowler's but Incident, Hereafter. all good things said about balls of .fire, and the eucalyptustree, want to see Mr, Stampage," said'. emost word for word as Klyne had "ImmortitIs" must be uttered In Its dross of brilliant yellow, Is a !told it, and he rejoiced to see that.; French Kiyne. while they are still in mortal far'M and gaily palnE4�d court lady.—From "My as don't! Knowles had t#ken full credit for the "There's a many does that not over their graves. This mode was Lady of the, Chlael%e Courtyard'," by me him," was the reply, performance. I . established. by the present group of Elizabeth Cooper,, I know he is in," persisted K13,na i (To be continued.) I .. mort the breaking a; A41 met a man on the road not long' ceqtury-old, traditiqll.of oulogles andColor on the Deck.. to shoot." I age whom he threatened Britisi Invention. of Noma,: t parlegyTics at the burial of.distinguish- "I didn't know that, but it's the , The sky, a palt, pale blue. -,eemlod edmem-, malirter all over," laughed the servant. Film is to have In Ila delptl;,; a faint rose,, as the way he'd treat you if he was Announced.At EL meeting of the Academy of In - 1 it somewhere far off behind it a vivid A noninflammable film for the 696. sorip,tions and Literature a note was., d -in, which be ain't. He went out five awn ere shining- Perhapts some signed by the memberF, which- read. I minutes before you rang." i =a Industry Is ww claimed to have Out.of consideration far the health distant sunrise was being falDL17 M N. Klyne looked the fellow over from elected -The white posts that ranged been azhieved by W J Mallabar. after icbes of my survivors, I _want no sle, head to foot and decided that bt'rT1?W Klyn' marched .. bol I d]y up to the -12 yearW experimentation, to overcome at my fineral'. the length of -the deck rail caught the, o;sspealcing the truth. e diflieuitles which hitherto have barred elustve timt and be -came some of them,' 01 - Academy circles have long "'u"* almost a dellivate, lavender rose. Others i . . r .. weather -scaled front door. its use�, stiescess in this dirwtion has qll take your -,Very well," he said. i ad the subject of t4pisect;ee in 'damp remained pure white and as the boat word for It and drop-in on Mr. Stasi- often been published beforel, but ten- . 4! Inc; oemeteries, and their effect 'on the ,page to -mor -ow"." was.at Beccles. lie was surprised and ole strength has alwayls been lack health of men of advanced ag I rose and fell, -skadows ithifted over am shall I tea him called?" quer- not a little gratified to find his Journ- and the film has. bad a heal e, The them. giving soft blurs of gray. or tendency 10 Ifunera.19 this week of Hdarl Cochin leaving them brantly while. Patches midst of the !J led the servant. alistic friend, Mr. Ted Knowles o * f the ward brktlanletss, and Jean Richepsin In the in of suah'ght sprinkled the floorboards Klyne did not answer, 'but turned Planet, on the platform to receive him. Mr. 'mallsbar's ftim is staid to In-" Is he Acade- Influenza epidemic doeffled t turning their duUness into gold. Where to re -cross the uncu:tivated en- I "A litt"o of - nch." was the frank re- crease Ili flexibility with age and U. -,e, sway ther -'-- — --- e, 111� all-therit orl ellu- m'e'ans to (iverturn a precedent to pro- ilres sun touched the tan and maroon erasure which could not ..y uvcru%, - ei,- own hearth at such ritea- ..:._-with the,name of - garden. He . was hostelry in I this on_ -`horse place is lose, reports that the new till i n base in became a brilliant orange with half way to the road, when away to crowded with Fleet Street boys from mechanical properties. purity'.. color, a line o the right there sounded the shrill other papers. So I ant in a -private pliability and resistance to frictional For Cold*--Minard's Liniment. sheathinx fired by the sun turned scream of a woman. Klyne halted in lodging, and I took the liberty of en- weer and 'tear., equals .the standard creamy, aril here and there, through 4 .-his tracks and strove, to- locate its gaging a room for you, too. I knew film in every rW&LX-Ct, ignition tests the indigo of the ocean showed. Britain Appoints Woman g'p'- 'source. you wouldn't want to be pestered by showed the film to be fireproof. con- The gin=s measlag the electric light The iilght had quite failed now, the a herd of pushing youngste"s, and I fact With fillme-cauilng only charring' Broadcasting Governor.- ,bulbs- tv,.)k- on opalescent Wn"s. A thick rain and the darkness of night thought I might pick .your brains of i at the spot hosted. 'Mrs. Ethel SwrA,dtii, wife of Philip basket by a steamer chair showed biding all objects over thirty yards' an exc:usive story if I got you on the 7 Snowden. 'former L-abortte Chancellor touches 0 green and prurptle. Most Popular lee Cream. -v one, appea - b( - I; Ra�. 8 Pn g e ars red. a the Exchequer. ka., -*n- appointed On, But his sense of direction told, quiet." awa Y, t. the cry had ben raised out! "You shall" said Klyne�_shcrey,i, i4e, most popular 'one of the governors of ths_h�rast• woman in a bright blue dross; another Ap him that . - .1, ? Vanilla is by far marsh and he went forward till -and with a reservation." ice cream flavor, manufacnirer., re-jing organization which the govern• in a YeLl hat a.rid, with a. green book. on the - be camrt e to a plank bridge leading, No further reference was made to 11 prezenting an aiintial prv,-hivr:6.ti 9finitpt.is taking over from theprivate, (14ad It ben a green hat and a red + Mr. Stainpage's grounds to the the case till the two men had suPPL-cl 1 ii,arly S4.000,000 gallons "t'D011 that -,5 British I3roadc3,,;ttng Cn ot - - . book' nil' pauy from night one all her literary?) A sodden flats beyond. On the other -aide' and Sighted their pipes in the. homelyor cent. of'the oininit is vanilla, -10 January I for a consideration of $3,.! child tlaat}ed by In i'lvid red. of the Per cent chocolate, nearly S per s one of Great bridge he found himself on a sitting room of their lodging r con,. 100,000. Mrs. Snowden I The deck was no tenger sohibor. its I beauties had revealed them - "I reckon you didn't interview, Britain's leading feminists. She also biddeu raised embankment running nut into! frawberry antl nearly. 27, per'ceul, 0(i I I tire Pelves. the marsh. From some distance along Stampage?" said Know'es. "At any other flavors. %Ic�re than S8 per cent. an awhcl� of -nnte and an e'ff e c I the footway a great red eye Ivan rate not to_ mase him. -cough 'up any-, of the lee cream Is sold in bulk not I public speaker, blinking at-binL .'-thing useful?!' I . 1 12 p*�T cent, in brick forin. C -on. --Her n46w post carrie;q -a salary of In Righ Regions, not to oln te Creeping close, he was overjoyed to' 'Ile coughed up enough, but trary to general belief drug stores sell $3,500 a year and among the other gov-! ins did'not quite. replied Klyne. "Unfortunate:y ! Great things are done when men' and find that the red curtains about halt :is much ice ereirsl a,,� do errors are Sir John Nairne, a director, I cou'dn't hear what he was saying. c ry .stores. of the- Bank of . England,. and mountains meet; meet in the middle. There was a nor orfectione These tirt- n6t done Iiy jo�tlinj'in the. ch he could peer To begin it the bieginning I got.the� lother prominent persons, with the Earl row space through whi 41 street. dirty kick-buf from the ruffian who), , of C!areniori as chairman. into the interior. I . Minard's Liniment for chapped h a nd a, .—William Wake. But I came up Tl ere was a woman there all right, answered the door. but she did not look as if she h'ad been, with Stampage afterwards.' Now loq.k! ' sermming. Or. the contrary she here, Ted. I am going to give you an seemed gompiacent and bn � excius!Ve, eventual,y 1.eading to a: the best of terms with the ta14 aus-- scoop. Bdt,in relurn I -want some-! `' 77, tere-visaged man in earnest conversa- thing." tion with her. The n N tan was standing Trust You for that," laughed; , . > bp while the woman was perched on Knowleo,: 'hat is Jt?" c 'w. the edge of a "A p rough table. aragraph in the P:anet. I sbali: ]A And, wonder of wonders, the woman dictate it, but it will fit in with the i L. was Miss Adele Larkin, -Who by 11 story f shad eventuaLly- give you. eI n irles of, geogTaphk' and' arithmetic fact -it will,lead tip to,and be, part of, 4 ... r in Cheverel 'Ree- ;that story." oight to have been % tory a hundred and, �,fty mires away. j "Then it's a deal," the journalist i N Klyne had no doubt that hir compan -issented. :ion in the but was Mr. Silits St4m-,� On that Klyne Iaroceded to describe! Page, eminent surgeon, the e retired his experiences after, being turned: practice, who." house on, away from n Mr. Stanapage's front door ,from London pro 'A the a A --how he had ?olo-,6id ia� the se i eam edge of the marsh he had ju, visited. I from the marsh and peered into the, -if only be N)uld- hear what razz 1*-' wi7d-fowler's hut, to see the presumed Ing discussed Klyne would cheerfully master of *the house in _con_6e_r­s`­af-1—vT_," , have parted with a handsome sum of a young woman who 0ioNved no money. From the movements of his Fign,;; of (11-treF.,, though there was lip an aared'to be talking, nobody e!�-e about, who could have. s; the ruPPe incessantly, but only a faint Uerr ,screarned. reached ched the watcher outside. Either I Good stuff!" ,aid Know :es. �eq. "That'll Pa he was speaking in a very low tone, or: get.'eni, guessi rig. But it's a bit weird, the glans of the closed window. was i eh? What do -you nu;l.e of it- - too thick to al:ow the passage id his Klyne?" "N 0 - t Much yet," wa� Cha c 1,Y. N -voice. 1. p rigid U shall t I B11 if ycu are a pr,.fld boy, Suddenly the moving lips grew ri of ti:e Maclenhie-, I'livpr Distri(g, 2011 mHeq \%-"thin the Arctic Circ: P, They are very generous to In their natural line --n line denoting and 'phore or wire that up f.. , p6l):i , _1' tf knie!airt in CLnada. The Indians 1.9 cruelty, as only the human mouth can cation in to-rotorrow'.q issue of yn-,ir' tit„ limli c and Eskimos of the district. donsleA �14.75 fr(OM each family to .4 shifted his gaze to Miss Adea, st,int.,hur.ting rag. 'Fut this Is a poll t.' th�n w ork of the Church Misslonary St�ciety. Is ­'.- - CHANGING THUS OP BRITAIN'S KINGS The permutations, of the royal -clue Salisbury a few drays later that "I am 71dn Groat Brft&W have been au index of: much pressed by the Empress about Aho history of England and, of ths; her crown. .4u6neing eharaoter of that political 1 When the bffi was Introduced, It met Antitir known as the British Empire. with considerable opposition. Disraeli 'The recent action of the Imperial Cos- had. unfortunately omitted to Consult 'ftrenCe was not exceptional; it was the Opposition in order to minimize the last of a series of changes which! controversy, as was the oustom in -in' royal and.nonparty matters . of this Afivdose the relations of Great Britain'. to the church, to the continent o1 sort. Nor in introducing the bill had 11troPe and to her coloWee. "Phe pre- I Disraeli disclosed the exact phrase aer4 rather' simple title Of L the King, that was to be urged. It was not until 00*m8 a far cry from the grandiose de-, Its second reading that the Govern- sorlipdon in the Statutes of Mary after meat Proposed to make the Queen was married to Philip of Spain: "Empress of India." The Prime OPhthp and Mary, by the Grace of Minister scouted the idea that the 904 King and Queen of England, word "Emperor" had had, bed associa- Yvance, Naples, . Jerusalem and h-oa- tions. Spenser has uaW the phrase land, Defenders of the Faith, Princes in dedicating the "Faerle Queens- to of Spain and Sicily, Archdukes of Aus- Queen Elizabeth, Indeed- the addl- tria, Duques, of Milan, Bucgundy and tion would come as no sbock to the Prabant; Counts of Haveburg, Flaa- public, for the description "Empress 6m and 11LML11 of India", was applied to Queen. Vic; James I. brought with him to the torts in a popaiax school geography throne of England this title of "King, that at the tame. was widely used. The of Sootiand," The Bill of Rights, the most weighty objection to Disraeli's Act of Succeselon and the. Act of i plan was the nouzccognitlofi of the Union of England and Scotland re- dominl6ns - whose -claims were equal to euked In simplifteation. The title be. j those of India. The possibility was came, "By the Grace of God, King (or then discussed of —king the P rincenee Queen) of England, Scotland (or Great of Wales "Pri-lace, Imperial of India" Britain), France and Ireland, Defend- and his younger brothers "Princes of er of; the faith, etoleters-" George I, Canada and ..Australia" respectively. 'however, used his own titles of "Duke I The Prince of Wales objected strongly, of Brunswick and Lunenburg Arch- and* the proposal was abandoned, Treasurer and Elemor of the Holy The controversy over the recogni Roman Empire." George 111.1 in 1801. tion that should be Locorded did not by parliamentary authorization, drop- the down; -It was discussed at the pod aN claim to the thraAe of France, first Colonial Conference, but nothing And abandoned also the "etcetera," j was dome umtfi 1901, when Edward VII. wtilch had been assumed by Elizabeth came to the throne. Many suggestlow at a substitute, for the "Supreme dead were made, but the ekbilple and aoccur- of the Cbu=h." No further change arta language, "of the British Domini - came until 1876, when there A -as a, ons beyond the seas," was decided up - heated controversy in ParlIameat over! an. Now that Ireland has a dominion the deefg7HWori that Victoria should status, the phrase. "The United King - hare. I door of Great Britain and Iroland'.' be- % After 1858. when the govern'Ment of.1 comes inaccurate. George V. has thus India was tran:aferred from the com- 1 been made "King of Great Britain, Ire - pang i. pany to the crown6 it seemed fitting i land, and the British Dominions be - to signeLlIze the changed relationship Yoi2d the Seas." The comma Is all by an addition to the royal title, Dis- important There Is still, however, raelf was extremely anxious thus to 1much truth in Dismall's- statement to appeal to the imagination of India, the House of Commons just a half- iand the Queen was anxious on her own century lbgo: "It Is only by the ampli- account. - As Disraeli wrote to his! fication of tit -lea that you can often Locd Chancellor in January, 1876; touch and satisfy the -imagination of "'The Empress Q;;wn demands her nations. and that I. an .1..,,t which 'AmPerial crown." and he told Lord' governments; must not despise." At the.Fair. The Serving Maids of In the vast theatre enlarged Into as ellipse, and outlining a large patch of The se -ring maids of England, blue, thousands ot feces were -pressed From parlor Maids to kitchen malds, close together on the many rows of So comely and so courteous, benches, bright eyes forming luminous Of them I mean to sing - of light which mingled with ths. .:,:Marled reflections and brilliancy of fes- With cheeks so pink and eyes so bright, tai totbets and -picturesque costumes, In meat black gowns and Capt, of white, Hm thitnee, as from a huge rat, eA;,. The serving maids of England, ,oended joyous shouts ringing volcee An ode to them 1- fltng' Mand trumpets, vitualized, as it were, by 4 r {Che Intense I1gtA of the sun, I walk through lofty halls ..at night And see the brasses %baulag bright. 'Above all rose most distinctly the; cry of venders of milk -biscuit. bearing ' And boots for cleaning In array - Cry a4 th In k 'how zealously they work, from step to step. their baskets limped How scarcely one Is known to shirk, with white linen—"L! Pau ou is. 11 pau, I From sea ing inalois of England Du la." - The venders of fresh -water. I A Moral b"r away! balancing their green and varnished, JuCJ6 made one thirsty when llstenlzg, The serving maids of, England to their gulping, "Lalgo es fresco, I Are part of England's charm, quau vou beuTe?" The water is fresh,, Though It may seem laborious, who wishes to driukt' Tben, at the They make their service glorious, very top, children running and play- With the rubbing and the scrubbing t -9 on the crest of. the area crowned Of each willing, sturdy arm, this grand hubbub with sharp sounds They contribute ample share ..las high as, martinets soar in the king.: To the backbone of the nation, dom of birds. . . . Thus peopled and 'Far beyond all computation, animated, the ruire seemed to be alive The serving maids of England again, and lost their appearance of a Are not bettered anywhere' cicerone's show -building. When look-; —Amy Smith. ing at it ono'had the sensation given by a strophe of Plader recited by a modern' Athenian, wtich to A dead A Door Sill. hmguage revived without a cold schol. Long years ago, she crossed -this deiap- astic character. This, sky so pure, this worn. &Ila, I sun like molten silver; these Latin A bilde with happy eyes who 'saw intonations preserved here and there the days especially in the smallWOO Es, in the All faii before her.' Here she learn - Provencal Idiom; the attitudes of aomos,: 'ad the ways standing in archways with, motionless Of n -d evading that love,-paflent, - still, poses, which in the glimmering air Must ever walk through hours of joy seemed antique and almost like ,the or III; ..,work of a sculptor, and were a type of And here she watched June's light -the place, their heads appearing as if her lilac sprays, struck off on medals; the, short arched Heard thrushes offer God their ves- note, the broad shaven cheeks, and the! per praise, turl:iedup chin of Rootimestan-all to And dreamed of wonders far beyond Welber connOleted the Illuidon of a! th4 hill,. Roman spectacle, even to the ]owing [ - I . :- . I . of Ladaise cows which echoed through Within the door her loving Qngers Taults from which formerly lions and wrought -elephants came forth to combat. Thus Of long and bugy.years . a cheery when above the circle, empty and cov- home eared -with sand, the very large black 1 Where peace and gladness Isy' like bole of t1io podium covered by a sky -' i hands that bless Millit opened, people expected to see Though heaven may by shining way; wild beasts leap forth instead of the be sought, quiet and rural procession of beasts Across this s found, who could - and people crowned at the fair. --Al - ill she not roam, ' 0-nas Dandat w c 16 I -6v'16 lies'heaven's hap- pine3s, 'Bobby Behaves. —A. W. Peach A guest was expeoted ror dinuer and: Bobby bad received 5 cents as the � , . "'. •M ost of Them -Are; VTIoe of his silence during the meal. Jcrry -"I tc-11 you, it takes courage He was as quiet as possible until dict- to say 'no.' covering that his favorite dessert was I.Rrry—"Tb(,.n I've met lots of very being served. Then he could no long- i brave girls." 7 er curb kta enthusiasm. He drew the Coln train his pockx nt and roiled it Our national character is the great - across the table, saying: "Here's your est asset Of the Empire; at the same nickel, Mamma. I'd like to have it, thus, we can trade too much upon it. but I'd rather talk." —Lord Burnham. .31 A N, 4­,�­ e L '400000" r C Is ­'.- - CHANGING THUS OP BRITAIN'S KINGS The permutations, of the royal -clue Salisbury a few drays later that "I am 71dn Groat Brft&W have been au index of: much pressed by the Empress about Aho history of England and, of ths; her crown. .4u6neing eharaoter of that political 1 When the bffi was Introduced, It met Antitir known as the British Empire. with considerable opposition. Disraeli 'The recent action of the Imperial Cos- had. unfortunately omitted to Consult 'ftrenCe was not exceptional; it was the Opposition in order to minimize the last of a series of changes which! controversy, as was the oustom in -in' royal and.nonparty matters . of this Afivdose the relations of Great Britain'. to the church, to the continent o1 sort. Nor in introducing the bill had 11troPe and to her coloWee. "Phe pre- I Disraeli disclosed the exact phrase aer4 rather' simple title Of L the King, that was to be urged. It was not until 00*m8 a far cry from the grandiose de-, Its second reading that the Govern- sorlipdon in the Statutes of Mary after meat Proposed to make the Queen was married to Philip of Spain: "Empress of India." The Prime OPhthp and Mary, by the Grace of Minister scouted the idea that the 904 King and Queen of England, word "Emperor" had had, bed associa- Yvance, Naples, . Jerusalem and h-oa- tions. Spenser has uaW the phrase land, Defenders of the Faith, Princes in dedicating the "Faerle Queens- to of Spain and Sicily, Archdukes of Aus- Queen Elizabeth, Indeed- the addl- tria, Duques, of Milan, Bucgundy and tion would come as no sbock to the Prabant; Counts of Haveburg, Flaa- public, for the description "Empress 6m and 11LML11 of India", was applied to Queen. Vic; James I. brought with him to the torts in a popaiax school geography throne of England this title of "King, that at the tame. was widely used. The of Sootiand," The Bill of Rights, the most weighty objection to Disraeli's Act of Succeselon and the. Act of i plan was the nouzccognitlofi of the Union of England and Scotland re- dominl6ns - whose -claims were equal to euked In simplifteation. The title be. j those of India. The possibility was came, "By the Grace of God, King (or then discussed of —king the P rincenee Queen) of England, Scotland (or Great of Wales "Pri-lace, Imperial of India" Britain), France and Ireland, Defend- and his younger brothers "Princes of er of; the faith, etoleters-" George I, Canada and ..Australia" respectively. 'however, used his own titles of "Duke I The Prince of Wales objected strongly, of Brunswick and Lunenburg Arch- and* the proposal was abandoned, Treasurer and Elemor of the Holy The controversy over the recogni Roman Empire." George 111.1 in 1801. tion that should be Locorded did not by parliamentary authorization, drop- the down; -It was discussed at the pod aN claim to the thraAe of France, first Colonial Conference, but nothing And abandoned also the "etcetera," j was dome umtfi 1901, when Edward VII. wtilch had been assumed by Elizabeth came to the throne. Many suggestlow at a substitute, for the "Supreme dead were made, but the ekbilple and aoccur- of the Cbu=h." No further change arta language, "of the British Domini - came until 1876, when there A -as a, ons beyond the seas," was decided up - heated controversy in ParlIameat over! an. Now that Ireland has a dominion the deefg7HWori that Victoria should status, the phrase. "The United King - hare. I door of Great Britain and Iroland'.' be- % After 1858. when the govern'Ment of.1 comes inaccurate. George V. has thus India was tran:aferred from the com- 1 been made "King of Great Britain, Ire - pang i. pany to the crown6 it seemed fitting i land, and the British Dominions be - to signeLlIze the changed relationship Yoi2d the Seas." The comma Is all by an addition to the royal title, Dis- important There Is still, however, raelf was extremely anxious thus to 1much truth in Dismall's- statement to appeal to the imagination of India, the House of Commons just a half- iand the Queen was anxious on her own century lbgo: "It Is only by the ampli- account. - As Disraeli wrote to his! fication of tit -lea that you can often Locd Chancellor in January, 1876; touch and satisfy the -imagination of "'The Empress Q;;wn demands her nations. and that I. an .1..,,t which 'AmPerial crown." and he told Lord' governments; must not despise." At the.Fair. The Serving Maids of In the vast theatre enlarged Into as ellipse, and outlining a large patch of The se -ring maids of England, blue, thousands ot feces were -pressed From parlor Maids to kitchen malds, close together on the many rows of So comely and so courteous, benches, bright eyes forming luminous Of them I mean to sing - of light which mingled with ths. .:,:Marled reflections and brilliancy of fes- With cheeks so pink and eyes so bright, tai totbets and -picturesque costumes, In meat black gowns and Capt, of white, Hm thitnee, as from a huge rat, eA;,. The serving maids of England, ,oended joyous shouts ringing volcee An ode to them 1- fltng' Mand trumpets, vitualized, as it were, by 4 r {Che Intense I1gtA of the sun, I walk through lofty halls ..at night And see the brasses %baulag bright. 'Above all rose most distinctly the; cry of venders of milk -biscuit. bearing ' And boots for cleaning In array - Cry a4 th In k 'how zealously they work, from step to step. their baskets limped How scarcely one Is known to shirk, with white linen—"L! Pau ou is. 11 pau, I From sea ing inalois of England Du la." - The venders of fresh -water. I A Moral b"r away! balancing their green and varnished, JuCJ6 made one thirsty when llstenlzg, The serving maids of, England to their gulping, "Lalgo es fresco, I Are part of England's charm, quau vou beuTe?" The water is fresh,, Though It may seem laborious, who wishes to driukt' Tben, at the They make their service glorious, very top, children running and play- With the rubbing and the scrubbing t -9 on the crest of. the area crowned Of each willing, sturdy arm, this grand hubbub with sharp sounds They contribute ample share ..las high as, martinets soar in the king.: To the backbone of the nation, dom of birds. . . . Thus peopled and 'Far beyond all computation, animated, the ruire seemed to be alive The serving maids of England again, and lost their appearance of a Are not bettered anywhere' cicerone's show -building. When look-; —Amy Smith. ing at it ono'had the sensation given by a strophe of Plader recited by a modern' Athenian, wtich to A dead A Door Sill. hmguage revived without a cold schol. Long years ago, she crossed -this deiap- astic character. This, sky so pure, this worn. &Ila, I sun like molten silver; these Latin A bilde with happy eyes who 'saw intonations preserved here and there the days especially in the smallWOO Es, in the All faii before her.' Here she learn - Provencal Idiom; the attitudes of aomos,: 'ad the ways standing in archways with, motionless Of n -d evading that love,-paflent, - still, poses, which in the glimmering air Must ever walk through hours of joy seemed antique and almost like ,the or III; ..,work of a sculptor, and were a type of And here she watched June's light -the place, their heads appearing as if her lilac sprays, struck off on medals; the, short arched Heard thrushes offer God their ves- note, the broad shaven cheeks, and the! per praise, turl:iedup chin of Rootimestan-all to And dreamed of wonders far beyond Welber connOleted the Illuidon of a! th4 hill,. Roman spectacle, even to the ]owing [ - I . :- . I . of Ladaise cows which echoed through Within the door her loving Qngers Taults from which formerly lions and wrought -elephants came forth to combat. Thus Of long and bugy.years . a cheery when above the circle, empty and cov- home eared -with sand, the very large black 1 Where peace and gladness Isy' like bole of t1io podium covered by a sky -' i hands that bless Millit opened, people expected to see Though heaven may by shining way; wild beasts leap forth instead of the be sought, quiet and rural procession of beasts Across this s found, who could - and people crowned at the fair. --Al - ill she not roam, ' 0-nas Dandat w c 16 I -6v'16 lies'heaven's hap- pine3s, 'Bobby Behaves. —A. W. Peach A guest was expeoted ror dinuer and: Bobby bad received 5 cents as the � , . "'. •M ost of Them -Are; VTIoe of his silence during the meal. Jcrry -"I tc-11 you, it takes courage He was as quiet as possible until dict- to say 'no.' covering that his favorite dessert was I.Rrry—"Tb(,.n I've met lots of very being served. Then he could no long- i brave girls." 7 er curb kta enthusiasm. He drew the Coln train his pockx nt and roiled it Our national character is the great - across the table, saying: "Here's your est asset Of the Empire; at the same nickel, Mamma. I'd like to have it, thus, we can trade too much upon it. but I'd rather talk." —Lord Burnham. a ..7 '400000" C d - ..n 4 T, % is A WAL-Tcl bTvART DAVEY. Allct4i LC T -060 111CHmO"D U-TTMET. Lon Dam 0"Tiks-o. SEMI-DETACHED HOME IS DIFFERENTtib. ..THIS By Walter Stuart Pavey, Architect Many semi-detached homes posse" living room hgb,,. lot -her, It Is uotuoticeoable f vom t.6 very marked and objection -able tene-' The dImensJcrs are "42 ft. x 28 ft. perspective, which Is absolutely am MeDt- character but the tendency Of hollow We ba;king and brick are. sug- metrical in every respect, but you will this design is to create the impression gested for the first floor" *alls - with notice in the plans that the dividing of a Private residence instead of ac. hollow tale and white stucoo, above. partition wall is nearer the windows coestuatIng the fact that it is no - t. The 'This permits this Interior, plaster to be at the Left. Ilowevef, the layout of cottage roof, for Instance, and the well applied direct to the tile or it may be'each house provides the same accom separated front entranced both COUth-, furred. and strapped, and thea lathed, modation and couven!ence as regards bute to this effect. l,and plastered in the usual way. the number and posif ftion of,thqt rooma. A The small Porches are also' an in-* Good quality cedar shingles should terestluir doparturL- from the full width - Readers desiring furthk informap I cl be used on the roof. A very striking verandah which has became such a; and attractive effect can be obtained tt,6n regarding the Plans i aid specifi- cations for th-19 house should communt- common and deplorable feature Of by having the -shingles dlpped in houses of this type. They afford much brown tate with the architect direct. AA• several shades of and some rod more Privacy And do not obstruct ther also that the success of but remember duress, Walter Stuart Pavey, 380 Rich. Mond St.. London. Ont. t such 'a treatment depends on random variegation and should never suggest having been Ptudlel. The well proportioned casement win- dows, with stationary skhuttera ani )I# Raw• window boxes painted a bright green, are nct only pleasing from a strictly detail viewpoint but blend In perfect harmony with the enooembl•e. It may seem rather "de trop" to mentlon that t Ju Pam. hi ?W:aonk 4 the window sills are Of brick with t Deo a brick laid on edge, but If the effect be PLAWV good.•-- sure 1, y the cause Is. Important. The floor - plans show that the house pin/? r4ft ft.4 -at the right is - slightly larger than the MUSiC as a Game. Various Blooms. j Story Words. .inquiry aworg piano; teachers, faLh-'Far; far away, I know not where, IMacadam. era, mothers. guardians and others' know not be* i're fitting tribute to an Invent - -No mD having relations with youth shows The skies are gray. the boughs are! . roq or could be paid than that the P ct that In about every 10.000 boys there bare, bare loughs' in flower; i which he invented should bear lite "t't Is one who looks forward with groW14 Long lilac silk is softly drawn from I name. Thus I's *John Londou McAdam, interest to, his mu,.q!,c'I*,6son, and prac-. bough to bough, the highway engineer. of Scotland,who tiresbetween lesson;without being With flowers of milk and buds of ' instituted the use of Crushed stone asa told that he must. 'Mostly boys who fawn, a broidered shower. paving material, remembered take piano lessons, or lessons on other through the use of the words musical Instruments, deplore the prac.; Beneath that tent an Empress arta, found with slanted eyes, cadim," macadamize," and other dorl- t!cn periods. Ways might be to s. vativelthough interest such boys in prosale practice, And wafts of*scemt from oehseis flit, AMcAdam rose to the Post- ri�gardless of their dislike for flue tin- a lilac flood; 1-4,round her throne bloom peach and tion of general surveyor of m eti-opoll. ger exercises or the ruandn.g of sc�aee. ,NJ ktic plum in licquered dye-%, rested . in athletic I gat boys are interested I - tan roads with a great of 2 10,000 from ; the English' Government for carrying .4 games..' Football might be usAdl an And many a blown chrysanthemum,on the work of highway improvement X example. Rather than tell a boy hat and many a bud. there to evidence in the now obsolete h must learn so many measures of word I'maeadamite" that the MeArsm music, it might be suggested that each I She sits and' dreams, while houses system.of met with op - road-makiThe measure repreeents a tenyard section i twain strike some rich' , ch bell, facng position. t that "macads- . Pols of a football field. For every..,ten i Wb04% music seems a metal rain of a first down is posgible. radiant dye; mites was used to designate those . In yards gained, ,Whenever a note Is fumbled, when ever In this strange birth of various bloom* who advocated macadamized roads - w dicatee that there were Others. who the fingers, stray outside the proper, I cannot tell 'Which did not favor the method. measure, it would be natural for the spiang from earth, which In the mid -nineteenth century the teacher- acttng as ref.,ren—to blow a slipped from loome, which sank word was used figuratively for bre 4k - whistle and inflict a Penalty. from sky, Ing up anything into pieces. "Flinty It inay*not have the sanction of those I .—Edmund Gosse. hearts," for instance, are spoken of as who love the pranotorte for Its own "mace domized." ve s-trug- sake, but thos,,, who may have 'It Is Ser ious Business -- gled with a so-called backward lad; . —To be the father ofa small *On. . ... might find that he would learn music i —To be responsible for training to - well If- It happened be .. Italy. �V and karn-it to to him in a way that would morrow's citizens. And row, fair Italy' ' taught . _To be intrustedwith the handling TIou art the garden of thewo rfd, the arouse n-11 his sporting instincts. of other people's money. home 7 —To hold the lives of other V­60-Ple is of all Art yields, and Nature can do- Test. l6ved ones In our hands. cree; ...The I 117hAt a ninn can do wf-.11 is t lip tf-xt —To own a lot of money and have Even in thy desert, whet Is like to Of his worth, and the, Idea that he- no grey objective in It In oeralls he f4 as- —To sand before an audience oft cause he do" v Thy very weeds are beautiful, thy sentlatly.Inferior to otboerg, 1.9, as false one hundred people for thirty minutes, believes he Is waste a,,; tbo cowNerse proposition which to —To Live If one that More rich than other climes' fertility. nr,,%v so ott0h­ and so loudly heard.— Imm or -Byron The Timex (London) Weighital.ng goo lbs., a giant sunfish L was recently stranded on the rail of Always. paint an eye on an ACantic liner ner after a great waw a the now strike about?" " their bcaO to enable -the boats to see 'had washed over the vessel during a -,It's hard to tem, but wWre in the their way go:& a N, 71 % 7-1 T-SbAting on bhe acbool rink on Now --4Ln.. Burrell is busy those days e& -RolYt. Rankin, of Lansing, Out., are holidaying with her. Day and Sunday t Christmas LO r's Dity, weather permitLing. entertaining her grand -children who —Dr. E. A. Sadler, Denth-, Gre -A Happy and Prosperous New ape" practis- with his mother here. in Torxmto, will be here in his in Year To All. -Xisses B. and 1, Bunting spent officle, on Thursday from 10 a. m. to -Tube skates at Bushby's hard- — ware Christmas with their sister Mrs, R. 5 pm. as usual.* ware A. Douglas, of Toronto. -Dr. H. T. Fallalse, Resident Dent- -E. C. James spent Christmas Day Is h -John and Mrs. Duna spent last ist. Office over Balisdon hardware with friends in Aumni. store week with -their daughter, Mrs. Oliv - Office hours, 9 to daily aud' -We are sorry to report the iser- low illness of Mrs. W. B. Power. ter Denny, of Whitby township. evenings by appointnient.s Frank and Mrs. Saries and child -Miss Alice Prouse spent Christ_ Of Trenton, are spending the holiday irew Airorm"ownts. ville. with Mrs. Sayles mother hem pow with her sister in Bowman John Law, Toronto oranto spent V --Miss Jessie M. Day has returned anise with her son Gordon and Mrs. VOR SALE -10 head of young tattle home after spending a few imeks Fat lot Phone Maly with her sister, Kr& J. A. Bus%hy. W Fred" To all our Friends and. Customers IAW. Li -V P. 0. 13-18 -We are sorry to report that. Mrs. Fred and Mrs. Baird and family, J: -3kdoon is confined to her bed through _,721 Mrs. B&irds T:)OTATUES FOR SALE-Aquanti. spent Christmas with Al 43 p 0 hland Iftess. mother, Mr. Bush, f Hi Creek. FAu_lity,0R(TirMt=R11t Yhoine 14ck 5 ea we extend the A. and Mrs. BuAby and dao- - -Mrs. Mutch was Zed to _e u r T spent Christmas with relatives 7 OST -A Prayer Book, in Pickering *htt city on Friday last owing to the' ser- LVillage. The it -me. Gertrude in Toronto. nimbly, -Mrs. Alen. Wilson, of Whitby, ions illness of her daughter, Mrs. Av. Reward. FlVV Y. S►EASON'S GREETINGS alis. 17 W" the guest of the Misses Bunting -L. K. and Mrs. Devitt and child, OR SALE -1 Ayrshire cow, reg'd -Miss Minnie Morris, of Toronto, d. will register.Wm. Gr to oII Wednesday. of Toronto, spent Christmas with FOR in December; I Holstein bull, 6 man& T. 's parents, Hugh and Mrs. 01!--2 7=r e 2213. Vli spent over the holiday with her. sister Mrs Devitt R Mrs. Wm. Cullis. Mechin. '&s. J. H. Rogers spent Christ- -Robt. and Mrs. Somerville spent T-TAIR DRESSING- Powder@ and _4 Christmas Day with the former's bra- X -1 ereams. soaps, candies and nuts. Can at the nuo in Toronto with her son, W. D. Biauty Parlor. Brougham..for all kinds of Christ. ther, John Somerville, north of the mar bargains. Mrs. Robt. Devitt. 15-18 PAvers and family. Rouge Hill. Balsam, -Mrs. Wm. Harbron, of OR SALE -25 young pigs, 1 2-ye&r 7 spent ' a few days. with her parents, -Mr. and.Mrs. Fielding, of Graven- - FOR stock boar, res. Tamworth. 2 nsanj horst, are V2 with Dr. and Mrs- goats and I buck Fred 14vp lot 334 V. rm Cartwri ht. They all spent Christmas con. Pickering. oat one H. and Mrs. Pilkey. Viat and Cree P. 0 -no regular monthly meeting of in Malv 607. 14-17 Paul's United -the Ladies' Aid of St. of Dun. Fred Bunting aurch will be held on ' Wednesday, Found, in Pickering village, -a la. SALE -In the Village T Bunt' I iekerin dy's hand -bag a sum of FbOaRrton. a 8 -roomed .'rams house and tot. Jum� 5th, 3 p.m. at the home of Mrs. 11 frame barn. Hard and soft water. AFAtiablished 1857. money and street car tickets. Loser bras and small fruit trees. Apply Mrs. W. B. Dunbar. Potter. P?. Jai call at his of ice. • 241 Glebeholme Blvd.. routo. 1417 -Services in 'St. Paul's Church on -Wilfred hionney, teach 01 Sunday at the regular hours. MorningORONTO WET -WASH LAUN- subject, "An old promise for the New Wolfe Island Continuation schol is TDRY (Semi finish) -Let out driver call and u spending his Christmas vacation at explain our 24 hour service, just leave your Year". Evening subject, "A sudden name with Mr. S. W.2 avis. barber shop, We I` is the home of his parents here. ill pick up and deliver 3 times a week. 10onversion -Begin the New Year right by -Tie Young People's Union of St. •w iq erre : ��ry 64 Paul's church will meet this Thursday ARM MACHINERY -Frost 77 purChasing some library tickets for FARM Cockshutt Tudhope Andersonjohn evening at 7.80 o'clock A splendid Deere Bissell Gould: ;h Muir, Fleury, yourself find family. One yearly tick- re arranged. Come wiiki�Zn_. i6stprices. Order your.. et 450 cents. All additional tickets in Program has been w. Also De crest radios. W. sne9, and enjoy your last laugh this year. isame family 25 cents. Greenwood. 27th Refreshments will be served at the --Reg. Barker who has been in date OR SALE -New sloop sleighs at A close. Note the change of am F X` close. Minn., for the last year factoayfp a=n � also all kinds of implemeants -and a half is visiting his parents, time. of use on a in first -claw order. cheap. Also Robt. truck scala and hgb price paid and On January 16th, Rev. Dr- it scales. Highest Mr. and Mrs. Gen. W. Barker a for poultry. hide.. wool and junk H. Herman, % S,,�;u vr e e! 40 remain for a couple of weeks. Laird, will preach the Missionary lepbone 194. istf sermon in St. Paul's church at 1U0 -Irwin and Mrs. Shepperd and am. This will be a sermonic treat for OR SALE-Oheap. all kinds of F wagons, harness, and all kinds of farm ins - family, of Kitchener. spent the boli- ty. On Frida evening 'day with Mrs. Calvert's parents, the communi y mate in good order, Alto several boa H. and t scales and cook staves and besters. Igh Rev. Archer Wallace, Calvert, and on their re- January 21 st r"' d f bides and wool. also live 0;4 G. and Mrs B.A., will give his illustrated Travel- es% P H. = S.ff'N. ph. 190 1%. Ilurn on Monday, Mrs. ClIvert accorn- ogee on London. t". - FOR SERVICE -Old and panied them to the city. -We congratulate our former ri�- t Lung -Rev. F. J. Horwood, Mus. Dot., of V bows. Hereford bull end bstekgoa sident, Andrew Forsyth, on the hon- t,:;;ice Ville, will be in Pickt ring fee for those animals. $1.00 1 of or conferred by the electors of Sint&- service No other service please. Extra chLa�rge next week, and will be available for it left over. Fred Lacey lot 36.'B. F car. ricx. luta, Sask.. who have re-elected him snag. HighUnd Creek V 0, Phone Maiv 607. ­1hining a limited number of pianos & Mayor of the town, this being 14-17 organs. Parties wishing piano tun- ing done please leave their order with sixth term Ave being by acclamation. any Customers This is an honor of which he may ilL SURNINGHA M To our m IRev. J. S. Ferguson at the Manse. justly feel proud. Building and General -At St. Georges Church next 5 _-Oliy a limited quantity on hand. Contracting. And Friends 18vinday, services at 10.30 am. and 2 Modern scierytffic research shows us lye 1pin- Christmas music will be repeat- timat;w furnished on all classes that the lack of mineral products in Be �ed at both services. On Friday, Dec. of work -Interior and Exterior. feed is one of the basic causes of 31st, a watch -night service will be abortion. The average farm fomgt -alterations and repairs. Thanks' For the hearty 1held in this church. A hearty irMts- C Mien is extended to all to be present. Is deficient in mineral rations. As a Chimneys Built Concrete Work. q! 4 -Beginning with the New Year, prevention of abortion in cattle I amt. 7 -Co-operation during the recommending a lime salt preparation Phone Pickering. 5712 V. A. Reid Traffic Officer, will have itharge of the Provincial Highway (not a cure), in 25 and 60 1b sacks FAIRPORT. ONTARIO at 20 cents per pound. Dr. N.E. Me- iftom Toronto to the eastern bound- year and especially during Ewenckering. ary of Ontario County. Previously his The.Piannual meeting of S.S. No. Pe&vm'PV-Act Product territory extended from the top of the S the Xmas Season. ;Rouge Hill to Bowmamille, also the 4 west, was held in the school house ;Lindsay road which he still retains. on Wed. morning, Dec. 29th, with a Being agent for The Pedlar People, I_ L�` fair attendance present. A satisfac- smigre.pfared to on ply you with all --A t the school concert on Wednea tory report from the treasurer was kin steel, inc uding Steel shin- -iday night last i --mJackie Coogan" presented and accepted showing a bal- glee. Corro. Crimp and Corro. Iron for Greetingsisee., May the New fountain pen was placed on the tree ance in the bank of $20& Mr, Get. roofing and- siding: also Metal 10411 - for Lloyd Baird, which by some mix- PE" W. Barker was elected t - and to 0 succeed Inge Wall*. Metal Gaiagee etc. �} take had• been given to some other Special spring terms after Jan. IaL I Year— light yeur himijelf as trustee for the ensuing 1"7"n. Would the person who re- am also prepared to do hem building three years. Interest w shown by repair work. For pit-ces phone= 'ieived the gift kindly return same to 71he News office or to Baird's butcher the numerous nominations presented r write. -Happiness and to the meeting and while there was shop. "VI NORTON, Mee" !f e rate- Claremont R no criticism of the old trustees there -The annual seemed to be a feeling on the part of R. R, 1. Prosperity ty. —=payer* of held that o -d on Monday evening for the purpose a new-Wwas de-ki: ates for M. S. Chapman as chairman J. Re PARRY of nominating candid and John Draper as secretary handled tion of police trustee, W. J. Clark, BOOT -MAKER, the m9eting very acceptably. returning officer presided. T It e CLAREMONT, ONT. "firing trustees were F. J. Proust -M. S. Chapman and Wm. Cullis who .1BROUGHAM Havean amount of work that bad been All• who desire to get their Boots done during the year. Their financial The Holtby family spent Christmas and Harness repaired at a big statement showed a balance of about with their parents here. reduction, call at the SM. A large number were nominated Mr. and Mrs. Hanson spent their above address. -for the position of police trustee;'ba Christmas with their family in the All work done wIlre you wait -^11 retired excepting F. J. Prouse, city and guaranteed. 'Wm. Cullis, and S. W. Davis, wh 0 The Malcolm family had a re -union are thus declared elected by aeclam- at the home of Robert Mane ond. We P A R R Y sition. Christmas. X' -The death occurred on Christmas Miss Gammage and brother, Thos., 40 at his home, 67 Athol Street, visited their sister izr the city an 'Oshawa, of Patrick O'Connor, after Christmas Day. Thowands of an illness of about two years. lbs The Sunday School entertainment funeral took place on Monday, inter- on Tuesday evening, Dec. 21st, was New Words 0 HqPMAN ment taking place in the R. C. Cent, one of the best ever held here. All "lied, pronounced,etery, Pickering. Deceased was a the children did so well that it would native of Ireland, but for 37 years be unfair to specialize any particular and defined in has resided in Canada, and for thp one. The dialogue and reading the IVMTERPS last 15 years being a resIdent of Osh- Pickering News gave a touch of hum Swa where he has been the efficient or which was enjoyed by all. The NEW INTERNATIONALTHE-CENTRAL GARAGE section foreman on the street railway order maintained throughout the ev- of that city. Previous to moving to ening was excellent. '-.."Telephone 4900 ,'Oshawa, he was section foreman on no "Supreme AaM-*je' V the Grand Trunk Railway.at Picker - IT 0 rZ 1 0 M Mem am a low samOete: big. Deceased was held in high esteem Ke Befts Hay said Straw hot pursuit Red Star by all who knew him. The sympathy Air Council capital 8WP of the community is extended to the Omand after Jan. let, 1927. theand Waw price mud gun Mystery ship widow and family in their bereave- for bating $2.OD per ton. hay will be $1.75 pdr ton, aerial -SMA S. P. boat iffedonts 'd r4ent. Retbonia Auto' Repairs, Accessories, Oils an The Annual Christmas entertain- Signed American Legion Blue Cron merit of the Pickering School was girl scoot airport Welding, rx Lorne 0. Duff detector .,Gasoline, Acetylene held in the school house on Wednesv- Wilmot G. She&(Spee Crystal v sippic poperbsterodynt 7, -day evening, Dec. 22nd, and pro ed a '.,W,=., A. Boron aboneen Very enjoyable event. A playlet en- Battery 0hardings titled the "Christmas Wood" -display- 1, #A" aftwe&w" exceptional ability -.6d the of many of NOT / C E servissir Yom? Repairs made on all makes -Ue scholars and "takin Lbopai C care y On nA ft T 1 27010116156" --N -a' _nvornbeps y, lot, 1m, we -be" Inglivid, Run I a- cash system the scholars were of equal merit and an Inti&d cing a stric buds= ot cargo' all was thoroughly enjoyed by the otWeilefts which will enable us to large attendance present. Santa most our obligations. and furthermore407JM reduce our bTerbeed and increase effl- Womb "A :Klaus was particularly enjoyed by the phn� ci in service to the customer. eac -young people and he was very gen- Tru"ting our many eustomerswill erous with gifts. It was unfortunate co-operate with us to carrying out the Got the 8*0 1—write for a 19 that go many, of the large crowd pre- foregoing be to page of the New Words, Specimen Of un3lso, believing this to be to a Pap*", FPJM Regular and InAf sent had to stand. Even the halls our mutual benefit. ...CHARLES B.PENCER 1and stairways were crowded and Thanking you to advande. Ca. C. MERRIAM CO. many turned away, emphasizing the -W 2:Z. 1& 0 1,+ 2�q -T-V Spirblofkid, Mass., U. S. A. Ineconsity of a hall with adequate at- — Proprietor, Pickering - comodation for such events. 14-17 Pickering Bakery. ........... Z Q