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HomeMy WebLinkAboutPN1937_07_09P: I - x. 1 n 1 • VOL. L`'1, PICKERING, ONT.. FRIDAY .JCT ! .Ir 9. y3� . Yc. 46 i, Msdfsara►tnlaaal Eas�ar. - - -- AlumNOTIC� GREENWOOD lrdfrn1w, spent Sun Remember the Institute Garden DwR. H. O. PRAR8ON—Pbyaiciau �t day'with Miss Marie Devitt. Party and lee .Creaan Social to be rads.rsao.. Dr,Our trucks pwstt your way Mr. Hugh Gannon has a position held on the beautiful lawn o1* Mr_'every osis." at Markham for the holidays. and Mrs. D. W. Crosier Friday R. trOtttBYTH, Opti. A., Director - _ Laaoaatiosot Ost rlo• Ret• ('iOAL,� . QQ$E. - A number of our residents att- evening (tonight) . .1886--1936 - Wared Member at the Aasricat Opm.etrkill ended Cedar Grove garden part _ y association. gree eamined b! mpg m tmeat. y on Misses Mary and Eileen Ransom er•a•t N. J .n ,. out. WOOD, CEMENT, Saturday- evening. of Toronto, are holidaying with Mr. - The July neo ng of the W M. and Mrs. H,, Slack.. Chopping 1.aoak BAND, GRAVEL, S- will be held at the Maleolnt LI`We are sorry to report that Mr. home. W. Eckhardt'is not so well as us-. Monday, Wednesday and Friday R rorttserlr ,tcarvted by tae tate a. >r- ubns- B ILD E R S SU P P.L DONALD KU1)LY lfwlrwWr. and The Sunda Sch ] usl, • soliator, triorAr•r t',iblrc. nlo.ielw wan. � , y � purpose hold- ' IE8 rag' their Annual Picnic on Jul; tiaasaoutb triad or l curt k►ouse• wat6t . clic 23rd. Details later. Cherrywood 7e. per bag _ BEATON, BELL & ROSS also 190aI cartage work A large congregation attended - — + 3Y bap : $1.30 Earriaters tf Solicitor-- a�� We'6sivealso piaeed in shock a fn}I ��ental Service on Sunday. The Cherrywood Sundaq School • -s line of Maples L 3k f Killing evening.. Rev. ' Augustine of Clare- and Cormrrunity Picnic will be held 25 bags and over, 6c. per tag WILLIAM i�lAM J, BEATON.K.C.J,D. C• Uo,s Foods, Mont will be here on ,July 11th. at Oshawa-on-the-Lake, on Tuesday ,A full line of cattle and pig i1.BROOKE BELL, K. C. J. D.F. ROSS A number from here were at the July 13th. -The Truck leaves at 10 feeds JAMES A WRIGHT A, .We MITCHELL. Claremont Cemetery on Sunday at. o'clock D. S. T. :ff "r bt,teec, Tomato, wdelaide sm - tending 'the Decoration Day Ser- r._ Pig Concentrate - thk is necer v O.. RICHARDSON A Go.. Barris Pi©keringr (}IIfi. vices. Dunbarton for eeoaomiW feeding V own. Soligci�cond�• [!rotaries etc., suite act. Mr. Norman Meehin and cions, Raceldoc Lire Btridiu�Tameto,5t. Toronto, Ocoee phone 7400 Residence Wjo of Oshawa, and Mrs. H. Mechin of St. Paul's Anglican, Dunbarton. �t Starter .tae Toting $tis 'r4lfapbtlrte eq. ►ess: �relteri�ls t'booe atlt3. 8tr Pickering were guests of Mr. and Sunday, July 11th. 7th Sunday of- + THUMBON Ar)![a1dILLAN—Burris- The Beal Store; Claremont Mrs" T. C. Brawn on Sunday. ter Trinity, 2 p. m. Sunday School Poaltry Feeds, An kinds C7llekail► j fw% Sirbcitam Notaries Public... face Mr. Ed%w-d at Gordo¢ Howe. Picicen , an'Ineeday and PHONE 9'3El Caaumack and, dau- 3 p, m. Evening Prayer. Rev, 'E. ter and Mrs. Canw ach. Sr., of G. Robinson, preacher. A cordial Starter and Growing ]lasllll astaMay em•was from 7 to 9.00 orb ap- �II and Shorts pir,tsrol- St. Po office. Mc-Kt. gids.. FURNITURE Iona Lake Mich., were with . the invitation is hereby extended to the !a l/�lisda St. Pbe•e Erato am. sett Hicks family over the week-end. We wre• displaying so attractive residents and summer visitors to OONANT & ANNIS — Barriste-s. variety of The Walter Bayles familly were attend these service:+. F. Z. C3RF�Fr.Z•i t r•• Notaries Public among the guests at the 93rd bdr- Owing to the Horticultural Soc- Aluminum and Rraniteware Stet, ALLIN F D NNIS. NT, . LL. Furniture and Furniture thday celebration of Mrs. Jane iety holding their Rose and Delpb- d *♦ �Tn Mesa- R. 2Sirac, e, A.. Lt,. S - Novelties. Boyer at her home in_Greenwood on � One«- •7 l 4simooe se: s.: Orliasrt ' inium Show in our basement, on Prices low, ict keeping July First• y ng, our minister. ,boa«—f and a Kxha'wa). and az the Court P ng witL timet;, ! Saturday evening, House. Whitby. (Mr,'Cona•t) Pbone 7 CW hit- Mr. . and Mrs - Bert Harvey ' were P.ev. . ('hats Howey, will deliver a AND by)• entertainers at Creseley -ort Thur- floral 'sermon om Sunday &ruing ,SII kinds cf FEI air � ork :RADIO SERVICE day evening and at Kintore, near at 11 o'clock. Everybody welcome. - London, on Saturday, and have a The regular meeting f the w urns Guaranteed - gul g o e All Tu Graduate of Radio College -.number of engagements booked. M. S. will be held 'at the home of C. S. Mac'DONALD HDLT ERB6RT T. FALLAIBal L D e.. with Greenwood Field Day attracted Mrs. Gerald Cow an in the form of 209 CLOSE AVE.. I ORONTO' . D. s, cradoate U the Royal f Toronto, of mart of our Brou a picnic, and in connection with it. paaai Snr>4eo¢s and the tlatveMt! of Toronto. V • t0-the-rnir me training y sham ecce% :nn Phone Lakeside 1502 Wseainr«tdeneesrconddow east of St. And- �- g Wednesday. Messrs Harvey and -will be the C. G. I. T., The Miss- 1•w'. Church. Piekennr;, Opt. (Hirt, Dwtry : 'g a. m. to a-P. m., or ay appointment.- (x-ray p and Kenney were among the evening's ion Band and the Baby $arid • On Orders taken at NEWS Officerarvice). Phone Pick 3700. 4317 _F tNEST EQUIPMENT entertainers, the afternoon of Thursday. July for _ Miss Marie Devitt visited Mr. . . . . . L . {gssstsase• or artier. ' Ouaranteed Satisfaction and Mrs. , Ti, CheeseborouZh and 15 Last Wednesday evening at Cen- -Shingles For Sa e - n R .i AT other friends in Oshawa cin Satur. ten, al United (Church, Rev, Chas t FPOST" Liodused Auctl eel, Reasonable Prices day' Howey, w indicted pastor of th" Galt GhIrFknizhd 'Merl Rbiogles. . ler o•uatue or York and ungrio. sue Tubes and Batteries stwaya on h Ad Word has just been received of , L)unbartnn. and. Centennia} Chur~:he� Bird'- 1+PIt tfiKte Ali nglem. I". 0jaes.« dr all Gros a fiver, o nn on sbors«s tho death 'in Homer, 1\_. Y, of Mr aj eerding Rev F M. Burrress Also. re-ruM,erin Flt y wheels soft••. r•ddr•« Qrs•¢ River, P. O„ Oos, _ g KR: H. ROY MILLER. Jesse Hubbard, on July 2nd. Iii •. The sermon was given . by Red Lawn Inowerb ehitpeued, l R. BEATON. TOWNSHIP ;BrouVbaut, Untarin friends have .the sympathy of all i1s11as, end the address to ;caste► T. PATER` ON'h !'LARE�(Ol\ D s Clerk Conveyascei Commissioner for 48tf Phone Mark I" Brougham friends. and COP TP a p c C& Me sHtdaVit',, AcconntAnt. ELL. •Issuer of - ' tt @ tine by -Rev, CYtristi OKII Khd irrt r>*icew, Phone 261L t,rarrieva Liceos«. W hitevole, out. A theses for $?00 donated by bath of Tnrnntr After which a rF - --- — — Norval and Lyal Wilton, of Oshav:3 ce*e,n was held for the ,new• 'pas.�* T n'..��R- EL � A. 'E. RIGHARLSON ,- was gtatPfully rece,t.•d by. ;h? S irsr slid his- wife. -• cretary of the C'ernetery, Cc*rn,tnitt-,.: 110i>?AY. JULY— 12TH;, GE1!IIOftAL INSL RANC -- - t<t sestet .fir tyre carting for the rent +h'� �1;�F .« n' The +� REAL ESTATE Insurance of till 'Elrlcs. eters grc,unds. (:,• ,rte. vac lr , � ®®' , 't✓ONVEYA`CING The W. I. wPI hclId •t'p:r 3U)"' ('n-nFr. 1`.nQa,•? Rr,a(l -T}-4 Builders'- Su' Bent Bent Rftter_ A,!Ik agile witl, wee,tinc at. th.e howl- of Mrc, T;1.;. An old established agency, res y ... ,un •—:� PP gl;in;t•• l3,•ln:•!' , rise - _ -_ —. _ t0 BeTTe, - � K1 -. 1:illnP £,n .TUFcri;ti'.- '� .. 1 tl7, 'w a.:k n .rF:t �t r>•s. t'hNr, '♦ � .., l . Pct7rlte and 1$1Pr71'N' ptrr . rf the, lh;'r,,t < > P rd-e'c I r h,, fu ,, tip; .Phone;' Pick. 6800 T•• I�UIu1JF1' ?iht 'Lath gL 'n by df•1t-,at, -.l;na t ars f,G (1 - �' T B'. C. �1t.I11 JCS I' �i . Address Phone. - 1Lut,t rt ,L ,r, tins) ter:, T: PHt!i c.; Jr ,,u A. n,a 1+= << 1. r Ll,aw k `� r I{ .,. Yk W BROUGHAM PICK• SiC'. Mrs. Ar.hur �I:rhun ar.<i-'ll.., (rf:rt E • .. i-"• ',+1 E"t. L liar 'i, '-1%t] LiCF..`S.EI ..A1 7CTluNEVil AN*f, l Ln. ufC' 7( u,, s {t ! e,(1 t * `�•'� p i!F n t .. c A]In'rra r: _ i B.t km 1l i4 b -, s' ,a•.. r u :r • t• •F tit` t: l �iLt .�TOH l _ `2 i, t . ) .. t r ' .. a I t t - 1'~ 1 1 ) ii<Ir� trL>odutrted �iuywC,etc Pickering MiI1S her ni,.h 91r. '•B!I1'r.:Us }i=.\ tthr„ ,F isH Phfa,i- or write -Addreb: Ult Da a.da- alis` visaed ill Th-e nE:r• fits 'eaL- r Lt,NI1.t; I 'ltl�e,: i�ltt.teC ll }•ttr\'alt` a S'treL Eetbt, A;encS for Fro,,t Woou, a=t,: - i11t,I Ie Ii,1dy R•cod It httbt. Ontario; i ° A_ report has jut rF i iie1 Rr,'i- `.(i Aa t Ij Peit.ce? Cockchutt Fa,rw MH(-llirjery ;:ha^ of ti:t. ,a= in;. u: \Ira. 11•n'. ,,, eutS or I-illi, 1 au 118 n -a cull -r r3)r�, t- Mr, anis ''tYrc• ^Ii, ;.t: 1 99e c3ilLlin "CI R'II� • E.1SE�RLEk. vl Ltnt<,?,. car i'„id.Rre :t!ll I3.� ('.. - ALL . Complete lire. and rep�ir�- We'll way .ane 'efccur Bruit h un coy; 11'11 .-;: a dau>rht.r• aIIa L � (1�11:RAL iNyi RA NCE , � - Phone, — Piekerine. 6701 ChOppin� tlL,d. Feeds: of H]] and bntthrr of Mrs. F.. Ca.44- alul 1fi.sc F., Long iS holidayin POINT . .k1ndR., Vers,_ B; 'x Feaiby, and ell-known 'tlrs - Parkc. COCkRlliltt I.uI)let)tt3ntB here, lis wife tta�z a native'of Ont- .lfrc. ' Bufkle�z anis -family aro, at S,Secure Prices Before Buying Ropal Pastry F;our ario as well. His sisters, Ruth and the hotel for their vrcatinn. -Jn itrance at R(-becc•i-l: -w•l.Q are now West,ni Cnilvra-Ufar!.,n tr Lr'rnP an .1 Ponitry Feeds, Growlna residttlts. are still rFn,enl.her'd ,t�11 t ��T ^^ p ROS iME!1l1CPfl AtE'6 i,n *» 1,::-11' n, : YY I L `J N B r1 Oi7 F; T V0M, 'car `laFh; L. (� ins 1ld•h here. , d- :c, :rima, t:xtsn:(l sin- � ,t •.t: • (ei ­e4t rl,.•± �• .. *�_e_ il: r, la:r+l... \l l', - 1'.T:1 \lr= Na ".a, an,l fm. ''�' Locust Hl!! Ont. .. NJ. cam, all makes 4.P!oa Pc:ints t !, +. See -Us ;,: l <!T :,. Wi 'U 1 ala: "W­z, Toln{,'. , tt 'a , 1 .. n t1 , 1� 1 i n :. F'ran•..,• , r '111? a { ail t�l, P.hnn•, t,I.,j k 7.2o,l SE.KVIdE: an<i. PiiO iECTEON D. N . Lcich wo Od ! I ... c lInr ",r.; of �liti>,:j t - \ c lc . ; PIC'hh;R1\G. ONT. th, h, l nLi, aT c1, t I t:;e u r iii 'ath,3`' .cI, Summer Furniture t', },n{ , 1,{ t. > .til .. , ur:,la.1r. lit nw l.nrrin•r?�'•E ;RC1)\ _ R�. G. CLENDENING � l Ia. it. ll', r; Fa'.:. r• r ri' d r,t= ;,° P;r:<- ` The annual hr•c ,roti„n ailri. Rn1a1 . -FLY Sf'R AY er I1 Tr:;t;;cel a?Ere their chili- embranee iiay trill late held on Sur.- Cape Cod Lawn Chair $2,85 FUNERAL,DIRECTOR r6nspent their :•hihihtxni, attending ct' c T-^ r l la's. J. y ' 1 th.' at 0 in th? a. - Broucham school.' Eivhfv were in ternonn . at the Cemeterv. R v . for } Lawn Chair ;$2.10 Pr Anabnlnn(e tt t a N'ndarwe b this enjo}able Bath- Pri,'. Thomas H.. 3litche}I P..D.. Day and Night Service 'ening. Deck Chair 'with Canopy and be ;ruF�t sneaker. Phone poor, \.� AfuR� fu iG} edllh t P- l it •t alN 0 -wood. r Foot Rest $3.35 610vern 5000 ' Middleton ];amily Hold Re-IT nion at choir. No service.t in hthelhUnited CATTLE . -- - _. - CoiKhiching Park. Orillia July Ist. Church on that day. - Deck Chair with Canopy .$2.60 Markham, • And Alll t1Gmesti'c Stock y � The Middleton Re-anion; held' at the Unified Sunday School, proved ' Couchiching Park, Orilia, on July quite a success. All the enure( Gives Longer Protection. -will .. ..without Canopy . $1.25 First; was a decided -success. ' In- were real good. In the Junior class, r Summer Tim- e g not taint milk. Lamp Chair $1,�, creasing numbers each year attend First Prize went to Douglas Sloan, ' thas gathering which has become an far violin solo; Second, to Audre PEARSON'S CATTLE SPRAY,yNote the. Low Price. (irase ffiatts STOCAAIDE, annual picnic.• They were honoured Snyder,, Elocutionist; end -Third to ti Fly Tax, Hated Sprayers,' , Fly with the presence of Mayor Goode, Mildred Petty, for piano. 1n the 1 OD seer Ola��iDn n . Studio Conches sprayers, Fly Swatters;. Screen of the town, who was clothed with Senior group, Mary Pt reeIl, tap- ' !pe b Doors and 'Whtdow Screens. the badge of the Clan, and given a . dancing; Ruth Sloan, piano; and Wan Paper Best of honour A the banquet tab- Taylor and Snowball, guitars. 128 Ounces �1 King Bug le•He gave the Clan an address of United and Baptist Churches Day, we one, o we by short speeches of Whitevale will hold a United Container Included �� � Day � � •in b, 10 and ZO 1111(. bag& by the officers. Arrangements Senesce i?L 'the-Baptist Church next phone 121.0 ;were made to hold the. 1938 re-un- Sunday, July lith, at •7 p. at. S. We-sbelieve this to be the beat 'A” Mowers sharpened and repair'- ion at Orillia, All officers were re- T. Rev. J. R. Bick will preach. procurable, i ''., i �- elected, and ,the following names ' on Sunday, July 18th, the •service P1 K IN E C ER 0 _N NE. -,VS- added to the Progralm Corritnitt:ee: in hire WIhitevale Baptist Church Made by itfakers of CreoWfl► C. A. STERRITT Mu>ebi>ng. Roofing, '1�tt�itthht� Mrs. Thos. Rowntree, Woodbridge; p . a dLVIN BUSHBY g , will be conducted by Mr. Thane- son, speaker, and the muter Dan- Jones, Phm • B +ft, Funeral Director Mrs. Farr, Wle.4ton• Mrs. C: O. AI]<] Johnston, Coldwater and Mr. Wes- rel soloist, both of the Mt. De,nnis?r • C. FIIrnitare Dealer Hardware Tinsmith ky MiddlAcin Orilba. Everyone re- .r PToRERI�IQ turned to their homes after o lurch. Service at 11 a. ��t it1f[eT'Ji1lQ, QIItal'10 enjoy- m. All welcome. Tfeieering y phone 4606 tug a very pleasant day, . Ab Chickens Turn To Ora'nge''Tek®e � B1e�,� sola Digging A _ Large Nugget Found in Crop log AIDS Of Bird To Be Eaten \ - - CHARLOTTETOWN, P,E.L, —Just _ s. gold had been discovered in the rG . about 50 years ago a report thatshore - ��ZF.- � -S kLAD P •� sands in the vicinity of Nest Point, ,� �- • P. E. I., created considerable excite- Sts ment throughout the Maritime .Prov- L _ - - inces. A big boost in land values of EA ...7 the locality where the gold was said to have existed oourred, but the gold did not "pan -out" •to expectations and the excitement abated. The° value of farms in the vicinity reverted back to ;--------:_o' :tee _.::::::::o' •: :+'�::::: :� =': ��'-=='= ==ems normal prices of good farm. lands. But now reai gold has been,` found Not long ago while one of the house- hold ouse �r '"•�•- _ ints }cold of Keil Boulter of ';Vest PointH®� was preparing a fowl for the. table a - large nugget of almost pure gold was ." found in the crop•of the bird.. Mr: �_ By .LAURA KNIGHT Boulter's nephew, I -Toy and Living-- '> stone war. present when the gold was ' found. ft h eturned home he told his "L `.• •'- When the United League season unearthed the following facts: Huet- A er e r mother of the circumstances and ea - - opens the gamblers are offering 200 te, Rawlins' assistant, went to see Pressed aonderwe�nt as to where the to 1 that Pop Clark's New York Rawlins right after the game sad gold could have come'from. His mo- w w rii" Blues will not win the pennant. was with him for about fifteen min- ther then related the following: Terry Burke is the only sports writer utes; Rawlins was pretty sore at him "When- my grandfather Boulter ) to give, them a chance. He bets $10 because of the Butchers' second sue. came -from England, he settled where i _ � , y �., ;�. • �,. • �. � �. � ..� '. , at Tony Murallo's restaurant in the cessive defeat, and Huette went away, Keil now lives. He had some gold Broadway district. In the Blues first sulking; one or two of the members , coins which were kept in a corner game Whitper, the Phiiadelphia of the team stopped at the door to in= cupboard. These disappeared but pilcher; is killed with a bullet tbroygh quire for him; his talk with Huette were afterwards found 'by the grand- - the heart after smashing out a home had tired him and he refused to take daughter to whom they were then gi- run. Both Burke and Larry Doyle, his supper when it was brought in; yen. She rolled them up and again f z the Blues' rookie shortstop, for whom he wanted to' rest and the nurse had put thom in the cupboard. Some 40 s < •'. `. Clark's pretty daughter, Frances, left him for about an'hour. That was ears ago they finally disappeared. It had .hews her preference over Whit- all that turned up from the police is believed. they were gathered up 9•w� ;. ` per, are suspected at first by Detre- efforts. The missing maid was check- with waste paper and thrown into the tive Kelly. It is Burke who discov. ed and had not left the hotel by the stove and cater the melted gold was ear it was Sid Stream, notorious gun-. usual means. Her clothes were in taken out with. the ashes and Neil v., - .man, who wrecked a taxi with a bul- her locker and there ivas. no reason ' Bouler's hen's have .become gold dig - •s° let through a tine and injured -four to suppose that she was anything Ser§." Boston players as the Blues are to other than she appeared to be. She ° open a series. Then Dirkin, Chicago. .lived in South Chicago and had been ]wiCnt>feal VS. Toronto rear, drops dead, after hitting a hom- employed by the hotel for oyer four' *F er from o:son on a phonograph . P was com etent and well years. She P u d b Canad]•ans have been am se y needle fixed in tha handle of his bat. liked by the management• the controversy that has been' going "' . n Pietro, Chicago's bat boy, disap- "how you've got the whole story," on for some time between jealous r .pears. Clark sends Doyle to Newark Hover said when the bottle was em- admirers of Montreal and Toronto but he is soon sold to Boston. When pty," and know as much as I do."as to .which is entitled to be consid-` 4 r - ' the Blues go to St- Louis,. Scotter, Both Terry and Craven looked to erer� the leading city of the Donrin- -� t the Rubes' star pitcher, is found Doc Biers for confirmat'on. Biers ion.. • '•�a�' `_ 6..�, ��`�� °�" • ' dead from a gas given off by a mys- nodIted•true," - Tcropnto,. .of a populouq terious powder in the -box with a ° u can Hover said. "Yo yepcentre area raudl o;nts to, its .ever -in- jigsaw puzzle sent to him. Each time wire your papers if you want to, but creasing mdustrres, eta rapi.ily grow- Burke has a bast oo these sena• Doc and I beat you to it." He lurch- int; mining market. its record trad- ; - !' •• ' F;K , + -.: - lional happenings and masked gun- ed to his feet and- ambled toward the ing on 'the Stock Ex,hange, and its _ t ween truss him up, question him and door. ".Come on •I'll, buy you'; ever -widening boundaries. On the = - warn him he knows too much, Raw!- .Doc, - drink." other hand, ore -cannot overlook such _ las, the manager, is sick when the Blues to Chicago, aisd New Yora' Doc Biers smiled. and 'followed Ho- facts as that ,Montreal is the Dorriin- "that it - Coconta Dainty _ Coconut Jelly Balb: " go wins the first game. Burke bees Mull- g ver -through the door. _• . Ion's $rancial centre, is- the headquarters: of thA most substan- Coea'rrut, in almost any .form; -is a 1 ct,p sifted cake flour _ im, another• sports writer, $S the, "It's crazy," Craven, said. _ "The tial a-nter. r>�-in the country; and favorite.- n �' rite.- There re so many uses n. baking powder 1 teaspoon. _. Blues w511 w n the sreoAd game if `t� whole thin; is a crazy ' ni�•htmare: that it is the Dr minion's greatest sea- for these del ghtful, moist shreds of 3 eggs Rawlins is F•"t "' ' ''- absent ,Vb- will hagpen next?.Know any- prii;.-}e it may not base as many large goodness -that e,�ery housewife should 1 cup sugar _again. s : ^herr; Terry, any at head- . 1_:wer: - Toronto- has. but it' is kee a carton or seared tin of it on r 2 teaspoons lemon -juice . w;ro would hive you the in - as equally true -that it -is_in the centre equally hand. She .thouId also be careful how ::G tablespoon; hot milk Ho,, er had *,'no- . to iiia •ncn I mail- 4C ,;c. t . ' ' of. a rapidly growing population, one she bu;;.: coconut,, because its' good= 3. _ f cup tart' jelly "_;•ager's office after dinner and had �. ',•„oak his hen ::e !:new whose first :nterest is agriculture, ness is lost if it isn't perfoc-Cy fresh.' 2 clan -coconut, southern 'styla. spent most of the ev ening there. At no one ;nil. ryas glad of ,ie IIP, }vas se--_ and one that will continue to can. -The only way to be -sure thnt what Sift. Sour once, measure, ad3 oak- . nine o'clock F.arilins' nurse Karl call- t i.,�l that for once he had not fibulo, as it has done in the past. you buy is .the best is to get it in ir.R.powder, and sift to ;:hcr three ed for the mananer ane rnstste< f a been in tine thi.-% of the my:stary.. He to Mohtrc^I's• t;•rentness.. - sealed tins --or cartons w r:.r are t tura. Beat eggs until very be come upsta'rs: He had been gone for Len or fifteen minutes and Hover heated a, sitht of relief. „ - It sloes not resin lively. therefore, I w especially constructed. to reta.n all .tis and light and nears white {about` 10 , Y had to find .him. "I know one of tha btai� here,” he t t flint Toronto v, is oust Montreal from the- moature and freshness of the minutes}, Add. -star , gradually, .gone The nurse was upset because Rawl- said. "-'i[a;he he can help us- out. I its proud• position as enc comtner- coconut. bcat`.ng constant) Add 1^mon uice. 1r y =ins was "not in his room. She had will _call him in the it orning.' - c cal metro oli:, of Canada• but; as 'cities There -are two kinds cf coconut, Fo'.d in flour, a small' amount at, a.. off duty for an hour, because They both Fent wires, to t1wir pa- admirers of both believe, th's Southern style and premium shred. t:me. add milk, 'in!, g go -:clay un - gone' he said he was tired and wanted to Per: and saE tal:?ne a3out the rtob-, �.f friendly risal:y between the, two The first is used -for to n-- des-' pp" R til batter is .smooth. Tu:n'at once ' sleep.NVhen she came back the 'bed abilities Rawl clap vanishirI It s''�o.uld 'contribute to their greater serfs, s�rinkling• over frostings and into small cup -cake par.. chinch have was empty. She called scleral rooms �e,es just elc�en-thirty+.hen Terry.'s- telephone ran7. It w•as Doc' Friers. eflicicrey r.r.d' in the end to, their greater prosperity —Canada s Week -- fruit cups, for fluffy-witips and.,mer- been greased very lipatly on bot- =and could not locate any o€ ecce men He was havib-: trouble gc•ttir.g ]]over :9y (London). ingue mixtures and the .second is 'semi toms. Bake ,in moderate oven (3a0 orF the team who roamed -at the, ho- to Iced and calkid for help. - used more for fluid or -fluid mix- Deg. F.) 20 minutes, or unto done., tel. She then became alarmed .end The both event up to the — tures, such as pie fillings, custards Remove from pans. Beat jelly, with L':cd the grana,, cr• There was no y. .sigh- teenth floor. anal wc:F working over PrS93tt' .lobs U M U. S. lg; and uddin s and as an,ifigredient in P g fork until of right con a tansy to ' trace of ' Rai-lir.s, any -where.' They 'the Hover when . -they heard a horrified ' cookie mixtures.. Though in most -s, read. hen cakes are col siircad, looked in courtyard . first; they cry. in the corridor. A cold chill•run Iti ASITItiGTON — The United recipes, either style may be used it P b y + -with. jelly; roll in coconut. 'lakes 36 searched the hotel from top to 'bot- down Terry's spine. The three encu Stales Emplo�-nrcnt Scrvice during is best to use the kind called for, ds cakes. tons: • Th6ve was.no, sign of a struggle : I!i looked' at each other in startled 'Io- found the largest number of Y it. is es eciall adapted to that ar especially P P• in. the room: The be:i covers were 9 thrown hurl. if he had slipped amazement: Doors were o -ening .all 'jobs in private iridustry for unem- ticular recipe. `The circus hag - just signed a labor as from the bed.' His slippers were un- along ,the corr'dprs and they heard ployea persons of any month in its Here is a.delicious idea for the tea agreement. The week's greatest ih- •- - der and his bathrobe was or. - excited voices. Craven raced dov:n history and listed tae lowest number hour in the form of fluffy coconut stance of exhaustion was the case .the .bed a_ chair. TI 5 :other 'v: ere„han,'ing the ball ,• folloti ing fern{. , hotel "one rf the older of job sec.:e:•s on its rolls, Secretary Pcl-kins reportvd. balls which are a treat when 'made of the union man delegated to picket in the cupboard• 'Fhe house detective called in. The was* Chic» o hote.� rs tl in^5 ;o'r. ; , .but "� ' The numLrr of persons paced in with fresh coconut, and fresh Coco- nut is the real secret of the success the man on the f.yin, trapeze.=H. .:as The maids on the floor had not seen new enough to be on- of'the first of The figure 'was of any recipe calling for coconut. I. Phillips, in Nov Y,�:'; S'.in. 'rte anything unusual in the halls and the moderns: Tt NVa_s' one of ,the first SO per cert above May, 1936,_— noi:e of• them had seen a man in to put in :eer:i:e r',00r•=.' Tlrcy:.v et•'e.. and nearly 1Q per cent higher than pyjamas wandering about. One of not like, the more recent ones. They April of this wear. - the mains, however, cr'uld not be'. were longer and deeper than the new The gain in placements over the found. She v, -a not in the linen room ones and 'there ,vas rn • c•irc:nce of previous. year has been cont`.nuous ' nor on any of the other. floors. snt:asilin� n suit nor -s s' it ii co. -ai-v for 15 months - . ' The seai:ch the'n hec:rme t ­ :o -fold to flattcn. ri,, t your laundry b .; in � but neither the maid nor P,awlins. 'orFlcr to gut it'in the don'.' Clayton asked the still shaMn bell- gc could be found. •Then tiro police were A hellboy stood shat :n;;• . in the boy: called in: centre of n crowd > ^frre . n opened The boy pointed to -the body in f Py a ser'es of r;::estions the police se:••ricc' door. Tl:c r.rer half of the the, doorway. Ternan whistled and dmor was o^en, nn,” -oukli'x d t lust forward to leave better look. tics light which can -de ftori a lihtvd moved a The house doctor came hurrying s ' A EA B L A C K E$ E A D «:nil w acres the com dsn led the t hodyQof i ti just then, went, into the room and 'p jw Don't sGuceze blackheads —dissolve r liar, TLe body h';ni:* f ';til t] - hnol: „closed the door. them. • Get .two ounces, of peroxine' powder from any diuq' store and nib t meant to lin!J. co::t-a^n I's. • The gc. .(TO DE CONTINUFD) > u Z v" f ' gently with wet, hot cloth over th•e head was heat fnrararcl cn its: chest � „ T 1 Al 1 3' and` the Ion" w t^ -c1.11 lo- +" hung ' blackheads. hey situp y isso ve an 1 , disappear by this safe and sure method li-niply down . into -t1:, roo;.l beyond, Have a Hollywood .complexion. Craven; knelt •dov:n and looked up at the face. 41T I 71 -i, us LaV..iM;, 112 V:11 411eted to Terry., There Nca s tha sound of. c::cited voices and three men ca=rve hurrying down the corri:lor. They were .Clay g ton, the managed Ternan, his house detective, and the rci;;rt clerk, who hSuke No. 2$--'37 F was . just going on d uty. "What's the matter. C„t^rgf1 C-2 _ J • Sparkshom the'Press To Aid Flying OTTAWA.—A radio and meteoro- logical reporting station will be con. --44ructed at Port Harrison on the east • tion, manures and fertilizers, nutri- tive value of pastures, fodder con- servation and grassland economics. I Marie Antoinette's Gems For Sale I from Lorne Duveen, and cost $498.- 000. o 1,- .'Homework For Teachers - TORONTO. — More than 6,000 teachers in Ontario will give up a month of their summer vacation to - take refresher courses or to improve their professional and academic sta- tus. ,The number this year is nearly twice as many as in 1935, and many coast of Hudson Bay, Hon: C. D. 1. Howe, Minister TIT'S Forecloses on $200,000 Doukho- � =74 of Transport, an- bor Mortgage y y x `t Power Revenues Up . pounced. this week. VANCOUVER.—Mr. Justice D. A. WINNIPEGo .—The Manitoba P w- sj "The inception of the trans-ailan- p McDonald Supreme Court Cham- P Cham - ' p er Commission, which operates tic and tr$ns-Canadian services has berg has appointed D. D. Munro, Van- � ' ,a Province -wide Hydro -electric service, a made it necessary that reliable couver Manager of the Sun Life As- g As - k >;• increased revenues b $27,909 dur-" y weather reports covering conditions surance Company of Canada, receive- k ` ing the first six months of the fiscal over wide areas should be available er for a large g portion of the hold - year, Chairman Herbert Cottingham at all �� gimes, the Minister said. "Meteorologists fogs of the. Christian Community of announced. Income totalled $523, - are of the opinion Universal Brotherhood, Ltd., in •Brit•, 325• that a station at this point will help .1sh , Columbia. .: greatly in making these reports, re p 4 complete.. Port Harrison is roughly Ab About 15 15,000 acres ;of t D he ouk- hobor property in the vicinity oi� - , .:: � 'Great Empire.. Exhibition In 1935 , half waybetween Churchill, Man-; and the Labrador Brilliant and Grand Forks, in South- lrs £ At Glasgow -Canada will be fittingly represent - roast, and will pro-' vide a quick means eastern British Columbia, is mort- y edat Glasgow in 1938 at the largest• of communica-a tion with the outside world for this g d to the Sun Life to secure $200,000. ;. Empire Exhibition• to be held 7n part of Canada.' "This A foreclosure action has been in- Great Britain since Wembly (1924- 25), where the' Canadian Pavilion station will be of value as an aid to navigation in Hudson Bay, atituted against, the . Doukhobor or- ganization by the mortgagee to re -(fine r vias one of the outstanding features. 'the - apd of service to the Department or covei its principal together with :.. z Because the attendance at last Mines and Resource s, also to the t ltiiounted Police in 10 000 in $ , Lerest and $30,000 in k f s f �r F ? 9 r, ,:_, -`- �? ! !y,: ° great exhibition in Glasgow in 1901 totalled 11,000,000 ,, 0,000 visitors, it is ea-. connection with, the administration of their services. taxes. The receiver was named at ..the request of the Sun Life• �� ti petted that, with the infinitely better It will be equipped with long and The defendant has not yet appear- transportation facilities of today, an short wave transmitters of the latest ed to the foreclosure suit. The necklace once treasured. by Marie Antoinette of France attendance of several million more design, providing for transmission -contest has been set up for sale in London (Eng.), by its present owners; at the 1938 exhibition will not be ea both by radiophone and international j the Archduchess Blanca of Austria and her sister, the. Princess Beatriz unreasonable expectation. ...biome code. --Poultry Protection of Massimo. It is said to be valued at $100,000• The diamonds are c d onst ered unusually fine. Use of Air ]Nissl sire f U ed a& Y rg HAMILTON..—James Waldron of Hamilton, was acquitted of cruelty _ -- - • ' - � � _ Drought Area Receives Aid TORONTO --Since Oct. 1 last year OTTAWA. —The Department of 'Trade to animals, -Mag:strate H. A. Bur- Says -Cancer Still Balks Medical Moscow Flight Planned By Jimmy approximately $450,000 over and and 'Commerce strongly ad- 'vises Canadian exporters in the case bid a holding that accused was ju- tified in protecting P g his oaltr Research h OTTAWA.—A noted- F French rad Mattern WASH b1 I GTOr.—Jimmy :sbor a ordinary receipts have been . c tr b- - • . on i u£ed to' the Ontario Red Cross - - . sof u en urgent correspondence, sp ce, antics- P larly with outlying P Y a' sinst the attack o B f a wire-haired fele ist told the an g Canadian an and On- Mattern, the flier, is seeking White House aid in connection w' tion i h t the Western prairie drought, Dr:' E. W. Routley, .� . parts of the world, to take advantage of the air terrier which Waldron admitted _kill- ing witha rake hawdle. tario Medical Associations': _seiene cane trace- step- by 'step 'the organic uel°ng flight from Oakland, Calif., to Mos- director of the _-organization, told mail facilities which are now avail Waldron said he struck two " blows changes that result in cancer, but cow in. August. members of the Executive Committee able from Canada. As illustrating the saving of time that be to ward . off the anima], and one. broke its continues to be balked by the rays- terious Mattern and Senator Sheppard this. wgek. It has been an unusual year for emergencies in Canada, Dr. can af. fected by this means in comparison neck. Controller Donald McFarlane was special prosecutor for transformation that turns a benign growth into a malignant one• (D., Tex.) conferred with Secretary. Marvin H. McIntyre. Sheppard Routley declared; with non -air routing a table bas been the Society for Prevention of Cruel- The associations heard Dr. An- said the Commerce Department's Avis- P Outside of district relief, tha ' prepared showing that from Toronto ty to Animals. Waldron produced an toine Lac sssagne, radiologist at the Lion Burean discourages all "pion- largest individual expenditure re. 'division " or Montreal to Bombay, India, there In a saving of eight days by air mail. injured rooster to show the result of the dog's visit, and bird Curie Institute in Paris, describe ex- periments on mice, in -which it eer flights" of that character as too- ported by the Ontario for the first six months of the fiscal year From Toronto or Montreal to Cape- .said another was so seriously injured he had to was possible to promote growth of tum- hazardous. McIntyre informed them 'where to was S110,907 for Red Cross outpost town, South Africa, • an air mail let- -with destroy it. . ors which eventually . become can- go for further coisferenee, hospital service at -the twenty-nine ter will go in 17 days, compared 2.5 days by - - -• .. - cera through injection of oestrone, pre m- w ably the Commerce Department. hospitals and nursing centres oper- in ?rgntier steamer. To Crystobal, - the female sex hormone. ated districts of Northern fPartama, there is a saving of six days by air. mail; to Rio de Janeiro, ' ; .. r - French-Canadian s Cow _ Cow- Has Quadrupkb Ontario. - - - ---- - a'saving of eight days; and .to Bue- nos Aires, a saving of twelve days:. wins Breeden Awards OTTAWA. — Joseph P. Beauche- B, C. Reduces Relief, 8 y 27 Per BETHUNE, Sash. — t=eorge Seig= : U. S. Farmers Visit Quebec Agrostologists to Meet at Aberyst. min, Vercheres,Cent. Que., is the first French-Canadian owner of an Ay:- ,.VICTORIA.—The British Colum- bia meth's purebred shorthorn .t$ cow has 'done tis best to help hirif throw h a _ 8 QUEBEC.—A par of eighty -iii -farmers from Nebraska, Colorado wyth, -wales shire cow that has won the' double relief_ department announced last bad year on• h -s southern. Saskatche- and Iowa - arrived in -,.Quebec this . from award of a Canadian Ayrshire Breed- week -relief rolls in Ma q of this year were wan farm. She v gave birth to quad- week for a visit and spent the day Can- ads and th the United States era' Association• meritorious rodue- p 27 per cent. less than in the ruplets last week. Two of the calves sightseeing. ..Later in the da they _ will meet otherd eminent agrostologists from all tion gold seal certificate and mere- b-raWp in the American same month of 1936. Monthlystn- tistics issued b the survived and are doing well, • , left .for Montreal and will visit Nia - te principal countries of the world .:Breeders', 'at the Ayrshire A_ ssoc� ation hundred -thous- y department showed 65,223 persons dependent on ; King, Formally Opens New ars Falls, Ont., Detroit New York and Washington on their way fourth international Grass- lead Congress, which will be held at and -pound club. St, A l4 -year-old cow, St. Blain Prin- unemployment relief during May, 1936, compared with 88,090 in May Sculpture Nall LONDON.,•••_The . -bome. Aberystwyth, Wales, in July, 1937. The congress will consider different, taniere, owned by is a yeai ago. In April this year 73,- 825 King formally op." ened the new Duveen Sculpture Halls As construction of -the Interna - sapects of the grassland problem, in- the 19th Canadian Ayrshire to - win the awards.' The cow produced 100,-. p Persons were receiving assist. ante. at the Tate Art Gallery this Week. "These tional Thousand Islands bridge g o- eluding ecology, pasture and _range management. seed mixtures, 1!aA nnunr�a of .Y,;tl, , 4.515 pounds- -e€ butterfat, 4.46 '.._.' 7. ' -sculpture galleries are the finest in the world," the King said ceeds, he wiseacres who said it would -never -b >fuix. are- being given pl"ant bi•eedipz, genetics and seed produc- per cent., in 2,580 nilking days. Special. in a brief dedication speech. The p their 'answer.* Recorder - _ new galleries are a gift to the nation and Times _ THE, RE r::SLEET 0 cently. ss you. knots, we purchased from you tat 1937 Cbevroks trucks. 1 nt you would be interested to know i to o little over two months this ftme 461350 miles. The o Sasoliee, rot inilee fists! drivjng. of course, /N UM.Pdf p tons 5e per util•,'t _ Jame Ca?�� $ons. L•rp. .. w:•,;vcfY$S;�': �j\ :..{:{v_..�� ••}� v}�vvw'}tl�v 5�`SC'�E'�P•'H ^�IO�� �i C _ .� it ---- • — -� •-•• p..-.i.......+.� o..... ...... t,wa.aauao uvlvac rV1t LuuV lmena 1T . to your friends. In ,the Chevrolet Truck files are unsolicited testimonials { _that. read like "believe it or not" items, yet they are honest, owner -histories of µ these famous commercial vehicles! If you use trucks, take I a tip from ' big Canadian business firms. They keep Y -an accurate expense account of every unit in their fleets; ; : and ars.a result: specify Chevrolet ::: for long life and economy! Why not check specifications .. ,compare values ; : c Inquire about the convenient financing arrangements of the General Motors Instalment Plan. If you do, your logical choice from every angle, will be . , . Chevrolet ( - .�_ • woman dearly, but now had forgotten slob,no You're not, Shoni•" she To Dry de- {tea ..� 'Rt aaa Sw even her name, and only remembered clared tartly. "Get you back, to ++�. • 4; that she had been a good cook. bed." Tenderly, Shoni' kissed her, though "I will not," he declared, heatedly, Are irrigation and other watee - - smiling inwardly with the loving grasping the door-knob to prevent projects going to figure increasingly By N. J. SAVAGR cynicism of, a bridegroom newly (IN- her exit. " "If - you don't get back I in 'the moisture problems of the -- _ _ __ _" - •= covering the sweet absurdities of will go down as I am in my night- West's drought areas9 which his beloved is capable. shirt if I catch my death of cold." Over 4,000 applications have been The old man sat close to the fire, have been in love, for there's noth- "Gwenny," he declared solemnly, "Shoni, dear," she coaxed, "do you received at Regina offices under thi his elbows on -his knees, his veined, ing I like better. She was a grand "food, warmth and shelter are noth- get back in the nice warm bed." Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Act knotty -hands dangling before the hand at rabbit stew was. The mg to me without you. Forget that "Gwenny, dear," he mimicked her,. from farmers and ranchers in the blaze. Only a while ago he had been old man's words trailed off into foolish'old man. He could never have "do you bet back in the nice warm Prairie Provinces asking for the in-'.� cold and hungry. Now, he felt de- silence. His head' sank on his chest, loved bis wife like I love you. bed. '.It's 'no use your 'arguing. I'm stallation of irrigation, stock water- lieious warmth seeping• into his -old He heaved a sigh and his gaze did There's nothing I would not do to going down first to 'get'the -break- ' ing or kindred. projects designed to bones, and he savoured hits s hunger not waver from the saucepan. He show my love for -you. Look you, fast, yes, indeed." — beat the drought. At the moment, --like Amo •a- -sauce for the meal that had was very hungry.' swetheart,, lie exclaimed, taking "But I want to go down first;' she- larre community been promised him and was at that "What was her name?" '•Gwenny the saucepan'from the .hob and put- said - desperately. A blush. spread stock-watering reservoir is about to moment bubbling. on, the hob. Noth asked• ting it in the fender, "tonight 1 will over her'• face. She hung her head. be• erected -near, Davidson. Sask.. _ ing, else was in his mind. " Her name? Let me see," the old eat nothing that • you have cooked. Shoni stared%at her flaming cheeks Then there is the recorded experi- Gwenny came quietly "into the man mumbled irritably. "Rose, it My supper shall be bread and cheese and sud-den comprehension came to ence of two farmers in the Vanguard, : kitchen. Her young housewife's ride was—no, that was my mother's —and I sha.l still love you. Let us him: He threw his head back and y g p Sask., district. Each has rig'gd up was momentarilytame.- What • was'.. it now—when pretend you are a bad cook. Never latigbed'till-the tears came to his his own irrigation plant, and there " offended at, the e sight of the wretched, old scarecrow you're old your memory play- tricks mind the waste, the dogs will be glad eyes are other such records in Saskatche- ' sitting in Shoni's high-backed wooden - quick, gal," he cried excitedly, of the stew in the, morning." "All. right," he said, "I'll get back wan.. Each farmer in the Vanguard chair which was lustrous with the "take off the saucepan. You're burn- "But,. Shoni," she - remonstrated; tp bed, and if you, did not finish' off scheme irrigates a 40-acre tract, in- `• polishing? -that- had been' ,part of ing the- stew! smiling through her tears, "you must all. the stew I could do with some for eluding wheat, oats. barley. and al- her 'dailyritual ever since Shoni eat, sweetheart. You have had a my breakfast." 'London "Tit-Bits." falfa. When the weather is hot .and .WHICH DID HE LOVE?` brought her here as a bride a whole hard day, and it's different for a man dr and no rain in sight; they simply • The old .man. had long gone on his Y g ;.'fortnight ago: Out on the road, the —food is-nothing to we' women. It "turn on the juice." They expect way. Gwenny sat brooding in the is for Apparition old malt had looked clean• and coin- you that '! scour and 'polish wheat at 30 bushels to the acre this . ' paratively neat, for a tramp. Im firelight• when here, Shoni scraped ..his and cook nice dishes, not for my- - - year. They have 'had' tiseae 'irriga= among- her burnished copper, the boots, noisily in the yard and opened self." (Leslie Nelson Jenn_ngs in The I\ew the kitchen, door, to stand appreci-. �, York Sun.) tion systems of their own for years. bright, unshipped china on the Welsh . Bread and•'cheese for my supper - Such projects may become fairly"' atively taking in the rosy scene. "Bread !" Once, .walking deep, in Malden -. -. -dresser and the glossy bits of wed- ght. Shoni repl'.ed firmly, giving _ Wood, - common in- the' West. It may not be ding plate, he looked sadly soled "There's nice it looks:' he exclaim- her a squeeze. "You. must `have practicable, owing to the immense. ed heartily. "Everything bright and some stew, though." Where a green twilight seemed to and bedraggled. y g g g _ areas that would have to be served warm and clean! .Indeed, you -are a " Clin She reproved herself as she ob- Indeed, no,' Gwenny declared. "I $' in many cases, to irrigate in a whole- grand housekeeper Gwenny, , ands And no bird. had the hardihood served his white -hair 'and the grey only eat to keep you cpmpany. We sale way for wheat farming, but for• stubble on his weatherbe'aten cheeks. good cook, too. Is that rabbit stew will both- have bread and cheese. To -tarry long. or sing. -`smaller farms, with sundry,crops, the "There's unkind I am," she. thought, I smell? Why, Gwenny, whatever is Aren't we silly, Shoni, dear, but it's scheme may have a 'future. pIt is • • the matter?" he ended in dismay, as nice *t feel how much �,. I saw three birches, Winter-white, to repent a bit of charity to a poor yogi love me. ,. worth keeping, a friendly eye on. she burst into noisy weeping. Three g.irtering birches frail The success of all will depend, of oId tramp. lei s shame for him to �, That night. Shoni .lay awake 1.sten- -as The, . Go away from me, she sobbed, •be wandering the roads at his age. repelling his comforting arms. "You ing to-his wife's. steady breathing. Fugitive from a" word more .course,. upon having ample,water,re- She moved forward to the fire and He could not get. to sleep. It had serves available. Will our `lakes and _1 . •_ , . mere are all &like'. All` you thought p bright, lifted the saucepan lid.. The appetiz- about when you came in was your bean a hard day out on the mountain I'rrevocal)Iy lost. rivers,' as also great dams, yet be ing 'odour- rrelegted' went -to the old nand the bread' and cheese lay cold on In that half-shadow something drawn upon on a big' scale fu: itrri- food and.your comfort, and never a g msh's braiii like an-electric shock. He his stsmaci:., gation purposes, and even to the ea' cord for me, myself. Now I know ' s3izred,' rubbed his hands and cangraEulated St�altbil he tent of including, the production of a that you. don't really lave me. Yes, y -got out of bed and "No w:nd or, 'wing or leaf let :himself. How. he loved food and wide- range of products?' and after !'m dead and gone the day store downstairs.. .The :embers.. still •. •.all--- - warmth, and sometimes he wished he will come when you will have for. . glowed find it-was not- long before Something* not safely seen or loved ii;s -liberty-less- saAhat he could t gotten my na,ne and ..how I'. looked, the raburt stew was a.mmer►ag ap- -. hemid -Ice Cre8Tl7 at 'School. ata in the house and enjoy them even. All that you will remember petizi�ngly.. ate a.good half, and, By any one at all. British Board of Education after along with the other •old men. me. 'by will - be my . cooking and leaving his d.rty plate on- the table, Ask me not where, knee-deep in ',w6rking•'for, months has made its re- -Their eyes met; hers dark and whether I madeou -comfortable." store hack to bed satisfied, with the .fern, . Y _ port. No more homework for child- lustrcus'rv:th the sheen-of youth be' Shoni' stood aghast •for a moment. ricntsl resp ve to rise before G}venny Those three,`'f`orsaken birches ren under, 12'years of .age, sad ertr neath s , *,de brow and jeep black Thenrgently b.sparm ybEc about her. in the morning so as �to .get rid of stood. g basis placed on the faLt that educa- hair;'his a failed blue, honest et im `' at has, u set m little dove?" the_ ha:f-cm .t • sauce- .n and the. in- I aha'l not soon again return ton is not merely crammin things' buPd with the childish cunn;ng_of the . he . coaxed.. •'I]as that cornea::e of a . cr rninati :g p:ete. To walk • in Malden Wood! into the head. Much better. to de- e old • who -have to -use all their ' craft sister of mine been '-bothering you? . l� hen he aKo:x;. she was already velop qualities - of resourcefulness, to'preserve their liberty from' the :_ Is it too quiet for you hc:N, sweet- dreas:ng hurriedly. He leaped .out "American education is beginning individuality, and self-dir�tio'' :end ` good inten io � of the. WaNd. The • heart?" _ to come to ' %1 �,{ of bed 'and urged hes to get back, grips with the responsi-. there'i more to it. "Hereafiter instead smiled; and. he 'opened and closed his Clutching h's arm, ssif!' anbbed out ''It's Sunday morning," he remind- bil.ties which . face . the educational : of being t'urnished with a glass of watering mouth unconsciously, like a the story, dwelling on it.. paathos; cf ed her; "acrd I'm'going to bring, up system. milk per day the children '&dill bs chill' expectant before some delicious the old tramp -who once loved.. a ycur,. breakfast-." -Harty Elmer. Barnes.._ given. ice cream. _ TELLING THE TALE. _ Gaerny stirred-the stew with one of the shiny spoons of which she tuns so proud. she' sa d. long, now, grand- OWNERS DEUGHTED I pa BLch" shee' said, "You shall have 7.r r a as, much as yot. like.,, - :I ti "Ah, rabbit'stew, the re's nothing like it," he said ecstatically, nodding - ` _ his _trentuleus a d- ]Sea .---.'r noddih'airitng Im had a 3me:1 of -rabbit %:cw• this long,' po r� lens while;" he Kent on thoughtful-�j - iy. !¢ rtakc•s me think abou• -- .. .. years ago. Slje used' to good, 'make em #oil.... \Ianp's the time 1'd, come borne i74t�f.C. ' • cd :from work :n• the even:ng and smell `%Lp1 �.t� LTuia �„ �' :as. soor. as I turned down the Ianc. .<} ,,. :`abbit f,a it is-tonight,' I'd say THRIFTY, DEPENDABLE' OLDS M-OBILE A,, myself, and rabbi stew it was!" So You: had a, home of your own, - Gw•c nny :asked, looking down ALF the fun of driving an Oldsmobile is engineering and precision workmanship. t th wite way a pitying smile: y it saves you money. It's great to 9 Look at Oldsmoiiile's price tag!' Convince:, F ' "Aye, aye," he answered., "a long own a car so big and roomy—so smart and yourself that it is "The Car That Has Every- time ago; back before that old war, spirited but the real satisfaction comes when _ thing"'with such fine-car features asUnisteei a long time ago." .:you check motoring costs and find that Olds- Turret Top Body by Fisher—Knee-Action— : . ':Were. trQu- in the wa--mndpa?"' ' mobiler operating andupkeep costs are right Mal Ride Stabilizers--Cross Steering with : she asks d. down with the lowest. • Owners will tell you Center Control—Super-Hydraulic Brakes— " Y( s, , itut I never set eyes on them thatOldsmobiiedelivers unusually high mile. and Fisher No-Draft Ventilation. Then come =' Bde":%' They kept mb down at the age on gasoline and oil. They will also prove for a trial'drive in an Oldsmobile'today. Ask s „base in the cooki►ouse. The food was 10 you that it requires the minimum of servic- "about the low monthly payments to suit your shocking bad," he said, his voice fun-,ing • because of Oldsmobile's quality purse on the General Motors Instalment Plan. :=• Of gr:evance. "They Used t0 $1V9 AS _ at/ UxsN edo idtr e `6" Jour oils Sedaw m'uh Trunk !. them frozen-rabbits and no heads on. ,.>.,:,�,,�,'•,�,,«.,�<�. } :;� }. v'ti•�;;,rMv:y;,::.:;:}; �. <,: ;� ,, Now and then there'd be- a black _ 'un " among 'em, just like a cat. Enough to turn you _up! I didn't 3 , reckon thry was _ proper rabbits at Y•' all—no taste to 'em." He took a lingering'- sniff, his eyes' fixed on the' : bubbling stew. Y w• " > « „�, f _ "Your wife died'?" Gwenny asked _ softly. . , - _ - � ''Yes, des," he said absently. ", vg o ten wondered what it must be like," she said, as •though think- ing aloud, '"to.. grow old and be alone F 4 ;.""1 . .._and to think back on the one you -loved who has gone from you..", The old man did not answer: His • . eyes, were fixed • •on the • saucepan: `- • ��. ;. � � "sem* v:�x?��i`• `.'. ?.: .°?:;�`.`r{ Hunger was;'beginning to gnaw s again. He sighed 'deeply at the. de- ra, lay caused b the young �x> �R .. Y Y g ,woman s e. `rc::�.�?'.�,> w �: ,> : Rf��d1 .. ;.. . k ,Nt ing .....,..:...::.:;:;;,<: .:;>•. 4 ... .. y:,.•.,::.v.. :vara,., ,.... ' :: .v3.3}:. . Y T" "Did you love 'her, our, ' wife �" O 09venny persisted softly; her '`eyes . _ ,,•r ,•� �� : _. on the framed glossy photograph of. nt • �_�... ,7d�h�,,;; ,r,�Qerrre;�a Tier wedding group. I�./� V I�?✓w� ,C tP,k�°ra�ir°reJ.r,•c°fi. & i3i(,pu�.iec� iro �j91. �'... "Must ha'-done," he CiluCk}ed' CY/lp� 'Ice "Se harshly, remembering the wisdom 'of liumouring his hostess. "I mind A,•y�ae•Oy �o .;,,when :wq- was• mari•ied'first' and we - �'HAS COOPER quarreled, L was so, upset. I couldn't LAREMONT � DONALD MOTOR SALES �i�Vlg'�F MI -eek my dinner. I mind it was rabbit , stew, too, the smell from your l7Ruce-Assoc. • Slee Picke;rin pan put -me in memory of it. -I must DealEr--J. �C�isl>I�IA--DunbBrfolllt— .,Assoc. Dealer-M.. p— g V.T the series on July 26. Miss filen - Canada Packers - _ _ _ ken, as "Olivia," will join the pre- . •viotisly aiipounced cast.o:' Sir.Ced -- . - - - - ria Ha ke, -Tallulah Bank - (Continued from Preceding Page)r,Ol�rid head, Orson Welles and Estelle Winwood in "Twelfth Night*' This means that, providing the price of Graii, is the same, it costa while Morgan is to be to as one-third more to,produce Bacon Hogs in Canada than in Denmark. The • Dial "Jacques," the so'.emn come; ian Applied. to the actual data of production n "As It "- D the significance of the above facts is as follows: ` . - 0 i You Like sten for Canada will produce this year approximately 7,000,000 Hoga the two latter productions as well They will be•marketed at an average weight - "' ' RADIO HEADLINERS � as- for. "Henry- LV," .Nvhich fear .. �? of approximately 200 lbs. O 0 • OF THE WEEK tures Walter Huston, Brian ................................ . On the basis 5:1 each Hog would take to - Aherne and Walter Connolly, have produce ........................... ............................ 1,000 lbs. of Grain -- - G. C. MURRAY _ not -been set.' 'On the basis 3%:1, each Hog would take to r. �� ,� u� ��..o �. � ,.o �� �� � �• — � produce ............................ ....._................... ,950 _. _ - Briefs -Shakespeare Cl -e or Old Tim W. a Ir — —The extra cost of producing Hogs in Canada, One of the saddest things to me let," with Burgess Meredith in the aim i�r�e1S expressed in Grain is = 250 "' = is the radio entertainer who in title role, has been chosen as the An' average price of Grain at.the Farm may the early days of . broadcasting inaugural' program to be heard Many farm animas, meetly cattle, _ be taken at .__1?/ac.... per- lb. In other used to get so mucin fan mail. and _ over the WABC-CBS .. network,_ die in spring after eating water hem - words, the extra cost -of -production per now can't get a ,spot on the air.' Monday, July 12, from 9 to 10. lock, .which grows. in swamps and in Hog, due to feeding inefficiency in; Canada Still he goes on believing his pub- p.m., E.D.S.T. wet meadows and is frequently relatively tq Denmark is— ' lie is clamoring_ Pqr his outmoded li/ac x 250, i.e .,.......... _..-.-._..•,:,.. _ $3.10 per Hog :• ; a long irrigation ditches. : t -,.on 7;000.000 -Hogs ........ $21,700,000 type of'. entertainment. Radio has ... Barrymore' one of "America's Abundant dant a If the relative feeding ratios are correct, there can be no doubt about progressed so much. And the outstanding, dramatic actors, has "I'd much rather hear women play - this figure. And. the statement of ratios is based on the best available in- audience is so much harder to sat- been signed for the title role of the trombone than the piano," asserts formation in each country. isiy than -when: it • sjGun the dials "King Lear" and will be heard. a writer. They certainly can't sing But to Canadian Hog Producers the figures have still greater signific- mainly for novelty, during the third -presentation of while 'they play the trombone. ante. - And Was His Face- Red Many Canadian Farmers; both .East and West, actua'4y produce' Hogs .at a ratio ::..3 :1, There is *no doubt about this. The statement is based Jack Benny's face got quite red on carefully kept records. recently when he' was on the air Remembering that Canadian a•:erage .production is 5:1, it follows that —reached for part of his script— on -many farms,—thousands of them,—the basis of production can not be only to find one of the studio aud• better than. 6:1. What then is the difference between .the high and low fence bad taken it as a souvenir. cost within Canada? On the basis of 6:1, the quantity of Grain required He was forced to do a little fast ad-. to produce a 200 Ib. Hog is ................................................ 1,200 lbs. Jibbing until Mary Livingstone -'On the basis 3%:l, the `quantity "is ...:_....._ ....................:. 700 " showed him her copy. .. Therefore, the difference between high and low pro- - . For our Informationhiss .. stand- duction tand• y, y karkus writes his script in stand• 1 duction is per Ho 500 _ ,�P•y,/� _ Hog ......................:.........:..-.:,._...._......:....._..:. and English ..and the dialect is _ at; 1'/,c per }b.•. .... ................:.:.......... $6.25 per Ho extemporized when be 'goes on the u Do these 6:1 Farmers realize that a savingis to be made from im- - proved feeding methods equivalent tomare .than --_.3c.... per lb." air. k ,f The' argument of ' the preredinc paragraphs may be. summarized as Happy" Joe Gentile and "Toby" e _ David are the -two -genial -gentle- follows:_.. The Bacon Hoe is the larm rr-r-nal whivh Canaaa is best endowed by men of mirth and, melody who At. kn -,jiature to -produce. T: - most suitable feeds can be grown here perhaps tempt to. send us forth to work=in s more cheaply than in any other country. the mornings happily because of V� ; To maintain her A r•c�ulture one ound basis, Canada must produce their capers in.the CKLW studios. e l3 P many more Hogs than she herself can_ consume. Mapy there are who will vote for The great market far tke surph s Baron of- the world- is Great 13ritsIn.. them -as -°being- outstandingin-their In'this market Canada at present rnjbyx a -preferred position of the great- particular realm. - - -gest importance• t' For the time being the price ur L'accin in. Great Britain,• ( and the car- I hate to take your dreams away - responding price of Hogs in Canada) is such that even on a bas's of pro- from you .. if you think you can r - duction 5:1 there is a large Profit in- Producing Hogs. ,jast.,step into the radio spotlight _ But the high price of Bacon in Great Britain is maintained only by a without talent and training you're _ fsocernment plea of..restricting imports. (Under this plan Canada is al- all wrohg. It has become amighty - lotted the large ,Quota of 2us m?llfon Hogs). specialized field and you have `to k Canada is. fnereasing production at a rate -which, with favourable crop have plenty to click. conditions, will enable her to fill her Quota within two or three years (per- Did you happen to knd* that I haps earlier). Kate Smith is 'near sighted?- - Canada's volume of. sh lei:ynts- to C: eat.. L'citain will tnen be- almost 4s Well she is. Now I'll tell you .a • on a par with those of Denmark. ,Thin will afford an opportunity, by i• -a- 4 proving Canadian product and service, to popularize Canadian Bacon to an - little secret, all the manuscripts extent never before possible. _ used y 'hate n her b oad.casts are b i r This can he done only •by making Canadian Bacon equ�il in quality to ' typed on her special machine on Dan'sh. which the letters and numerals For this the first requisite is to make Canadian,-Ho,gs "as "good as are 'twice the size as on an or. J)snish.. A. substantial, improvement has been rnade in Canadian Hoga in dinary, typewriter., This is impera- ' -'the. last -15 years. The. test. Canadians 'are still not so 'good as the best tive to -Kate as she .finds it very `.' Danish, but neverthel^ss thr_y arc very good. Canada's immedjate_problem hard'. to read ordinary type. _ .4s to bring all her Hogs up to the standard of her best. _ But Canada's chief remaining proh!em .ia, during., this '•protected" Bing Crosby, the croon of croon- pperiod, to prepare herself for the time when she wi:l again have to meet era iii leaving the air', but not for _ Denmark without preference do the British r:'arket. long: Bing, Iike the rest of us en- , — For this the inexorable iequ i-er ent i.; to achieve an efficiency is flog joy a nee holiday' and during' h1s � - •production equal to that of.Denr-arl;. - absence is turning the job of lead - If Canada does achieve such an frciency she will then h ace an Ing the .guests up to the micro - k Qets can be produced -in Canala r..ore•che' -p y fi will than they can, be bought in Dcrmark. introduce them as only B. B. can. The -achieving of this amlard of feedit:� eSiciency s 'tae •,rro -t im.- port=.+t single objective `n C'ar;.disn , r? ^::culture. On it uepend; . W.ietber By .the .way do you know-how Mr. Canada will advance to fir t l ogee . in 'dh 1 r itbh wnrket, o will rt some Crosby got the title of "stag? " future date he driven frr , t' --r r -piker I - nn cn-e r,c:.irrcd- Well it was tfifs_ way, ir long time y _ in the ra-.t. r _- other normal lad *as s ery like of .-CATTLE: - "< playing "Cowboys and Indians ' The rec.o:d in the Cattle irdta,.:•y is ui�l tarn in 'any and with his old broom stick *used k ' year since 1930• The pressure on the. -Cattle r.:ar::et from t::e year 1930 to s:ioot it out with the other side, forward was the difficulty of finding a-m_-r::et for'Cantida'S sarplus:' That fo: each shot he would say BING E' -surplus is roughly 200,000 Cagle _per yoar. F.;ports (1'vo Cattle) for —BING-BING, and so the boys _ 'the last 10 years have be -on: �c� ' �_ r tagged the- nickname Bing on' hint 1927 .................. ..21_,5,,9 : 1`13 ........ ............:: ..0,578 and h 1928:......._.:.......166,8 7.3 -.= 1^33 ...........:.:... 56,003 a i as stuck, like glue ever _ t 1929...-._._..::........160,103 . 1`•+34: ..................." 60,1`.13 since; Bing is now 33 years old - 1930 ......... .... 2-i.rsS3• 1035.. ..... and was born in Tacoma, Washing 1931 ..............:..... 3G,�C8 1936....................197,901 ton on May 2nd, 1304. Hie father, l T who ran a pickle factor in Wash• ' -The recent rel'ef has come throe^h,shipments .to-Lnifed States. Under y. _ the Canadian',American Trade -A,- cement a number of Cattle up to 155,000' "ington wanted Bing' to become a may be shipped into United States at. a Duty of 2c per ib.. This concession lawyer, but .the only lawyer Bing �• - was secsred from the United States Administration only after' prolonged knew was earning $30 a week, $10 negotiations. It was strenuously opposed by American Cattle Producers. less than Bing was, who was a 4 "^ rrr„r. It' is supposed that negotiations are at preseikt under way between . drummer In. one of the: local or -r - -. Canada, Great Britain and the' United States, looking ,towards an expan- chestras; so Bing kept on drum- cion of trade between these three' countries. ' To. secure such an expansion. ..ming and, singing and has made concessions will be`.asked for,. and given, by each of the negotiating coun- himself today one of the great. ::.•... ".:.. `: �`' tries. ,Canada undoubtedly will be asked to give certvin advantages to stars in both Radio and Screen but •` •,`•y$.!;':`•>:?li: iiz!?:'s:•`•^•.> United States. In return she will expect to receive- other advantages. One concession Canada should firmly stand for is in connection with .Cattle, again he might have been a good ,�;,. If the United States insists on.a Quota (as they probably will) she should lawyer.*pttaes - P 617 seek to enlarge that Quota from 155, y 000 to 200,000 Cattle per year., This paw e`a �h•t s L. number United States can certainly concede as it is only about 117c of the Don. Wilson has been signed to Kapp k pts r oM total number of Cattle marketed in United States each year. eke a ae a \eg rO d use act •as narrator for a series of M \e b ta\ a 1 r But more important, still is the rate of Duty. If L n'ted States is bo eget Sett • \.b• , ane stet admit any stated number of Cattle, it makes no difference'to the American w outdoor sports short subjects durinSe a it+9 0 Pe pas at, Jp ape . • is 3t\i ++six {0 ^ Producer whether those Cattle pay a 2c Duty or no Duty at all. This is the which RKO will release during 'Stirs {tOpt ss{ot e.4 cpt seat ''. the t ootp{°rt,- eat modification, that needs makingin the Canadian American Agreement., the coming year. Before he be- W\ae ooM ts• peens :� If Canadian Cattle,—up to, the Quta number—were admitted. to Un'te$ came a'mikeman for Jack Benny, e\b°'g t sten o a a«viper\vet {°t pj� -States Without Duty, this coheession Would automatically a'dd 2e per lb. (ap- Wilson was known as one of Uno to Meet tw0Map a{ety. Ott LpN proximately ....$20.00..,. per head) to the -value of all the Cattle in Canada. NBS's best s orts announcers, He- ab\8 etlte tieck S Aa NP%$ 5 - Artd-the--ea�eesaia� o>>i�: `^d ctnt'G nothing. . , has done other picture work, also, Qt tine t (stop' e� .t P�IIGE� pNC ER ENGINE ---- n to in `'M' ice" w 9� fr�N� o bly issue America!' with eh 1,0� pSE In this Report to aha. _:.ors again wish to pay tribute Victor. Moore. and Hejen �_ rod- ��'tNE HEEL6 S% -A Y pN0 BERING R j to loyal and efficient work of µ l r:_i...., U',. Employees. Dur.ng. the.year: there erick•' eNGH �E?O`I'IE pGt1� Rp55 5f tl7v VE have been two increases in Plant wages. These are now on a basis sub �►1'1 89-Hpas KNE ��p1, IL CX -stantially higher than the rates of 1929. To an appreciable extent these - - - SON k716 advanced wages have been offset by higher efficiency, brought about -by co- vciB�ie gabled to follow theoating enthusiasts in coun ` CEN�a.S�EN�'tF �pME operation of Employees.* The quality .of products is better than at any ogle -previous time in the Company's history. This is due to the pride of work-_ try's *,defense of the "America`s ; manship on the ,part of Plant Employees, fortified by co-operation of all Cup,.' which - England has been other ranks, striving to wrest from it since - .. ., S._. McLEAP e _ • � •:• 861, when Ted Hosing, 'smack � s • ' • ' s � + ' 1 silent - Columbia -sports reporter, des - 'Toronto, ist June; 1937. - + tribes ortions of the thrilling _ Extra copies of this Report are available, and so long as -'they P - •� last -will, be mailed to anyone requesting them. Address to Canada competition off Newport, R.I., in Packers Limited, Toronto.. a broadcast from a Coast Guard CHAS. COOPER CLAREMO�i'I' . cutter over the WABC-Columbia Assoc. Dealer—J. M tion,.. Washington, to determine tehat. network, Saturday, July 31, After Canadieuz Nurses cGlaaheri—Dumbarton _ action can be taken against Canadian ST.- PAUL, Minn. — The Board of , nurses coming into Minnesotil with. "Lionel Barrymore, Helen Men- 0 en ' - A i' ICducation her has joined the State out jobs. Investigation. disclgses 100 ken and- Frank Morgan have been DONALD MOTOR SALESWHITBY' industrial Commission in an 'fppeal' or more Canadian nurses in the added to the imposing list of stars. - �bp the Federal Bureau of Immigra- State, ' who, appear in Columbia's. Assoc. Dealer—M. Sleep—Pickering - Otis , LG 11414. "1QiLt)� tfine. ji?it Sunday, July 4th, at 4 p, m,, is to be held the save ss very interesting tidk about he work in the social department last:. There w we five past -district deputies the Marimad 'Order - c s meeting at of pre - apie Ulf Xntnw a close of the regular afternoon ser- at Little Trinity in the heart of sent, and a most enjoyable time � } =1.�6 per sass; il.b0 paid is advanruo vice for the purpose of reviving in- I Toronto. Mrs. Percy Tredway, who spent by the visitors and their l usurance Cc• 7 - FSubscriptioaa 'to -the United States a�g p nd beaatif - resided over the meeti was dir-, P ng• wives. and Gt. Brjsain $2.00 in advance, cemetery withappoint- e ctly mosphere of 1e for triendline eh of the which seconded Audley Church Ice Cream . ,u„+ W 1NANE9A IN$ `----- - mentthof aTr Secretary a ens- urer with other persons to form a everything. p rye ng. The spacious Se oCial .will be held on the church lawn, on Wednesday evening, July C beso Rates for Farm and comm" JOHN 'MURKAR. Proprietor. corunitrtee to plan for future Mem- grounds made a charminv setting 14th, with the following artists pro- 1Buddiags b. _ orial Services, in aid of the perpet- for the tea and social hour which viding the entertainment: Mrs. A. Wisdatorm Insurance on Yom Cemetery at Highland Creek to be ual care and beautifying of plots brought the pleasant afternoon to W. Lynde, soloist; Miss Blanche Miss air. hohoured--by--descendants. and the neral a general appearance of the an end. _ Balsdon, elocutionist; Mrs. How- Automobile hwro�so st ' groaxids hfi�re Ile the remains o and Arkse and S—Yeast-Webrber,- y • — - i All Ill'Jai -' _ :The.. attention h•' many .relatives these noble citizens of fonmer ears. y' To those of ripe old age, who for Dunbarton singers and entertainers; Clarkes Orchestra from, Greenwood. Adm., .. Write ce phaor ` t as been aroused new interest in what was or- yeers have played their part in pre Miss Ina McConochie left on Tues 25 and 15 cents. BOWMAN & REOWN with ' iginally the graveyard: of the Pion- ' venting these grounds from b ecosn jag unsightly, much satisfaction has . day night on a trip to Moose Jaw Prince Albert. - WHITBY ONT ' er' Methodist Church of highland e at their' efforts .and Miss 'Janet Allison ,' accom Hied TENDERS e ain., o. Jordan and :Melinda Post, whose• have not been in vain, and when they too have been laid •alo side by her nephew, David, are visiting her sister in Tonawanda N. Y. in will be received by the undersigned Law Motor Sales _ names connect Muddy York with : .Scarkoro and Highland Creek. Jor-year, sacred dead, then yeargafter their friends and relatives will Miss Hazel Branscombe, of Brigh ton, is, the guest of Miss Doris Tay- for the purchase of -the shed at the rear of�.St. Paul's church. • The Chrysler- Plymouth don and Melinda Streets, in Toronto lor; for for. Mr. and Mrs. gather to make and keep this pion- a few days. same is to be taken dawn and re - were. named Post. While resident in. Muddy York -of eer cemetery attractive and a •place . Dan and Mrs. Hennick, of Tons- moved. On this shed them in a ! .Dealer Dir.. 'Jordan Post specialized fn the perpetual beauty with thouglitful wands, N. Y., spent the holiday good steel roof. Tenders will be re- f _. -.USED . ' making of grandfather clocks which remembrance and sacred regard for 'in: week -end with Allison Bros, ceived until July 26th. GOOD CARS }� were so o at that On P those who those early days gave Mrs. Oweneth, of Niagara Falls F. M. Chapman, GOODYEAR TIRES pular .tme. P along the Kingston Road -of themselves their best for the ben- N• Y. visited with her sister, Mrs. Secretary, Board of Trustees WILLARD BATTERIES ._passing efit of succeeding generations, Sun -S. G. -Morrish over the week -end. _ GENERAL BLACKSMITHR40 .:through. Highland Creek, Mr. Post was charmed with the clear -water day, -July 4th, at 4 p. in. at the close of. the regular service, Rev. Sohn and Mrs. Mills, of Tona- spent Sunday vrith the former'eRadio t Service SKILLED MOTOR REPAIRS Give us a trial. on a Nese or a Wed Car and'surroundings, and later purch•, E. T. a former mother, Mrs, G. White. ased four hundred acres. of land, .Douglas, pastor has been asked to speak and pres-• A goodly number attended the I Hogrs Towing Service He built a saw mill on Highland ids at this initial meetink when it United Church S'. S. picnic at the Expert service and re- Gordon J. Law Creek and also donated. an.. acre of is hoped that friends and relatives Woodland Park on Tuesday after - 'an pairs to makes. Reas. "land for a Methodist Church and will unite with the church officiary noon' last and re enjoyable port en o able all • Phone 2908 graveyard. In this Churchyard lies .in this good -work. (received too time. onable ohar d8. Work PIUf3;FRING, n1VTl\RiQJ, - the remains. of many of those early . ' late for last week's issue, bt;t pub- - g uaranteed.• ?,pioneers whose names are precious 3n the memory' of elderly •People lisped this week in the interest of the work being ,'done on this ol,i. _ , Andley _ - ARTHUR FIELD + -who.now survive and to many oth- and historic cemetery, lad.► Haying has been blessed with ` -ers who are descendants. James . - fairly good weather for saving it. Graduate Radio and Tabviaim Institute iDtrncan, w•ho, is hale and active, il. 'Highland Creek We are glad to •know that Wm. Member Official Radio Service Man,, now in his 94th fear, can remember - -Squires, who has been laid off for Association. -the first. -funeral, when, his grand- 'The regular meeting of the High- few weeks; is gradually recover- 46 Phone 520[; PICKERING : mother was buried in the% church- land W. I. this month took in� former good health. . -. Z•ard. There were no undertakers '•n -Creek _ the form of a Garden Tea at the he Club picnic, sill beheld in T�i� BMt t�LiE i0��1fIM those parts and a carper ter made home of the popular ex -president, Chapman's -grove on Saturday,- Jul: 1CDRn� B V mild ii'tis" mn gift► the coffin but of rough lumber, an -ox tea�rs—drewthe conveyance that Mrs. Carl Wallace. .Pickering and eview.branche� had- accepted 17th. Keep this date. ev -= ' J -- �+ �+ bore the ' to � the burying an, first here last, EA 1 RL" _ caskA ti_ prea sermon ��n Sunda _ *rnund. Mr. Joh=n Duncan, wife , representatives increased ..the att.-. and he• created a favorable impress - • and three children came from the endance to more The ioin.. We wish him welcome to our County Tyrone: Ireland,' iii 1P'3fi, and 'con.- -than- _fifty;. l�eit speaker for the rias ha,. homes. - � � a -- -ltlr. -Jams Duncan, hi§ Fun, Bride Broder, from the staff,of the � The local strawberry arowers j ectured that the'. church was ,built Globe and 1lsii, and her address on have_ had a .fairl good season and y' All Shows D+yl gig Saving Time about 113? or probably. 1 40, as his °father wa most active with nther, Wild Flowers shored that she «a a . keen • student. of Nature, and? -eft ' prices have been fairly well, main - twined; A e q All seats Sittttrd and Holiday r 11 Harry Hu in 'cuttin� down the tree= and burr.- her audience with a deeper apprec- Sid. and -Mrs, Wo.nna lbtt spent. F.veniubTs. 2C cents ' 11 - Ing the 11 gs* .to , make, a clearance iation-.of the beauiifel denizens oi. .the Dominion Day with his mother `while Friday and Saturday - Builder a21d CQntraotor for the community, but beinga "'sweet singer" cave of his talent in field arrtl forest. Bride Bmder..wva; _ accompanied by Miss Miles. - wh„ in Guelph and there, had the P gleasure.of meeting Mr. and- Mrs. � . July 9 a,od 10 Br clew 1 ork and dtc]aework 'the service of praise and -worship _- _ Stainton, , who has accepted a calf Two Shows a t 7,30 acid 9 30Specialty James too, 1`e "—• a singer, followed - his father' exam le and in. after 11�larkham Fait tendse the -church -where his mother at- Ba nrday gKuweeta Sat. Evening h 1 Architect's g9[VIOe -years sang in thatchoir while :Hiss Mr.. and Mrs._ F. •M. Chapman glace:3o Chester, a young girl, played the. is_ Mrs Ben Closa- Special attended_ the reunion- services at 'Markham Waikiki "Waikiki � p - organ; she. now the Bos Grove school in THF CROWN INNS _. on and is seventy,=nine years ` ot,i ' S EpT. 30 & OCT. 1 and l Township last Saturday. This was Wedding Rosebsnk Rd. and Kingston Rd. �— an active regular dttrndant of the '� _ the first school where he taught in!! # Phone P}ait 661 Highland Creek' Centennial Unite 1892, W'. H. and :firs. MoorhousE - Church. After the union of the : Methodist denominations and the :Bo) s Beef Calf Cla"ea. $25.00 in Prizes '.accompanied them. _ A group . of the Pickering Fusil- With. I3Itia CROSBY � Notice Bible Christian Church, alternate iers, from Toronto, were the guests o You j were ' held in the Bible For best bob b y beef calves born this R. Mrs. Winters to a B'J8. BURNS ':services Christian Church. .sindahe Pioneer year and shown'by boys under -20 of P. and strawgberry feed on Friday evening : MARTHA RAYLS _ church -was'erected midway between Boys' Yearling Colt 'ClasFesWel '� '•t1v Pioneer Churclaes which is :the • _ in. Prizes ATTENTION CAkCPENTERINQ. preAPnt Centennial Church.: The be. .550.00 For best yearling: colts and for Monday, Tneaday wnd Wedn'9day CE'JIBINTIAIGi.. Hi hand Creek cemeterythen clime the propeitf of' the. trustees showmanship by boys under 20 Brock Road Caravel FJuly 12, l4 and II - '1`w ►'LUMBINf3 _ rpt- the new brick church,. 4 young These classes will be shown on Fri- 0 9h ase at 7.3( and 9.30 and •doctor b the name- of Closson be-- day day together *ith Harness and - : - r Pit Special Matinee on Mondav, AOOrr1'r j Agan to practice at the Ro e , aft uu�� erwards moving 'tc, BendaCe ,uxi 'Mai•kharn Posy Races. Su classes for Jump- and a special -display by the Crushed Pit Run July 12th. AC 2 �'eloek We a eo sell Brantford Roofing _ tater to the road north of. ers CLAUDETTE COLBBRT Mat -rials, Empire Batbroom 'Woburn, from which centre he be- Hunt Club in full uniform with n It Eq' pment. Duro Water came the outstanding physician fir _ _ _ _ _• hounds. - 'Gravel IN ; systems,' Beatty :Scarbaro, liarkham and neighbor- r ing districts. His son, Stephen. Enures close this week for the Hoed Sand and Graded jib I Met Him Stable .Equipment ' Crop Competition (175,00 in prizes] an ether Building Material Closson married. a Maria Post, dau-, of Jordan and Melinda Post, for best five acres of hoe crop of at - - _ ...... _ Stone 1 ! an Paris hytimatee Free `I •ghter and their son" "Benjamin married least Spree kinds. :. .Work Delivered or Loaded in Pit : Guaranteed Miss Chester, the organilt of the 'Pioneer Church, both of whom stilt Fiuther.particulus may be secured from the Secretary, PHONE: Plant,, Pick 1026"'with . T F. eJ . PROT7�E 'live and are nearing their four R. H. CROSBY �' '' Totonto office Howard 6471 MELVYN DOUGLAS• .;;score years. They possess a • well- Markkam, I JOHN BOURNE dr SON ROBERT YQUN(3 Phone 8502; Preserved tin type photo of Mr. PICKEf;INti. 01�1hARL - Closson's maternal. grandfather. •:•. ,Jordan. Post, which was taken' in. Whitby, by. Barrett THE OLD FIRM - _.. Brock Str., A _ _... and Co. Rev.: Woodruff Post, awn -..",of Jordan Post, a minisiter in the rCoIlina' Shoe Store ` WhitbyIs RED&WHITE STOW T: nited States, wrote to, the- Closson ! - -' 1898 family at Highland Creek in at the age of seventy-eight. Mrs. y ' 8.. $ _ Established over Half a Century—still Stijl oiD 6tron y— going SPECIA L ..• • :: ., _ ::� , � Ben Closson, (nee • 'Mlles Ch Chester), Feeling we are at times a tithe neglectful of �r Screeds and • Aylmer Peas, 'size • 4, -,2 tins for - 23Q -• -now seventy-nine years of a$e who ' clients in Pickering and district, we have resolved as occasion' SPECIAL was organist J those early days, spol4e of ' fir. James Duncan, who deaianda to kee in toslch with p them through the medium of Aylmer White Corn ,1Oc.. still lives and 3Ir. • Stainton, long this paper. _. .: y. I : since passed to his reward, played a prominent part in the sen -i ce of _ - - NEMS ' SPECIAL - SPECIAL Jam, A & Rasp. Apple 2 3 oz . ` Z�• • . .°_...song. Taking a walk .through this :White Buckskin Oxfords, perforated vamp, historic old church yard, we read on anonume;nta; headstones and slabs, -the following Duncan, : tele latest in Style. SPECIAL Syrup, g Hive or gown, � 5 lbs 42ce names: ,Tay $2.98. • 'dor, White, Fawcett, sitainton, Chap- Bramwell, Pearce, ,. : �rALiIES' SPECIAL _ SPECIAL ''tans Swallow, itaseon, Fisher, Briggs, Karr, _ White ties and straps, Coban and Iow heels. Marmalade `1.iother's " 1 .' , Ig. jar, 129Q .'Greenfield, Huston, Ellis, Keller, - -Adams, heed,- Steel; Closson,' Post, $j.98•SPECIAL : ' Littlejohn, Bennett May, Boa Mor- ] y i'iah, Doherty, Hawkins and Born- O .Our Cash bonds 3 per cent on every - purchase is a comparative utpa p is ! !f 28 oz. Pork & Beans, s, ' - 2 for 25C syitem designed to be of benefit to you. - Vibb.7 tin elf. Among the early pioneers was !Calvin Cornell born in 1818 and - -died in -1854,- while- on= a - visit to Alwayi Reliabli _Bring your _ kepairs Xlways Reasonable SPECIAL p. Sliced Pineapple, 2 - for . Beat of material nd we know Hos. Workshop under the care of Mr. S. Pctntia4 Relatives in the Uniiled • States; - -lEonnders of Cornell University, IIIc ?%W y was brouitht • horns for burial. Open Tuesdays and Thursdays until 9 p, m. -Fresh Fruit and Ile etablea- g - +a Highland Creek. Many, others Collins' Shoe -Store sway have relatives buried there, 1B�0T M f1 MIJR/SON iwboss nasmes through the years aro W$IZ'�Y PRO" W - -Wo #htersted by *14 ISP" od F _ PROM 476 } The Ann Union Sunda School _ !�'1+tement i Green River There will be an out-door service y and girls of Picketing are promoif- ,rn -- Picnic will be held at Ramona Park DQrB. Vain, of Toronto is visiting at 2.30 on Sunday at Wilson's on Tuesday, July 13th ,when a good ed a good tune. There are already :r + �g Particulars for Green River Gar Park. Rev. J. R- Bick will be in turnout is expected to have a grand some rery attractive children' K• th Mrs. M. Chandler. den Party ann unced later. charge. This is an annual service books in the Pickering Library and r and Mrs. Fred- Cowie of time. Come and enjoy your share. " Cowie, Mrs. Jessie Lewis, of Orangeville and a large number are expected. it is hoped after the Book Fair to :• R hyr, were in town on the lot. is visiti her b=other Mr. John There will be no The, Turner family held their re ng service in the ev- make substantial addNons to this Mrs. E. Palmer has been visiting Ni wander and Tamil union at Lapp's Park on Saturday, ghs y. ening, as Rev. Harry Wilson is an section. Perhaps when the Book friends in Stouffville for several Mrs, W. T. Loree, of Toronto is his vacation. July 3rd. Fair comes the boys and girls will ,';�, • The Com¢rnittee in charge of the �Ys visiting her daughter, Mrs. Will- The Sunday School held their' pie- see some hooka displayed there _ Mise Doughty, of Peterboro has isms and family. nic on Wednesday, June 30th at the Pugh-Evans 'Re-Union asks that the that they would like to suggest to -` - ?sear visiting for few da with descendants with their wives or Mr. and Mrs. Francis Turner Parld. The races were entered into the Librarian as additions to her Miss S. E. Evans, husbands of those Pioneers accept and family attended the Turner re- .with keen interest and competition. this intimation to be present at the collection. _ Two local cars collided near the union'at Woodland Park last Sat- The usual peanut scramble was en- .� library corner on Sunday evening urday. joyed by many more than the little annual re-union in the afternoon of last with negligible damage. . Saturday, July 10th, at McKay'a A .5KET15 The Ladies Aid Executive wish tots. The football game Green Riv- ParlU Whitevale., It will be im ons- s< `►, Born, to Mr. and Mrs- Alex• to thank all those who took an act- er vs. Whitevale, all-star juniors p Schneider, of Claremont, on Fri- ible to notify all, so come, bring All sizes of Berry Boxes, , ive part in the bazaar on June 26th was tied 1-1. F. Turner referee, y 'Crates �i day, July 2nd, a daughter. your basket and renew old friend- to raise funds toward painting the 6 t and It t Baskets, Bushel o Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Birkett are Whitevale ships Q + Spendinga few days in Kinmouar church. Hampers, sold at Hagerman's Bas y t, On July 18th, Mr. Thompson will and suspected of being an a fishing have charge of the evening service. Miss Irene Pugh, with a couple Library Notes ket Factory, one mile north of the gyp• Mr: Daniel will sing. Both gentle- of girl friends have returned from Green River 5ehool, off No. 7 • Church services next Sunday will m#n are from Mt. Dennis Baptist a motor trip of 2000 miles through The Library Board have been Highway.s be 'held in the morning • at the Bap- Church • Come and hear them.. Ontario, Quebec, Maine, Vermont, fortunalte in securing Miss Kitty fist Church, and in the evening at a young People held' their plc- New York, and report a very • en- Burkhardt for the Children's Story Get our prices before buying else. the United Church. nic on Scugog Island on Tuesday. joyable trip. Hour for the Book Fair, in Octcher. .where. We deliver. Fred Lynn,' of Toronto, with a . AL tinne,of orifi s21 were loo M10 Burkhardt is one of -the most ng g ' `number of friends from the plant forward todramatic dWr a lovely drive, fine wen- y- llers of the Boys, Phone Mark 1604 -4.2-2 Tor- where he is employed, were in the STANLEY THEATRE and Girls' Department of the Tor- ther and a full lunch kit. And with evil on Thursday.onto Public Library, and the boys • the youthful spirits, what else is Y, 3 Norman Mechi.n, .of Oshawa, and needed to make a merry occasion. STOUFFVILLE i Firestone Tires his mother, Mrs. H. Menhirs, Pickering, called on friends here - F tt r m llll ne h in C r y i Gam-Dipped for Safety and Loner ' . one day last week. THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY James Allaway, -of Toronto, ah-i SPECIAL NOTICE July a. 9 and 10 l�e.� Mr. and Mrs. Frank All_away, of l Cockshatt, Frost & Wood No. R Whitby, called at the Beal home ov- �• "Pennies from Cora Cultivators; No. 10 A. Oil Priced to meet every .purse. _ er the week-end. Each Sunday during duly » Bath ?towers; No. 4 All Steel Man- t Whn. Thomson and daughter, of and gIIgust meetiIIgB will be - Heaven dersSpu bider almd N to t Grain Bin- - Buffalo, spent the holiday with the improve- Ruy your coat oil by the dram former's mother, Mrs. H. H. Thom held in Starring mentAL Cockeand Save. son. PICKERING BRACH` HALL BING CROSBY Plows, �1Tr styles salt Rev. J. 'E., Mrs. and Helen ED4TH FALLOWS your Farm, . Oliver vie AT 8 P. M.. D. 8. T. sizes for every purpose. Used mac- . Glover, and Mrs. Glover's nephew � MADGE BVANS hires--;3 Grain Grinders, 5 60-cycle S PLACE ' fmm Norwood, left. on Thursday News, Comedy and Shorts Electric motors. 1-4 bo 5 h. p. Tur- as CLAREi1�0 �T OD1T for their annual vacation, starting YOUNG PEO PLE - M uaical � . first for Cochrant. _ niv Drill• etc entertainment and Singing W. F. DISNEY, 'Greenwood A local, Mixed Tournament took t� � MONDAY,. T. ESDAY, WEDN'SDAY More for Your Dollar at the plgce on the green here on the 1st. Gospel Messages, July 12, 13.and 14 PHONE PICK V14 �41Lf Rev. J. E. Glover's and R. D. °The Econo .Mill'.n's. rink t6ok 'finnan and _steeond_ WILL ROGERS awards. INO0 • "THINGS NOT DONE BEFORE" �• R. � Claremont ,- Mrs. John fieusted, Margaret Wood and John, Beal and vw e, oS`lf IJ3dS and Midland, Michigan, spent the QOtT]@ &n e p "State Fair" Goode S is 1th, wiih the lormer's sister, Mrs. hull[ of real fellowship. SHORT SUBJECTS -- WhiteClover Shortening 2 The 25e. Pumpkin, 2 1-2"s 16c. Biscuits. Peanut Mallow,, lb, 19r- Chandler here. Norw'g'n Kip Snacks. 2 for 19c. Cocoanut cookies, pkg. 3 doz. 15e, Miss Katharine Michell, of Tor- All are WelcomeTHUR3. , FRL and SAT. Fancy Red Clov. Salmon 1-21s 14e. Certo ZBe, onto, and bin: ,George Bell, also of fuly 15, l6. 17 Aunt blartha's chick, spread 1.0c. Khovah Jelly:blaker, ' pkX. 154 Miss n, spent the holiday with Two mileFi east of Pick • 46 " Clark's Pork and Bea 2 for 21c. Fruit-jar ria 12 in boy 6e. _ visiting � l es. Miss Margaret Macnab, Top of the Town Camp. Veg. and Tom,-- soup, 2 21c, Tomatoes, choice quality 1116 t friends at Uxbridge. erin�' villaSe, then turn Neilson's Cocoa, 1-2's _ i 19c. Sweet Pickles mixed 6 oz jar lacy The ladies of the- Womews, Lis Starring youth at the big sinu' Keett's Mustard, 1-4 oz-'=--18c, Lucerne Wondenvpread 2=2 lb 15r. titut?_ret nest the }oung . people s - I -- NOLAN.' HUGH HERBERT - take part in a contest of vocal sol- t11eDCe dlr�ct` to Picker- and many others, also 4 oz L 26c. Kellog's Whole Wheat Flakes 2, 19e. as, piano solos and recitations, at - Campbelb Spaghetti, 2 -for 19c. Junket lee Cream Mi: 10c. the home of Mrs. Loyst, on July ing BBach Ea. ;Short Stories, News Green Gage -Plums, 2 for 19t. dolly BIL Tea, lb IiOa. '--21st at 2.30 ,p. m. Aylmer Irish Stew, 2 for. 23e. Phone or Mail Orders tDAveeri The concert- on Saturday evening - Fresh and Cured Meats on Electric Promptly, by the Victoria Park Baptist choir . ` Refrigeration, at all times. Vrae one more pleasant event- for BROUGHAM, ONT. A. C. BR� 1 ! Claremont this season. The- choir _ ..CA9it GROCER ..enjoyed a garden party in company N, � :pitons Pieh. Sal with the local choir at the home of phare Clare 3701 «e- Mrs. Mothersill. -in the evening = - - the concert was held in the church, D -: ;and consisted of Choral, gaaritet- , � � d _nd solo h__ w�h sev_ - eral readings. Misses Alma Pugh / �e Kin98I1igkway acrd Vivian Sadler, with the local - � SAFE • DIRECT - ECONOM1CAL .mule quartet, assisted in the prog CHANGE OF TINE TABLE 1 `gym. 1, - Effective Sunday, April 25th The Decoration Day Service at _ LEAVE PICKERING -the Union Cemetery an Sunda af- r'y y J�� f � For Toronto - For Oshawa ternoon was largely attended by and intermediate points - _ land intermediate points. "our own citizens and many from • outside points. A feature, comment- -,Entering a Store. X. P. M. P. K. A. iii: P..?!. P. ILL x6.09 ' • 12.54 e6.64 &7:31 1.31 e7.31 ed on by many was in the fact a6.44 A1.54 754 t ` 8.41 e2.31 8.31 `that the trees• had been nicely tr- ianmed, improving the setting. The you are Courteous- 7.54 2.54 e$.54 10.01 3.3T e9 31 United Church choir led in the 924 a3.54 9.54 11.48 *4.31 10.31. music, presenting also the solo. by 10.54 e4,54• ?10.44 P. M. 5.31 11.31 l Mrs. Evans, and the mixed quar- c11.54 .: b.54 E12.31 6.31 tet. The address by Mr. Frank M. 'Eastern Standard Time . Chapman, B. A., was very much a.-Dally except San. �. Rol. b-Sun. • HoL only. appreciated, he using as his sub- Ask -Sat. only. a -Sat., Sun. k Hol. onit. ject, "Pillars of Civilization.^ Mr. Asst for, Attractive Illustrated Folder. -31 Deligthfai T. Paterson acted as chairman for Lake and nd Highwiy Vacation Toms„ with #2 espeasa the service, and was assisted by the ` _ . paid. '. Local clergy. The . l-. A. system a Tickets and Information at iaostailed by 'Mr. Cooper, enable3•' - Y all to hear and take part in the 111/hen 'You Enter Traffic G�? �•� LtIYEs .. EASTESPi SOuss - PtcKzRn(GPHONB � service, and incidentally encourag- ing betiter order, for 'the out-of- W13EN we enter or leave a store we are all nwet eoarieoes. --- -- - - - - -- - _- -- doors service. 'The closing item of We stall bwk for one another, hold open the doors, anake the service was the decoration of �, for the e�ildren and otherwise net in a eoarteoas manner FRIGIDAIRE - towards our f Ilow-shopper. But def we egntinae this wage i the grave of a late director of the friendly mental attitude towards each other when we gea back Board, Duncan M. Morgan, at. into oqr can and enter trsfc again! To our fel ow-shopper, • • • • _ those grave the benediction was for. whom «e held the door epee, do «e .how coarse., when ha !, There is only one Frigidaire pronounced. - becomes oar fellow-motorist! - --- -- Do we warn him of ourintention to pass by sounding oor , Green thorn! Having paced him, do we set well ahead of him before (A product of general Motors torp.} swinging back again into our trade lane? Do we dip or dtm Mine Rutledge, our public school our lights when we meet him at night! Do we keep wel-to the ttl�kt side of the road when meeting him? Do we sive him the -Reasons Why You Should Buy A Genuine Frigidaire: : teacher during the past three years beueSt of the doubt in a "tight corner" so we cam both get out 9. New Food Safety Indicator 'rays presented with . a cabinet of of it unhurt! And do we, in the many other ways that come 1. Cheaper to operate y silver, by the community and pup- to �' miud', act and think towards our fellow-motorist in the 2. Simplest machine on the market 10. Sliding shelves with adjustalYy its at the home o! Mr. and Mrs inline kindly avid considerate manner as we did when we held (only 3 moving parts) partitions N. at � � open for him as a fellow-shopper? S. 5-Year Protection Plan 11. Made by General Motors �4• n Mr, and Mrs. R. Philip, of Buf- 7 eatetestl, request that, when you set behind the wheel of ,oar 4. No more expensive than oI}fers 12.1 1.2 Million More Frigldsizr talo, spent the holiday with ,slain- ear or truck, you continue to be the same courteous person that 5. Larger food storage space have been purchased than at1F "lies here, y you are afoot and "Tey Courtesy" ever, inch of the way. 6. More ice capacity other make, grad that maw tai• The Community 'drss shocked By so doing you will help to malke motoring a safe and enjo,able 7: Patented cube-remover ple can't be wrong mode of travelling. :: 8. Automatic Reset Defroster Ir when word was received of the - death of Mv'. Perkins, . while at his - _ Ca a hone .us for a Demonstratim - Ula rp form hear Palmerston. He, with an employee had taken shelter. in the TRY barn during an electrical storm,'�a. 'the building wits struck and both �RV Chas• Cooper, Claremont, Ont tttear killed instantly. The sympathy Thi New Spirit M0,�E old pump _ of this com1munity is extended to or �e Ro.a %b-dealer, , J. McGilashan, ' Dunbarion • � Isis survivors. -. - Mr. and Mrs. James Raine att- ended a family re-union at Hutton- vote an Saita?dy last. 1•.CANADA ''PACKERS LIMITED -Sunday Schoo Lesson REPORT TO SHAREHOLDERS v LESSON If The tenth fiscal year of Canada Packers Limited ended March 26th, the sows should or should not be bred, he is faced with fa^_tors which ire God Provides A Leader - Exodus 'k: 3937. -• not known and cannot be known. 1.22; 3:1-12 Profit, after Depreciation, Bond Interest and In- study of the past comes to his aid and enables him to base his E uivame Tax, is .................................................... .....$1,522,662 But a s GOLDEN TEXT - "Come now there- '.69 decision on other and knowable factors. • If a period of years is considered, q • ent, on 200,000 Shares, to....$7.61 per Share. it is found that,'providing feeding methods are efficient, there is an as- fore, and I will send thee." Exo- Out of this sum it has been decided to distribute, as cured Profit in continuously raising Hogs. This is not conjecture, but his- dus 3:10. Dividends on the Common -Shares,during the •� • tory. A Farmer cannot know, in the case of 'any particular litter, whether current fiscal year ..........$3.00 per Share....__. _ $ 600 000.00 the will sell fora eater sum than the value of the Grain required Place LE T eN event S surrounding I The Profit applicable to the Common Shares is substant?ally higher to produce them. Nevertheless, he can be certain that if he feeds Bogs all the birth of Moses took place probab• than in any'previous year. Shargholders may feel, in the circumstances, . the time, he will make a Profit, and a good Profit, as against selling his ly near the city of Tanis; one of he that a larger Dividend might have been Justified. This was, in fact, consid Grain. On .the other. hand, it is equally, a matter of history that the in- royal residences in the northeast of �ered, but thedecision. was against an increase because of the policy of Plant and-out feeder generally gets in before s decline and out before an advance. the Delta near the mouth o>4 the Tani expansion to which the Company is committed. (In discussions as to the Profit or Loss of producing Hogs, there is: tic branch of the Nile. The call of During the year.just closed, Plant extensions were sometimes .confusion on a most important oint. -During the last three Moses took place near Mount Sinai, made totalling.-,,.-„-, matt ----••--•••:•••.....:............... "$1,067,030.72 ye Hog pr`.ces have been high and stable. The low monthly averse rice and for the coming year extensions have been or Bacons, f.o.b.,. Ontario County points, has been __..$7.14 =per 100 lbs. 1 apthorized totalling approximately 1,150,090.00' The yearly.averages have been as foows:- Time n B C 1578B C f 1499. located o peninsula In view .of these heavy expenditures the Directors thought ft necessary 934...... ................................ to conserve Working Capital.. " 1935 7.85 _....... 8.21 _ "Now Moses was keepnng. the - - flock of Jehtro his father-in-law, the a Y q large a programme of Plant 1936.......--•....................._...._......_______......._................ 8.10 Shareholders may inquire whether so..........................................priest of Midian, and he led flock p nsion was necessary. The answer lies in the fact that duringthe nine The fundamental fact is that at such to the back of the wilderness."at preceding years (Le. since the Company was formed) net Panexpendi- growing feeds and convertingthose feeds into Hogs. It i>aaYuaBP ar that aures had amounted to only P Y y--••----••............................... $707,125.68 for a certain period rices oGrains m be high; and during that period is, to the west of the wilderness, the p may g east being in front.. The wilderness During all that time the main objective had been to build up Working that Grains would sell for more than the Pigs which those Grains would was the tract of country south and Capital, which had increased from- 1.927 produce. f Midian reaching to the east • ;•• •--------•••-:•••••....:.._:..$3,617,944 mer, if he f �eds,, woul t make Ihesa ofit• Bubt he Ian such a the Far, fh west of the rGulf lof Akaba. In to 1936........................... _............... :. .... 7,042,457,71 would not make a Loss. The feeder who does no grow is rain, but buys se years of oblivion, wherf he was �:�� , the Last year, it was decided to extend operations to the Pacific Coast, it on the market, would make a. Loss. For him the fluctuations of the Gran quietly shepherding the flocks, there and, as a first step a Plant was built' at Edmonton, Alberta. This Plant a serious cost approximately............................. _... _........ eve _..$ e r r due ng Hogstinrthe. assuran ea that during the Iife of the Ofeeds t- when Mosebe s would be by g hours himself, fows the ry ace market -1,000,000 00 contiau p g It is one of the finest industrial Plants in Canada, combining a beau- tawa Agreement Hog production is the safest actioty on the Canadian to face with nature and God, gaining tiful exterior with high operating efficiency. farm.) mental strength and vigor irony his Plans for the coming year include a new Plant at Vancouver, B.C., To the Farmer, therefore,, who can count on the necessary feed, this contact with the simplicity and sol- also extensions and, new equipment at several of the existing Planta When conviction makes the problem a simple one. He need not even stop to emnity of nature. At the same time, this programme is completed Directors look forward to another • period of consider whether he will or will not breed. he would be disciplining his body by rest in respect to Plant extension. B for the Farmer whose ops have failed year ft ear it is a ........ ....__ ...._ But rent matter. Without the Grain he cannot fe a. The wide areae Total Sales for the year were cropif failure of the last se-ten ears have appreciably retarded increase nt walking the open air. by the ..--»-- $72,699,519.48 _ qui � spa i ':. Total Tonnage ..........................:...........: 774 0 9? lbs. is g f ° Y PP y st i p the in Hog production. Crop' failures have in fact been the chief reason why sleeping on the ground; short nights The Net Profit (:...$1,522,662.69._:_) is$ therefore, equi- ,7 Canada has not yet reached the Quota for Bacon allotted in the -Ottawa and early risings; while he vi orat- valent to:--, Agreement of 1932. That, Quota was the equivalent of 2,500;000 Hogs per ed his whole character by commun- 2.1011'o of Sales year. Ing with himself and with God, ' and or to 115e per lb, of product sold Since re has. been every incentive `to increase Ho production. by deep searchings of heartsharp' The above figures relate to total o lb n high. and the Grain Ho 32 h g _ 11 ccs have ee h spite-ef--gMestioni gs of eonscWtive, reflee- AW peraa inclu g �_- g_ratio_favnuraiie,_pusd..in_ a than those derived #rom oc . - cropfailures production s greatly increased. This is evident from the tions upon his past life and repent- On products derived from Live Stock, Profit is equivalent to:- following table of Hog marketings and Bacon experts: 4 ance of his sins. 16.8c per 100 Ib. *In the above discumdion no mention is-made of the other i.e 1 fie her lb. costa which enter i to Ho g labour and Plax Aad. came to the mountain of God, .... i P . a g Production incl Sales increased from ...... $63,586 883.36 a 0-- read. TThese items are-eonstants-acrd t efo-e -do not affect unto Horeb:" (See also 4:27: 18:5; 24 year ended March, 19 7 -the argument, which has to do with fluctuating Grain prices. = 13) Horeb and Sinai are throughout ! that is ..»-i 9,112,636.12 _... or 14.3% Month 1935 HOG 9MARKETIN Inc. 1937 ; % Ia the Scriptures almost interchangeable Inc This mountain is located on the pen- ' - :Tonnage increased from .. 659,706,572 lbs. January ..... ::� 297,325 275,553 7.3 320 607 16.3 insula oi. Sinal. The mountain may I to.... 774,270,797 February ,,...,... 263,005 257,801 .- 2.2 345,696 34.0 previous sacred associations - .»_.. ,822 312,695 36.1 897,218 27.0 but we do t know. It may have been 564.224 lbs. or 17.4 % March »»._.». 229 ao These lar inereasea are due i to new business deriving from April _..._.........:... 312,719 267,201 =14.6 837,236 _ called _ holy, in this text because 'the that is...:• 114, - `L6 2 i3e - Party g May 228,556 275,876 20.5 writer knew -of the great events that the Edmonton- Plant; also to increased exports of Bacon. But all Plants June 204,540 .3113,686 6},9 ' T-. --- - - �r enjoyed an increased domestic vgjume,_reflectmg the were Tater to. take place on. sacred _ _-_ improved-economic July .:._....:., . r _ '225,586 226,14? .2b Ione-in Cissas. _ heights. August •,..•»...._.,. 173,369. 235,708 36,0 That improvement, ac far -as Agriculture is concerned, is indicated in September ......_.... 192,103 328.148 88.2 "And the angel of Jehovah." We be- the following table of prices of farm products. .__..,_ 287,855 375,081 80.8 this to be none other than a October leve FARM PRODUCTS November,-».,r.,• 252,800 415,141 64.$- .Average rice Month, March J PDe ember .. 301,631 411 468. 66.8 henifestation Trinity, the Lord Second Je us Person Chri tt Years 2830-1937 - - - '- ' ' `. r_ . "Appeared unto him in a flame of Lire - January : Total .-...2,969,3113745498 °26.1. ogal out tai's bramble bush, or a' form. of ac of the midstof a bush," This bash _ 1980 1931 1932- 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 BACON E1C3?O1:TS (In terms of H- - wheat-No. 1 Northern »..,....._. 113,378 100,473 11.5 134,864'- 73.9 acla. "And he looked, and behold, the -Bon Arthus '"'•••.:.'51.06% s -56% % .ss _ •49 $ .Qe34 i .31$ i .8731 $L4o FebruarX...._...»:... 123,043 92,088 - 3.1 152,966 39.5 bush burned with -fire, and the bush cater-;ood steers, �,oao March •,... ..... 113,096 109,651 -.25.1 138 146 50.0 was of consumed." It should be not• W* 4-32 lbs. down, Toronto ...30.70 '.6,10 a.t:a. 4.21 x.75 5.74 4.90 637 ' a sols-sawn.-Loh. April ........_.:».::.. 69,549 77,547 _-11.4: 138,192 '87.6 ed that the manifestation of God was Ontario pcsate i7.Ta. 7.19 4-40 s,ai' sae 7.4a s.15 s is May .•.....:» 103,445 120,642 ' r6 6 Latabs-Good Handywelshts. -0' thFough the majestic oz�k Toronto .......ii.es- 9.71 7.30 p,47 i 47 7.14 Juni' ...»-....- -,»... 92,420 99 `�i17 'r-?� sides-Native Psaker ,_ _ 'a•oz_lo•°s _.»....--------- 8'r9�1-- 108,776 23.5 dar, bqt through a common bush of --mss - :ori----pari .004 ,13% ,17 August _..._ 68,791 96,128 39.7 • steers Toronto ....1334 den t - -.=EdibTa� Toronto .. .07% ,03 .03% .03% :04% .07% ..06% 06% September ... 51,973 92,014 77.0 the d, I will' turn aside wilderness. d Moses said, ' Ki'ool _ b a, Toronto 79 ills is la 51 71 , .33 .4b. October' .._-.-, 54,328 115,818 113.1 now, and "see this' great sight, why Over wide areas; 'Canadian Farmers are still suffering from a succes- November ..._.._... 96,936 130,495 - 36.0 the bush-Is not burnt." Joseph Par- Over of crop failures. But in every other respect Canadian Agriculture has December ............ 62,107 ' 146.902 136.5 `. key' has sn,egestively arranged some emerged. from the depression: The low point of the depression fell in the T : _ of the words a this verse as follows: 41rst quarter of 1933-ire. just more than four-years ago. It is difficult now, Total 1,036,057 f,289,741 24,5 _ I will turn aside, and see - why not. d even to recall how bleak the outlook seemed at that time. Not only were "' prices of farm products at or near all-time. lows, but there-were heavy aur- These figures give ground for thinking that if fe-1 had been plentiful And he remarks that many men turn pluses for which there seemed to be no external outlet; at any price. last Fall, and the Hog; Grain ratio- favourable, Canada would now be well ' aside to' see why things are. Here. is' :-That was particularly the case in respect of Wheat and of Cattle, on the way towards filling her Bacon Quota in Great Britain. a man who turns aside to , see vhy All this is now -changed. The .surplus wheat has gone. At the end of This question as to whether, (and how soon), Canada will achieve her thini;s are not. God is always looking _ file -present crop year the carry-over will be less than An an Bacon Quota is the most important one in Canadian Agriculture. As to for the man who asks 'How. When a e ` :1926, And the price of Wheat (at Prairie points). Y year since. whether Canada will fill her Quota, there should be only one answer. For man takes lite a�rtoiisly enough to that of Feb P ),is.more than three times Canada is naturals a He. producing county, and this Quota • fives her the • February, 1933. -. .. -. Y, e P g y, Q d ask the reasons of ih.n�s. God is all - This disappearance of the overhanging surplus and the rapid advance opportunity, on the most favourable terms, of establishing herself in the „ ready to grant him his desire. " in the price (and with it in prices of other Grains) was the signal which greatest Bacon market of the world. r -to the Farmer, marked the final passing of the depression, But this ve The opportunity lies in the fact that the AgEeement permits her -rapidly "And when Jehova:i saw that be to increase shi turned aside tseeCori called Lntc event brought with it a complication in the Live Stock field:-particularly pments, and at the ,same time assures her a stable price. him out of tAe 'midst*-bf the bush, and that of Hogs. -Such a situation never obtained before, and is inconceivable except under a Hogs are produced from Grains. The cost-of-production of the Hog is Quota plats. At any previous time so rapid an increase in sh'pment would said, Moses, Moses.. And he said, Here ­1n direct ratio to the price of the Grains Between March, 1936, and March, have brought about a drastic- fall in price. But no fall has occurred, for the . am L" .God calls to hien in different 1937, the price of Wheat advanced from .... 82c to ._.. $1.40 per bushel,- British plan is to keep the total quantity of Bacon approximately constant. ways, sometimes by sending an angel. -,and other Grains in similar ratio. But.the price.-of Hogs advanced not rt As Canadian shipments 'increased, imports from other countries were coy- scmetimes: by mis.brtune, sometimes all.respoadingly cut down. Canada's policy should clearly be to establish in great opportunity, sometimes in an This disparity in movement, as between Grain and Hog prices, present- herself firmly while these conditions last. ' - 'hour of defeat, overwhelmed by -a ped a problem to the Farmer which he had not had to cons:der for six years That Canadian Farmers have a grasp of the value of the Bacon Quota great sin, sometimes when travelling Would he feed Hogs, or could be sell his Grain? The question became acute is shown by their effort to increase Hog production. But there is an' and a great vision of wont is opened, just at the beginning of the, majo% breeding season, i.e., Septemb*er• In element in the situation to which they are likely, to give less thought than often when reading a book, and moat that month Grains began a spectacular advance, and Hogs declined. its importance' merits, viz.:-that time is of. the essence of the situation. of, all, when we, are engaged in medi. The following table sets forth these prices,-Wheat and Hogs,- Canada is assured another.'three years of the Quota.. Within that tame tating upon his word. (monthly •lverages). since March, 1936. it is most ,important. "And hp said, Draw not nigh hither. ,Bacon Hogs F.O.B. (a) That she take maximum advantage of the opportunity by filling and put of[ thy shoes from off by Wheat Ontario County he Quota. per bushel Points, per 100 lbs. ,(b) That she keg in mind constantly the time will certainly .come whereon thou "rt March, 1936 $ ,g21� standing isholy8 ou God is shout •-••~• $8.15 gain when Canadian Bacon will have to'compete, etc w'thout -. April , .............. a P - 80 ference, with Bacon from Denmark and ,other European co tri- 8 02 � to cal Moses to a great life-work; one • May............z ........................:.:.... ,T6 7.81 _ tries. What will Canada's position thea be? thing lis Ineeded before God speaks - Zune:............................ ................ .79?z `8.52 Will Ci�nadian Bacon be able to hold it place in such a situation? a bowed and reverent heart. The Com Tully........... .......------- _•__•_........ .... .42 % R.71 The answer .hinges, on a point which has received too little 'attention. ' mand of God to %,Icses to put off his .August.................................. 1.0214 shoes ma be accounted for from the -='-• .. September , ' 8.8`J _� � It will depend upon efficiency in breeding and Canadian feeding methods Y •••••••••-•---•••----•••••:•--•.: 1.03 ,� '8,13 relatively to those of Denmark and other- European ''countries. custom in the East of wearing shoes - P _ October 1,10 Ti. :7, g _ How do the efficiencies.now compare? or sandals merely as a protection November"..:.........� .......:....:..7 1.08% 7,24 The answer firings us back to the fact that Hogs are produced frgm from dirt. When entering holy places December ........._.: ........................ 1.20 i/4 '7,86 Grain or its equivalent. Exact statistics are not ava.lable, but the Best the Arabs and, Samaritans, and all. FJanuary, 1937 .................. 1:2474 8,18 informed view is that in Denmark, on average, Rao lbs. of Grain produce 1 Mohwmmendans, .take off .their shoes ebruary..........................:........ 1.27 . March..................................... .... ;, h. of dPignwhe s Canada, average; 1 o Gr i econsumedn p may. not be do,iled by 93 1 ren in C d on ag 5 ba f a n 'ar that the laces 1.40 .16 in pro uc g 1. lb.•of Pig. In other. words, tbat.the cost of production the dirt or dus, upon them,. llTnder such conditions intakes some courage on the Farmer's part to Canada as compared'to Denmark "Moreover, he said, i am the fiod o1 breed sows (the progeny of which wi}i be marketed from '10 to 12 months is as b. 3 thy father„ the' God of Abrdliam, (he . later), unless he has the necessary feed actually in his granary. Many F.. i.e. as -- 20:15 Isrmers,-perhaps most, not so situated. Hence there developed ,a i.e. as. - 4: 3 God of Issac, and the God of Jacob.' good deal of hesitation, and since September there has certainlybeen (Continued on Next Page) These words are used by our Lord some diminution in breedings. As to the extent of this diminution o sta- (Mark 12:28; Luke 20:37' to prove to tistics are to be had, and the scale of it will not be known until the progeny the Sadducees the truth of the resur•t • arrive at the markets, July 193:7, forward. develop a` herd' of uhigh producing rection of the,'dead. The words imply On each. farm -the decision whether to breed or not to breed is an Factors In Live a personal relation between God and important sne• It determines in advance that portion of farm o erat .ijia cows of good type, strong and robust, man, which carries with it the germ P Stock than to simply produce a herd of of eternal life.. '4And , Moses hid his • �Qr almost a year. (The litter is farrowed four months after breeding, and _ N Pigs are marketed six to nine months *after birth.) The armgr wtio good producers or of good form. We face;. for he was afraid to look upon breeds,- thereby elects to market his Grain through the medium of . Pigs. A• breeder of-live stock is not ex'- most thoroughly believe that all God." Moses was to be the first preR• J& On the other hand, the decis:on not to breed, is equivalent to that of selling ' cher of the holiness of God. From his Grain for. cash, But the important factor 'to consider is clears not the ercising w'ution or, making the ]erg-. breeders of dairy cattle se bre give ' relative price of Grain and Pis at Y est contribution to the development the closest attention to the breeding %lips the people of Israel were to re- g the time the soot is bred, It is the of farm animals when he takes into of -animals that will be ca ceive the r_ essage• Re holy, •I am holy verage price of Grain'for a.period of 4 to 1011 months forward in' rets- capable of :make hot (ET. 19;8; 22.;11; Lev, it tion t0 the price of Hogs on the marketing day (unknown) 10111 months cokis'deraticn only one or two factors r.:aking large records. y away. in breeding. A 44,45; 19:2; 20.26; 21;8). IIi3 prepar• g. groat breeder takes r ation for being the messeng-ar of the If, therefore, the Farmer seeks, at breeding time, to determine wether In- all factors. It is more difficult to H-3 Holy One was hero. tib@!'. a. -Wa. `i > .. } ri yF„ - f L: � •, - - -- •:... ;,..„,•+.•; .,. ..._+: ;'. +"...;' ..: ',. ,.•.,,.. ..t” ':k-+ ti, � - rhi .d.•veit%N�h 'H'�7r' ccy9�' �- R�!^�p n P No Quick What everyo i� his flock of y and quid �,. such thing action and e There is do L stopping th treated as a on should be, val of all si f the flock an in quarantine Rich probably SAs best place er the group then be made by making the v ell members lied well vent' in dark,. damp, If you wish Bch sick bird the eyes, nas groat and any cleaned wit do solution, 1' -acid in water ti art, any "ca tAtches within ould be rem tincture of iodi and aleanin$ until the head and its from crop soil phos- ' to re. direct , of the �nuri he crops s 'rpt best wind —= g, it is sit bhr ecoveAd 1b "1 xtremey and hap `a he -ave'" nolderatt ospho?us1 -lest the . Ave ck low n - with th coataia phosphor as bran and fed in mlatea. mke oved he found New York's skyscraper Mineral Loss The serious losses result passakes are frie from discharge, dark, dreary and practically desert. removal. Repletion of the head may be momentarily dipped ed. The same condition, he asserts, .: • In Farm • 'oil phorus results from fa ilure )Udb7Fli oQl i info a solution of corrosit� sublim- prevailed in towns farther west, evein place the losses, either �—� ate, one to one -thousand in strength. "in the wilds of Missouri." Anda through the medium of of ROW" AAs solution may easily ba prepared a certain Johannesburg newspaper re- The sale of crops,. live stock and produced from feeding t from tablets procured at thb drbe Potts that "the world crisis has milk from farms represent a loss of live stock. Under the - a}ore, but is p9isonous and should be swept America with a flame of fire, minerals from the soil, which if not tions of live stock farmin no w discovers r h�il�4led accordingly. It is a strong, scourging and shrivelling state after balanced by an equivalent return in mated that not more than Po y wLtis th`o`ugh irritating, antiseptic and the state, from the Atlantic to the some other forma, must eventually or quarters of the phospho feed bedding flock cure. There idea in its use is to kill the roup Paci•8c." result in soil depletion. and are r knowt foup is An in. germs, as itwill those that are reach- One American tourist recently ob- Phosphorus is one of the first of the manure. When the 1 oases/ contagious. ed by it and as it will not those that served that 'he could travel Europe mineral nutrients to become deficient take place during storage may and quick method are so deeply hidden in the tissues Wand never know from the local press P in cultivated soils. It is' well under. Ing of the manure on t disease. It has to that they esca a it. After all, roup that America' had anything but Y g stood that, in most soils, the total farm are taken into c is a disease tot prevented b keep- ny other severe infra- Y P- heat waves, droughts and gangsters." supply of phosphorus is considerably PP Y P P y the actual ,return of ph first by prompt re- • lag the flock in such good sanitary But frank European .travellers com- less than that of nitrogen, potas- the land is considerably Y condition that it does not obtain en- birds from the rest meat upon the. paucity of "news from sium, calcium, or magnesium. Even that removed in the crop trance. Efforts at cure are likely d the keeping of them' home" in the American.press, so the P under most .favorable conditions, the farmyard manure is d eflnitely Y to be unsatisfactory as the directions until full recovery, score, would .seem to be evened. proportion of the phosphorus which P P P phosphorus in eompariso would never occur. given above. Half -cured birds are The hobby • of our newspaperman is in a plant available form, is but a nitro gen and potassium it for sick fowls is un- dangerous. friend, however, does not, stop at small fraction of the total. Experi- except perhaps where An should - stuffing clippings of ,bizarre report- meats have shown that phosphorus rich in. concentrates, su ch t heeffc to stop the contagion Mud' Thrown IS ing into brown pouches. He is a deep student of the is taken up in large amounts from and oil cake, ere bought addition to the feeds pro prod quarters •used by the public opinion and techniques of its formation and con- .the soil, during the early. growth of the The maintenance 'of farm. Even then, the as of the flock clean, dry ��rr Roup flourishes .�. Ground Lost trol. Quite dryly, he. oliservea that plant. .an P adequate ,supply 'of phosphorus, in a hay, live stock or milk close quarters. in affairs •both national and person- readily available - form, ' is thus ' a farm represents critical 1 to catch and treat A newspaperman, whom we know, al, "mud thrown is ground lost." Get him critical factor in the: normal nutrition ultimately must be mad soil is to be maintained. once or twice daily, has an enlightgping hobby. He col- to be serious and he will tell of the plant. If the available hos- P P ]acts outlandish? misleading state- sl passages, mouth, y g You there is acro of Y P younger re- pp y is reduced to a leve phorus. supply •• external sores should ments in "the- press of the world. porters who are taking pains to write insufficient] to meet the needs of a Y There are 308 Wome h some mild antisep- Every nation, he says,, has its share carefully and .'accurately, and that rapidly growing crop, phosphorus Clubs spread throughout a solution of boric of tale. bearing, comments the Kings- their work is buttressing in under- deficiency results, even though the of the Province of Qua one ounce to the ton Whig -Standard. standing the world's will -to -good- total supply in the• soil may be ton- past 20 gears the me nkera' or discolored. Typical of clippings that compose will. - . sideraVle. fully lived up to the the mouth or throat ' his collection is. one in which a South CROP REMOVAL LOSS principle of the moveme by a swab and African tells of depression in North The annual catch of whales in the Loss of available phosphorus from mote a love,of farm life ne sainted uson their America. This 'scribe declares that Antarctic exceeds 10,000. the soil by leaching, is negligible. ing to make it even bett e bac. lundamen on tilt le of grain, from t Issas wh I Farms ' -n 66 k For tubers hs - nt "tA while or'$ r. p,]y- •SL :. .. 'Ja�',�•.T s nr� b pT .`4"T • _ _ • . litical angle with eyes aslant at From Chicago he wrote many maga- Dating Bureau '+ .-PARADE .� pan and the necessity of ,e. good sone articles , well as contributions lJ MEWS AR A DE friend in time of need. South Africa to the Lancet, and on his return to pleasing to Girls - is favorable to a nation which is her England he became assistant editor best god customer. And so the bar- that journal. He was appointed edi- L 1 0! t t J ppoi Commcl�tar 011 tI1C $tutu --- for in 1908. His only signed contribu• y gaining goes on between nations even tions during his editorship were his - •-- as between you and me-. p TECUMSEH', Okla. — A dating HIGHLIGHTS OF THE WEEKS NEWS Hunterian lecture to the American bureau at the Oklahoma training Mystic Power Colle2•e of Surgeons in 1928 and ar- school for girls is promised and the " - The United .States is said to be the titles describing his visit to the Peter Handal United States, prospect of dates with their boy richest nation in the world today. It friends has 240 inmates on their best is the only country which could de- A .talented water colorist, Sir behavior. -'- Karl Radek noted Soviet political mittee and announced that nothing velop swiftly by encouraging the Squire published short stories, essays A plan of Mrs. Creighton Burnham; and a novel, "An Industrious Cheval- commentator sentenced, to ten years short of a rebel, victor would be-- digging n precious metals from the superintendent, approved by the' State Y ter." His articles outlining the chane• ground in the days 'of the last, ten- Board of Affairs, Is this: �t hard labor for alleged Trotskyist satisfactory. Now all this action ed relations of the medical profession activities last Janus tury only .to reserve the policy by Thirty of the more eligible young January, was released seems rather drastic to. be occasioned putting the metal back into the to the public won him a degree sev- girls ,with exeeptional records will last week and is living in a small by some Body passing swiftl through eral years after he Joined the Lancet move into a trim cottage net apart 7 ground in the recovery days of 1937, - - TRa near Moscow. Radek is said the water in the neighborhood of a staff. from the rest .and. the. superintendent - When brokers talk of gold Stabilize- will arrange dates with nice young • to have been granted his freedom by warship. Chancellor Hitler made it ation and sterilization, they refer to •- _ the Political Bureau of the Com- clear why Germany was taking such men. rnunist Party for exposure of milt- that quaint habit• of the national Mothers. -Pla. action. It was - at a gathering of miser—filling- "Already;" said' Mra.."Burn a , 80,000 Bavarian Nazis. The real a hole in the ground at i� idea is, providing incentive for better :. tary espionage activities. Fort Knox with gold bars. Back in Ini>aortant Roles Since that sensational trial eight reason was ,not the Leipzig -incident, '49 the di behavior. Why some of our most In - but digging of gold set the world **�� * • corrigible girls have decided they generals have heard the, famous but German cupidity for the iron on its feet;' will the opposite policy til Lives of Stars want to be 'angels'." region are little damaged and Franco Secretor today? _Roosevelt and his -supply of young •'seventy -three-hour' sentence" passed ores of Bilbao. The mines in thisSucceed And how about the upon them by their comrades of the y of State Cordell Hull,are T highest military is said to. be putting them into oper-Some of Most Outstanding men. ry command and— hoping tiso. - "Why," said Mrs. 'Burnham, ewe there was no a aon again as swiftly as possible. ppeal. Only a rich nation could afford a have had applications from three That Franco may now hold a tramp Started Them to Success Many political commentators- have national debt such as that possessed _ young -men already." tried to' weight the significance of card in his hands is indicated by by the United States. Present One young swain' intent on being Britain's need- of the same Bilbao NEW YORK.—Stage mothers, they , these trials. Do they mean the' ore as the essential raw material for figures .stand at $x6,000,000,000,. a among the first into the parlor said trifling matter of Bay, are a menace to the future car- growth of an organized opposition most of her tremendous rearmament g $1,300,000,000 eery of their talented offspring, but lie had always been an admirer of one above ,the Presidential estimate in Broadway and Shirley Temple prob- of the girls. to the personal leadership of Stalin? project. J' ably would deny it. And what If love and mayhap matri= Do they' represent the activities of a January.' Milton Berle would be the most ve- hement mony should enter the cottage? foreign power? Are they actually' 18 Years After Employment Index Mrs. Burnham wasn't certain but connected with that famous and most And as Europe etre hement denier of all, however, for ev- _ p ggL�d vainly And here is a big Canadian figure she. indicated she might release the unwanted man in the world, Trot- on the verge of a second world war that is ezyone- -known that Mrs. Berle has _ . - g going to please—a--lot—of- been the best stooge in the world for bride-to-be. Sky? No one. seems to know the and as a British Prime Minister ad- people. Canadian employment figures her humorous, brown -haired boy. - answer but there is a great deal of dressed an -appeal ppeal to the dictators of for June are higher than they have Yes, the maternal head of the tam - guessing being done. Europe for "cool h_ads and calm been at any time since 1980; 10,178 fly, is helpful to •several other grown- QuQC�7 caplets Don't Duranty, for many years judgment," there were those who re- employers report payrolls aggregat- . ups. Ed. Wynn, Don Voorhees once -special correspondent for the New Balled the signing of a treaty whose ing 1,087,735 or an increase of 7.5 confided, -told him that his sibilant 7. .Make Much Money York Times in Russia, thinks the re- eighteenth anniversary was celebrat- per cent over' the same period last "So -o -o -o" Is a coi tribattion of his-' cent trials may' be one indication of. ed last week. There isn't much left year. The stock market may be flat, mother's. She still says it to punetu• NEW .YORK —While Canada's an increasing desire on the part of of that famous :treaty signed at Ver- there may be international jitters, ate her conversation. Wynn told Voor• quints make thousands, America's the Russian masses for a bourgois sailles. Germany has regained her but there aie a good many more pay - bees stmt his mother stole the comic- quads haven't been doing so well. democracy. Quite conceivably Trot- national independence in' every res- cheques • going home on Saturday "�"_ from him. Mrs. Wynn, never. pect. There only remains a matter night theless, charges the plagiarism The four K_ Pv made n y ., u, Ohi„__� sky may have had something to do ght and that means something to might have made money .but their with the turn of events.; It is well of 1,803,879 miles of territory in the man on the Street. against her son. father refused all offers. Now, how - known that he is eating his heart Europe, Asia, Africa; and the Pacific Johnny Green, the'. he composer and Islands and about 17 000000 people ` bandmaster, has a mother and grand- ever -22 and just graduated from mzt in exile. But whether or not he p P Ba lor•Colle Texas, America's old- Iras the mainspring, Trotsky forms who should be Germane but for the Editor of Lancet mother is hia'reilnue constantly, They Y ge, e signing travel with the orchestra when it is at quads are going 'on the air for the focal point far all forms of op- g ng of the troublesome treaty. . itinerant_ and listens right through ev cash. Both of these Chancellor -long Dead in Londo]i - ' -position to the existing regime. Many swears be will regain, Just how _long - cry one of Johnny's musical sessions. The 11�orlok family of 'Lansing, regard the wholesale trials on all = - - -it-.will be before he has sufficient Grandmotber is especiallyhelpful Mich., also shied awn from commer- thargea as a government exhibition Sur Squire S a Wrote Oa since she knits the socks for the ba- cialization when four daughters were r vvhieh serves: the double strength to. -make his bluff a resift borne seven y purpose of y'' chelor members of the band. � no one -rightly knows. ... - � Many Subjects • .. years ago: But the cit lidding it of uncomfortable oppon- Frances -White, the songstress, will gave the jobless father a $200-a- "It sifts while "impressing the messesAngio-}�qi� Friendship LOI�"DCkN. = Sir Spuire' ' Sprigge, be the drat to tell you that her mo- month job as constable and he was with its power. Radek'a part may And while the dogs of Europe editor of the 'Lancet, the world's beat ober was the first to bring .her into re-elected on a "quadruplets" plat - well have been that of a great actor strain reach imaginary throats known medical. the limelight, besides bringing her on - publication, ts dead form. to the world. Kra. White happens to paying, as be thought, for the good across international Boundaries, the at 76 When quadruplet boyo 'were bora of his coup be a vocal teacher and when a Broad- great lish a eakin countries of A tits#t to the IInited States en- to -the. Kasper family of Little Ferry, p g way producer called at her studio for lu the wdrld tried to reach some form abled Sir Squire to combine medicine N.J., a year 'ago, the quintuplets were— - - X Torpedo Started It and writing. After taking an arts de- a talented young stongstress, Mrs. verymuch in the news. So the fam- �'_ of common economic ground. The White brought forth the prodigy from Diplomats have long ears when it gree at Cambridge 'and being gradu= ily was. showered with cash. The atedp Anglo-American` 1`reaty seen as a her living room. Her daughter, she suits their purpose. Last week the 1887 from St. George's Hospital in first ear's total reportedly possible outgrowth of the Imperial unabashedly insisted, happened to be Y + P rtedly $7,000, of icer ot. the German- cruiser Leip- Conference is said to be pro' sin 1887, he became• not only became sec- her star pupil. included $50 s week from a news - es si p i. - p ' g retary to the well known physician'," p z g thought they beard the passage , to a point where definite 'action may .. ' .'• Paper and $100 a month from a San Sir Russell Reynolds, but also secre- o� a torpedo• near the ship. The be ex ec d before -the end of the .3ohn D: Rockefeller -was a mere Francisco .woman in memory of her p � tory to the well.knawn society. o! Au - German Government promptly as- year. Canada, while affected through thorn, hiit appointment to the later tenant during the last 12 years of son, who: died on the quads' birthday. sumed that"the ship had been attack- possible ,concessions on_ Omber and poo reautting from his friendship with his life. But. he -at least know where ed by Loyalise forces, withdrew from fruits is hoping for a new. deal"on Sir Walter .Besant, whom he had ac- he could find the money when rent the Non -Intervention patrol, though American -Canadian reciprocity. New companied to Chicago in 1893 to at- _ day rolled around.—Stratford Bea- ;Special - still remaining a member of the com- Zealand and Australia think of the tend a literary congress. eon -Herald. — " BES X11 THIS BLUE=RiBBo ►r�nER _ _ ' ' :r �'�"' '^w .L4y'�Y.+, .kip:•}� 'e0 v.•4 +' ,�.' +' .... .. - - W. &A PA• ' IF yo want a whole lot more thea ing--at jun very .... s fit ��• �... \-> little m. re, ordinary cost - 1 x % McLaughlin-Buick's your car d.. It's a thoroughbred; thirty Years of *� u ` + r + �•� building back of it, years and years of. " "'K k �. <••-•s•::;�- % blue•ribbon,perforagance in front of it. Itis a beauty; the most distinctive, most exciting -looking fine Cir of the year. It's built for action. You'll- be riding high—on the crest of the wave i •I, r .� • � ; I .µ, tic• t p WhCn it's yOtlfal- I' ' M e it ours toda the McLaugh— lin-Buick ,.. _ . you've always wanted... \ .;; Come in and take a look at this year's ���i r akk:�§ k `'.♦ fIAC "Special Series" mOdCLt+—•lOWef priced, .probably, than you ever thought McLaughlin-Buicks might _ " be. But that's just the �a - natural resole of three S _ decades of McLaughlin- ' Buick leadership ... a finer IP8=ClE>p 1FIROM { tar for ksa money. _ . • • `1_1 12 O 7 • '. _ . ,41 -SPORT COMM WIrN KPLuGm N L, n Fin .. ON" SMTS) - • - ' Drlio•r•i s /�uuory, �ibiiw. GoMrra r now uxw, lkmo wl /rd& addkk,ui. CHAS. COOPER CLARILE, DONALD MOTOR SALES WHITBY r b= ' � Assoc. Dealer' --J• McGlishen—Dunbarton Assoc. DwlerI Steep --Pickering _ - 411*w • $Wl bli yupi.Mrr So,w, sow . On. _ uM Gmeral Nesori lwtutwm Pka. WWII 41 ,.. Young Doctor — "Say ah -h -h-, ThatMasked stud' is very ancient—in fact.it.-.was tried and test- ' Which reminds us of the time. when Lou 'Scholes went over to Sweet Young. Thing — "All right, I syrup,., saying.: •'Dear, Sire:. Though Kenley to compete in this event—which he was good enough to win. -'himself Unless he has the ambition to fit _ But when he got there the question arose as to his status—whether, _ •? • ' ^ SLICED VERY THIN S as the son of a hotel- ro rietor—we suppose the Sala ovah theah, 1°= a better job, he has not th tha ability to. acceptably till the one , "pub -keeper'-', he was fit to match oars against. the Oxford and Cam- T By Sizbits _ . . he now has. .► Suggested that movies be flashed on ♦ k. • .. +� -But: wasn't till Ivan MickalIoff -brought. here._that master show-. , the ceiling in the work shop of den - am very sorry. I wrote 'natty.' ' 'Somebody told old John L. Scholes Lou's' paternal parent— tilts, and the minds of the, patients "No Matter How Thin You Slice It •-= it's Still Boloney" tsbout this trouble, saying that the English authorities were in doubt I WILL 8uCCEED V• as to whether Lou .was a workman or not. furnish the sound effects, if is assum- -ranks, they had the .color that makes the cash register jingle.. IL you keep your faith iQ me, Visit Exhibition Why these corporations and individuals keep on bringing suit --,against • Mary — "Well. -leap, 'year passed Though life ' like ,a stormy. seamy difficult my task may be —• ' -dust I the Ontario Government is more than we can fathom, unless what one good and colorful performer .can do to boost any E will succeed! The funny thing about it is that Danno is a --far better `wrestler -- ,� syort—and especially the sport of wr-eatlirlg--is shown by .the way. -+- the lawyers are doing it for exercise. For the way Mr. Hepburn'e Govt. acts reminds us very muctl of a boy who used to live in the Whatever causes- underlie the If you will look with smiling eyes, it ,_ figures, much of this fall in .birth ^village of our nativity. ♦ • • � Let days be dark with lowering s s we have had -fun at wrestling bouts, although we tau: . con- .; . ' (By the way we have just heard that the citizens of that village and. drum coria frorl var%oua points And nights be fraught with 'w ry in the north czntral area or the U.••S. ..,,squirm and listening to them grunt - have put up a tablet on the house in which, we were born. It reads sighs, " "Main Street.") ' « • } " r I will succeed! Anyway this bo was a lot bigger—and huskier—than the rest _ X Y Y gg _ ..,.^.. If you speak a word of cheer, R•, and the U.S.S. Dubuque, I.t.-Com- mantler Richard'T );ioadh'ead, U.S.Smiles N. FL -of us'kids, and 'bossed us around no little.. And when playing bane- Though harassed oft by doubt. •and ,. ball—or what we fondly thoughtwas baseball—he dearly 'Ioved to fear, bat, and hated to field. • * • nOw-tangled machinery there is. Our An ugly failure hover near — - { DEEP So the way he ensured a permanent turn at bat was like this'. 'Whenever ,I will succeed! D RAU GHT City Miss — "How interesting. But he was struck'out, or, caught out, or put out in any other Grenville 8leiser. DIXIE PI u - v iso, he would promptly stop'the game and change -the rules—making . 7 " +the said change retroactive.. And if any of the rest of us would protest Nothing is really work_ unless you thrifty man's' he would threaten us'with a swell bust in the snout. would rather be"doing something else. r If a Isms er he poi away illi' -these tactics for some�coa ' - -- - — b time—in t, till new I mov - o own who turns out there are slip-ups here and there. to be gher to be even tougher than he was.' a Mandy. had been given leave to at- cellophane -wrapped After the fight wh_ch ensued, our batting -loving. friend,played tend her sister's wedding, -and on her With the easy -opening the game strfc'tly according to the old rules—and took his turn in the $old just like the rest .of us. return entertained her employer with a full account of the proceedings. AV ribbon.' It stays ''After almost a hundred years they have changed the rules of the famous Diamond Sculls "artizans" it now ter listening to a glowing description of the gowns, the wedding breakfast and factory fresh and so that as they phrase are "gentlemen." Formerly the guests, • Mandy's employer _ ., allgwed to mingle with and compete against only those who had never soiled their hands with vulgar toil were said: g . lasts: longer. allowed to take. part in. this sculling classic. _ Young Doctor — "Say ah -h -h-, ThatMasked stud' is very ancient—in fact.it.-.was tried and test- ' Which reminds us of the time. when Lou 'Scholes went over to Sweet Young. Thing — "All right, I syrup,., saying.: •'Dear, Sire:. Though Kenley to compete in this event—which he was good enough to win. will says it, .but remember; I doa't words he can put on a show even without the aid of his disguise; with _ But when he got there the question arose as to his status—whether, mean it." _ were before." as the son of a hotel- ro rietor—we suppose the Sala ovah theah, , "pub -keeper'-', he was fit to match oars against. the Oxford and Cam- From an exchange we clip: It is mean by, saying in the paper that I bridge graduates who regularly won this 'event. Suggested that movies be flashed on ♦ k. • .. +� -But: wasn't till Ivan MickalIoff -brought. here._that master show-. ► « • - the ceiling in the work shop of den - am very sorry. I wrote 'natty.' ' 'Somebody told old John L. Scholes Lou's' paternal parent— tilts, and the minds of the, patients tsbout this trouble, saying that the English authorities were in doubt may be distracted. The patients will V• as to whether Lou .was a workman or not. furnish the sound effects, if is assum- -ranks, they had the .color that makes the cash register jingle.. _ i ► • - -. aid John L. "They can set their minda at ease, because 'I'm Visit Exhibition willing to take my oath he never did a stroke of work in -s11 his -life?' • Mary — "Well. -leap, 'year passed Birth Rates -dust and were still single.' vis., t ` the--Canadlan ,-Nptiotlal Exhibi- what one good and colorful performer .can do to boost any Martha — "Yea, but. lap year is al-.. The funny thing about it is that Danno is a --far better `wrestler -- ,� syort—and especially the sport of wr-eatlirlg--is shown by .the way. ways with us."' - - Whatever causes- underlie the business has perked up since the appearanee -of this new Masked Marvel or whatever they call him ,_ figures, much of this fall in .birth ' =The- toll received ThatMasked stud' is very ancient—in fact.it.-.was tried and test- by a firm that manufactures corn ed around here till the public no longer took any interest. But this syrup,., saying.: •'Dear, Sire:. Though present mysterious stranger seems to have 'what it takes—inother . _ ;, i have used six cans of your corn Ry words he can put on a show even without the aid of his disguise; with rup, my feet are no better than they the result that once more the folks are floc$ing to the shows. were before." - Wrestling, modernly, in Toronto started with such performers Indignant Caviler — "What do you as Zbyszkos—real wrestlers if ever -there were any—Renato Gardini 'whose mean by, saying in the paper that I "... and several others names for the moment escape ns. ---- " looked quite nutty :as I stood on the ♦ k. • .. +� -But: wasn't till Ivan MickalIoff -brought. here._that master show-. speaker's platform?" Reporter � 'll4dttyf' Aly dear sir I elan=the unforgottable and unforgotten Stasiak=that-the crowds ' am very sorry. I wrote 'natty.' ' -started to' -bulge out the sides of the auditoriums. Guz,Sonneberg kept up theg ood work, and while probably neither he or''Stasiak—from a standpoint of real skill'—b'etonged in the first -ranks, U.S. Gi'rrbtzats W41 -ranks, they had the .color that makes the cash register jingle.. . Visit Exhibition And when Gus. the Goat lost his t'.tle, and Stasiak died, wrestling hereabouts started to slip. It is true that Danno O'Mahoney_ drew big -but. Two Un cd .Staten - fiunboats will crowds for a' white, it got so that even -some of his compatriots began to notice that Danno's opponents weren't playing for keeps vis., t ` the--Canadlan ,-Nptiotlal Exhibi- ,e against him.. ' + • tion this year and from their anchor - The funny thing about it is that Danno is a --far better `wrestler -- •aga off the seitwa}i • wHl- fire' a sahite _ now than he was when he was flailing all and, sundry with his "Inch in connection .Pith the Warrior's Day Whip"—blit that's the way it goes. _' _ ' •P; -rade. Tire latter-this-,ta'kes on ' • i. ac,tleti.intcrnatlontil asrrrt Lecause of Anyway, we are glad to see are'siling-on the up -grade, bee" use 'plenty 'of the Attend nee of numerous posts of we have had -fun at wrestling bouts, although we tau: . con- .; the Amer:curi•Legion with their bands . -fess that we got far more pleasure sitting' in. the dressing room talk- and. drum coria frorl var%oua points ing to the performers thaR we ever did at the ringslde,watrhing'them in the north czntral area or the U.••S. ..,,squirm and listening to them grunt - rhe na�•a] aecletsl'y o€ the Depart- ment of Nittional Defence had inform- ea F.ahibition authorities that the " " r gun -boats v:.M be the U.S'S. Wilming- ton, Capt.. Anthony. Nicklett, V.S.N. _ ..,.^.. and R•, and the U.S.S. Dubuque, I.t.-Com- mantler Richard'T );ioadh'ead, U.S.Smiles N. FL "�— Chuckles Farmer'— "Yes, we've got all the '- nOw-tangled machinery there is. Our { DEEP latest buy was two' milking machipes. D RAU GHT City Miss — "How interesting. But ro LMA Can , IN sly accoua a or. . The prevalence of unemployment and the_ general: insecurity of life"in-re- cent years has not only delayed mar- riages; but has reduced ' the aize:of families. This may be a temporary � I r y , President HON. G. HOWARD FEIiGUSON Who has been ejected President of the Crown Life Insurance Com - pony, in succession. to .the late- . Sir Robert Horden.—Photo by :Aylett. tellt me,. do they .really, give as Zoo(] 'l '� ' HfiQre 1 dere `\ milk as the cows?,. STEADYere erywh Cooper (at slimmer resort) — "And E . when did you discover that you.-loved�) A brother to every othei 5cou-r, withotci regaed to raccor•c>ecd me?" Agnes. = "When T - foun'd ,out that Y. you were the only lmmarried man Nearly 2,000 Rover Scouts ass;stcd S here." the London police in traffic control during the Coronation.' Their princir FRIDAY Postman s Wife.— "Why Pa, you pal job. was, the. erection land manning look all tuckered out!" of "crush barriers" on side streets. " Postmark— "I sure am. I have been * • « FROM MONTREAL all over town looking for. a guy nam- Just as it is "'neon «her a man nam - to Plymouth; Havr@ and London ed 'Fragile'." bites a dog;" so is it "nee::'," when a "ASCANIA",.'!AURANIA'tt Boy Scout is found guilty of a crime,. "ALAUN1A", "AUSONiA'! Read It or Not.- declared. MatJstrate S. B. Arnold; -of 3o Belfast, LivetpooLand.Glasgovli That lightning -does not 'strike even Chatham, Ont., addressing the Scouts "ANTONIA", "ANDANIA" It Is in the- same t It. iscrck 'fie of. Blenheim. The ma 's•trnte-stater •� �� � It is of record that ft . struck five g'" sr ATHENIA LETITiA . that ' r times •wlfhin thirty minutes. , _ his, year's on -the bench he. --Popular vessels, offering the -- -- -- had never., had a Seaut before him hill benefits of a sea voyage. Salesman.. =."I understand -that you charged with a misdemeanor, and your husband have. both lost sev- Complete personal sendoe' to eral pounds„since you bought one of The Cornwell Badge, Scouting's every paissenger. our reducing machines,"__ highest decoration, awarded for •out - A high standard of aceommo• Customer — "Yes, we've had to standing courage and' cheerfulness dation in all Classes.' starve ourselves to keep up the pay- under continued suffering in additlon A Cuisine famous throughout meats on it.,, to, other evidence of high --character, the World. _ and uninterrupted progress. in. Scout . Fares that represen4'subsEail: Employer "You haven't told me' ' work, has beelq cordprred' upon King's {sal savings In travel 't3bsts. ' . anything about the bridegroom, Man- Scout Buckwell Graham of the 24th empty to j Iy- What is he like? Ottawa (St, Andrew's) Troop. Scout ` s Mandy "Why, - ma'ij,nl,., dat_.man . Graham,- •suddenlystricken with tI]- t g ' never did show tip. berculosis of the spine, has carried on cheerfully for over a- -year at tlle•- ri _ Issue No. 2$—'27 Royal Ottawa Sanatorium, -for six 7i7 13:y R:r,bw mcn'ths' in a ca:,t wh?ch permitted only file moving cf his hands, and "sin'ce then in a fraiile on a fracture board. Doctors and nurses have paid a high tribute to his che�,y patience' acrd the valise of his esanin.e to other patients In the wan.:.s, Scout Graham ' I'Leently clinlnNcd -l:ig 'progren 'in Scout Proficiency 1; 'ge stu,l;•, • f6t- withstand-in • h:s haasiicap, by qua-li- fy'ing as a l :,ronnti6n'I:in-'s Scout. Reports still being received' at the International Bureau of 'the Boy Scouts Associatiori, Lor.:ion, • show that the Boy Scouts -of 'Nt ar-ravaged Spain, both in the l;overnirr nt con- trolled and insurgent controlled 'ter- . ritory, 'continue to cearry out' the: Scouting code of helpfulness to others "at all times." In his last letter, to.' the' International- Scout Commissioner, the Spanish Chief -Scout, writing'. -from Madrid, reports' Scouts helping. the wounded, serving in the -hospitals;' looking after • lost ­ and orphaned children, turning -over their camping equipment for the' use of 'refugees, and otherwise "doing -everything in their Mower -to put into practice their Scout Promise to, do their duty to their country, -and. help other people at all times.” rr: TOBACCO phenomenon, destined to - dishppear; . . -as economic conditions improve. In some countries the rapid decline, in birth rates is causing alarm, but! gr is temporary and that there will bis' an increase as the effects of economlda recovery make themselves felt. There, has. been, a long-term down- ward trend ' in birth rates for the` past thirty or. forty years, but,- this' - has been more than offset by a de -f;. Cline in death.. rates. . Since 1930,. - however, there is a further sag below the trend line,. and _this undoubtedly is associated in some degree with the,. economic: muditien&_.. The Winnipegi Tribune. Classified' Advertising AGENTS WANTED.. C! EI.L MOT0R 0tL3. TO YOUR FRIEND&' t wrlte for details. — Franklin Ott Stati-n ei, Toronto. 4iIETHING NEW, ELECTRIC IRON CORD, JJ Retratto endd Ironing drudgery; -04 51.50; agents *wanted. S. Davis, 785 Wisemeft i '- Ave., Montreal. WSTILL HAVE A FEW- VACANCIES left. You can make good money Lobs seuina motor' -oils, tractor oils, machine, ot1a, greases -and roofing- cement, in your locanty.' write WAreo Grease and 6I1' Ltd:, Toronto. CHICK„9 $5.50 PIER HUNDRED B ADEN GOVERNMENT'-APPROVLD chicks from blood tested brooders. DATI-� OLD LEGHORNS $5.5n, Barred Rbeks s5. GO.: _! Pullets, Rocks $9.40. Leghorns $11.95, Cock-' .erels , Leghgrns $1.25. Rocks $530, Started Chicks 2 week old add Bc; 3 week old 10c, Baden Electric Chick Hatchery, Baden, Ont COLLECTLON SERVICE 1 \TARIU COLLECTION ACTJiCISS IEX. 1 N'rfeDCOA Cet:ectinn' Senice. Bailiffs. ' Strir Bldg., Tor_�nto. GRINDS -,0N$3 CRI`:DSTONES —' 13EST QUTALITY, g"• . fame. 10" diameter for $1, regular SO— Burns Radio,' 1067 Dovercour•, Toronto. PHOTOGRAPHY E.NLAr.GEMENT FREE WITH - ZVERY . 25 cent order. Roll films .developed _.and'' eight print's 25,cents: reprints 3.r:ats each. '. Cri ghtling, 23 Richmond Street East, Toronto. ^a C:*_:DDLE R,O.P. ''FIRED IIOCT. AP- PROtiED, CHICKS AT . ROCK B0TT0M PRICES FOR JULY D\Y ,OLDS, LE,;HOP.N$ Mit, • BARRED - F..c:is $6.95, Ncw .11anipshlre Reds, 7, hits Rocs s:.95. PULLETS, Barrel P•-.t;ks $0.95, Reds, whlte• P. �cks 510.95, Leghc,rus 513.15, - COi`::FRFLS: Legh:-,rns _ .• Barred Rneks - Si, 05, white Ra c!cv. .neds S6A3, 2, wEE$a' OLD, A,ld 6c per *chick. 3 deck* Joe, •i week ' 15 0'— Tweddre'-Chick H.^•:chery L- :^ .fbed•, Fer. pus, 'Cntarlo. .. L0CAL _ACIINT OR F; J. F.I•:5::::T.1T3�'E __, To -Se!] — -- EUREKA 'WASHERS Scie Dnsidn, 310:Int Er r,7rs Ahcad Lciv. Prices — iso.d C�,mmisslons Easy Tcrma — Send for ;; Ader, Infor:ra tica and Prices ONWARti ;.SFC.' CO., I.I,�11TED F. A04cratching. Nit/EVE itching of Insect Bites , Even the'fnost vubboin itching of insect bites, athlete's font, hives, soles, eczema, and many other 'skein afflictions quickly yields to cooling, antiseptic; liquid D. D. D. Pr♦snriptiorr. -Its' gentle oils soothe the irritated skin. Clear. ¢reascless and stainless --dries fast. Stops the most intense Itching instantly, A. 35c -trial , bottle, dt drus stores.. proves it—or money back. { Ask for D. D. D. Prawrlption. 27 �•, r , ••?i%., ,. .b ..: i .., -. '+,r4=i., m.*•a*.%,`:,-est,',: Y..M._,�.,,,,+rf : .. ai '► � e' .t IJ 1JA V A !C J 1 b a b C , Georows Church, 311110day, Merritt,• E , C. Juries, A. J . Bush- ' a �a3�{ew pofabees. l�+n'Ir�l t f41r Jam` 114h, 7th BtiMay deer Trio- by, Doeth A Murialm, M. S. ` N,Y, 10 •• on. Sunday School; 11 a. kroner, F. T. Bunting Canada Pack. 1 - bave appeared es Che mar", m . CJalebraCion 4f1 lite Holy Chantel- ens. The evening ,>f[Ns Ida Bwlittyt is t strted W. din. 7.!!0 Evening Prayer. - R". P�como► has been e i tore __� y --wed in Aealw. variety ninny fine he crowta, the _ - --iSlMS61►, C. N. k. atdlfar+ R, i[:. lioblaaon, preacher. variety ••Fpeskisig to flee crowd. The llisant is f!t�ltlhj' stn Ale eaIR - * tt . `� mae'rlaag took place ou boys have netted about $= on the T p t i hers It" Meen `Sattuelay, dune 26th, at Guelph, ant day's show. 4APiCkeringa8 Leader Shore" of Mier Jb•sie Katharine Syer, dau- •ofd M Mr , laud . Ct tnwfetd, OW ho `ght+er of 1[r and Mrs. Arthur S. . ro drill fh it we fMt-tetttal... Wilkitnoa, to Mr. Root. S. Ruddy, DI STIN CTI VE f .�Isrr1, r11 Jt ttOth,' �' ealy rets of Mr. and Myra. E. L. a dao- Roddy, of Uro,ntto . Congratulations.­..Tub-fast, Ladies ftp • to Mr. and Mrs. Roddy, who will In:its high quality pregram.Lisle _ Floes ' - •Y _ '�n!►�rrIAW krauts � !W' a- reside in Pickeriag. - Houses dresses, new protty er for house and 1 11 rra(r debet year, Watt tM sea_ .umpner weather has new U I UE garden, . Son is dropi4ng tth . a Anse • sande its appearance, with the ther- :prints, 79c. and X1.00 8 �C and 39c. a' pair: -,Bev, Mr. Sanwa, boo beell nunneter rising to About 80 : ,ppm ae.'t!rai tfaytt with Mr, and i But the hottest spot in Cant • In its natural scenic setting. $>� : ]lees. C. J. Stevenson, also Mina R, A Doiitrias sad son -Bert, sad- _ --nee, t>tf Kingston. = -- _. —= --min Hattie is n above -we has - es s for ladies, ed. The dui storms that accoitl!>p= low her home Buffering fra•n an friends 1 anied this intense heat made it stilt �g�j N PARTY tea-rose. io0(1 quality.' 49c. leather soles, -- ::of appendicitis. Her many more t>n eoardortable, +1 +u - heels, leather tip's,- very eomfy: }pope for an .early recovery • -The xnotor traffic on the High- [ �"I' Q ,_.,'Wo regret, to depart flue irk- way over the weekl-end was very • All wool, Black Special, 1.20 a pr. nese of Mr. Lorne Squirt's who, A large number of Azneric- CEDAR GROVE 1R,�fS suffered a Blight @trope. on Friday an cars from State: all over the Swimming Trunks, with white Men evening last. of United Union, are among- the >purnber, be- ON belt, Youths'— 1.t 0 - The W. A. the ing on their way to the arnall lakes _ Polo Shirts, white ver alar Church, is withdravring its meet-, where they will enjoy A flew week's Saturday Night. McII B- 1:39 ' for the' months,.of of July and y � pop in8's fishing and hosting. Quite a large•- _ _. .. _ _ . _ � _ •.75C _ a •pair. T .August. number of care are now equipped Jul 3rd _ -A' few from this locality att- with radio. sets, .Mich add anuch y MEN—Don't fail to, see our new "Corona Brown" Sport Shoe + ended the Decoration Day Services to the pleasure of their outing, -:' 8.80 p. a, E. S. T. at the- cistemont Uation Cemetery _The Base Line will holo their white rubber Bole, brown eaWas, with wide strap. It's all • the on Sunday afternoon last. Annual Ice Cream Social, on Wed- The Wbmeri's Guild' of St nesday evening, July 21st, an the Barber Shop - -_ _. .Y_ � rage. 1rge s Church held a garden tea lawn of Mr. ' Wm Li .. nton . There on Marls. E: Booth's beautiful lawn ! will be a -ball game at 6.80 S. 'T:, on Thy afternoon. I locals and Audiey. A prize of a - -Miss Ida Sterritt, of the teat c ball and bat will be • giver[ the win • p • S • CHAPMAN ung staff of the Tormito pub I Hing team. ' A good program �+bvill Beauty Parlor t _ schools, is holidaying at the home follow, after which ice cream, calve - ' - . •. of her parents here. ��. - - _ - - • .-:.. - - .. ... and tarts will be served to all. A 71 competent lad will bavecbar e --:Dr. R. M. Bateman and Mrs.refreshments toroth will be on the � Y g week is in Saskatchewan, where 114 of the beauty parlor and satisfac Admissienl lA and 10 eta ! tion is guaranteed at reduced - -' f1Fi4•rlui, of ?oraatto, visited tfie=3iiElsa-Anthm,-_D��F L es Bunting on Sunday afternoon. - - --prtcea:... ti--.The W , M . S . of the Pr`eeby- Jily Celebration has been carried en of Permanent W avec,12.00. =3.b0,fIf5.00 ienian Church, wfll meet at the, the ' AAtli.let�icrAsooeiby atior sang d they Shampoo and Finger Wave. .50; Tailgr•made Suits. + `hosts of Mrs. George Baxter, on mode a good job of it in this their Finger Wave _. .Wednesday oftersoumt, July 14th, first slttempt. The older group. who Marcel. .40 ^at 3 o'clock. for many years. have "pit on" this Oil shampoo. .35 ! i - .-IMrs. R. H. Croak was in New dsty may now rest comforts¢►iY Ladie%'HairCut. :20 f nlat'fcet last week sttendins; the seeing It carried out so well this Special Prices', 'Ma 25-to 31 = ,.�untln$y8 foC I Canada nearly Meeting of Frieatde Pe Y -- _ year: The bops have placed in their _ ' - -which w%is held in Pickering Coll- troffers about 3285 to be used to Oil P. W.. Reg. 52.00.4SI,5O cc 5 ' Re' ulvr Re$3.50,-$3-00 v•� carry on their aetiv{tiea. The us- g _ !(• . .- 1 + --,Mr: and Mrs. George Smith,' of cask openingCalithtmipian .Parade Regular. Reg. X5.00-44.00 Hamilton, Mr`s, Hough, of Redland, started off the show once more, Why pay $ more for Ready-mades California. and hfcs. Bradley, 'of headed by the Whitby Brass Band. H. M A DELL lldiltan, Ont ._, visited with Mrs.'. H. ST6 *-as paid for prize[; in this, dv. pho•e Pick 71 Mein on Thursday last. ent, Jas. Palmer, taking First, ir. - -. g• roy'' Decorated Car, G Rend- _ of .Strath and slater, Mrs, Fred Pugh, of sil�2nd; Jack Bryant; 3rd. in the the Best {� Claremont, visited `their tincle '.and Comic lase.. Jae Palmer, B. Tay- Roofing Fred T. $canting, .. - ,_ Picerin Tay- aunt, C. H. and Mrs. Wilkey on Mary P �'-- tinday. lorMaat►d Martin,McDa�enOzanarrm c d' C�late, Tile anti C>~ravelRoofing _ .._ 1857 _ . ._ _ .� .. F.•tabliar ed .�, -JThei Sa•yament of the Lord's - , Suppe A1, •Crawford.. Clow,ne - I. F.tl Asphalt Shingles-. Roll Roo$n — r will be admini+tered..in the and C. Pascoe. in the Ball Games 1 R � Presbyterian Church on Sunda Whitby defeated Myrtle 6-3, and 1-ply, $1.2.5 a roll. R° oof r:oat• -next at the usual hour, 3 p • .m• : Pickering then 'defeated Whithy. 2A - ~ C ,Preparatory•. Seri ices %ri-11 be held! _lq. In the' Girls' Game, ClaremontII1 f►r>(' 1�Pr p�tllan: P� Friday tveiing at li o'flock. . also'chimneys rebuilt and repaired.L/ j. ', J defeated Pickering 13-:► (. L Clare- -The 'sen-ices _ in St. Andrew < merit defeated Bra,klin 1.0 In the-. :JACKRE Church on SundiaS nextw: at the, u, c lD - F(;,ftball,. An•th r .new event, th 1)UN'iiAHlON ;z-10 nal ' hd car.. yeti . Mart;% Jrr.l:::;sdarl• I;icy.le. Ra.^e;. prizes; were .asnrded _ : " Breakf as# Bacon, 25e. a Ib, -the minister, in rh2'me" • Susis, ifs order, to R?J "'heeler.`B':'V School at 10 a. m. Choir'pract 1 FK, Bradlley and WJ rer. F(Ir" Minced Steak liar been w,tndra:4n, a�' is the cu` s^oe pitching went to, 4Loe',i; -• : Our Appreciation � 2c. a lb. . . thin. cw lig'Julc_,nd._a.utu':. _ r,.c, and Linc t-r'. T: -Al! JEr.�� 3reed�r� a friends Pa -P g �t;. DN TRIS OUR . -Pork Liver, 12e. a -lb. ° O�•P>7) - ti^Lal�l l;n �{ R ar _ 1 are in: fedi ti eland tt?e 'p:^n.i of, and Paaioe-Dross Task,-t­ w r(. . Stewing Beek` ' 12C, 1. lb the recea'S- ` ^nisi Ontario. Courts, fc,*, a Lurk; Pray and aur.; t� First Ann><versary Jetxfy Clue, wl x h' 1� being he?d: nn Tun n± rr,al to R'm . Hu xrar, +, ° Saturday neat in conjunct :