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HomeMy WebLinkAboutPN1937_07_16mp r .+girl ._ a .•- ` � �.'. , •~i '.«„-tin•'^ y-.,. :/`•'�f - THE PICKERING SOL. PICKERINGone, ONT., FRIDAY JULY 16. 1987. N�. 47 4 i>is�fsifestassesl ��•..� - - is�r>tw. Aadley Dsabartop � ' _- --- OOh► • - Remember tate Club Picnic in Dr.` and Mrs. Piearson's daughter !�.EEI\ W , )b"asmgeos. PquWaN—Phi Dian .. every Pass Saturday Chapman'$ Grove next. B?�g and family, of idaynng with them this u'mmer. an ILL ' • fJnt tracks Dor wayy baskets and a good net _ ';�•MILLS � -:._ � ` • �, B. FORSYTH, Opt. D., Dirsetor ' �Y Bo We are glad -to welcome Mr. and Sg�.=f936- T � r i COAL'- OOKE ghborhood time. _ Mrs- F- Hill beck to_tbeiz=_ --I rrclatsr. g� �. _ frame a{ eeb�ank Corner. nale IML Claeemust.Oat. �+ D,- CJKMIG , Green River Alfred, and Mrs. Tyas, of Tor- onto, Chopping -• 1 ` a e Dine o. r i Mr. .Hugh Chessum, of Toronto, the latter's mother, Mrs. R.' And- ^ is_ in a short vacation with- erson. Monday, 'Wednesday and Fri DONALD .RUI)PY I;sagrwter - S1rd-- $�� A y day Me Saiicitar,.Notary rubix- +�inyw Loan. relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph White, al- t01rmetly oxupmd Dy we ,ate t#. E. Ghrm- BUILDERS SUPPLIER The Green River. Garden Party so .their daughter, Mise Thelma, of - 7e, per bag �. e'Oa °( t'OYC1 �O• Wei�y' sky will beheld on Mr. Roy Carter's Lockport, spent the week -end with BEATON, BELL ff ROSS 8160-18081 cartage W01k lawn on July' 24th. Amateur Show. the ,former's sunt, Mrs. George 20 ba f - Barriators 1! Sotieitor�rs+� We have also placed in etoeil a full The Ladies' Aid will hold their White; s>, - si.sa WILLIAM,J, l3F.ATC+1�i. K, C. line of Maple Lew.f Millkng annual . basket picak at Wilson's The Weiner Roast held by the a bags and over, 6c.. Mr. bas ' �� ireede, Park, on July 28th. All ladies int- Dunbarton Young People last Man- A �y line of cattle and bIg . BROOKE !3>ri.G K. G J. D.F. ROSS — erested and husbands and children day evening at Bob Graham •e res- feeds JAMES A WRIGHT A. We MITCH L are cordially invited. idence was quite a success, with a- 1 si r Street. Totrooa., Adelaide 9888 Next tunday evening Mr. Thom- bout 60 in attendance. Baseball, Pig Ceneerttrste thb b necestk Pickering, son and Mr. Daniel of Mt. Dennis y singing and fin- for economical feeding aii Q. RICHARUBUN dt .Uo., Sarrir •'' $', ODt. � t ,games community J•tom Solieimon. Notaries etc., suite aft, Baptist Church• will have charge of ally the "dogs" formed the even. Iq=AfeButldittg� tieToro'to St: Tomato. 'O!liee phone'7400 Residence 0520 the 7 o'clock service. Rev. ' Pig Starlet .toe m Ad. tis8: PirJtering Ptto01e sets. Su Haar .ng 8 entertainment. roans yip '� Wilson, being on vacation. - . ��.• _ "IHOK80N A hicKILLAN—Barrie- The Beal Store, Claremont Although same sections of the Wititevale - Poaktry Feeds, All kinds C1ka tees. Sdteitoem, Notaries Public. 06we Garda01 cwt... Picket�g on lueday mad PROMS 9&1 province were greatly damaged by ,S today evening• from z 96 to v.PO or h ap the Sunday stmarl, we, of this dig- Decoration Day at the Cemetery & and Growing 1Baals r lettaant. St. atoPh. ne FADameD am. aOn nice.. FURNITURE trict are very thankful for such a . :,n Sunday the 18th. Prof. Miteiell Bran and: Short@ 11 s Pttaae eco lovely rain, It was so much need- of Ringwood will be the We t.re dirplayiag an stLraotive speaker.. 10NANT dr ANNIE _ Barriito-s. variety of ed and will sorely spoil all the Attendance 'at the United Sun- V. S.m: Iaeilekt.ra, Notaries Futile Aluminum sad (�raniteware Ste, small potatoes. There :was- no dam. day School last Sunday ran over NtRON D. CONANT.'K. C. Furniture and Furniture age reported as a result of the high 100. } e LIN R. ANNISi 8, A.. LL. S. PIA O-TORTO Novelties. wind,.' Mrs. w. Hilts is feeling intra" Liemr• ft 1 8 S(ttacoe 5t. S:. Oshawa 13 - ' mom.—a and a ft wwal. and n the court Priose low, in keeping with times. Send in your entries for the Am. better after- a splendid holiday in AND weithyy.,(Mr. Cannot) Phone r (Whit ateur Shaw early, to insure accept- 'Detroit, ^with Lawrence and wife. - 11 A i�ll0 ante. This Garden - 'Party will . be 'Walter and Mrs. Hehn and two All kinds of PE Bir �Or� ; SERVICE flood. To further popularize this little daughters are visiting at the T —+�-- — year's' -garden party a cash prize home of Mrs. Rendall. Wit Tuning Guaranteed a Mrs. Gibbons and daughter,Mra. C. S. MaCDONALD IBRBERT T FALLAISE, L. D 8., With most popular unmarried lad on $ o o a D. D. s , Graduate of the RoyUniversity College of the grounds. Have your friends guests f Mr. and Mrs. for ra. Sarg and tl>< ttmr- east or St Ano. II t0; the -minute trainin Spears ke l01 rddoee ercond done wt or 3t And �- fig Phone Lakeside 1502 ►'S Church. Fiske"mg, Ont. . ollfee "0011' : 9 and your. favorite. We stress The I Orders taken at NEWS �)ffios ' V N. to o p. m., w try appointment. (X-ray - honesty in counting of -votes and regular meeting of the W . I . rice). Phone Pier ayoo asy FINEST EQUIPMENT fairness in judging of contestants, will be held on Wednesday July - for 21st, rat 2.30 on the United Church #uot ces•a,dl'orbs• :'Guaranteed Satisfaction lCgAsdian National Exhibition lawit• Roll Call—Hints on Canning Shiitgltr$ For Sale AT Avg. 27th to Sept. 11th Come and have a good time and I POSTILL,'Lieenred Auaiiosear. ' Reasonable Prices 111 -mile marathon swim. Empire welcome a visitor. Galt Galranized Steil 9hiugl'ed, 0 tar o•01atias at Tors and Ootaeo. .Ams.• Tubes and Batteries always on b A Onward Pageant, Coronation Show Miss. Emma Birnie has returned Bird's. -Felt glare Shiaxles. m make od all kinds asunaed to on dborMM rem, Aade.m.or.w aivw P. o., oea _ - --�- - — home after a . lengthy illness .A Alru, re-rubbrrinf; hufzgp wheels. H. ROY. MILLER. - Brougham Toronto Hospital and we are glad Lowe roew@rm sharpened. R. BEATON. . TOWNSHIP Broufrbam, Ontario to state, much im in health, T.• PATERSON S • Cterk CoOvyounta t. Etc. inner for 4811 Pbonp Mark itiUti 'Proved(`LAREMOl1i ne •i9davttr, Accountant. Etc. lma01er or Mrs. Lemrnon spent. the week= May this state continue. (yMit ,,.,r► p, r „r;,.F�., Phnne-2812 mage Licensee. Whttevale.Out. end in Toronto. Rev, Mr, Bick spoke very acc- D • �. _'R Mr. M^Whiner is taking " .sum eptably to the united . congregation A. E. RICHARD mer course at Hamilton during the on -Sunday morning( in the Baptist __ FUEL holidays; Church . "Purity in Our Liven" be - Many INSURANCE —' - Many from here' attended the lfw stressed throughout. the ser. 81'�TD REAL .ESTATE -Insurance -of All Kinds. )+field Day at Green's Park at (+reeTi mon. , CONVEYANCING wood on Wednesday. The baptist pulpit next Sundry . Builders' Supplies Beet Rates Available with Mrs George Philip and Effie Pet-' will be filled by Mr. Thomson, who PC v 101 old estsWphed age»ey, trendy erson were visiting Toronto re`lat- will . be assisted in his service of to eve. ".. Security and Service.- ives during the week. sor4, by Mr. Daniel These' gentle' Lumber and Lath Y. Phone, Pick. 6000 --'Mr". and Mrs. T. Wright and Mr. mere are the product of the brother Address' -Phone and Mrs. ,-Wier, of Toronto, -were hood 'movemen.t in Mt. Dennis. 8 - �71� B: C. Shingle{ �f l! M • - MAW - -BR000HIk PICK 516 cailers at the T• Brown horde on, Church. blue Coal k _[ *.N86D AUCTIONEER _ANO Sunday. The .annual. picnic of the Pugh.' Alberta Coal *�i VALUATOR Rain came just in thn_e 'to save .Evans took place at McKay's Park _ ;�j :Pickering Mills fruit and other growths; much hay when some twb hundred thered Pomestle Coke , Sales- conducted Anywberc Sa t Doe write. Address. i314 Duoda« lies been cut and housed during the tri renew old acquaintances. The — favorable weather. oldest person on the CiFnlent Limes Plaster r. Street, Sart. grounds was Agency for Frit dt Wood In our last issue an error appear- Mrs. C. Middleton, mother of :Maple Body Wood e Whitby. Outaeio. ed when it was stated that. Messrs. Councillor G. L. Middleton anct who Cockshutt Farm- Machinery Agents far Lnudy Fence CYRIi; E. MORLEY' Lyal and Nbr"val Wilson, -of Oshawa is remarkably alert for having pass• _! Complete lire and repairs. � dortated 8200 to the- Cemetery ed her 87th year, The•member who .,..And Metal TrOOfWP 08151l;RAL INSURANGE Chopping and Feeds Of 9,11 Fund. It should have read 120. '. c from the greatest distance pyre _ Pickering, pN The Sunday School picnic will be this year . was Mrs. Agar, from the t kinds. held at Wilson's Park, Green River South African Colony of Natal.' CeekehIIt II1Dplementlli W -POINT , on _.July 23rd. Sports Committee bringing her two small children f�«.re Pike. Before Baybg Royal Pastry Fltour- Misses Doris Johnston and Annie with her. Another 'interesting per• __ ___ _ IIIslaraIIOe at POIIltry Feeds, �}rOWiDg Myles and Messrs Hugh. Miller and son present was Mrs. A. Mchinn• e�; KedIICPd Pates P.oss Wilson. an from Windsor, who had just air. �(y I L SO N B R O► Y Mash, L.aj ins Mash Rev, Mr. Augustiner of Clare- ivied from ' For your car. - England and dropped it a ODt• mont filled most acceptably, Rev. on her way home and -who had the >.'�.00[ISt HIiI " stir " ' We .carry all makes of Plow Poiirts. ' , ' .See- Us _ Glovers appointment here, on. Sun- honour of being chosen as one o' Phone Mark 7200 D. N. Lokwt>'�d day. The threateniaig storm' made the sinkers for the Coronation SERVIGE and PROTECTION Sunday School and Church attend- Choir, The Committee decided to P]GKERIIG, UNT. f Ance srnaller than -usual. meet next year in Uxbridge Park, The Misses Wilcox, of Toronto, on the last Saturday -in June, %vhicb t ` Timmer Furniture ere„ recent tiisitors .at the B. Rit- will 'fall on .the 25th. The officers 'Y8�R5(,iN "� R! G. CLENNNING crie home. Donald and Francis elected for 1938 are; President, �` SPRAY I pe Cod Lawn .Chair _ 82.85 FUNERAL DIRECTOR Ritchie left the week for.. holidays Hugh Pugh, Vice -President; Harris : rL-,LY Sl'R AX I�, x _ -with them at Stoney Lake, Mrs. Evans; Secretary -Treasurer, Irene ++ wn' Chair ;2.10 Private Ambulance Ri ie s ht severs a Pugh, •with a' strong. Executive. ; tch pe ]days last we k Day and Night $ervlce in Toronto... r�r A very successful Bab Band Greenwood ck Chair with Canopy. and ^' _ Pbone 900E ^ w held at T ,7 LE meeting as a the Norton ��--� 1'001 Aesl - ;gam Malvern b000 home on Wednesda afternoon, , of Markham .+GATT a y 33 Mise Edna Meadows Ma>r.1_tam being present. Babies, Mothers and spent a few days with Mrs. Plas- ' ek Chalr' with Canopy' ;2.60 kh f :Ont. several Grainies. The .meeting was keit. .And AN domestic StOcl{ z conducted by the President, •'Mrs. Rev. H. H. Mutton and faintly '�; Norton, assisted by Mrs. Malcolm, have left for their co 1 Omer protection. Gives L Will -without;i' Summer rime Misses Duncan and Doris Johnston. bright. at Sea not taint, milk. *. After which the little' ones ave a Mr. and Mia. W. W. Gee1and mp Chair ;1•� PEARSON S CATTLE SPRAY little entertainment of their 8 ovum. daughter, and Mr. and Mrs. F. W. • N Note the Low Price. t Grass Matti STOCHAIDE, Avery happy occasion. Refresh- Gibson, spent Friday of last week r _. Fly Tex, Hand Sprayers, Fly ments were served on the lawn at with Mrs. Tom Hortop, at Camilla. l aQ0 per gall f3tadio Cenehes Sprayer$, Fly Swatters, Screen the close_ : Carman Douglas returned hone Doors and Window Screens, 'There passed away in Port Simp- after spending two 'weeks with his _ su Paper King Bu Killer eon, B. C., Missionary Hospital ,on aunt, Mrs• Wim, Sadler, also his 128 Ounces r y July 3rd, Miss E, Hargrave, who 'siste , iss _ Marion Douglas spent $ Container Included �- spent her girlhood here, being the the k -end with her aunt, I[etor A>sbdaslea, ilky se riisbt in 6, 10 sttd se lb. basil, daughter of the late William and Miss Eileen Sadler successfully ti We believe this to be the best Pbow 1x00 r Lawn Mowers sharper and >�{r- Mrs, Hargrave. She went to Brit- passed her Higher Grade 1$lement- _ ish Columbia to be with her sister, ary Piano, Conservatory Examina- p�t�eul•able, Mrs. 'Rev. W' H. Pierce, three de- tions. Congratulations to Eileen and C. A. STEIRIT_ T Plwnbinft, Roofing, 71mmithing ' cades ago. She has been a sufferer her teacher, Mrs. P. W. Gibson. Made by makers of Creoflgr �QT B���B� of cancer and ,confined to hospital 'The Ladies' IbIle Class held their Funeral Director • ++ fQr quite a long period. She is sur- meeting on Monday evening at tl,e (� p�,�,� Hardware Tinsmith vived by her sister, J Mrs. Pierce home of Mrs. Geo E. vie ione8 Furniture Dealer PTOKERI)\TCi 710 Gibson with sr• ., and a brother, Col, bt. Hargrave Miss Ruby Amus in charge o! the DrsgaLt *'' ' OUtar10 hone 4000 of the Salvation Army, now retir- I program. There Was a good attend- ekeriAg. p ed from active service. tj ance, rTYL'. 'i`!Ch'bi `F.CRs.},T••"S'.^Fj,.•-SM-'GT'�`�'.-"T^*.-_`_+r_.•., • _ thea turned to Clayton. "IThis was- n't hroom, was fol�""No, his was the next opm.G"���T��:Tea "Who would have thought of look- ing is there? How did you find him?" Clayton explained the circumstanc- es quickly. "It's another one of those, AD baseball murders," 'Sherman said grimly. "I thought they.were through with • our team. Now, why do you suppose they would•want to kill Raw- lins.? And how about the girl? Any . Dols sign of her?" t =--— e'd better take a look in there. �- How about a key?" -- key,-Sherman unlocked -the -doox-pro- per and pushed it open. There was a horrified gasp from the people in ►+, �� BATH ;: the hall as the hanging' body swung a ►�+ j ;� ON THE �+ ►�� crazily and' then fell down half in �Eom''e ^ +� �• f V and half out of the open door. ►�� / IAMOND _ i Inside the room' Sherman opened % By LAURA K,l ►� / ►� the closet, looked under the bed and BY CORTL/�ND FITZSIMMONSI V then opened the bathroom. He let - ��=:::+ :� :+:+:+:��:+_: :�s+:�'r•.+: ►�� ;� of t a startled cry. "Come here, somebody!" he called. . Th a, policeman ran into the room When the United League season star, drops dead, after hitting s tom-. p opens the and into the bath In a momentthey pe gamblers are offering 200 er, from poison on a phonograph could be seen through the open door to 1 that Pop Clark's New . York needle fixed is the handle of his bat. • carrying a limp body in their arms. Blues will not win the pennant. Pietro, Chicago's -bat boy, disap• It was the maid, bound and gagged. Terry Burke is the only sports writer pears, Clark sends Doyle to Newark They placed -her on the bed. ,/ • to give them a chance. He bets $10 but he is soon sold to Boston. When "She's all right," Sherman ' said to at Tony Murallo's restaurant is the the Blues go to St. Louis, Scotter, Clayton. "She's just stiff and sore. u;.l " Broadway district. In the Blues' first the Rubes'. star pitcher, is found Get a glass of water." They untied. game Whitper, the Philadelphia dead from a gas given off by a my" her wr:sts and ankles and took the pitcher, Is killed with a bullet through terious powder in the. box with ■ gag out of her mouth. y ' the heart after 'smashing out a home jigsaw puzzle sent to him. Each time "She was dumped into the bath- r. rna. Both Burke and Larry Doyle, Burke has a beat '9a these senna. tub," Sherman explained to 'the man - the Blues' rookie shortstop, for whom tional happenings and masked gun - ager' as he chafed her wrists. Clark's pretty -daughter,. Frances, men truss him up, question him and e - had shown her preference over Whit. warn him he knows too mutt, Rawl- They gave the girl the water t little at a time. "You'll be-all right per, are suspected at first by Detec ins, the manager, is sick when thein Live Kelly. It is Burke who discov- Blues go to Chicago, and New York soothgly. minutes," Sherman said - "r it was Sid Stream, notorious gun- wins the first game. Burke bets Mnll- "How are you- feeling, Louise?"': 4 . man, who wrecked a "'with a bul- ins, another sports writer, $5 the Clayton asked the girl.* let through a" tiro. and injured four Blues will win the second game if -Terrible, Mr. Clayton," she. re- Y. Boston player as the Blues are to Rawlins is still ill. He lis- absent plied after a moment. "I thought I open a series. Then Dirkin, Chicago again. :. ,. r ^ was just goingto lay there and die." rum-_See_if yon-�- "Call' the police,"' Clayton said to stand up." Sherman helped her off Ternan. He turned to the' people the bed. grouped in the hall. `:'Won't. you peo-- `YeO, I can stand all right," she ple please go to your roams." " n said after a - wsvering'moment• The crowd moved ba.•, a IittleI but NOa' Lomse,.r_Sher an said, - �,. did not disperse:' „y 've had a shock, but there are +� , Ternan . name• back and, stood- on sow things I want to ask .you Just sift guard. ; - as soon as you feel able." its — w �.} f "Come with me," Clayton said to "I'll be all )right in •a minute: She «f'' �•- � Q! the bellhop. He moved down .the hall essayed a .smile. V and stopped .at an open door about Sherman" looked -toward the door l «� to "" OCQ,A'n tour rooms down, the night clerk- that, led into the connecting room.' close on Vs heels. Have • you your pass -keys . Fe ask- a� „ ed. Ha%•e you ever tried to figure out ©V Go in there, Clayton ordered, _ . .I -"oE4,` "Y.e took 'e n." - Just what makes one bolt of cantly' l tom,." "and find out who, is registered _ in 'Who took them. seem so choice, and another so cpm- 3 that, room." He turned to the boy, .1 mon lace ? It's more. than the good-' Carter. "What do' you know- about The man• who tied me. up. P g t •� this"„ y "What .happened?" - ness of each piece ,important as that 3-•t -' "I wan Vo min' down- the haat ani a is. See • how the contrast in color 1-4 "The captain gave me a ticket to. man came up to.'me and asked me if and shape and the dainty- wrappings 1?_ . come up here for a suit., When I op- . I'd- open the -door for him. He said, add to the attraction abore filled C ened the door that thing was Mang- lie had forgot his key. I opened the with late, 7 ing there." His voice quavered. door and he shooed mein and put his Caccnut Cherry Divinity over • The night clerk came back. "The hand over my mouth. I tried to fight 'g cups sugar room was vacant. Has bees unoc 9P g u til him, but he. was too strong Qnd the 2-3 cup water boa's Direct front Montreal cupied all week.: It wasn't rented, next thing I know I didn't know its cup corn 'syrup aro because .it was,next to 'lir. Rawlins' , to nothm . .I 'u o of lose w just sort floated d a ay 9 i - .. Begs, stiffly beaten, i:'i - ENOLAND, SCOTLAND and he was sick, lid: when I come to I was In thrre." -IRELAND AND FRANCE •• ,� 1 teaspoon vanilla' Add Get' the operator; Clayton sa d, She' turned to point town rd the -bath- ddASCANIA- "AFFrONIA" "and see if she can trace the 'call Dash of sa:t to - 11'ALAUNIA" "ANDANIA'P _ "' roTh f h kl ' cane 'coconut, . southern style, ..Add "AURANIA'P "AUSONIA'P for service in that room. y -ATHICKIA" "LET1TIA's The clerk was gone for ,several a 'acts that the police could toasted or crumbled cook gather about Rawlins'` dust were for-.• ' Popular Steamers minutes. "'The operators say the call 3-•1 cup cherries, thinly -sliced. F. Y few and meager. the murderer or SailingEve Friday name from 'outside. It -was. a man ring Every Y ;murderers' had seized, bound and Cock. 3ts cup sugar and 1-3 cup our o ¢ria called and asked for'the o erator to-4gge3.tfte mald;.had.used her. pass- gather until a small amount p ,$ ? P water to inch individual 'attentbn and send up for his suit He said he had l:et - to enter Rawlins' room. They of, syrup forms a slightly firm ball complete personal service to forgotten -to-do it before he went had' e-;'(:er tly been._ watching the . in cold water. Cook remaining sugar s'tan passenli out aunt would not be back until late nurser It eras supposed .that 'there water and syrup -together -until a n 3 A complete shipboard holt- ani wanted the su�1t� for the first were two of them working together. sma1L amount of syrup forms a hard slab, day with a drilling helpful- thing tri the inornin, • Eve effort was made to trace the ball- in -cold water. • Remove first 1- mess ellm2nating all care. A lainsv'othes man and two ol- knif The low.,st rates of passage " p p telephone call_from outside; but th@re syrup , from fire, cool .slightly, and to. d icemen hurried down the hall. "Hello, • were so man calls comm in it.. was ver etatalnable. Clayton, have you found him?" the difficult to know which one had been constantly ty unt 1 emgxtureQ3loses titshigh e3 mod standard of see& plainclothes man asked.. He was Sher- the call that, resulted in the findingi, modatlen In all classes. man, of the Chicago force, and had of the. boo ,gloss (1 ,z minutes). Then add second Apply to n been' in the hotel earlier in the even- Y' syrup slowly, beating as before. Fold There' were no finger -marks, no Ge 1 1 ► ing trying to locate Rawlins and the clues' of any kind. The maid did not in coconut, vanilla, cherries and salt, fro mis5irg maid. - remember the man. The halls were 'anal "turn immediately into buttered 'aye Clayton 'nodded 'and led the. way Ev not brilliantly 'lighted and 'she was an 8 x 8 inches. Roll in additio 1 4 4. doc:n •to the door. The crowd fell P Th sl ghtly near-sighted. toasted coconut, if desired. Makes re Buy Street (Elgin 3471) Toronto back. (TO BE CONTINUED) 1- Wo mrn to see is, tocol aliens. l: -man looked at the body and _ 3 ,' c:o�: pieces. i Save The Trees You '11 LIKE The best known grove of big their nutty, Douglas firs is that which lies on + f the. Island Highway between Cam- -Slightly am- oro —S I g h t 1 y salty;:,*- „ ., n Lake and Alberni. These Cath - t edral Trees,` as they have been call- ®e F l a v o r .y •T l anyone who passe never through them. rilMore than one j government ' has promised .that they s q, will be preserved. But governments corde and go and nothing is done. Mr. Pattullo cannot celebrate his +*+r'. ` ? confirmation in power in a better or d - more lasting way than by making t ;► • definite and immediate arrangements +• �F :-r to save these trees from destruction- ' �� j • X ,• w A�{` - --Vancouver- Province. "What the statesmen of the world • : need behind them • is an aroused, in- dignant, articulate public opinion ' . • : � �� � ` � that demands peace" ' j"I�7 —Richard E. Byrd. "Nmoa Christie Biscuit for a ety taste~ Issue No. 29—'37 C-2 i w`A ints GHT ti qy.6 � Clot plata. Carmen _ A cup sugar -� squares unsweetened cho_olite, cut in pieces cup.iight, corn syrup teaspoon salt cups heavy arcam. - amliine sugar, corn syrup, •choco- salt, and i;a -cup• cream Place a Iciv fame and i,:r co scantly sugar is disso.vcd and mixture .'Ccntiiiue" cooking until a small unt of mixture forms a soft ball cold water, star•.• , constantly' ?'i cuecr c ar.1 ' an3 again cook "3 Deg. F., start. constantly rcma:ring. t,j cu -1 c:oam and until sma:l amount of mixture a a firm ball in co:� v ater, stir- --constantly. -,c rcm fire, into slightly battc-':1 pan, 8 x 4 cS. Do not sera^e pan. .Let d until cold. Mark wiW knife ' -�44ch sgLares, turn out on .cold turn r:ght side up. and'cut into es with full langth of long, sharp e. . Let stand two to three hours ry. Wrap each caramel in . wax - paper. Makes.40 caramels. Get two ounces of peroxine, powder m your druggist. Sprinkle on a hot, t cloth' and rub the .fare 'gently. ery blackhead will be dissolved. _ e one safe• sure and simple way to ' move blackheads. Have a H9117.w od complexion. l 10C t Weal folks, "Buck Benny rides again, not as in his radio sketch but of the poles in the -aa nual Radio Guides "Star' of Stars Elect:on." Leaving all- "other com- petitors far ,behind Mr. Benny -has again ridden into No. 1 spot, ranking every other radio performer for the third successive year. Benny's hated late rival, Fred Al- len showed up in 11th place. Hard on Benny's heels came Nelson Eddy, baritone. Frances Langford topped the feminine entertainers, finshing in fourth position, although Mary Liv- ingston probably shares first place honors with Jack ' Benny. Jessica Dragonette, a. songbird, finished in 0th place in the pole. Don Ameche Yiot listed last year, got under the wire in 12th and last place. Harry McNaughton, who is known as Phil Baker's "Bottle" on the air, will make his first microphone ap- pearance under his own name later in the summer as a guest on Harry Von Zell's variety program. He used to be a stage comic in his own right be- fore he turned to stooging. Harry Conn who wrote Jack Ben- ny's material for three and a half `14pre, is scheduled. to.- collaborate with Walter O'Keefe when the latter starts subbing for Fred Allen on. Wednesday. • Charlie_ McCarthy, Edgar. Bergen's famous dummy, celebrated his 15th birthday .on July 3rd- Sort of a wooden anniversary, what? Smoking is not permitted, at any time, in NBC studios, Which ex- plains why the studio -patrol officer keeps a skeptical eye on Joe Laurie,. Jrj comedian on Rudy Vallee's vari- ety hour. Joe smokes 12 to 15 cigars a day, and at rehearsal, keeps an un- lighted cigar in' his mouth. , "He's afraid I'm going to light it ' one of these days," Joe said. It is rumored around- that our old friends Amos and Ardy of the tooth.- paste ooth-paste fame will- have a_ change • is 'programs on --the fust of the'year.It seems that while their. sponsors are not tired of the Negro wit and humor., they think - that some other. sketch would at the present time bring them more dividends, so they are on the lookout for a kid show to replace the btackface comedians. Meanwhile it Is said, the A and A combination al- - ready .has a sponsor;' (name undis- I dosed) who wants them to sign on 10 dotted line. The Metropolitan Opera Auditions_. of the air, vehich .were so very popu- tar last fail, are planning to return to the air on October 3rd and it is stated that .all. the preliminary try- outs as well as the station auditions will be handled by Wilfred Pelletier. W:lf, by the way, was just recently married to 'the opera star Rose Bampton. - And now for sport lovers. There 3fk to be no less-' than four great Sport events broadcast 'via"the radio this month; the nibst outstanding. Z ;'-ink is the Vanderbilt Cup Race, Fhioh is run at' the Roosevelt Race - Fay, and will . Labe the air over the WJZ chain; then there is the "All Star" Baseball game and the Anglo- American' track nieet,' and -finally the 5rnerica Cup race which while of 1u.te long duration should • be very nteresting to all sport fans. The Anglo-American track meet which is heli at Cambridge, Mass., is- o be handled by Bill Stern and his ,roup. of announcers who will travel :o that city • and• tell the world of ;he prowess of the English' • chaps from Oxford • and Cambridge and of ;he American boys from Harvard and Dale. This meet is scheduled for 8 p.m., July 10th. Then there.is •the - Ng boat race which is run at Nan. ,racket, Mass., and is between T. 0. k. Sopwith, English challenging yacht and the American defender, die time for this great event 'will be Iroadcast at a later date. ° Annual Poll Radio Favorites Tabulation, of the 1,500,000 votes fast ' Radio Guide's annual "Star of tars" election, just completed, shows hat the American radio audience till prefers comedy. to everything on the air. Jack Benny, winner f the "Star of Stars" title, also ame out on top in the comedians' ivision, just ahead of Eddie Cantor d Milton Berle, and he carried on Wilson to the top of the in- ouncers' bracket. Tiny Ruffner and immy Wallington placed 'second "and national radio weekly's poll i• .-Around The Dial RADIO HEADLINERS :OF THE WEEK —G. C. MURRAY showed . increase:l appreciation of semi-cla'msivalmus'c at least as far as' Laughable? It Depends On Who's Looking Record Newsprint Ex Peru "t? Among the principal comm accounting for the inere"es newsprint woodpulp, both i and which were. guaranteed free ea$y t0 the United States by the pact. In five months ending with May Cabada shipped $40,557,196 of'newsPrint to *7 the ne}ghboring republic which was an increase of more than $9,000,000 over the corresponding period *st year and constituted a high ric rd for all time. ; Shipments of Canadian woodpulp r for the five months under review tb-. ,. talled $13,841,117 as against $10,,s 125,719 in the first five months of -� last year. Exports of 'Canadian Gated by ` Nelson Eddy's amazingly_ - whiskeyto the United States showed high vote in several classifications.NN, _ an incrase in volume, but a shrink- `• Second to hcr.-,y for the "Star of ` may'` d -- } age in value, yet the total of $7,60 _ Stars", honor, Eddy was, tope In the #°'s 514 this classical division, second to Don gear as against $8,901,845 task year was awa yahead of the pre. Ameche among the actors, fourthj�n�,� / t ,th pact period when the tinned States ry the popular singers' rating. Andy.,. tariff was $5 per proof 'gallon a8 Vick's Open House, which featured against $2.50 under the agreement.. Nelson £tidy, ranked second among v / ,,. Cattle shipments for the first five all musical programs, finishing just month§ of this year totalled $5,797,- behind .Showboat! 010 an inerease of $400,000 over last Wa a Kin 's wartzez floated to f 'z�Nti//.�!! : 4! ;w '' Xn g// ,; , ff,�' year and a tremendous betterment the top of the orchestra pool, as, /rte` over the a i' ,;., ,,,z ,,y y ars before the trade agree - usual, with Guy Lombardo second . ment was'consummated. Previous to and Shep Fi lds third, Bing Crosby 71. •'.o of'Slender Loris from Ceylon find as much amusement in 1936 Canadian cattle exports to the topped the male popular singers, fol- wtttching antics of visitors to London's zoo as visitors find in watch= United States were a' mere bagatelle . lowed by Lanny Ross and Kenny ing them. owing to the prohibitive tariff. _ Baker. Frances Langford took top honors on the feminine side, with _ Kate Smith second and Jessica Drag- er and Frank Teagarden, the. saxo- Ask Equal Pa onette third. phonist. Canadian Exports y Boake Carter was first in favor - :," , among the commentators, and. Dean- Boake Carter Statistics To U.S. Expanding For Men, Women na Durbin was voted the 'most Statistics and Boake Carter, -CBS promising star." news analyst and commentator, are Total For Fire Months Showa 'Gain ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — The Paul Whiteman Feature ' affinities. at heart. Boake likes no- of 45 Millions Black -Connery labor bill' should be Paul Whiteman, dean of modern thing better than juggling with elu- amended to iuciude equal pay for - music and glorifier of jazz, is now sive figures, and colossal rows of eil al work for men and women, ac. -heard over the networks of the N. numerals seem to like Boake, for he OTTAWA.—Canadian trade with cording to a resolution to Congress B.C. in a new Summer series, of pro. has as neat a row of statistics to the United States continues to ex- by Quota Club International, a group grams presented twice weekly show for his eight years on the air pand thanks partly to the reciprocal of 5,000 business and professional through this month, August and Sep- as any one extant, trade -agreement and partly to the women. tember. - general improvement in economic Delegates from 107- clubs in the This will be the first time the famed, Boake Carter figures that if.all the conditions in both countries. United States and Canada, at . their -conductor, who set America dancing words he has rsed since first facing- In the five months ending with 18th annual convention" at Hotel- - to the tempo of jazz following the the stony -faced "mike" were laid May. this year total Canadian exports Traymore, 61s6 asked Congress to ie. ... - World War and then- clothed the : end to encs in 10 pont Caston they to the United States were $185,000,- Peal section 213 of the National Eco - "noise" in -symphonic dress, has been °°4-uldBch 45 miles, or the distance 000,. as compared with $140,000,000 nomy Act, which forbids husbands heard in regular network broadcasts from New York City to New Bruns- in- the corresponding period of last and wives from both holding civil wick, New Jersey. year, an increase of $45,000000. service positions. for almost a year. - y , P Jimmy Brearly, Whiteman's Ben- - In his eight "years of dispensing Of the exports affected b --t the re- Miss Elsie M. Yellis, of Allentown, saiional high tenor discovery, and his news comments he has' missed ciprocal trade agreement the total Penn., was re-elected president for a the "Swing Wing," the Three T's, is only two broadcasts, and Suring one for the five months ending with May • Becond one-year term. featured. In the "Swing Wing," week's illness in a Philadelphia hos- this year was $101,,000,000, as Jackjon Teagarden .is the trombon. pital he broadcast his programme . against 480,000,000 last year, an in- -•- int; Charles Teagarden the trumpet- from the bedside. crease of $21,000;000. Special ' _. s. `i4,�i 44CU 7 -At 4 } . y. a 1 i F0V y ` PIP ° 4 .t. N.v � h . ry Illustrated—OldsmobiloSia o,; R(►Ca :. ` Sedan with Trunk. °` '`' ' ea R QC QJ> ' • erA 4e' $4�r°'e f►i "THE SMARTEST CAR- OF THE YEAR ... THE SMARTEST BUY OF THEM ALL" �rM� fto;de•. Here are lourimportant .reasons ,why this bigger, fixer . TWrd, Oldsmobile gives you SETS THE PACE -1 N VALUE . Oldsmobile is the smartest buy of the year: :the distinctive beauty of the 1937 Style Leader—the extra drat, it costs you but little more than the lowest -priced cars. comfort of roomy inferiors and, performance that thrills. Y .fid, it is The Car That Has Everything. OldemobiWo +Fourth, Oldsmobile saves you money, not only in gas modern fine -car features include: Unisteel Turret Top Body and oil, but in exceptionally low maintenance coats. ' by Fisher—Knee-Action Wheels—Dual Ride ' Stabilisers Pro for yourself that Oldsmobile sets the ye pace in value. t —Center -Control Steering—Super-Hydrau- `Monthly payments to suit your purse on the General "lic Brakes and Fisher No -Draft Ventilation. Motors Instalment Plant_ • Chas: -Cooper—Claremont ` :A-Soc. Dealer --3- McGisshen—Dunbarton Donald Motor Sales --'Whitby ; Assoc: Deakr—M. Sleep --Pickering x.,77=w ... , 9i"S - u . .. .. +.o ii4 'r.:' '.'e--`' >.'� .. '...: ~' e j• :.•.. ,tr .T ;4. q' `-a Ya ,., ,},. .,; w- .. _ i^r'�.'�r� .dr ..two /:.''•r.�, .s. y . - .., .. s • •'k . h ,n '�i r?�a� ror t- ..Sr . .a'ti:. ` "A thousand or nothing," she in- Aunt, •ish *bat I awissled lam --Betty ing room should i s talus downs a �n i 1 `� T r o �u ��l e � `Y , - stated. "Tomorrow it'll be two turned me down Sat this morning that they could be together. , thousand --Saturday it iaight be a t Gosh, it was a lovely dinner, wedding- " Aunt .. « and ten fivers thrown-inr' Everybody is wondering fust who Mrs, Brown's pen carved its is to become of Simone Simox Afte - ' Mrs. Clarence • Brown burst get oid and fat lilts the rest of them. gloomy tracery across the pink face _" - _-' a few days' work in "Danger- Lov through the stage door of the Friv- and you wpn't want a penniless hos- ,l at Work" she was taken out of th olity Theatre as it shot from an in- bared o your hands then, I'm sure.•' of the cheque. The sedate sa! n bore a slightly,. ` _ cast and Ann Sothern substitutes yiaible gun, and stopped only for "Everybody doesn't get old and °Y The heroine was'supposed to be a breath at the far end of the coni- fat, expostulated Betty acidly, phant ntle s but nevertheless t Golders,, American girl educated in France 'dor oytside a tall red door, on which feeling annoyed with herself at hav- G sen. Brown back to Golders, • Movie and Simone's heavy aemrit was jus .was a card inacsibed "Miss Betty Ing let the argument get so far. `But too much to be convincing. TwV* Beaumont." we aren't her to discuss figures•--" After supper she arranged herself - 'C eth-Century-Fox officials still hav A voice answered her peremptory Mrs, Brown pounced on the op- in the drawingroom to await Archie'e faith in her, and say that when the, c homecoming and rehearsed th i assault of knocking with a bright portunity like a teriier on a rat. ' - find just the right -story for her the - "Coma in. Mrs. Brown pressed ��Oh, yes, we ares' she announced. phrases by meaa9 of which she would will put her to work again. w !Forward and frowned at the blonde "I want you to let the boy go . tell him. She had been so right, too. ¢� — who stopped doing something to an in plain words, how much?" The abandoned creature had accept- "i►di� c ed money. She must make Archie _ The dinner party that marked th •''extremely pretty face, and gave her Betty jabbed her cigarette Into the end of the recent Twentieth-Cen a predate what she had done for , .91coming smile. s ove s e won exp aconvention put on a shoN "Do sit down," she said sweetly. sprang to her feet so suddenly that a°uld never think in terms of cash ��" By ViRC1NtA DAI.t the ineluded about a m on o >< "You're . from the .'Echo; aren't you or are the collector for the Mrs. Brown started back in the chair. With backward toss'ot her How lata the boy was Perhaps the happiest, but certain- Lars' worth of talent. Irving Berlir . sang "Remember," -the Ritz Bros? .you Orphans' Fuad • P 1" a quick, froth of blonde curls Betty sprang At two o'clock a dreadful doubt f ly the most bewildered family in just now consists of era made the rafters ring' with 6i1 "No, young woman, I'm not from' p' her hands ped on her slim assailed her heart. Supposing that the country Michael Kelly, his wife, and five chil- - ar:ous shout by their imprompt the 'Echo,' and I'm not a collector," she contradicted firmly, raking the blonde minx had deceived her. Sup- hips, the had .been married that -coldly, "Pve Po�g Y dren who lice in that part .of Neer foolishness, but Eddie Cantor walks with the honors of the evenin ' girl's shapely elegance with. disap- "Listen," she began . -- only ten more minutes before I go -very. morning. They might even be in York City known as the Bronx. Ther twelve -year-old Tommy has off when he arrived in bions curls an prnviag eyes I ve come licca' to - on, Let's hear what you're pregar- laughing at her over champagne been to play Tom Sawyer . baby dress. `and did an imitation o talk to . you on a ver slant paatter; and I haven't nth time to some low night club. She could never ed to offer me lar not marrying your y stop a cheque given to a chant Ob, se!ected in the Sel;nick-International film of Shirley Temple. Prettiest girls o the -were Loretta Young, wh +waste: „ nephew.. I suppose he's told you ev- erything—all about the Ietters he that girl had been clever, the Mark =Twain classic. , Such- an opportunity for a young- party came with Merle Oberon's forme ' -1 Betty :Beaumont, leading lady of writes every day, and the. standing At half -past three she was wak- ater would be a thunder- fiance, David Niven, and AI!ce Fay Frivol' revue oto ty , PPS her order for flowers?" sued from a comfortless doze by a .dramatic bolt in any family, but for the Kelly who came with her constant be ssy�µµ�� makingu and spun arotmd on the P P Mrs. Brown,- remembering her miniature hurricane assailing the it was the first good break in years. To Martin Incidentally, Tony •t , stool set before the wide mirror ywuth behind a market stall, thought front door. To her practised ears it Papa Kelly -has been on the relief be back on the radio regularly agair; . ..edged with electric bulbs. She put •, of her ori Y g ginaI offer of 9500 and translated itself into a key being rolls for two years, his jobs as jaai-MY soon.. j one shapely leg across the other, and halved it. boisterously put anywhere on the for in a school life -guard at a Pickford is :asking S76 0 clasped a dimpled knee between sP P d Betty hooted with crystalline glee. door but in the keyhole. ;and beach having dwindled to nothing, for Pickfair, because when she ' coral -tipped fin fingers. Her bright liel .• say, dont try to be fanny—do With an effort Mrs. Brown revit- Mamma Kelly has been to the movies the house she i ' young face wore a, puzzled frown. "You you know the last father who came alized her slumberous, mussed per three times in her 23 years of include all the t want to see me about some- and tried to settle up With me gave son, and cruises} across the wide hall. _only ures that she thing important," she echoed with' me two thousand. Besides, think of She extracted Archie from his loving marriage. Tommy and his father are in. ,y Douglas Fairbank gentle surprise. "It's m feelin This ' vin to break farewell to the taxi-driver, and es- y is $ g Hollywood now, and Michael gets a , collected in the' about my n w," Mrs. my heart. torted him, slightly drooping, to the day's extra work every now and travels around the Brown snapped. Bettywas honest' m stilled. �' Y "I might possibly make it five bun- diningroom "Don't tell me ou'rc. drunk," abs y then- while his son is being groomed world. When ane marries Buddy Genuine surprise cloud her grey- dred," Mrs. Brown said frigidly. ., " . frowned- "At any rate you're sober Absolutely out the question, for stardom: p . she 1 beacr1 � - ' blue eyes, "Your ,of retorted. Betty, walking leisure! enough to understand what I'm going g y - assns pwlilel nephew?" she q attuned. !`What's the matter with him?' acr the room to minister to her- to say."' sel�itith a1scent spray. It had never "What's it, Auntie—what'e keep- When you see Claudette Colbert y . 'In 3 house and -an old . fashioned ran c "He's mad," fluttered Mrs.' rows s : �eehementl entirely fo tti her orarrred to er that Archibald could ing you up so late"' t. ., in "1 51st Him Poria," you taiA find t. + -cast most utterly de- IdsryPic kfwd house, and wants n he y, y _ -=-L'aFefaily- FelleaTaed speech. "Quite , be worth 2500. tahere--hast been Its about this Beaumont girl, when she given him ten bob to began Mrs. Brown with pronounced lightful -f t 1 m In reminders of - former life around to haunt her off his head." "Oh, I'm so so Are sorry go to `the pictures, to get rid 'of him, bererity.' "You're .not going to mar- many months Claudette Colbert, Whoever is urebaser will possess a p « yo ` quite sure it's as bad as on think. 9 y but £b00 'was a lot of mgney, and ry he=•" money sb could never take. Visions Arch'e's expression Letokened a Melvyn Douglas and estate at which notabtes of the wail were entertained in the_ days when . -firs. Brown flourished an accusing- g 11 t people to whom it would- faraway dream of iaapture that seat "flowing -little p Robert Young romp through the picture Mary and Doug were filmdom. ' -s most'Anger. ' "Don't gallop- mean s fortune camethrough the horsemen. of doubt llo g g '► as if they were. hav- celebrated couple. p r. try that innocent stuff on me, woman," "You her mind. ing through her tortured mind. "I'll "You bad boy been out ing the time of their young she cried. tell you what," she Sung ... you've lives It is -the Story New Contra'ption' know perfectly well- what I mean. You're the cause of all trouble. over her shoulaer to the waiting Mrs. with her to -night," she accused. "Oh, no, I haven't, bonour bri ht," Brown, "I'll be I e of a girl who has Teaches Swimming -.'the My poor Archibald!" s ort. couldn't take money from h e aunt of the he assuied her. "I've beed out wit's saved for --five years • Bett - y gasped. man who loves me. Make out a her father=jolly, doe old colonel i Pra for a tri to Parts, p NEW 'YOEIr:.—Parents. who wanlj 'Oh, you -mean Archie , : ', you're cheque far £1,000. to they Artists' bloke-... but—"he wagged his young Claudette and when the gets 'Colbert their children to leafs to swfm this _ his aunt - How stupid of me!-- He's Benevolent Fund." face rather sadly at her "—he says t he r e everything summer may_ be. interested in a newt often spoken about you. But what's "A thoiisandr' gasped Mrs. Brown. our family's all wrong. Told me he i; ;, .;,_; _., it might have to a fan- contraption—a frame made of hollow► .:'wrong with him? He was perfectly "It's blackmail?' - wouldn't let me marr-^ $etty if I'd. tastic dream.' A giddy novelist and rubber rode Inflated by your own. W all right when.I saw him haat," • 'Rot in the fair name of eharity, all the money in the Bank of Eng- a cynical playwright fall in love with_ wind power, they act ait a sor*#of Mrp. Brown settled herself firmly Mrs. Brown. I promise you, I won't land. Still, he's a nice ola chap. To- her."underwater supporting cradle. It fitr into the chair with something of the touch a penny. You can crgsa the night he stood me a whale of a din- For the first time since their mar." under the shoulders in front, allowl' "--aplomb of a broker's nan come to cheque and make it 'account payee ner, and promised me fifty quid it I q pay nage, Joel McCreaand Frances Dee ing the arms to awing free in th - • take possession. _ only.' Now—you've got only • two wouldn't see Betty, any more... will play opposite each other' in• the Australian crawl or breast stroke "Archibald has xold me that you minutes!" Look, all in fivers, too.." paramouat picture, "Wells Fargo.;' An .adjustable tape across the from want to marry him," she stated ae- 'Mrs. Brown reluctantly extracted He- sobered suddenly, hiccoughed, Adolph Menjou and the `!firs. known near the -bottom is meantato.be place cusingly. ' "That's what I've come a cheque book from her handbag. and regarded her shocked misery 'to us as Verree- Teasdale will be tar so that. it -hits just above the knee about." • "I'll make -it 9750. dear," she with a .sly expression.Goldwyn's: lam- • gather is Bum ' Goldwn a "Marco This allows freedom, in kicking: !tip ` - The smile had d- msppeared from Betty's bright lie d. "And the funniest part of all, polo" sad the one extra clause the Y tags is supposed to be that it advantage y face. She flushed Betty ignored the insinuation of insisted on is their contract was that supports the -entire body, instead! 'with swiftly -bore indignation- %f bargsiniag. is' the dividing wall between two dress- just the top half, as water wings do she could have laid hands on Arch!- bald at ' that moment she could hap- pily have slain him. The outrage -,Kim out, I.reposterous little snipe! " "But I. don't undentaad you, 1[rs. ­, Nz"­azeu. . --i ve neve sac 1 I wanted to many Archibald, The idea, I may nay, came entirely from hien." "Don't worry where it came from It won't get anywhere. • My neph- w'e not CGing toyet, _%4, Ynd if he does marTy anyom married of I don't approve, he , doesn't touch a :.; penny of his father's money, of which. I amthe t:vstee- ." you might as well lay your hands oft Betty lit herself 'a cigarette, no. ••deed her hand wak trembling, and - rondered what to do. Then the ides .came. , "So I gather you wouldn't like me the 'family," fahe coolly Inquired. "It's absolutely out of the ques- tion," came the stern reply. "Be. sties the boy's not oia enough marry;*yet." "But • he's twenty-three — surely !that's old enough?" "Not in his case, and I won't !et 1im. His parents, who were hard-` working people, asked me to`protect - hirn- So far I've done it. . What's more, I've had him brought up a gentleman—and a gentleman he stays." c Betty could nbt forgive ' that .last infeTence. If she had lobed Arebie *he would have loved him whether he had been the son of a bus -conduct- or or of a millionaire. "You mean that you don't think --.:=-I'm good• enough for him," she Sar - ed. "Don't forget 'I'm making quite 'enough money, to keep him in the, -position to which he's accustomed, as they say." "It's not that so 'Much," said Mrs, . Brown, a flicker of respect in -her eyes. "It's merely that I've made dans for the boy. I want him to marry a nice girl later on. Besides, ;, : your job 'won't last for ever. -You'll r - _ a . - Births In Maar Exceed deaths - 1 PARA «. News n�� 'Brief � Marriages Increase 15 Per Cent - Commentary On the Over Last Year, Deatha Drop FHG�-.LIGHTS OF THE WEEKS NEWS -•- Casa Loma Revenue to start negotiations with the news- Thi TORONTO.—The first ray of hope print company. By Peter Handal The men are demanding primarily 32,904 Born 5 Months the city has seen in some time, as -? far as Casa Loma is concerned, was recognition of the union and when ERR Can - reflected in the pleased expressions this is granted, Michael Smith, local OTTAWA—Only five cities in Can- Central or^ f -e _':� dieta.orshfp a i:OL nog i_u::-•t the resident said, the were read to ada r corded more deaths than �► - --Twenty years ago a great war 'acro of political ower alone in of the Mayor apt -Controllers this P y y . P- g P p *eek when it was learned, that in a negotiate for increased wages, uni- births in May, •accSyding to monthly- the hands 'of one man but the very formit of working hours and other vital statistics fig�ires compiled by !swept away the hampering bonds of 4 period of about five weeks, the West y tradition. Men dreamed of a golden lives and thoughts of his people. "'In' Toronto Kiwania Club had taken in points the Dominion Bureau of Statistics many sections of the world' civilized:v. The strike was called short! be- for centres of more than 10,000 0 age in which peace and good will $5,590.60 in admissions to the castle. y pop- were to take the place of. the old people no longer possess the right to ;= The city, 25 per cent. of this Pore milinight. Tuesday, the men ulation. In all the' other places births think or to speak other than as they', y p walking off the job an'd leavin two exceeded deaths, usual! b a wide Phrase concerning might and• right. amount. g y y are commanded so to do. Their The total amount represents 22,- ships with cargoes of pulpwood from margin.. Those men are 'either dead or. .gone g r r e- right'td self' government has gone, Quebec p 000 ie— births—numbers t free 636 -dmiswiang -On -_.--Agri- _ _the compa t, 64 pentres of more the o a visitors made their presence felt, a Weliand�shi canal: docks , -The peop d 6,671 -tom has given -place. to a new s] . press, That . somet ing o , t e_ same ; ,- %total of 2,900 arsons viewing the hill steamer Scott Misener was being un- deaths, 4,256, and marriages 3,095, e,'ry. One of the traditions to go in order may well come to pass in our p g ' loaded. when the strike was called compared with 6691 marriages in the war ruins .was the world concepti d ;show -place on that occasion. own world is not beyond the powers "We'll get our taxes out of it yet," and about 800 cords of wood are still May 1936. There was practically no tion of democracy..Today democracy of imagination. Last 'week, eleven zemarked Mayor Robbins. aboard the ships, while the Portwell change in births, a decrease of three is facing an unequal struggle against "And•in'addition the Kiwanis are with a cargo of 1,100 cores arrived and one-half the forces• of- dictatorshi as vested large newspaper associations met. is per cent' in -deaths and P Chicago to pretest the attempts of „ as the men left their jobs. in- Fascism and . Bolshevism. By the American Newspaper Guild to -• working in a good cause, added an increase of lb per cent in mar. ; Con. F. J. Conboy. - . riages.. . Drastic Drop In.Wheat Crap The five, centres having • more. obtain ,closed shop conditions. for WINNIPEG. — Drastic decline in deaths than births were St. H a THE editorial workers: Such attempts, if Editor Lauds Press Here Hya- n successful, would mean a virtusi crop conditions in Western Canada cinthe, ue Galt Ont., Owen Sound, . PARIS, — Canadian newspapers @ control of the voce of thc,people. Of corm one o� the world's best rostra- with the wheat crop estimated at .40 Ont.; Sts Thomas, Ont.,_and Brandon, menta for .the study of world-wide Per cant. of normal, compared with Mari: particular significance a the ,fact 68 per cent• three weeks' -ago and 70 Darin the five months January MARKETS that the.American Newspaper Guild events, delegates to the Congress of g is an affiliation.'of , .the . C.I.O.. and : per cent. a year ago, was reported in to May of this --year. births totalled American Nations were told here bythus bound in man respects to sup - the Searle Grain Company survey.Y' Edmond Turcotte, Editor -in -Chief of 32,904, deaths 23,481, and marriages _ The reportjsaid Saskatchewan far- port its cause and its dictates in op• the Montreal newspaper, Le Canada: 12,177, as against 33,481 births, 22,- Buying prices: mere are facing the •worst year in position_ to all others. In other "It is often said that Canada, _ 592 deaths, and 11,356 ..marriages Toronto dealers are quoting PYo= ' history with wheat. crop' conditions words, America is enter-ing upon the :through its historical past and its during the corresponding months of ducers for un aded eggs, delivered, g. P 23 per cent. of normal. Three weeks first stages .of a dictatorship. ` Political present,- forms- a bridge be- p 1936. The comparison ,shows a de- ess:p returned: ago the estimate was 5? per cent., tween England and France on the crease of two per cent in births and g and a year ago 67 per tank• in the P Egg:Agri C. I. O. Battle one hand, nd the Un°ted States on increases of .6 per cent in deaths and south and western areas complete Grade A. large 21 to 00 At the present time, no one„ is the other,' he said. 7, per cen£ in_marr:ages. Grade A medium .... 20 to 00' i failure is bating experienced and gen- I , _ "The same metaphor.'wouid equal - Agri o predict erous rainfall during July will ' be -Grade B ............... 17 to 00 able t ict the future of the ly illustrate the role of -the Canadian ...._ C.I.O. A recent straw n vote. taken necessary £o produfie even seed. Grade C ...._._.._..:..._... 15 to fl0 press. Fed- by American, English and by the magazine, -"Fortune'.' would The northern and eastern districts House 3n Dealers are quoted on graded eggs.' ''�► French sources of information, it is - sem to indicate a oro g Y Pathp of Saskatchewat} }lave deteriorated - cases free:' a veritable cross roads of. several civ- due to drought ;and their condition. m Grade I lar a 28 to 00 for : the American Federation of ilizatldna.- -=Agri-Agri - —Agri _.=_ Is Profession . a g Labor mon a great many people "That is why it certainly has one t tte he Grade A medium '. ." 21 i�c to 22 g survey said. Grade B ..__ 19 to 20 who are beginning to look upon it of the highestranks among the world T " """ a threat k rasa control is -only press for alsundance, quarty, interest Manitoba's trop is estimated at 96�cme-iVlaker Ia Aseoided Stam: grade C 1714 to 18 ss a bulwazic .in time of dire naed;a:e : per cent, of normal and the Swan i» -g When New Bedy Organized GRAIN QUOTATIONS Th p and objectivity of-iWnews." River area, _in the Northwest' has - one indication of just how severe the _ Following are vice!: end quotations b tt likely to b John L Lewis been the only district to show a seri- TORONTO—A housewife is a pro on Toronto grain transactions for car Curb Scouts Sw a :e 18 : e y e. app`s ous setback. fessicnal and.. goes by the . title lots, prices on .basis. c,i.f. bay ports: has determined to take his industrial WASHINGTON.._— A_psrtisL ban= Alberta showed effects o! drought "household manager," it ..was explain- Manitoba wheat—No:. 1 Northern, tion beyond the ranks of industrial against •'swapping"—the Boy 'S -but during the pass: three wee::s, when ` ed at an-erp�an!zation •meeting of the $1.4974; No. 2 Northern, $1.47%; workers into the realm of the white - Jamboree's greatest pastigr:e — went v:hent condition dropped to 53 -par International Professional Associs' T collar people. Only the other day, No: 3 :tiorthern,'$1.44; No. 4 Nor- -into effect last .week at the Canadian . -cent]. of normal. with the, average 79 ticn bere. - - a• we received a copy o! a handbill . $1. � , - No. 5 Northern, therm 40 tamp• per cenG.of normal June. 1G, the. re- While housewives are proYes- v ..• z being i�istributed to workers in Am - A. A. Smith, District Scoutmaster - . $1 W s , n 6 wheat, S1.26 %. port stated. .A yanr ao Alberta signals, steno,Rraphers, clerics. and z erican -publishing houses. The hand - at Montreal and leader of the 14? : Western oats—Ilio. 2 C.W., 7,2 a c; wheat conditions were estimated at bookkeepers are rot, it was the v bill clearly stated the affiliation of Canadians here, said. other Scouts No. 3, C.W., 71 .qac; No. 1 feed, ?1 Far cent. of normal. Eastern, di- ; r*:eting s o- inion. Plicate .s3Cre- ,. :. , its sponsors with the C.I.O. C. had been attempting to' trade the'r tri - s report w:therad cro;s, esti taries were admitt�tl to Lhe assoeis- 68Tvian b own souvenirs or trinkets for a- ria edaat 3D per cent. Ot -normal CQa- -tion as. professionals. - - , j�3Noa 5 CrW9-78c��'No. 1 feed - Wo" ' �etEto-cicip Canadian Scout badge, - emble:rr.. or $a rote acreenl4l 32 per ton. ere. is more than -.one way to the ribbon of honor. Rc n s "But, we issyed an order against s ° s� en present at hen meeting, , i -n- C.outhg -r fr'can corn, 84c track Dowers,. of `dictatorship. Lewis has e Me thsy. HQfa . -. - - cludingeartists,^ a:wuntants,^ doctors, stated - his intertizn' -of enlisting • that," Smith said. "If we didn't, I'm" e • 'Montreal, October shipment. I OTTAWA. — Tran�oe_^ni test nt'sts nurs:3, •newopa;:rrmcn,, en- Ontario rrrsin, a prices 5,000,000 workers in his organize afraid all .oar bays would be looi.-ing approximate :iIights,..:Yor the projeolipd :n^.ail .:ser.. incurs. ehem's.s, clergymen: F•rofes- like the United States Scouts, and vices, of wh:ch the initial one' his g tra^?; shipping point—Wheat, $1.80 tion. . The- Fower that such an of cors, teachero, civil sorvar.:3, and to 51:35; catq, b7e to 59c; barley, g�nizat`.on would be' able'to give if we are trying to retain our'own. uni proved successful, are to be rontin- "h6usehald managers:" 75c to 77c; corn, 95c.to 97e; malting- • his .plans are ever completed holds form. But; an the last day of the tte3 all summer; it Zvts stated b de= __ - o Jamboree, next Thursday, the boys artme'ital authorities Aero. y The —T• - barley{. 75c t 77c; milling oats, 58c possibilaies above and beyond any P govefninent. can swap even their slr'rts 'if•.they tmts-will be gradual, proba',Iy r,:onth- to 6Qc• .want to. Canada's largest tobacco crop 'n HAY AND STRAW ly, till the fall, v:it% approppate note Geve n. -n t to 1Yie:r�age • - 1. history is about to' he harrestci from .:\o: timo'hy, $IO to S11 per.. ton, , of weather and other navigr`tien co 50,F,00 acres,. �� ill this mean the No, 2 timothy 310 to 511 er ton; Moral Virtues StressedIn s P Last weiik, we comniented on.'the ditror_s at the different•scasor-i. { = Curriculum Assuming that the 'experiments smokiest year also.—Si:atford );�a-:I wheat stint, $7 to g8. Above prizes change 'of governments in.. France. con -Herald, f.o.b. Toronto. Ex -Premier Blum is again in the LONDON, Ont. — Mercy, justice work out satisfactorily, the A'rc ay 'and humility gill be part of the cur- companies will decide .when regular headlines though for quite a differ- ;iculum for Grades 1_to 6 be sntring services -swill be inaugurated, first for „ „" tint 'cause than the downfa'.1 of a next September; in -London schools. mails .alone, and then !oi passen;7ers IVaWIy El��tt "Ale Conner" goverrirxient.- . Eack in the days be - First offic:al copy of the "new pro- as well. This is e::pected next year, fore he tho.ugiit of governments, the gram of studies': was received here.- with •two flights-a,wee'.: each way, '` ;'4�r1�"�- c eX-premier wrote a book on mar_ from the Department of Education across the Atlantic. The Dominion -rage: ` The book is. to 'be - published. and revealed- that under the new Government' has a financial interest s ,• iuz New York soon and is predicted system '•'nothing must be done. in as a shareholder o; the Impgr:al Ari- , - a' a- one of the coming best sellers. the primaryschools to lead the chit- ways, the stock being. acquired with I .: dren to the impression that religion particular reference- to; and the en- Czrrada In The Plewa �► `-is something apart or superimposed couragement of, the Atlantic ser - in ;Canada made wort news last upon school life." Vices. F eek in several conrectiors. For "The 'curriculum, banning home- _� • the hungry and the speculator, there- .work, here-.work, while it does' not prescribe a_ = . was the news' that Canada's huge course in morals or include religion Calves From Teat -Tubed: 4 ��, wheat surplus has finally been liqui- as a separate subject, should be per= vaded by, a Spirit of,religion. In all LINCOLN, Iveb,—Two University dated. For the hungry, the news acti�dties of. the ;school the child of -Nebraska dairy" scientists report meant higher, wheat pr;ces when �. ., ooup'.ed `with" rumours 'of light -crops. " should -be lead tc love mercy, to do that • test-tube calves have been iodated in 50 per cent. of recent . ,% For the speculator, it meant busi- y justly and to walk humbly, P p a mess, better Csnaeian 'business all Social Study Course experimental attempts at artificial iri.. ,; �.: Replacing the -former 34 -page semination. t r� round..'. Canada s wheat carry over pamphlet] the crew course is outlined There were 31 conceptions in 62 '.. L amounted to 211 million;.bushels. in in 154 pages of detailed instructions cows used in the tests reported, said { 1934, so the -task accomplished by to teachers. It makes training sin- H. P, 'Davis 'and George W. Trim- ' . * • the Wheat Board n:ay be, considered. portant, combines' history and geo- berger, who demonstrated the -method .� N, as . something of an . achievement 6 especially 'in vew of the fact that to the .American Dau S:enc Con- P Y c e o graphy in a course -of social studies, y '� lessens the time devoted to arithmetic vention here. r it was done with no loss to the gov- Whey cited several advantages' to ernment. and stresses English. dairymen in use of the method -ex- It puiges the curriculum of all z� Then there was the story of Prime little habits that. might have any bad piaining'that it prevented spread of * Minister Mackenzie _Ring's visit to in effect, even asking that chi!- infection and enhanced the value of The Chancellor of Germany.. Qfficial- then should not be trained to make each bull by extending the terntorx•. in which' he mi ht be used• ` ly it was designated as a purely --enlq fashion On "acri'bbliiig paper itifiCisl-iinsemination- as—been their arithmetic calculations m slow- g personal affair but men in a position .. which is thrown away and then re. practised extensively in hoi•sea. M �t l _ to know of Mr. King's influence tord the .result in neat statements Empire affairs are Wondering .if 'the for inspection., seemingly innocent visit may not. Automobile Galen have decided effect on British policy. . Stevedores Strike ,`IS 2,350.9W 7 As. the most 'Influential of the Do- THOROLD. — The strike of ap• - minions, Canada'd statesmen sic proximately 1E0 stevedores at the NEW YORK. -=More than 3,000,- tak6ng an increasingly important �yV trio Paper Company, members of 000 miles ha a beets added to the � � }be International Longshoremen's world's motor highways i'n the p- t ' a: �''' part in Empire decisions. Association, a branch of the A. F. .qd L• remained unchangedeight years, the highways comms as the o! the ' Antonnobi a Ranula t *ikers awaited the arrival of Simon NOW IT CAN BE TOLD ' Association announced last Week: • O'Brien, Buffalo,- Vice President of tee. n tel mileage as of Jinaary 1 w�p_� the Great Lakes District Longahore-• timated as 9,900,000 miles. #dAd • H• Graves, newly elected ale Conner of the City of London, Eng., - . 'First Partner "Yea, but w sat do men's Association who will endeavor .• his o�cial robes. • An ale Conner is paid 10 pounds a year for hold we -do in the case -of bankruptcy." motor vehicle registrations, the re- i g a traditional. post th:.t dates back to 1350. His. task is to test the - port said, total about 39,00,0 0, ass quality of the beer served iii any tavern, but the last time that this Second Partner• "That's simple. C increase of 2,850,000 isone year • privilege was used, was in 1850, 500 years after the post was created. T1ze profits are divided equally. { %q MvwM. , - Tartar 4L?6 per year; $1.50 paid in adv=e. $ubacrlptaotu to the United States _ and Gt. Britain $2.00 in advance. JOHN MURKAR. Proprietor. _ Township Council ` The Township Council met oto Monday, July 5th, with all membe - present. Stanley Murdock was heard, a: ing for right-ofrway and fenci..g :• privileges. I -cess a -n take over will property to the diversion on No. 6 Highway. Dr. Mcl-wen, asked for gravel on aa, short section of the sideroad from the 5th concession, south, along his property. Constable Chester was given in- structions. to proceed , with the pro- secution of all pedlars, not having licenses, who are required to have them. E. L. Chapman, Director, of, the a South Ontario Fair, asked theconn- .cil for a grant. They however felt that. as the, Coupty makes a grant x . of $380, and this township pays 17 to 18 per cent .of that amount, they ltave-contributed their share. The - belief a also expressed, that the Municipality feels- that -this is Osh- " `;area's Fair, and that the people of this township. do ...not . deri.ve any anterial benefit. opinions will dif-- fer- on this subject, of course. _ r The Committee on Roads and Bi- :idges paid the following- accounts: Pedlar People,. -culvert pipe, 19.21, W. Petty, repairs to .trucks. 33.35, F. Gostin, bonus -on wire -fence, 6. 70, J. 31cGlashast, repairs to truck '.snnd purnp, 3.50, Rob W-ard, salary, excise stamps, clync»ite an_d rep- - airs %r pumps, ` 17f : 33, R: Lynn.; '.labor,; 2 72.x, W m . , Cowie, ditto; 277. 25, A. Hobbs, .teaming,'6 20..._ Wm. .McDonald; .teaming, 40.00, tivm. Teefy, ditto,, 45.001 -A. • 31.itcheIl, -. truck planing"Gfeen;Aood rd. .3.-75, Sam, Farndale, team and labor, 54. 70, W. Stevenson, team grading.. .....•14.00, H. Parkins, removing stox+4,. • Whitby T. L.., ..10.73, G.• Wagct, - ditto, R. 7a, E.. Ward, d -rag con 9.' 4.60, Albert Lee, haul gravel con. 56:50, Larne White. dir.o, .42.00: F. S. Barclay, ditto, - 93;00, Fraft" Carter, ditto, 190.00, Leonard Dix on, ditto, 68. la, A .�-Ha-tings,. oper- :. ating crusher, 48. 00. J. Farley, sh- ovel gravel, 15!,25, H. Jackson, -dit- to, 4.00, -E:, Hilts, ditto, 6.00, R. Hedge, drag con 4, 4.00, Walter -Ward, operating eradPr, 6..0A, A .,'Davis', -tractor on grader; A. Percy tractor grading, 31., 50, Elmer Pow- ell, tracb,r r;radinp', t_' .,0, Lobe t Fright, drag AIton.T rd, `10.00, C. 20- rods 'wire fence,: fa.1`4, Cher.- Ftnjiliririgham, bonus .on wire. fence, 2(;.Q0', T. Jarnivson- bonus on %N irr f« c� c , ?%.7-5. ('an. .Oil Co.-, gaF, for tractor.,- trucks etc.,, 189: .00, Lorne Juane, dray; }Whitby T. lAi,e,• *.00, L't4ited Church- Clare- :tnont, shed rectal, 10.90; J1: S. -Chapman, pr.- rubber ,hoots, 61.00, li C. l.edgett, dna r Audley ,rd.,• 5.00, ;4. �Iit<hell, 'haul gravel, -calcium ..chloride etc., 29. C)9_1 H. Calvert, .•-labor on bridge, 3.00,..E. Bath, dit- 4o, 3.00; F. 11-adigan, ditto, 14.00,,- IE. 4.00,;IE. Dwyer ditto, 3-:00, J. Dwyer; cut brush and .weeds, 26. 00, H. .?.Pow•ler, spreading cal; chl. .75, E. 12affey, ditching, 2, 75, r Committee on Relief paid the fol - 11 - lowing: for supplies etc., Eaton Co. Ltd., 47.47, Douglas Drugs, 4,00; Pickering Dairy, 3. I0,• Roy Morrish, %W.00, 31'. S.. Chapman,- 16. 00r, N. M. Gordon, 1.05, O.' V. Shaw, 4, 00, O. Madill, 9.98, W. Sadler, 10. Committee oa' Cantingeiicies paid 'the following: D. R. Beaton; sal., •25.00, Wm. Chester, 25.00, Grand and Toy, cash book sheets and bin- rtiier, 18:66, AlunicipaT World Ontar- Ao Statutes, 2.00, D. A. Beer, ins: on Workmen, and Road Supt. Bomd 34 :16, Pickering hews, •stationery, R-25; G. L. Middleton; relief exp. • 5.93... Committee on Damages to Sheep Paid the following:' -•Chas.'• Fuller, $ewe killed, 1 lamb killed and 2 lambs injured, 20.00, W. Milne, I -lambs killed, -4 sheep injured, 23.00, W. Wilson, inspecting -same, 8.70. :SCHOOL REPORTS: - -•- $. 11; Pickering.-- ~- ?r. 4 to Sr. 4th - Vera Zubrisky, Jennie Partyka, Inez White, Edna i Beelby, Glen LeVett, Thos. Rickard,. `wen Turner.- -Sr.-- 8rd to Jr. 4th - Helen Malcolm, Duncan Turner, Muriel Pennock, Geo. Ed . - Windgor.- Billie Michell. Jr. 3rd to Sr. 3rd - ' Jean Arnold, Isabel Lehman, Albena Partyka, Mildred Carter, Agnes Bielby, George Williams. 2nd to Jr. $rd - Aylmer Carter, Sarah Mal- eolm, Lloyd Seebeck, Murray Beel- by.. Barbara White.god • D*vM , - -.._. .. y Pugh, Kenneth Beelby. 1st - Reg, r,naid attendance I936-37-34, M. Isabel Rutledge, teacher. -COME Maple Leaf MutualF! Nighawander, Hazel Michell, Bobby Beckett. Pricker - (a) Peter White, Keith White, (b) Mary Car- ..Claremont Public School-- to the Annual Insurance Co: Jr. 4th to Sr. 4th - (honours) - ter. Mary E. Muir,' teacher:. _ Hazel' Hinan 82, 'Margaret Manion _ ` t<n.A W AWANESA INS. W6 Dumbarton School — 78, Leonard McCullough 77, James JVNIOR FARMERS' Gbap Rates for Farm and ca■ (a) - Passed .on: year's work; (b) Reynolds 76, Douglas Reynolds 75; - Buildings Passed'on ,Final test; (') - Promot (Pass) - Donald Middleton 66, Andrea Lenson 64, Margaret Wall- - MOONLIGI IT . Windatoni Insurance on 1RoiN� ed on Trial; (h) - Honours, Names in Alphabetical Order. Senior' Room. ace 64, Alma ftedshaw 63, Darlene Windmi sins ole. �► m bile ♦vto o h asrasM d —Entrance (a) -S. Annan, J. Bellhouse, F., Camplin,• M., .Dixon, Norton 60. Sr: 3rd to Jr. 4th - (honours) - Shirley Kilpatrick ,83, EXCURSION. All Kim I. James, L. McChesney, 'M. Pax- Audrey Forsyth .81, Jack Ward 79, - FRIDAY, JULY 23RD 'Write' or F1~ ton, M'. Taylor. Wrote' Finals - Irene Lynn 77; (Pass) - Ernest ,,BOWMAN &ROWE R-. -Bassett, • J..• Benn, D. Fairbairn, Anderson 60. Jr. 3rd' to Sr. 3rd - _From .the York Street J. Gillard, B. McChesney, H. Me- (Pass) - Bernice Lynn 69, Eric WHITBY. ONT.. Farlance, K. Reid, F. Stroud, H. Wallace 67, Jean -McCullough 67, CANADIAN NATIONAL DOCKS Underwood.. Jr. 4th to Sr. 4th - Norma Mothersill 60; (Recommend- i E B. M AIX BOA« S MU SIC .I Law Motor Salej ed) James, M. Morrish. • (b) J.�-Mitchell -Hosie, teacher. -_ KETS -AT THE DOCK i U. Shoy, . Sr. 3rd to Jr. 4th - a M. Annan (h), J. Briggs, C.'. Flynn- year's work. Names in order ,of. Boat leaves at 8.15 It• m., E. S. T1!jer DeA (h), H. Moore: (h),, -H. Hopkiris, merit. —Sr. 2nd to Jr. 3rd -. *Vic- - F. Gillard,. S. . McConochie, S. Stroud. (b) Fenn, G. Jackson, .tor Morley, 'Shirley Manion, Ed - mund Warden (h), Jean. Taylor. - FAS�� CARS �yP. N. Shishko (h), C- Snyder, K. Jr. 2nd to Sr. 2nd - "'Violet Midd- ;SINGLE, 60 Cts GOODYEAR TIRES WILLARD BATTERIE Belk*, M. Flynn*. Jr. 3rd to Sr, 3rd - (a) J. Flynn; R. -Forsythe, leton, 'Harold Brooks, Jean Len - son (h), Muriel Rawson, Thelma -DOUBLE, $1.00 lGive GENERAL BLACKSMITHhNC G. Hopkin, J. Satnik, V. Wood- Sanderson, Pearl Pilkey, Blake Br- SKILLED. MOTOR -REPAIRS ward (h), (b) H. Bean, V. Canner, i$coe, Irvine Rolling, Elgin Snodd- us a trial on a New or a Used H. Mabley; D. Moore,. W. McFar- en '('rec. ). Sr. 1st to Jr. 2nd -24 *Jean *Lawrence Norton, Bil- TENDERS Hours Towing Service lane. R. D. Buchanan, teacher: .Farr, Jr, J. y Gordon' J La Junior Room—¢nd to 3rd - (a)Fr- be Mundell, Bdb Ward. lat to will be received by the undersigned. ,,1+ antis Blenkin Douglas Coates Jno. g Sr. 1st - Lillian Redshaw (h) Lue- Derusha (h), Kenneth Morley for the purchase of the shed at 'the - Phone 2908 Santis, Doreen bicGlashan, Bessie France, Lydia Moore; • (b) Donald .41a` (h), Douglas Hinan, Elaine Fraser, reof„St.• Paul's church. The is to be taken dac�n and re- PIUKERING, ONT4,1 Snyder, Patricia Hodge, Bill James, Earl Anderson: Sr. Pr. 10 Jr. Pr. same moved On this shed there is a CeciL•. Monk.. 1st to 2nd -. (a) Fred- . Helen Diamond, Margaret Lenon, Helen Norton, Joan Sanderson, Aud good steel roof. Tenders will be re -. g - e Stacey; Evelyn Moore; (b) Betty Stacey, Gillard, Ren- rey Rawson, -Marion Redshaw (ill); ceived until July 26th- . . neth Jackson, Mildred Convey, ..Wal- . Jr. Pr. to. Sr. Pr: - Carl Miller, Dick Ward, Grenville Snodden, El- F. M. Chapman. _ Secretary, -Board of Trustees ter Gillard*. Primer to 1st - (b) Jean Woodward, William Bellhouse, mer Brooks, Billie Manion (ill). Audrey Thompson, Betty Davis, L. E. Linton, teacher. Pete= Satnik, Mary. Hopkin, Gladys HIGH SCHOOL ENTRANCE. —' EROCK - Th. Bat ttut Appleton, Lawrence CampPrimer (passes, on those whoa had to write &J%d irtistr ► 0= to Boddie �Villatt•. Jun. _'Primer to Sr. Primer - (b) 'Peter Sloy, Vir- the examinations.) THEATRE �rriina = •i;inia Jeffries, , Marie-W'illatt Eil ' een Ward, Jimmie Willaft, Rose WHITEVALE — Challenger, Wm. (h), ;Duncan, -Gordon: Pilkey, 'Steri= `VCTf32'TSY + eCl� � Off. Ci.=H. k. Stacey. H. Bradd, teacher. • Greenwood School— . ley, Smith, Fred: Young, "Isabel_ PICKERING —Adair, Elsie: Allen, Lorne: Balsdon, Lloyd: Bassett, R: DIN � Sr. 4th -Eileen Sadler, John -Gib- ler oh ytl: Fair-- Benn, Jean: 'Cafik, �ianrun All Shows Dwylight SHviag rime - ..O Win, Helen' Dewitt, Byers, Leslie. Wilson. Jr. 4th . Fred bairn, Douglas: McChesney, Eliz:' All seats 9atorday and Holiday $mwn, Alan Clark, Clare F.atock. 31cF'arlane, Helen: Alantin, Johri: Palmtr, John; Pas+c:oe, lien: P.icov, 1':venintta, 2C cents - Harry Hull Vernon. Johnson, Carl- F.114s, :31ilton Benj: Puckrin, Herbert:.. Reid,'. Ken: -rriday.and Siatarday. k 'Contracto: Walls..Jimmie Kinnear, Sr 3rd Smith Edv�ard: - -Stroud, Frank•' July 16 and 17 _ : -Builder and Billie Devitt, Joyce Is.+ard, Ross Walls, Vernon Short.. Jr. 3rd - � ' Cnderwaod, Helen: Walsh; John. t I;ARE31ONT -- Bronian, Hannah:. Two Shows at 7.30 and 9 30.. Brickwork ani' ctvntlw0l Vernon Gibson, Harold. Clarke, J.�an Ha old Crard Davis, Velma: ' G�istick, Nellte: Sal nrday Matinees at 1 30 s' a bpecsialty Mark, EGibson, Clarke °2hd - Bobbie Eatock, Isabt,lle Loyst, Rendall: -Moment, Vera: Sat. 'Evening 'Show starts at n 30 y Architect's. cclervioe .Sr. :dark, Eward Knapp, Ernie Sadler. Devitt, Ronnie Clarke, Tucker, Mabel: Tucker, Walter: Walker, John.-: "Seventh . Heaven” Repair 1st - John = Milton Campbell, -Douglas Knapp,s "Kenneth Short. Primer. = Douglas Davis. Lawrence Knapp,. Average Radio pp r p SV 1 V I C V With SIMONE SIVON - THE CROWN INN +' Roseb,ank Rd. and Kingston 44. 4.21D:. Phone Pt -JAMES SrE WART Markhaiin Fair Expert servioe and re- Real-- ^ *-�0�� � tOpairs �v n Yc to all mekes. - Specials Monday, Tiie4day'and Wedu'@day onable chargas, VVgrk guaranteed, :July 1:a, 20 and 21 p� Building - -:SEPT.30, & OCT. 1 and 2 - Hirst Show at 7.1(.. We do of all .kinde - _ARTHUR Beef Calf Classes F IELD Last Complete Show, at i; 56 - CARPENTERING, � -Boys' Gtsduate Radio and Television Initituft .,. « The Wolman ; CEMEl ?TIN( . $25.00 in Prizes Member .Oficial Radio Service Men ► t LUMBING For best baby beef calves born this .. _.:-Association.1f �` Alone and ; year and shown by boys under 20 ?201, PIUKERING 4' , ROO i4'I N.(I ....... Boys' .Yearling Colt L1asEeg= NTTENTION Wtth sYIVIA '9hDN)?;Y' w'a a.wo• sell Brantford Roof!$50.00 hiat-riata, Erupire Bathroom in Prizes r7 ir• - for best yearling colts apo' for. �_ OSCAR HOMUL'KA Egmt)ment, Duro* Water showmanshi b bo s under 20 P Y Y Brock Road- Gravel Also) •� � • - MULFORD'S Stable a; Beatty .. -� Mable Egnipm.ent an other Building. Materk These classes will lie shown on Fri- CLARENCE E. day . together .with Harness and Pony Races. Six for Jump Pit Dust" Estimates Free Work Guaranteed classes -Trail era. and 'a special display by the Crushed Pit 'Run _ Hust Club in full .uniform with . Gravel With _ - F.. J. 'P O SE ..hounds. Entries close this week for the Hoedn d �� and Gradeed WILLIAM BOYD• •'.1JIMMY ELLISON =Phone x502' ' Crop Competition '($75.00 iii prizes) PIUKERING. OxrAP for best five acres of hoe crop of at . Stone _- resat three kinds. Delivered -.or Loaded in Pit Further particular may be secured 'from the .Secretary, PHONE: Plant, -Pick -1026 - . R. H. CROSBY Toronto -office Howard 6471 _ Markkam. "'JOHN BOURNE SON _ 'SPECIAL Aylmer : size: 4, J2 tines 2� ,Peas, JUST LIKE •- � FIN�IN6` MONEY BUY "GOODYEAR � =SPE EDWAY 30,X3% ..� _T'1' R E S Siam Sia» 1 V -'rho -sewing In- wice -a Si:. like /curd morn. -4.50-21' .8 =00 • . • written Goodyear guar affil ibi �t ti apt** with corn tiro. GORDON LAW pldKZRING, ONTKRIo SPECIAL Aylmer White Corn,­- Jam, orn, Jam, -Apples & Rasp: 32 oz` 2 SPECIAL Syrup; See Hive 'or' Grown, IS" Ibs' .4 SPECUL Marrrialade "Motheii's," 1g.-Ut 12 SPECIAL - Pork•&.Bean!, ' [Pbby s, -tin 2 for -'2 SPECIAL _ Sliced Pineapple, 2 for �~ 2 .',.Fresh Fruit and Vegetables ' . ^ 8007 Hp cl M6UR/SON , . , ,, t x,,-- , , ss• .,..,...• �. .. ... ' ; •. '.♦ . � -„•, .�'.: '�;'..- a*, �. �+1..',s% . 4 • T '•-' .moi 4N,¢�A v � MEN '> Ltatensat x. E.=Aug, 27 to,t. 11. RADIA SERVICE Your ;� L. E. OWE /LL. 1 - Mr, and Mrs. Roberts, 'and son".I -The Canadian National Exhibit- ".­9f Perth, have been visiting Mr, ion, that unfailing barometer of. 'Fully Equipped for Guaranteed Woof FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND) ;znd Mrs. - Berg. - yes business, reports that space reser- _ its FMgaLMEx _ Mr. Jack Banbury, of Boston, :vationa by manufacturers and oth- Reasonable Charge. 9ucceesor to W. J. Mather, spent the week-end with Mr, and And ars have reached the 1929 ` peak... Tubes.and and Batteries on Had .:Mrs. Rumohr. Std�f1!ville R. J•. How and daughter, Mrs. vision Tub" ww" rove Night d Day 8eraiue ' Y ..Anderson are visiting friends in " _ LAND . ' SURVEYOR PAUL TIBAON - 1ANN A att =_ Undon Ont._ .. .. Pihaea. Gats, 513 _ _ Business , Residence e hone .-By 'p.- Mrs. H. G. McIntyre is visiting . y _ F. 1. DONE1'AN B. A., B: Se., O - ' _20 friends in New York for a couple L S. On file are this records of .sur -of weeks. C. 'H. Tuck, Opt. Eyesight 9peeialist veyors Gibbon and Yaanold, 861 /� Mr. -John Norton,has, purchased Disney Building.. (Opp. P. O.) iGng. East, Oshawa.. Ph�•ne 1981 Madeline ` .the D. M. Morgan residenck and , Oshawa, Ont, Phi 1516 - - All sizes'of Berry Boxes, Crafts,,. ' '%%ill move in shortly. Mr. and Mrs. " J. H. Caskey, of Hyperopia HORSE REGISTER Beauty 6 qt, and ii qt, Baskets, Bushel Metcalf, have been visiting with , • • legdale Stallion, the - Hamp4re, sold at Hagerman's Bas- •4 g - (farsightedness; - gILMEIN (25419 L23ati, Imported _ r and Mrs R. Kilpatrick +. A Mixed Tournament -on Friday of Oscar Wilson, Brougham, wnti' HAIR CUTTING, ' Green River School, off No. 7 sig ase on t e green gave odatian and Convergence go hand is stand for service at has own $tas>` SgHighway. -ghe Whitby rink first honours and hand. When the person acemnniod- AMPOOING, -le, during -the- season. Enrolment �a local mixed rink second place. ares to suit vision to a certain iia- _ _ FINGICRING. - (Get our rites before loll •m else. Mrs. Ray Rumohr and daughter, ed int the eyes converge No..2243. P y• g point �'ge turn � - MARCELLING where. We deliver. `.-,?Grace Madeline, of Hamilton, are to fix at .that particular point. A DOLL (2336) 12921. Imp. Freacls 8psdalise-Hot Oil Treatment -visiting -with Mr and Mrs. S. given amount of accomanodation, Percheron Stallion. An outstared. ThoD8.Mark. 1604 • 42-2 in ercherott horse of high Reasonable Ptir R Rumohr, here. stimulating a given amount in the g p g qaul- aad Pezmaoset waw The • Evans-Pugh annual picnic angle of the 'eyes, converge or turn Ity, carrying a first.,class premium - +ivaa attended by quite a number of in 'to Tix .at a given distance'.' If; certificate, �property M.M[1111D$L � P perty of E. A. L one Tires Claremont members of these faadl- by convergence to a near.point or Some"Ille. Will stead for• the Phone Blois JLAREMONT' by. assistance to the muscles of the " -season-of 1937, at hie 'own stable, Gam-Dipped -for Safety and Looser Mrs. (Dr.) Ralph Brodie, daugh- eyes to fix at S near'-point in aec- lot A, 10th line, Markham Twp, I, ler and grandchildren, of Toronto, ommodation convergent conditions Terms: To instYre a foal, $10.. Farm Machinery - , ' Mileage -have been visiting at the R. E. the vision is improved, the '_oiuiit- payable March 1st, 1938. -All at" `Fora home. - idents at o• .ner'- risk. E- A Priced to. meet, every parse. 3'th ion is one of .Relative Hyperopia. Cn.r�- ,T�� 'CoeMhutt, Frost" & Wood' No� 6 Mr. and Mrs. H Crocker,' R R«.,•i.a"'lla Corn Cultivatrre; No. lA A. Oil arr'Y When the alloys relation does not : and Mr. and Mrs'. Gordon Williams. exist or becomes broken up true COMMODORE ' AGAIN (26812} = Bath Mowers; No..4 All Steel Mar!- of Buffalo, spent the week-end with binocular vision is im eai`bie. { ' Choicely bred Clydesdale Stallion, pro- Buy' your -coal' oil by the deaat" perry of R. Defoe, Green River, will are Spreaders and Na 6 Grain Bin- .Mrs. H. H. Thomson. There • is enerall su pression and Save. g y -suppression, make the season of 1937 as follows dela combine dw latest Improve- Mr. and Mrs. Bradbury,- of Ux- of one eye or alternating suppress- Tuesday, May 25th. will leave his own menta. c :bridge, called for Mrs. Lonsdale ion, which,- as the terms or periods stable for Hugh Pugh's for noon;thence, - Cockshutt Plows, all styles ke`suit -A j Z; �►7 PLACE " and Mrs. ''Conner; on Sunday and of suppression become' more con- to John Barnes. Cherrywood; for night. your Farm, -Oliver Tractors; all ALF 'S a motored to Clarksburg,. to visit Mr.' atant, more periodic, . and of longer-Bros..proceeds to M: thence sizes' for every purpose, Used mac- _- ,Bradbu 's parents. owAltn s a Road, for noDn: thence -CLQ �, M, -Q� T ONT r'3' P duration develops to alternating or to his own stable for night. Thursday, bines-4 Grain Grinders, 5 60-cycle , ., The Public Library will be clos- convergent Aduint. proceeds to Fred Wright's. lot 2,, con. Electric motors, 1-4 bo 5 It. p. Tur- `'t ped during the last week of Ju)y to be continued 6, Pickering, fornoon; thenceto_Eli nip Drill etc, More for Your Dollar at the - and the- first -week of 'August. Will. Lebman's, lot 34, con. S. Pickering. for you please exchange your books an night. Friday. 'proc'eds to his own W. F. DIMY, Greenwood '�'h@ Eeonorriy Store stable where he will remain- until the PHONE PICK '2314 41 tf J°�l : 'e th, 'or 24th. oke'. member (allowingTnesday morning, wi11'be allowved tour books: °'- � Services in the local churches on Claremont-. Sunday next at the usual hours, itwill E. R.- Woodward. SPECIALS STANLEY THEATRE, the morning at the Baptist Church, blola4ees ,Knape lbd the evening, at the UnitedParawax. per Ib 12c.Church. Rev. Augusine acid have f STOLfFFVILLE Campbells Park &.Beans, 3 for 25c. Peas. 2's Ise: tharge of both service-, _ Soa 5fo Corn, 1Cala 2 e The :�#nnual ufiion Suriday- chool y ' Phone 10p 2 Quaker Corn Flakes, 1 Quaker Pork and Beans 1�nicnic, Is being- held this Saturday Puffed Wheat, all for 25c• Sliced Pineapple 106.at Wdodlaw-n Park, Cedar Grove. 5howin Rice Iris ie 'transportation ' requifemeirts' havi l g Mallow Biscuits, lb 19c. p s g for 25r- Cedar arranged, and expect to leave lil/ C![ 'Week Nights-815, . Standard Time Rubber Fly Swatters' IOe Salmon, !ge tin 1016 Coosa, 2 lfi tin Z9e. at noon hour... - � _ .. - •. _• .. _ ,Sat. & Nuirday a- :: Shaws, 7 and b p. m. 3•r^. Mixed Pickles _ 23c. � • Stuffrd olives, 8 6z 25c. Matches: 't- hoxpa EOG - Mr, -anis• airs. ' Seger Augustine, THURSDAY. FR1uAY & SATURDAY ' j Toilet tissue. R rn!18 Rubber Jar Rings, doz. � 5e.J � _of Kingsville, Ont spent a couple of July 14., 16 and 17 'Heinz Salae days of their wedding trip -with P . r, 50 tt roll - 13c. Fly- Catchers. -5 for Wax ape In simple but rich de- « yf Orange Marmalade, 32-oz. 25c. 1�• , the foriner's brother,. Rev. August- sign are can furnish Top of the Town Hand Cleaner 186. ins here. memorials • that will ' - Fresh and Cured Meats. on Electric Phone or Mail Orders Deliverle t • )51x. and blas.•=George Hill, of. _ .:. - Starting _ _ Cappon, Alberta, and family, motor- Please from every - - - - - - - : Refrigeration -at all times. Promptly. ed from their.. home by truck, to -standpoint. In- dignity, DORIS NOLAN HUGH HER BROUGHAM, - ONT. - A. C. BROOKS 'Ontario, to visit friends and relat- of appearance our r ,SHORT SUBJECTS -" ivies. They are at present with the work will stand out .'phone Pick.'S01 CASH-GrROCER oranei's parents, ' Mr. and :firs. through the ages. " - - - -phone Clare 3701- :f - 'Wr.:. Hill. ,They will return to the' Na Greater Tribute MONDAY,. TUESDAY, WEDN'SDAY' _ _ _ _ _ West late "in August. - N. W. STAFFORD July 19. 20 and 21 A very pleasant day was spent Highway Monumental « ff r Works . College - Holiday = _ G = A A 6y I1Ir. Vundeh, on Friday-last, it � _ '"being his '80th: birthday. -He roc- Ph. 462 Whitby Ont: Starrio �t -v 'r rived many congratulations from 1{ingstoa Road West _ g �tte Clings ltigllway friends in and out of town, which 'JACK BENNY -'-1e, appreciated. very, much: Th.) BURNS & ALLEN O N O M I CAl. Ty SAFE E DFRECTAB E- family and other guests had dinner 1�IARTHA"RAYE Effective Sunday, April 25th with him in the evening and all IF- ".Paramount Short Stories _ spent a very enjoyable 'time, Mr. - LE4VE .i"ICKERIlv'G Mundell enjoys the best of health, - For Toronto For Oshawa ".:and ,is hale 'and hearty. ATTENTION, FARMERS LL. THURS., FRI. and SAT. And intermediate points and intermediate points` _ The Women's Institute will meet July 22, 23, 24, A. M. P. M. P. M.• A. M. P. M. P. B: GENERAL REPAIR, -WORK . st the home of Mrs. Loyst.. This -6.69 .12.54 e6.54 - a7.31 1.31 67.31' e Big SPECIAL till TECHNICOLOR a6.44 al-54 .7.54 . 8.41 c2.31 831 lbeing the. Girls meeting, Miss, L. ' We are prepaled torepaircars. PROGRAM R. Rorke; will be the guest speak- trucks, tractors, and all farm ., T.54 2.b4 ' 68.54 10.01 3.31 69.31 - - er. Her subject, "When They' Were- }aures Oliver Curwood s Story 9.24 x3.54 9.54 11.46 -4.31 10.31 ::+Girls and Boys", and will tell stout maOZllilery. wheels rebuilt aad -10.54 •e4.54 b10.44 P. M: 5:31 ,11.31 some interesting.. whom she ttiB•settriIIg, WOOd-Work- 8nd «!'r�„]'S Country c11.54 5.54 c12.31..,-t6.31 knows. There will also be numbers - WOOd.turning of all kinds. ff a Time _ �iT F.istein Bt ndard T m- on , the program by some of our loc- and the ♦F oZnan ~may �a°� HbL b-Goa. t< HoL only. al girls. ,May all the girls make an Plaee your order now for e - Sat. only. ' e - Sat., Sun. & HeLialy. :effort to come. and hear Miss Rorke. WOOd.working and turning. •Starring Ase for Attractive Illustrated Folder. . 31 Deligthful Time Wednesda afternoon,• July Phone of Oall Iloke aad Highway Vaeatf an To y GEURGE .BRENT - i y ma. with all .expenses _21st,�at 2.30 o'clock. Each member ". ,�� �• •i111/ .` i/j BEVERLEY ROBERTS �M' bring. dishes, for three, lemons and 'Tickets and Inforsaxtiow at food. droek Road Store and Blacksmith Shop. Short GRAY C�QAC� i.1NE3. A very happy gathering was held (Successor to W. H. jadgwu) "The Changing of the Guard" " lUSTERN HOUSE PICKERING PHONE KM' _.in the-, United Church on June 8th, _ when the Claremont W. 'M. S: had as their guests, the 'W . M. S. -from Whitevale. ' After the opening �" FI-IiDAIRE exercises, the Whitevale ladies took - charge of the program, Mrs. Bick, - _ n""= ' i -There is only one . Frigidaire .'the- President, presiding. The "Prng- -- - -- rum, which • was purely missionary, itt� - -+�,1♦ was both entertaining and instruct- I>slOFa>to � " ride, and, gave us much' food for (A product of General Motors Corp.) thought. After .the ,closing exercis- - •es, lunch was served and a Pleasant i Reasons Why You Should Buy A Genuine Frigidaire: 'J - hwtr •was enjoyed by all. Ma and its products do -set sell themselvq.?heymnst �'�' 1. rhesus( to operate 9. New Food Safety Indicator be geld-from door to dao: 2. Simplest machine on the market ` 10. 'Sliding­ shelves with adjuitobb In Memoriam. P ' "aad from more to store. Only by aggressive salesmanship (only 3 moving parts) partitions; BEARE--In Ievipg memory o! our � mi�ons of•poriads of kilk from thoasaads of dairy farms 8. b-Year Protection Plan _ 11. Made b General Motors Ceep. dear 'son, Hilliard;- *ho passed a- '•be sold day after day, year after Y"r- _ 47. No more expensive than others 12.1 1-2 Million Afore Frigidairos way July 5th; 1935. =.ta the complicated, business of bridglAg the 1"9 distance S. L6rgei food storage apace have been purchased than aalr Two. years have passed and gone, • from cow to consumer, Borden is p:pert.. Vital to the income 6. More ice capacity : other make, and that many pair -Since one -we loved so well of the dairy farmer, are tho tans of thousands of calls made 7• Patented cube-remover - ple can't. be wrong. ;.,,Was taken from our home on earth b7 Bordeu mea in this aad foreign lands, every day selling S. Automatic Reset Defioster : -With • Jesus Christ to -dwell. milk aad milk products-door to door and storm to store. - - -..... - _.. Cali in or phone us for a Demonstration r The flowers we place upon his grave May wither and decay;- sfs� :But the love for him whp ' aleepa agar i937 Cha". Coop 'Claremont Ont beneath, _ Shall never fade away. M -'Dad, Mother, Sister . and 'Brotlsw- .urcw.u+ao, am •'"` Sub•dealer - . J. McGlashan, ' Dunbarion' of AV" naa,on ------------ - - .a..wos. n.orsoow no V00" _ , T y. IT happened if such had not ta':en place, unrnercif Lily burdened. w:th exhaus- Paris lives in the streets. P SUNDAY ��SCH®® Yet it would. appear that Moses' re- tii,g•toil and demands impossible to do their reading and knitting on the luctance to assume full leadership weet, by the Egyptian tas!.-masters, pavement cates. They gossip and spill at this time had in it consecluenca as though hharaoh would Bay, "If their secrets on the sidewalk and of - more or less harmful to !sine] in •the the�.e peopie do - not have enough to ten maks thel: toilet there. The L E SSO' N ,• streets are a theatre where everybodydays that followed. `:.loses lost the koep their minds occupied .and to possession .of high gifts 'v:hicb• God' keep thorn' 6om this mood of rebel- is both an actor and a spectator. was ready to confer upon him-- 'God liousness,. we will se that their very If a family has not money enough would have, made him eloquent, spirits are bro::en, so that this laugh- on a Sunday afternoon tg'partake of LESSON X111 who maketh a man dumb, or deaf, or though he was not so by nature; and. ty pride of theirs will be utterly refreshments emsat a cafe its members , will content themselves by -slowly am- -GOD ENCOURAGES A LEADER seeing, or blind? is it not 1, Jeho- had the faith of Moses been sufici- crushed." Those wno remained to Exodus 3: 13-6: 1. rah? 12. Nov therefore go, and I eptly strong to. overcome his .self- mzl:e the bricks must attempt to bung down the streets looking in the shop windows an deyeing indulge Printed Text — Exodus 3: 13-161 will be with thy mouth, and teach distrust, he would have added elo- make .enough brick's day by day to uence and er the cafe crowds , who return the r 4: 10.16; S: 1. thce what thou shalt speak. God q p suz3Oe s,e.cli to bis make up for thea -mount *high those GOLDEN TEXT—The Lord will' give never sends any servant of his on other splendid endowments." out Ic oking for the straw were ex- strength x- ' looks with the same idle and phi.oso- stren th unto his people.—Psalm 29 an errand unless, at the same time, ectad to make themselves. The phic interest. g p p y Ex. 5:1-6:1• 5:1. Ani after. p Paris is not -gay. On a rainy day he fully equips him for the accom- wards bioses and Aaron came, and task. of course, pib.ved too great, and _and We have had nothing .else for pl'.shment of the task which he has said unto Pharaoh, Thus saith Jeho- the Hebrew scribes, whose business ten days, —.it is melancholy and rue- -'THE LESSON 1N ITS SETTING given into his hands for doing. ' if it vah,. the God of Israel, Let my peo- it was to record the amount of bricks ful in a way that New York or Lon- Place.—The call to Moses occurred were words that Moses needed, when ple go, that they may hold a feast made and the hours every man work- ft has the sadness of a near Mount , Sinaiuat-RO - e hour Lame for him to stand e- unto me in t e wilderness. "After ed were beaten for their failure to fine old house with a decayed 'root eb) on the peninsula of Sinai; when ''fore Pharaoh, those•words God would forty years of 'obscurity and silence, fully meet these increased demands. and moldering walls, or a beautiful Moses went baek' to Egypt, he went certainly, give him. What a wonder- Moses re-enters the magnificent ha11,9 No doubt the action= of Zipperah as ' woman grown old and still perfumed . back" to the court which he had fled ful comfort to Sunday -school teach- where . he had formerly turned his tyloses was about to leave Midian was and flirtatious. -. ~ :;:from. forty years before, which was ers, Is gf missions, workers in back upon so great a place. The rod a, great d'sappeintment to him. Now Parisian' gaiety is the importation" probably at the city of Tanis. '. the hospital, all who feel that God of A. shepherd is in his hand and a he is about to experience another and of foreigners. It .is a, dreary synthetic' ,:. Time.—B.C. 1499. w, has placed a certain task upon their loyal Hebrew by his side. Men who tar greater opo, The very people commodity sold at high prices on 5 'And Moses said unto God, Behold, Hearts, to know that the God who recognize him shake their heads and whom he has come to deliver turn Montmartre. when I come unto the children of Is- sends is also the God who will ade- pity or despise the fanatic who had upon him and blame him for the in: ,.4ael, and shall sayunto them, The uate] and assured] a 4i ! thrown awn the most dazzling los- creased severity of the oppression q Y Y q. P •' Y g P' FarMer3 Cut -Their a God of your fathers hath •sent me 13. And he said, Oh, Lord, send, I . pects for a dream, but he has long which the Hebrews were suffering• unto you; and they shall say to me, pray thee, by the hand of him whom since made his choice, and whatever This is always one of the inevitable- Debts By $35;QIID,C00 "r i Svhat is his name? what- shall I'say thou wilt send. "Moses assents, but misgivings now beset him have re- experiences of leadership, a price unto them?" The names of God ex- unwillingly and ambiguously." gard to his success with Pharaoh -or that has been• pa `d -by -every great OTTAWA. — Operations of the Press Gbd's character, God's pur• 14. And the anger of Jehovah was with his brethren, not to the wisdom leader of every `age, namely, that .Farmers' Creditors Arrangement A - poses; to know the full meaning of kindled against Moses. Only once of his decision, nor is be known to when anything goes wrong, the lead- one of the social reform `statin► the names of God is 'to know the repent of it. The om of an obse- er will be blamed. Most men cannot passed b the Bennett Government again,in the long life of Moses do we P P P P Y character of God. What roses now uious court was a*poor thin to the see farther than the day.in. which and sustained in the appeal to the have recorded the fact that God was q F g • p '' wanted most of all was su a revela- a es of an ambassador of God." they live. They are not willing to Privy Council have brought- about angry with his prophet, at the waters Y e vY g tion of God, • vouchsafed to. him in of Meribah, when Moses arrogantly Of course, as God had told Moses, suffer a little for ultimate freedom, reductions of some $35,000,000 in •one of God's great. names, that the .manifested an undue assumption 'of Pharaoh refused to allow the child- and any hardships endured by the farm debt and an interest saving o. Hebrew people would know for cer- power (Num. 20: 19-13; Deut. 1:37). ren of Israel to go; asking impert- multitude who groan for deliverance 'about $4,000,000 a year. tainty that Moses was Go 's true And be said, Is there not Aaron thy ineptly who this person might be will be immediately blamed upon the put into effect in 1934, :the act , the'will who,has-come to is down his ti messenger in this momentous'hsrisis, brother the Levite? I know that he. Lord God, of whom, Moses spoke, for y has brought 27,000- applications from "And God said unto Moses, I am can speak well. And also, behold, he this God was not included in the vast lite for • such deliverance. The bit- debt -ridden farmers, and -22j000 of that 1 am: and he said, Thus shalt cometh forth to meet thee: and when pantheon of deities in Egypt with ter accusations -against Moses were these have been dealt with to the -thou sayunto the children of Israeli experienced ' in an even greater and • extent the applicant ha§ had his fin - be he seeth thee, he wW be glad in his which he was acquainted, He did not T am hath seat a unto -you." This deeper way by another who come uncial position re -arranged. -throo�h Va heart. Aa Moses, equally with know .this. God, and he frankly asked P 8`e name, of course, reveals God as sa (Ex. 2:1), the term, as applied to, why he should obey the command of from heaven 'to freemen, to deliver compromise with his creditors. individual, a arson • this eraon is " thein from their bandage, and died .in Mortgages involved have totalled` P P Asion, must denote not ancestry, but such a strange deity. The point of ,.: self -existent, i.e., has. life, his life profession. It was the official title the reply lies in that word obey. He executing such a mighty work, the about $130,000,000, w. the great- _. --'does-not depend upon someone else; .,of one' who had received the train- say that these mea did not presdnt Lord Jesus Christ... est percentage of . applications com- &ie is Independent of all external ing of a priest, whose duty it was to him with a request, but with a man- Ing from the East. _ Farmers badly forces and of ail other beings in the give oral direction to the people; date from one of greater authority . �v� sty�uck by the depression, couple rold orld. hence some power of language might than himself. This stung him to the Parra Isn't Gay with crop and weather conditions., "Aad Godsaihave sound the act of less use than d moreover unto be presupposed in him." quick. He also was a god. $ow dare i. - • ' Moses,' Thna shalt tlDu say unto the 16. And thou shalt soak unto they, a parcel of slaves, speak ..of those who were left with better pros- - ,children of Israel, Jehovah." The p W. F. McDermott in Cleveland Plain Z� to: start afresh with a . de ee him, and put the words in his mouth: their paltry deity irl his presence and Dealer writes: � Tho bonlevarda o! � � same Jehovah means the self -exist- - and I will be with thy mouth, and will in the midst of priests, courtiers, and of relief from debt. This is said to Y Paris are the sleeves of its dress and en£ one, literally, "he that is who teach you whata -shall do. 16. And high officers of state !' ai : account for the small proportio of � y Paris, of all capitals; wears its heart proportion'.. of is," and thus we have in this name be shall be thy .spokesman unto the Instead of granting permission to 'on the sleeve. Nowhere else do you applications from the drought areas' he full revelation of what God had where man farmers 'were left with t people; and. it- shall come to pass, be excused from labor for three days imagine_. that you, can feel the Ener y jest told Moies, that he was the I that he shall be to thee -a mouth, and that the might offer sacrifices to g the no assets of any kind. aim• The word "Jehovah' occurs hua• y g pulse of a cfEy.by-idly, vratchia 'diode of times in the Old Tesla- ; flop shalt -be to him _as God. While their God in the wilderness, the Hem crowds as' they mill around you, in' a _• meat and is not Lound here for the it not wise to say -what would have brew people were more bitterly and sidewalk cafe. Special first . time. The first reference is -in r _._Gen. 2: 4. "Tbe God of -your fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Is- _ - sac, and the God of Jacob,- hath sent me unto you." Here' the God about - Ao' deliver, Israel, the God Moses 'is to follavr,•the God whom the Israet--, ices are to trust, is not 'some new -deity- like one. of the many gods of pagan' Egypt, but- the eternal God = of their fathers, who truly led them _ • ' in ages gone by, who revealed his power, his wisdom, --and. his love to - i ahem, who had made - promises to - _ them which were now to be fulfilled. }r ."This is my name .tor ever, and, - - * this is my memorial unto . all gener- • stions." ',`This statement contains a _ very important truth, a trutbw which many professing Christians seem to forget, namely, that God's relation- ship with' -Israel is' an eternal one. He Is just. as much Israel's God now as " .when he visited them in the land of *DOUR hauling job maybe light delivery on paved roads or heavy log- ' Egypt. Moreover, he -is just as posi- ging over rough-hewn forest trails. It may be any one of a hundred tively dealing with them now as then, only in a different way.!'. . - varied transportation tasks. In any case, you'll. get greater power and "Go, and gather ,the elders of ] - a trucks, with an en- stamina with maximum economy if you use Chevrolet rael together, and say unto them, Je- Is - specifically or _ _ gia� ..catty designed for truck work. Why? the God of your lathers, the y? Because Chevrolet thrives on plain, old-fashioned hard work. It's _ od of Abraham, of Isaac, and of built on truck assembly lines. Its list bf features has no equal in the low- ` acob, hath appeared unto me, say- price field. Finally, its proved ability in the hands of thou- ing, I have surely visited you, and - - sands 'of owners is the finest guarantee of satisfaction a i4en that which is done to you in `,NpER •truck buyer ever had! There are other reasons why you f uL 1 Egypt." The. elders of Israel were (e CY p / j (FN ¢ thea older and- leading -me n- of -the - 1N.HEp► �. should choose Chevrolet trucks and your Chevrolet dealer G T Y different families,among the Hebrew VALVE+ pL \ will gladly give them to you. Why not arrange to call in / ATER H r people. We should notice through=`. SPEC�'SYPE and see him today ...For Economical Transportation. �� ;: ;JACKET out thi3 declaration by God of his �RVCr( / - purpose for Israel -that everything is Y to be done logically and in order. ` M - ' Moses is not to appeal to the mob, • hor get to confront Pharaoh without - _ u F•- � authority to speak for them, nor is WA- -he to make the great demand for OWER — - —D - - - gmancipation abruptly and at once. - _ HpjtSEp ADR The mistake of forty years ago must 78': a AF! AZ ALAN — not be repeated now." �� -,::' ;ti• ' � Cq CFD•• ' 4:10. And Moses said unto` Jeho- R•P• "!*w RBUR ';4 p vah, Oh;' Lord, I 'am not eloquent, 3200 ET4R neither beret„ fore, nor since thou hast spoken unto :thy servant; for I, _.• �,�• ti,,., gm slow . of speech, and of a slow / > •�� 4 �. ` -. tongue. It may be that Moses hada d natural hesitancy of. speech; it may be that he had' lost flu of PR 0 - a encs LBS RS SVR _,speeph which once 'he had, by long �7Q E years of semi -solitude tending sheep 10 .0%) �� BtREgM ryl in Midian; it may also be that Moses Of QQ RP,M• ` V BR/CAT G " - was exaggerating his own short-com- 16 / _ irig$-that' he thought an eloquence �►t Soo N vias needed for the task greater than the task really called for. "Without : / CT•978 God, oto amount of human eloquence . 'would have availed; with God, the i . -merest stamr:nerer would nave proved • - • .. an efficient minister." T UCK ENGINE THIS FAMOUS R GIVES GREATER ECONOMY INCREASED POWER LONGER LIFE 11. And Jehovah said unto him, 04 1 i Who hath made man's mouth? or 1 , - _ r sw Not Days Are Here The Industrial 4ccUent Prevention _Lociea sends this papal some ' ely bulletins, one of which points put that industry today has about much concern for "after .the whis-• % blows" aec+ident and f;taiity as it kgs while men are at work. The day is not distant when sunstfoke grid heat exhaustion will be here, as welt as the drowning toll. The latter bas e ready arrived and it is quite true [a the bulletin points out' hundreds �f li`es could be saved is Canada Byear if there were orgahiaed ing in artificial respiration and ald. But when the hot weather comes, the medical authorities advise: 1. Keep your skin clean; 2. Wear light, loose clothing; S. Eat les meat and more vege- tables 4. Eat fruits °is. moderation.' Do not overeat at any time, b. Avoid strong alcoholic 'drinks; 6. Avoid Ions of sleep, over -fatigue :and worry; Z. Cool water and table salt ('A teaspoon to a glass) will assist in preventing heat exhaustion.. Sodium 1 :Chloride tablets for this purpose may 'ie 'obtained at drug stores. The toll, of drowning and the high- ways is really the appalling ' one in Canada, :but it is quite important, as the bulletin points -out, that pee-, ple take care of their health In op-, pressively hot weather. And if a pbrson does keep himself in gold gondition, it is. surpj;Wng how easily severe..weather of any kind can be niet. Faith Baldwin As A Worrier, ©• O. McIntyre in the Cosmopoli- tan writes—Like 'most people who live by nervous energy of the pea, .,Faith Baldwin is a- superb worrie $he can take up a worry that is get- jing nowhere and in no time at an have it working like a bear: . Mostly she: worries about people, ry$a ,is. a greater, sucker for a �rd-luck story. Before she moved rom Brooklyn to. Connecticut, she *ould come upon some spindly child ' tanding,wistfully gaging at nothing particular or perhaps poking hope - 1i lly ope- ully about a refuse_ can. She was ever content until sbe had present - �d that child with a bright red- wagon i a fully frocked doll. l " She is essentially maternal, for lhe hasfour. ducklings of her own whom she is passionately devoted. ost of her time away from the type- -_...4hter is spent romping with them. Her children adore her, and if she If away from them for an hour they ..-We up to, peep out the door and ig est her in the manner of a family A African Native 86hops Consecrated bFifadier•geAeral. member of Familia• r4ont. Cabinet Minister, Lsbamodor all before he was fifty. hie was a meal is considered extra desirable. first -elm railway anan. •` `" -- Lloyd George, wko used to pain and - and can be added to a.mash mixture astonish the politicians by -picking good men wherever he could il" - them, began by, making Eric Geddes di "rector -general of the munitions sup- ., y ply. Later he made hlm� director of proportionately. A good ration general transportation for the British tacreP. ,,.. forces in France.- still later recalled him to England as director-general o '' military railways. Is. time — during the closing years of the war, Geddes was First Lord of the Admiralty. - But with peace he passed from the picture'; no longer In .the Cabinet.nor ,:1:;; 25 per cent cracked corn, and 26 per '41 in active politica. nor the heaGiines. x Cent oats or barley, with some sun- The; younger generation 'did not know able. - For the mash ration feed 4li + - _ him; most of an had forgotten his per cent wheat bran, 30 per cent _ part in the war. The public memory r' shorts and .10 per cent oil meal. Milk, is pathedea.117 short. And fame: pers printed in the Dominion average--if-�. FapQt in an eyeelleat additi and has just been found. about 11.28 a year. That seems to PoWtry Gare at to the ration of moulting hens. With She is a bridge atheist but aposh- .Messina$ Time For the run of the farm, birds will get . JdOulting fowls _ should" have a nu- 'Canadian people keep themselves Meng - . `�'�".y tritious and easily digested ration she reaches inevitable impasse is her - whl4h,. is high in oily nitrogenous to replace meat scrap, which they plottings she gets out a puzzle and feeds. 'The demand for materials_ How IIeeiing' is Camel. Just twear would require.. _.. from " which. to supply featherma- The spent on daily news- ty years ago the acme of Erie Geddes terial is very - heavy at this time. On- ptitiles especially made, the bigger„ :)NALD MOTOR SALES WHITBY A"oe- Dealer—M. Sleet—Pickering 1 - meal is considered extra desirable. •` `" and can be added to a.mash mixture up to 10 per cent, reducing the meat proportionately. A good ration tacreP. ,,.. _ - for average conditions is to feed a scratch ration of 50 per cent wheat, - __ 25 per cent cracked corn, and 26 per '41 Two native Africans were : -Cathedral consecrated bishops b the Archbishop of Canterbury, Cent oats or barley, with some sun- recently. They are Venerable Alphonso C uiwum Anyeabo, raft, and Venerable Thomas Sp(► - ester Claudius Johnson, right, shown with the Archbishop, ceatra� after the services. Bishop OnyeaB$� —" able. - For the mash ration feed 4li + - will be assisUbt, bishop on the Niger, ana Bishop Johnson assistant bishop in Marta Leone. per cent wheat bran, 30 per cent shorts and .10 per cent oil meal. Milk, welcoming some beloved who was lost pers printed in the Dominion average--if-�. FapQt in an eyeelleat additi and has just been found. about 11.28 a year. That seems to J to the ration of moulting hens. With She is a bridge atheist but aposh- be substantial evidence that .the For the run of the farm, birds will get . over for the jigsaw' people. Whenever 'Canadian people keep themselves Meng - . `�'�".y plenty of. green feed and also insects, she reaches inevitable impasse is her well informed regarding current to replace meat scrap, which they plottings she gets out a puzzle and events. -otherwise How IIeeiing' is Camel. Just twear would require.. _.. works out the mental kink. She has The spent on daily news- ty years ago the acme of Erie Geddes Both the time regnfred in moult- ptitiles especially made, the bigger„ .amount paper sales sad' subscriptions is over was in the headlines of the world"s Ing and the promptness with which the better, and .one room of her ;11,000,000 in a year, but there are newspapers. To the chorus of «We the bens come back into laying again house is -called the Jigsaw place, weeklies -as well, dear to the . -Geddes stand at Arm -Geddes and we bat- Arms are largely dependent upon the care Exercise is anathema but she likes of the people of the towns and All- tjs for Lloyd George” the team at and feeding they receive.. It' is" to •attend all sports.. She is not ages and the folk who have gone far Geddes. Geddes and Geddes appaared highly unprofitable to neglect them at averse to a ringside seat at the spec- away from their native, places. on the British stage, did their ca moulting time . just because they are tacle of couple of heavy -weights Readers as a rule are. greatly In- lective and individual turns. They unproductive. Fowls during' moult eocking from the angle. She has also teresseen ed the home paper or what were Three: Eric and Auckland, the often become nervous and timid. and a wrestl' gets gag match or so and to used a to be the home paper. In such boys; and a sister, 21[». Chalmers should be handled with special care a kick out of ice hockeyussd games. publications there is more local Watson, who became commandment at this time. _ - Her only outdoor yen is for fish- news. The things dose to home of the Woman's Royal Air li'orce. All Very few, fowja cru tinue to la Ing. For several years she has gone usually interest the readers most. three appeared from obscurity and during the moult. Certain strain% to the St. Lawrence for a bit of ang- - The local new tells what the became famous until it was a byword ander certain treatment can be tf ling.- Such a regular is she, indeed, that there is • trout B called the By neighbors an doing, whic.6 of them � in England that the war had been finished almost before it was begun to lay whilst• they -are casting their Faith Baldwin: � • — are nick, who amongst them are but for lack of sufficient Geddsses to feathers. Hens with records bf over climbing to the heights. It keeps informed how till all the responsible positions. .- 300 eggs; mast, of course grodn�e i 'certain iiumber of eggs wring tiiefr They Like Newsplipers readers on local ad- mialstrative affairs are being con- Yet the family was noted for its' meatal capacity. The father was a dig• moulting period. Those hens which ducted, what civic improvements an tinguished engineer whose work .took do laying wben moulting must be fed The extent to which Canadians planned and what social activities are him to all parts of the world. Aucb generously, otherwise they cease, to are newspaper readers is illustrated taking place. After all, those are the land (he was .once• a professor of an manufacture the -eggs. by the fact -that the per capita sales things we like to talk about mind atomy at McGill) was successively acid subscriptions for daily newspa- read about~ surgeon, professor, private soldier, Special :)NALD MOTOR SALES WHITBY A"oe- Dealer—M. Sleet—Pickering 1 F 7IF .! •^ `mow ' si I2ce Stresses Value of Grassland ;Although during the present genera• tion, wheat has held the stage in the )public eye as the moat spectacular IulturaI crop, there is a much old• and important crop on which ag- ir�culture itself was founded in the dawn of civilization. This is the grass - d or pasture crop. For many years •it was relegated into the background 'fitil agricultural science came to its I by adding much to human know- -' edge (and profit to the farmer) in re- laiion to grassland, its creation, man- . ' t- gement,, and fertilization. Never before has there been so much interest all over the world in. `. grassland problems, or so much at- tention devoted to research work _ along the lines of plant breeding to 'Improve, the different forage grasses $ad legumes, the nutritive value of the various forage. crops in livestock feeditfg, the improvement of grass• lifid by the use of fertilizers, pasture }management, and the. study of the feat seed miatuies for hay and pas Mb p&Dosge. " Recently scientists of the Dominion .Ontario and ,Quebec Departjaents of Agriculture, together with those of e 9aRous agricultural colleges, held twoJey • sessfo% of the Doiniaion- ovincial Pasture dorifeiren6 at the h'e`al hxperiafental Farm, 0 1 o *a, t wa�+ where t�-g m� in phages of Anon i�il#zatioa of peat} e pre dfi ee , Od on Ali' th Jnl�y reprea�ative agridnital scientists will assemble for the Heads Doctors (''�ty �olisllls so unexpectedly and to eat np every - world's Fourth International Grass- Ci " thing in the larder. land Conference at the Welsh Plantp The way for country people to stop Breeding Station at Aberystwyth, !1 s�»" Not + OPUkr this practice is for them to do like - Wales, chosen because the work ac- �� Cowise with their urban friends. Let complished there is internationally :- Ill Country them descend without warning a fes known. It is expected much benefit to times upon an urban household, all countries will be derived from the- hringing the hired man with them, discussions during the meetings. Can- A country preacher has been tom- and ask to be fed, and the towns - ads -will be represented by Dr. L S. plaining to one of the Toronto pres- people who. are in the habit of landing Kirk, the Dominion Agrostologist, byteries of the United Church of the at the farm or is the village for un- who'will deliver the plenary paper for Sunday descent upm on rural hoes of expected meals will begin to think the Dominion under th33tttle of "The+ better of what has become a custom t their, urban cousins and friends. Valgation of Some Species of Grasses ; a in numerous quarters. and Legumes for Pasture Under Can. . 4� This clergyman declares that more adian.. Conditions." The only other country people stay away from church Car: dian representative, Dr. MacCon• because of Sunday visitors from the Average Pro Golfei<. _ key, of the Canadian Research Coun• city than for any other reason. "They _ _ are like tent eaterpillars-whit strip --- cil, will give a paper, "Nutritional As - our The average U.S• pro essiona our trees just as they come in bloom," golfer begins his career at the age pects of Forage Crop. Production in g g Eastern Canada." he said. "They come out from the of 26, earns $2,800 a year and ex - city and strip thepantry and they al- pects to retire at 55. This pertin- sq strip the people of the mora and ent information was brought to light %_a> adian Tourists Buy i spiritual renewal of their usual Sllln- last week by Pidelity Investment As - $1,000,000 Of U -S' Goods day. Country families often have to sociation of Wheeling, W. Va., which ` prepare as if for a threshing every ' week -end. Then everybody's tired and queried 3500 professionals. The OTTAWA. --Canadians travellir-g youngest was 19, the oldest 66. The Dr. Kenneth A. MacKenzie, of cranky for the new week. in the United States are taking ad- richest has reaped an average of , home free ofe d gilea lege bringing Halifax, N.S., was chosen presi- There is much truth in this min- $11,500 yearly, the poorest $1,068. dent -elect' vantageg of the Canadian Medi- laters assertion, although urban real y aximum of,Less' successful as investors than, as cal Association for 1038-39 at the dents may dislike being characterized $100 worth of personal goods pnr- h breadwinners, the golfers reported medical convention now in pro- as caterpillars, a species which every - chased in that country. During the they had lost X11,400,000, or over ' past two months the total of such gress .in Ottawa. Dr. iMacKenzie body has been trying to exterminate ($3,000 per man. Three out of four - is professor of medicine at Dal- this year. Certainly, urb&n residents ,purchases has been eatimated'at $1,- readily admitted that financial wor- sa housie Univerhis Alma do not- always thinof the work 002,,000, of which the bulk was in y' s own g ries hurt their game. —Time. Mater. clothing and a large portion in radi- . which is involved and on a day — os. dedicated' to rest when they de,- $y an old law which has never acend upon their country ntry relatives orr Last year, when this privilege op- friends for Sunday meals or picnics. been repealed, about 200' persons in erated for the- first time, Canadian ' derstood travellers from United If -the urban housewife is entitled to England are outlaws and liable to be. tourist purchases in the United some degree of rest on the Lord's day, "shot at sight." They are descend. States were estimated at $4,000,000. States, who enjoy a similar privilege, so is' her country cousin who , can- ants of the Clan MacDonald that This year it is anticipated this fig- are also buying more heavily, in Can- not always be prepared ahead 'of time. figured in the Stuart rebellions of ure will be nearly doubled. Itis'un- ads, but figures are not available. for the guests who are apt to arrive 1715 and 1745. C 17, - •r ,fly - _ ',� e: .moi• w i IL CL fl xSA ¢ rr & -0- F. g ::' - 5�3� o » o , C H • // Cr •i• rbr O CL p S f n • ;�� 4 o 0:9 C4 a. 0 ch yo, » 0 . p' til O$' 0 rrw y y tits ori. Z a »,Z �'w p Z ag Z C: _ o �. a o. o :: � � tai`4 •! M�' m• p � `4 m � A iii+ � � `., tZI roap= wm = ppm �... _ m � m M• p *rJ O O O 9 O !0 n _fb— i = r Her Limbs Were ..rr. �h A -'o For John • • • r�; • • • • j� Almost Cripples • r P --, t DOUBLE _ �- s� s �• P O Suffered with Sciatica for AUTOMATIC t 25 YearsBOOKLET �1{ <� ,,. Those who are subject to sciatica should read this letter from one whol ? More convenient to carry; • suffered for years before she found y� r andmoreconvenientto use, `�i QVAi ]t6tlt how to obtain relief.:— P ' thedoubleaiiioma icbook. "For 25 years I suffered from aci- €, , z ` f let keeps every paper fresh: f I NE 3 31 at in my right sidy, and I had back. aches which forced me to remain in a O / bed for two or. three weeks at a time. ,* t ,W ! When I got ug in the mornings,. my � ; �� � � "1 ' � � i •. arms. -and -legs, used_to pain -me -almost ">k unbearably. One day I heard of ' Kruschen Salts. I took a bottle of ��, twi hem thout feel:ne much improve- �' 3., - meat. I tried a second bottle, and NONE FINER MADE kept on I t king. Kruschen' everI felt better. lsinee�'e ✓fn. - K (Mrs.) H. yme -. - — - The pains of sciatica are frequent- ly requent ly caused by an excess of uric acid in the body., Two of the ingredients of Kruschen Salts are notable for their 7 work in dissolving uric acid. Other ingredients of these salts assist the internal organs to expel the dissolved j; 4 1, W17H THE - - - rh acid from the System. . OY SCOUTS J"ge Do s Are � - rV l �. Y' ,ems• > :2. � .. Most Dangerous - • ' Folloo:ing the example of the re- r Should Not Be Kept in Town Or fo-Tutation work carried 'out for some Scouts helped prepare the meals, Sup - Dr: Alison Gaw, of the Univers:ty of Southern California, congIratu- • plied children with boiled drinking City Vnlexs Properly Exercised +� years at the Scout Forest near An- gating John Barrymore 'on his recent broadcast of "Richard •the Third water, took cilarge of lost children, as other Shakespearean authorit`.es and Mrs.' Elaine Jacobs Barry- Sus+ Ont., the Scouts of Fort Erie P ran messages, swept the floors• Gen.{ Chief Shane has declared war on more join the admiration party. In rear (L -R) are Dr. Victor L. this' spring planted 700 saplings on erally, 'Their smiles, courteousness, rt + Clittick, Read. Institute; Dr. John B. Cook, USC, and Dr. Edward property near their Scout cabin. unlicensed dogs, and is advocating a Mims, Vanderbilt. -Beamsville Scouts planted 600 trees willingness and quiet -discipline earn- $25 license for police dogs. ed appreciation and commendsMoii in the game preserve south of that „ _ This followed an attack on a citi- on all sides. In other wards,- Lou - town ani a group of Ottawa Patrol zea by two -of the animals: Not the' � - - - don's ,Scouts lived up to the be Naturally, a community of two- ate the danger and nuisance =which Leaders pihnted- the same number on first on record, by any means. Y Scouting traditions when suddenW, The main trouble with dogs is legged animals cannot- be— -at-present exists a reforeatution project . at. Carlsbad that probably 60 'per cent of the for a' communityof four -le . At the same time all ani al .lovers Springs. confronted with a serious teat. gged ones; people who own them do not under- and as the majority -of the -two -legged. who feel sorry for the animals who in Malaya all the seasons have the The King's Coronation � Honours y stand them. It, takes time and pa- '.cannot -properly control the four- through no fault of their oWn, but same tem erature- and the sun risFtl, list' included many distinguished 8g- - P len and the large legged, there have to be measures for lack of training and care, become and seta at the same hoar all 'th4' animals, particularly, should never = dangerous and nuisances. . There is ures prominent in Scouting in many be kept in a town or city unless =the old days ithere the extremist, a pfarallel in the parts of the Empire. In addition to year round. erg and systeliiaticall exercis meat for keeping dogs in this. min- bringing ug Lord Baden-Powell who received the properly y rder of Merit, and His Excellency ed or kept in a yard. ing community—they, 'were largely the Lor wee 9 _Classified Advertising used for teaming: _ a Priv Councillor, the list include�t Privy COLLECTION SERVICE But .dog teams in Kirkland Lake the -tion. Sir Patrick- Duncan, Chief " these days, and what do teams.. Maternal DeCLt% "ITAR'o COLLECTION ACENCILs, EZ Y S Scout for the Union of Souch Af- n are comparatively -•few in .number Fate Is Too High perldg., collection service Bainrrs. � .. ,._ $ vita; Viscount Galway, Chief Scout stair slag., Toronto, , there are do not appear_ to be entire- . for New -Zealand; ' Baron - Gowlie. ly, , composed of police dogs, or that _ CHICKS 6s so PER HUNDRED 44 r NE`y. YORK—` • —="Briefs," official or- Chief Scout for Australia; Sir Her= , KING OF PAIN assortment of breed which falls un bert Emerson,, Provincial Chief Scout 13 ADEN GOVERNMENT APPROV ' gan of the Maternity Centre .Associa- • ch;cks rrnnt blood. tested breeder. D :•der the category. ;..As a matter of for the Punjab;• the Raja of Khi1- OLD-LEGHORNS $3.30, Barred Rocks 63. ' fact, it is the lar mon els, mostly tion, whose :efforts are directed to - Pullets, Rocks $8.40. LegSorhs sl'lss, c large K y chipur, Chief Scout for Khilchipur lowering the mortality of woman in erela Leehorna i1.23, Rocks 63,50, 8 uncared . for, which... are the _most State, and Sir Bernard Bourdillon, Cvie�.-2 week old add Sc. 3 we old god, childbirth, says: Baden Else trtc chick -Hatchery, HBden, oat' dangerous. „ - Chief Smut for. Nigeria. leaders had reported for orders at - _ AY OLDS,_ LEGHORNS $6,43, BAt'1 Scout Headquarters. They relieved Rucks 66.93, New Hampshire Reds.-", officers on. point duty, and handled R:rks sr.9s. - P Y, PL'LLETs, Sacred RncksReds, Whit( traffic efficiohtly.. They, watched Racks s10.93, Leghorns 613.43. bridges, manned boats, and' kept COCKERELS, Leghorn% $1.23, Barred 6593, R'hite Rocks, Reds 56.43, 2 WIr sightseers from coming into the city, OLD, Add 6c per chick. .3 week loc, 4 At .the police station they tookover 15c. — Twaddle Chick Hatchery Limited, gus, Ont:rin, - the telephone switchboard, releasing officers for other work. A staff of six older Scouts assigned to the -fire • . department, wen -t out.on'-all fire calls, 'to handle traffic and the cr3wds. Red I t c h i n Cross Headquarters at: the City. Hal] I&TORTURE In /1 Minute - was supplied with runners. At the For quick relief from the itching of enema, bloot, -clothing depot 'messengers were fur= pimples, athlete's toot salsa rubes and other ekd' �puooa, apply Dr. Dennis' ppu�rree eoolin6. %vtleeo• nished the different departments, ria liqui D. D. D: PRESCfi1PT10N. Ill gentle 00 i and ether Scouts ke t the refu ees. aeothe the irritated seim n. Clear, grand .tab• P g Is—dries fest.• Stops the meet, intens% itching 1W In -line. -At. the. Armouries,..crowded study. A iso trial bottle, at drug rtora ill— with rcfvgee• for several days, armoneyback. AskforD.D.O.PRESCRIPTION. 0 Indepene-ent Test Proves That "VOL. O PEP" m TABLETS INCREASE CAS- up 25 1 TO OLINEMILEACE In a test run of 507.6 miles a 1936 Chevrolet Master Six Coach consumed 18 gallons of gasoline to which Vol -o -Rep Tablets hpd _ been -added -an average of 28.2 miles ,per gallon. Without Vol -o -Pep Tablets the mileage was 22.2 miles per gallon. The increase per gallon effected by Vol -o -Pep was 27%. The same gasoline was used on both runs over the same roads and no $d- ; justment of the carburetor made. Tests were conducted by a -well known,Toronto firm of Inspecting and.Testing. Engineers, whose name will be furnished on written request. Vol -o -Pep is in &'convenient tablet form. Dropped ia'gasolilis It completely dissolves, leaving no sediment whatsoever. Recom- mended for use in autos, trucks, motorcycles, tractors and all gasoline and diesel engines. Send one dollar for a tin of Vol-o-Pep'Tab J lets (65 tablets treat 65 gallons), use ten - iablets send ' if you can not notice improve- - ment in your car, return the- balance and - get your money back in full. Mail $1.00 to THE .VOL -O -PEP CO. OF CANADA 36 Toronto St., Toronto. : AGENTS WANTED i. - It is hard 'oh the few -real- dog Morc.wometl die between the ages - —' T : # 1-. r,m lees§es of eft- PHOTOGRAPHY - 4,*ssue o. 29--'37 valuers -In own W. O cep t elr 3rge beasts have nancy and childbirth than from any One NLARGEMEPrr -FREE WITH EVER E '23 under good control to to other Muse except tuberculosis—and Londoly Ont., flood- concerned the cent order, Roll tum& developed • .� C-3 pay such a, heavy tax, but certainly this in the face of the fact that many services of man kinds rendered b y eight prints 23 cents, reprints scents aatq��q.. srlshtling, , _ something. has tb-be done to elimin-' of these deaths are preventible:" the. Boy Scouts.. ,Within half an hour ,29 Richmond Street Eat. Toronto. of a radio mobilization call, at the TWEDDLE -R.O.P. SIRED GOAT. - —�-- request of the -police, 250 boys and PROVED CHICKS AT ROCK B PRICES FOR ZVLY leaders had reported for orders at - _ AY OLDS,_ LEGHORNS $6,43, BAt'1 Scout Headquarters. They relieved Rucks 66.93, New Hampshire Reds.-", officers on. point duty, and handled R:rks sr.9s. - P Y, PL'LLETs, Sacred RncksReds, Whit( traffic efficiohtly.. They, watched Racks s10.93, Leghorns 613.43. bridges, manned boats, and' kept COCKERELS, Leghorn% $1.23, Barred 6593, R'hite Rocks, Reds 56.43, 2 WIr sightseers from coming into the city, OLD, Add 6c per chick. .3 week loc, 4 At .the police station they tookover 15c. — Twaddle Chick Hatchery Limited, gus, Ont:rin, - the telephone switchboard, releasing officers for other work. A staff of six older Scouts assigned to the -fire • . department, wen -t out.on'-all fire calls, 'to handle traffic and the cr3wds. Red I t c h i n Cross Headquarters at: the City. Hal] I&TORTURE In /1 Minute - was supplied with runners. At the For quick relief from the itching of enema, bloot, -clothing depot 'messengers were fur= pimples, athlete's toot salsa rubes and other ekd' �puooa, apply Dr. Dennis' ppu�rree eoolin6. %vtleeo• nished the different departments, ria liqui D. D. D: PRESCfi1PT10N. Ill gentle 00 i and ether Scouts ke t the refu ees. aeothe the irritated seim n. Clear, grand .tab• P g Is—dries fest.• Stops the meet, intens% itching 1W In -line. -At. the. Armouries,..crowded study. A iso trial bottle, at drug rtora ill— with rcfvgee• for several days, armoneyback. AskforD.D.O.PRESCRIPTION. 0 Indepene-ent Test Proves That "VOL. O PEP" m TABLETS INCREASE CAS- up 25 1 TO OLINEMILEACE In a test run of 507.6 miles a 1936 Chevrolet Master Six Coach consumed 18 gallons of gasoline to which Vol -o -Rep Tablets hpd _ been -added -an average of 28.2 miles ,per gallon. Without Vol -o -Pep Tablets the mileage was 22.2 miles per gallon. The increase per gallon effected by Vol -o -Pep was 27%. The same gasoline was used on both runs over the same roads and no $d- ; justment of the carburetor made. Tests were conducted by a -well known,Toronto firm of Inspecting and.Testing. Engineers, whose name will be furnished on written request. Vol -o -Pep is in &'convenient tablet form. Dropped ia'gasolilis It completely dissolves, leaving no sediment whatsoever. Recom- mended for use in autos, trucks, motorcycles, tractors and all gasoline and diesel engines. Send one dollar for a tin of Vol-o-Pep'Tab J lets (65 tablets treat 65 gallons), use ten - iablets send ' if you can not notice improve- - ment in your car, return the- balance and - get your money back in full. Mail $1.00 to THE .VOL -O -PEP CO. OF CANADA 36 Toronto St., Toronto. : AGENTS WANTED i. I ,. f x r - 4 i• • ,L00A1J1bXb ,Scorn, at the Toronto Geral Comm EVENTB . Hospital, on Sunday, July 11th, to •a-••i'ti[iss Ruth Fowiie, has been via- Air. and Jim. Russell Stork, of Green River Garden Party, under - I*W with Mss . Underhill, at . Aur- Keswickl a daughter. the auspices of the Ladies' Aid, on9he ors. - - -Miss Ida M. Cook, of Toronto, Saturday, July 24th, on the lawn La „ore -.A number from Pickering went visited over the week -end with ber of Mr. RoyCarter. Amateur Show, U Whitby on Manday W witness, sister, Mrs. Ed. Stork and Mr. Nine Cash Prizes. Send entries be - the -Vr&W e-the'o=anse Paracie• stork. fore July 19th, t4 Mrs. T. W5lliagns",PickeTiva's Leader Store" •Congratulation to the Teacher _ar. and Mrs. W. G. -- Scott, at Locust Hill. • Five Dollar Cash Of o the _ �. Rendall sad thePupils G . f of . o Claremont, )!lies Gwen Scott, Prize for the most popular unman- • �-, CA - - jlbllraaoe Close of No. 4 West, Cookstown, and Mrs. Tom Scott, led .lady on the grounds. One vote ... • �- - a 100 per cent pass. of Toronto, spent Tuesday with Mr. with each adult entry ticket. The�+ ladies •,l[rs . W. G. Reid, who hes and Mrs . W W. J J. Biller . Channing. Fair Ouse may be from . 1 ub ' Fast - - been veryill and under medical r --Service in the United Church your Own social centre. . Amateur Houses dresses neveett Lisle Hose,,; for -house andi' care, is now able to be out again- on Sunday next at 11 a. m. Even- Contestants, Free.. Adults, 25 eta. " y garden, 26c. and 39c. a ' -Mw Leila Monney has return- Ing has been withdrawn Children, 10. cts. -. ` prints, 79c. and $1.00 g ell home after spending a couple during July and August. Rev. M. of w;th. her aunt, in SaSia- Jenkinson B'r D . in .charge . 9tu►- 8lack Canvas -0 x - Mich . - - _awl Mich. are pleased to report that ! -.-,Mr. Frank Ej Gees who a Canadian National F.Yhibitioa.. •. •_. Or $ ' Miss Hattie Law, 'who has been aer nugl ber of years apo, was a resid- nests and Pantees, in White and iously ill, is now much improved, ent of Church Str., Pickering, died L For forty years' British Bands, tea -rose. Goodualit . '.49e, for ladies, leather soles, low' ,sad is able, to be about the house. on Saturday. forenoon, July 10th, at usualty the representatives of fam- q• i --,Miss Annie Larkin, of Chicago g��h heels, leather tips, very cenlij�t his home >n La Calif. ons regiments which leave 'played is spending a few days with Mrs, Since going to California a number prominent parts in Britain's glor-��� WOOI, Black $pedal, $1.20apr. Oliver Pascoe, is her old Name, on of years ago Mr; Gee has been in ions history, •have influenced Cam.; the Basfriends.e Line 'and visiting other the building =d -real ' estate, basin- dian muilic . ' These have ` been pres - $wimming Trunks, with white - Men's . - � ass in which he , pd14s very success- sated to the Canadian. publiic ands . t*. H. and Mrs. Btmtingo of ful. foreign visitors in free afternoon belt, Youths -$1•.00 Polo Shirts, white, very popular. Pas, Man., are spending P- -The regular meeting of the W , and evening concerts at the Causd- Men's' $ 1.39 le of weeks with Misses Bert and M. S. of the United • Church met ian National .. Exhibition. An inter- - 75f ?de Bunting and with relatives 'in at the home of Mn. L. M, Morley esting change has been made this Toronto. on Tuesday, July 6th, -with .,Kra. F. year in the engagement of the fam-t t . • , --•allies Mabel Wlright, of Stock- T. Bunting in the chair. The De-. Otis 'United' states wavy Band of MEN -Don t fail t0 cele our new Corona Brow n' �pOrt Ehce- tom, California, is spending a few votional Period was taken by Mrs. htbition Park, ~'bite robber sole, brown canvas, with Wide strap. It's all the dave, with her uncle and aunt, Mr. Valleau, Mrs. Rendall and Mrs. sad Mrs. M. S. Chapman Miss Chapman. The Topic for tiie after- Aodky --- rage. Wright, (formerly of Pickering) is noon was taken by Miss E - Murraj •how tehin$ i116C9liforn* and is and was most interesting. At the, The Aodley Community Club hold' her Vim on with relatives by their annual picnic on Saturday -�pts[di2CB` , close; •rnireahmente were nerved . -mmd�frietnds i>tettario . the members of Mies Bunting's nest. The .games are.. called for t M : - 4 ienda ung. with Mr. and gaup o'clock standard time- Sapper ser- a 7 ■ a S • CHAPMAN _ Mrs. John Grockett, over the week= --Bt, George's Church, Sunday,, ved at 5,30. This ,anneal event md^ were: Mr.* and Mrs. David ' July 18th. 8th Sunday after Trin- sholld be attended by 'all the net= Gra6^ and --son, of Markham; Mr. ity.. Sunday School at 10 a. m. ghborhood. Chapman's grovel north _ .. . . and Mrs EA& Orockett and daugh-' � Morning- Prayerat 11. Preacher at gate, ow4e early. II[t_ and Mrs. Austin Marie ; this service, Mr. G. K. Kingston . ter Shop - Crockett -and Iiil� and Mrs.' Harp- No Evening Service on July 18th. Barber ShfDp er, all of Motin('-Dennis. _ - rse 11ye BaLine will hold their Dmtbartoa Tailmad S ' Annual Ice Cream Social next Wed- - 1 or- a ul s t ww&y, July 21st on the*. lawn• of St.- Paul's Dunbarton, Sundae ^ 31r. vft. Linton. There will be a July 18th, Sunday School at 2 p Beauty Parlor at _ baU game at 6 , 30 S . T . , between m. Evening Prayer at 8 p and Audley: The wkulin,g Preacher, Mr. G.. K. Kingston, L. u' �gf,8 €oY m will receive a ball and bat,, A R. All are cordially invited to these A competent lady will haveeharge B n a good program will be given by Mr. services. of the beauty parlor and satisFac• Bert Hirrey and others, after which' _ tion -is guaranteed at reduced ,1\6.95 : ice cream, cake and tarts will • be Pickering Township Horticultural prices. - served on -the .grounds. Admission. Society hold Summer Show Permanent R avec, $2.00. $3.50:$5.00 - h a more for Ready-mades-? SO and 10 cents. Shampoo and Finger Wave... ..b0 „„ -Miss Nellie Sier,' who has been 'The Horticultural Society held Y C_ Finger Wave. .35 - spending several weeks with #rien their Rose- Delphinium Show at the Marcel, _ _ ..40 -In Pickering left o'n Monday, and Dunbarton Sunday School: an Satur- Oil Shampco. = .3b - - will spend about ten days with day, July 10th, with awards as fol Lsdies`Halr Cut. ,20 Dred T. Bunting, Pickering friends in Toronto, after which she lows: 1 Rose - Mrs. --Beare, 2nd. . r wl ea = Mrs: Beare, 3rd. 'Collec- Special Prices', May 25 to 31 ' --Australia:: She "has . a great love for .tion, of Roses - Mrs, are,. Oil P. W., -Re 52,00-- 1. F.atabliaked 1857 Canada, and" would like to make her Mrs. A. Wood,- 2nd. 1 Spike -Del.' & 14 bents hie,' having lived in. Picker ph - 1. C. Rodd, lst; E. B. Regulvr, Reg. $3.50-•$3.00 _ in some years :ago. Brawn 2nd and Mrs. B. W: Lotton Regular. -:' Reg. 85.00--54.00 -- -- : :. : -Qin Sunday afternoon -we were 3nd. 3 Spikes. Delphinium .- E.. G. -� _ - treated to a fall' of rain, which StaIlon, 1st; , C. Rodd, 2nd and '14. MA DI LL � PE � 1ALS1 lasted several hornsIt was not E • B . Brawn, 3rd . Collection Del- phone Pick 71" heavy, but came down gently and phininm - J• C: Rodd, lst;'Mrs. B - iefreshed ' the _vegetation. Along W. Lotton, 2nd -and E. G. Stallon, the lake shore south of the village, 3rd. living -room Bouquet - E. B. Roo€ins t_1 e� f }jam i� it was acro>npanied by a very high Brawl,, 1st: Mrs. Beare, 2nd'and ^� Breakfast Bacon, 25e. a 11.x• isrind, which blew dawn tents, and bliss A. Wood; 3rd: Dining -room. l levelled a 4umber of ' fields$l of Ibugtit�t' E, B. Brown, .iso; May ate; Tile and Gravel'Roofing -MincedSteak, 12c.'a lb ' d Mrs. L. M. It poled off the air, which .yomtnertfille 2nd an Asphalt Shingles. Roll R " Main � p g 01 oofing --gyp - bed become oppressive. McCoaochie 3rd. The Simpson Co 1 - ply, 1.2 1C Orkier 2c• a lb• "-The motor traffic was very Ltd. Trophy, Mali awarded' to 'J p y � 6 a roll. Roof coat - heavy over the week -end: 'Anwng C. Rodd, for the rsost worthy ant- ing, 65c • per gallon. • '' - tewing Bee€ 12c,. a ib. -the lot was a number of trucks, ry, . a Collection of Delphinilmss , f &I" chimneys rebuilt and repaired. which am supposed :to keep off During the - evening, Mrs. Lowea, ' ' the .highway ' on Sundays, unless of Roaebank entertained ns with a JACKRpjD Jewel Shortening, 15e• a Ib - they are milk trucks, which are member of delightinl solos. A fen- PUNBARTON' s5 -lo .,._Classic Cleanser, Z tins, 13e• : s` considered necessary, especially when ture of the evening' was a lecture _ the milk is used for feeding child- by Drs. Smith and Scott, of Toron- : . ren. (iris evening last week, a car- to, -on "The Bird Life of Cseorgian • • "tins, 25e• . T OA twin person, with a liking for stat = Bay." accompanied by lantern slid- Our Appreciation - istics; counted 110 American cars es ' and motion pictures taken by ONTHIS OUR , D within half anr a•a.hour, most of. them these gentlemen themselves, and E ' being oil theiy 'to their favor- 'was very interesting ,and , extremely '' a ite summer resorts aurone the small educational . After the sliow, the First . Anniversary , "lakes in ?northern Ontario. exhibits were .moved up into the Butcher (phone 3000) y Pickering ! -Ane spectacular stunt, perform- church for a floral service. is expressed to our ed anywhere, by anyone, -rill create a world -voids interest, if given pub- many friends and patrons' licity enough.. Swi7i "stmt' a Asphalt Roo€�n$.. :Pickering Hardwa're- Store. Amelia Earhart's Round -the -World �- for their favours of the Flight, has been given the required 'Get ollr prices on As past year. - - publicity, and `received the inevitab- le world-wide attention 'and •inter phalt• Roofing-, We haI3- May we, hope for a continued Nom is the Timeto girderyou est. Not ail rural folk are of an die all st les manufac- increase in that trona and patronage, • uninterested,. non -reading class, and .'by' expressions of opinion are heard in tures the Toronto goodwill of our ertmomers. pring Seeds -the rural sections. too, Such an ex- Aspbalt Roofing Co , - pression regarding the $250,000''a Mo Dennis. Ont. 4 day search for the flyers as the The'- Pickering Timothy, Alfalfa'Red Clover,. _ following expresses the feelings of ,;- PICKERING "'' MEAT .MARKET • a large number of ,people: The • Sweet Clover and Alike s United States will Spend .$250,000 LUMBER YARD . s day to recover a couple, who ever, A"Or%4AOVi%"9s. mate -the flight for their own a- pHorrs 8400 Small Garden Seeds in bulk.- mnaegttent, but can't find that am- f OR MALS-RegietPred Holstein - ount of money to assist the Starving LILLIAN'S .. _ F'bvlt. ?8 tnontb, old Apply Bober Wright, and in Packages thousands who can't find rwlork'. D lot 29, con, s, Pickering. 4&47 (Heard in town) There. have always BEAUTY • • SHOD, �j�OR . SALB-30 nerep , nf et4nding Purina and Master =Feeds been pioneers, and a big loss of • 1' bay, clover and timothy mixed. Apply to We has always: beer _ experienced '(Nest door t0 Old (hsrch Garage) S.1• Mennen, lot, 36, ton 6. Pickering. 47 by pioneers,•but it, will yet have to --'"TANTED TO RENT -A bouse in .:-:-'Field and' , Garden -- Fertilizer `. be shown, just what branch Of nae- the village of Pickerinr. Possession on jn Shs>talpoo and Fin�arwave W or before September 7st. APPI to Angus Mc- a ful service, flights' round the world Ringerwsve $be. Millan, McKinnon Bldg„ 19 lrelindaStreet, 1. 00.Qts. Paint --Special; -59c• a Qt* may be'pioneerivg. Great -concern Toronto. �ltf _ Oil Sbainow & ' Mserwavb 76e. . is generally shown for the welfare Arehint IRL WANTED - For general �geIIt fOr �lloCoimiCls--�eerilg 1.�61m• ��ael]lnery Of persons bearing a name well- 86e. Ghousevosk. Russell Flemitlg, Kingston Rd Whitby West. 47 _ _ and Repairs. )mown to the world, and not enough Manicure abe' -u W S l*UR SALE -Close a ria to the 'poor, and neglected, as are Faciab hoc. ( P Oar )!lotto:-"Wd have QaD iLet it, Or 'ere and frgh cows, pure bred and grade•. F. to be found in our city slums, and HAIRCUTTING , B. tr sted end blood tested Free delivery it in not made.t. such as the. Toronto Daily Star's wm J• Murphy. Marto Faris: Ll•dsayr out Phone 1962. latf r Telephose 8600 ' Fresh Air Fund is successfully car- Theradque Heaterless Oil Penman- �j rying out, but what s' lot of effort Tj`Olt f A I.Ft - 1 milkir PhOrte d is J S BAL.7DOi� ' '- P'ICKERING ant Waves 1 hull, from heavy milking strain. Herd is to get funds for a, very cominmd- U." $2.50 $3.50 �� fully accredited since 1998. Would asehange • • -able work. Pict, 221W for work Pick 1007W. C. Willson, h�leltf •