Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutPN1937_07_30.. � .:yam. .,. iiia a r.r _ �•� '� ... Fes. `b,. :w.k^_'.'..; i..,•c.:._ .,sC![ • .. : f_�'. rv�t .+!•! sat �,• ! i+. ' - '° : 'ai•'... w NIE E ICKERIN ST VOL. LTI ;-- PICKERIN(, ONT. —FRIDAY JULgY 3U. 1987. ^.a 9� r �s'fvfss+st'tastat itasrbo. _ GreenwoodNOTICE GREENWOOD Master Claire and ,Bob Eatock moi' j'� R. H. C. PH AkSON— Physician a, have returned after spending same MILLS �''iJtmdsaraeon, Daabarcoa. lar Our tracks pass your way time with their aunt in Little every clay." Britain. , RE. FORBYTH, Oph. D„ Director COAL COKE Mrs. L. Linton and daughter, 18$6--1936 •Optome'da1 Association of Ontario. Rea. " istered Member of the American Optomattica) ' of Balsam, spent . few da ' Anedauon. Eyes examined by appointment, days witb rroaes fK. eaaemunt. ont. W%,OD, CEMENT, friends here.' t.sotu. BAND GRAVEL, Miss Zorah o Gee is spending a� a' - !Chopping t t visit with her sister, Mrs, Tom Monday. "Wednesday Ho of Camilla. esday and Fri P, ,: K DUIYALD itUliLY l riL an - and The church service on . Sunday R. Sojicitor, Notary Pushes uioaeyio Lona. flak a formsrty occupied by tae tate A. 9. cttt;.- BUILDER'S BII PPLIE g .win be in charge of the Missionary tlaa.soutb win of t;ourt douse. wditby. sty g riary `� tra��:• ; - at. per bas � 1'y � � `81Bo local cartage work Superintendent of the Sunday �, BEATON, BELL tf ROSS 8 School. The special speaker will 20 bass .$11,30 " r� .� Barriators ff Solicitwa We have also placed to stock s ftal! be Mrs. T- Brown, of Brougham, line of Hapie Lefaf Killing - x � and over, 6c. per bag WILLIAM J, F3EATOi4. K, C. Do's Feeds. "A full tine of cattle and '< IL BROOKE BELL, K. C. J. D. F. ROSS - sots E. JAMES A. WRIGHT A.W.1VIITCHELL 1�e cost of Staging the C. N. he feeds is ;1,000,000 a year, and with the JS Bay street. Tarmto. Adelaide seas same "spent by exhibitors, a Stagg- Pig Concentrate - this is neeewr= C' O. RICHARDSON & Co., Barrie- Pickering; Out. -. ering total is disbursed. for economical feeding �' •teas. Sohown. Notariga etc.. Suite bol: ■a. aacalaim Ljfe•Buddi 35 Toroatost. Toronto. Office phone 7400 Residence E1520 Dmobarbon Death of Joseph T Clark Pig Starter . tits romtg . l h n"' Tatrpboae Ad, lbsa: FwAatias Phooe 5813. SU _ -� TT110111SilON a)ldoM1 LLAN—Barrier The Beal Store, Claremont Mrs . McSporan and family of Early on Friday morning last, Poultry Feeds, All kinds (WIt1Ms I cin, solickwm Notaries Puwk. nines Moose Jaw, Sask . are visiting with following a • heart attack, one of the and Growing at Gardoa Howe, Picteriata. oo '1 uesda , and PEONS best "known and most loved editors g a[Y� 8acasdar cy To from r f. to nit o ore ap Mrs . L. McsConochie here'. of Canada awed alwa at Bran and Shorts p�t�e.. St. Po nates. Mc_M:t. tai. FURNITURE Miss Jean P y his sum- - 19 to Se. Pti•oe stain bsca. 2litt• Annan,.of of the Welles- ly Hospital • visited her parents t$!s mer home at Go Home Bay, in his We are displaying an attrwtiTe 71st year. During the �. �. QRrFi�Z� %TON T A ANNIE — Barriste •e. variety week. y ng past four tvJssooaaccttt Notarce. Public r of The W. A. of the United 'Church 'years he had several minor attaclu, p Alumintsm and (}raniteware Etc, will meet at the home' of Mrs. : eOA�ON D. CUNANT.`K. C. ' which led ham to art out acinic of M.LtN F. ANNIS. B. A., LL. IL Furniture and Furniture his activities. In t► letter we sec- NovelUm. Chas. AnniS on Thureda PIANO T"QNIN4 oetya- -7 I s simcoe St. S.. Oshawa ' y' August slued froart him about a month s Pbone -•*..d a Kabawa). and at the cmrt Priem low. in keeping with times. 5th, in the form of a picnic.. ago, D - - House. WhitbT, tdtr. Cottaat) Phone? (whir. Mr. Wan. Hewitt, of Montreal, in which he was thanking no for an _ ' by)' and Mr. Bob Helwitt, of Guelph, article which appeared in the Pick- Al] kinds Of Repair Rork SERVICE visited their father and grand-fat- ering Nates, he referred to his ill- RfADI�. STRVICE her sere fiat week. _ _ nese, stating .that ha then spear. Al1.,Tuaing Guaranteed A Graduate of Radio College _ - _ _ " __-. pnly two or three-ho _ �, DONALD ' HERBERT T. FALLAIBal o D8.. B�g� " each day. -Although his illness was 2W CLOSE AVE.. I ORONTO -� D• D. S., Graduate of the Royal f%aje'ae of With. tau �aoe ebe pairarwty of Taroato. _ well known among ' his• numerous < Qpm io •.wad door care a st. woe- Up-to-the-minute training � W , J. Brown fwnil are friends, his sudden death at the end Phone Lakeside 1502 Mrw'iChn[ti. Pickering. Olrice boon : 9 y a. M. a dpi m., or as apporateeet. (x-ray .$nd holidaying with their ,people. carne as a great shod,. Mr. Clark Orders takes at NfiWSG�I- x ass' '• Psooe �� sTeo pus IriNEST EQUIPMENT Miss Scanlon, of Toronto visited Wigan bis newspaper career when -r-- for E. and Mrs Holtby last week. only 13. years of age, being ern may atsttt�rlaa arl+s. Mise -Margarett 'toyed in the offkm at Durham and S 1 1 t n gIe s . �or S ala :, Gvartw)teed - Satisfaction Burton, of. Octroi. 'RTiarton . He soon became one of ALT waa a •w eek-end guest of .the >Sd �POSTILL, Licensed Atwtiooew, Reasonable Prices Hamilton home, the most expert compositors in-the. Galt Galvanized Steel Shingles. w .. one ooaatt•s of York and pasao. An*-Tabes and Batteries always iNj Miss B Ste'verMn is holidaying province. In the 80's be came ' to Bird's Feir Slate Shingles. own sojas at au kjada aneao•d a on shoeerA kjad sola«, Address Gram River P.O., Out. __ __ at the summer cottage at Orillia, Pkkering wborre he entered intoAlw, re•rnbbrriag buggy wheels. { H. RdY MILLER, of Mrs. Ho�werth. Partnership with his -brother, W. Lawn mowers sh%rpewed:, "'I`e4 R: BEATON. TOWNSE14P Brougham. Ontario Mrs. Hanley, of Stratford spent J. Clark, it was in the Pickering T. PATERSON19 - CLAREjMONT, Ds Clark. Conveyancer. Commmakm er for 48tf- Phone Mark 1808 t3ie ro�eek-end . with• her aunt Miss - c:ami o0clavtts. Accountant, Etc. Issuer of ,'dews office where he first took the: ball-and get {micas.: Phone tawrrtasoUcem•s. wbitevale.oat. Ida-Bate. pen to give voice to his opinions. Miss Parjdn: and Mrs. A. Hai- �g�ing men and events. His A, E. RICHARDSON � E :E � bran, df Kinsale, have been with the articles dreg the attention of the .-'GENI?RAL .INSURANC4. Bayles'' family for a few days: late W. F. MacLean of the Toron- �� k .REAL ESTATE and Mrs. Norman ffiorton, to World, who.at once offered. him Insurxuoe Of All Rinds.' and daughter,' of Seattle, have been an attractive offer as an editorial M ----"-CONVEYANCIIY( • visiting their-relatives,. the WUL9nn writer on the World. From this Builders Su 1>te$ Beat Rates Available with and Gannon families. ` time his rise in the editorial world PP ;An old established agmey, ready ffi +ass rapid, Mrs. Mina Mr�ster aaoness pid, - At this time E. „�.I1a E to serve. . . Phone, -Pick. rr0o0 Security and �et�iae. of Sherbourne .Str. United Church, Sheppard of the Toronto Saturday : 'Lumber and Lath Toronto, 'spent the ween-end. with Night, who wrote under the pen B. C Shingles Address IPbone her brother, John and family. name of "Don", induced him to C. $ MAW The Sunday School picnic at contrIbute articles in .the -Saturda z - BROUGHAM PICK 516 ;� h y Blue Coal' L10ENSED AUCTIONEER AND Green River park on Friday was g t, which he .did under the name Alberta QOaI a good success. Mr. • Hariock kind- of "Mack". In 1899 he became Ed- VALUATOR ly transported the children, and itor-in-Chief" of the Toronto Star, ,_`D02Le66iC Coke- Sales write, Anywhere _P1&(WMg mill$ y the uric authorities are a1wtays but for three years was editor of Photic or write.. Address 814 Dundas ""��b - — sgturda Cement, Lime Plastelr -_ .BtiroSt. Bast, - - very Kind and hospitable.. y Night, after which he re- • Whitby. Ontaaio Agency for Frost& Wood Mr. MoWhirter is taking a sum- tamed to the star and has been .. ,.,Maple'Body Wood i mer course at Hamilton, and spent Editar-in-Chief ever since. His art- Cockshutt Farm Machine it ca m Agents for Lnnd" Fence Sunday with` his family._ Miss Tum_ always free of bitterness y CYRIL E. MORLEY P P monde is visits . her sister, Mrs. but were strongly written and nev- and Mew ` P Complete lire and re airs. er ' `e v j.�oiln GENERAL INSURANCE McWhirter, at present. ga offence and were widely Pioee — Pf�iuL li700 Chopping and Feeds of. all. H- Found took the Sunday read and much admired. In his son POINT ��'Aug. > , �lIIda.. - g • y possible to at- most prominent editorial writers, service an . Sunda sing-Canada has lost one of its w ;-.� .. `•'. : ; ' ustine fmdln rt . im 8ocare Priem Before Ueokshutt Implements . a Royal Past Flour tend. Mr. F. M. Cha and one'vho will be y Baylf Insurance at y piman will great mourn: Poultry Feeds (bowing occupy the pulpit ,neat Sunday. ed. Personally, he-was one of the . T .h educed Fates ' Congratulations . to Miss Doris most lovable of men, full of hum- W1L S �'ly BR Q8 y r piano solo at the Green River ,gym_ our, and a friend of all and an eri- Wash Iia in Mash. Ho son on winnin 4 For .ouiicTar 3 +' S a prize on her emy o f none. In his younger clays L4DCUSt HIIus Ont. 'See U8 Wena all makes Platy Points. all' Contest. Doris is a pupil of he took a deep interest in sports, Pbonehlark 7360 �. Lockwood MrQ Carl Devitt, especially., in cricket: He cans a SERVICE and. PROTECTION NIra. B� Harvey and children of member of the •Pi Renrig team PICKERING, ONT. England„ were at the Harvey. borne' when it was. one of the Ieaxiing for the aceek-end. Bert and Mrs. teams of.'tbe Province." In his Inter Summer lr urniture ' Harvey were at Merriton•bri Fri- ?7Q he was a great golf enthus- - r PRARSON'S •. ° Re G. CLENDENII G day, evening filling a conceit en- last and borwler, abut during the Gape Cod Lawn Chair $' 2.85 FUNERAL DIRECTOR gagement. Pmt few years h'e'had, on account •:SLY SPRAY _ On' Saturday evening, Mr• aiid of failing health, to give -up these y Lawn Chair Private Ambulanceyles were host and sports. $e has held man} prom- - Mn.rs W l ! 4 a hostess' to ,about 150 guests who inent Positions, including, the Pres- for _ Dees Chair with Canopy and • . Day a a Night t Service were helping them celebrate their ldency of the Canadian Press Ass- 24th -wedding arunversary. -Among oclataOn of the - Toronto Play- Som ' '``i3.35 - �� a guests were Mrs. Jane Boyer, grounds A tion. He is surriv- CATTLE FOOL Rest .Malvern 5000 � i � aol3 of .Greenwood.. 93 years of age, 'ed by his three . sons, Gregory; Jos. Markham • Ont. and Frank Smith, 88, W. G. and Arthur Hugh Clark and And`AN domestic StOa�r Deck Chair with Can o9y ;2.60 f of Whitby, one daughter, e ' aunt and uncle of Wx. Bayles. g ter, Mrs. T. G. Drew. Gives Longer Protection. Will . Mr. Roy Mowbray took charge of Brook. The funeral took place on g ..w3Wont Canopy Summer Time Saturday afternoon, July 24th, from Camp Chair the evenings entertainment, when Y a fine program by many Miles Undertaking Parlors, with in • lRot taint milk. a? 31.65 >' grain was given ferment in Mount Pleasant Cemet- , PEARSON'S CATTLE gpRAp, of the guests. Musical nun,jbers Note the .Low Price: y :. Gran Matta STOCHAIDE, were given by Miss #iarbiron, Miss e!i' hY Tax, Hand Sprayers, Fly Parkin, of Kinsale, the, children of y; Studio Conches _ Sprayers, Fly Swatters, Screen W. Brown; the children of Mr. and Brock Road - �� •00' per gallon Doors and Window Screens. Mrs. Douglas, .Master Robert Har' = t 'Wan Paper' ---' vey and sister, Betty; Clark's Or- Miss Audrey Wells of Durham, " ' -128 Ounces King Bug chestra; of Greenwood;.. a group of is spending a few-rweeks with ;Kr, ` '— ?! Killer Container Included Yates Ambulance, Dar K Night songs by Bert Harvey. Words of .and Mrs. Chas. Fuller. .r -.In 5, 10 and 20 Ib. bags, appreciation • and congratulation The farm until , recentIy owned Phone 1600 �� Hewers shay • were expressed by Rev. Mr. Doug- by- Mr. "Mogno, has .been purchased 'We_believe this to be the beats ' ened ed.and repair' las, a relative frown Toronto; also by Mr. Beckett, who is- busily en procurable• • by Mr. .George Johnston K. C. son gaged taking off the large crop C. A. STERRITT Pi robing, Roofing,' 71namithini of the late Afthur Johnston, once of berries Just at present. Made by na4ers of Creoilm �j TT of Gieenw•ood- a reading'-by ' Mrs'. _The Brock Road "Sports" are to `s Funeral Director A • IN B V SHBY Douglas. The host and hostess. re- be commended on their charivaring I L+ Ca Jokes Phm S ' '. FIIlIIltilre Dealer Hardware Tinsmith ceived many lovely gifts. Miss Am. ability, sPortsmanshi and a ec- f a G W P sP a. PTCKERINGI nie Bayles, cousins and g'rl friends !ally their literary style in. reply DmggWPkkedn served the 'bountiful refreshments, irg to the reception given by .the�ks.' g 1C�[eT1f1Q. w e OIIt8r10 phone 4000 _ * i,riL3's cal a -' ' e I icrn.arn. Frenchmen's ' • _ I Bay `.70rt9. .. rte..,. . :.a:•. .. �• thus with us, to bring us forth out of doing the former, he gives peace of telephone operator's courage, reatfts • CUNDAY -s��OO Egypt? Is not this the word that we conscience; doing the latter be fog that her smooth olive skin and epake unto thea in Egypt. Baying, let ghee peace of` heart. Long curly black hair era unusaaUy ' as alone, that we may serve the "And Jehovah said unto Moses, lovely. such Important artists as Egyptians. For it were better for us wherefore crlest thous unto me? but Howard Chandler Christy, lean torn- S S O to serve the Egyptians, than that we speak unto the children of Israel, that • well, ,Arthur William Brown and Hal should die in the wl:decness." Here they go forward." What a command— Phyfe proclaimed willingness to fur' it is an -utter lack of faith. There is no to go forward, when immediately in ther fester her 'modelling ;•steerwhen turning tc Cod, but a shameful ea- front of them was a great body of she is able to walk again. all have LESSON V ed as a dark cloud in contrast to the pression of helplessness, and that.,so water! When the circumstances seen, asked her to pose for them as soon @OD LEADS A PEOPLE — Exodus light of the "sun. "but .by night as a soon atter Gcd had powerfully maul-the most difficult and the time most as she can. 18:17 16.21 tl@ry splendour. When this cloud had tested his own ability'to deliver from unripe, then it Is that God often com• "But don't think for a moment ., printed Teat — Exodus 18:17.22; -14: gone before the army of Israel, 1t as- every power that was now threaten- mands his people-to advance. May it that her beautiful hands and face ' 10-15 sume.d the form of. a column; but Ing them. not be in 'these yery,days, when the alone brought her these chances to " We, too, have our Pf-hahirotha• church' of Christ seems to be growing make a living and' be a ti i useful '-..Iliolden Text — The' Lord velli guide when 1t mood' stili above the tabor•. pP. thea continually." Isiah 68:11. aacle, or came down upon it, it most when we seem absolutely shut in, and weaker and weaker; and its Influence citizen," said one watch company ` THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING probably took . the form o1 'a round helpless against the . circumstances more and more circumscribed and its executive. ' which are surrounding us. Yet, It Is leadersLip less and less able, 'when , Place — Ttie Israelitiea gathered to- globe of cloud. and, when it'separated ' To understand what has happened, wether, as they went out of Egypt, at when the people of (God are brought there seem to be no gr the Israe3itea from fhb Eggptiitns at one must know something of Jessie's into the greatest- and- difficui- the-land, when the people of God are " t3uccoth, which is to be identified the Red Sea, we have to imagine it spirit and courage as well as her good spread out like a bank of cloud,,form- ties that they, are, favoured with the indifferent that as s the time for -with the city of Pithom In the north- spread thiis looks. The sheer loveliness of her. and a real advance led by the Spirit of east of this great chantry. Various ing, as it were, a dividing. wall. In finest displays of Gcd'4 character personality and her splendid determ• events in this lesson occurred .be- this cloud, Jehovah, or the angel of acting, a,id, for this reason, he oft. God? }nation never to be a burden to her tween the city of Succoth, and some God, 'was really present with the peo', times leads them into a trying post, --�^^ family or' friends have made us her art of the Red Sea, which !s not to- tion, in order that he may the more Displays • - iD pie of Israel, so that he spoke to Mos Beauty DiS la $ willing subjects." day easily identifiable. ee and markedly show himself. He could v v gave him his commandments J � J• Saye Arthur William Brown:. "f ' have conducted Israel through the _Great Brave • Time — B.C. 1498. -'-- - " out of the cloud." — C: F. Kell. (See, "Jessie, Simpson's courage of soul' "And It came to pass, when Phar• for further references to this remark- Red Sea an osis beyond the reach of is evident as an integral part of the 'able phenomenon, 16.10; 19:9; 24:16; Pharaoh's hosts before ever the lat- - soh had let .the People go, that God is of her Mace. Her hands have led them not b . the of ,the land ter had started from Egypt; but that 18-Year-Old Jessie Sim _ y ay 34.6; 40:34-38; Lev,.l6c2, 13; Num. 9: peon Lost character—stud beauty. t never en. 15, 22; 1 Kin would not, have so fully 'glorified his of 'the Philistines, although that was Kings 8:19; Neb. 9:19; and Both-Legs In Railway Accident gage a "model by her tate and figure Psalm 78:14), own name, or so entirely confounded near." It the Israelites had come ,from' " :�ontinttes to Fern Her Liv- alone. Hands can express so much, Egypt straight up tato Palestine all And when Pharaoh drew nigh, the, the enemy, upon whom he designed to - can accentuate other charming tea- through (laza, they .could have been children of Israel lifted up their eyes get him honour. It we could only look Ing-tures." -In the center of the Promised Land, and, behold, the Egyptians were upon a difficult crisis as be occasion HACKENSACK. N.J.—J.story of And Hal Phyfe; noted photographer, of bringing out, ori our behalf, the y within a week. This is'the way almost marching after them; and they were sufficiency of divine "Jessie Simpson, 18-year-old "MISS Jer• adds that Miss Simpson is flawlessly all of the great military campaigns sore afraid; and the children of -Is- grace, l would sey of 1936" who lost both hf her beautitu7 — a perfect -photographic enable us to preserve the balance of for the invasion o1Palestine from the 'rael Cried out unto Jehovah.", From lege in a ret. at railway accident, !a model It Aur souls, and to glorify God, even in south have advanced. The march fe every human standpoint ft was Inevi- the deepest waters. the newest proof that although all the Rapia Recovery difficult, at certain seasons of , the table that Israel . should be afraid. world loves a.lover, its cheers go to "And Moses said .unto the people, Meanwhile, — there Is unexpected Year it is blistering hot, and many The Egyptian army, whatever -the fighter' who won't be licked. - - Fear ye -no , stand still. and: see the gaiety in the Simpson home. All the miles would be through as acid des-number, was cotx)posed of trained Sol- if the world had heard only that salvation of Jehovah, which he will members (mother, Lather, small Bets but, LAVerth@lees, such a march Were, well armed and used to war; the tragic accident • postponed Miss work for you to-day; for the Egypt-. brothers and sisters) have taken their 6 possible. Napoleon himself led. his the 600,000 Israelite men above twen- Simpson's marriage to a young man lane whom ye have seen to-da ye cue from Jessie and are happy, cheer h'�De up this way In his futile at, ty years �i age, were, in the main, y' in Hackensack, the story would have shall see them - again no more for ful and vibrant with lana' for their - • ;tempt to reach Constantinople.- "Roc unarmed, ignorant of warfare, and B' been forgotten by now. - p •• ever. Jehovah will fight for you, and future. _ 136d said, lest peradventure the peo- trained very imperfectly. Surrounded y However, when It became known Ye shall hold your peace." Nothing yle repent when •they see war, and on three aides by water, and desert, that the attractive brunette had no Even the family doctor (he brought they return to Egypt." "But God 'ted can be' conceived nobler and finer Intention of remainingan invalid and Jessie into the world, cared for her and ground ton rough for toot march- than a servant of God, standing out the people• about, by the way of the ea, with the Egyptian army templet• absolute faith and confidence as was busily, trying to figure out a way" through childhood and saved her -life _ = wilderness by the Red Sea•" The Rel >ng thin circle of obetaclea uttertq against the unbelief and [ear' of a to continue to earn her living, a kind- after the accident), is astonished-'at Sea le.about 1350miles long, wltb an Incapable of .being overcome. Israel vast multitude of people, here over ly world turned not only a aympath• the way the family have carried on. {/extreme breadth of 205 miles, the forgetting that (sod himself was am. etic ear but a helping hand. He predicted that IC 'vrould fake a year deepest portion measuringtwo million of them, his own broth- for his mangled patient to recover— It 1200 Lath• nipotent, and that they were fn this ren. One'thing the children of Israel A famous watch company has made hale. It fs located between Egypt and very place by the command of (this were not to t to fear. Two things !t possible for Jessie Simpson to earn v@ even to eft up. She is. sitting up now 1M.rabfa, stre�Cliri68 tTOm"-l3uez-to--the- a living with her beautiful hands and and wagers that she will have artlfi- their leader in bitter- they were commanded to do—to stand tial lege and be walking within a afx -Strait of Bab-el-Mandeb. Why this arms, She will model their new set complaint. The leader o any - - a •� nap what fire Lord would body of water has been called the x watches until the day comes when months peditloa !s the one thatAlways re do for them. What else could they do hod Sea for the last two thousand -4be can have artificial legs. In tact, � • '• - - _ - • lPearo, no one seems to tones. The ceives the bruit of criticism. If there but stand still? There was no power so impressed are they with her ability Sbe still Vwears her fiance's fra. - Dame-has been explained by the cot~ 7s failure, he 1. severely blamed for in Israel that could have • ever' ever- . to model watches and with the shin- ternity pin tmd 'makes ,plans tar 'Als within its waters, by the color o1 It. If there is hardship, he to held re- come the circumstances arrayed as Ing, beauty of her face and hair that future happy 'home file as well as the Edomite and Arabian mountains aponaible for ft. against the Israelites that day. It they have given her a six months' professional que.._ Bordering' its coast, or by. the glow of "Aad they; said unto Moses, because they were to be saved God must do it. contract, one which does not exclude .the sky reflected In it they were no graves in Egypt, hast The Lord not only places himself be- other modelling jobs. 4 ways: oars seelb toso often not out thou taken as away to die in the wil. tween us and our sing, but area be. Lovely 'Character i _ be capable of the dueness? wherefore haat thous dealt lessen us sad our circumstances. By impressed by tales of the former Spec 'al --wicker results and leas suffering. But ' God's ways often appear so much..}on. �ier than ;necessary, and involve so r ._ bench hardship and disappointment, pet God always known best. We we two evident reasons why to theDN ., goodTRANSPO - _- 'providence of God-the near way .was l• rof choaea. First, the escaped slaves tOuld not bear the sudden danger and 'FOR.-EEDNOMI(AL fierce. struggle in the near way {he. -canoe of the powerful. Philistine peo- ple .against whom they would-lmme -Y: -diately have to fight and for. which they certainly were not prepared). -z x b "And the children of Israel went up j armed out .of the land of Egypt." Lit- e raliy they went up equipped (see Jo. shun 1:1'4; 4:12).x• _ "And Moses took the bones of Jos epb 'w.th, him; for he had strait]j ,.,sworn the children . of Isrse}s saying, God will surely visit you; and ye shall - carry up my bonesaway hence with i you." =This was 'according to the ex. _ _ .: • . , pticit 'orde: of Joseph just before his death (Gen. 60:35, 26; see Acts 7:16). = :Faith Jh'the Promised Land must also have kept, burning in the hearts of Some Israelites from one generation to another, or the bones of Joseph -would have been :forgotten. would that. all of us,, in. dying, could leave ... such legacies of one kind or another � that those who follow us, e J yPecially.. •' .. _ • 4 `�,, . our own chf]dren, might therefrom' de=' .. - ' -:. -: :. ' • ..� - rive strength for continually walking In the favour of the Lord,' living the - faith-life .... "And they took their 'journey—from Succoth, and' encamped in Etham, in - the edge of the wilderness." The ex- act position Of Succoth. Is not. known, but scholars 'are coming, to pelieve that ft was very -near to or actually Identical with the city of Pitbom in lower Egypt,, on the banks of the ca• tial connecting the Nile River with 'the Red Sea_ mus , as on the eaelt of the Isth• •• ]� PENNY SAVED IS . A .. PENNY, '-Hydraulic' B=akes and solid • steel s of Suez, l"1 ` although lie enact soca• EARNm !" and•Chevrolet truck' Turret Top cabs highlight safety FEATURE S •' ileo has not been determined.. ' owners Jehovah went beforethem by thou hout.Canada are daily, that is built' into every detail of Entirely da ifl a Pillar r sly new valve-le h esd Y of cloud, ud -to lea t d hem proving the truth of thin old saying. chassis and f=ame. Handling, too, :six-cylinder (truck engine the wap, and them night yin a pillar y You see, Chevrolet t=ucks are built. :.has been made easier for city traffic, Increased Power.- fire, to give them light; that they _ � ' Ta wee at 3200 r.p.m. also might o b da to last. They're smartly dressed but a m. g y y and night. They .,-and more comfortable for Ion horsePo P Pillar. of, cloud by day, and the pillar dependable servants that never get hauls. Increased Torque— of fire by night, departed not , from lacy . . , rarely require' sick leave. 'In fact, Chevrolet Trucks stand ft' lbs. at 1100-1,600 r.p.m. the' people." We are not to regard this The famous 6-cylinder, valve-int- '--today, more than ever before, "for All-Steel Turret Top —miraculous phenomenon as consisting Of two differ6nt pillars that appeared .head special truck engine is a mo- .Economical Transportation". For coupe-type cobs alternat@ly, one of. cloud, and the oth• del of efficiency and economy. Its proof, geta demonstration and- the Larger bion of or of fire. There was but one pillar of worth has been pPoved'to the sans.. '.facts from your Chevrolet dealer. Factory-Built Bodies l Path cloud and fire. for even ' ~ faatiof3 of. more than 39,000 ezisti=tg Auk him about new, lea%prices ... �'. lowest-pelted when burning In the dark, it fa Still Chevzole# truck owners in Canada. - -big trade-im allowance `OYw`��ne modef Called the, pillar of cloud .(14:19) or easy - ,the cloud (Num, 9:21), so that it was Load 'space has been increased, General Motors Instalment Plan -.Pwbctsd Hydraulic Brakes a cloud with a dark side aud� a bright loaddistributioni=4tproved:perfected "'siinancing„ New dselpr stm ng par ,one, causing darkness and also light- Ing the night. Consequently. we have _ _ _ _ . , .. - -• _ .. _ _ . _.. _ _ ..,. _. _ _ ._. .... _ . _ - -cr-tire to imagine the ctoud as the covering r A of. the fire, so that by -day ft appear 1 t t r w t W°oUM43e Brides_ "We are constantly sending par- the number of animals oa d* roilt� harmless male., abs it !e tamers out to At ihe.larder. The record mal ties of tourists to man ; . L y y Parte of army picket lines still coatdn ap- of the spades i►htisb lttst-f � wood red, also be wed as a Danis for the can ���:_.; .+- tHe tl7 tuuope, and even further afield, and proximately 26,000 horses and males. Mood-riUes the irritating swellings ning schedule for the following sea - Be the one and all return with a warm During the fiscal year beginning Y y on on human akin. non. :41, corner in their hearts for the people July 1, the army will buy 1:,600 To be pedantic, a mosquito bite is Another big help when there it =' Mpst-Be of Athletic Type to Marry of the countries the have visited. horses for motorization and mechaa- not an incision made with teeth in cann ~ ` y ing to do, 'especially if one's • One of Blackahirts "Moreover, I am sure that our peo• ization have not yet placed Dobbin the generally accepted some of biting. kitchen is large, is a table on casters - T pie, mixing with inhabitants of fore- and his. running mate,. the mule, rp on Rather it is a shastalF with which or wheels, or one that is otherwise ra BERLL1. — GeneraI Jaeckelen, ign lands as freely as they wish, have the shelf. the female mosquito .punctures and easily moved about., On it jars may 1Stor&Troop chief, is specific of per- left behind a good impression of the Because of the drought last year lacerates the akin with four minute be placed as. they are taken from n lection required of eve German q every people of these islands. the army must pay' higher prices for lancets before bringing sato .play the storage, then wheeled to the sink for girlhoping to marry one of his "The opportunities for this mixing its animals. As compared with $161 tiny filament of her proboscis through washing- Placed clean on the table, Blackshirts: varysomewhat aecordin to the na- the aver which -the blood is drawn b auction. -the whole supply may be taken to -the ha g age: price for s horse'during y P . "Javelin hurling and pole vault- ture of the .tour. Some tourists travel the current fiscal year;- the Quarter-' Simultaneously, she injects into the stove for sterilization as needed. Use =? r Ing are more becoming to German independently, others go 'with con- master Corps is planning to pay an puncture a fluid which thins the blood the table also. for taking to the stove womanhood .than the wielding of a ducted tours, using . the ordinary average, of $175 for the horses it will to the correct consistently for her use, fruits and •-egetabiea ready for lipstick," he told a Nazi Party meet- railway facilities of the country, and buy during the coming fiscal': year. It ,is this "poison," add in nature, blanching. In the coolest part of the. ing• - ver7 popular are those grand tours Close to 700 breeding stallions are Which causes the discomfort pt the room the supplies may be made readf —'The young woman w o wishesAo where the. traveller. has a reserved now -on lind, and it is -proposed to s ng, and which can be best relieved for the jars because, by means of thl marry into the blackehh-ted militia seat in a special traiiu throughout. buy forty more, at'an averagehce by the application of a swab of a ' table, containers may be wheeled must be perfect in all respects, Let "In all cases there is plenty of of $800. Despite the motorized tem- neutralizing alkaline such as am- back quickly to the stove in larget -'nE? us further require that she has pass- free time to see something of the or- Po of the times,- the army believes monia, soda or iodine. numbers for the boiling, water or* the -s ed an examination 'in sports and won dinary; everyday -life of the people. the. time will never dome when it will Mere vindictiveness does not in- syrup, sealing and setting in the 'hof - 'an award from the National Athletic "A' friends • smile 'and' a kin hot need a substantial - spire -the . female mosquito in her at- water hath. - p dry quota b horses tack. Animal blood is a necessity in rt -organization. word soon open the way to a little and mules. .. The primary object of "Blond hair and blue the.reproduction.o4-her kind, and us - "Blond are not entente, and in surprisingly few cases- the horse -breeding plan is to make a enough to prove that one belongs to are there any language difficulties. certain that the army will always An she has secured the tiny speck from EitrO w ` have on hand an adequate number man or beast, she cannot commence pe heat Crop the Nordic race. The Reich has no "They soon get down to the terms q steed for women• who know how to of 'me and 'im', and without doubt of horses of suitable quality and con- to lay her several hundred eggs ; . TO Show InCrea$B �N. dance, but of girls who can prove that is all to the good in the cause formation not only for peacetime use among the foliage bordering some . „ - body of water. This act completed, { their health in sgbztittg contests." of peace.but for emergently. her mission ends and she dies, The life cycle may have extended but "e ROME.—The 1937 wheat crop will Never Quarreled War DII Insects Is Fewer Cats, Lens -Holley mere three or four days, . or, should be from 20 to 26 per cent larger the search. for the vitalising mammal than that of last year in .the United During 41 Years ` � 9f � Cllr When men 3aterferes with the bel- blood have been prolonged, weeks and States and will show a amaller im- *_ "-b OTTAWA,—A forest insect inf saes of nature he is apt to. invite even s Winter's hibernation may in. crease in Europe, but will be media ! . lar trouble, observes - the Kitchener Re- tervene. ere in Canada, China and Japan, the -77 lrsteseat►ttonal Preeideaot Makes in ma and protective service, aunties cord. For example, in a small En Attached to the grasses by. a film National Institute of Agriculture an- Statement "Peace -Be in many ways to the existing fire � cats which had been found $� fish vii P � g of glans resembling cellophane, the nounced• At Howe" Protection service, is being organized, guilt of killing eggs require to be washed into the It is tihe entomological branch, Dominion y g Pomp were destroy- predicted a total European . �— Department of A ed. - A few summers later the hone pond by rain or the blowing of the harvest of 412,000,000 metric quip- j p Agriculture, disclosed y VANCOUVER•—"Forty-one years crop failed. Investigation showed reeds in the wind before the next epi- tals as compared with 408,000,000 in a circular -last week.' /married and never -quarrelled," Was that the scarcity of cats Ied to the sode in the mosquito's life history quintals in 1936 (A metric quintal With- the object of discoveringia- commences Here, the eggs tmmedi• is 220.46 lbs. 'a, the record .tri her mixed -rare mar-, dearth of honey. ) sect outbreaks" in ' Canada's forests'• What connection was .thele 2 Cats exporting countries of Eur- nage, Mrs. Tsune Gauntlett, Inter- lumber, ateijr hatch into. larvae, tiny "wrig♦ The pulp and paper, rvic sa and , glare" who while living for a day -or ope, however, -are -expected to� have -: national President of the Pan Pacific don't make honey. No, but cafe eat variouta provincial forest services and so an „ Women's. -Association, told a Vancou- field mice. - aqueous existence 'breathe by a smaller wheat crop than last year. _ Ver audience Last week, other agencies etre za-operating with Fewer cats, -more mice •uneaten. contact with the air above through a The estate for- these' countries the entomological branch to make' tube thrust through the surface about As a Japanese teacher in a min+ Mice destroy the nests of bumble g Hangar}, Rumania, Yugoslavia, BnC= observations on and collections o! in- every five minutes. gary, Poland and Lithuania-; -is 118,- 'aion school in Tokio, she married. bees. ' sesta oceurri to the' forests. ' 000 000 quintals as 'compared whit 1✓dward iiauntlett now a retired � � More mise, !ewer humble bees. , ' T .. More it is hoped to have a - 127,000,000 quintals last year. British professor from the University Bumble bees fertilize . the clover well organized irtiormation and pro- 'tanj ing o! Tokio: They have sir children. crop by searching for paIIea, ag "Peace begins at !tome," fatties service, similar in many ways g' Mrs♦' to the existing Bre protection ser- Ferrer bumble bees, fewer clover -1_ Work Easy Usin Gauntlett told the local committee in ., Sowers, and.thazefore, less hone ak -charge of."the the g vice, the cin said. y $. 411! Wheat g. comic Pan Pacific The scants} has been divided for for the honey bees to gather. � • - =' -• - Conference here: "11 om the begin- ' this purpose into five regions with In' short, fewer cats, less honey, List wlu►es Baud t (beelt Now British consumers are being Zing of our marriage, which are knew 'That'is an example of the balance (� What is Used told of the advantages' of the -use of established' entomological labozator- _.. _)night Iead us into many controversial Ila as the centres. The Maritimes and of Nature and how man can upset it Canadian reheat in their bread; of subjects, we agreed to talk over all to -his cost, life on Western Canadian )arcus Eastern Quebec will be under the At the beginning of' the catmiag ' 'difficulties' quietly and . in . patents, In much the same away -the deatrac- where wheat is the -principal comma laboratory at Fzederictoti;,wes}ern season It is a good plan to tack on the., and to adjust them In accordance tion .of Insectivorous birds can lead ty -- produced; of the elaborate and - far northwestern. Lake and Oats.- to more extensive crop losses than door of -the fruit cupboard a piece'of . di (with the principles of Chrtstisu re- io as far west as Lake Superior; nn- wheat handling and freighting syn- ligion. 'It is a wonderful recipe for would have been the case if the birds heavy ruled paper and fasten to a nail,. P . der Ottawa; northwestern .Ontario above it a pencil on a stout string, tem which has been set ' up on the . martial happiness•" and northern Prairies under Wizmi- bed not been destroyed. prairies in order that the cereal ma -' Peg; Park Belt Prairie .ovine nn- . With this constant Inventory 'may be F p es, j� kept of all canned goods on liana. List be handled and transported cheaply "Me and- 'Im" der Indian )lead, .Sas]:; and British alphabetically cherries; carranta, and and 'quickly. They are also being Columbia, and Alberta foothills un- Female Mosquitoes so fortlt, devoting a line to astir, or impressed with the value to Britain der. Vernon, B.C.:Do All the Damgae more if necessary for favorite foods. v a Pi ng "Me and• 'fm ' the article by thein having eat wheat- oduet .-Rev. W. H. Elliott, has brought the ,.1— As the supply is built up, make, abort country like Canada able and read following communication from 'G. T. AJ�y ;YDS H.a.•Cr j perpendicular marks on the line de- to supply vast quantities of the re - Woodland of Trios. Cook, So There are occasions when mosqui- voted to that particular produce, each quired bread grain_ during .perilous Sons, Prices For Horses toes, while seemingly present fa large mark representing a jar. - Whenever times as' when war breaks out. The ; Ltd., the famous trace] agency: quantities, cause ,little 'annoyance. a'coniaiaer is removed from the cup- advertisers plan appears to have aI. "The whole o! our experience WASHINGTON. --Though the. trio- "One of the days they are not board, draw a line through a mark p justified itself and is certain }read bears out the truth of ':tife and '!in', torization program of the army has hungry", says popular fancy. Par noting a jar of that. particular product, to be continued. so forcefully put by the Rev. W. H. tinhorsed.many mounted units and in more correct! k is Y. an Instance ce when One advent _ Elliott. ten years reduced by 43 r cent the age 0m this plan is the ease - - per Preponderance of the flight are with which• menus may be worked '• .Special - — - 1 TOUGH 16011M M � s -� VOU can thatch ".sturdy beauty of -a ear against .!Yoe• travel relaxed and comfortable is the. rooatier, -L the roughest roads, the -steepest climbs, . the more beautiful Unisteel Turret Top Bodies by' Fisher. weather's worst vagaries and count oa it to come . Unisteel construction —Tiptoe Hydraulic Brakes- through with colors Eying. You can call on McLaugh-' ahockproof Centre-Controlsteeriag--,and Safety glass lin-Buick's famed Valve.in-Head' Straight Eight ---insure matchless protection foryotund your family. 'Engine for what yoit will ---and it will never lei you . * I, 'I 1 t McLaughlin -Buick 'is an abler car, and a more depend. 1.) .. _• - •. able car. Thirty years of McLaughlin-Buicks--thirty::':: Knee -Action and Torque Tube drive smooth and q years of leadership in the fine car field—h- a proved _ 7 steady your ride, no matter how tough the going. :'it. See, and drive th?s great Straight Sight yourself. 1 , 1• ,k ♦ fJ f y i -0h4:,}'j;y.J:vvy' ::..�y:::. Y $ '''V { , :. .y •,-0,.{;. .:::.Y.;.v:; :i' -:.:. - � ....: ;r.: '::::.y.y'iv;:.:: :}T:Y.: wy>; i:;: ;'nti:{:%v .i ":. ..: .:;{:: r. .!, ..+.•C. S ' Y .:;{.;.:; 1... .. '• .y'..:� . {;. Fi :.:: is •.: .::::: Y 1y .. ,� ''i:1'r' :: ',::: :', .: ;. x: v. is ^::•yv..'.' > `� +r t? y.�' . J ' 777 ' f f� Y .. fgoa eQ,a 4 lief 86f 'ffe„4 fQ" iBu _ o j � �d 8 Donald Motor Sales=Whitby Chas. Cooper=Claremont f''� ,;��.:° f�,�'. _J. -.. Assoc. Dealer=M. Stgep—picker'I Assoc. Deeks—J- MrGlashen---Dunbarton • .. - ins -• - _ p s. s' s;, rliowir I>• espdodtd. "You mea&—t' 619,050) i •specific reoei� $W3.83C . LOve TurnaThe -Tables Ser faee:+ess white: "i aaa't un. Jacgath kissed him: "Yes, darling. 056.988). drrstand it. I sweaa those were the Isn't it marvellous? At'.last, Pve - •_i ones you gave me, Hilary" She worm down • his pride and hi's con- - ^ Y"6 . .• rained to the clerk appealingly. seated to marry me." She whispered: .r� dune Hilary 'Later, senior cleri o! smiling face of his employer. , s "He gave you. . What right—?" I'm so happy, daddy. " Thane and Parrott, Wholesale Jewel- "Really, air. I fail to see what y her father spluttered. Alone, gazing after them as they hnag up his hat and coat—!last connection my Iunch hour has to do "�.� Jacynth wished t :wear left for the afternoon's holiday on I'm a perfect pattern 'of a pions as usual. He thought ruefully of the with business." them ata costume dance, sir. She which Jac th afternoon's Thane realiz- prophet -premier, efflee char's inefficiency—dust' was - Thane shrugged; his voice smooth, I'm principally popular with persona everywhere, even on the clock. He his fingefs restles on the desk. knew you would refuse," the clerk ed that he would have to acquire an from Bohemia, " said quietly. appetite for humble pie if he wanted , I've solved the pressing problem o! -- - 'glanced at the inscription: To Eldred Perhaps you will when you realize " „ Thane Februa " So you dared - to keep even the slightest hold on her the common commissariat; , ry; - •1819. From the the -alternative. � , etas of the Thane Factory." "The alternative, air?" "Yea,, air. I knew if the pearls affections. She was all he had. And how to pinch and plunder the Eighteen years ago; Thane had been "Certainly.: The 1 olice." were lost or stolen away from these He was filled with an almost un- provincial proletariat. ` N „' prem; the insurance would not bearable' self -pity. --London Tit -Bits. - even the senior °�' g' partnership as a ' That is not necessary, sir. I pacify the populace with " cover, them." • ,,,, Peace -time gift from his. father. The .Planter said. _4!xet yon .. �" Thane gasped, ings. prayers, and prom isest- P y P P Preach- `> "in I a day,. Hilary had aeft"ed a X theuglat yea would see that. T.0111taw Revenue junior clerkship. Today, he was the The package—?" "Not at all, sir. I substituted 16 I castigate the critics and deride the those you have in your. hand. I knew Increased lri June doubting Thomases, - senior clerk; trusted and recuse. Slowly, the clerk, drew an oblong Miser Jacynth would not get the same Aad when my folly frightens folks The stab arrived slow4y. Plaster parcel from his pocket.. Impatiently, who's was busy with a ledger when the stir Thane tore qff the wrappings—"Ah/ pleasure if she knew they" were not previously courted me, . behind him told of the senior part, the Goldschmidt case. . " the rea cones." Rise of More Than $3,000,000 I blame it on the Poison Press, and ner's arrival. Without. lifting his "I am, sorry about this, Planter," "Oh, Hilary—didn't you trust me•?" Revealed By Official say they've misreported.•me. eyes, he was. acutely a.vare of Mr.. be stopped to say. ."After all these : Jacynth. cried. Y I sort deceitful Douglasitea from Thanes _ He smiled at her: "Of tours but OTTAV6 A.—Total ordinary rev- solid Soc.al Credit-ers; passage to the door of his years..:'- e' enue of the Dominion 'for June was I'm launching legislation for exterm• `= office, set within the main room, Opening the case, he stared at the the risks were too great... Had I: box- i S merely divided from them by a glass necklace.... His. face whitened:— rowed them on my responsibility, it $36',6ti8,896 and spec`.al receipts mating editors. partition. Young Brims had once "Dash it,,pnan.. " would have taken me years to find brought .the grand total to $36,- I long to license every press that F said: "the old Iran likes to keep an With a noisy clatter he pushed back 20!000• •" -... .... _ _ _ 977,726 as compared with $33,601,- dares defend democracy; eye on us --else he'd have frosted his chair. `.'These aren't the pearls!" Thane stared at the pearls. 440 for June, 1936, according to lig- and reign supreme like Hitler is a �, ures released - by the Comptroller of Germanized autocracy, Hass.. ;' A small part of his brain.register- the Treasury.' Partly true—for Thane was a clave Blackett craned forward. A -moment ed; "She calls him Hilary." Total re eipta for the first three With every Sabbath I assume a role !river;- he had a habit of .fixing his , later, he exclaimed aloud as a girl "Where is the real necklace? I pre- • months of the, fiscal year was $167, ecclesiastical; we on a slow worker, -making him flung open the door and hurried' to sume you know," he sneered. 219,981 against $134,865,019 for the I vomit forth my spleen, or vent my read looking inside his next pay- embrace Mr. Thane. Very pretty, -"Certainly, air." Planter walked corresponding period in 1936. foolery fantastical; fsvelepe. wearing a smart coat and diminutive into "the outer office where th- clerks Total ordinary expenditure for And when I'm not exhibitiij the_pro-._, Planter heard the almost inyolun- hat, -she er3ed:. pretended to be busy, put his hand June was $26,307,504. In June, 1936 phet's vaunting vanity,. -- lary sigh of relief as the door shut "Hallo, darling!" Turning to the behind the plaque bearing the in- the total was $26,069,611. Total or- ' I demonstrate the workings of poli - safely. Now he quietly watched his clerk: "Good afternoon, Mr. Planter." scription on the clock, -and drew forth dinary expenditure for the first three tical insanity. - - employer discard his thiek coat. Thane spoke sarcastically: "This i8 a small package. months of the fiscal year was .$90,- - Thane was a broad man with s de- aa_unusnal honor. .In say ..case, I'm In a6 moment, -the Goldschmidt 416,266 and the year before $89,- t rise to heights of eloquence In sided bulge under -his waistcoat, aw a- engaged,'► pearls ere in Mr. Thane's hands. 767,482• these divine excursions, Smiling eyes,: and a alit fora mouth. The girl smiled and looked at the "I knew they would be safe enough Other expenditure& for June with I've 'proved the modern Japer to be After 18 years they were still' dumbfounded Blackett; her -geranium- there, air. Place hasn't been touched the corresponding month last year the ancient Medea and Pers'ans, strangers. _ _ _ red -mouth in shaking, contrast to her for years--tell—by thedust." in brackets were: capital expendi- Salvation may be free; but I require Eldred Thane shuffled the meat pile pale face: Tisane's mind whirled; reliever, the tures $227,001 ($137,810); special from my Supporters = of letters. Lifting -his eyes, he met S°'�' darling, then I'll ran along Pearls were safe—yet it was madden- expend'tures $4,1b7,282 ($8,268,- A constantly fusses ing stream of the quiet gaze of_ the chis! clerk.: I only wanted to say I'll be out to ing that Planter was always right. 972) ; Government owned enterprises nothing less than quarters. ddnaer." Suddenly she saw the "Might I inquire where you got this $13,74,255 ($11,505,173). The -fall - 0_' Curse the fellow—why was Ile star- „ �" i off in special Ingf For tl a thoosandth time, he gym' `"So -chat's it=you ve •found necklace from . fie held 'up the ng p tial expenditures were I know the inwardness oi' eerie, the wished he had had the partition made out. original one Planter had given him. due to reductions in greats -in -aid, secret of prosperity; Thane, spoke pompously: "I have. Strange for a clerk -to come by -such , to provinces and relief works. And when I call for Lvvenanta they of frosted glass—yet' he knew .why Of the ordina expenditures sign 'em with celerity; not. Instinctive2 he feared his After all these years, it is a shock.' things honestly, , . •" ry pe diturer the ai y; - y' The girl laughed:. "Don't fuss a-, it yn glared at her father deft- w interest on public debt was higher, For I alone am competent to mould etaf! might sneer behind his back-- Jac th far the bad -to a was only -for a night." To` Blackett's antly: "Hilary is not a- thief l" - than a year ago )unwping from $81- A man. arrested for. begging in the y ppesi respectful while " 488,468 to $9,7§6,467. Domin'on Midlands was found ter. have over two he faced 'em... . amazement, abs gaily tweaked the They happen to be a family heir- - - — angry Thane's nose. loom, Mr. Thane. They go to the eld- payments in connection with t>e hundred shillings and sixpences sewn Eighteen pears ago—hes been glad Thane asked away.from her: est son's bride on her wedding day, movement of coal also showed an, im- into is underclothes He evidently - _of this .partnership. Thanks to the "What. areyoutalking about? These As the eldest son, .I couldn't sell 'em portant increase. from $129,677 to bel'.eve� in every clout having a sil- war. .. as his father would remind $226,577 and outlay on, national de- ver lining. -:—London Sunday Pictor- are not the stvien pearls. .. - • no matter how tempted I felt: It fence rose om $1,303 cal. .-him. He felt suddenly sorry for him- "What?' It. was her turn tc, be seemed abeae was no harm in lending_ � ,053 to $1,- - 1 self. All he'd got in life was this ++ 811,117; • We take bads our opinion of the startled. But, Bilary._. _.' Her th Hm to the bride a little premature- Total ordinary revenue for. June Duchess- of Warfield, -Md., as'- she business and his daughter, Jaeynthoccasionally. baud was on her mouth, 13'• with June 1936 in brackets: Cus- hadn't her fingernails ' tinted at the !' And she lei him down occasionally. "What—what. , " Thane's face Thane was beaten—an+d knew it. p � y $7,982,437 ($7,-' g.—Brandon Sun -. - e toms im ori duty wonderful weddin _ f3he was too much' like Thane senior, violently red, he tugged at his collar. Planter had come out of the encounter 278,-942); excise. duty $4,798,412 always throwing the fact that the He noticed the curious -eyed Blackett. more of a bero than ever. - -war had made them in his face. "Dif. "That'll be all for now," he snapped.. With a shock, he realized thq sign;• - ($4,004,341) ; excise 'taxes $15,04$,- No wonder Alfred E.• Smith .is op- �ereiit'from the ruined Planters:." i+ „ 918 ($12,079,740); income tax $5,- posed to European dictatorships. In I'lI get in'touch witb�you later.. dcance of his-aords. 158,852 ($6,462,693); post office de- Italy, they called him Alfredf she woof dig up her grandfather's The door closed—Thane whirled _ partment $2,40.1,870 • ($2,200,785); Schmidt. Louisville Courier Jour .stories of haw he used to touch his round;— Special sundry departments $1,373;34.b ($1,- �. nal. :cap to old Planter and atcept a tip.., # - - - - Small wonder he got fed -up with having the smug faceof the son sl- - ways before him as he had had for - ..the past 18 years. Planter was _ so superiori it seemed impossible to take him down the necessary peg or two. If.. only he'd slip up . some- OLDSMOBILE V - BVIDES where. Later, Thane remembered the Gold- , Schmidt necklace. Worth every Penny' of its price: 20,000 quid -it was in the He felt a desire to see it. .. -Quickly, he. dialled -the combinations FOR -YOUR COMFORT of the safe. Swinging back the door, EVE he ran his finger along the row of + - cases.. The - Goldschmidt . one had,a a _ crest. .' _ :1KNEE-ACTION RIDE BIGGER It wasn't there. Frowning, he -picked up each case in turn. Dash it Ensures gliding -smoothness ROOMIER INTERIORS —it must be here. He'd handled it son all roads —and gives You'll be quick to a reci only yesterday. -Ot,ty two people its , rear -seat passengers the same Ste the extraead room sad' the office knew of it. Only two had ..comfortable ride as for. those b. tr leg room rathe extr& wide access.... - Himself • and Planter. = in the front seat.., Oldsmo- " and deeply upholstered seats Planter., _ ; : !bile's -proved Knee - Action —of the new Oldsmobile " Thane caught his . breath. Of - `enables the `front wheels to Front seats are quickly ad course Planter. It had, taken 18 :':' move up and down, indepen- 'e justable for driying comfort years,. but at last. dently of each other, and t, - Thane made himself greet Planter - "step -over" bumps and holes. �# FISHER —'calmly, and left for his lunch -at the usual. time. The private inquiry . + • _ NO -DRAFT VENTILATION— agent to whom'he went jumped at his DUAL RIDE STABILIZERS casual! w, z:::'. Circulates plenty of clean, y -implied ..suspicions. That fresh air—without annoy - evening they ransacked theoffice ''Keep ' Oldsmobile on an { ing or harmful drafts. Also without success. \ext day a crump! -"even keel" -minimize roll->" ed banknote • in the land'.ady's handing or lurching when round- enabled you to scoop in air gave access' to Planter's bed-sittinging curves —reduce - body ` for cool driving on hot days roan. � ; _ sidesway on the straightaway. "Strange. digs for . a clerk, " , Ride Stabilizers are located YOU RIDE Blackett. sneered at the severelyur- both front ��BET EELS' nished room with its plain white Walls. ' ' - - and rear in the �+ WEEN THE WN I 193? Oldsmobile. `' ] I and two vivid -colored paintings. He a - 2gQ - tifc 1 eight ld� -- due to _scien s rchgd every corner in vain. At - last, the writing -desk .gave them a_. :. .• .. "` tribu ' do 9 a wheelbase both front and --.clue: .a.. typewritten - HYDRAULIC ' f? Postcard: "One , `� -, - ,rear seats are advanced for. o'clock outside Scott's. .. ." _ SHOCK ABS 0 R ERS i ward—providing new riding Blackett snapped: "Leave it tor me: • ' - �� �� Comfort for all passengers. _I'll follow him and report later, --New double -action type, Thane lunched hastily and returned contributes to Oldsmobile's P R 1 C E D FROM to his office. Art -impatient eye on smooth, gliding ride. These thq clgckr hg .�aitgd. _ ;Fluter- arrived . Hydraulic Shock Absorbers �P an� sad down wlti a smile. - check and smooth the action - ; - 10 65 R1ackett • followed.- quickly. ••.In of the front sad rear springs. na rat — emo ile Six an r+ (6-cpliuder Sport Coupe will Opera Seats). lal A ! ed Old bi S' Sed with Truk D -� "o : slivered at factory. Oshawa. Goat taxes, ?lianas room, lie said breathlessly: - They are an important eom- license and - "I think we've t him!" to change without notice). e). MowthlY peayyswmmtj g4 _ fort feature, especially OnOLDS MO 8 I -LE _ to >orit your yarse o" the General Motors =The senior partner was smiling as '-long trips, lnstalrnexrPbn, he rang. - - _. 11 -Cylinder Models also Available. j "Kindly let- me . see _the package yon. _ 0_2178 received during the lunch hour Planter=-fromthat young woman. DONALD MOTOR SALES 'WHITBY - --CHAS:' COOPER CLAREMONT . . Planter's face changed color; his . Assoc. Dealer—M. Sleep—Pickering Assoc. Dealer—J. McGlashen—D.unbarton eyes darted from Blackett to the $ ` f y . - fit• _ •, - �_ , be he'd send a mese!age back on the mule in some way - Get what I' Canadaps Fmean?" -'T H E W O R L D' S s "Yeah, I get you 1 Don't you wore - . rq. I'll Seep my eyes open for you, M O S T FA M O U S�`` , -- mules and all." " "I'm not kidding," Terry protest- F LAV O R "Neither am I. Let's drink to your safety." Craven_. lifted .his ' 6�M LAD glass. The.. Detroit eirening papers were soil full of the horrible death of Raw- lins and the conjecture ran high as s TIC IV— the possible motives for the crime. t +. One writer said that Detro't had no- •. - — • 4 thing tofearbeisuse their position in fourth place did not put them in d' t da if th mut any rmme ra a nger e ders were committed for the purpose of having'the Blues win the pennant. Other writers were not so' optimistic. The next morning the papers were full 'of the latest news.. Penny, De- troit's star pitcher, had quit cold. He absolutely and flatly refused toplay any more ball. Penny took and awful panning 'from the papers. They called him yellow and a quitter. ,Synopsis of Preceding Instalments tional happenings and masked gun- They heaped invectives on him and he refused to budge. They promised When the United League season men truss him up, question him and him protection, 'a special bodyguard, opens the gamblers are offering 200 warn him he knows too much. Raw- but he would not listen. He adin t - to k that Pop Clark's New York Has, the ,Chicago manager, ill when ted he was afraid and there was no Blue will not win the pennant. Terry the Blue arrive for a series, is hang- argument. Burke is the only sports writer to ed in a hotel room adjoining his, When Terry went down to break - give them a chance. He bets $10 at after a maid is gagged and bound, fast that morning, he met Frances Tony Murallo's retsaurant in the and her pass -key taken. Again there Clark as he going into the din - Broadway district. In the 'Blues' � is no clue to the murderer. .was ing-room. - fust game Wldtper, the Philadelphia of. the Detroit men -had sign �fled their' "Isn't it horrible, Terry?" ' she Pitcher. Is killed with a ballet through "Well, suppose you went to an sighed.. "I'm glsd Larry isn't here. the heart after smashing out a home Army game and the mule, wasn't It's getting Dad. It is killing him. rum- Both Burke and Larry Doyle, there, it. would be' unusual, wouldn't . He knows I see Larry whenever I the Biros' rookie shortstop, 'for whom it?" can and he knows we correspond and Cartes pretty daughter Frances bad "Sure." -- sometimes I- feel' guilty about it be - shown her preference over Whitper, "Well, suppose during the las: half, cause he is so upset about this. lie are suspected at first by Detective of the game the missing mule trotted said last night he would like to see Kelly. It is Burke who discovers it out on to the field, that would be the games cancelled for the rest of was Sid Stream, notorious Beaman, unusual too." ' the season. That will • give you an who wrecked a taxi with a bullet "There'd be a rousing cheer." idea of his feelings." through a tire and injured four Boa "Couldn't You get the Army's'goat • Frances went out and Terry join - •ton, players as the Blues are to open by taking their mule away from ed the others at breakfast. A ser;es. Then Dirkin, Chicago star, them? You know how. superstitious "Trying . to cut Doyle out?'" Mul- drope dead on the diamond from poi- all athletes are.", lins inquired. ' mon on a phonograph needle fixed in "Sure, it would get their goat." Before Terry could ' reply, Doc the handle of his bat. Pietro, Chi- "Well, suppose an Army star had Biers said, "Reynolds is trying to do sago's bat boy, disappears. Clark been kidnapped and the mule had that. Having any luck, Reynolds?" —_sends Doyle to Newark but he u soon . vanished too, and •'yet the mule .came Reynolds flushed and muttered, "I sold to Boston. When the Blues go. back." don't have any chance when Terry is to Si. Louis, Scotter, the Rube: "You're going cuckoo "' Craven around." star pitcher, 6 found dead from a exclaimed, and looked anxiously .at "Well," Hover wheezed, "with Pen. gas given off by ■ mysterious powde erry. ny out, there won't be much of a In the box with a jigsaw puzzle sent " "I know , it sounds funny and game to -day." I* him .anonymously. Eack time queer,_ but if a man had been kept "The Detruit team may fool you, .'9nrke has a beat on these sense- . in the same.place with the mule. may- Craven suggested. . -well and pulp) "That guy quitting has made them :.playing. I couldn't' stand it if any-' -2 tablespoons quick -cooking taploca all as yellow as saffron," Mullins .;SHORTS TO WEAR WITH SHIRTS AND SWEATERS said- "They won't be -able to play R Ruth S F P ball. They will be scared. to. death, anyhow." 'A teaspoon mustard "That's nothing," another said. Sift flour once, measure, add bake : The late morning papers had more A, -=' Home' Hints''r By LAURA KNIGHT f Snacks and Sandwiches crosswise, and then slice the long way, Co say a out epny and what they called his shameless desertion. Pop C find ways and means to serve the Quick -cooking. tapioca supplies a yeB t family nourishing food without too long -felt need of the sandwich maker Clark and the Detroit manager were much trouble or fuss. The Summer by making It possible to have soft H fillings that'. do -not soak into the in conference all morning. Two more' bread even after several hours' stand. flavour and nourishment are still in = ' G demand ,.s far as meals go. of. the Detroit men -had sign �fled their' - - There a re plenty of times, too, '' fillings are just as fresh and moist . d of at the end of a few hours as when unwillingness to play against the' sandwich to take to the picnic or �►► - wfches n,)t only keep well but are • Blues.. The manager was frantic. It really satisfying. f ' are a few _ideas on what can be doneB$ncedHam : in the line of giving spice to your. was finally at Pop's, suggestion that next picnic supper -and evening 8 tablespoons quick-cooking_tapioca' - - _ - _ _ - -+- ~ - - - snack:. Ys teaspoon salt a wire was sent to the Czar of .Base - If you've - been making Jam' today on pepper F pound p oKnd boiled ham, ground ball basad in New York. cup sweet pickle, chopped: family are so enthusiastic that they . 1 tablespoon scrapped onion ,► '. want to try the jam before next Win -1 The curious mobs in the hotel had ter, you can give it to them in more . 1 tablespoon mayonnaise. ways than spreading it on bread or become a problem and , the ponce - toast. A hot waffle shortcake is the Y perfect thing to serve when there are were called in to help: ° , c cook flue min• rapidly boiling. water, sert any time of the year but will The Detroit players .roamed about prove especially welcome now. - other Ingredients. Coal—mixture will the hotel restlessly, looking very • waffles thicken as It, cools. Makes 2 cups of- - glum... One of the men pulled' a tele- filling. 2 tablespoons baking powder gram from his pocket and showed it % teaspoon salt 3 egg yolks beaten Z cups strained canned tomatoes 'Juice to the others. It read: "Don't go on -well and pulp) -- :.playing. I couldn't' stand it if any-' -2 tablespoons quick -cooking taploca 4 tablespoons melted flutter „•, thing were to 'happen to you. / 'A teaspoon mustard "That's nothing," another said. Sift flour once, measure, add bake : "I've had one myself. It's- hysteria, 11A ' cups ('A lb.) dried beef, .flnely Combine egg' yolks; milk and 'butter. that's all it is. Nothing will happen Add to flour, beating until smooth- -A teabpoon Worcestershire sauce. to you fellows. Can't you see�what _Fold in. egg whites: Bake in a hot. Bring tomatoes to boil, using top of you are doing to the team? double boiler; add, dry ingredients _ - (To be Continued) - a" - New Theory About halt and • dust each portion. •With , water, .00k 6 minutes, 'stirring oceas- Air Disasters i tonally. Add cheese gradually and make four 4 -section waffles. stir until melted. Add beef and sauce. French toast with jam is a very Cool - mixture thickens as it cools_. A new and mighty intereating 13-5 7theory as to the cause.of many air You make yourown P. The.shorts shown are made in four plane accidents was advanced before the Arperican Medical Association at pieces; with seams' at the .idea. large piece of wrapping paper will needed. Draw a rectangle nches wider than half the hip meas -van Fruit -Nut Frilling Atlantic City the other day by Dr. Al - urement and 2 inches deeper than the length the finished shorts are 1- cup, dried figs L. Barach, of New York. He af• to be in the front. 1% cups water firms that a "what the hell?" attitude The next step is to mark the points that will .give the pattern 3 tablespoons quick -cooking -tapioca Which air - wplane pilots find it impos• tvrrect proporCons. Point A is I% inches down from the upper left 1-8 teaspoon salt sible to overcome at high altitudes is corner of the rectangle. B is 1% inches straight in from A-• C. is ],4 teaspoon cinnamon caused by a deficiency of oxygen. --2 inches--in.from- the -upper -right .corner. _-D_is-.1..inch- -in from Ci -• -• --either in- flying- for- w -brief -period -at -a Take the child's crotch measurement next by suspending a tape cup nit meats, chopped l great height or for a considerable measure loosely between the legs from the center front to the center back waistline. Now draw a dotted guide line 8 incdres longer than 1 tablespoon. lemon juice. '! time at a medium altitude., This at fects half th's'measurement, slanting it from point D to the right side of.the Cook figs in water.6 minutes,.or un• both heart and brain, and ren - ders the pilot unable to read his in - rectangle. At the lower end of this line mark point E. Draw another dotted guide line straight across the rectangle from E and mark point til softened. Drain; place I cup of strumeats to keep his sense of bal• F at the left end of it. liquid in top of double boiler, bring to' once, or to coordinate his muscles in Draw acurved line from B o C, as you see it here. G is oAe- boil. Place over rapidly boiling the perfect timing so essential in fly - quarter the waist measure from B on this line. H is 2 inches more water, cook 6 minutes, stirring oces, m8, and makes him feel that nothing. than a quarter the waist measure from' C. I is a quarter of the hip ionally. Grind figs; add with re. .. is very important measurement from the lower left corner of the rectangle. J is 1 maining ingredients to tapioca. CooIi To counteract this danker, Dr..Bar- inch more than half the hip .measurement from the lower right corner —mixture thickens as it cools. Makes ach would have all airline companies .of the rectangle, Outline the front as shown here by the heavy outline at the •left 234 cups filling. prov4de their ' pilots with a reserve oxygen supply'.both for the sake Of of the diagram—the back as at the right. IMPORTANT: add three- : eighths inch to OJI seem edges, and 1% inch hem allowance top and selves of it. ' The increasingly large the flying public and the health of 'aviator bottom when cutting the pattern pieces out. In making,. fit the back , the themselves, if Dr. Bar• in with darts or pleats at the wa:atline.ach a theory is correct — and it NOTE:—Mrs. Spears' new book, "Sewing For the Interior Decgr. ought to be susceptible of easy proof ator; ' contains 47 other fascinating things to niako for the hesne with would tend to a belief that some-' and ought to be tested at once—then step-by-step instructions. New ready for mailing upon receipt of 14c the remedy' is in the hands of the (lOc plus 4c postage). Address: Mrs. Ruth Wyeth Spears, 73 West companies and there should be no de - Adelaide Street, Toronto - lay on their part 1n availing them- -=' Home' Hints''r By LAURA KNIGHT Snacks and Sandwiches crosswise, and then slice the long way, Right now, most of us are trying to of the loaf. . find ways and means to serve the Quick -cooking. tapioca supplies a family nourishing food without too long -felt need of the sandwich maker much trouble or fuss. The Summer by making It possible to have soft Is not the time to spend' long. hours fillings that'. do -not soak into the -cooking heavy meals and yet variety, bread even after several hours' stand. flavour and nourishment are still in ing. Wrapped in waxed paper, sand - demand ,.s far as meals go. wiches made with these new -type soft' ` There a re plenty of times, too, '' fillings are just as fresh and moist . d of at the end of a few hours as when sandwich to take to the picnic or they -were first made. These sand - some delightful snack to serve on the wfches n,)t only keep well but are • porch of a hot summer evening. Here really satisfying. f ' are a few _ideas on what can be doneB$ncedHam Sandwich Filling I in the line of giving spice to your. . 1 cup boiling water next picnic supper -and evening 8 tablespoons quick-cooking_tapioca' snack:. Ys teaspoon salt If you've - been making Jam' today on pepper and have some left over which wasn't pound p oKnd boiled ham, ground enougL to flill a' bottle, or ff you're cup sweet pickle, chopped: family are so enthusiastic that they . 1 tablespoon scrapped onion ,► '. want to try the jam before next Win -1 . tablespoon vinegar i ter, you can give it to them in more . 1 tablespoon mayonnaise. ways than spreading it on bread or place water in top of double. boiler; _ - toast. A hot waffle shortcake is the add dry ingredients, bring to a brisk perfect thing to serve when there are boil, stirring ce'Place over, Just a few present. It's a grand des- , c cook flue min• rapidly boiling. water, sert any time of the year but will utstirring occasionally.,. Add the. prove especially welcome now. - other Ingredients. Coal—mixture will _ waffles thicken as It, cools. Makes 2 cups of- - 2 cups sifted cake flour filling. 2 tablespoons baking powder Nippy Cheese Sandwicif Filling % teaspoon salt 3 egg yolks beaten Z cups strained canned tomatoes 'Juice r -well and pulp) 1 cup milk -2 tablespoons quick -cooking taploca 4 tablespoons melted flutter „•, 1-8 teaspoon pepper 3 egg whites, stiffly beaten. 'A teaspoon mustard Sift flour once, measure, add bake 2% cups (341b•) grated .cheese t Ing powder and salt and • sift again. 11A ' cups ('A lb.) dried beef, .flnely Combine egg' yolks; milk and 'butter. ..$$round Add to flour, beating until smooth- -A teabpoon Worcestershire sauce. _Fold in. egg whites: Bake in a hot. Bring tomatoes to boil, using top of waffle iron. "When done, brush with double boiler; add, dry ingredients 3 melted butter and bpread Jam . over • and bring to a brisk boil, 1ktirring con - half of waffle and told over. Cut in stantly. Plaee over rapMly boiling halt and • dust each portion. •With , water, .00k 6 minutes, 'stirring oceas- powdered sugar, and serve hot. Will tonally. Add cheese gradually and make four 4 -section waffles. stir until melted. Add beef and sauce. French toast with jam is a very Cool - mixture thickens as it cools_. nice change ;from the usual French Makes 23¢ cups flilling. toast with syrup. or sugar and'etnna- mon. It is a particularly {welcome Fruit -Nut Frilling change at breakfast and to also a 1- cup, dried figs good -lunch ox' supper dish. it's really 1% cups water just bread, milk eggs and jam and so 3 tablespoons quick -cooking -tapioca is fine for the children who love it. 1-8 teaspoon salt And now for something new in ],4 teaspoon cinnamon - sandwiches. A book could be written liy cup dates, ground about sandwiches alone—a different cup nit meats, chopped l kind could be served every day fora 1 tablespoon. lemon juice. '! decade. They lend themselves -to so Cook figs in water.6 minutes,.or un• many, variations! til softened. Drain; place I cup of Bread should be cut thin for sand- liquid in top of double boiler, bring to' wiehes, edges should be neat, and the boil. Place over rapidly boiling filling and butter spread evenly to water, cook 6 minutes, stirring oces, edge of the bread. Day-old bread of ionally. Grind figs; add with re. .. close, firm texture is the beat to use. maining ingredients to tapioca. CooIi .Before slicing the .loaf, remove the —mixture thickens as it cools. Makes crusts; if long, cut the loaf in two, 234 cups filling. selves of it. ' The increasingly large . Brief Comment , number of airplane catantrophies dur• 7 . Ing the past six months certainly would tend to a belief that some-' Why you should eat bread—be- thing is radically wrong somewhere. cause no method of drinking the The result of Dr. Barach's report will stuff has yet been discovered.—Lon- be awaited with keen Interest by all don Sunday Pictorial:. who have the safety of the flying pub lie at heart. Children in street cars en route ':to picnics are almost as no`.sY as some weddings bound for railway Home, Not Structures, stations. — Toronto Tdlegram. Held Need of The People Envy, if surrounded on all sides by the brightness of another's pros-. LONDON.—The flue basic prin- perity, like "'the ---scorpion confined - •. ., ciples' of life that lead to health and within a circle of fire, will sting lt- happiriess have been laid • down , by "elf to death.—Colton. ; Lord Horder, the King's doctor. They are:. Bees' have two. stomachs, one for, changing nectar intQ honey, the other 1. Enough of the right, kind of for ordinary digestion. food. 2. Suitable shelter at the right price. SLACKHEADS 3. Access to the fresh air. Blackheads "imply dissolve and dis• 4. A reasonable amount of leisure appear by this one simple, safe and sure and also of quiet. method Get two ounces of pemine .5. A job of work: " powder from any drug store: sprinkle i< oft a bot; stet doth rub 'the face "Proper housing p ng of the people is ft—every blackhead will be goes. one of the most important things in nave a Hollywood cmpkmon, preventive medicine," Lord Holder ri told a meeting of housing experts. -Issue No. 31—'37 'Houses that are real homes are needed C<--3 f1gO iGKQZtivKQ'113r' flavour that Robert Louis Steven- urea than those we find at home. son knetvP so well how to achieve. Canadian National Exhibition Idaple Leaf xut% i di igi . Avgust 27th — September. 11th Ttv " These are only a sample of the Lib - Special x.;1.75 per year; $1.50 'paid is advarAe rest' books that will carry you out ' Special Train and Bus Fares Iasuraace Co 8ubscriptioaa to the United Staten to new lands and stranger advent- ATTENTION � Ona WA1•IANESA PN& 00. r `---- - Cheap Rates for Fane and Gan" . - and Gt. ertwio ;�.� m advance. - - _,-- ._ IT -R FAR��RS P Asphalt Roofing Brock Road Gravel anildinse - lOHN MURKAR. Proprietor. .�. Pit ASSOCIATION WL "e m Iuaaranee as >�. Get our prleeli on. 'As Wbdmdit >� � ,.Henderson—James. halt ROOfiI. We hon 1Snfomobile Iwea�e. r i t — p g- Crushed Pit Run PICNIC An KhWls St- "Pauls on -the -Hill, — Anglican dle all styles manufac Gravel , Write er Pham 1 Church, Dumbarton, was the scene tared by the Toronto F. L Green s Parr ;BOWMax Row$ .'-of a very pretty ' wedding when Sand end Graded - -Vera Winnifred, second eldest. dau- Asphalt RoofingCo WHITBY ONT .2ghtef of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mount Dennis. Ont. - - reenwood -James, of Dunbarton, was united in marriage to George Alexander lien- pICKERING Dellvered or Loaded in Pit THURSDAY, AIIC+, 5TH Law .Motor Sales V_ aderson, of Toronto, adopted son of PHONE: Plant, Pick 1026 7111 ' Young People in South On. Chrysler. Plymouth ]2r. and Mrs. George McIlroy, of, LUMBER YARD Toronto office Howard 6471 y 3Pickering, the Rev. E. G. Robin son, officiating. Mass violet Swan, pxoxn 340(1 JOHN BOURNE SON toric (both Gir(s .and Boys), _ Dealer sof Toronto, organist of the church, are invited. 4presided at the, organ. The lovely — GWD�USED CARS — - bbride entered the church on the - — Sports- Program in Afternoon GOODYEAR TIRES ^. - . Bim of her father,who gave her in LEGION—ROTARY wILLARD BATTERIES marriage, to the strains of the wed- PICNIO 8UPP1iR GENERAL BLACKSMITHIM `. - -ding march from Lohengrin. Her % _ _ BRINQ FULL BA9KR1'9 SKILLED MOTOR REPAIRS lovely gown was of white . crepe •:miriade on, long lines to floor length FMR Give w a trial on a New S a Used Gt .A yoke of white chantilly lace fin- ATTZNTION, FAILMERs, 24 Hours Towing Service :--shed the neckline in a Queen Anne _ - Gordon J. Law s .tyle collar, and extended over the and - GENERAL REPAIR WORK shoulder to form a leg -o' -mutton We are prepared to repair cars. Phone 2908 ` asleeve. A small pearl clip finished :tit at the throat. Her veil of emb- trucks, tractors and all farm PIOKERINp, ONTARIO -Toidered bridal tulle, fitted the �T DANCE machinery, wheels rebuilt and 'head closely in a cap effect, a tire -setting, wood -work and -wreath of orange blossoms held it wood tarniuR of all kinds >Zn place. She carred a shower boa _ -TOWN PARK 'WHITBY _.duet of sweetheart roses and baby's Plaee your aider now for 'breath. Miss s love yattwoop as Wednesday Evening, August 4th wood working and turning,- ' 'kri•idesnuiid, a-sa loyal • tri a wrier •Phooe or Call lblue sheer crepe, made on .fitted ' Sines, with -a stiffened collar and "' Big Parade headed- by- 5 Banda at 7 p. 111... - �. �• - R019E! $�{ that -three-quarter length sleeves. She _ sroek Road Store and Blacksmith Shop, and artistry pill wore a small turban of same shade Prizes for Decorated Vehicles. and Best Costumes (Successor to W. H. Jackson) and materia], which had as off=the-barninatba SerriN ''.face brim and open' crown, also the - .'�' _ FORD,'COACHO�NER 'bride's ,gift of a avhite gold pend-ROCKC. jS Ht ' ant set with margvisite. She carr- iR BPsotshrt Sed a shower bouquet of Talisman _ OF LUCKY DRAW j�Dle-roses • and baby's breath. Little THEATi�E -Miss Helen. James, small si:�ter of the bride was flesh pink orkandyo frock wer over pink 3 ?Additional Prizes of 55.00 each��iTB''Si'" r milk, made with a floor -length full •• 0 - — Harr y Hull skirt gathered into a yoke by many Darce, Grimes of Ski i, Fun for All, = 1► _ ,Ill Bhowe Dwylight Saving Time Bililder and C.ontraetot grows of. 'shirring; and small puff In event of xain, will be held on Aug.th _ ill 9e�t9 Saturday and Hoticlay -Brlcawork and Stone- rk :sleeves. trimmed with narrow hand $ and' bows of baby 'blue rikkon. She I±;veniuge, 'L� cents a - Specialty vre-a quaint oke bonnet of pink _ t P bo P ..IM'rida and Sa nr y t da flowers across - the headline;. - and - _ J y -. A re�itect'e 89rviae - pink lace mitts to above the elbow, " sly ti0 and 3L also a small gold locket. Mr. Jas. _ -..- _ Re irs go Two Showy at 7 30 and .9 30 ' :Henderson was his brother's best jji `JH urday �itineA we 130 THE CROWN INNS 'rnan and Mr. Win. Henderson act- - Rosebwnk Rd. and Kingston Rd, --led as usher, and all wore convent- �, Sat. Evening. Shaw starts at 6-30 .4 .29 tonal -shite flannels and dark costs. _ Phone Piek r: ai ­ 'The groom's gift `to the organist . ----- • -.�- B��B >avRr s }. p -� -MARTHA tiAYE Noone to You a rhinestone set bracelet. A - Teception was held immediately af- IN ' Ler the ceremony at the home of _ _ she bride's parents, when about Ship a>6r Crean- to LTa Mountain Muate" fifty guests from Toronto, Picker- p y We do Building nf all kinds Ing, Dunbarton, Chenywood and We are paying these priced from July 19 to, 31 With CARPENTER[NG, MosE6ank were entertained. Mrs. 11cl1roy and Mrs. James received. )LSA N HOWARD ' CEMENTING, S "Tater the bridal couple left for a S�� J TRRRY WALKI�R C1EiiMBNTI O .Xmotor trip to the rutted StatesN - -.- •. ;- - lIBI Q. isnd points south, the bride travelI- and _ trig in a canary yellow, ensemble "_ -- lb'2s ��j a -- Noaday, Tuesday and Wedn'gday; ROOi�'INf3 "writh white felt -hat and'accessories. - tiDn the-; return. they will. reside in - BUTT$RRAT - ' x --- Bog ,Toronto. - at d i E and 4 ._ .- � - a an 9 30 a�ti mpice Bathroom TWO Shows B $ WMatJOr — +r _ Holiday Matinee. Monday at G.00irupmeot, Duro` Water ..,,Notes and Comments First . 1 Stable Beatty • n i n rl You're the Equipment Premier Hepburn has expressed :: er Building-Kateria! -:.the opinion _. !! t bf. � 7 � . _ an c th p ion that most of the motor -Army NOTA/ - Estimates Free .accidents are. due to slow driving, A sloow-driver may hold up - a long BUTTERFAT _ or saran ;V i t h Work (} teed. ,. string • of .cars and the inipatie,nce WALLACE FORD of some of those held up leads diem 1�'OR CREAT!! PICKED UP BY OUR TRUCK JOHN MILLS �• J. PROTj&@ ~ to cut out and -in, and if they'meet ANNA LEE ' -.-another oar, and being unable' to :Phone . - A 'We pay extra for dellVery.' BRACE BRADLEY P[CLi;F,RiN(, OYrAR :cut into the line of cars,..a -Collis- on .6 the result. There may be Write or Phone ua••:c.bQrges collect _ NO some truth in what Premier, Hep- -- ----- -- burn says, but believe a mod- C171ZEN IDA -IR Y � , erste speed of about 35 miles per a hour is much safer than 45 or 50 PHONE burn 52 e - WHITBY, ITBY, ONTmilesPer hoarwhiChPrenvierHeP- , Rep - advocates, We doubt if his SPECIAL . !proposal will be favored by a maj- -ority of the people. Wien the new ighwa� it completed with room foi dour cars there should be very few waccidexts from cutting in, and there should belittle cause for limiting .2be speed.' i Library Notes •i . 'If you like toto o adven ,. ri 8 n and - �i g rrdourself tied ed to the day's Rork amd the ham town boolds make a •every good suibstitute and your lib- trary has a good selection to choose >l'rom. ',Mutiny on . the Bounty" and "Men Against thg Sea" were , both + L• n m nT the most popular books of f ' -recent years and both appeared in -the movies in a combined screen. "''astory under the title of the first book. 'Blue Water" is an advent - 'are • tale -of Canadian seas. "Cap - Rain Cdurageoua" has appealed to -.:many ,bloys and quit+ %,Jew fathers as well since Kipling wry it a- Mong his earlier book k Aylmer Peas, "size 4, '. tins for 23c. SPECIAL' Aylmer -W. bite Corn, ,:7... 10 SPECIAL, - Jam, - Apples' & Rasp. 32.. oz, 25c, SPECIAL Syrup, Bee Hive or Gro1wif 5 lbs.' 42 SPECIAL Marmalade, "M ether's,'.' 1gC jar, 29 Pork & Bsane, "�ibby's," zit o 2 for 25c SPECIAL Sliced Pineapple, , 2 for :' 25c. ' -: Fresh Fruit ' and ' Vegetables' Ae007" a )wuRIson► s, and HONE A0o Arrow" has "t tine adven to .+G': '. 1-•� Q. 4^.,0'". • .^. kn-,(.. ..-... F• .,:. •..1 4 . ..�.. ..-' • .'+•' '-' .,,,-. .... ._h'd� • ;"''�" the Baptist Church here, spent the . _ �,r Y of ' 'week end with friends here. • -Rev.' J.- E. and Airs. Glover, VIMrenOalt ''Miss June Forsyth is visiting friends at Jackson's Point this week Miss Margaret Overland is spend _itng a week with her cousin, Misa _7i.is Lloyd, of Midland. Miss ' Anna Forsyth, is visiting Mr. 'and bars. Sever, in Toronto for �;R few days. Services is the local, churches on Sunday next as usual, Mr. Augus- ,tine, in charge. A number from' here attended the funeral of the: late Mrs. Drewery, •of Stouffville, on Sunday last. Miss Shepherd, formerly teacher At Gednr Greek school was a Sun ,,Wood for Sale Body wood, 10.00 _Linlb Wood, $7,,50 Get our Prices on Wheat .We Buy and Sell Feeds of all kinds, Coal, cement and binder -twine for sale. Farr's Elevator Claremont , PHONE 38W Resi.9'20 At Claremont After Aug. 1. 1937 ERNEST C. FETTER - Lawyer 20 Years Experience 48-51 Monster Amateur Contest Memorial Park, 'Pickering Wednesday, August 11th 8' 15 •p, m. A wide variety of entertainment 20 individual acts. ' Softball in the early evening Madeline, Beauty HAIR GUTTING, SHAMPOWNG, FINGERING, M•A aCE LUNG Specialise -Hot, Oil Treatment and Permanent Wave Reasonable Prigs R a d i . _Expert service .and re- _ pairs to all snakes. Rens. oilable charges. Work guaranteed. ,ARTHUR'FIELD Graduate Radio and Television Inedtaile; .Member Official Radio Service Mse'Y Association. „ HORSE REGIBTER Phone ING -- CLAREMON T 6 PI CS E RING : P a r z e 's:)1, .Eyes : CILMEIN (25419) 22346, Importea LAND SURVIYOK Clydesdale Stallion' . the property Farm Machinery _ And of Oscar Wilson,, Brougham,= wil% "�� F. L DON ,AN B. A., B. 3c., 06 { stand for service at his own stab- Coclishutt, Front A Wood No. 6 L. S. On file are the records of Mar•- Vision Is, during the season. Enrolment Corn Cultivators; No. 10 A. Oil veyors Gibson and Tarn Id, 11w No. 2248. Bath ' Moweri; No, 4 All Steel Man. �g Eak, Oshawa, Ph," igm- �y DOLL (2336) 12921. Imp. French ure Spreaders and No. 6 Grain Bin- Percheron Stallion. An outstand, ders combine tlhe latest improve- jjam�+• ••• y ing Percheron horse of high gaul- menta. L•, V. N� /LL - H. Tiscls Opt. Eyesight Speeialiat i ca a first-class premium Cockshutt Plows all styles to suit Disney Building, (Opp. P. 0.) tY, carrying p y FUNERAL DIRBO'POR AND' certificate, the property of E. A. Your Firm- Olivet Tractors all _- Oshawa, Out. Phone 1516 Somerville. Will stand for the sizes for every purpose. Used mac- BMBAL![I4S season of 1937, at his own stable hines-3 Grain Grinders, -5 60 -cycle 9ucceeeoe to W. J. Mather, Y Hyperopia lot :4, 10th line, Markham Twp. Electric motors,sl-4 bo 5 h. p. Tar- 9touflville (farsightedness)' Terms: To insure a foal, $10. nip Drill ate. Night and Day Service -- payable March 1st, 1938. All ace " Massy of the Sufferers from what idents a' +r. ner'a risk, E. A W. F. DISNEY, Greenwood Buslnees Phone Reside Phone" Y are commonly termed nerve disor Sr,mq,-villa 8. R: t., Stnuffville Peorrit PICK 2814 41 t 9601 9;120 dens have the real source of their COMMODORE AGAIN (26812) - trouble in eyestrain. And when we Choicely bred Clydesdale Stallion, pro - RADIO SERVICE �e.ss��rrs onsider that if iwe can lift a.weight perry of R. Dafoe, Green River, will f strain. from any patient through tt;ake the season of 1937 as follows_ he, relief of eye or muscle stiain Tuesday, May 23th. wi;l leave his own Fully Equipped for Guaranteed Woes ?Ill sizes of Berry Boxes, `Crates, • stable for 6 t and FI t Baskets we are doing a lot in assistIn the q ., q , , Busw g g to John Barnes, Cherrywood, for night.. _ at M p building of the person physic- Wednesdak, .proceeds to McGriskin Reasonable Charge'' Hampers, sold at Hagerman's Bas. lly and, perhaps also assisting Bros., Aftona Road, for noon: thence ;,Tu� and Batteries on Hani ket factory, one mile north of the hem mentally through this relief, -to his own stable for night. Thursday. as it is a common fact .that many proceeds to Fred Wright's. lot 2 , con. 1ems toner 1� Green ,River Sehool, off No. 7 - isturbancea 6. Pickering, for noon: thence'to Eli PAUL WIL80 SAL.MN Highway. have their origin : in $ y• Lehmans. lot 34, con. 8. Pickering, for ft� �m 618 he irregularities, of an -organ very night. Friday, proc eds to his own Get our prices before buying else, ar removed from the one which -stable where he will remain until the where. We deliver. resents to us- the symptom ; Some following Tnesday morning. f the cases that may be benefitted E. R. Woodward Phone Marls 1W4 42-2 a this way are: Chorea, St. Vitus Dance, Amnesia, Migraine.,'Slalnut- STANLEY THEATRE Sardines, 3 tin. for "' : 13e tins in Children, Nystagmus, Nic Pineapple, Sinxapore. 3 tins 23c _ _ USE . - tation and Albinism. and* -Hay STOUFFVILLE Grape Nqt Fla:k•e:+, 2 for 21c British -- Ferer..I do not wish to say that all P and G Soap, 5 bars for 19c rl! 1S American he ii' ove cases hsve their- origin -Phone 100 i8 ^ ' - Pineapple Sand. Bis., 2 lbs for 35e n eyestrain, but the relief of _any Cloverleaf pink salmon 2 for 23c - Gasoline risting eye strain will without show ag i -2's 2 for 17c oubt be of great assistance in all tAt Nights-d.t5, Staadatd.Time Harry Hor'ne's fruit punch 25c Special Prices to Farnier8 and f these cases when it is the caul- Sat. & Holidays-2.Shows. 7 and 9 p.m. Free -running salt, z.lbn. for 2� T hreshers tive 'factor of some of them„y gs, to be continmed THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY G1a4 Tops, doz. 25c tank Wagon Delivery .�_ F1RE51ONE TIRES �- -- rosy 29, 30 and 81 -- - ' _ Our meat sales are increasing week- Reliners Repair Material ..'.Road to Cslol'y" lye. Come and sere what we have. �^+ Electric Refrigeration A LF'S PLACE 'HOTTER 'Starring BROUGHAM. 0141.- FREU MARCH -:phone Pick. ail CLAREHOaT, ONT. WARNER BAXTER 'LIONEL BARRYMORE - MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDN.:SDAY !• !l/ lea �,l Augut t 2, 3 and 4 t 1 lIACI` MONDAY, (Civic Holiday)'7 and 9 pear. -�`Le Kitlq'a.ttig�L13X1� ' 4i IWSAFE * DIRECT • ECONOMICAL l Lloyds of CHANGE OF TIME TABLE t - �+ Effective Sunday, April 25th London" LEAVE I - PIC6ER NG • In simple but rich de For Toronto For Oshawa sign'. we. can furnish - Starring ;hand intermediate points '.`and. -intermediate •points memorials that will A. IL P. M. P. X. A. IL P. lL P. IML please . from every TYRONE POWERS t a6.09 12.54 *6XA " - &7.81 1.31 e7.81 ' standpoint: In dignity FREDDIE BARTHOLOMEW x6.44 x1.54 7.64 L L41 02.81 of appearance our 1 MADELINE CAROL 754 2.54 eS b4 10.02 8.31 e9.81 work will stand out 9.24 &8.54 9.54 11.46 x4 81 10.81 through the ages. - 10.54 e4.54, 610.44 < -P. M. 6.81 11.31 Na Greater Tribute .THURS,. FRI. and SAT. N. W. STAFFORD c11.54 5.54 el"I 16.31 -August 5. 6' and • 7 Eastern Standard Time • ' Highway Monumental - _ - - a -Daily eiospt San. HoL 1- sone i HoL only. ` aceteeCa e . Sat. only. a - Sat., Sun. & Hol soly. Ph. 462':Whitby Ont. Ask for Attractive Illustrated Folder. 31 Deligthfal ' Kingston Road WPa Exile" Late air Hi=hwq Vseati on Torus, with all "pensee 1 � - paid. 5farri+ g Tickets and Information 44 GEORGE BANCROFT GRAY COACH LINES EVELYN Vfi1�TABLE LASTERN HOUSE - P[CRERINGPHON>! 4iN JULY LIST OF USED -GOODS. _ - TL Y�- Nl�lk .boosts 1934 Ford Cabriolet 19'28 Chev. Coaches (3) y lr ' 1936 Ford Sedan Deluxe 1934 Chev. H. P. Duals truth eo1'1'1m�J n sty C /,� 1934 Chev. Sedan delux ": 1930 1 -Ton Chev. Panel Truck 1933 Chev. Sedan deluxe 1930 Chev. Duals, truck• �i'r ` 1935 Olds Sedan deluxe 19.29 Chev. Delivery Sedan trans[ l' .� t 1931 1-2 Ton Ford Panel Truck ' � "o m & 1931 Durant Sedan (n +houwnds of communifi•s•milk is fM 6;00.8+ single muni 1929 Durant 60 Sedan 1931 G. TNI Pickup : of ineonr• for formers. Trail• sp•rahs in fhee• commons+iss 1931 Devaux Sedan ' 1928 G. 4t. C. S. Wheels, stake +o dairy 1929 Durant 40 Sedan and dump truck . �. •6r0•ly on ,milk nion•y. Th. +o+al milk money going. „ fern *m in Condo annually is nearly, =200,000,000. 1928 Pontiac Sedan Milk needs moray ouNe+s. Selling milk in bof+Ies prev,das a 1928 Willys Knight Sedan Int. Povier Unit 25 H. P " rnorb+ for only yy of Nr.:miJk produced• le• er"m, buH.r. 1929 WS1lys Knight Sedan 14 -foot .boat and trailer ch••s•, dry and •vopora+•d milk and mony by-products mus+ be 1932 Durant 6-18 Sedan Sea flea 1 ! 'i I. J i,wnufoefured and sold daily so Nat milk money may flow back 1930 Olds. Sedan 2 Y 40? :' $ H. P. Lister gas engine fo +Ito doiry coeseruni+ies week aihr week without ill+•rruption 1926 Buick Sedan r 2 Electric stoves :5inu crail gordo"'$ inve�ion of eondeMing milk in a veeuum i0 1926 Cadillac Sedan Furnace Oil -borne? . ti ': yore o00. {ord•n hos pioneered in r•s•oreh work /ko+hos' meant 1933 Chev. Conch )De Laval Milker, 2 pails stew uses for milk end new mark is for nidi produe•n• tesswrch ,-Vent Electric Grinder, near new , "' gond effieie merohandisin0 of milk in oil ifs ferns are flrs+•land 1930 •Pontiac Sedan. ou� reosau Cando is k»eomin0 one of fM world's 0 1928 Durant 60 Coach Double -Head McLaughlin Grinder ' pr.duee 400 welt as consumers) of clary products, 1927 Olds. Coach Jacks, for same - Chas. Cooper, Claremont. Ont r ass,oclatrn COMtANlea .�„ .. Sub•dexter, ` J. McC:laahan, Dunbaeon PAC H MM Of salt , . f IUNwatsneess o. ssaa noovcss N MW*Aq SM - _ _ _ MGR we vsoa* • . . 'day visitor in towm. Mr.. Dadson, of Toronto, 1whose father was a former minister in the Baptist Church here, spent the . ' 'week end with friends here. • -Rev.' J.- E. and Airs. Glover, vvho have been visiting in the north country during their vacation spent the Tiast !week -end at their cottage • -tet Trent River. A number from here will be tak- C Inc in the excursion to Niagara e- .Falls, on Saturday August 7th, be- ' --.Ing ` .ing organized by the Boys' Club, in Pickering. Mrs. Morrison, of Vegreville, Alta., Mrs. Tilley, of London, and Airs. (Rev.) G. S. Lloyd, of Mid— -land, are visiting their sister, Mrs. C. A. Overland. Mrs. Ray Rumohr and daughter, +who have been visiting herefor a week, returned to Hamilton this e week with Mr. Rumohr, who was ° at his home here over the week- t !end. Mr. Loyst is erecting an addit- u - - ion- to his plant ta. meet the increas- a ed demands for the production of "his t products . He advises . that the tomatoes, which- at present look d `e.fceedingly . promising, should 'be t ready shortly for canning. They f are ripening rapidly. p Evans Ward, is preparing his ° - . threshing equipment for.. a busy sea-- t ;uon. Great grain •crops are in ev- idence, and as to hay, we heard ri one farmer say,'he hoped he -kould ti never see any hay again. it's a t '( pretty fair bit of , country, this Ontario, of ours, alvrays 'sure to be ' a crop of some kind. e Considerable work has been. done d the clearing away of • the debris ° Tesulting' from the fire. However a things seem to -be at a standstill at present. Many expected to see 'a service station in operation on th-3 corner by this time. The oil comp.. L anies have a habit of snatching up. i , -; those good corner sites. An interesting meeting of the Women's Institute was held at the dome of Mrs. Loyst last week. The = "SirsL part of the program was. by the young girls and one wee laddie. Prizes were given to . the following: ist-Piano solo, Margar- et Cowie; 2nd -Piano solo, Jean Farr, 1st ---Vocal solo, Peggy. Over. land; 2nd -Vocal solo, Blair Ward. �Ist­Recitation, Margaret Farr. At this part of the program,; Miss L. ' Rorke, - of the Educational Publish- -ing Co., Toronto, gave as a •very 7 -beneficial and entertaining talk on . the subject: "When They were boys and_ girls" and some interesting writers, whom she Wew. These boys and girls .theught and played t ;.. and planned, just the same as oth- era that have made life worthwhile for those following them. The first $2. 00 that one of the nuniber made shpt his pen, he gave to his baby - -`sister .for a pair of shoes. Thus by prepanng.se f you are helping oth- preparing- lers . At, the close of the address, about fifty took part in a social y 'time . Roofing ' . 'Slate, Tileand Gravel Roofing ;Asphalt Shingles, Roll Roofing ;1 -ply, $1.25 a roll. Roof coat- ing, 65c • per gallon. also chimneys rebuilt and repaired. JACK IUM a. " .D'UNBARTON :35-10 . 1arciay-Transport -. Blah Seevin between Claremont, Bnntg'bam 'Greenwood, Whitevale and Toronto My drivers are trained to be earft% i courteous and reliable. Special Rates on Long, Dletaaes baling. Ifs. order toe small, Noce We 1sr80, ,' : i� sYipsreats Iwstrea Mad • pretestM frog Ails Wostbw TOL Clare. 311 Clam a MA C. Domes Mad operaud by . Femill a Inas" At Claremont After Aug. 1. 1937 ERNEST C. FETTER - Lawyer 20 Years Experience 48-51 Monster Amateur Contest Memorial Park, 'Pickering Wednesday, August 11th 8' 15 •p, m. A wide variety of entertainment 20 individual acts. ' Softball in the early evening Madeline, Beauty HAIR GUTTING, SHAMPOWNG, FINGERING, M•A aCE LUNG Specialise -Hot, Oil Treatment and Permanent Wave Reasonable Prigs R a d i . _Expert service .and re- _ pairs to all snakes. Rens. oilable charges. Work guaranteed. ,ARTHUR'FIELD Graduate Radio and Television Inedtaile; .Member Official Radio Service Mse'Y Association. „ HORSE REGIBTER Phone ING -- CLAREMON T 6 PI CS E RING : P a r z e 's:)1, .Eyes : CILMEIN (25419) 22346, Importea LAND SURVIYOK Clydesdale Stallion' . the property Farm Machinery _ And of Oscar Wilson,, Brougham,= wil% "�� F. L DON ,AN B. A., B. 3c., 06 { stand for service at his own stab- Coclishutt, Front A Wood No. 6 L. S. On file are the records of Mar•- Vision Is, during the season. Enrolment Corn Cultivators; No. 10 A. Oil veyors Gibson and Tarn Id, 11w No. 2248. Bath ' Moweri; No, 4 All Steel Man. �g Eak, Oshawa, Ph," igm- �y DOLL (2336) 12921. Imp. French ure Spreaders and No. 6 Grain Bin- Percheron Stallion. An outstand, ders combine tlhe latest improve- jjam�+• ••• y ing Percheron horse of high gaul- menta. L•, V. N� /LL - H. Tiscls Opt. Eyesight Speeialiat i ca a first-class premium Cockshutt Plows all styles to suit Disney Building, (Opp. P. 0.) tY, carrying p y FUNERAL DIRBO'POR AND' certificate, the property of E. A. Your Firm- Olivet Tractors all _- Oshawa, Out. Phone 1516 Somerville. Will stand for the sizes for every purpose. Used mac- BMBAL![I4S season of 1937, at his own stable hines-3 Grain Grinders, -5 60 -cycle 9ucceeeoe to W. J. Mather, Y Hyperopia lot :4, 10th line, Markham Twp. Electric motors,sl-4 bo 5 h. p. Tar- 9touflville (farsightedness)' Terms: To insure a foal, $10. nip Drill ate. Night and Day Service -- payable March 1st, 1938. All ace " Massy of the Sufferers from what idents a' +r. ner'a risk, E. A W. F. DISNEY, Greenwood Buslnees Phone Reside Phone" Y are commonly termed nerve disor Sr,mq,-villa 8. R: t., Stnuffville Peorrit PICK 2814 41 t 9601 9;120 dens have the real source of their COMMODORE AGAIN (26812) - trouble in eyestrain. And when we Choicely bred Clydesdale Stallion, pro - RADIO SERVICE �e.ss��rrs onsider that if iwe can lift a.weight perry of R. Dafoe, Green River, will f strain. from any patient through tt;ake the season of 1937 as follows_ he, relief of eye or muscle stiain Tuesday, May 23th. wi;l leave his own Fully Equipped for Guaranteed Woes ?Ill sizes of Berry Boxes, `Crates, • stable for 6 t and FI t Baskets we are doing a lot in assistIn the q ., q , , Busw g g to John Barnes, Cherrywood, for night.. _ at M p building of the person physic- Wednesdak, .proceeds to McGriskin Reasonable Charge'' Hampers, sold at Hagerman's Bas. lly and, perhaps also assisting Bros., Aftona Road, for noon: thence ;,Tu� and Batteries on Hani ket factory, one mile north of the hem mentally through this relief, -to his own stable for night. Thursday. as it is a common fact .that many proceeds to Fred Wright's. lot 2 , con. 1ems toner 1� Green ,River Sehool, off No. 7 - isturbancea 6. Pickering, for noon: thence'to Eli PAUL WIL80 SAL.MN Highway. have their origin : in $ y• Lehmans. lot 34, con. 8. Pickering, for ft� �m 618 he irregularities, of an -organ very night. Friday, proc eds to his own Get our prices before buying else, ar removed from the one which -stable where he will remain until the where. We deliver. resents to us- the symptom ; Some following Tnesday morning. f the cases that may be benefitted E. R. Woodward Phone Marls 1W4 42-2 a this way are: Chorea, St. Vitus Dance, Amnesia, Migraine.,'Slalnut- STANLEY THEATRE Sardines, 3 tin. for "' : 13e tins in Children, Nystagmus, Nic Pineapple, Sinxapore. 3 tins 23c _ _ USE . - tation and Albinism. and* -Hay STOUFFVILLE Grape Nqt Fla:k•e:+, 2 for 21c British -- Ferer..I do not wish to say that all P and G Soap, 5 bars for 19c rl! 1S American he ii' ove cases hsve their- origin -Phone 100 i8 ^ ' - Pineapple Sand. Bis., 2 lbs for 35e n eyestrain, but the relief of _any Cloverleaf pink salmon 2 for 23c - Gasoline risting eye strain will without show ag i -2's 2 for 17c oubt be of great assistance in all tAt Nights-d.t5, Staadatd.Time Harry Hor'ne's fruit punch 25c Special Prices to Farnier8 and f these cases when it is the caul- Sat. & Holidays-2.Shows. 7 and 9 p.m. Free -running salt, z.lbn. for 2� T hreshers tive 'factor of some of them„y gs, to be continmed THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY G1a4 Tops, doz. 25c tank Wagon Delivery .�_ F1RE51ONE TIRES �- -- rosy 29, 30 and 81 -- - ' _ Our meat sales are increasing week- Reliners Repair Material ..'.Road to Cslol'y" lye. Come and sere what we have. �^+ Electric Refrigeration A LF'S PLACE 'HOTTER 'Starring BROUGHAM. 0141.- FREU MARCH -:phone Pick. ail CLAREHOaT, ONT. WARNER BAXTER 'LIONEL BARRYMORE - MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDN.:SDAY !• !l/ lea �,l Augut t 2, 3 and 4 t 1 lIACI` MONDAY, (Civic Holiday)'7 and 9 pear. -�`Le Kitlq'a.ttig�L13X1� ' 4i IWSAFE * DIRECT • ECONOMICAL l Lloyds of CHANGE OF TIME TABLE t - �+ Effective Sunday, April 25th London" LEAVE I - PIC6ER NG • In simple but rich de For Toronto For Oshawa sign'. we. can furnish - Starring ;hand intermediate points '.`and. -intermediate •points memorials that will A. IL P. M. P. X. A. IL P. lL P. IML please . from every TYRONE POWERS t a6.09 12.54 *6XA " - &7.81 1.31 e7.81 ' standpoint: In dignity FREDDIE BARTHOLOMEW x6.44 x1.54 7.64 L L41 02.81 of appearance our 1 MADELINE CAROL 754 2.54 eS b4 10.02 8.31 e9.81 work will stand out 9.24 &8.54 9.54 11.46 x4 81 10.81 through the ages. - 10.54 e4.54, 610.44 < -P. M. 6.81 11.31 Na Greater Tribute .THURS,. FRI. and SAT. N. W. STAFFORD c11.54 5.54 el"I 16.31 -August 5. 6' and • 7 Eastern Standard Time • ' Highway Monumental - _ - - a -Daily eiospt San. HoL 1- sone i HoL only. ` aceteeCa e . Sat. only. a - Sat., Sun. & Hol soly. Ph. 462':Whitby Ont. Ask for Attractive Illustrated Folder. 31 Deligthfal ' Kingston Road WPa Exile" Late air Hi=hwq Vseati on Torus, with all "pensee 1 � - paid. 5farri+ g Tickets and Information 44 GEORGE BANCROFT GRAY COACH LINES EVELYN Vfi1�TABLE LASTERN HOUSE - P[CRERINGPHON>! 4iN JULY LIST OF USED -GOODS. _ - TL Y�- Nl�lk .boosts 1934 Ford Cabriolet 19'28 Chev. Coaches (3) y lr ' 1936 Ford Sedan Deluxe 1934 Chev. H. P. Duals truth eo1'1'1m�J n sty C /,� 1934 Chev. Sedan delux ": 1930 1 -Ton Chev. Panel Truck 1933 Chev. Sedan deluxe 1930 Chev. Duals, truck• �i'r ` 1935 Olds Sedan deluxe 19.29 Chev. Delivery Sedan trans[ l' .� t 1931 1-2 Ton Ford Panel Truck ' � "o m & 1931 Durant Sedan (n +houwnds of communifi•s•milk is fM 6;00.8+ single muni 1929 Durant 60 Sedan 1931 G. TNI Pickup : of ineonr• for formers. Trail• sp•rahs in fhee• commons+iss 1931 Devaux Sedan ' 1928 G. 4t. C. S. Wheels, stake +o dairy 1929 Durant 40 Sedan and dump truck . �. •6r0•ly on ,milk nion•y. Th. +o+al milk money going. „ fern *m in Condo annually is nearly, =200,000,000. 1928 Pontiac Sedan Milk needs moray ouNe+s. Selling milk in bof+Ies prev,das a 1928 Willys Knight Sedan Int. Povier Unit 25 H. P " rnorb+ for only yy of Nr.:miJk produced• le• er"m, buH.r. 1929 WS1lys Knight Sedan 14 -foot .boat and trailer ch••s•, dry and •vopora+•d milk and mony by-products mus+ be 1932 Durant 6-18 Sedan Sea flea 1 ! 'i I. J i,wnufoefured and sold daily so Nat milk money may flow back 1930 Olds. Sedan 2 Y 40? :' $ H. P. Lister gas engine fo +Ito doiry coeseruni+ies week aihr week without ill+•rruption 1926 Buick Sedan r 2 Electric stoves :5inu crail gordo"'$ inve�ion of eondeMing milk in a veeuum i0 1926 Cadillac Sedan Furnace Oil -borne? . ti ': yore o00. {ord•n hos pioneered in r•s•oreh work /ko+hos' meant 1933 Chev. Conch )De Laval Milker, 2 pails stew uses for milk end new mark is for nidi produe•n• tesswrch ,-Vent Electric Grinder, near new , "' gond effieie merohandisin0 of milk in oil ifs ferns are flrs+•land 1930 •Pontiac Sedan. ou� reosau Cando is k»eomin0 one of fM world's 0 1928 Durant 60 Coach Double -Head McLaughlin Grinder ' pr.duee 400 welt as consumers) of clary products, 1927 Olds. Coach Jacks, for same - Chas. Cooper, Claremont. Ont r ass,oclatrn COMtANlea .�„ .. Sub•dexter, ` J. McC:laahan, Dunbaeon PAC H MM Of salt , . f IUNwatsneess o. ssaa noovcss N MW*Aq SM - _ _ _ MGR we vsoa* • . . _ — Visitor — "I can't tell yon how de. SLICED VERY THIN lighted I am. scholarship." Giles. My Boa R43g- gig has won a By Si>cbib 1100040 Farmer's Wife — "I can understand OY SCOUTS your feelings, ma'am. I felt just , the No Matt,dr How Thin You, Slice It — It's Still Baloney's same when our pig won a blue ribbon at the County Fail. 1, itb the name "Seven=up" appearing frequently on our streetsWe and in our newspapers (Advt.) it might not be inappropriate if we do +'t believe times are as good turned over the dump of our memory and tried to dig up the ancient as they say. There doesn't seem to °astory about that pastime. We think it was Irvin Cobb that told us be be enough insurance agents bothering fast, but we make no apologies for that as it has always been our - US. best to try and steal fromth e sources. - And that reminds, the Great War ;ver,'a Clothier — "Were you phased with the us—after was friend overcoat I sold you?" of ours who was mixed up in that affair informed us that during Customer — "Oh, yes. All my boys 'the four years he was overseas e h e tried countless times to tell this have worn it." tale but never could remember how it went. `_ Clothier — "Well! Well!" • . • Of course stories that require ex lanat:on q p generally fall as flat Customer — —"°Yea, each time ft as pit- on a plate,, in view of the fact that the illustrious sport of has been worn In- the rain the neat Seven-up seems to be widely unknown in these degenerate. days, it smallest ane has ; . take it." might be as well -if we told you that there are five ways, of scoring a point in the game; one each for high, jack and. game; one for., the Go-getters are not always keepers. — ..Player who plays low; and .also, if the non -dealer doesn't like the Ing, about a figure representing the trump turned up he can "beg'' for it to be changed—and the -dealer, L TheKitten That refusing to make. such change, giv.es his opponent a point instead. = So how, after all this wordiness; let's try and get started. It - Was Brought Back was down' in the hill -billy country in the south, and Lafe Hawkins • had been hauled into court on a charge of assault, battery, mayhem first did not' recognize that- the Boy and attempt to murder Lem Yokum. J. D. Featherstonhaugh, in Our • r • • - Dumb Animals, writes • — "Patricia" m Lewas a sorry sight indeed as the judge looked him over—in has Learned that even a,burly truck - fact he appeared as if he had received the going-over of his life. driver may have' a kind heart. • •Patricia, a stray cat who was "Lafe Hawkins," said the judge sternly, "thar before ye stands adopted by the writer, recently gave 'the evidence of what ye done. What have ye got to say for yourself, birth to three kittens in the back com- it anything?" partment of a moving van that had "Well, judge, it's a sad story," began the defendant. "It hap- been laid up for repairs in the back !pend this -away. Lem and me had been a-settin' in the back room yard.' The following day she• decided of the tavern, a-playin' of Seven-up—seven pints to the game and that March weather in Schenectady two bits on every game. was a bit too cold for hes youngsters • • • • - and one by one, she started moving "I had been a-losin' steady, all afternoon, till I were down to them to _an empty carton she bad my last two -bits in the world. And then along dome this game. and found in the cellar of the house. The the score stood six for me; one for Lem first two were moved without dtM- • • • ' culty, but when the cat• returned for "it were my deal, so L dole the cards, and turned up trump. , the third the truck was gone the Lem begged—so I gin him one, and the play began." 'driver havi ng completed his repairs • • • • ' He Slang his ace and I played my tray for low,, He Hhis - king—I played my ten. He flan his queen—and I played the jack." and driven away.aag Patricia was puzzled. She searched • • • every soak and cranny of the yard - "And then, . jedge, then—the mizzable "skunk flang his deuce for her lost kitten and then with -.and I hit him." plaintive meows extended her search • • • • over the entire neighborhood. Only The suggestion is being put forth that the Athletic Commissign future boxing bouts—should be to when night fell did she return home; her kitten. .--fn prepared over -rule the de- cision of judges, or referee, in case they think that anything is without -The next day Hlank Bartlett; the - wrong with same. . driver, returned to the house. _ ' • • • . Which, with due apologies to everybody concerned, certalril ' "Ig there a cat th here that has just had kittens?" he asked. :.' sounds scsewey to us. What is the use of having officials in charge of a bout if their word is not to be taken—and what -control can "Why yes;' I replied. "Our eat has "- they hope to have if they 'are in there knowing that their decision just had tWo of them" may be reversed? I think she must have had three," . , ,. • • • . he added. If the Comm.asioners are better judges of who won or lost a "How 1s that?". I asked,. puzzled. ..Sght then why, in the 'name of common sense, not let them do the Then he explained that the preced- jud.ging right from the . start? • - r Ing day after he . had driven the truck • • • `It all sounds- toO much like what appears to be happening in home- he had heard. whimpering cries. Looking into the back of the truck the vicinity of Queen's Park. A man is put in charge of a depart- tment, and is supposed to be in control of it: he had found the little animal, shiver- . • • ,. IN - _ .. - .. 'a Ing and hungry. "I took it into my, house.", he said, But of he makes decision that doesn't meet with the approval of certain quarters, along comes the Big Head Man and cancels that "and fed it a little warm milk with decision with no more hesitancy than, if he was telling as office boy a medicine dropper. We couldn't fig - to head in. ure out -where it came from,.but thea * • • — I remembered seeing a cat jump is And the nominal chief of the. department has to take it—acid the truck while it was over at your ;"try and like it=or else. " place. So after putting it in a warm ' ' " ' • ? It Inlay work .all right in politics—for a while—but let's try and - place for the night I brought it back." He then produced the kitten- from 1 ep it out of sport—or one of these. days there won't be- any sport a little basket he .carried in his hand. E NLARGEMENT FREE WITH EVERY Together we took it to the little box so thrilled' over their freedom that in the cellar where a worried mother He helps smooth the rugged path p guarded her remaining two. Patricia - Of all. within his ready. heard our footsteps, looked out of ..S ) �] ane+ terest enough. the box , to see her lost - kitten Re - joicing at its return, she gave her I like the way of the Optlmist most welcoming meow and when the L `// Who looks for the bright an dthe best He scatters sunshine he kitten was placed In the box started ` 'C1T)tttCREPi$ _ sa goes licking it affectionately. And leaves his fellows blest. — -- Some unhappy, marriages might I am glad to meet the Optimist, 7' - The only Real be prevented if the method suggested by the following from the Pathfinder With his message of good cheer; He carries hope and confidence . . i Stability s Change To those assailed by fear. Started Chicks, Pullets, Cockerels - were adopted. l. Twt) week old pullets. Barred Rocks, 815.9x: Young Man — "Sir, your charming - • . ' So here's a to. the Optimist Today 'we have to put, on running daughter has invited me to dinner." "I71• ,song Who joyously works .and sings shoes to keep up. with, the procession. Her Father — do better than And daily. shows this weary world - Improvements are Coming so Last that. I'll invite you to breakfast. And 'you The Way to better thing y better , that we ,can hardly keep track of then can see how she looks in .. -—GhingKleiner them. the morning' without her makeup." keep the mmentally content. Play As Nelson Jackson says: - "Yon can - ._To'tell a funny story, tell the point Clipped -- "Where there iss will not do today's job with yesterday's methods and be in, business tomor- and emit the story, there is a way, and where there ie no will there are a lot of fighting rola- row." There is much truth in that. Mrs. Smith_ rushed into her. living fives." A writer for the Saturday Evening room. mornings, or, if •youo prefer, after- Post once asked, Henry Ford—"What Mia. Smith — "Oh, John, is dropped my diamond ring off my linger and He Was ve!t d ryaanstood behind about bringing stability to th'e,,motor -I can't find it anywhere." old an Irritable owoman fa a line that was waiting to• get In a show: industry?" "Stability!" exclaimed ,� Ford. Stability is a dead fish float - John (calmly) — "It's all right dear. I came across, it in my trousers She — Stop Pushing, can't you?" ' Ing downstream. • The only .stability podket." y He —" Eicuse' me, madame. I, did, we know In the country Is CHANGE." _ not push. I only sighed." That was a fine answer. It was a THOP TIMIST E s-- complete answer to the Bolsheviatic -theorists who say that industry must I' sing a song to the Optimist, Good definition of Sileemanship "The art of selling products that will be stabilized by nationalisation. To the man that brave and strong,, Who keeps his head when things go not come back to customers who will'' You can measure the efficiency of Ideas for play, because, left entirely any business man by his list of im- And smiles when things go wrong. Pat wanted to borrow some money provements. If he, has no such fiat, from Michael, who happened to have on paper or in his mind, then he is I am proud of the genial Optimist, a small boy with him at the moment. • not efficient. There are thousands of stabilized His radiant voice an dspeecb; Pat — "'Tie a fine boy you have mouldy businesses, still using the ob- •moi , there with you, 'Mike. A magnificent, solete methods of thirty years ago. head and noble features. Could you Most of them pass out, but others , ITC H loan me ten?" Mike -- "I could not. 'Tis me wife's child by her first husband:' barely keep alive, and make shillings when they might be making pounds. A judge asked s ' woman. "Is your '—^ 'not husband steady?" "Steady, is it?". she y ..STOP® IN A MINUTE ... Sic You tormented with the uehiryi eutufes 01 Read . it or" — Angela do .not replied. ' If he were any steadier, he eepemn.r••h",athlete's A•t,erupw,neorother trot have wings." would be dead." skin affledont gstcll and ha relkr. �sse cooling, antiseptic, liquid D. MIX' ,'� - - The purpose --of every man -should be to keep the .es•.ipei.e. In sentk ole soothe this till. •died Cker, "Hair out of graveyard until skis, and -triode.•-- driri fast Stotts the mwt intense itelhrg-' Hairy Customer — crit, singe, he dies. While he is alive, he must arty A 35c UW b,tya''iu brut. shampoo.' mustache clipped and the act and change and do today some- trorss, as ssoaar beard trimmed, and — er — where thing beteg than he did yesterday. can I put this cigar!" There are now so many thinkers and hwe No. 31-'37, Barber'---- "Would you mind keep- inventors and scientists In the world Ing it in :rour mouth, sir. "It'll be sort that the whole of us inust keep mov- of a landmark." Ing. At least once a year a man should look at his whole business suspicious- ly and ask himself: "Am I still using anything that is obsolete—anything that is holding me back?" At least once a month he should ask—"What improvement can I make in my methods or my equipment, to increase the net profits of my busl- ness V' Most of us want security, and too many of us think that change means risk. The fact is that nothing but constant improvement can 1pake any besiness safe. So, thank God you are alive. Keep moving. Start something. Think of something worth while. 'Do it now. THE WORLD MOVES.. Only A Game It's grand to thrill To a great victory - In a game you -rove to play; 1 But, how does he feel— j (The other chap - You licked to w:n the, day?)' - Suppose you were in his place And instead of victor's i3ieers And smiles all over your face— Your lot was a bitter defeat; How would you. feel— < Would your temper still be sweet? A game is only'a game --- A win or loss won't tell It's how you react at the close That measures you for the crown: Can you "take" the breaks— With a grin—whether up or down? v'' f WITI- A COAST-TO-COAST "SMOKE -UP" Wise roll -your -owners will tell you Ogden's is the feature of the smoke. enjoyment firogramme. They know that finer flavour and cooler, smoother smoking are assured—every time— with-Ogden's Fine Cut and' Vogue or •'Chantecler" popers. ,. And there's a bigger 15c. package of Ogden',, now I " P.S•— Your Pipe 11 Rnos•, Crde•'sur , Plus I y cam OL , ; V,RCrH,/A,Q��r 064 G � 4 V Nte te, - THE t OY SCOUTS .4, A spectacular feature of the Coron• An experimental camp f6r sightless ation Year Jamboree of the Scouts Boy Scouts of the Scout troop Of the- and Cube of Winnipeg was a living Blind School, of Behala, Calcutta, was ' Coronation Crown, composed of .700 counted a promising success. The 19 ; Wolf Cube. Another feature was a blind lads, In groups of five, were In great "Scout World Friendship Wheel charge of. "sighted" Scouts, and took. � the'living Scout spokes of which, re- care of all camp details except the presenting the different Scouting , cooking. A three mile hike was 'one countries of the world, revolved, sing- of the Scouting ezperteaces greatly Ing, about a figure representing the enjoyed by the boys. -Because of T.ft Scouts' patron saint, St. lleorge..On. tidiness of the ca=p, and the smart °"a giant checker board small Wolf appearance, of, the boys, visitors at Cub checker men hopped about 9a first did not' recognize that- the Boy they were moved in an actual game. Scouts were sightless Continued evidence of the practical"Smiling. 'Mixture" a-. iiiedlciasi value o! Boy Scout training recently .is novelty at the. Rosemary Convales- brought the gif� of headquarters cent Home for Boy Scouts at -Herne buildings to the Scout Troops of three gay, England. The mixture, w1hich Is Ontario towns. A new club house In plain vinegar -and water, hangs on- the Agri'oultural Park. Owen Bound. was -wall; with the -prescription. "This mix - presented by the Town Council and tore "to be -taken in tablespoons three - formally opened by -His Worship May- times a day for non:grinnicus; non - 'or Jackson. At Sarnia a new Scout lafflcus, and any who have the dole• home, to be known as Coronation fu] dumps and dismela." It has only + Hall, was presented the local , Scout been used once — by a nurse! t Association by Mrs. W. J. karma, and at Tillsonburg the Bell Telephone Co "If all boys were. In the Boy Scout were the donors of a buliding oh movement, many magistrates and condition that' the Scouts removed It police would soon be out of a job.., — to a site gives by Mise Cora Ander • Magistrate S. B. Arnold, of Chatham son. Ontario. All Play And No Classified Advertising° ` Work Makes For AGENTS WANTED Trouble E.Make. wa ake nyGasy"g nsP� "Vacation - Clothes Pins, Sells quickly, Tim cents a down. . Mail one dollar, special twenty dozen trial. See That Children Are a to 'Fos Agencies, 21 King 8t. East, •ruronto, With Useful Tasks a Few AGENTS WANTED _ .. Hours. a Day PORTRAIT AGENTS WRITE FOR CATH- logue and price. — Big money making Experienoq.has•laught mothers that proposition. United Art, Toronto 2. for the first week or two Of vlicatfoII PHOTOGRAPHY ' there is no trouble. The children are E NLARGEMENT FREE WITH EVERY so thrilled' over their freedom that 25 cent order. Roil elms, developed and they entertain themselves. No plan eight prints 25 cents, reprints 3 cents each. Brightling, 29 Richmond Street. East; Tr,ronto. is needed now, because- loafing is It , terest enough. COLLECTION SERVICE But reaction sets in inevitably, and NTARIO COLLECTION• AGENCIES, EX- - after that the quarrels begin. You via- perienced Collection service. Bailiffs. — Ion slamming doors, arguments and star Bldg., Toronto. - tears. You see disorder, too, because Ecce WANTED;` WHITE; HIGHEST beat and disorganization upset train- k ref - erencers, � Zammmtt.n5 KaneA grades;, Tor nt . ing. - That little imp Mischief Ands work Started Chicks, Pullets, Cockerels - for',idle hands. But why keep hands Twt) week old pullets. Barred Rocks, 815.9x: Idle, and let minds .become lazy and r.°, 519,45: c:, ckerele Barred Rock., 9 bored'i. $8.95. Three week old Pallets, Barred Rocks, Work Ie the 819.95; Leghoms: $23.45; Cockerels Barred Rocks. $12,95. Hour week old pullets, Bar. 9answer. Children need some effort .and re red Rocks, $24.95; Legborns, $26.45. Five week-old pullets, Barred Rocks, $29.95; Leg- sponsibility of one kind or another to horns. $33.45. Four-six week old pullets, as- keep the mmentally content. Play sorted breed, overnmaentt 526.45 An stock from Governments.Approved Blood soon palls, and ceises -to be a joy, Tasted Breeders. Shipped C.O.D. anywhere Let them help with housework' and write for prices on six weeks to 20 gardening, at stated hours In the week old pullets, TWEDDLE CRICK HATCHERY LIMITED. mornings, or, if •youo prefer, after- FERGUS; Ont_ nacos. I! Sam is conditioned In certain Baden Started Chicks, Pullets, studies, don't have him wait for the and Cockerels end of August to begin. the hour An from Government Approved Blood Tested. of study each day should be started Breeders, sired by Big Government Approved Males. soon. Music lessons might be kept Two wtelt ow Cgckereli, Barred,' Rocks, 18.45; pullets Harked Rocks, $14.4o; Leg - up, or an outside subject In which horns, $17.95. Tore week old Cockerels, the Child L interested Barred Rocks. $19,45; pallets Barred Rocks Furthermore, all. children need $221,40; Leghorn, $21.05, Four week old ' punets Eared Rocks, $23,40; Leghorn, Ideas for play, because, left entirely � oI*'rda; 00, ' w to their own -devices, they lack In- 03.40. aeywh on older pullets a weeks to 20 weds senulty,--and there is nothing to work oPrices toward. BADEN ZLXCTR1C CRICK HATCURRT, - BADEN, Out, .. •moi , f , �, — P r - -` � w •r . i ! .` ' "� .'yrs` Y :� ' ow existence, bs, must have Io r, in his book, "The Vikings _ v : Regreb.r�asaa"b at �PFe , �. _ ,DwIO>�*,�* E`�ts �,• liaise Tanished from the esrtls .. Br:Lain," tells ns they awakened .,: Beloved k $! Is it not tim4 that the hunuudtart- the sleeping sea -sense of the , Saxon. ' !, orators have hammered to `y ' an leglaturas which have already pro- The extreme north of Britain is o! Careful NVrsIR=� ` ° a Tided pensions for the few .who grow course, full of Viking blood, especial- the point of boredom on the g%ort ! a old enough to collect them, placed ly the Orkneys and Shetlands. Shet- of our "unlimited natural reaour-ca." r'cOrse ill' The tali tree is believed to he And meanwh:le we have mile on welt -intentioned if unobserved land still commemorates an annual D Yoeksiblre Rustic, Produced somewhat rare` in this section of nn• mile of dritling'soil in the We -t and. _que mena of Lapin, , s:gns -along the . highways, 'ordering Viking festival, and builds one of acres of charred and broken foreal traffic cos to re tario, but there are some in St. Tiiom. ; p gelate traffic and lays' picturesque . But the gal- as writes the St. Thomas Timow.iour• land. Yet, looking abroad, we fini ., KEIGHLEY, England. — The name passed anti -glare headlight laws, did let's "for the purpose. But the Viking Italy building fertile farms v: herf something about this situation also? influence spreads a lot -farther than nal. They do not thrive much further Y g _ of George. -Russell, So -year-old York. north. A Guelph citizen -recently matte once the forbidding Pontine inari•hee —Brantford Expositor. that, and many of our place names shire rustic, will be passed on to pos• the statement that they will not grow' lay, notes the Hamilton Spectator. have Norse origin. _ teritR but despite his fame, George in that city. The dry, hot summ-rlast And to this reclamation can be lik• ifs sad and restless., Atter years of Whitefish Dwindling Then again, Whenever s man , says `t' instead of 'the', there speaks year waskard on all trees, but t>ar cued the reCrovery by the Dutch of ;' persistent refusal, he has cut him- i „ titularly on the tulip tree, to- which lands once under the sea, now pro- Beg adrift from the hobby he loved the old Norse, says Mr. Capper, reference was made ' y The Observer Tiding prosperous agr:culfural house; and made him famous. He has "sold The story o! the dwindling white- Love of sport is another clue to in his interesting department in The In German when they cut down r his children" which he affectionately fish resources of the Great Lakes is Viking heritage, especially those Times -Journal a week ago. trees • they replant others, and re- written -plainly in tball-matches in -which- Y P —Calls his rare collerfion of plants - er ape a arges specimen In St. ores total catch of fish made b crammer- the whole communit oins seen ih :w,iih long tapering spikes of flowers _ y - y a .! .-Thomas Is' located. on the property boasts. tial fishermen over the past four various towns of the North, Mid-' of various colors. Some of his aped- bounded by Stanley and Walnut sts., These comparisons are perhaps not ` years in waters under the' control of - lands, and even the South-West of , to y have never been cultivated . by Michigan. The figures should convince England• deevloped about a hundred yearn or altogether fair, -as it ' coui3 riot be any other person in the world. so ago by Mr. Edward Ermatinger, fa- expected that we should, in a gen-. Twenty-five. years ago Russell saw a commercial fishing interest that over- England, Scotland , -and, Ireland ther of the late Judge C. O. Ermating- eral way, plot scientific gardens on s display of fashioned fashioned Blue and thing and' the use `of killirig gear were happy hunting grounds for the er, and . grandfather of Major Percy vast expanse of bountiful land. Oul white lupins that stirred his ima must be restricted or this fine re Vikings. For four centuries the resources are not unlimited and L Bina- gs y Ermatinger. It is in an excellent state f tion. He wrote for seeds to every source will vanish. plundered our shores. of preservation and flowered profuse- ' In 1932 the whitefish take in the Mr. Ca we arc not afiowr! this dechaivelq is country 1n the world that grows lu.ed Capper gives us a wonderful ly this year. Last year it underwent our own generation—and take.a new Inns. From that day he has developed Michigan waters of the five -Great insight into the lives of these en- a course of feeding calculated to ov course of action .on it—then another ,his whole life to their cultivation and Lakes totalled 7,855,715 pounds and tient-sea rovers, and also a rOman- ercome the effects of the prolonged generation will suffer even more. today the gardens have .become one of led all species of fish in poundage tic story light enough to read in a drought. the show -places of the country. ' and value. ' Iri 1934, 5,924,481 lbs. deck chair '.on 'the beach. It is to be hoped conditions here The fame. of his lupine, from seeds were taken and whitefish dropped be- -from e- will be, so favorable that this ma- _ from every country in the world that low lake trout in poundage that year. • jostle tree does not soon meet the �T1MiR�g Share Of i grows them, spread beyond the bop- In ;1934 the cutch ran 4,859,655 lbs., Ant@r1C1n Slang and Sealskins Lowler ` ? b fate of a great tuplip tree in Inwood _ ldera of Yorkshire. Important people dropping to third place with lake ]English Qpe�CL Hili Park, New York, long knov ii ae - came or sent their head gardeners; trout and herring toppingit. In 1935 ]Englis Speech. "the oldest living object on Manhat• leading nurserymen, from all . section only 3,757,541, lbs. were netted and tan island." This tree lives no longer. OTTAWA. -Canada didn't -get as" • of the British Isles, from the Conti- it still held third place. In 1936, the The New .York Herald Tribune re many sealskins . in 19363 as in 1985 neat and even from North America. last year of compiled statistics, Lord Plender's lament at a speech Y P ports that its fragrant blooms are be- and it was all because the weather - The King's gardener came. whitefish dropped to fourth place, dog recently, for the .departed glories mg missed for the Brat time fh' per- man misbehaved at the Pribilof Is- They- spent hours pleading with with i.rring, lake trout and suckers. of our language is an indictte%t of haps two and a -half centures, our lands in the Berm Sea. him to sell some of the plants. which the modern age which destroys at- g D leading. The take was 2,616,836 lbs:, New York centemporary writes dole- Fewer'seals were taken, last year, Have never been duplicated by other about one-third of the catch made tention, observes , the . Manchester fatly about this tree's passing: the Department of Fisheries report - expert growers. They offered him five years a Guardian. The wi8e Currency given Like the Indiana wbo saw it de , because storm weather _ revent- , - sumo np to $1250 for single plants, but These figures should be convincing by the films to American slang has velop from a self -grown seed and -built er, p he remained adamant. He refused roof of the pp undoubtedly resulted in a serious im- - ed fur seals from landing on the :thousands. of pounds. P gradual disappearance in a village around 'it It- has gone into Pribilof rockeries as freely as usual. of the finest food fish to be found in poverishment of everyday speech in . history. - "As a result Canada got ?,86? seal - Then he produced°a specimen which Englan Some years ago a New York Nature made a Bnal unsuccessful the .Great Laken district and it is skins compared with 8,694 in 1985. no one has been able to do before — - - journal, reviewing Noel Cowards attempt this spring to revive -life to small wonder that cronservation'. oi8 Sealing -at. the Pribilofs is curried a lupin with a straight-backed stand= "Design for Living,, admitted that this beat known of New York trees. on only by the United States; which cials and fishery experts are alarmed. ,K ed- compared "with the common curl- This problem has been called to the play "makes us Americans real- it had been progressively dying about but a- condition of ed -back standard which ,makes the ize that our vocabulary consists of a quarter century. Year b ear ex -,ovens the islands, &pike=hook tbin spa - o , the attention of 'Congress by Rep- y 7the Pelagic Sealing Treaty is that ohs hff c€'e -of £sea about 16 words e.' ht of which are porta tried to aave at- least parts of came -the bi-colored lupins and Nex the 'swell' and 'Toney'." Conversation is t a once ma eat-spwerime-13ei the Washington Government hands dwarf lupin. No one knew how he did of the ced a bill calling for a study bound to deteriorate when two such cay made deeper and more serious over 15 per ten . o ei1► ani3eai talo-- it and he wouldn't tell. o! the situation by the Federal Bu- of sealskins. ' But Russell finally gave in. "You reau of Fisheries in the hope that its unprepossessing words are made to inroads until its heart cane hollowed are being selfish," said James Baker acceptance would lead to a- set of do' duty fora thousand kinds and out twenty or more feet up from the Under protection ,the treaty- af- - ... uniform fishing regulatfons for the degrees of approval .and distaste. ground. -One by one its immense .limbs fords them, seal. herds frequenting Of Godsatl. 'You are keeping all this But perhaps the position is not ` ` died and were taken off so they would the Pribilofs .have been steadily 6' beauty to yourself instead of sharing Great Lakes, the restrict°on• of killing It with other people who love flowers- gear and the establishment of greater quite so grave as Lord Plender would not menace passers-by. Everything creasing and it was expected the .1936 What's going to happen when you protection for the resource. have us believe. Such imported epi- that could prolong the life of the ,kill at the, islands would . be• larger �ie," thets gain favor by their novelty, but great tree was done. than in 1935. Baker o ere o purebase the en-%� j� their reign is brief; they do .not per- This spring only two branches However, the: United States Bu - tire display' for a handsome sum and " by Britons manently corrupt our literature. showed . signs of life. On them tiny reau of .Fisheries explained to Cana. . to market the flowers as the "Russell- �+ Slipshod colloquial 'usage -is far older buds, formed last fall, expanded until dian authorities weather conditions Lupin",,Three days later the veteran Lode the Seib than`the talkies, -and no popular they exhausted the supply of sap in at the time .o! last pear's hunt agreed, `: phrase has ever survived for long un- the branches. Circulation had ceased brought about the- unexpected and Today he lingers about his. tieloved Oar British race is a rare mixture less it supplied a real need. Perhaps, and no life-sustaining, substance could... the number of skins taken was re- _ Plots sad and self-critical. 4'1 should too, Lord Plender was unfortunate in be drawn up from the earth. duced, . . of nationalities, some -Cif which we his choice. of an example. M. Blum "Almost any tree is worth preserving - Skins which Canada.obtains as its, neer have done it," he says mourn- are apt to forget about when review- of the -Buck" does, after, all, but It to a sass condithoh that our god- share of.thePribilof take are mark - fully. "Why, I've sold my children." ing out ancestral trees. For instance, mean something more than "M. Blum erning bodies are not as tree -minded .. eted in Great Britain and- during the there is Viking blood -in many -of us, " Real as they should be. last fiscal revenue obta`ned through + T• - eepecislly Scots.. bus; rt expresses an idea and an - g m* nm' School It seems likely that the Norse attitude of mind that could not easily - sales amoanted to slightly. le than b y be conveyed in any other terms --cel- Britain has not and -will not modify $103,500, approximately $9,000 less and.Danes of the Viking age con- tainly not in the restricted space of a icer time-honored principle that the than in 1935-36.- _ . For Domestics tributed many of the qualities which. newspaper headline. American slang Mediterranean is a main arterial made Britain great, No doubt may not be dignified or beautiful but road not' merely a British short cut With Federal aid, the Province of these cruel, hard -living .people taught some of it is rich in wit and empr•.o. to the- Orient." Anthony Eden. The Italian crop is expected to be Manitoba is to start a trainingschool us much of their superb seamanship, sive metaphor. That which is not :s from 20 to 30 per cent. larger thaim for -domestic service in Winnie but they did snore than that, D. P. The ci Winnipeg- hardly .likely to, establish itself as a Trout lice in swiftly • moving that of 1936 whihle the Soviet union ty.wiIl contribute 20 per cent. _ permanent load on the English ton- streams because of the great amount was reported to expect an- abundant of its cost, with the two governments Special gue. of oxygen dissolved in such waters. crop of winter wheat. ' 4 splitting the remainder of the, outlay of is to be free far those who use it to. learn how to do work about the home, observes the Windsor Daily Star. • . , ,'_. .._ ... : The dad. was when most' young - - - :rls received an adequate training. :n housework in their own homes. Of - 37 Later years, this seems'to hade'been neglected, g perhaps for the reason that girls have been -taught to go outin the world to the many jobs they C ' � C C �. occupy.-- 0 I C L The results -has been - tniat onnof gar s look domestic, evenwn t houhe a PONTIAC'is a car of surprises! Your eyes would never tell you that.& car so - gh a big and beautiful can be purchased for just- a -few cents a day more than the y many domestics receive better pay and wort: under :better 'conditions - t• riced'cars. Yet Pontiac Economy quickly cats doiin even this -small-- �OR es p M: cyan some 'in other walks of life. price difference. Many 1937 owners report 225 ,.miles to the gallon .Wand Today, domestics are in demand, and. _ : better.'Despite the long 117 -inch wheelbase, extra size and weight . •provid.- here should be ample opportunity Ing greater comfort, safety, smoothness and steadiness ...Pontiac is one of :7r ih ince +o c 1 the most economical cars . ever built, the thrift car - theear beforeudecide .. :.- .. �:. the' school will not lie u,ed oy, aonie u ho {{ Price, see and drive the new Pontiac. Ownership cacar at n z, 7 ever intend going into domestic ser-µ �r 3„ tf" \ be easily arranged through the General Motors ce. Only few girls escape marriage Instalment' Plan that' rovides monthly payments t -id the home duties that follow. f P y p Ym to suit your purse. - Many. of. them are not, fitted to , un- . .. ,. � �•• ' _ - -:ert, -e the task of managing a h� Y f: T home, and a free school ought to be • r ,1 ill-ilizccl by those who lack training domestic work and wish to prepare P P :.e nselyes for it: They could do Bch worse than • attend, and their f ware husbands would have reason£' c. rcra•teful to them for. doing so. be. as a voice crying in the w:lderness, it is • - _ ratuy time §omeone, in sheer•hu- �`,,.• µ. ;:sanity, :•ttered a word in behalf of that truly "forgotten man," .te the '1 t enol that he 'may_ not, become alta-. •• _ : ether extinct. We ref " a er, u • _ of course, he pedestrian. _ .: DONALD MOTOR SALES --= WHIT -BY - Inch by inch, with inexorable cer-• tainty, lie has beery hounded, pursu= -Assoc. ed, and pQsitiaely hunted, and, but Dealer --M. Sleep --Pickering prat, for the occasional' safety zones and. CHAS. - COOP -ER CLAREMONT considerately placed sidewalks, from and to which he leaps out s precari. _ m Assoc. Dealer—J. McGlashen—Dunbarton - :,, _T -1I -- . z, • i t� ,d _ y :} true 'k I 1,.. •y r^ ,ten :. ..:..�„ .,; �,�. ", ." g 5, ��, V, ... -... . �"Ki '...At. 7;'„ '' v-� �' i..� rr„� ti., x :: Y++:• .'. -. Y 'r,.. t� !' .( ''�,ti "' r.y,''J,"." ,.•.,,. "iy'-"t ,v�,J�'i' +:w,;, .5,: `S+d', �..�ae , t iC. " — ' a c.= ,fit � "It's all very well for some- of us before it was whipped caused it to in her free time, plays a good game • ;u I' Courter dill ' . ;' _ to say these children should be more whip much mare rapidly and—what is of bridge. sic • ;- , careful but that doesn't relieve the more to the point=double the quan- In their enthusiasm for travel, the adult motorist from the major part tity of 'whipped cream. two former first ladies are alike, :lies- - a �c a of the ree)5onsib;lily for the child's Science has not yet explained ac Roosevelt has trayelled about 500,- .. -wave •Children V Yes safety. pingy what happens during the whip- 000 miles since her husband's d�.^.tip• . : - • ',TQ -day many pale-L$ced children ping process but the laugh is on the lie in hospital cots, nan of whom diner who gets halt the amount of .,: - are in plaster casts, manyywill be per- cream that he used to. OII the diner ' L - ing rom swearing at him be;ause he manently crippled due to negligence can do is to "laugh it of." Combating llt0@d • rAutotinobt�es Rank With Tuber ., &' YP c0mob, Paralysis and Rickets as gees in the path of your car. dieing on somebody's part. Accidents in .. with politeness, courtesy 1ucLidFs . =` Cause for Crippled Tots• Ehiv- most cases are avoidable but the re• First Lashes Are Although medical sc'ence still has• Tots; carefulness, thoughtfulness and con- sponsibility must lie with adults,: The mart knotty ' ers Must Watch. sideration tor` the. rightl -and comforts universal application of 'Tr Cour- c • `' .. Y Y Problems to solve, it of other people.^ - y Still �/ a ACti*w has at least freed us from some of ...f'`' tesy' by all motorists, all the time, 1 TORONTO.,• -Carelessness or lack Accidents in which children are in- can do as much to save children's the perils which beset former genera- 1 I courtesy on the part of motorists volved are 'by rio means aiways the, lives and health as science and the tions. An illustration, is provided tri 1; s just as dread a disease !or childrbn Mrs. William Taft and LVlrs. Edith figures on the death rate from ty- _ fault of drivers, he stressed, becaus3, medical profession is doing in the Roosevelt Lake to" Travel phoid fever, as compiled cur cis rickets or infantile y the Journal of the Am erican _� ., aralysis, thinks Reg. W. -Hopper, .tor getting into accidents.''' In On- . WASHINGTON.—Two former first Medical Association. In 78 cities- aecutive secretary of the Ontario tarso during 1935, 1,500 children were ladies of the Un:ted States live as last year, the death rate from_ ty- Society for Crippled Children. injured in automobile accidents. Sixty Feet Lau hter into phoid fever was ;94 per 100,000 of _ zestfully today,: in their middle 70 a, In s recent�intervfew `Mr. IioPpPr six chilareu under fourteen years of - p - - ated'that a -great •many children age were -killed by collision with •mo- _ V M as they did in the White House. population. 'This compares with ,a ould contigue to walk throngs lite for care.. Twenty-six of these were Your Meal Family ties, friends, occasional •death rate of 20.54 per 100,00!► of n their own feet instead of crutches tiny toddlers of four years." - trips and artistic interests fill the population in 1910. motoridts would show more cou' The danger periods, said Mr. Fisp- • "Laughing Gas" In '- Whipping days of Mrs. William Howard Taft, Here, in other words, we have the• aq when driving oa streets or h33h- per, are up 'to 14 years of age. More Create Is .Needed Touch 77, widow of the former chef jus- record of one dreaded disease which qe where children were encouW- boys and girls under 14 years are Science has discovered a new way tice and `27th President of the Unit- has been conquered. Doctors know • • i fired. killed or injured in •OAtario each year to inject laughter into a meal -time ed States, and Mrs. ' Edith Kermit exactly what causes typhoid .fever ` Hs telt_ the Ontario Department of by cars than are persona in any other hour! A McGill, professor, disclosed Roosevelt, 75, widow of Tafes pre- and they know -exactly how to pre- Jghways deserved much credit ' for age group. _ that a number of restaurants around decessor in the White House. vent it. A malady that took thous to "Tr_y Courtesy" promotion work to "They know- , no danger,• tbew Montreal are injecting "laughing gas" President Theodore Roosevelt's ea- sada of lives yearly, a quarter of.a eek highway' traffic accidents and youngsters who are so eager Lor fun. into Aheir whipping cream. ergetic widow, still in the best of century ago, is now reduced to com / ointed to the campaign being con- Most children exhibit no fear what- "I'm feeling funny," may be a ver health, will open her summer' home parative insignificance. acted by the Ministei of 'Highways, ever of cars. They have no realiza- appropriate remark toe a diner-0ut to in Connecticut this month. She keeps The figures are s striking test:ma . on. T. B: McQueaten as a powerful tion of the danger they are In where make as she finishes .her strawberry up to the minute on public affairs. sial to the advance of medical sci: eapoa in: saving the lives and limbs automobile traffic is involvedI. . When shortcake, topped with delicious Mrs. Taft's health also is excel- ence.—Victoria Times. _ _ , : �i - many children. playing on the streets, they are rarely whipped cream. lent.. She receives scores of friends .. "But -being courteous tol-a child or conscious'* of the . frequency with The new use for nitrous oxide was on her Monday "At Homes" in Wash- � j y other pedestrian;' ineia!ed Mr, which they barely miss death or ser- discovered when it was found that a ington when the social season is an, S ciat j opper, °doesn't- mean simply refrain- ious injury. • "'shot" of the, gas injected into cream goes to concerts and the theatre, and _ • - - __ . I. . ,, . - - _ ... _% . . -. C =a� s + °,-m m m ''stn_ 5 a 4eb �� : a. �- • _ - I 'y A e. i .... O "• O. 0. H m p O .a+ C N 0 S • !�4 O • a O m . �' " as O 0 m co • O ro a 0 _. r r ,- - -1 I. Orr m,,-�K< wm:'EE�ws ArO 44 R 10 . . -: o � a A - -- n O °54 I o, m vC, y • r ear. �.�p+ hep ��',qi _ . . C O n f9 I- ¢ r. in �7 0 O O ^ '-' m .0 A A O . may 'M. h" _ L �. - ,A e 8 T ° Col i"' ^L ~ d fQ. ,0.. A ow O' 0 Q. Q. 7 .�j m. ;�,'a �. `+�i • !may �.� . . �og..+Qm �g.c�a`e..:ormam�N o�_.� `f !�► �.i:2 . .. `% 'a � Co P V" rA . m^ m � m X . y .b_ o o m f .. '.. 0 to � `is • . _ 40 . - . 1.-,,.8 • G. O" m m O i `.0 m m m C < O O «+ Cr 0 m r+ �' !r- Q, . Fry ... 0 o ,.�•.. m .. a r. OC C J O fp Cr It G r 9, i- O CM2_ Z a O `a n o �• �l m e� -� g.`a G c� �a o a am o' A er. .M i'. y �q C .0 a 0 r m - u ,� _ 0.1 - � :_ ..., I.. . �-.1'.." . .- � ... w 6 ... ! N _. Z " O •(10 I o 01 Qg+ �- R Q ,g ". ime �. _ .l 7. o (•'i 1 .'T' fC"I a r. M 9% 0 r Lb r: ,0,,,, ' -r"7 i17 .. _ 9, LV _ .. _ - �'� Z ,3.:` J� so jj! m f�a :1 .a -" �F L a r0, (74 " 5 ;� - � . .;a _ ... :. " �" m •.Q.� °• C o d G c� :. eo%Q Aft- ;fir+ �'' 010 so _ "f 4 e9 cs. S. 11 g ,• m o- Cs � � M t•o e� A O . ­. ­­..� �:..,. _ - Oft .4 O _ ' M .. . .�" _,r _. _ _'Q to. 6 � :V r' _ . .. _ - I. . -.1 i - -. - �,so" 7!!!� _­... . � ,..; _ . . > : 0. ....;. ...., .. I . . ­ - ... � . 11. ­ E -'­�7.. - ,. :, . . - ':-'' W , ' -- . I-' �' - ,�, 1. � .. .. �. . . I . 7 . _1k%WM. I - *. . _. �.. - :. - , !. .. . % :ro­ ­ I .1 . L" . � . . � . - '. I _ .• ._ - ; -- 1 l— 1114 ,,, a, a �.. • O v...: M y.. 1, j �. .: _ .� . �i RL fs * - t e"_ - �- - l i f __ A r O�I .. j{f . . : v o • S - , - - __ -}� . k 4. R . A - - via a x _ , Go ." �$ .It z . . 1 'V • !� t7' '; fi ,; C i 0 �? D �a , i .~ _. olo Z — — � U ,:, � im J : ----i— • t..� '� s ' O 8 ` Ij � R �{ 3 i w• 4 ' t .. . ., . -.1 Z - I � V , . .. . �1 O 1. 4, F _ . l J `�I� tY st . r- ,: X ! , , . . . ,. '.... . � . , .. . . - . D I . .. . 1� _. ale h d ` ., I tT ,4. � 2�' ♦\ + t t k< 1. . . 4 . - R.. . " .; - , . I 'Q;aw a�a,R �, , , ,It I . (� a� o i 3 :' _. . .. _ . _ b o ate'= 9 . Y}R } XJ V ./ 3 ' A 3 s r %r :; . , oe.r1 , __. S .. .. - .. 5 . n3� . q, i . ., Y sou . S I _ • .. t __ . ' � .. _ _ .. _ • -:.l:,a _ _ _ _ _ L-l:sAt�»..` LbM;..W_re,,:nlllNY'.w•C4`�c 3'�.... V'�y;•fy �.U,t`„ y� News Lm Brief Characteristic µAs far as women go," says Dorothy Dix, "men will always be un- fathomable." That's chiefly because a woman thinks ,it's a violation of the IS* not to answer the telephone im- mediately. ,while mere man grunts, ' NEWS iPARADE Commentary* on tht MG441 IGHTS OF THE WEEKS NEWS --- By Peter Randal wheezes, stalls, looks out the win- dow, picks his teeth, straightens his' The world this wreak saw the Span - tie and 'chews off a couple of hang- !ah war sweeping to a climax while in the f E t th • fir t rbl f situat:uu in the Far East. _ With Soviet Russia disturbed by so- 1tri is d +11ti of - - nails before lifting the receiver. They are built that way�both of 'em, — - e s um es o a new con ict were heard. p ensue a an 'k ezecu on army leaders it is not unlikely that CANADA ` Datiiul son Fails Windsor Star: Lashing out from Madrid. General Japan will push forward in her march George Bedard, a Niagara _ _ Joe e, Miaja's re organized Loyalist toward the rich stores of war ma - in the Cit? Injured -youth*was - fatsbetween between s� truck and n street Union Uy Phantom Disease 8�-1te stat greatoften- slue in the year-old civil war and e a a e ear o China. The extent to which dogs and cats car. At the inquest into his death it "that OTTAWA. — A mysterious disease has Eskimos !n recent struck fifteen miles into. the !Haar- Hope died this week in two widely have beconpe the favored pets of hu -am beings 1s shown In the estab• ' was stated the last words the were: "What will '•mother which afflicted years took -its toll again last winter, x ad ring which almost announced distant .-parte "of the world the— - Ushment in the larger cities of 'els:} boy spoke 4 Major -D. L. McKeand, commander of Madrid and threatened General Fran- x Pacific ocean's wide southern expanse _ orate hospitals for animals and even think?.� Those four words cone a world Y the Eastern Arctic Patrol found when cisco France's line c communicationruckck with the'sea. Fiance struck back where the United States navy caro• • plated its two weeks. =4,000,000 ' . the eanetruction of impressive burial o! meaning. They show that the ill- his ship tb arrived at Lake - places where the pets may be shown fated youth -was deviated to ,his he 'South Harbor, on the 'south coast of Baffin attempt to regain lost territory before Noonan, and on the wide stretches o! ' - the deference usually reserved for the mother asci that to sufficient proof Island. the Loyalists could strengthen their Western Canada's wheat country a dead of. the- human species... that he must have been an obedient He radioed- to the Department of newly won positions. where farmers faced the greatest crop Dog fanciers today are .capfronted son, one Who Would cause his parents 'Mines and Resources that six adults Hundreds o1' planes, tone of high failure is the history of the west. ,.. with a great handicap in their hobby. • w h no- anxiety it he• could help it. There and -seven children had died from it explosives, and a quarter of a million The United States navy after comb- •._� Itdifficult protect the animals would be much less "worry - in the near Lake Harbor in February. men were hurled by both armies at Ing 200,000 square miles of trackless j from accidental deQth If, they try to homes today if youth generally show- Almost every year the disease the point of the loyalists' newly -won ocean for the loaf niers, gave up hope avail themselves of the freedom that ed similar concern for their parents. sweeps down on some and with seri-. salient in the mountains at Brunete, and pronounced them dead. The only ; { 'they naturally crave. The motor car sow many- sons sad daughters tell one results. Dr. L. D. Livingston, 22 miles west of Madrid. This may from their attempted trans - has made it virtually impossible to permit dogs any freedom on the their mother where they are going on medical_ officer for the patrol, and doctors !n the North be the deciding battle o! the pivil war. ,gain Pacific flight being the U. S. Bovero- ' a the leaving the house of an evening? It other stationed the the Rebels are driven back near meat's earning "Such flights will not ; Weals and death toll is exceed- they don't do it, it is a practice they are seeking to diagnose it with thea position' they have held for near- be permitted !a future." !ugly heavy should follow. hope some provision can be made to ly a year at the gates of .Madrid it is Federal Minister of Agriculture It would be a grand situation it all situation ' How many sons and daughtets ar- guard the natives. likely that new agreements -will be James G. Gardiner predicted this ' i dog owners had places the country rive home three or four o'clock In the Doctors in the North are inclined formed by the great European pow • week In Ottawa that this years wheat , where the pets could be offered a life morning Iter attending • a show or a to the . belief it is a form of ptomaine ars with Germany and Italy with- crop world be not over 160 million that is suitable to their natures. The dance at a distant point without as poisoning, possibly from eating bad drawing much of the support which, bushels, the smallest since the west restrictions for b1 the city are deadly much sa sating themselves: "What meat. Further inibrmatlou may be has so far.boletered the Rebel attack, first became a. great wheat -producing dogs but it is as expensive recreation 'to' will mother think?' Perhaps poor gained from doctors who spent last One million men, women= and chil• area to have buy a place In the country mother had been, worrying half the winter in the North. Dr. T. J. Orford dren have lost their lives, it is esti- Saskatchewan bore the brunt o! the . to exercise the dog.—The Woodstock night, wondering. whether her son or is at Pangnirtung far up on the east mated since the war began on July drought and '114 degree heat and Sentinel -Review. daughter had been in an accident be. coast of Baffin .Island and may have 19. 1937. Gardiner estimated that 600,000 or 60 ' cause he or she - stayed out, so -late come. in actual contact with it; _ - per cent. of the population would need ' Poison Ivy (or should- we say early?). , government aid of some kind before ' The Ontario Department of Agri- Young people would get into less $1,13$,606 Tobacco Crop Japan's militant imperialist govern the winter was over. culture will sponsor a drive, on poison trouble and cause fewer heart -breaks CHATHAM.—Members of the Bur- ment which has held the nation in Following his announeement the ivy, through the District Agricultural for their parents it they got into the ley Tobacco Marketing �asocfation of readiness for war for several years, Federal government led by recently ' representatives. Poison - ivy. -is a habit of asking themselves: "What Ontario received a total of ;1.188,606,. made its first move in North China returned Premier King promised lm- noxious • weed -and 'as much must be will .mother think?'—The Kitchener or ¢26,124 more than the -appraised this week when Nipponese troops en• mediate and planned remedial action . deatroyed. It would. be well to have Record. price, for their. 1936 crop, it was re- te=ed . Mope!- province which adjoins -in and better atilt, heavy rains fell for all weed inspectors of the country in- vealed is a report .tabled at' the an- Japanese territory newly -conquered several days is most parts of the ' strutted as to the appearance and ebaracter of this weed, so that it may t'i'ff EMPIRE nual meeting here. President C. E. Desmond of Morpeth- occupied the Manchukuo: Japanese soldiers were repulsed southern s-katckewaa deet bowl u ; well In the northers parts of the be eliminated from the list of nature hazards that man is compelle2i to on. _ 1iHest IndianRepresenting Engligh chair, the tobacco compan= however by unexpected ,and deternr ' fined opposition- by Chindse Commuv- ..es province. Handy westerners immediately dare. Thio campaign will be of interest to Now; it .e honestly admit that the les for *us year are: Gay Miller for the Imyerial Tobacco Company, Mont- fat and Bandit troops, aalted against the Japanese threat, under the Nan- washed off their sense of humor and ' produced drought jokes of which the a number of Cbathamites in a cea general' English am spoken- by the In these British West Indian real; W. Milligan of Richmond, Va.., kin government. Peace overtures have following is a sample. The rains were ta1n district of the city where several 'children, masses Islands is unsatisfactory, then it be -s for the British leaf .Company of been made by Tokio and aa' armistice so heavy around . Shaunavion, dust . and older people, have sl- hoyea of us with any influence, .Chatham; C..L. O'Brien'of Chatham. expected to relieve the troubled bowl centre, that a large drop struck re react become affected. But the In- -those however 'obscure. some nor the Canadian Leaf Company; N. a termer the forehead and knocked ' specters cannot do It aLL Persons n boutassua responsibility to bring about a way of P. Lockwood for the Hodge Company him to the ground unconscious, and , who recognize poison ivy growing.. in the city limits, or >n any part of the speang the English language, which ki of Kingsville; Oliver Drouin for the Liton Company; William Rose eamng I TS A FACT the hired man had to throw three , him !a nadoubtedYy, when well spoken, the ' buckets of dust over to revive conaty,'shonld Immediately notify the Proper authorities. Chatham News. best In the world. It should. however, for the Consolidated . Company at Kingsville, and' M. A. Berkowitz of ,. By KEN EDWARDB him - be acknowledged that it seems . im- possible to change the language Montreal representing all other cam- ' 'fall girls all over the land rejoiced Due TO Speed spoken by a people for more than s panics. Directors who hale another year to 'cam, Speaking of soh, we have our own when they read that Miss Toronto - Police Chief Smith of Winnipeg It his' century;_ local experience with the iii- ungasl French and English serve are: R. V. O`Neill of Pagyette. r 'y Canadian waters, X1937, chosen after a week's elimina- ties was statuesque 17 -year-old Billid - givea as conviction that the majority of automobile accidents are patios amply demonstrates present condi- J. F. Thomas of North Mglden, M: A. Drew of Merlin and President Des- and journey to Bermuda f t o m Hallam, live feet ten and a half 1n- , caused by speed. Many 'others iD s tions. The majority, ' therefore, can mond. a=Y whence c o m e s thea in height and, weighing approxi- Position to know the facts agree with only become, and do'remain, bilingn- news that a new mately 150 pounds (sht wasn't quite him: The higher the speed the al. But is not "English,. grammatical - = New Trick x record 'baa hese sure). This fine Canadian lassie Is an greater the liability of � something go- English" one of our aims and con- , NORTH YORK. — A new trick of established. accomplished softball pitcher and,says", her Irish Ing amiss the, grealee the liability of loss, of control, and the more Alea�st• cern'.—Dominica Tribune. - - 1 hitch -bikers to obtain rides into the Harry J. Tucker she owes her .success to . mother and English father, also she roux the consequences of collision.. , Barrie's Fortune city was revealed this week to a mo- Street. of Flatts, .Ber• has j� eats anything she likes and hopes to Chief Smith would_ do away with `: to st on Dutierin muds, _ spec- get into the movies. The 20,000 spec- , high speed menace -by requiring. the Although he gave much money P.C. Weller (412) of Toronto, and established a new rotors who attended the notice games manufacturers to put governors on all away the late Sir James' Barrie lived Mrs. Weller. -were driving on Dufferin Atlantic O c e a n at which Miss Hallam was chosen as ' their cars which would prevent any. so frugally that he is expeeted to Street when they spied a lad of about record for "wa- Toronto's loveliest all agreed that the one exceeding 50 miles an hour, leave a large fortune. For over 30 18 lying' on his back with both arms ham's. It weighed 91 pounds and was 'feet, judges picked a typical and admirable • which is now the legal limit in On• years his plays- brought him hand- outstretched and his leek about three- six two inches long., Tucker Canadian- girl and one well qualified tarso. It is not exactly a new idea some royalties. feet on the pavement, In. the path of fought it for 20 minutes before land- to represent the .city in Hollywood. but it has me=lt. Rare!, is there oc- Of' his, contemporaries Hall Caine . their car. ins it. He used a'12 -ounce tip and a - ' - _ casion :for driving 'taster •than 60 lett over $200,000, Rudyard Kipling,' As the prostrate boy was motion- *been 24 thread line. An 86 -pounder; caught -the 'New Giant Eggs I miles and usually those rare emerg• £155,000, Stanley Weyman, £100,000, less, they presumed he had the by W, E. Carlin in 1911, was prey. encies are caused by peed itself. Hardy, £91,00.0, Galsworthy, £88; victim of a hit -affil -run- driver. 'and ;aous''`traTioo" record for those waters• A egg, eight inches in cir- u Eacept for the very �ew no pleasure 000, . George_ Moore £75,000, Charles was either unconscious or dead. Stop- What player on a baseball team giant the Is added to driving by stepping the Garvice, £71,000, and Conan Doyle, pang their car quickly, they hurried him, to have him jump to his touches the' ball more than any other? cumference one way and six other, three and a half inches long rate up beyond 50. The necessity is !almost always imaginary. It Is £63,000, Rider Haggard left 961,000. Arnold to only feet.and ask -fora ride into the city. the. pitcher. Did -you know that - 'way- -back in 'and'twb and a quarter in depth; was y; an- desirable that anyone should en. Bennett._.£ 40,000, Chesterton £28,000, "Apparently he had been unsuccess• 1887 or thereabouts, the nigger produced by a .hen in the flock of danger others by'excessive speed.: It W: 3. Locke; VON,' Mar1e Corelli, ful in 'thumbing' a ride and tried this.. pitcher, Geo. Storey of Newark, won Joe Ciroti, BIakeburn, B.C.. would be impossible under Chief. 424,000, and Conrad £20,000. new way of getting some motorist to 35 games, the most ever recorded. Poison ivy is not always three.' Smith's plan,=Toronto The largest literary • fortune was stop," --ommented P.C. Weller; who Lefty Grove had 330 strikeouts for ' leaved. Occasionally it has four _Telegram. Victoit Hugo's $300,OOQ. Dickens died added that the incident had rather Baltim-7e in 1923. leaves. worth.- 980;e00—News-of-the- u rs—Weiler.- __. D OF OZ By L. Frank Baum; . .. l •7te covn�bc.a im UU4 a Lae 016sro�; . _ .. � ;�• 1, : �. "I requested the' Glnome King to Ozma looked around her proudly. "I'm not afraid to plead with -him," ,`�So'Dorotl y stepped forward brave 41 appear," said Ozma, when there was 'Do you wish your ruler to plead .said Dorothy. "I'm only a little girl •ly and said: "Please Mr. Gnome King, hb response. Only the mocking with thiel wicked Gnome King?" she from Kansas, and we've got more dig- come here and see us-" The -Gnotr ea - laughter replied tq..her, and the tasked- "Shall Ozma Oz humble pity at home that, we know what to ori the 'rocky cliff' startled to laugh shadowy Gnomes •pf continued to flu _ herself -to s creature who lives in an - —moo with. I'll call .the Gnome King again, but a low ' growl came out o! { here and there -upon the rocky cliff. "Try en -treat -y," said Tik%k to Oz -kingdom? „ ,� and plead with him, too." "Do," NoI they ' said the Hungry Tiger, "And if he the mountain and in a flash they had q all tna. "I! he will teat come at your re- all shouted with b'g voices, and the maces hash of you, I'll willingly eat all vanished from sight and were at - quest,. then the Gnome King may_ Scarecrow added: 'If he will not you for' breakfast tomort'ow .niorn• : lent.' Then a door in 'the rock open - lis -ten' to your plead -fug." ;coram, we will dig him out like a fox I" ,- . ung." - ed and a voice cried: "Enter 1" ' t6 `. --+C. x. E. /August B7fh to Rep- 'tslmber 11th. __..pieloaring- scores against Myr- ;".tle, Wed. night 17-5, here. Mss. Hann, of Fergus, is vis- -: Atiglg with Mrs. Thos. Andrelw. ,hlrs , ilarLdsll, of Toronto, is visitia8 :With Mr. and Mss. Harry Boyes during the past week. -Mr. and Mrs. H. Farrow were hosts to several friends au Satur- day. -Mr. and Mrs; F. H. Hall spent last (week with Rev , J . S . and Mrs. Ferguson, of Keene.L -- - :,P wti ' W • . _• t •toe `' ii .,. j t _.$t 77 - 411r. F. C.-Xedhia. i[ Bien- M among' file ialWfts with iris�- Wed, spent ftidsy lad, vitt kW grandparents, Rev. A. D. and Mrs mother bere. Collsin. - �- h -Wjm Gert>rodSt e Walsh spent . Paul's, Anglican, Dunbarton, a ore 1 several days last we with friends Sunday, August lat. Sunday school in Toronto. at 2 p . in. Celebration of the Holy Mrs. Clam. -Baxter and daugh- Communion at 8 p. m. Preacher, ter, of 0llthalwa, spent a few- days "'E. G. Robinson. with J. G. and Mrs. Baxter--T`Piokerin'e Leader Store" -9. H. and Mrs. Ripley, of :.-.Barber Sho Manitoulin visited friends' here last p -- w -•}Mrs . W. J . Clark and dauch- - ter, Norah, are spending a. few days ..CLEARING SALE OF MEN'S in Bus'ford, -with F. F. and Mrs. Beauty arlor Balsdon and faanaly. --, "GOODRICH ZIPPS" .--St. George's Church, Sunday,August lot. Sunday Sch'-_1 1n A compete Dt lady will havecharge a. m. Morning Prayer at 11 a. m. of the beauty parlor an sa 1s ac• res cam shoe Wl at leather upper aII ' proclaimed Tltanit},:giving Day �- $ _ p ; 'tthe Dominion Government., Event, Prayer at 7.80 m. tion is guaranteed at reduced Evening P• - -• -. rubber sole. Sizes 7.-10 . Monday next being Civic 1101- Preacher at troth eervues, Rev. E. rices. P idray, -the piSCes. Pf businsea-in-this G. Robinson . Pertlsaaeat V1'a�es: s2:08�56 B5. , - e prioe, age will be closed. in. -Mr. C. A. Swallow and wife, Shampoo and Finger Wave, , .50 • . --,Mrs. Parsons and daughter, formerly of Pickering, known to Finger Wave. ,35 - - of Win Nancy, Windsor, are _.visiting his father as Dtlfiias' CrCreek, visit- Marcel, .4o Big �'.88,r Overalls and Smocks, $2.00 each. with the farmer's sister, Mrs. Dr. ed with John. Clark and Mrs. Gor- Oil Shampoo, ; -.35 _ Cartwright- don this week, having come by Ladies' Hair Cut. .20 - `NO better made. -Mr. and Mrs. Fred Balsdon, of plane from San Frane4sco. His Burford, visited the lattees brother, blather, John Swallow, of Kings- Special Prices, May 25 to 31 ".M"• W. J. Clark, one day ta[�t ville, accompanied him here. :Oil P. -W,, Reg. $2,00--5$1.50 SPECIAt"'In heavy white Cups- splendid for oweek. -ri'he winual picnic of the Wlam- Regular, Reg. $3.50-•$3.00 camp, cottage, or for threshing time on the farm -Rumours of a Provincial Eelec- en's institute was held at Avis' Regular. Reg. 85.00-44.00 tion are heard, but Premier Hep- Palk, Fairport, on Tuesday after- _ Look 1 60 cents per dozen. burn has made no announcement now, when the Kinsale and Audley H. 11I1 A ©� rLL regarding the date. branches ►were their invited guests Tonvslship cou cil will meet on � v�l� 'branches gave a splen- 'bone Pick 71, Tuesday next, instead of Mondayr, did program, : and the Pickering .. , L owing to Civic& Holiday on. Man- branch put an the program of .The Pickering "day. sports, which all enjoyed.. About --Dr. N. E. and Mrs. McEwen seventy sat down to a fine picnic MEAT MARKET IM a -S o CHAPMAN'...-. were in Fort Perry on Saturdaysupper. All seemed to enjoy the �' visiting their friend.. -Dr. Mc,Master, picnic and the beautiful park in •wbo is seriously itl as . 8 result of which • it was held.- - - stroke. -All those mbo .intend going on We carry afull line of --.Mrs. W. J. Clark, Miss Jean the Boys, Cl* Expedition to and Joe, also Ham and Mrs. Boy- Niagaga Falls, on Saturday, Aug Fresh a _• Toronto on Saturday .. were m y e Low 11811 `ea>' fth, �wdll meet at the a , • . .- • . funeral of the late e un v the o have 2. axon unless n attending at 1 30 'y ,Tose T C1srk. - Pse y arranged and - ,Tailor-made Suits M . Spieran, and little lough Mr. Pearson will leave with his ter, of Ori", returned home* on truck at this time. Don't be late _ Cured Sunday after spending a few wedks Bring your orrrt lunch and remem- - , at - with the former's parents, J. G. her that 'all ticktets musk rbe purch.. - r and Mrs. Baxter. used by Aug. 3rd, •at Balsdon's -meats = 'Bunting's for -lmr. McKenzie, of Toronto, . is store. Anyone who can take in in charge of the local branch of the their car an extra passenger, kind Our delivery is at your Service. c Bank of Commerce, while the man- ly nosy Mr. Wheeler or Mr, Bats- $16.95 ager, Mr. W. V.o Redditt, is en- don. -All passengers meat be at Phone Pick 1620 jjoying his three-week vacation. - - - - fOrReady-mades----- the Niagara ]doss dock i,tt Toronto, - . -Mrs. W. G. Reid •has beerk-with h at 2 p- m. �CLARENCE SILK Why pay more ? y weeks spending a couple of .-The day 0f the Amateur Con= .friends in Windsor. We hope she test is stall with us. Many were of Now Advoril4somoasa. will return quite recovered. from the opinion that, this type -of • prog- the illness from which -she has been tram had IheCOme wont out. Judg-. POP SALE -New potatoes. . Price - _suffering _suffering for several weeks prev- ing by the number that are still L' "Ot• E, Pen. R R', Claremont. Phone Fred T• Buntln�j � .Pickering jowly being held .thrnughout the provin- Clare 1+22 4s-+9 � -,Mr. Jabez Hallett, while ass- ce they are still very popular • L�0R BALE -One registered abort i ; Kstabliskad 1857 3sting in haying operations one The element of contest, the y Wm. Anderson. Whrtrvale. 41S vaTiet i' kora bull,) 4 months old. T 8 tested. fico day last week, fret with ' an-accid- W make; of entetainzc►ent all.. help make ant while unloading, that severely it one of the most interesting 'ofSTRAFED-On to my premises, lot - • wrenched the muscles of his should- entertsirzments On wed, Au 11th 17, eon. 1. Pictering, one ear mare Own- er and 8rm, and 1188 been Obliged at may have sass by proven ple"y and the men of the. U><iited Church are Paying espen•es. Geo Taylor. Pic -,ring. 48-60 .....-SPECIALS to carry the arm in a sling for a sponsoring s Mobster .Aattateur Con FOR SALE - Two good beifero. ,few days. t4st in the Park here. Applications both T 1s tested 2nd ewe one eshened ---Mr. and Mrs • �R. Dixon, Church heir rec8ived from from. June 25th. One large Holstein freshened July s are $ 18th Appi7 Walser Wbity, P,ekettng Villasa Str., Pickering; announce the en- 4649 gagwnent of their daughter, Verda Pow the a well -know and CC these with one of the well-lfa7awt*n v R SALE-Olo•e eprins Breakf ant Bacon, 25c.! a The Marie, m Sidney Eric' England, radio announcers of aatateur shdws : era and fresh cows. pure bred and grades. T. _ = _ son of Mr. and Mrs: J. England, B.t-sted and blood tested Free. delivery Minced Steak, �2e alb - will present for this ooamnnnity Was J. Murphy. Margo Farms. Lindsay. Ont • • 'Cloverdale Road, The wedding to Phone 1352. Int[ take place, August 14th, at Dan ager of these interesting Prog- ram6. �jOR SAL$ -1 yearlibfr shortborn• Pork Liver 2c..a lbs forth United Church, Ttrrdnto. FboU, from heavy milking strain Herd is y --Misputing a statement often :. lolly actrediwd since 1026. Would exchange ■•� 2C a lb Dnabartasl for and work hone. W. C. Willson. Locust SteWmg Beef heard these days to the effect that H� Prose rick 1007 47 -as f _ • e fast driving is not the cause of the We weletyme Mrs. Chas. Selal,es p1 ARMS accidents, the Accident Rec- h.� alter ARMS BOLD -O. R, Purcell Co. , i wel Shortening, 15e. a lb the winter at have beer+ instrumental in securing the sale , ending Division of the Dept. Of �B litres and o[ many farads [or vanow. purposes during the �r] • Highways in a bulletin issued this the borne of her son' Perhaps We have many peppe ett:<parc homes. Classic Cj ager 3 t ins, 13ee Mrs. Smalea of Enniskillen. Perhaps roar property would esaotl al their f Week, makes this Statement-l2W ' requiretoento. La, with -u..' C: R.PurcelC tills, 2Vc• accidents last year were the result Master Eric Cousin, of Toronto, Coopany, lea Yoege serest, Toronto. 4a _ _ of excessive speeds. f HOUSEKEEPER WANTED - A _ Ljjrj,j S middle-aged woman to keep house for two •-•1A. J. and Mrs, Taylor, and sen, to begin Sept., lot or before. Apoly Emil cousin, of -Cherrywood, and Mrs. BEAU'T'Y SHOP G1entat,, R R 4. Pickering. W. J. Monney, of .Pickering, spent FOR RENT-Atttractive bungalow - several days last week in a de- and garden, garage, suitable for young or • • (Nexi door to Old Church Garage) retired couple. Hard and soft water, Immed lightful motor trip through North. iate possession. Appiv to Mn, Dales, Dunbar- h evil Ontario, in which they visited Shampoo and Fingerwave boa ton. 49-b0 .Butcher .-phone 3000) `i'ielrering North Bay and Callender, after- p 00 M S WANTED t One large wards motoring to Oftarva, Where• Fingerwave ` R room or tvrosmnit o +Ps. on main floor, on 1 Oil Shampoo Fin erwave Qom, hi-hway preferred Must have hard and soft Pi •they Spent considerab_e tisf a see- 8 water. Apply Bo= D. C pros Office, Picteriagckering Hardware** Store ing the sights of the 'Capitol. arching .`�• 9E8 FOR SALE -one Ci des- --On Sunday neat. and on the Manicure g� HOR y dale brown mare 6 years old with colt, also r'ennaiaung Snndays of August, the t three re 7 and 10 ars hr e ma s, 2, Ye ;13ei'V1Ce9 in ills Presbyterian Church Facials ; 5OG old. John fiayel. R R 2,'Pfekering, 49 • HAl>;cUTTING 25c. Time to Order,wl•ll be conducted by Rev. Mr. 0' SOK 1KALE-4 piece bedroom euied,O� 1Sthe Brien of the Whitby united Church nearly new, cost $195. make offer: S-4 bed. T11ermique Heaterless Oil Perman- new: Beatty washer. used only one month: cab- Beds while, Rev. Dr. Carmichael, IS a ire• radio: Chesterfield suite; floor )amp: 5Spring `ry' , way on his vacation. Dr.. and Mrs.' ent Waves smnlltables; kitchen table and chairs:oilcloth V ,1dishes etc. Appply Leslie Leech, onDr. Roy 1V Catanichael left -this week for Coat- =1.96 iZ.60 i3.5o •� Simpson's [aim, Clark's Hollow. Phone Pick , -icook, Que., where they will spend *►btmr Pick. 220P49 .part of their holidays with relativ- Timothy, Alfalfa, Red Clover,q. es. • -The . Sunday . School and Con- Sweet Clover, and Alsike seed* heldgregation of St. Andrew's Church O TER -held their annual picnic on Thuya_Small Garden Seeds iIi bulk day last, at ' F. L. Green's Park at Greenwood, which isone of the - ltllost delightful spots in the Town- and in Packages ship for holding a picnic TheA a e u r �C o 1 e, S t grounds are most attractive in ap- .Purina and . Master Feeds pearaatce and are kept in excellent - .:Field a:1d Garden, Fertilizer eondition. There are also fine bath- • - ing facilities that are much apprec- • • Paint S ecial 59c. a! Qt r fated. There roes- a large .number M e m O r l ,a 1 l 0� Qts. •• P f • present all of whom thoroughly en- joyed themselves. There were . a _ ggent, for McCormick -Deering j"e1m machinery dumber of races and other games_ - ,.. • • . '..,. ' . and Repairs. _ .. for which suitable prizes- were a- - a t Or winners. There was warded to the r 1 g Motto: -"Wel have , . - a Oar ve ,, 0 n Ret i rot contest in which . the older pic- - it is not wave. flickers took part, the winner being - Miss E. Andrew. There � all a- bundance of choice eatables, ice u 11th I .•:.PICKERING am watermelon etc . , which soon � e d • .� • is S. BALSDON, cream, relieved the intense hunger of the children, which thev developed dur- Ar.dr�Qa' flr•':cr.tiora t1 -•W, r. -4v-1-a* .eta^ Pi�.kerinir ant..