###PAGE###1### < 4 O No. 4, 40th Year SHAW VILLE, PONTIAC COUNTY, QUE., i 11 VUS I) A Y, JULY i) f $1.60 per nnnuniln advance t 2 00 to the United bu:tes lit:; I LOCAL NEWS Keep those Valuable Papers if" S afe f Shawville Hardware Store Haying and Harvesting Tools Mrs. Uubt. Lawton, of Ottawa, is visiting lier relative» in town this week. Omissions from Kn trance Class published last week were : Km bio Richardson, School No. 7 N| p <•., in 5t h place ; Kuna Burton, School No. 11—78 p e. in Oth place. I « < - « * ° «T V<7 U « »’ / tj Pe> o c_j C» o n M The extreme heat on Dominion Day made it rather unpleasant for those who took part in the Shoot at the Somerville Han go withstanding this handicap, some * fairly good scores were put on as may be seen from Hie report appearing in another column. A Bank of Nova Scotia Safety Deposit Box safeguards wills, stock certificates, bonds and other valuable records against fire, burglary or loss. The rent of a box is small. "... & N ot- dr* v Forks, Rope, Pulleys, Scythes, Snaiths, Hay Cars Stop Blocks, Hand Rakes Binder Twine, Rafter Brackets and Hangers. \ V The July meeting of the Slmw-villo Womens Institute will take nlncont the home ot Mrs. Munson McDowell on Monday evening, l.'Uli inst, at 71k) o'clock sharn. Program i—Report of Provincial Con- at Macdonald College. Roll call-Dikhes for hot weather. Hostesses—Mrs. Manson McDowell, Mrs. Austin McDowell and Mrs. HorsHeld. I 4 Enquiries arc invited y tBAN K« NOVA SCOTIA ESTABLISHED 1832 Capital #12,000,000; Reserve Fund <24,000AX); Total Resource <265,000,000 Shawville Branch: J. H. Stewart, Manag Shawvillo Branch^: vention The Toadies’ Guild of St. John’s Church, Morehead, will hold a Lawn Social at the home of Mr Kola nd Metcalfe on Thursday evening, July Pth. Supper served from (I to 8 o’clock, after which a play, entitled—"The Voting Country School Ma'am’ —will he presented. Admission -35 and 25 ets. Elections are pending ; hear Quebec’s political problem* disc limed by able deleters Ht Bristol’s Biggest Picnic, Wed. July 22. Agent for— IV|cCormick-Deering Farm Machine Repairs. er J. H. STEWART, Manager. C. J. CALDWELL. If you think the country is going to the flog*, you'll forget your trouble* at Bristol's Biggest Pu nie, Wed. July 22. (fowling . Business (College HENRY’S SHORTHAND SCHOOL PERSONAL MENTION OTTAWA, ONT A few of our townspeople attend- the Church ol St. John the Kvangc- .Mr. and Mr*. I . Thick aiu] family li-t at Quyuti, at whicli the Bishop "ure week end visitors in town, of Montreal preached, and dédient- Miss Jessie Neshitt. of Wake-ed a memorial and other gift* to field. Que., is a guest of her Mister, the Church. Nearly nil the clergy Mrs. B. C. Horner, this week. Mi-- Winnlfred Hamilton, of Ol tawa, is presently -pending her vacation at her home in town. THE W. A. HODCINS STORE Tlii- In-r it 12* ion offt * s i hupci ior train ine ana the rel.y insure» a more success fill fitture. e it leads all others —a fa< t fully »*»! aol i ¦died hy more than liliâ pupils who lilive left of her luisine»» schools to come to it—ami ranks among employers as •* The School of Higher Efficiency." It is not surprising then that business in advertising for stenographers, should definitely state Henry s School preferred Gel particulars about Ottawa, Canada Ottawa’s Greatest School of Busmens, Shorthand and Civil Service.” Write for catalogue. Enter any time. t # DEATH To the Bugs and Flies I ol the district were present, and tlie Church was filled to capacity. The service was much enjoyed hy all present. men Graduates of Mr*. J. M. Aigue and children, are at present visiting their relative* at Carthage, N. Y. Miss Rose Cohen, ut Ottawa, i* visiting her sister, Mrs. S. B. Cohen, this week. our course. 1). E. HENRY, Director, 62 Bank Street The Vnion Sunday School picnic at Green Lake on Dominion Day was largely attended, quite a number besides those immediately connected with the schools, joining in the festivities nature <»i the weather, however, precluded any zeal for indulgence -Mr. and Mr*. Ernie McQuan ie, in the customary field sports and M^tawa, were Sunday afternoon games, and bathing became the guests ot hlends in town. most popular feature of the day's Mr and Mrs. Milton Austin and proceedings- that coupled with the three children/ accompanied by urge for consuming large quanti- Mr. Lors Carlson, of Haileybury. ties ot jee cream, lemonade and were Sunday arrivals in town, the other supposedly cooling buyer foi mer on their way to Qtiyon. ages, r or the ladies whose task it ... . .... , At Slmwville. on Sunday, inly was to ladle out the liquid refresh- Mhscs Dpi! Langford and Muriel nth. to Mr. .and Mrs. Allan McKay, went* and prepare the eats, il wa# I returned "o Saturday from u son. a nil work-day, and no doubt I &Dowlton, Que, where they had relief wa« welcomed when all wa^ been attending a Summer school over and done. Coder normal Sunday School teachers. VVT. E tiOWLINO, H.O. W ü R A I Til WAIT, Prin. Pres FIBEIIMMCE D. J. CAMPBELL The torrid Mr. and Mrs. Jos. W.unman and Veterinary Surgeon SHAWVILLE. of Reasonable Rates. Prompt Payments Inquiries Solicited Eliminate the Potato Blight ! Phone 81. D. A. IÆACFARLANE BRISTOL. BORN Arsenate of Lime - - - - 15c. Berger’s Paris Green - - 40c, Bluestone (Sulphate of Iron) 12|c. Phone Pi—2;' DR.H.G.DOCKS, DENTAL SURGEON \ ini'll enjoy “Jock McDonald and have been much less arduous. accompanied by her mother. Mis. ! „ 4 L> . 1 ' Rev. A Fokes, late ol Princeton. Out., who pleached in the United Church on Sunday last, h is been Mr. L. If. Aiundel, Manager of given a call by the congregation t he local branch of the Bank of to succeed Rev". Mr Wright. Montreal, accompanied by Mir Arundel, are spending their annual vacation in Nova Scotia, from which province Mr. Arundel hail-. (Graduate McGill University.—P< st graduate work in Detroit and New Yoik Ho*! it U*) CAMPBELLS BAY Q V E (Over Dr. Ben md’» Drugstore). Office open until !(, p. m For Dusting or Dry Spray : 5 lbs. Arsenate of Lime, 1 lb. Paris Green Mix well ; apply when dew is on. II Black, and niece, Miss Margaret Turney. Dominion Day — Slmwville observed Dominion Day, by closing business places, but made no attempt to “celebrate*’ in a civic sense. Quite a number of citizens attended the S. S picnic at Green Lake, a fexv went to Reach burg, where they had quite an extensive field day despite the intense heat, and others — those who regard a horse race as the whole tiling—went to Pembroke and en- ,, . du red a 4 hours’ roasting at the J’^py * L Smileys cottage at ering assembled to hear addresses Beam out* tathei, tmm : on agricultural topics by Dr. Conn , l . S., and Mrs. Beamonts I he anniversary services of Bris- ! Motherwell, ex-minister of Agri- mother, tol Memorial Preshvterim Church NOTARY PUBLIC Ililii lilli SSI'Sr jubilant mood. To inadequate arf- new flthrea, % an olitlh^ , ,19,ml Wel1 known si,ppe, served — vertismg nmis piob.iblv due the the attractions that are being ai small attendance, con pled with i tlie torrid weather which prevnil-Doubtless many would bod is- Phone 47 DR. R. E. DAGG SURGEON DENTIST (Graduate of McGil l *niver>iî v The Orangemen of Sh i v ville and neighboring lodges attended service at the l ni ted Church on Sun Tbei ¦ was \ g< > >d E. Wright ; < Mli ce—Hayes' Block, Centre St Shawville, Qve. Bordeaux Mixture and Insecticide : 5 lbs. Arsenate of Lime, Bluestone. Suspend the BJuestoi fur *J4 hours, or till dissolved. Lime and mix tboroimhlv. spraying Mr. Jos. Belmont, of Macdonald day afternoon College stuff, xxitli his wife and attendance Rev XV. children, an ive in. Admission : 50 and * i 25 cents. DONAT LeGUERRIER A radial map on the back page of rover for some reason .1 * .1 • i ha* left Pontiac out of the picture, appointed to learn that they missed while places of importance along the opportunity ot listening to the the Gatineau, and those along charming ex minister. other avenue# leading to the city are plainly indicated. Surely this section has not purposely been ignored. Another omission, which there I is no mention of any of the Pontiac Bristol Mines, Evening Prayer, Fairs in the list appearing on pages1 63 and 04. Can It be that our local ! Bristol Corner*, Evening Prayer, 7.30 négligeai i sending in the names and dates of our county fairs to the proper official of the Ottawa Show ? Notary Public. Office at Campbell's Bay, Que. Branch at Quyon ; open every Monday. Matters dealt with by correspondence as well. See June is- Church of England rd Parish of Bristol The Races at Pembroke Sunday, July 12 HOUSE FLIES Whiz, Fly-tox, Fly-o-cide Are the Popular Sprays. Aeroxon Fly Hangers, 25c. doz. Watsons Fly Pads - - 10c. each. Fly Swats, - - - 5 and 10c. each Caldwell, Holy Communion, 10.30 2.30 The Pembroke Times, commenting on the race meet at O'Kelly Park, on Dominion Day, say* The severe hot weather which prevailed here yesterday (Wednesday) somewhat hampered the success, from the standpoint of attendance, ot the track meet which was held in the afternoon at O'Kelly's Park, and only about 200 people were on the grounds to witness the splendid program of ¦¦The meet was the only holiday attraction in Pembroke, and the promoters of the meet .«p won « • v,.^ " were keenly disappointed at the wicked ball all season, and Cham- ville Counties Exhibition small attendance. There were three races, the 2 21 pace, the 2 30 pace and the free-for-all, and seventeen of the best racers in the Valley competed. Those who witnessed the races were agreed that they were the best seen in Pembroke for some considerable time. UEO C. W K Iii HT, K. C. ( I.INTON II. DOW II, B.A., LL H., BC.L. WRIGHT & DOWD K. J Thorpe, in charge, Advocates, Barristers, etc m Main St., HULL Havoc at Fair Caused by Heat Sher. 1304. At tlie Pontine House, Shaw ville, every Thursday. ij. St. Hyacinthe, Que., July 2 — ; current heat wave hay i Shnwviile baseball nine met OQ The ^H itnrday afternoon by a m ore of wrought havoc among animals on 0 to 4 Dean Howard, regular exhibition here in connection with J. -OSCAR LAFLAMME ra ces „ Dean Howard, .. *.... , ........-................... pitcher who has been hurling a the St. Hyacinthe, Bagot and Ron- ber la in, regular short stop, were | than half a dozen valuable cattle unable to make the trip Advocate, Barrister, Solicitor, etc. Office : Campbell * Bay, Que (Over Telephone Exchange). - and pigy have died while many with y.r «.d .t ,h. ,„d : i'SZ' --y. ,w. evening. sand dollar*. ads. OQ last page. W. A. HODCINS STORE CO., Ltd SHAWILLS, QUE. 7 V . ###PAGE###2### What New York Is Wearing BY ANNAHKM.K WORTHINGTON Cpi(> adventures of ft CH A PTK R VII Salada Orange Pekoe Is a blend of fresh young leaves Barb#ra pondered Peter’» lust statement, >mth is sudden shift vf ground 1 don't see ar i t “No," she said final'v m \ * \ what interviewing my father can nos ! sibly have to do with it.' i “You thought my hypothesis flighty 1 and libellous and a few little thing like that - not a nice hypothesis at nil. Well, I'm not wedded to it. Only I'm : addicted to theories I really can't live comfortably without one. Your father might present me with a pleasing substitute, devoid of dynamite. Even if he doesn't, he’s always good He would distract my nttvtnion zn H «y// the camp with the General's written order in my pocket» and hla > I algnet ring on .v hi eh someone 0n my finger, as proof of my author-lay sleeping sound* fly. ly. Scarcely dar- The camp was Ing to breathe I crept slowly forward. Then before the surprised Chinese could offer any resistance, ! grabbed him and secured hh arms behind his hack. Under his pilot I discovered no food less than two pistols and a knife. The knife 1 threw away. One pistol Hums were I pocketed; with the other 1 induced him to follow me. Wrapped In a blanket. I shoved my captive under the lent wall, and marched him along to where the horses were held by Fu Hsu. Once we had put some distance between ourselves and the camp, we questioned our prisoner amazement, we discovered that we had secured no less a personage than General Pong as a hostage. “Tell hlm" I said, "that as soon as It becomes light, he'll write me an order for 150 gallons of gasoline, twenty gallons of oil and a supply of food, and If he doesn't order pronto, I'll take him apart by hand to sen wh.it makes him tick". Intel Vi. f, r transi it#-1 my of Gen#ral Fong w. walking wearily back to his camp iTo he continued) lb: /A à __ copy from these imaginative flights." "This sounds like a novel sort of Barbara's fact translated •Fresh from the gardens* V vas blackmail." white, but Iter u.ice was cool. Not for nothing had she spent the first four- 1 teen years of her life on the defensive against the world. “Naturaîîy, I don't to have the fact that Mr. Ellsworth and 1 werj once very good was aides to the darkness, I could srp tho outline of a largo cot m r tv rHE Lh va it* TULE MARSH MURDER .iMtlr and Immediately we were sighted, a group of mounted men galloped out and surin a loud and com- friends dragged into print in connection wi\i a sensational "tory. 1 should tdslike it extremely. The test of your flight into the blue is sheer piffle, and you know it a quick gust of anger but under that burst of indignâtiot Peter listened for the note of anxiety dare print a word of it- you’re trying to frighten me with bogies. 1 used t cry all alone in the dark, because 1 knew there was a black leopard synch s I you’d help a fellow out it’s my job, crouv}u.ti the corner of the roda She i in osimv. ii r mer) y a popular ' you know. I came because I was sent, whero the broom ami dustpan stood in TnVu,s;r;.K;but vvis M;n\ry,r'to M? d"> “«*• "£**•”* pears leaving no trace behind her. l’on every effort to get what I was sent ^ et)ni(, and console me. Well, it was for- That> n'a,vnnh,v’ i,n'1 itr’ good training. 1 had to Warn to meet lire has been \ery unhappy, l »r. Vnvurt- : “Ye-es." Barbara admitted. “That’s and know my bogies, alone and in the auvH*rgrïpî • *f1ThehHera t« >vUr P°int (,f ' *"• But I'm much | <.ark—and to conque! them e.nt to cover the vase. He goes to Ur.' more likely to take my father s KJYSS? "; There-.» little thing like loyalty, you fui voting wen an. Veter learn that “he know, i ou play on my sympathies to l« inter ly interested in the i 1WVI1 h get me to persuade father, aa ft favor, j U. do something he wouldn't do other-Wel!, supposing that I could— The set of Barbara’s ch n rounded us mandlng tone I insisted that we bo taken nt once to the commanding of-To him ! slowed the ring and STORY OF A MISSING ACTRESS AND E UE TAX 1NG OF WITS TO EXPLAIN HER FATE. Her voice > ibrnted in fleer made the demands for gas, oil and You wouldn't s We got plenty of Immediate action. load ml with gaa, oil and food and we set out for camp. Leading off In s round about way, It four hours before we shook BY SASCY BA HR MAVITÏ ) was over off the last spying soldier and finally reached the plane For us tinned food was a real feast and even the General seemed to the ? So. you see, 1 recognize n bogie when 1 see one—even a grown up one." (To be continued.) To our I / enjoy It. Break fast over, we put him to work emptying cans of gasoline Into the plane and he proved to he about average Chinese labor at that Job. Then we took off on a level spot in back of the tree; and our last sight seeing him <• Caprice cn“e 3079 rev Caprice Is gold; An orange colored toy balloon, The tinkle of a tambourine, Pollen that make# the brown bee bold.— W !St' I won’t was very firm indeed CHAPTER VI write the Peter Piper had ft 1 the normal mis-I credibility of a young man to the) charm of $ pretty girl. The difference between him and the usual young man that he had learned to gauge it» “Not even to help cut Pen Ella vrtb Flu* “What—do you mean?” Barbara's voire was little more than a gasp. “You and Mr. Ellsworth were privately engaged to be married—before he married Miss O’Shay," Peter calmly asserted. a jaunty jacket dress — Here simple* to make, cosy to wear and Oh message. “General say he no can t interfere ? said Caprice Is green — A hurdy-gurdy's tangled tune. The tassel from a jester's shoe, A faun’s dream in mid-afternoon. so smart In a thin woolen in skipper blue coloring, was the original model, with tuck-in blouse of white crepe satin. A printed crepe silk with plain crepe is quite as attractive. Then again, it .nay be very interestingly carried out in black crepe sbk with white crepe—a costume .hat is smart wherever it goes. Rayon novelties, linen, shantung ami shirting fabrics are other lovely Fu Hsu and lie'll be \ ' ' \ • ' w it 1» J < 1 1 scowled as fl< c« h ,i< 1 could, writing to Vtiv of our young readers Captain Jimmy The poor Chinese looked so funny In Star Bldg., Toronto, w his night clothes and blanket, yet s'gned photo free. one s with his judgment. The life of a reporter early teaches the lesson that even yoi ng and pretty wo- Peter had Not ( 2010 receive Tils women "How did you know ?” The words, came out before she could stop them. Caprice She bit her lip and a slow flush Is blue— Vi mounted to her forehead and drained Soap-bubbles blown by Virrot, gain. An errant dragonfly or two, Venetian lanterns hung a row.— Caprice Is you. — Hat bar it (Vdar, are human beings men looked into more than one pair of wide and innocent eyes bad listened to more than one sweet and persuasive void, had responded amiably to more than aXY:i> appealing smile, ami had discover l3on/en'A ClIOCOlBtB M3‘t6(l Milk "Ixxik here." Peter said kindly, “1 haven’t any ill motive against any of you. Pm quite willing to be frank. 1 Whatever Don one ed .hat all these attractions migh ts t prevent their possessor from pass ig bad cheques or «• gaging in the ai guessed it <>f blackmail. Experience tends to dis- Ellsworth does has a way of getting v an j distorting mist in ! into the papers, and one of the things The health-giving, delicious drink for children and grown Pound and Half Pound tins at your grocer* X Gate of Morse, m i suggestions. Style No. 3079 may be had in sizes I 14. It-. IS, 20 venvs. 36 and 38 inches ups. which one sex views vhe other; but I that got in. by way of society gossip the reporter quaffs strong and mimer- from our Del Monte correspondent ous draughts of experience beyond the was that you and he were seen to limits of his personal affairs, cannot carry t t row w th a head, he is soon advised to seek a here. But you needn’t mind—the ad in which he i mission i< certainly nothing against | A rushing train a night ; In A Nursing Home By day chill winds blow from the sea , Size 10 requires 3>2 yards 39-inch the grey stone with 2 yards 39-inch for blouse. bust Germany’s Great Spring How “Dixie” Crime To Signify the South Money gave to the South its pet seldom visited by tourists Kri ,i w forth atn ut 100,000,900 gallons of > the tourist And beat upen walls. Germany's biggest spring, which Is pours HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS If he get her a great deal just prior to nis clear I sudden marriage Waters monody pping | While the Rises above their sough, and tails. earns through the I've the Write your name and address plain ly, giving number and size of such aiin" patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap • takes *ci s unm . | carefu|jy) for each number, an j *lu ‘'l>' 11 1 ' U ' address your order to Wilson Pattern ended, morning come. ; . 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. of the American Bank- ws ter a j ng ;. ini i*.:i ii :i! ' ' t'.-v < f h< « nan Na- The huge volume from the Rhume- “ a y s Thompson more congenial caret 1 will be the only loser ;f his sympa tbies run counter to the facts. Peter's head was very clear indeed The bills issued by a bank in New Or- j tivnal Railway between the of water c< ers* Association you 1 X 1 K Why do You survly don't aint tinglinglmean : • you're going t<* drag that lead" in 7 But what dt*es it matter leans before the war And echoing vou want to know sprung near Rhunispringe on the rail ales were in ft" denominations They were engraved in English on load from Herzberg to Blcichrode in one side and In Fren h on the other. th< Harb M< inta : The spring is not far from the 1,099-year-old community of Poehlde, throughout the formerly Palathi, where King Henry a id tu have h< 1 Em pel 1 Tell of balls All night winged angels hover there ill Pain, with He was exhilaration of following a which had turned in an unexpected I like that 1 was a fool to let you trick me ? dark One they Barbara’s v oice u as bitter direction. The fact that Barbara was w j t h accusation of both herself and very attractive to look upon enhanced | him. her newspaper value; it did not in the least befuddle Peter's faculties was capable of proceeding precisely i as if she were an angular spinster of ail too certain years—which may be lack of chivalry or its fine-drawn fur- j As he glanced sitiewise at Barbara’s averted profile and noted the firm curve of her chin and the breadth of brow delying the, childishness of her short titlted nos and delicate coloring he paid her < : Drives Pain away The night drags past, and now sees hair with lullabies. ivs la The village doctor was called In to attend a very testy aristocrat. he commenced “It matters just this much," Peter said steadily. "There’s more in this Ellsworth business than meet» the eye though goodness knows it's been meeting the eye plenty these last few days. Suppose that young Ellsworth had a reason for wishing his wife out of the way. Suppose that you were the reason." one He “Well, 811 what Is the matter?" “That, sir." snapped the patient for you to find out." "1 see," returned the doctor calm with coiffes blue-robed Figures of white i ill of these Just human women Yet. surely, angels in Gods light in Chamb# r’s Jour* for a few ! Emmett friend original “Dixie Land" for a minstrel town aie preserved in the Guilph Mu j show, then performing in New York. seun. in Hanover, lie embodied In it the expression he The Rhume River rises in a small had so often heard: “1 wish I were valley not far from Poehlde. Hun This song was later re- 1 f springs ir a small pond form f the river. The water thest developments If you'll excuse me minutes, I'll go and speak to a of mine and ask him to come along." “What ever do you mean?" asked iy — Jean Lang Money or Her Youth Vve just met Maude again," said and she wanted to borrow $;>.00 “Gracious, you do leap to melodrama !" Barbara's smile flashed out a moment, and was gone married somebody vise than the first What use will your the patient friend he?" ' ll. *s ,i vet, and he's the only chap who can make a diagnosis Kave Dixie wrltten by G< nt ral Alb# t Pike, who t hi ü the battle thrill that makes alwi t at n temp# .f 50 Immortal and stamps the degrees Fahrenheit. The water furnishes fewer foi factories and mills. Alice t If every for her holiday expenses “Good gracious! uns pi said the girl's I know #' | without asking questions ! the medical man. Why is Maude always so explained 1 thought her unci Dixie upon the South name The vast lures Sunday ex Magistrate -“Whi n yo i married him In t, Nord* you promised to share his lot, d:du t baij>vn and ether joints in the Hartz you ?" w " Y « s ; but i «i dn't kn< \\ then it was just a lot of trouble." But, you So he did," smi eel Alien not allowed to touch it nd she'll never own oil trim a woman less a foe man to be worthy The United States spends $5.000,000 And they certainly get of his she's until she's thirty Mountains. Lectures ate occasionally held to <\pnin the origin of tho spring, which has been found to result from Oder Kiv steel value for their money Murder," he murmured gently. So, up to that 1 Barbara showed that she d the compliment by sitting, quite Mill far as 1 know, nobody has mentioned silent, in her corner of the coupe, that the Ellsworth case involves a What I really came for," Peter ob- murder." page from the Sieber and : seven n away. Coloring matW placed in the rivers in the water of the Rhume about ihiTty hours later. -¦«vend largest spring in Ger- much better known rJ Wife Czy “Bon Voyage” a Mothers ers, r f served con ve rs a t i on al 1 y you wouldn't help me influence to get me an r father.” You said you cam was to see He saw Barbara's teeth catch her ng your ]ower lip. Then, as if warned again.it ew wit i allowing her features to betray her, she leleased it and turned to him a omp appear Spiin- The n ary, which >'< n the h him miet in her e t ad 1» the arte* tn spring at Oeynhauson, which rows a single col urn of water high in the air at a rate of more than 2,000,000 ga'lons daily. i Barba ra i v “Your own phrase, 1 be that Mr. Ellsworth might wife ’cut of the way one out of the way is isn’t it? Pardon me if I i ed your meaning." Peter’s eyes beamed upon her with frank admiration. He could discount « was quickly. Her hand lap, hut there ness in the po figure. The years her. dropped like pe less’’: from a h 1} u vhf Putting some familiar idiom X f 1 €i 1 from sound- rpre ft ff edge into the ce a She was once again the orphan asylur ; by the hard, unremit (Tort to hold her own. to clutch, personal attraction, but he knew bet. ter than to d >unt quickt -r w he Peter disliked fools, even when they made his own task more simple. “You reserve all your naps for your sleeping hours, don’t you his1 mented. w ¦ s\ When Sail Beats Steam Cornwall is one of England's favor* nd most of those who visit it look in at Falmouth during their stay. Just now 1 a!mouth should lie espe-eia ly interesting, for the grain ships from South Australia have begun to ml those windjammers, are perhaps the most picturesque and intending of all the ships alloat today. Also, there are very few of them left — and Falmouth is one of the few ports where they can still be seen. It is interesting to note that the champion windjammer, the fourni a IF gin Cl which arrived 000 mile journey over the a a ter ways fu. Fried by at Falmouth recently, has been known They are Paul Faquin, leader cf a i Across- to sail 17 L miles in an hour, which is Relatives witnessed their start considerably faster than the average ir* r. In one twenty-four hours* period she has sailed 360 miles, beating the Cutty Sark’s best run, which was 353 miles in twenty-four hours. The Cutty Sark, by the way, is also un National Railways Photograph. jn Falmouth Harbor. eh \ tir nt fragmentary ad van rimen so inimical to bit e holiday c in ? Spirit of childhood ed. “The P u he com ut to get an interview of % i me with Dr. Cavanaugh on tl views on the psychology of runaway <, with sidelights on husbands from whom wives disappear—some thing like that" “Mv father doesn't see interview- mere evidence ... . urely you knew?” Barbara you can’? print any such insinuation, i faced him now, once again the self- Mr. Ellsworth would be after you for f wealth and; libel in no time. “I knew you were a bright girl. Peter’s gray eyes shone with enthusi-1 didn’t suppose society buds 1» had a chance to a mulate that mu La S The point is, it’s a cai i loe expedition las' ear; Jean Maison, R. B working Barbara ignored the tribute. “I might remind you that your inspired flight of imagination has no firing tied w it, holding it down to You must know that WÆ m e; arrive 4 W1V m* ft*# u XF - m. ers >* v# «* * V possessed young woman < Her polite remote voice was r t. c position calculated to put a presumptuous re porter in his place. But Peter was not t< by a “society** manner “Yoi.'re ever so much more Alice in Wonderland than Lady Cla-a hypothèse* Vere dp Vere really," he said with a proof while they work. Now you I , k ' i *. I hoj ¦ ' be a good t bin to get your father to give me tha- interview.” pid Montreal canoe men started on Saturday a n lus historic journey from Montreal to New Orleans i i asm i turn and M. Bourcler. f Maison ayd Bourcler, (left and right) and the common sense working hypothesis, and sometimes accumulât from Laehine, on historic Lake St. Lou s wife of Paul Faquin were on hand to w N h months. The party, in two "Canuyank ca \ dling westward as far as Duluth, will then e m r journey which is expected to take them 10 . Lawrence west to the Great Lakes, and pad- i I sou*hern metropolis tl disarming smile h ward he s Cana i ISSUE No. 2o—*31 ###PAGE###3### Negroes Less Susceptible to Skin Diseases Than Whites Arclicry Champion Polke Horses of London Undergo Strenuous Training & f Tbo diltii ulUes that germs have to ned black by generations of racial ox-gnt through a negro kin as compared posure to tropical sunlight* should with the relative ease of penetrating resist the germs of skin diseases like the b /J 4; 4FM In two ro- er skin and wonder how measles and chicken i>ox cunt 1 Pearl’s ology, Profryg tics establish tween the two i the horse's back believes Ac< "i U Human Bl- that th ng of ;« n< th i m ' i train him to Ills task i ;u t should you be to one of Lon* taughl "the arts, don's crowds, tightly squeezed In be* velop his Intelligence and muscles. 1 le hundreds of pushing people, is taught how to stand still, to move apidly, and to be completely Indlfr All this Is studied f Professor Raymond evolution on i quarterly review ill, me i i p /i is statis* ires in g the e difference# he- proof abilities of the *kin ft le germ Negroes •esistlng $ tween in, ible to move an Inch in any direc- , lion, t hen you win wonder still more t to noise at the wisdom of the police horse as for a month, and then the third Hugo . but forcibly controls the In the training begins, when the young lending his sagacity and horse must go through his duties w ith t i lu i 'ance t<> pay i t.» which negro* • ¦ • ¦. ly Immune also Include billty than w •ariut f ÏÏMM pti .11 • l CH I t(> uses, f which klu, but of the body like tile are relat diphthet.. fectloiiH of the n . r and germ In-j like pneumonia, the never try to penetrate th he gently iras A' 3 inu why the relatively ! attack other pa nd of masses strength to the Force of which he Is . man on his ha* k tu. h a worthy member. Round the training ground are vari- Not many miles from London Ilea ous “properties" which can ho st;m«-d Ember CouiJ.. the headquarters of the at any moment. Dummies hang in London Mounted Police. Walk through rows forming a crowd, to which the tlie gray archway leading Into linker horse has to he introducedÎ Dummies Court and pass to the training ground ; are placed on the ground, and ho must beyond. Here you will Iqprii the In- pick his way among them without Infill ' lng Injury. Khm > "\\ .tved and whips cracked, all of which lie must get accustomed to. Every summer for two weeks the trained horses return to linker Court, and once again are put through their exercises and tests. This has been found necessary in order to refresh them In the understaud- It is thick and tough skin of the negro, tan iny to ! China Building Roads of the co ties of Cblng-ln Northern $5,000,000 More Spent On Recreation in 1930 w- By ans operation or me iargt ko w and Halchow \(cording to a corres Christian K New York lire Mot pondent of th tor nearly $5,000,000 mot was spoilt ou public recreation in 080 communities in the United States and Canada last year than the total expenditures during 1929, according to the yearbook of the National Recreation Associa- ( . tvresting story of how the police horses are trained. The training actually consists of three stages. The first stage Is the de-wloplng of an understanding, not only between rider and horse, but also between the horse and all those tilings that he will necessarily have to deal Young hoi es, nr small i road bu i 1 1 fully car- Kiangsu provln campaign is being su i < and already this i >f broad, high, ms more than well-grade, built. » been road îave heme calls for build- ¦ : 1 • lonal The w hoi tlon, issued recently. Despite the slackening of business = ~-== sS? s-5 in g nearly 400 miles highway, hut completion of the pro- ing of their work. When the training is over the horse takes Its place in the public eye. It moves through crowds injuring no one, and enforce# law and order with a controlled dignity, showing it has complet ' «onfldence in its rider. Watching it while on duty one is gpajns New Government = To Build 27,000 School, friendship existing between horse and The horse and the officer national girls archery champion, during archery championships just completed at I/>s the University of California, led with In his career tho • that have had only .1 amount of training, are chosen as being the most adaptable. 1 furlng this first stage, which generally lasts seven days, the horse is left alone with his instructor In order that ho may get used to his voice and to ills new surroundings made to establish a friendship between tho horse and its future rider from the beginning, as without a knowledge and understanding of one another they would never he able to do the work that lies ahead of them. Tho horse has also to accustom himself to many things—the sudden vagar- Miss Betty Jean Hunt fete! çiate girls Angeles her team victory Miss Hunt, a student at with canals and Five Potato Points Silk will not have a washed-up ap-after washing if it Is clean- Every effort is these waterways. The new stretches of highway built this Spring now make it possible to automobile over a roughly In 1930. While about one-third of the total expenditure was for land and Improvements, the amount spent for recreation leadership e/ceeded by % i rains have stopped. The county authorities dividing all the roads Into two sec-One side Is reserved solely and all pearanee ed with potato water. Pare and grate number of potatoes into cold water ni stir with i ‘iik ; mr or SO, then pour tlm clear portion into another vessel and wash the k by I fling it all-fill ill this move without wrln to drip. When aim >st dry, press on the right side first to produce a gloss. Obstinate mud stains can he removed from any kind of material by rinsing them In the water In which potatoes have been boiled. If fat becomes burnt while frying, drop a few pieces of raw potato into it ami leave for a minute or so. after which all traces of burning will have for building Madrid.—A program 27,000 schools in Spain was announced recently by the Minister of Education, Marcelino Domingo, who stated that would he completed buildings a mount work as one because they both understand exactly what has *<> he done and do It with an intelligent, gentle firm-They are something more than they are true corn- use an triangular route nearly 800 miles Is All of these Leave for an Northern Kiangsu 7,000 of them within .i y ir. Some of the schools will be constructed with funds obtained from the cutting down of tho Moroccan military budget. In making the announcement, Senor Domingo said lio- ness man and beast, ' les of paper blown around him; the rades. .a in part, to need for maintaining health and morale through wholesome recreation at time when family budgets for amusement are curtailed." More than 85 per cent, of the 1930 expenditures was derived from taxation, the report said, less than 11 per cent, from fees and charges and slightly more than 4 per cent, from private r and hang up are now a t Ions : r rubber tired In Africa —Land of Color vehicles irt s, w heelbarrowa % tired vehicles i mule carts, ox and Iron or wooden forced to ke the other side. Rigid regulation of these traffic rules prevents the new roads being cut into furrows which, in the past, have quickly made most of the new high* unuseable by automobiles or measure alone justifies --J3BS2 g=S liI§H “This one The are rock knolls ti . ran in towards us have been commemorated by Wordsworth in one of his innumerable son-Rut the final touch was most un* Not daffodils border-At first sight sources. The total yearly attendance of 573 used frequently in- cities at outdoor playgrounds was 206,818,987 and at indoor recreation centers 31,114,757. Municipal bathing beaches served nearly 38,500.000 fn 81 cities and 7,520,551 rounds of golf were played on 163 municipal courses. Among the 13,354 directed recreation areas there were 7,677 outdoor playgrounds, 2066 indoor recreation centres, 4,322 baseball diamonds, 312 golf courses, and 1,042 swimming pools. There were also 1.806 ice-skating rinks, 59 ski jumps and 221 toboggan slides. disappeared. A boiled potato stead of soap will keep the hands soft and white. A pen nib will not become rusty while not In use If It Is stuck into a Ten minutes in a car gets you down to the mud border of the lake; ind then you begin to realize the nunv You get out and walk towards handicapped Spanish State education, Minister stated that normal would he opened In Madrid ways trucks and the schools this Summer on nets Wordsworthian : hers the pink regiment. A pinky white window runs the length of the shore, a It is all made of ed It, but flamingoes they too had a flowerlike atr, as of enormous lotuses or lilies thrusting themselves out of water to hurst Into Rut then the lotuses raised ? The Split Infinitive Border Cities Star: The days of the purist In English appear to he numbered, at least so far as the Ontario Department of Education is concerned. Copies of agreements between school boards and teachers which have re cently been distributed are reported to contain such choice split Infinities as “to diligently and faithfully teach," “to teach diligently and In another place the word is used instead of the correct Europe to Receive Summer Students London.—Thirteen French univers!-1 have organized courses for tho coming summer holidays for foreign students. The chief subjects are French and the teaching of French, to-, —................._ received a letter from the manager of the theatre. “Dear Sir,” It reads,—“Your performance last night was so had that several people have already written demanding that their names he removed from the free list.” raw potato flamingo i'-mMi.-i \ a i d up by the Most of the birds are busy bloom •inttotts necks ffom their subaqu > browsing; they looked at us with sus-plcim; they began to walk supreme combination of the pro waves In the shallows; they walk out as you ties approach, and finally fly up wings closed they are all pure pink, hut in flight the deep red of the wings is revealed, bordered heavily with Flattering The first performance of a new play was received by the audience enthusiasm largely notice- With Flam in goes t |ue and the ! utlfuls Wln-i.-nnere with Its shores bordered by great rosy Then suddenly I saw that the geography of France | and pastimes are Included. The number of summer courses m Italy has increased this year. Rome is holding two courses particularly for students from America. Venice will present several on painting. Perugia has announced a 'Royal University •> black instead of faithfully." Hair may be a woman's crowning glory, but like so many other mon-archs she is waiving her rights. birds! far shore, four or live utiles away, \y as bordered with pink. Surely this could not he birds?—It must be some geological deposit, some But the glasses insisted on the fantastic truth—it was all birds, battalions of birds, massed In a pink con- There are two kinds of flamingoes the commoner is smaller and here brighter pink. The other, paler, more roseate and less salmon, is not only larger but has relatively longer legs it is adapted to feed in “less “fewer," and the punctuation is do scribed as somewhat futuristic. This seems to us r*-gi ible. We to the There was once a man who kept several dairies for a whole year. He ( was a stationer. incrustation and neck have no objection whatever convenient and euphonious split infinitive, but “to diligently and faithfully teach" is neither convenient nor euphonious. It is just sloppy. And if the emanations from the Department of Education are not to he properly punctuated there is little hope for proper punctuation form graduates of our schools had occasion to criticize the writings of the usual high school or even university graduate knows to his sorrow that most of them use commas as cooks use pepper and quotation marks for no reason at all. deeper water. Towards sunset, most of the birds gather (or gathered the two days I watched them) round the north end of The air was full of flocks, for Foreigners limions army. Like Nakuru presents the same spectacle of flamingoes as does Elmen-but the lake's pink border is You can see it clearly 3 * l i « the lake a few hundred In this one, ten thous- The bird-forms outlined teita much bigger from the top of Meningai, the mountain above Nakuru town, though the far end of the lake Is ten ralloa off. I know something of estimating the numbers of birds or animals, and how it is to overestimate (the same and in that against the sky, with their queer big heads, their enormous sinuous necks, and long legs trailed out behind, were redeemed from grotesqueness not only by their glory of color, but by a certain arrowy quality of flight, a natural wild-As with so many other créa- i t « i4 Any one who has ever ! km i t (' ea - y Is une for all objects—how many people realize that the total of stars one with the naked eye on a light night Is only some two thousand?); and I have a perfectly good conscience ness tures (although not all), the flamingo is only grotesque in captivity.—Julian Huxley, In "Africa View." h '4 l can see ? Primitive Man Knew Value of Food Preservation Montreal.—The reduction in the general death rate achieved within the past generation is in large measure due to advances in methods of preser-: food, said John 8 Blay, in a recent speech here : is, he said, have estimated that 45 per cent, of all illnesses arise from intestinal disturbances, and proper conditions for the storage of food eliminate a great part of all intestinal dis- 5 4 MAIS CUT *4*1 it • •• which is suggested by Professor R. E. Mr. Harald Andre, and • • e • • E I I • III! • • • I • » Z i-xi « • » • • • > JimxnL; [It' • • i Vacy iTr t , li* I 4 komurs, * % Medical stalls- y i y /4 % y % J eues. and Cyrus, the emerald of Polycrates; these things, reckoned insignificant at have L— i ¦it orders. The use of refrigeration dates hack to the age of the cave dwellers, said Mr. Blay, probably being accidentally discovered by throwing remuant» of food into a cool corner of a cave where they remained edible longer than unordinary conditions step was the use of ice preservatives, mediums ai ep h i in the earth, wells, cellars and early, more or less i Irrglrpr Zachrlsson, other experts as making English much easier for foreigners to learn and suitable for use as an international auxill- of their occurrence, 7. the age floated, whilst laws and expeditions and books and and are forgotten simple element of humanity or moral common sense.—Emerson, Journal. n • Me LC kingdoms have sunk n. So potent is flits ? I # • • • l e # Tl ary language. Many prominent people in this conn-interested in Anglic, and a l • • - uL> j 1 .in The next n y are magazine, "The Anglic Illustrated." is being produced, all the items in which in the new spelling. It Is from one of them that the paragraph quoted above is taken. Will “Anglic" catch on? Time alone tell. But It is rather flattering to (1er » / and snow as Other refrigeration v > ! ire i primitive iceboxes. Ice was first produced artificially in 1755, said the speaker, and the first patent on an ice-making machine was taken out In 1850 of large Ice making and refrigeration plants Is comparatively recent and Is confined largely to Canada and the United States. Ice is used to a greater extent in North America than in all the rest of the world, he said. • » can English-speaking people that theirg] tlve tongue, even if disguised by eccentric spelling, should be chosen as latest world language.—London ua / i The construction /O < 8 the : Answers." i ? A Britain’s Small Savings Show Large Increase London—Britain Is thriftier than Despite the depression, $250,- y Ltld tojYifr ilaî$2 U&JL important flaft In hastening the coflT ing of the electrical age, also made possible the domestic automatic refrigerator, said the speaker, and all practical refrigerating machine# ere a memorial to him. I î ever 001,060 worth of postofflce saving certificates were bought in the last financial year, it was reported re- This figure was $50,000,000 in the fiscal year of, & c c : centlyg^g higher than 1929-30. *v« a mi ml to kiss >ait. I’ll give you Just five min ut es to change your mind." II •O I SI, ###PAGE###4### w THE SHAWVILLE MILLING CO., REC'D. . proprietor. THE EQUITY wrinmln Has InnrHontlm l»;it i llii;lil> - Sïivvliiüzivl X<|’. a ami-— "Sun - Svi-iMNil'* Omuot Swim— Fish XX llh Four Fytv*. The New Plymouth w. J. EADES SHAWVILLE. JULY 9, 1931 For vxpvrtM pick tuv OGILVIE’S l.i anrl along cv t.i tin* divine 1 Wvd |onlinar> l&nkanc? vt lilt 1) -t w tha ( a î \ i v 1 real\ The Talk of the Town is the New Plymouth. ONE YEAR ahead of anything: in its class I 1 I ' \un. I IL u ; ,-r i thv full and it of Klac her for the Term 1 ! whirl l 11 Wa 1. hut A - l.i turned from July 2nd, Itteiuse of -mill attendance. the meeting of (Mu School vmlun I inner* Vlub, to consider the nine matter of ptirchafting Twine, is again lull, t tiled for Thursday evening of this ' aiy, 91 week, J A î>th, A s o’clock H nested. I I 11 vf I 1 \m - ; t Nov., D« VXM. S r lI is a 2 »-ci n " i ’ 1 April, May, June per month. Applicant state V tn cut boat is taken T a a consider Hum t1- t haw been campaigning tor weeks. Norn inations ol candidates for ill const it n Dieted. Hu? pleasui nil » as t i » School Hall at . i1 allow for is made to th ations v\| tioneivs have 1 L K. SMITH, Sec. I’rv.vt 1 attendance i> r tilt x K i tr 1*. row boat l See It! f ami pci thi boats slowlv ov * r the coral ? oof. t h< l’xv b«>\ C’LAVDK KLLIOTT, Secretary o tout I ! KLHVT'IONS IN OfTOItKli f the ' passenger sitting gazing raptly over tin* well of tin* boat. Then* rnav be ,.i ripple on the son but the section of \ brief session of the the water covered by the glass is I perfectly still ami one can tee right Into the heart i f I>avy Jones For tl sea a ui ! Bvrmudi followed by prorogation and credibly translucent. Anemone % f the boatmen. Color! 11);» Otftob .;, set*ills i • • \ h v h era I impression in I Phone 24—5. t Third Government Shoot 11\\ October immediate dissolution ot the legislature necessarily aeet tien! irs apply to We close at ti-ISO Thursday Evenings 200 500 l!00 T’tl issiata n< e That is the predominating sensation. Kv« ry ro:i-| » »! it ir il «'ir- vivahle shade nf rce-i ami corals >' th ill the,mini f th« spectrum. Kish dart about in mud.Vs 41.1 species, though the finest i »>l U1 .v\N> L A 2. ; the fish which haxe the \ nwer of ly chancing color to .ummndings. I hear—and see— r than tis her men's 94 A 1> McVrviliv .hto Virie... . N (Î Stewart. N lliulgins. . . K Paul........ Win Pirie. P Wilson P Toner....... A lleamun.... L Kilgour.. . Ken Pirie I) MvTiernan. Wea Pirie . . .1 11 Stewart. . II Stewart ... B McTiernan . V Klliott.... .1 Stewart .. . N Sparling. . I> Armstrong. A Vhisnvll . . • (» McTiernan. i ieo Stewart. . K Black....... V Robitaiile . . L 1 lean...... Peter Wall ... P Somerville. V» Sparling... 1> M Stewart . Percy Wall... L Sharp....... J McLean Joe Buthledge L Dean........ H Wallace. . . . John Dean... Wm Vhisnvll. L H origins ... K Dagg........ M Blais....... A Dagg........ « " .1 I >nei K I(origins... M Horigins... (i Robitaiile.. A Haley . ... H Man well. . . 1:1 12 •2!) 12 91 1:1 2d 12 ss :$o 26 1.1 87 28 2d ill !h r 27 11 28 S' l l! VI !'M. Hi Ail.'v. 2d 29 10 h:» ESTABLISHED 1883 27 2”» 81 32 l .H N 0X7 r I Ix SITKKMI BROADCASTING KIGH l’S RI LONG TO DOMINION. I N *1 *\ :l \ tn h i V. Lniju ^ II 2 4 8:1 28 if l nstantaneo nntrh îhvir But if .» nu v\ 11 2 4 8:( 28 COACH INVALID 2:1 U 29 82 i 0- On f xt a i r j' ('> 28 81 28 27» Control of radio broadcasting in 4 an the Dominion Parliament 1 ivs st r you must v ' - - ' Bermuda. ; r from the d •26 81 •27 28 an tmpreten-tquarium t :;o minutes by k at Hamilton. un id,i belongs t | not to the Provincial Lvgislaturt decision of . m ii »rit> tin- jii*I the Su prom Canada handed down lui the radio reference. turt w i> n >t tin mint >us 1 ustice Smith and ruled in favor 10 m i twin I 79 1 27 t:t li> GBOEG-B HYNES 8s SON s I H »•> 7« 29 25 t } i ns was i n 21 24 2t; ie C ourt nt tst Tuesday in < > 1 t ( n .1 Tho rarest ttsh in the aquarium, as '"'u rater l, !.. Mowbray will tell you, s the “sea-serpent" a fish without ins which cannot swim. In appearing It is rather like a snake and «ports a suit of brown, banded with 2d Tl 29 lit x i v 71 16 >- to Directors of Funeral Service Shawville. Que. - I 71 27 20 l Miief 21 n v l i hit « :v i riu 70 29 23 i 0 Is now 69 ! r il*" ri (},; -.mu* convenient p’a< \ town or Just nut hid . plant, capable of s i ! amounts . ( hot st« im i st * un is lcd thn lated mdi pip* 51 ,,,| t, y the sy: te ni Ht : neorr. havo now found means of k ‘coin : te un .13 hot though i» han to pass through r»0 Immense length a f p!piag. In the homes .erved by th * central II plant arc t ne nouai radiators, which warm not only the living-rooms but ... also the lull's and passages, thus maintaining a genial temperature throughout the house. The radiators are self-regulating. Bach part of th" hous • is equipped 22 with h thermostat control which auto-29 rnatic.il!y keeps the temperature at "0 any desired level. One Kind of ther-L>() most it will bo f imiliar t > readers l«j who possess up-to-date motor-cars. , ^ When t!v engine is cold the thermostat closes shutters over the radiator i IS y Xnglin, M Newcomb* .) list ICt Mr. Just of the Dominion's amounting to necessity. it its prey like a snake. In dissenting judgment, sir. • !1> t-•' Despite its peculiarity, the sea- Jlistve 1/uiioni held tl,rp..nr nmst gi\e the palm of p:>pu-of th" Dominion was a ri t y to th.* octopus. This creature Mil change his color •— almost as Viivklv as his victim can! He has he color cells of Ida skin under compete control and when emergencies iriro, or to beguile the unwary, he vill suddenly change from a ilettght-hil green to a pale pink or vice versa. To see a creation of nature even t ore strange than th * kangaroo, you *111 visit the sea-horse tank. A peculiarity of this tish is that the feuille lays her eggs in the pouch of o male and the male then carries us 21 23 21 i !u Th 23 r.i 21 to full juris- yellow-brown 21 1 11 III Phone 80 tut It’s a sluggish fellow, but it ocoa 20 21 25 Il I 17 21 ui> 2t» ri 15 21 2"> lie i 21 12 $0 et uiiy-.iiMi-11 !i unies i 02 19 27 i<; Kinfret ami Mi the jurisdiction unlimited, and to=»k the stand that i measure over radio re 19 13 23 17 U * 21 not 24 29 •s were entitled t >1, particularly Iteration. the provmei 17 20 13 <»l itr 21 47 14 12 eei \in ur 17 15 9 18 40 )> HOSITTAL VHARUKs 15 13 I 26 15 1 1 Vrc ) Manitoba Kr 25 16 9 i ttitle more ex 23 15 8 Hvery year it gets pensive to lie sick. The operating room u >nly remain about stationary, , h that the I p lie mi> - » m hem 1 ! T , , 198 h >s \ 1 \ for i h which gave lonah his idea. This is the porcupine tsh, which and we have the author-ty of Darwin for the statement— *an eat its way out of a shark's itomuch. An interesting fellow. Mention of Darwin carries you to he tank whet Cel reposes. ‘arm arks of he in •in :v Running n length, it can give a good account u himself, especially when cornered. Bermuda has ;» four-eyed fish called the butterfly flsh nakes a specialty of removing pa radie erustations from other fish. Quite M ‘ful and cno of the most beautiful if the coral reef denizens. The peacock Rounder goes on*» bet-or The larval forms are hatched vith both eyes as in other flsh. Later he skull turns and the right or left »yo is moved over and both eves ro-natn on the same side throughout Il 5 t; 20 harg 20 HO speaking of them ni tais which have reported to the Doim Bureau of Statistics. 1 hese returns indicate that since 1920 rates h ive gone tip 0 0 per cent. 1' is a game that hospitals have been at -ince I9L» ureal increase is in the public " ud< which in 1928 was #1.90 per day, as It was #1.83 in 9 1 I 19 r> 13 mon 18 18 During the month of JULY we are offering A Discount of 15 p. c. on all Tires and Tubes in stock. Goodyear and Firestone New Stock. ... All First Grades . .. so that all poasihl » heat is kept in. As the temperature riser, the shutters opened more widely as may bo 17 8 !» Vin 16 !» a: 1 l 1 i required. The tliermosfat control la set to the * the green Mornny Phis flsh has all the g first cousin to a often to seven feet 13 13 temperature the owner wants to maintain in the place where it is install -d. it regulates the supply of Meaui tj the radiators, increasing it if the air boeimea too cold and de-creasfng it as the temperature rises. Hitherto about 200 building.! have hfen served in Winnipeg, but recently an expenditure of $500,000 has been sanctioned for a bigger plant to serve a much .argvr number. So successful has tin svsît m h.-en that plans aie under eon: MeraBon for spending a further t 1,000 000 to extend it to the suburbs. The municipal system effects a saving in the fuel bills. These great plants can burn inferior coal, and it Is possible that a good deal of rubbish which is now wasted can bo tis«-d to generate heat by being burned in special incinerating furnaces tinder .it ’ Then the adoption of such a scheme means an immediate decrease in the smoko nuisance. Where every house has several chimneys the atmosphere Is always smoky, and smoke means dirt, injury to health, and often the rapid deterioration of buildings. Thousands of chimneÿs cap be replaced by the single one of the central plant, and by the use of modern scientific methods the furnaces can be made to consume their own smoke. Winnipeg Is showing the way for a development which must in time come in all the cities of the world. We have already centralized the supply of a good many of our household requirements. In our grandfathers' homes each house furnished its own lighting by moans of oil lamps or candle.*. To-day we switch on the electric current or turn on the gas. In some towns there are centralized services which enable householder* lo hear the wireless programs by plugging in the loud-speaker. Under 'he new electricity scheme, power ind lighting for factories and homes will come from vast central generat-ug plants. Centralized heating Is now one of the greatest needs of the ige, and before long it must be an accomplished fact throughout the •ivilized world. against $2 03 in 192 19*26 m l si "2 in 1913 have moved up only i trine trom to #2.87 between 1928 ami 1929. The average cost of maintenance ot the patient per day mounted from $3.43 in 1928 to #3 62 in 1929. This figure is another which has got the habit <>t iis- 1913, when The t •A. 1>. McVrvdie was best shot over the three ranges with a total score of 94 and is entitled to hold the 1'll il*' ) Trophy, donated by t h-Supply Co., of Ottawa, for the best aggregate at each shoot. A. Beaman, of Litchfield, was the first winner with a score of 96. Semi privât* rates #•2.8 McMullen This fellow mg, having been at it the Dominion average number of indigent pitient* figure which has gone :»93 in 1929, roughly 1U |>er cent greater sine* Spoon Winners was #1.68 is another 1* Wilson, 32 John Pirie, 33 209 yards 500 “ 600 “ —Wesley Pirie and Nellis Hod gins, tied with 33. To shoot off at next regular shoot. ip, it being 340 than in 1828. The figure# above quoted are the average covering the whole Dominion. hides tables showing each pro The average hospital charges of public wards 1929 in this province was #1.71, which is lower than the Dominion average of #2.03, and lower than six other provinces, Ontario being the same and Prince Edward Island’s #1.10. ife The Next Shoot There are row fish and hog fi-h, latter running to 25 pounds and irvr excellent for the table; parrot coney or butter fish, which excel :i adapting themselves to their surf undines; the queen trigger, so call'd b cause its dorsal spine locks and !niorks like the safely catch on the rigger of a gun; angel fish and ?q*iir-•.•I fish, and hawks of the fish family, ed and white vith blue eyes. They tome to Bermuda in shoals once very seven years, their last call hern ; in 1927. There are live corals to be reen and iscidians, anemones and sponges In i riot of gay colorings, grow i ig over raturai settings of rock work. Many of the flsh in the aquarium lave their natural habitat 500 feet >elow the surface of the ocean. When ¦hey are brought up—either by ho k *r basket—and the pressure of the .vater Is removed the fish expand ’really* To remedy this Mr. Mowbray a short six-inch section of an imhreîla rib. This he inserts between Me ribs — experience bar told mm fust where—Just as a doctor Inserts i trocar, and the expanded gases are •^leased. The concave wound made v this improvised trocar soon h els. ind eight out of ten captives thus /ented survive. Mr. Mowbray Is a native of Be -iuda. He constructed the aquarium , * Boston. Prom there he went to Vow York, then to Miami, where he md operated for four years the vi'-known aq iwrluta there. Wednesday, July 22nd report in vince. SHAWVILLE WILSON’S GARAGE X .NOVUli INVENTION Model of Truck for Iy the mayor and & who bent i< w in a re- ; v ! PI = t f» ? The Following* Goods Are all New Stock : V ? # e # I» v t rai % •> x — t Al HVWl mn ION : l'atiudrt i n* % 91 ..10 2 no Any a li cri* in To I’lilted State* .. . Cut and Styled to Individual Order | A Good Line in a large number * of Choice Patterns to choose from. -'P< et fîjt TI well 'ill : f 11 ! t 11 ' t f f] ,y runtirl nu jcknowl Ih n vn H 1 igrapl - il ai <¦', t < •> ! ' lent i u i wn*t Ik* paid In fnII be my paper h dUvoiitlyuvd. All mirais if % ? 111! t f » f * I CHILDREN’S PLAY SUITS — Blue and Khaki—$1.40 to $1,50 ! PVItLISHEll, \. COWAN. i ? ? llll ? ! \ t i f à « I tn I District Women’s Institutes HATS ! | Now is the time for you to look ! •> * ? HATS ! v v n r i: $ * ? MEN’S COTTON WORK PANTS - . ? r»ri WH rfptv-i Am* rlf in pro . .. $1.50 pair Tima of Monthly Meetings : Fit 't Thursday. Second Weilnesdny. i the b'.ltl von t III Will * over our FELT HATS and choose one for yourself. »» f J» MEN’S KHAKI PANTS f >r riven re. the Km mnnii on need f hat o a certa ; to till i1!’ plfifid hi tho college ¦ervonnJ t hastily removed when It was dis ivered that the M I*, had a relative it Cambridge. This ml ht have made he Cains men u >riou8. They were, however, completely deceived, and , loudly applauded tho "M.IV*—netti- .. ally an undergraduate disguised with i grey beard, and not a hit like the man he was Impersonating especially when he declared that, if there was a division in the House of Commons on the ollowing day, lie would not I- now into which lobby to walk. One of the funniest hoaxes of this nature took place at Oxford. Tt was announced that a meeting under the auspices of the Home Counties Psychological Society would he addressed by Dr. KmII Busch, professor of psychology at Prank fort University, and at the appointed time a ,.presenta-tive audience, Including several heads of colleges and a number of dons, assembled in one of the roomi of the town hall. ‘ Dr. Busch'* was an undergraduate with a temporary walrus or Old Bill moustache, and his address sounded very profound. Of the nnnd he said: "After all, it Is merely p. chunk of ipace— time happenings which alone form the l>asir fundamentum of everything.” This brought forth no comment, nor was there any demur when hn solemnly declared that "every effect must he followed by its muse." While, in fact, the initiated were helpless with laughter, the audience listened with interest, and at the •nd departed apparently without the faintest idea that there had been any- thlng wrong. Buried trea tire hoaxes aro by no mean-i rare, though few aro so suc-ceaful as was one at Darvel, Ayrshire. On a piece of paper found near the town was a message in faded writing, to the effect, that many years previously the writer had hidden a quantity of gold. The exact spot where the hoard lay. It was added, would be found indicated on a chart deposited In a cranny of a certain old brfdce. So mo young men discovered this chart, which showed that tho gold was secreted in a quarry, and consequently a great trek in its direction began. Men. women, and children, armed with picks, shovels, and other Implements, flocked towards the quarry, which ultimately presented an animated scene. The gold-seekers dug feverishly, each trying to outdo the others, and there was not a minute’s Intermission the whole day long. Late in the evening, however, the diggers got a shock. A mother had discovered, they were told, that her bright son had prepared the papers, browned them before a lire to make them look old. and then hid them. As a result of mother remarkable hoax, many motorists were "had." It was reported that a tunnel tinder Harwich Harbor, and connecting Harwich and Felixstowe, was to he opened at 3.30 one afternoon, and invitations to attend the ceremony were sent to people in I^mdon, Ipswich, and other places. Guests were requested to meet at a certain hotel to Join in the first procession of motorcars through the tunnel. At the time stated there was a long string of cars on the quay at Harwich, and the police, who knew nothing about the invitation, could only look at them In bewilderment. When, however, the situation became clear, constables were stationed to turn back motorists as they arrived, and to tell them that they were much too "previous" for the opening of a tunnel between Harwich and Felixstowe. Still. 300 motorcars actually reached the quay. Ki $1.35 pair Bristol Via nmiloit Klm-ido Second Wednesday. V tobal I*. •> in M P. ! 2 t m • » ? ïh\ *pf‘*k. Nolle ft.m t MEN'S FANCY COTTON SOCKS r Vf ;lî Good Blue and Striped Overalls . . $1.49 % 1 Shirts Ties Hosiery Murrell* Third Wednesday St,uik- Cor’*-Second Thursday ille —Second Monday. / .. 15c: pair ! • • ? V Shaw v Wyman ? Grocery Specials •> Second Thursday. •> ? % * Sour Mixed Pickles, 30 oz Sweet n Prepared Mustard Canned Peas. .. Canned Tomatoes Sliced Peaches, large tin. McLaren's Jelly Powders, DeLux Jelly Powders, 35c. 45c. 25c. 25c. 20c. UNDERTAKING and EMBALMING # • • • MURRAY BROS * M Il II 4 •> t ? Il H 1 • • • # # # 3 tins for 3 .. W. J. HAYES ? # * • # f ! SH A WV ILLE II MAIN STREET • e e # SHAWVILLE - QUEBEC. 32c All calls will receive prompt personal attention. Motor Hearse supplied if desired » 7c. package 2 e # DC. Il # # e e raybestos Meat Specials Breakfast Bacon, 24c. lb. Pure Pork Sausage, 25c. lb. Head Cheese, 25c. lb. Waxed Bologna, 18c. lb. Brake Service Station MAIN STREET SHAWVILLE, QUE. At All Times Fresh Vegetables, Choice Groceries, Fruit, Ice Cream, Candies, etc. i Overhauled, Charged Batterie* ami Stored. Complete Stock of GOODYEAR Thus# and Tube#, King Bug Killer A quick and sure death Insecticide, Fungicide and Fertilizer.—20-lb. bag, 85c. ShkMm Cyclo and Marathon Gaholknk. ItKD Indian and Ca*trol Oils. ) Call at WM. WELCH’S G. F. HODGINS CO. Lt’d. Wkkckino Service Phone 53. East End, Shawville, Que. The Same Reliable Service Departmental Store. Wilson’s Garage. n P. S.-We handle STANDARD Hread. Phone 40. Shoe Repairing Bronson HI, Bernard Tinian 04. Grade III Eileen Trudeau 88, Jack Kvhoe 80, Charley Trudeau 70, Mabel Bronson 66, Ivan Tinian 05. Phonic No 11.—Rita T»nlan, Eleanor Lucas. June Exams District Schools. • • e Ji ni; Exams. Maillon Wilson 899, Mar N IM N No. f> t I. XI Slew lie Marble and Granite forts Grtiile VI ali,il tHgins s 17.1, GLidys McDowell 74!t*. Ivlilli Cutblwrtaoa 744, * El sic Cuthbertson Grade V Mrs. Etta Kkmær, Teacher. Donc on short notice at THOS. SHORE - - Proprietor. Kenneth IVMier f absent). B. F. Smith’s Shop Bristol No. 0. Robinson Hodgins 8^s. 774J. Revella Elliott * Jean Elliott Grade I \ Keith Brownlee 721 J, Clayton Sly 701 j, 632 A. * Ivan Hodgins 419. 11 \ in*- Brownlee 89 Enid Whelen Class III, Grade V.-rEthel Marks, Percy Hudson, Gertie Kelley, Eileen Fitzsimmons, Mineola McGillis. Class II, Grade III—Absent. Class 11, Grade II, Br. Hudson. Class II, Grade II, Jr.—Olive Horner, Former Howard Service Station MONUMENTS Contre St. - Shawville. Clarence (ii :$ Connelly, 799A, ( îord Builtof the Finest Crades of Material that can be procured All work promptly and satisfnc-t uily executed at reasonable prices. Oil Loras Hodgins 748 Barnard Beaulieu 580, Jas. ! Evelyn Horner. McDowell Class I, Br. II.—Fred Graham. Class I. Pr. I.—Willie G il pen. C. J. A BOUE, Teacher. Grade 11 Grade I Cutbbertson 669A, Norris 565, Clifford Whelen V>7A, Any class of work or design manufactured to order, and all work guaranteed satisfactory. Special attention given to Fencing and Cemetery wor Get our prices before placing your orders elsewhere. — X CAM. SOLICITED — B. F. SMITH. Prizes won. — General Proficiency-- ' f ÊKS j,mTl'r«- K,«h Rrou'nl», gSgSTWl t-H.Ui. Prize for SeatwoA—(Grades t, 2 & 3) Lucas, Verdun Manary. —Norris McDowell. Prize for Neatest Copy Nook Connelly. , , Prize for Regular Attendance—Lorn* Hodgins. Reading Prize prize for Politeness Jean Elliott. . . . General improvement in Scripture du-Wilmiir Hodgins. Eunice Cullen, Teacher. PLEASE NOTE Tint items inserted in Tiik Equity of the following nature are subject to the rates herewith given : Birth notices—25c. Cards of Thanks—50c. In Me n mam notices —(no exceeding in all 12 lines)—50c. Announcements —(10lines) - 50c. Business locals—8c, per line. Short For Sale or Want ads.—50c. Stock Service notices—$1.00. Money should accompany order gins o Insurance as Property - Enid THE CHAMPION HOAXER ï/irna Hodgins. | I level la Elliott, 4TUDKNTS ARK VERY FOND OF I PRACTICAL JOKES. Life Insurance is the ONLY property that can be bought in large amounts on a dignified instalment plan, and that monthly income insurance is the only form of property which is absolutely exempt from care during the periods of accumulation and distribution. Our Agents will gladly explain the leading plans. Women In RHO h 1*. <). There are 54.000 women civil servants lu the post office in Britain. Concrete Tile young Englishman, Posing as an 44Abyssinian Prince,” Addressed a Meeting In ”1*11 re Abyssinian”— Village of («old Hunters. ring term— PRICELESS PORCELAIN. I desire to inform the public that I am prepared to furnish quantities of Concrete Tile from 6 to :$0 inches in din meter, for well-lining and other purposes. i have also a Cement Mixkii that may he rented by anyone requir-the use of such n machine. Orders for Tile promptly tilled. Rhone 22r22, or write HAROLD ELLIOTT, Il R. 2, Shawville. South Onslow No. 1. Discovery Mode at Fengwang Mountain, China. Priceless porcelain objects belicve The Continental Life Insurance Co. - all. 75th Anniversary Shawville Fair 24, 25 26, ’31 I rocked, and the only mishap was Lot otici*!. In Lite middle of his speech : mo The “champion hoaxer's” ONTARIO. TORONTO a Grade 1 Stephens 693. score is 90-odd not out. and includes an ichievcment similar to that of the late Lord Montagu of Beaulieu and •evcral friends. Suitably dressed and provided with borrowed tools, they descended on Throgmorton street. Shawvii.le, Quk. If. Lkishman, Teacher. GORDON T. PAUL, Dis. M gr, • # # # A CENTS-' Bristol No. 3. (Figures denote per cent.) Grade V — Olive Trudeau, Margaret staked ofr part of it, and then, with T « , super-navvy ruthlessness, set to with Grade* IV.—Viols Lucas 86, George pi< kaxe and shovel on tho roadw*v EMERSON W. PAUL, Shawville, A H. HORNER, Charter!» Sept ###PAGE###6### V. Public Must Wish to Die Young, Preventitives Ignored, Is Claim Prize-Winner ^7or the m \ » Greatest Need Now is Discovery of Ways and Means of Inducing People to Take Advantages of Kecent Discoveries, Medical Writer Says y by g Jlattncc Riddick Boys Von or vu 1 Diseases—Canada « buccos*- fui attack tipou these disease* V',l|lte In dealing with ; I By Dr. Gordon Bates, General Secretary C anadian Social Hygiene Council. t lie way to luccess Thanks to a nation wide, well- i pectin. Cook boot* until tender and 1 remove skins. Slice beets very thin. ....sq|BHEHr3.3 In something Intel-eating, making « to fu„ rolllnK bot1. Boll hard new acquaintance here, tackling a new _ n|.|mtvs Remove flom lire and stir entcrnrlse there, drawing a new book ^ Tlu,„ atlr and skim by ! turns for just S minutes to cool slight- lv, to prevent floatiiiK. I our quickly. )ver hot relish with flhu of hot paruf* >ver with 18 < ' others ¦¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ I A friend of mine recently asked me organt2od and perpetual campaign two very interesting questions: against Venereal Diseases, recent sun • \\ hat in your opinion," ho said, "Is Veys in Toronto and Winnipeg showed ¦Tientlflc discovery which has con- ,lnt these . V s have the lowest in- of \ -al disease ,l‘d discovery of vaccination as a prv\ cn- l)Vt,ry y&ir. Not because wo are l.n k-tive of smallpox has directly and indi- jn(? ju meana of preventing disease rectly saved more human lives than 1)Ut because the public does not under-any other medical devolopnmut. Dl- stan(j thrt possibility and the import-tly, because this disease which was anc# of mau|Ug use of the preventive all mankind h is now been comparative - band. mi . Indirectly, because 1 1,1 pbe pos Ity that this may medical men to think of disease In ^ accomplished through some terms of prevention rather than cure covery" t* unfortunately remote. Such and therefore has been partly at least, & discovery would not ho a medical responsible for the development of | an educational one. Meanwhile means to prevent other diseases. For Qur only hope of inducing Canadians instance the toxoid treatment to pro- tQ put a st0p to this great drain of vont diphtheria, preventive measures aU(j health, to save thousands of and scarlet % t cry do you 1 of now?" 1 tit id tho second question much interesting than the first. It I il fin; when relish Is cold f hot paraffin. i per hey Roll glass to ««s. Requires ts. M ikes about 9 trip to a meet now Inch paraffin on about 1 liven l 1 V can mor ne grand, sweet t time to grow S 1 1 1 id ht-ouuco glass ire the grumpy > wily “stay g S3 ive lost esl and too ura Household Hints N t intents will x, rn To pack away many I make the rooL_ I airy and orderly in the fall will give renewed pleasure I in them and will make the rooms look To pa< k th m aa ay ires for the sum- 1 ms look larger and more To bring them out a ret the greatest onve Molded Salads $ more w ork ilads ar hlle molded they look tempting casions. \\ over "die- tamed ";:V* > )infy ami cozy m TOP» ** jw la I ire worth while f m ut which turns the trick and makes the molded salad. I 1,1 use meat broth or ; wil n your c live you more time for play #1 » 15? i 1 loor life Uhl 1 spots in winter clothing ne may . lion cubt b< < ’* •e or the prepared gelatine which come in the package. As :i Mollis tlrst attack sot Tut your 4 Uh in ...iss Carol i’cabody of Mapl< Russian wolfhound. Count Lebun Morris and Essex Kennel Club, tison, N.J. il dog show of tho it (iirulda Farms. Madl- fabrles. aw iv clean iiuiii ma to jui mixtures The boil liquid is poured over if it is the prepared gela- in bright colors, being unnecessarily lost is ceaselessly a campaign of against typhoid fever Cheap cretonnes v . flow ery spring and sum-useful when a * potato" appears body's heel just before inspect and scissors, too, to snip off odd >r to neat on up a leveloping a lives now fever vein to to carry on Hut what great scientific discovery tMiuvatt0n. Fortunately some progress stand most lu need of? u belng maile |U this way. To-day What great discovery would save the j s0lll6 mothers are actually bringing most lives? Many readers at once (helr ^blidren to their family phyal* will think of cancer. Surely if some ftsng t0 bav# them immunized against form of "vaccination" could be «its- diphtheria, some people are actually covered against cancer this would he |Uteregted enough in saving tlielr lives boon of incalculable value to hu- to lng,8t upou pure drinking water or inanity. The same might be said of demand that their milk he pasteur- u preventive measure against syphilis. and this awareness of danger and But In my opinion that man—be he the mealw of frustrating tills danger scientist, editor or legislator—would hajJ beeu brought about by public odu-most human lives during the cal|on all ' the nan or dish not exceed 12 inches by S inches by 4 Iu conjunction with other foods to 8UAUS ;ii !:i,‘ . u.-latine inches if possible, and a coating of gjve them health giving qualities. yuU ;'v 1< l a ‘ ' . . , enamel in the predominating Patrol. jIlg research has proved that over poured in vaie u i> n * h-fore color with the name printed on It j half of the substance of this former allowing the first layer to set oeiore the rest ot the liquid is added member that the bottom of the pan g ¦ " ,, ‘VT ?. t i! . rotiviin- brother or uncle to make you such a j considerable amounts of phosphoric der'of yomgciatl": w'fmm „:rd. ^ Number. For Name. SimpleHou.ehoWRemedie, covered. bo matle of rather rough wood, but The fact the Primo Camera, the fa When I am weltering in woe. Some of the ingredients xMih i a rubbed down wilh sandpaper aud moua boxer, ha8 a brother named Sec- It s time to bake or sweep or atw. ÿnrjs^s^ss a z&m $s.‘ s jsstf-s » r- z r. s % ..- jt&'jsrjs: t-sr^sr- “f"** °r "n° dV.ed turnip» carrots, to fasten the ltd on yourself, either When ca„.t think of names. For i van keep my tears from flowing Diphtheria has killed 1.200 Cana- touched.—London Free Press. ; pi « ip im ize i ail WMÉRn or in nurturing these, if only the party With one thin piece of silver I have t„ the Italian. You can always tell syrup. In an average of four colonies Umlnated, proo( ot that, consider of the second part will do her share. bought when an Italian girl Is named Décima not only were a large number or fact (hat w# Uavo cut the tuber-1 If the grass Is thin or there are bare A treasure-trove so rich with lovely that she conics from a large family— combs covered by bees up to mld-Juiy. cu]oglg death ra(8 half, during the, Luxuries Not a Perquisite r,'mv iï is .utss-ww ». ;:-,uu*rr,v"‘ "" 01 ^ N*nkin8 gets plenty of water. Do not mow the is fraught ary names would provide—"Answers." the check lots. Cancer ends 7 912 Canadian lives Nanking — White-collar graduate» new grass until It gets a husky start. wltU precious hoard beyond the --- - every year Periodic Health Examina- j of Chinese schools and universities Specialists tell us that the beet way richest king's. - n r,„ e||v.. tlon frequently reveals this terrible are a disturbing element and a real te light weeds Is to feed them, because For here I have the crimson heart of How 1 o Uo It Urac.tullv destroyer In Incipient stages, when menace to the good of the commun- the nourishment you give the weeds June, _ ___ .there is an excellent chance of curing, ity, It Is asserted in a formal min also makes the grass grow and It will The regal robes of amethystine seas. » - ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ —8Ë «,#„ Universal Periodic llealtn Exam- -late Issued by the Minister of Edn run out the weeds. Probably the best The pearly radiance of the maiden ¦8F Inatlou would make the cancer death cation at Nankin*. sU. : .U. » mmm mm ¦ ra ; "" , „ agegaM* r ............... - » ¦ - «- KHLL.2* |iarjusns srs join the rank and file." The mold must fringe. You mu ’ th nk of oth necessary years of research bj Gaspai Schmi equipment for yourselves, for now l a cbemj8t ()f Heidelberg, has estai»- parution, thus giving it more vitamins i> i few words about the box xislied the fact that the gi ma es than tropical fruit», su h aa oranges, d lemons, bananas and dates. >f cottonseed meal, or is Schmitt calls is considered feasible heist of the cotton- E luv-» been found in the pro a want to wish to make it T!i U-0 almost ly go into a salad— which will not. decorative salad Florida Albumen rod i save If one wants a very if the low I after the oil has been extracted, I net was formerly consider-i •. i.. >i , l for cattle fodder. Tho product has already been sue- otber wor(|a wbat is most needed to essfully introduced in Egypt, where it day hl the prevention of disease and is used in coffee and cocoa, giving j |h0 Haviug 0f the tremendous number them additional health-giving proper- of Hves I10W prematurely destroyed ties without dfectlng the original Florida Albu- i is that pi So They Say : Englishmen in Lead Tho new British plane now in the S sjsSsSm SKSsSSS (hoir doctors already have to offer | come through lu the eud wllh uni am almost tempted t» urge doubted evidence of their progressive natures.—Chatham News. the other -hade will make it look very wasje product is pure albumen, known neat Ko- to be a great body building agent. The a convenient remainder of the substance contains cannot find flavor and aroma, as lx t less md odorless lit’» them medical research workers to go strike and make no new findings until the public takes advantage of the gifts on British Magazines Not Touched I The taxation on magazines has been Land Derelicts Excluded There's one feature at least of that « Magistrate Pays Fine lingwood Enterprise that they % s -x i Fashions, Fads, Foibles Swirling circles of ruffles, wind ^ •round and ’round the dainty party bere ’the lesson of humility frock of to-day. The yards and yards I „Mlxed geed» tliey say. nay, rather of edges may be pinked or embroider- * ,t,g a key — We are back to all the fusslneafM That opens beauty's door full wide to of our grandmothers. The old fashion- me ed shined bands of the same ma^frif11____cbarles 0. Wilson hi "The Christ- as * garment of days away bark. the despair of the Here causes itself In early stages. i Maternal Mortality—1,295 mother»| S ¦ I 1 die each year In childbirth. Proper The deeper some people sink Into : pre natal care would reduce this ap- debt the higher they seem to hold ' palling total. I their heeds »P- 6 % ed Flowers in Bedrooms Are Harmless To All But Sensitive Patients ian Science Monitor." are also here, to And all this fuss and feathers ? trôner Tooth Brush Is Better Friend Than Toothache cotton goods. Verily the wheel of fashion is rls wheel and sets us down Just where started when we began our flight "There are thirty-two reasons why ward silken garments and shorter 6very member of every family should and simpler styles. Lace and itiser- have a toothbrush," says Dr. A. Lestions and all the other gay frurapery Lard, head of the Provincial Health with cotton elegance la Department, In a statement to the And there Is some- ^bllc on oral hygiene, "every reason on a Fer \ geu which their green leaves produce whenever exposed to light. The use of a little oxygen from the air does no harm anyway, since ample quantities of this gas seep In continually through the cracks or other accidental openings even it all the windows are closed. One real danger from plants in bedrooms or living rooms does exist but applies only to a very few pei ^| viduals may be subject to poisoning by some product of the particular plant concerned, as some people get attacks of hayfever from plant pollens. For example, Dr. Marvin B. Goldstein of Youngstown, Ohio, report*# to the American Medical Association e patient whose skin was poison** and broke out Into blotches If be wo much as came near a chrysanthemum plant. Tim common Idea that flowers In a bedroom are bad for the sleeper or flowers In a sick room harmful to the patient Is attacked In a recent announcement of the New Health SoI ciety, In London if flowers In a sick room please the patient they are likely to have a beneficial effect. Any healthy sleeper who likes to wake to sight of a growing plant or a vase of cut flowers may do so. It Is asserted, with no fear of harm to health. The popular fear of flowers In bedrooms may be due to the superstition that they use up the of the air and plants do the society admits, small They much than make up for this, how-by the larger amounts of oxy- we to which went here once more. thing lovely about It, to think that ia a tooth.” glad young hearts can beat as proudly ,3 On the contrary, W This is the danger that tndt was young." life Insurance. Green shoes, scarf, gloves, purse «-Brush your teeth after meals. U e and belt—there’s an emsemble for you. a down stroke on the upper teet . Or the color might be red or lavender stroke up 0n the lower Jaw—Jaws These or yellow or what-have-youî g will add joy and come hither to what-'>snLTe costume milady may don. Beet »nd Horse radish Relish lia cups solidly packed sliced beets, % nip prepared horse-radish, 1*4 r,|D® apple vinegar, 6*4 cup* sugar, l bottle apart. "Dirty teeth decay most at night "Many people are digging their graves with their teeth. "If a tooth could talk It would surely say, "I need to be brushed, three times a day." oxygen absorb, amounts of air oxygen ever a Heaven helps those who help themselves, or so this lltt> girl think, a, she takes « hydrant drink. «usines, dtpreselo. doe,a t a;tect the mercury, which Is due tor Its eauual Me*. more ever, % ###PAGE###7### 1 For Empire Marksmen There is a duty on Tea now of four cents per pound and four percent Sales Tax. All imports of Tea now pay these extra charges, but— I i g h t f U I fo r cooking .too! », e r raft Cheese 6 \ { to \K ML We have not Increased the price of - K, -, fflPF For dinner to-night, serve Macaroni and cheese, baked golden brown . . . for to-morrow's luncheon, give the children toast covered with tasty, bub-{ray bling cheese. {( > But be sure you use Kraft cheese, for Kraft, being jfljïij*: fully matured, is readily digestible and, because it ArW is exceptionally rich in WKji'd butter fat, it is a particularly nourishing food-^_ m K IfpâFf m 745 J We bear the loss 1. It. J. Bird. Ottawa, by ! I /.U handsome silver cup, shown above, w;»s of the Dominion of Canada Hlfle Associât on u.n.d,..r.c,nc including the triple wooden mounting i Made by the makers of Kraft Sa lad D essing snd Valvtata whistle, secretary So you can still buy the very beat of Tea at the same price as before the duty was put on. Ing at Bisley, England, by teams •1 «r .•>.»..-........ the bn»e of the cup. coinciding with the front and rear face» their husbands are made to order girl may allow herself to be led to the, altar, but that's when the leading ends, reproduced on Dashing young ladles often lead fast J of the pedestal lives. In modern j|||||||||||||||||||||||||||| times occasionally a girl may be found who Is so slow that It takes her thirty years to reach the age of nineteen. I Owl Laffs of BruHhvllle, Miss I ma Hardnut gH^gl^g Bas returned the lavallier her sweetie her because It made a green spot T. H. ESTABROOKS Co. Ud—ST. JOHN, N.B Egypt Yields Secrets Winnipeg Toronto gave on her wishbone Montreal Of Animal God Cults Teacher—"Robert, here le an example In subtraction. Seven boys went down to the creek to swim, but two of them had been told not to go Now, can you Inform Paul—“Are you going to kiss me good night ?" Kve—“Mercy, No thing I’ll do " Paul—“All right, then, what’ll we do first?” yard of the sanctuary on certain days to be exhibited to the worshipers. _ They fed him cakes made of the finest wheat flour mixed with honey; boiled — or roasted geese, and live birds of certain kinds. , The vulture, the hawk, the heron, the ibis and the bennu were Classified Advertising The Crocodile of a Sanctuary Recently Dug Up Was One of Many Creatures the Ancients I leld Sat.red That's the last REMNANTS In the water how many went In?” Robert—“Yes’m; seven LB8. 1’RINTS, SILK OH VELVET, $1.00 A. McCretry Co., Chatham, the serpent, seems to have been constant In all generations and many ta Id to deliver the hu- knowledge of an ancient Egyptian cult will result lleved, from the recent discovery of the first complete sanctuary, with all annexes me New it Is be- i Ontario prayers were dead from the "Serpents which In the Underworld, which He upon the bodies of men and women and ionsume their blood so coveted the power of the serpent that he learned those prapers which were most certain to bring him its powers after death, when his soul wandered about the earth: "I am the ser pent Sata who«e years are many die and I am born again ear h day. I the serpent Sata which dwelleth In the uttermost parts of the earth. I die and I am horn again, and I re-myself, and I grow young each It's terrible to be poor and old, but It Isn't very much better to be old and rich, either. SABY CHICKS If you want to find out how valuable you are about an Institution, lay off a week and see how easy it la to fill your place. This Is a a good cure for a person who has allowed his conceit to assume undue proportions. Flattery often leaves a pleasant feeling even though you know it Is flattery. There ought to be a law against travel bureaus sending their alluring trip folders to busy folks. man among the universally venerated Some of them 4 1 BABY CHICKS—BARRED 2V * Rock», Arconatr, White and Brown Leghorn*, 10c each. Assorted, 9c. PULLETS six weeksk ohl. 65c. Catalogjes. A. H. Switzer, Uranton. Ont. of the crocodile god Sekneb-Thls sanctuary, composed of a are birds throughout Egypt regarded os spirits of the dawn which, having sung hymns of praise while the sun was rising, turned into tunls# ¦ long processional way,, a temple and priests' dwellings within a walled en ..d .HI,. .10- u°'\h ..... °” STZtrzZC “ "d "" ;rr„. ,.r.... >"¦ '*• ¦*' ES.T.US.nsrissr.l.- recognized by theologians ««y* in late dynastic times when ani The Egyptian were The Sun's Munificence PERSONAL apes AllHY. RELIABLE MA 1 R1 MU.N-,.. IAI. ji.'iper mailed Tree. Addrc S Friendship Magazine, Medina. New iorfc. • •ri A F L COUNSEL" — 612 - FA OB ^ hook. Illustrated. Discusses problems of love, marriage, etc.. In plain language. Full particulars about our ••Special Gel-Acquainted Offer sent free to anyone over 1H years of age. v rit-Internatlonal Distributors. PO. Bo 202. h Toronto. M Limestone reliefs In There were many other gods for the Egyptian, which Egypt's conquerors adopted In time, but they never fully assimilated by them. Syrians and Babylonians never made them their own, and the Greeks scoffed not a little at suoh materialism, though they themselves used animals as symbols of their gods and goddesses. _______6-------- To be happy is to say little and feel When we were married I 1 were The As- sommer They disrupt the entire day s work. It Is now claimed that no man can | really love until he Is 60. A lot of peo-1 pie are lying about their age If this Is The radio Inventor who will In- am ? ridge Of mountain granite which formed to gold, An Laughed first the thanks back, to the vale's dusk fold On fold of vapor swathing, like a true vent a radio which will tune out pro-filled with boring advertising EST HAVEN. 63 BARNBSDALB Bl\d., Hamilton—Open to guest» holi v*. rest or recuperation. Rates moderate. them were trans- R for At the period when the serpent was being worshiped in Lower Egypt the vulture was the chief object of allocation in Upper Egypt. So powerful these two centres of worship even mais, beasts, birds, Ashes and reptiles were worshiped tended their veneration to human beings, to the great powers of nature, and to the large numbers of beings with which they peopled the heavens, the air, the earth, the ~ky, the sun, the stars and the water. grams broadcasts, will make a fortune optimist is a guy who thinks his wife has quit cigarettes when he finds cigar Scottish The Egyptians ex \K FINISHING. 23c A 1, any siye postpaid : extra P' H' e, Jackson Studio, Seaforth, Ont. much thought you were a brave man did all my friends.” XPERT K< E rnl 3o each So won ¦¦¦¦¦ ¦¦ ¦¦ . that the kings gave themselves the Lord of the Shrines of the Vul- to proclaim their Other wild animals bridge Shattered beneath some giant’s stamp. Night wist Her work done and betook herself in mist To marsh and hollow, there to bide her time Blindly in acquiescence. Everywhere Did earth acknowledge Sun’s embrace sublime, Thrilling her to the hearth of things: since there No ore ran liquid, no spar branched butts around the house who applied for a Job as an ture and Uraeus lassie artist’s model, was told to come down again the next day and to bring along She brought her ster was veiling a worn- The mlr noted for grumbling. She had a good crop of potatoes. The person said, "Now, Mrs. Higgins, you have nothing to grumble a omit.” 1Sn# Indeed I have; where s the pigs?” STOMACH an sovereignty which won- worshiped by the Egyp- the lion, the lynx and the hippopotamus. Not much Is known of the . ilt of the fish, but seven ! spot les the These animals were not venerated in dynastic times as animals, but as the abodes of gods. The cults had their origin in the precarious life of primitive man when S ?SsisS SSsiahs forests; huge serpents of various spe-1 per w ords of power were first ïsï'ï ,r.'u..rr.a£ z i %%%%%%: eruess I the river was filled with great croco- j with the scarab from inon‘l jsssss rrr:; u -..... -- ,, r,:s.r. = s a Æ r s i - catch Mary Katherine without pra|se ever came their way. When man cap- the production of large families. —Robert Browning, in Poems. , tured them he tamed them, fed them] One of the oldest an ma ™ -EH—"! 2V It’s Up to the Girls communications. cause he feared them. They pm es. —-ir -s=s- fH§SEi=EM bow Iheee ihtngekâk out. CON„ioi(hotïndlni= thb Increase, the ,h6 ldea ,hnt lo.llvhlual animals were .rîsss ™i E'-E1:;: «rs EE EHEEE the bare necessities of life, ine la tp(, bv 2S0,C00. Migration of ed wi6h reverence anti care. Apart- husband catches the early morning K population to better quar- (s wef.e 8et aside for them In the ¦ - — vas =: rss. Sacred animals were washed In hot baths, their bodies annolnted and perfumed. Rich beds were provided for In London, quite 1 them to lie upon «nd the greatest was exercised to give them the a pair of tights, father and mother ULCERS Hans were replied— little one Gerald—"Hello, aren’t you a stranger around here?" Imogen©—"Yes, to you!" Why suffer when Excelene gives Immediate and lasting relief in cases of heartburn, stomach pain, acute Indigestion, gastritis; stomach, gastric anil duodenal ulcers; building cells and replacing diseased Excelene Is guaranteed to ur to take Krtischen H and she has found its worth mu i 10 Individual Cartons rv Kennedy & | Menton 421 College St., Toronto Harley Lavidson Distributor* r bsrrain list of Terms nrratifred /)x BURNS | Li equal parte of Minerd'e ¦ JfÆf end sweet oil, castor oil, or Æ *|\ cream. Spread on brown Il paper. Apply to burn or ^ II scald. Before long the |f 18 painful smarting stops jÊ got my as we ns she feels a different woman. —(Mrs. G. A. K.) The commonest cause of depression insidious Writ*- hi on«-* f ua "d mo»»»r«*\el* is partial constipation—an complaint because the sufferer is seldom aware of it. It means t! * .gradual net umulation of body poisons which dull the mind, damp the spirits, sap the nervous strength ami lower the whole vitality. Kruschcn Salts make constipation impossible. Therefore, if you keep to Kruschcn you need never know the of melancholy ; never feel or depressed ARDS «as a having developed i “KING OF PAIN" lock I meaning “ nervy. 1 lecture life often is when his pay envelope over to his wife. Men have only themselves to blame. Mo-buy nearly everything on their Some wives seem to think W///////M try this improved ties z< Children love it A Sense of Progress men account I was dining once EHBErBE - .......... , small block of white marble The ftbject fear of the Egyptians fr silver mallet When he THE deliciousIUvo# of Borden's I Chocolate Melted Milk makes en Irresistible eppeel to yo«S-Its wonderfully food for 1 m - 4t WOOL stars, them too. h restores energy spent oe week was a wanted the maid, he struck the marble a resounding blow. I was somewhat amused, and aske Large juuatr him It he had ever heard of a push- * «Www,,. button for the same purpose. bicycle» fra a “My boy, I have,” was his reply, but $10 up. Motor ||H|| _ 1 get enough of electrical devices In ^.ct1®®,oru Momrs Ka iio*. etc. ! ss'its riasE>" -ssa ; i prefer candies; the, are not so likely to get out of or- ; I hate this pushing a dimple and waiting for something to happen. r: «“V *, ' if» Good stand for In this country,' -with a srtttvs* Farci." rf HIGHEST PRICES PAID The Canadian Wool Co. Ltd. 2 CHURCH ST.. TORONTO little bodies. I CM 18 FREE > c* \ rfccvtLe*ù Rid your home of flies with Aeroxon—-the improved spiral fly catcher with the longer and wider ribbon. Aeroxon is guaranteed not to dry out or deteriorate. The giue is always fresh, fragrant and sweet—irresistible to flies. Aeroxon is Good for 3 Weeks’ Service. malted mil* j CHOCOLATE SB MILK ) GET RID OF. CONSTIPATION à MALTED lii % vet to using gas Knights’ ” Mea.rord Flooring U der See your dealer Get our prices Acidify, Migration, pinions- It’s Even Better /T’S THE BEST Knight Mfg. & Lbr. Co. Ltd., Meaford we Gets the fly every time So/e Agontu: NEWTON A. HILL, 56 Front Street East .Toronto Ask your druggist for * roxofl ersmpills will The weighing 950 lbs A bullock yield about BOO lbs. of meat 1 ISSUE No. 26—'31 ###PAGE###8### rj mm i T t Requisites! SHAWVILLE BOOT AND SHOE STORE | Summer Clothing CHAS. W. DAGG District Representative, Shuwvlllc Mail Semi me further particulars of the Plan of Insurance for Super-Select Lives, as Issued |)v the Confederation Ufo Association. : This Cou port JSOIV ) Announcement > S : * ATüwr * Address..... • •••• Ml In line with rapidly changing merchan dising conditions in Canada we are linked with a group of independent retail Footwear Merchants who have band- , || ed together in a mammouth organization. This plan enables us to buy direct from the manufacturer, cuts out the middle man’s thereby assuring you of lowest possible costs. Our present policy of offering only chandise of outstanding quality will be jj continued. Watch for posters which will explain this method in detail. s At* Occupation ¦ s now Bathing Suits for Men, Women | and Children, from 35c. to $5.00 | - B ! : . « To r« . ! Flannel Pants, Plus Fours and $ Golf Sets, in the latest pastel | shades. A large variety to f choose from. I Business Executives « * S ! J and profit and travellers’ expenses : t ' : Professional Men ' i! ! S S & Fill out the above coupon and mail it to us—we assure you that you will be intensely interested in the benefits to he obtained from the Confederation Life Special Low Rate Plan of Insurance for Super-Select Lives. ' mer- ^ Boys’ Play Suits ; From 75c. to $125 v i * s IS *- * s ts J Khaki Pants for Men and Boys, from 75c. up. - ' $ Confederation Life Association I s BERT C. HORNER. s I - ' ^ wmmr. •: | Men’s ZIPPER Combination Overalls, Special, $3.00 Toronto Head Office Building Requirements Corrugated iron Rib Roofing and Shingles « ». ? ; < t Men’s Pure Wool Work Socks, J Special, 25c. per pair. ' t I : : HODCINS LUMBER GO. i ! X A t X t ? < Pedlar Rib, square, .. .. $5.00 Corrugated Iron, square, Estimates Gladly Furnished. Price t SAM B. COHEN SHAWVILLE. *. 4.75 * S | ; Shingles 5-X Red Cedar, 3 grades in White Cedar. Shawville’s Exclusive Men’s and Boys — Wear Shop — ; < >• We also handle 1 hi All kinds of Ready Roofing*. » i I s 8 Big Reduction in Pails : Four Milk Tails ami one Strainer Tail for $1 98 ft' all other Tails. > Look Here ! i Lime Fly Dope $ 25 11 For Sales, Wants, Found. Lost, etc. * A fresh supply of Lime in 50-lb. bags. DALES’ TINSHOP, Centre St., SHAWVILLE o For Your House For Your Cattle We have the kind that knocks ’em out. It pays to use it. * CS FOR SAI.B-Wt* , ff.T l.IooO- itt-l' -ri> from Allumette | w'h'itl-' I'.’.^hornl.'^nVo. ' liunr.l ! si y that a «torm on Thursday did Rocks -4 weeks old, 2D cents ; uvddei ibio dam i in that tight tinn in the way at levelling build- s I Extreme Heat Wave Roofing I A full line of Roll Roofing. 8 m \ week< Sixteen year- ex-backs our Onr friend and -t it Mic d M uid-< Ude , 15 Hiverdale White R 1 25 six week* old Chicks ; aN » large - Ihjx that would make a gond feed Apply Rev. Wi.i Ten persons, re-idents of Ottawa ! Medicines, Toilet Articles WI Stationery I hM' perished at a point on tin* ()t J j tawa river five miles east of the ms rnmvTOR Ft r I < iry. when a small boat with ten | persons mi hoard over-turned. Two | RAW LEIGH’S FAMOUS j hoys by hanging on to tin* over- ddotmipt^ I I'D lied craft esciped tlie fate of KMUUU LTb I their companions. On the same dite Paul Emile Whrvmninv, -, /"r-"'.....s «tessr known tailor of Ottawa, lost hi- !nMl* 3 out loca• /• u< • m « « i I, f,, life at Old ( India i d He tell. f ' " ~ risewhc ie I*lic A heavy toll uf death from other van-vs was reported over tlie weekend. Vi l \ 4 1 il ; hi». All priced to - II. R. Wiigl.t. Sluiw \ ill**. m Resident Auctioneer SHAWVILLE - QUEBEC a -t o in Bill il 1 « « II 1 < ' ' It f 1 ’ I 5 room Cottage with veranda. Sand Bay, cm l lie On iwa rivet Apply to J. II. Mim FOB SALE OB HEN I’ f i ; SBEE™1'* V I 1 >1 >t ill In • - ' •. température about 15 degree- on lovai instrument». The storm did not ville, but rapidly travelling ward, the wind reached the pro ; i portion* of a gale as it -wept over •' South On-low and tlnue wrecked several ha ins and ot her structures. suffered in t > have la -I wete : Victor Mi liane and John S Stun-1 t«m, barns blown down : Andrew J Cleary, new bain, uncompleted. , badly jacked up : .fos Steele, -iio demolished. Very heavy rain fell during tin- -torm, covering a w ide area that included Canyon village, in Noith Onslow the farmer- had hvw ated Ht |(înod fishing. Shaw ville. Hi V on > . (Ill (».- I n , lî (lollt I I t i -trike Shaw- east ! t I FOH SA l.K —Frost & Wood H-iy Hoad ‘ j er—only used one season. Apply 11 Fied F. E Phone 11 22. • • ! *i • 1 * $200.00 for Clover Competition < fc'C- Dale. 15. II. 1. Shaw- »• ; M ne !»7 x me. i oi t'X l*| if t \, 9200.00 ( ompetition if xve can get forty competitors at once Federal . I'ioviin ial Prize Grant. Application tna i in l*i iz of Clover ovei FOB SAT.E—Huy standing in lield 10 App X. Phone 22 M. A. KRIFF icily viewer. 2. Miawville. ii res. c:, A !> ,n t *10 Got ; 11 antr t \ <1 that if ; were ordered, th 1 r.l. o iursist In the HI Special Particulars on 'M! ppt'i! in : If » FOR S \ ! !' About 20 * - : \ :iijH i-I ti r and timothy May. standing in Held. An, x,.,rn ... , v a piv to an. CulhhMt Armstrong. Sim» • ville R. It. 1. Rhone 20 21. 11 • 1 LIONS I XII) ni N HOrSR. a g Dkai.kk in- . \ g Ft. W. lioiHilNS. ---- Sec.-Tt va-. C i*. A.S. No. 1. Are Increasing In Nunilwrs In the Kroger NaUaiwl l’ai k. In the Kruger National Park, one of I lie great game reserves ««i south Africa, the king of Leasts is treated In îov mory ol .1 hn Tit u nw >n. :"v ¦ x ' emalli i : amt who died June 27 1Ü2H for him to hunt, buck and antelope ... ! ” , and so forth, not to speak of croco- • ;«. < {> <>ni '*v tr diles and makes, if hip fancy leans t our cares are ended, that way. That lie is In no danger your work is done ; of starving is proved by the way tho avc gone where those who lion population Is Increasing, loved you The warden of the preserve, Col. KiSiEHEBEEE intense heat which reaped a heavy nile 10,1 Unm>* u quarter in the last five years. He toll ut death oil Dominion Day, V ttT... . ,pl has Been a troop of 18 lions, mostly throughout the greater part ot the I" loving memory of Millard thornp- vui,8i ^ing oil hunting together, northern hemisphere. H"*i, who died June 29, 11>29. The lions, young and old, see fa to Caught under his canoe when it The blow was hard, the shock severe, make a practice ol raiding hen roosts, rapsized near De-jardin a wharf. To part with one we loved so dear; The poultry generally belongs to the oppo-ite Pembroke, Bennett Mal- Loving and kind in all him ways, poor natives, who cannot afford to he loy was drowned <.n Wednesday Upright and just to the end of his days. in this way a-KsMrota ' *..--.... m: aT*H mmm , lalf, contributed to the political enough to know better and big 1 funds oj their unions. enough to hunt higher game. f its In Watches, Clocks and Jewellery main street SHAWVILLE, QUE. matter * rar.CiV .... ... . If the two rl tin- total a visitation ut hail which covered insurance on them will reach tho rea strip about ti mile wide. As to cord heure of 170.000 000. Other the extent ol the damage 1 rom ocean riants, like* tin Itei enguriu, thiJ \\ 1» have not heard. In Mi x— Bremen, Mujertic and Leviathan, are tol, at J,i- A. (.iraham s a -ilo was ap insured for huge sums, but noth-toppled over and other damage in g approaching this titanic figure of $35,000.000 apiece. From the biggest liner down to the Property For Sale 1 In Memoriam. t Several choice Building Lots and one Dwelling, all on Main Street, Camp-IicÎI’h Bay, Quebec, for immediate sale and trade. Apply ft j xs. r. Mf UVAin, gss Nelson St., Ottawa. done. Shaw ville, «izzling with tlie intense heat <11 through to»* week, smallest c< steamer, even J had a regular deluge of rain on and every ship's freight is insured. Friday afternoon, tlie down-pour; Without insurance no shipping trade coining from the north east and w°n]d possible, lasting les- than an hour. TliK] Lloyd's of London, the world s however, had little effect on cool- most famous marine insurance ren-ing the air and when Led time ter agents and signal stations ail came the improvised -hakedowns <,V,‘I ^ ^orI!1 • :mfl thUP gt‘fp flTsl pxtrjpssv a E HSHEmE jsmsl&z is'ssi ~^':LTZrtZi foi change, and titiz.'iis wtie t n j But marine insurance is onlv one aided to resume their customary branch of the insurance business. Httiie without experiencing any One of civilization's most deadly per-discomfort. People who had been ns is tire. If every business had to grumbling that the country need- boar its own tire losses, the risks of ed heat, should have n<> further enterprise would be enormously Inca use for complaint after lu-t creased, and all costs and prices weeks ordeal. .would go up. Rest in Y , h icace Ixcpairs promptly executed at reasonable prices and work guaranteed. Watches and Clocks