^^m June 17 1926 , THEFLESHERICN ADVANCE The Wealth of the Farm FEVERSHAM BRANCH R. P. Bellamy, Manager L-IOW near are you to the limit of ^ ^ production on your farm? Could you make more money per acre if you had extra capital ? Do you need fertilizer, seed, breeding or feeding stock ? The Bank of Toronto extends to reliable farmers the means for sound development. Every banking facility and convenience provided to assist them m financing production and marketing oper- ations. Talk over your plans with our local Manager. His experience in financial matters may be of help to you. â„¢KBANK«>^^ Capital $5,000,000 Reserves $6,793,983 38 The City of the Revers "^wm^'mmmmmm \t â- â- '^ :â- â- '-â- • â- â- m^-kMi^^2.i L it...^. -...-- ^â- ^^^'^vâ- ^'ifc£a^-fe^lBa'jg^^.''â- '--. The Bay of I'undy Is famous for i!s tines whicli are reputed lo be the highest lu the world, and the varia- tion In the harbor dojith, owins to the great riBc end fall in tho tidc:<, 13 frora CO feet at c. liuiiry ntap tides to 28 f«!t of Wiitor at ordicary iiprlii!? tides. St. John is Ihe -.vintcr lorl of the C.I'.n.. uud hii.'i :;;ilondl(l ..farilltlos for hantlilng ocean traflle. ^'lie harbor Is entercl from two cbiinnels, the ea^t ehanr.ol l)o;ng i;fcd for liiritn vossein ailrl thnt on the west «i(lo for Bmallor craft. Numerous large bTtlis rtard In the ):Erbor and .ilongKide then th'^rc are riany cu;)arlous warehouhxi; fin:! rrr.io big (rra!n c!ova!ora. T.'ie war lir.s stimulated BhlpbiiUdins in Si. John. The olibf attr.-'.olioa for tlie tour- It-t 10 St. Jolm l3 1h° H'.'verslble Fall?. u eurioi;?. r'h''noriien;.n due to the /real tides. When the tide of Fisndy Hay Is low the waters of the St. ,l!il;n river poi:T unrtor the ^rrat railwaj bridge in thi' form of rapids. Iliit when the tide begins to r'.eo it forees baek the riirrcnt of lUo river and gushes up Into its lied; with great forrc. This contintirs u:!-| til full fido. IhfTa an the tide re-j redes, the immens"! fo'.iime nf •,v"Jori In (he hod nf the river dashei^ to lhe| ]lay in a miis.sivo wiiirllni; s.'i.'et of' foaxS At lew tido the piled up v.at- < r.H of the river are hli-her than the Bea, and at hiffh tirie the l:ieoniinK flood of the Bay of Fiindy is hishcr than the river. That is Ihe explana- tion of the phenomenon. It i-s ou.;- nt certain pf>rlod.'( of the d^y tlia' iho falls may lio seen at fhrlr bef.t. The river Is deep, bi:t r.n hoit. hosTvor larj^e, <3arc vcntnro on ihjse water.- v.'.icn they are falUnj, Small boats ,jrs^--f , ]_ '.x-j'}^'.,-^''.---.: ^; (1) Tl:.! lioversiblc Palls at St. John N.B. (2) Mailello Tower, St. John, N.B. ?(i iin and down the river at opiKir- luno linuK when the waters aie ir their inllde.1t moods. I^anca^ler Heights dverlpolt the port of St. ,lnhn, and it is Uera that Mai'tello tower standa. Tills tower V. an built o\er a eentury aso as a wateh tower over the harbor. Sineo liie Canadian P«cifle Hall- way haa lalceu o^er the hotel at Digby. Nova S<otla, known an "The Pjnc3," there Is likely to bo an tn- freaaed influx of visitors to the L«nd of l-vans-'llpe In tlve f^itwro. Jiefore erossins the Hay of Fundy from New Uruusv/ielt to Dlgby thers Is" a great deal to Interest the traveller in the City of St. John, tUo commercial capital of New Brunswick. 9t. John ha.« a population 9f 81,000. The city lakes its name from the St. JohA ri>er which was dl»oovered by Cham, plain and de Monts on June 24tht 1C04, the feaat day of St, John 'of I'atmo.s. No pemftnent lettletnent wuH mudo until 17M, when 3,000 United Empire lx>fai\fiti>, who had refused to talte the e^lh of alleglsmco 10 the Uiilted St*t«8 utter the War of Independence, made their homcj at th« mouUi of the St. Joha rJlv«i', and founded tJio city. , : - Dkar .Sill : Vou have lie^rd of the Clicviolet. And y. u have seeo ploiity of tbeui. Vou have .s^rn more of them lliin lusf yi-nr lliitii ever before. And you will nee inoto la'Xt year. VViierevor automoliilen are to tio aeon â€" and ihiit is everywhore - tliu Chevrclot is n familiar bIkIiI. ThiHahould iiieitri Hoinethini; to y<iiu.' Tliu public doexnut buy n our in i,-v<!r iiicruiising numbers uiilesH it inoela with popular ttpproval. 'I'lie Clievroiet has poptiinr apjirovul. \V« would like you tr know why it litis. It would he easy for us tu tell ydU the roasou.s for Chevnilrl popularity, liul lieforu you come to u«, learn them from other sources. Mtede in Canada ^V;iith for llie Cliovrolot Judge i's a|ip3-ir- nnco. Sen thu niiininr of |)menj;i^r.i it will HO.it aod carry conifortnbly. Waioh fur it on the road.s. .S'o lin-.v it throltWs down and pieks n|i in triillij. .Mine »ll wii'uli th>) next Clmvrolol y. u .see luke i» lidl. Tiiit is proof of tne pudding. And «« SOOT as you yo' a cliinci ink iho drivor of H Cluivrolet wlnt ho ihink.s of ii. (J il h m to «how you ;tK iM.iuipniMH . Ask liioi h«iw rnnuy miles lio gels on a i/iilloi of giiol ni -on tires. Arid while your own eyi'.s ami o.irj aio liu'linp; out About Chuvriilet p 'iforni iiioe there W(Oi'l Uv mueb IhIi f(M' UA ln(Bl|.y,)U. lint we'll take you for u riJo in one wlienvvei you bko. Y or us VKRV Tltl I.V, tfjJi^^'J^^fj. ^jjfi ^tfiLH! ^ji^: ^j:^! Â¥'}U: i<iy- nf-: D. McTAVISH & SON g FLESHERTON, - - ONTARIO \M Girls in Great Britain Are Now Studying Charm As Husbands Are Scarce «'<»<><-»<S">«x««8->««:~x~X":~:~:":-:~x-M FnEED from war work and war worries and no longer having to fight for the vote, a con- siderable proportion of the feminine population of Great britaln is beginning to analyze the effects ot the new independence which has come to them. In fact, the new craze among London society women is self- Btudy. By interesting themselves in analytical paychology these >^omen believo they can stethoscope thel) own natures and discover how many personalities are lodged withif iheniKelves. After finding the best one, they thereafter submerge ilie other pcrsQualilies, of which many women are said to have three dis- tinct varieties. But there is a vastly larKi_-r numb r of women more inter- ested in ai";uing a woman's right to choose her own mate. This last is the luirning cpifstion because more than a millioa girls are doomed to bo hus- bandlr.js here because of the short- age of men. Ill one paper there is now pro- ceeding an animated argument about the attractions of tall women and short ones. The short ones say that the tall women are not so affec- tionate. Thf tall ones reply that their seeming austerity is only a part of their general beauty. Dr. Alfred Schofleld has found a new species of women which he calls "latchkey girls," or economically in- dependent women who will want to select their own mates. Mrs. Celloc Lowndes, the author, says that as a Frenchwoman she believes "arranged marriages" are immensely successful and that Cupid ought to be retired in favor of fath- ers and mothers. Although the seven women ap- pointed magistrates by the Lord High Chancellor at the end of Decem- ber were the first of their sex to be thus designated in Great Britain, the first won»an to actually sit as a judge in a police court was Mrs. Ada Jane Summers. Klected in 1912 as the first woman member ot the Stiilybridgo Coun- cil, she was made Mayor of that Cheshire town last November and thus became Chief Magistrate of the police court there. As such she took her seat recently and was wel- comed by a full bench of magistrates. "I did not find it an ordeal," she told an interviewer. "I am not nerv- ous â€" though I am not a speaker; the cases were trivial. 1 was glad they were so simple the first moiii- iug, and also," with a smile, "tliat I was able to let them off." Asked if she had any decided views as to whether sentences should be severe or not, Mrs. Sum- mers replied: "No. It depouds on the care and the culprit, doesn't it? I tliiuk an old offender should be piinislied severely, but I do not agree Willi punishing children. I think Ihe parents are to blame more ufttii than the children. I shall be inter- ested in those which concern women. A woman understands about a wo- man better than a man." The Locotriiclor. Two Dangers. The friend of an Kntlish clorgy,- man. who waa spending a few days in Ihe hitler's parish, says llio C.uar- dian, went up to a neighbmiii!; coun- try one day and found an old woman lust turning i.way from Ihe door. "Locked and boiled," she said. She thi^n told him that she lived in a iieiShboring village and that she came Ji>very now and then to the jhiireh in which she had been ihris- teiied ami contirimMl and married, but it was always Ihe same; .she could lever i;et in. "But what iimhiui can the vlear have for keeping the church shut up?" asked the friend. "I don't know, sir. I'm sure," slie said. 1 diould think either be must be afraid it some one getting In and praying, 5r elso he's afrind of Ood's getting JUt and seeing what a stiito his par- sh Ib in." rannnm Cannl. The least depth of Iho Panama .;anal is forty-one feel. The len«lh a about fifty miles, from (!i.e;i water u the Carribean Sea to dti i> wiUer n the Faciac. An interesting problem, liishly importaiu to the future ot the coun- try, ia being worked out in South Africa with the help of a new kind of railway. The problem came iii) with the after-the-war development of tlii^ coiinlry, the effort put forlli by the Union Oovernnient to per- suade the taiiners to increase their crops, the willingness of the f.xiiiiers to make the effort, and the imprac- ticability of transporting the produce. The need was for more railways, but the way seemed blocked by the cost of constriuiion, if the railways were to be operated by the regular typo of loiomolive. The roads are bad, ami the allernatioii of rainy s; a.son.s with dry and windy Rea.«ion.s luakts it out of tlie Question to keep lliem in good condition. And so South Africa has hit upon, and is experimenting with, a new form of railway by which the cars run on tracks and are drawn. not by the familiar locoiuolive but by a locoliactor, whoso guiding por- tion runs on rails like the ii^l of the train while its ilrivin!.-. wheels, shod Willi solid rubber lires, travel on either side of the track. The con- struction of such a railway costs about $4,00t) a mile, a,i compared with the $12,000 to 5!20,00O a mile cost for a standard railway in South Afiica, and Ihe syaleiu, it Is said, adapts iisolf particularly well to the needs of a farming population. If the initial lines do as well as has been expocled, Soulh Africa will probably become a land of the loco- tractor. ESTABUSHED 1672 The Bncceesful business man knowA tlisvaluj of st/.i;. lu all yrobability the liabit oftfaving made him succossful . You may get on the right road to siicneag by depositing yonr njoncy bo that when your opportunity comei you may ba prepared to take advantai'e of it. BANK OF HAMILTON DUNDALK:BRANCH-A. M. Carthew, Manager SlB-BR*NCIi PROTON -C. J. Forster, Sub-Manager New Perfection Oil Cook Stove Q„ _ - J.. Toueh a match to the burner and it is Opc"Uy"ieady for use instantly, just as speedy as a gas stove. Qi _ _ J. . Set the flame where you want it. Yoa OlCdUy'can always see it through the mica door and it stays where you S3t it. Plaon l^ot^9 cot blacken potsand pans. The vicdill'long blue chimney turns every drop of oil into cooking heat. Noueof it escapes in smoke or soot or diiagreeable odor. IJ^j. For every cooking purpose there ia nlways nOl"an abundance of steady, clean, intense cook ing heat directly against the utensil. Owon ^'^'^^^ door, will not steam or break. UVclrThree point lock device sa\es heat. Scien- tilichealcircukition, all steam and moisture carried a'way. No soggy food. Call and let us show them f o yon. Made in 2, 3 and 4 burners. F. W. DUNCAN HARDWARE. " FLESHERTON Pays to Advertise in The Advance BUSIN.ESSCARDS Societies :JtlNCK AKTIIl'U LODQE, No. :«3,A.K.4 f A M. lut'uts ill tht MaBonicball. Arm 8 lOMii'H lliocK Kleelifitou, every l''rlday On or huforc tlie full luocn. T. Uiuytou, W. M., A. li. Peilaiuy, SecfBtftry Dentistry Ur B. C MUKKAV 1.. D. 8 , deutal porga-ju h' uoi Rrutiuiile of Toronto UDivursity auJ ftoyal I'ollcRe ot l>eutal Suruootiti of Ontario. (3»B adiuitiiuiateicd for teettt extraction iBce Ki rraiileuc-e Toiotilo Street. Fk'Bhertou . c:: Medical f^i- W.J. Henry, Mi H., fva-lcatcof Faoultj -^^ of ^icdicii.e, Toronto UtiveiiUy. Oltlue â€"Dr. l.ittle'8 late retidcuce, FIcrburtOD. 1 1' OTTKWELIi ' Votorinary Burgeon irattimte ot Ontario Veterinary Oollefit 'enidence â€" Bucoiui door Hsutli west. 05 iLary etreet. This Btreut ruua ouUi frosoyteriao Chnrcti. Legal MAIL CONTRACT ^' Scalfil 'I'<-nfit'rsH(ldreB»fd to the Postniantec GentTal, will Iw rimvi'd ;it Ottawa until noon ou Kiivlay, tlie 18th "f.lmie. WJO. for thu con- vi-yanre (if Ili« .Ntujc8ty'.i Mails, una propos- eilCcntraitfor fuiir yiars, six CimcB per week, uu the route â€" MA.XWELL R. K. N,.. 1 from the PoBtniaster (ienoral'sple.'uure next. I'rintetl notices contaiuinc further infnruia- tioii «8 to cimditions nf proim.sed Contract tnay be seen and bl.tnk forum of Teuder may be obtained at the I'ont Offices of Maxwell and at theorti :e of the Post Office Inspector, Toronti>. A. SUTHKRLAND, Po»» Office luspctor. Post Olfice Inspector's" Office, Toronto, .May (ith, 11130. LCAS, A HKNKY-Haril»ter«, SoUfltors, eio.-I. R. LucuB, K. 0.; W. I). Henry, I L K. A, CMUoeii. Markdala Luoia liloek. Phoue 3A, hiaiicti otticiE aC Duuilalk aud Diirlia i •If llKillT, .* TKLFOlll), llarribtBr. Solid. '' torn, 4io. OlBceB. Cirev < Uriic* Hlook, ' Owou Houad. HtBndanl Dank l1 .^Fleshor- ' ton.(!<atiiri!ay»). W.H. Wrinht. vr. 1'. Tolforil Jr. 1 MAIL CONTRACT SEALED TENDKKS addreased to the Vo.st!.iaster tJencnd will bi' rocei.vol ao Ottawa until noon on Eriday, the 'i'lth of .lime, V.W, for the conveyance of Ilia Majesty's Mail.s, on a proposed Contract for four years, .six titius per week ou the route PROTON yTATU)N K. R. No. I from dlie Int of October, VJ-JO. Mcl'HAlt. r,l«naed Auctioneo tor tlio Pi iiited notices cnutainiuK further iufornm- I'ouuty of Qroy. Terms iiiinlerat« and I tion us to conditions i>f pro)Xwed eoutract may , BUvSiNEfis Cards IVM. KAITTINCI, Idouned Auctif neer foi '' the couutie* of llray and Siiucoe 'arm aHd Stock Batee a Sj^ecialtr. Teini<? uoderate. Batistactloo nuarnntted. Arianj.-u I'outfi for dates luav be inaile at tbo Advance >;Boe, or Ccuti at telephone ottico heversliaiu ir by addresBinu uie at Ktiverabani. Out. -iBtid Hctioii guaranteed. Ihe aiiaiixeuieiiks â- 1 iid liateH of sales can he made at ThB Advauco Jll\co. KeeiilBticoiind l'.()., OyloU, TDloiihooe .jonuectioii, Dec. U, ZO NOTICE TO INTENDKD BREEUEUS The Iiiiporttid Clydeodale Slalliuu, Horizon, will ba at the Muirshaw House, FlcBherlon, every Thursday uifiht during llio KeaHoii of li)20. Peovde ii.toiidini.' breeding ninrcs should ctmie and »e» this lii>r)<r, ae ho is a pieiniuui horso utid lia8 piiivcu hiiiiS4-lf oue of the best lueediii^ hutto.4 in Ibo province. WM FOSTER, Trop. and Maiiai^er. Boar tor Service Tile a«dorsis;hid livs a thorouch.>red Yorksliivf IJ' arfor !«ervice i.ii lot U, ootv. 8, Osprey. Tor uin <S1.R0. KllED SPOl'FARD Iw peon and \iltt.nU forms of Tender ni.'xy ba o'otain«<l at the Post t>fticea of Proton St;Uion and at the office of the Po.st Office Iii.s|>«ctor, Toronto. A. Sl'THEKLAND. ~ Post Offi«e Inaptctur Post O^ce luspector'a OtHce, Toronto, .May 10th, lUSO. Suniinur Sossi on coinuunces July 2nd at Iho Owen Sound, Onr. -Ttctin youiscU f,>ra gnod position. We wi-.h wo could supply one fifth the demand for iiftii3« help. J Ciilaloj-ue Kreo. ;C A KLEMTNO, F. C. A., Priiieip* ,' G. D. n.E\lIN(?. Seorjlaiy. MtUtion this piper whcu. writing) si I -â- - ii r w i I mill Mt vm m m 'mffKi^-