Halton Hills Newspapers

Acton Free Press (Acton, ON), November 25, 1926, p. 2

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m gftr ttan 3tor flrggfl thuhsdav novembbu 25 xp26 care for the boys what can a boy do anj where can a boy stay if ho la always told to get out of the way ho cannot alt hero and ho must not stand ihcro the cuhhlons that covci that fine rockrnjr chair wr put there of courso to bo neon and admired a boy baa no business to over be tired the beautiful roses and dowers that bloom a on tho floor of thro darkened and dek- cato cttom are not maao to walk on at least not for boya tho homois no place anyway for their noise yet boys must ralk somewhere and wbat if their feet sent out ot our homes sent into tho street should step round tho corner and pa at the door weere otiicftwya teot have ort paus ed before should pass through the gateway- of blitterlns llht v t hoar jokes that are merry and tngn that jure bright bring out a warm welcome wlth flat- teihttf vuleu and temptingly say therea a place fpr tho boya o what if they should what if your boy or mine should cross oer the threshold that marks out tho line twixt virtue and vice twixt purc- ness and aln and leave all his innocent boyhood within o what if they should because you and i while tho days and the months or thb years hurry by are too busy with cares and with lifes fleethut joys to make round our hearthstone place for the boys i theres a place for the boys xheyml find 4t sowe where and it our homes are too daintily fair 2 3te prwih iftttt targ f petes rheumattism bit e b harriman ii tread of their feet theyll find it and find it alas the street j mid the erildingn of sin and the slitter of vice for with heartaches and longings we pay a dear price for tho setting of gain that our- life time employs if we fall to provide a good hojno for r the boys black heart of potatoes the potato tuber which win real- v ity a shortrtblckejied plant stem lq peculiarly subject to certain injurious influences arising from improper stor age practices abnormalities are thus created within the tuber itself which impair its vltakty and disfigures its appearance thereby rendering it un fit for seed purposes as well 09 un- desirable for table use among the abnormalities occurliur from time to time is that commonly known as blackbeart an undesirable condition which appears as dorkbrown or blackened irregularityshaped areas in the internal tissues of the tuber par ticularly in the central region while affected tubers may appear quite nor mal externally on examination of the interior will immediately reveal characteristic dark areas blockhteart is caused by exposure of tubers to two extremes yet different sets of conditions when potato tubers ore stored for prolonged periods at ex- tremo temperatures ranging from 95 degrees f to 110 decrees f changes occur within the tuber resulting in the death of tissues in fho central area thereby producing- what has al ready been described 4 as bluckheart secondly the subjection of tubers at mgb or low temperatures to condi tions where the necessary amount of oxygen required for respiration is tacking also produces typical black- heart in the first mentioned case conditions might easily arise through storage cellar or heated car intended for the conveyance of potatoes being equipped with an improperly control led source of heat this would tend to produce extreme temperatures through the main storage room ortho body of the car the second cause is brought about by storing- potatoes jn improperly ventilated pits and healed cars or piling in ordinary bins to depths unsuitable for adequate clrcu lation of air strict observance of the following recommendations by the division of botany of the dominion department of agriculture at ottawa will in large measure prevent the occurrence of blackheart- l avoid overheating a storage cellar or heated car by us tag a properly controlled source of heat from which the proper amount of warmth can be distributed and main tained with greatest safety in the case of the cellar the source of heat should he situated preferably in an adjoining chamber to the main stor age room j provide adequate means of ventilation particularly if potatoes are stored in large pits or tins at greater depths than five feet by placing ventilators so arranged that no tubers will be more than five feet away from an abundant supply of air 3 avoid piling- potatoes to greater depths than three feet when the storage temperatures ranges from 50 degrees to 70 degrees f especially tf the storage period is longer than a month ij x macleod laboratory of plant pathology fredericton t b government control 7 in b c- conditions ai ettr byjrev h vv avlion b d a reiident minister formerly of acton xx e was fcom sunny italy and had been in equally- sunny california for nno years from his wagon he sold veso- tablcs and fruit at tbo two mining camps in calaveras county and everypno called him pete that was as near as they cared to come to hip real name n pete was jolly sunny tempered and kindly ho knew by naine-evory- child on his route and his customers often wgnderd whether h did not give along te4hbdsiaipr aoe they set away in fruits to tho kttlei rascals half his profits jho carried hie money in a long- buckskin pure and tho children novor grew tired of watching him makechango he would cup his left hand under the mouth of theojd purse ttfuclc had opened then ho wotld grip the bottom with his right hand and shake gently holdung tho purse nearly level and the silver would crawl slowly out into the wait ing ifiilm when he was obliged to chajagova large biu his hand would plunged into another pocket and ho would pull out a largo roll of green bades then the children would ataro and say opoh cheet i should think you would be af ra to carry so much money pete mrs hoicomb the wife of a mine fore man dnco sold to him for why asked pete lifting iris eyebrow nobody bother pete you cant tell said mrs- hoicomb some one might rob you some one from outside who didnt know you the way we do pete laughed and shrugged tils big for the touch of tho fingers and the- enouldero everything was a joke to they meant well at a certain convention in tho south a colored minister occupied a seat on the platform with the white clergy men when it came his turn to speak lie rose surveyed the large audience and in the most impressive manner said i -a- and now gentlemen ill give yau a chunk ot thought without dress or garbage tho good negroes of the days before the war thought they were compli menting a white man when praying for him in public and in his presence if they emphatically referred to him as tho chief of sinners and made especial mention of the special sins which justified the epithet thero is an ex president of a pen- nsjrlvnnla college who in his prince ton days used occasionally to preach at a church for colored peoptohe was very popular with the negroes and one sunday evening after he had preached a rousing sermon a prayer meeting wan held over which he pre- sided an old colored brother led in prayer saying f o lord we thank thee for brother cs sermon bless him for thou knowent his heart is like a cage of unclean birds full of all manner or wickedness and things a more recent story proves that the custom still survives among the no- groes of virginia a gentleman gave a fivedollar bill some time ago to a struggling povertystricken colored church in southern- virginia so jorge a sum had never before come from a single individual and the people wore overwhelmed- it happened that the gentleman mr c went to the church the following sunday and took a back seattln the sallery what was bis amassment to icar from tho pulpit the following descriptive prayer o lawd bless marse c he plays oards he drinks he races he gam- him he try- a treeck llkea dot me im pokea heem in da eye weetn do onion makea heem cry how that do and pete squinted at her oh so on you silly man laughed mrs hoicomb i almost hope some holdup man does rob you if you feel like that peto kept on his placid way trav elling a lonely mountain road from one camp to the other ha never carried a weapon and be laughed at people who advised him to do so generally he sang as he rode and anyone who was coming received plenty of warn ing of his presence at one place between tho camps ho had to turhf dsharp corner there his outer wheels ran within a foot of tho edge of a cliff at the middle of tho turn he could have extended his arm and dropped bis whip straight down for four hundred feet without its even touching anything in us fall just beyond the turn came a sharp rise where his horses had to pause half way up for breath in the middle of tho grade was a little level place just long enough for wagon and team his horses knew it for a resting place and always stopped there pete usually let them do as they pleased on tho grades on the sldel of the road away from the cliff stood a big- pine it was al moat eight feet in diameter at a height of a man above the root and tho ground sloped abruptly down frond the tree to the narrow road so that tho inner wheels of the wagon mado a sharp angle with tbo bank at that place ruts were cut into the rock deep enough to hold the wheels from slip- ping e we wise and no man who rode round that turn ever doubted the wis dom of the road maker pete sometimes eyed the big pine and thought what ah ideal place it would be for a holdup when some one had stopped on the upgrade to let ms team breathe a man could hide be hind that tree and give no evidence of his presence until he stopped out gun in hand always he laughed at himself for his fancies scouting the idea or such a thing it was perfect ly ridiculous to thlnk of so remote a possibility only pcto did not think in just those words morelikely he thought in his miningcamp dialect rats no chances likea dose then just when he felt perfectly safe folks began to talk about the road agent who had held up two rigs over on the road to the progress mine that was eighteen miles away blgh teen miles is not much for a road agent pete you better buy a gun said a miner i like a blsley myself but some takes more to the old frontier gun seem as you haint had any practice thro win a shortgun mebbe youd better get a scatter gun i dont llkea dat dose road a agent shoot first talk afterwards no noa carry gun too gooda mark for shoot roada- agent see dose spun bllml pete have hole in heem mebbe youre right but ijiunno said the miner id packa six under my left leg with the butt stlckln out handy tou can get a gun out that a way mught quick and come asmokivit pete made on concession to the con ditionshe hid the bulk of his money in a small can under ajphe of potatoes in his pockethe carried only what he needed for mahhig change m a week went by and word came of another holdup that time it occurred on theo ther side of petes road the inhabitants began to breathe more easily feeling sure that the bandit must be working south after ho had crossed the south fork of the river there would bo no more danger then enmo the report that he had held up and robbed four men in a wagon just over the line in tuolumne county calayeros folk took heart head in south said old tom mur doch hell most likely turn east and git out into the farm in country in tho san joaquin thank goodncsa were shut of him anyhow said bill tobln dont care a hoot whero he goes just as long ns he dont hang round here big joke on him if he ever hold you up bill chuckled tonr a box of matches and a jackknlfo that come round the horn thats about what ho tho knlfo that he used for cutting the tops off carrots and parsnips it wus almost two weeks slnco the bandit had showed any activity and pete was singing as ho drove up 4hc grade to the new camp with his el bows on his knees and the reins loose in in tax fingers he sat humped over singing his own version of a popular melody the horses turned tho sharp ol bow above tho tnll cliff and jog od would git offnj you now if he kctch- ed sufry ltd be more of a family calamity seeing aa she ulways kcopn tho cash and a blame good thing theres some one in my family that does keep the cacn which is a plaguy sight moren there is in yourn woll retorted torn glad hes gone and left us anyway the whole camp echoed this senti ment in spirit if not tin words they felt a strong sonic of relief to know that the bandit was working south away from the mines men who had gone back to the old habit of carry ing a she gun left it at home onc more the stage driver almost conned his suddenly acquired habit of driving with a heavy fortyfive callbro rovol- ver under his loft thigh with us handle well oyt for grasping almost but not quite for while passing cer tain parts of the road tie still would bring the revolver out from beneath the seat cushion to the moro favorable position whero conditions were most auspicious for robbery went armed and ready for instant action along the stretches where a bandit had lhtle cover he placed his weapon in a safe tied to their work nt the first rise and pet went on singing at the lialf- way stage they stopped for their reg ular breathing spell with a jingle of metal rings and a squeaking of worn h ftr ness flfuhqokiil my self then both horses quivered and jerked on their firmly pjaced feet as if to check a furious jump at its in ception a bit of dirt rolled dow i the bank pete lifted his head and st tod singing he spoke co the horses but the animals did not need reproof for after one swift glance up the slop at the tree they settled into quietness whata da mat wceth you why you makea da 111 jump huh fool ish stldk em upl said a voice and a long arm quickly thrust a big re volver past tho side of the tree git a move on ye dago position in the seat pete thrust his position in the seat pete thust his hands above his head the bandit came out and down the bank sticking his heels in deeply to avoid coming too fast got down he ordered make it lively too the stage is due here in twenty minutes and i want to get through with you first ileestar you be patten wecth me said pete rising with apparent pain and difficulty de rheumatic he no ver bad tlng- he hurta so bad you ever have rhoumatlx meestar never mind what ive had you got a move on said tho bandit sure meestar bo patlen please said pete getting down backward over the front wheel wath many naln- groans nota geta mad weeth me meestar dose rheumatic he awful bad thlng to have me i hope you never geta heem impatiently the bandit stepped closer and reached a hand to help him down from the wheel he was in a hurry to take petes money and make him helpless before tho stage came grating down the upper half of the steep hill a curve would bide itnintll it came within forty yards and he wanted to bo ready for tit pete was terribly clumsy and the bandit lifted him a little and pulled on his arm with oaharp cry as of pain the italian slipped and caught at the arm that helped him his entire weight fell on tho bandit who was standing on sloping ground and both men went down agstfnst the wheel with pete on top it was strange that a little fall like that should make such a change in pete the stfffnesa all went out of his legs and his back his arms be came tremendously strong and he act cd with incredible speed with a very fast thrust of his strong hand he jam med the bandits head under the up- curve of tho front wheel his knees landed in the mans stomach and with a hard wrench on hts wrist pete took his revolver poking the muzxle into the bandits ribs he jerked him to his feet how you like a dat hey tou smart rob youa marcha walk nowl queeck whirling the bandit round and jabbing him hard in the back he added come a babies pull along boys obediently the hordes leaned into thtfr collars and started the wagon walking ahead of them and guiding the bandit with a cocked revolver pete- led the team up the second grade to a place where a thoughtful road maker had widened the cut here his team swung oft the road close to the bank in a curved recess the horses stopped at the word and barely had the grinding of the wheels ceased when- pete heard the stage coming as it swung round the curve just ahead the driver caught sight of pete and his prisoner and slowed up stopping alongside he looked down at pete and grinned caught something eh pete he looks klnda blue round thegllls like he didnt relish getting prodded with a gun who is he brtnga de rope ordered pete disregarding the question tou take- a heem down to the sheriff with de compliments of pete aha you smart rob youa bandjfta rheumatis very bad to have- but pete no bave- heemn6t never looka and pete began a wild dance in the grit and dust of the roadway the driver set a firm hand on the bandits shirt collar and his lono passenger be gan to tie him hey you crasy dago lower the hammer on that gun or youll slug the wrong manl yolled the driver for pete was wildly waving tho gun as he danced he stopped grinned low ered the hammer and looked up rheumatis t huh was all he said as he stopped on the hub and climbed to tho seat thm acton fiucs poidjs ontario j dear mi editor h casual obsei vers und atayathomon muy think liquor control controls but it doosnt i um now quoting from an article from the alberta prohibi tion association ns follows 531 interdictions in 2h months v at the present rate of jnterdlo- tlons it should not bo long until wo have all the drinkers on the strictly prohibition lilt the on 1 flaw in tho system is that for every man or woman in lord let ed tho 11- censo system is teaching three more to drink and eventually to beoonio drunken thnts how the new law is working the inter diction hut conclusively proves that dtunkenness i again on tho increase drink beer and bo sober the cry of the moderu- tlonlst before the liquor control act has become in icauty is now dilnk- d a be drunken also- note in this connection that 67 of those interdicted did not have tx permit to buy from tho government vendor stores they therefore must huve received their liquor in the li censed places where beer can be pur chased by the glass without a per mit to get hard liquor they have become drunken on beer by the glass wo should also remember in this con nection that a special plain clothes- force is now busy seeing that hotel- keepers obey the law the bar has come back only in a worse form men and women can drink more sit ting than standing and so far as the bootlegging is concerned it is my be lief thnt it has not been curtalledat all consider the first authentic compli cation of all infractions of tho pro vincial liquor laws which is now be fore us for certain reasons we could not get this until recently and what do we find for the last 8 months of 1924 total convictions for infractions of tho liquor control act were 1743 ot which 1254 were fot drunkenness and 470 for illegal sale illegal possession etc the sum of 59771 was paid in fines 283 men and 7 women were giv en jail sentences totalling 362 months november 1925 reports show the in crease was over 1924 as follows 2307 convictions under the liquor law 1512 for drunkenness 795 for other infractions of theuquor con trol act 979995 was paid tti tints and 632 months in jail and then re member these items do not include 1 drunk and disorderly or 2 drunk in charge of auto which comes under the federal act which number 1 148 2 56 respectively so we have ns grand total convictions for 1925 from liquor control boards report drunkenness provincial act 1512 drunkenness federal and town 148 drunk h charge of autos 56 infrac tion of liquor act illegal sale etc 795 total 2511 the liquor control act of alberta la just what the liquor people want it is the best system for disposing of liquor at the present time in their eyes todny the beer halls bars in reality sell beer for hotelkeepcrr and breweries the hard liquor can be se cured at licensed government stores by those over 21 who have paid li cense fee there is no police- super vision here and policemen tell me that people can uy enough to take to rooms and have a carousal of the very worst nature pollccmenwlth whom i have talked in xmmonrnn7aftd here in calgary as well say it is their convic tion that there is more drinking and drunkenness more impurity more drunkenness among wonjen we have now 29 government vendor stores 350 hotel licenses 50 clubs recent ly suspended where is control 7- it is simply sale control is a mis nomer yours in the interest of prohibition sincerely h w avison calgary november lltb 1926 take heed that ye be not the deadlines of the drug deceived learning camouflage tola but b given nve dollars to this i l ohurch and o ixtwd blean htm i pole drova over the name rand that mr c dodged behind a post and i the olago followed at no time did he i carry any weapon more deeedly than l fturrledlv rattred at a certain place behind the lines in france the british established a camouflaged school for the developing of the latest forma of deception a war correspondent who visited it des cribed hla experiences near tho baso of a treocovered hill is a scries of trenches built to re scmblc in every way the trenches as seen from the german lines there are even a few shell craters in front of the bar bed wire entanglements to give the trenches a more natural appear ance the instructor stood with tha correspondent in front of llils line of earthworks and told him in an off hand l way that there wero six men looking at him from the trenches some almost in- full view or visible fiom the waistline up two men he asserted wero only a few feet away from him for ten minutes the party of ob servers ubed their faculties of obser vation to the best of their ability but without avail not a sign of any of the men in the trenches or of those in front or behind could they discern finally at a given slgnal the men arose it was like the sudden appear ance of dead men from the grave a few seconds later half a doxen heads steelhelmeted and rising and falling to their stride appeared over the parapet how many men are walking along there asked the instructor everyone thought that there wera six but thy heads marched round tho end of the trench into the open and proved to be dummies mounted on sticks held closo to the mans nose underneath jn actual warfare they serve the valuable purpose of drawing shots from the germans and of help ing thb british to locate snipsra editor of foks pmcstti i do not think hhrre baa ovor been a tlmo when the electors of ontario had moro need to bo orj tholi guard against being dolelvid und to remem- bei the words of jesus of nazareth take heed that ye bo not docelvcd some eminent divines und thei people with good loputatlonu would lke tho public to bollevo that gov ernment control mcnnn increased so briety less secret di inking by tho youth of our land anil that there will be no more bootlegging if tho promised govornmont control was tbo outcome of a demand to have tho sale of intoxicating liquor reduced to a itnlntmum the demand for gov erntaent control would be worth con uttering- on tho contrary tho prom ised government control is the ie- sult of clamor by two parties viz party no- 1 the liquor trade who expect to profit by government con trol and wont to sco the maximum amount of liquor sold that the public will sanction party no 2 tho moderatlonlstsj who desire to purchaso frequently at minimum cost the moral la that whilst under the o t a the government is the servant of those who desire the supply of strong drink reduced to a minimum under government control tho gov ernment wtill automatically be com pelled to sell to every person over 21 fortunately our saviour gave warn ing by their fruits ye shall know them tho fruit or result of drink ing liquor is poverty disease acci dents and crime and it necessarily follows that the easier and more re spectable it is to purchase kquor than there will be- more drinking more pov erty more accidents and more crime the slogan beat the bootlegger by government control cannot bo ful filled if mr ferguson hueavors to sell in such small quantities thnt the de mand is not satisfied many would bo moderatlonlsts will continue to pralss and back up the bootlegger and the bootlegger will continue to sell with very much less risk of detection and if the government endeavors to sup ply the demand as some people ex pect it will do our province wilt take a leap into the dark from which it may never recover v what ontario needs is increased power and increased penalties to stop manufacture importation and sale and to back up the o t a by in creased education on behalf of total abstinence every person who desires a dry on tario should vqte for o t a candi dates only yours truly j btjrlingham jr r no 4 rockwood november 20th 1926 habit quite different tho philadelphia world conference on narcotic education on july 8th last adopted a constitution c it at ins a permanent world organic itloh en titled tho world conference on nur- cotlc education the spirit and pur pose of which nro set forth in the preamble we the r people of the woild in ordor perpetually to pro tect society everywhere from the pciil of nurcotlc drug addiction b apply ing thepower of truth through educa tion doordttin and establish this con stitution for humanity tho board of governors of thh world conference on narcotic educa tion has adopted a resolution calling for a week to be observed throughout tho world us narcotic education week tho ast week in february of each year and inviting individuals and or ganizations to adopt such measures as they may deem necessary and advis able for observing this week in the extension of narcotic education the secretary general of tho con ference captain richard p iiobson has roquested mo to introduce in the congress a joint resolution for the participation of our government 1 hon frederick a wallis commis sioner of correction new york city declares the greatest menace to tho nation is drug addiction nearly 00 ot tho inmates convict ed of offenses ifnvolvcng moral tur pitude in all our city penal and cor rectional institution are users or ped- lers of drugs tbo criminal idendi- ficatlon bureau of his department states that there are thousands of heroin addicts chiefly youths 3n their late teens and early twenties all actual or potential criminals who serve also as recruiting agents for the army of the living dead heroin changes a misdemeanant overnight into a desperadooxthcmost vicious type every doymurders holdups and rob beries are committed by drug erased individuals tho increase in narcitlcs has been accompanied by an lncreaso in crime ten ounces of alcohol will kill one man ten ounces of heroin will kill 3000 men ten ounces of alcohol dis tributed over a week can scarcely cause the beginnings of drunkenness in even one youth ten ounces of hero in applied over a week can produce in- curablo addiction in thousands of youths tho profits that urge on the traulc are hundreds of percent foral- cohol but are thousands of percent for narcotic drugs drug addiction is secretive even well informed people never heard of heroin detected of fenses against the federal narcotic laws were about 1000 in 10i7 in 1925 they were 10426 the people- must know about this newest and deal lest enemy that lies in wait for the youth of the land hooking them by the tens of thousands because of their ig norance oems of thought method is good in all things order governs the world the devil is the author of confusion swift it takes two to speak the truth one to speak and another to hear thoreau the first and last and closest trial- question to any living creature is what da you like tell me what you like and ill tell you what you ore the crown of wild olive rus- kln thoughts spread like waterrings re vealed hume otsbet a boys will is the winds will and the thoughts of youth are long long thoughts r w longfejjow speak with the speech of the world think with the thoughts of the few john hay there is nothing that revolts our moral sense so much as cruelty schopenhauer like other plants virtue will not grow unless its roots be hidden hur ried from the eye of tho sun carlyle success is never a free gift wher ever you seek it you must pay its price time is money but it its in the form of a cheque you must cash it at the bank of wisdom out of the suffering comes the ser ious midgut of salvation the grate ful heart out of endurance fortitude out of deliverance faith modern painters ruskin matters of principle when a man tells you that h is a matter of principle with hlftn to do such and such a thing you usually find thnt ho is trying to justify an act of a somewhat ungenerous character such ns entertaining a- complaint against someone for a discourtesy or neglect or exacting the fulfillment of an obligation under harsh conditions or pointing out with blunt frankness a friends shortcomings or refusing 4o contribute to the aid of a cause or an individual or declining to make a loan to a friend perhaps every one of the acts that ho thus justifies needs no justification is in itself right nnd proper in the circumstances unfor tunately explaining it on the ground of principle is likely to excite n- ques tlon am to the nature of the principles that govern tho person for they seem to concern his own dignity and importance exclusively his own rights and conveniences the duty of other people towardjftlm rather than his duty toward other people nbw the only principles on which a man may well pride himself are those that he lomehow shrinks from announcing it is nt fitter of principle with all decent people nbt to lis or cheat or betray but any who called attention to some act of hla as illus trating the principles of honesty and decency by which he was srulded would be regarded with astonishment and even suspicion the real matters of principle ure the inner foundations on which the whole structure of char acter rests nod people do not talk about them call attention to them or explain them whenever we hear anyone say it is a matter of princi ple that he is about to give but merely sidelight on his trotum maria said mr rawlins laying aside his hat and overcoat and rub bing his hands gleefully together you know that for years e have been wanting to buy a building lot in that kennedy subdivision but couldnt af ford to do it on account of tho high price they ask for land out there well ive just learned that qulnlan who owns one of the best lots in that entire neighborhood will sell it for half what it cost him if ho can get the cash he needs tho money and cant get it any other way i have a great mind to buy it tomorrow morning it comes easily within our means 1 dont think you ought to do it joshua said mrs rawlins you dont think i ought to buy it why not it would bo taking advantage of his necessities but m besidest tha j of a splendid opportunity to buy some fur niture that we need grigs on mul- 11ns ore advertising parlor sets at one- third less than cost because they are overstocked and cant afford to carry them through the season id like to buy about two hundred dollars worth of parlor furniture well never have as good a chance again being a man of excellent selfcon trol mr rawlins- merely smiled when boy8 take notice if a boy who has been notoriously careless of his personal appearance suddenly begins to snow some interest in the condition of his face neck ears and rwrjsta agonizes over the part in his hair takes his finger nails out of mourning discovers over night that a toothbrush is of practiclo valuo instead of uselessly ornamental and demands a clean shirt every day if we say and when this amazing metamorphosis occurs remember the basis on which the old french de tective used to go to work find the womoih there isnt another thlhk under the sun that will produce such a revolution philadelphia inquirer bthers all over outadnaieclioosino dodskjiit ifocierwear focbidiea peifkewetttstveq dodsknit underwear cmskyour dealer laoh for thertabek dod8 rlnitting company limited qfahgevhxe onxawo sugar cuts feeding costs 50 the infant flapper a small boy who xraa tho youngest ot a large family accompanied ma mother to seo his married slstors new baby after barely glancing- at tho baby ho wandered idly round tho bier room soon he becamo absorbed in vii contents of the babys basket after turning over the various dainty trifles that it contained ho pricked up a powder puff turning to bis sister he said in shocked tones n she rather young for that sort ofjhlng the sugar jack system the sugar jack heres how it works come in and see us is a perfected feeding process that bat produced amazing results it not only does away with the expense of a silo but also increases the milk flow and weight of your live stock and cuts your feeding costs in half converts roughage into an easily digestible state making it actually more palatable and nourishing than the highest quality ensilage and hay thus roughage such as hay straw clover threshings bean and pea vines etc can now be used in place of ensilage and will give better results d the sugar jack pres3 and converter compound predigest roughage into highly nourishing feed this pre- digested roughage feed is relished by live stock and the farmer using it enjoys greater profits and owns healthier fatter live stock we will gladly explain how the sugar jack will increase your live stock profits and save you time labor and money its a wonderful new feeding system that no enterprising farmer should be without coold shaptjey and bnntfoni limited ontwte j w b arberee mill st actonront andye thank you for our radio a radio to be proud of a ooodj3adkfierymmt toafltboferxi not only the kiddies but mother and father and thooldfolfcs too will give thanks for a real radio in the home heres a genuine king radio that anyone can be proud of at a price everyone can afford to pay if stfaeiiewkingcl when you see it yorrtl say theprice is 10000 when you know its a 6tube set youllagreext must be 12500 when you hear it youll say it surely is not less than 15000 and when you ask- the 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