Acton Free Press (Acton, ON), October 16, 1924, p. 2

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tv v flllli artotijfrbd thuhbdax octobbil it 1914 autumn fires wftfth autumn leaven com falling down upon if city street tteyaro trodden by the passing of ot thousand iiarrlou foot the mean era coni tu swoop them up a dozen time w day and pack thorn into muddy piles to rot themsej vuaway and no ono ntops to marvol at tho old and brown at all oh what a lit they mi in town when leaves besin to fall whan autumn leave coma drifting down upon u country way ttioroe nothing half so beautiful and nothing- halt ao say a million merry ralnbowgroupo of maple bocch and oak all madly dancing with the wind like utile fairy folk and tlan om golden eventide when tttpb of dancing tires the conn tr peopla pile them up and light tho autumn flrus and oli the tacont of uurnuiar leaves upon the frosty air theres never a land in all the world hold inceneo half sorarol- the ion blue drift of the curling smdke cross the sursot sky and tho cheerful clow on tho face near when the crimson hamee leap high they may have wealth nndmansloiur great and all that heart desires but what a lot they miss in town in mlsstug autumn ureal molly bevan ffihr szee frees tatt taty twelve hours in midair qesoitqlc altah kndulnd vat woi prohibition vs government sales what ffect baa prohibition even partial prohibition on the salo of in- toxloanut the ormua packet aaya that in orillla under the present condition not ononf th aa much liquor la aold illegally aa waa aold illegally under license the- editor aaya the hotel that wore allowed to sell at certain hour and under certain conditions were not satisfied uquor waa aold r and flagrantly after eleven oclock arsnlght on saturday evenings on sunday to minora to indiana to drunken men and in other illegal way it waa also aold in plan without license to sauvjplen one inspector tried to interfere with these conditions he was warned that if be persisted he would have his head broken the fact la that experience has demonstrate ed that it is absolutely lmpoaaible to regulate the uquor trade we are certain that this applies not only to orlula but to moat if npt all of our ontario towns anvwe think that care ful inquiry will reveal tbat this applies equally to all our cities the friends of the liquor trame are very cartful to omit ait reference to the illegal sale of liquor in license aaya but t ance men will hare vivid m concerning- t thrngar the sale of uquor local or illegal today la no th in- like what it was when we licensed the trade so far aa we have been able to discover but what about govern ment control t a few days ago the canadian press dispatches contained the information that tho province of quebec had a profit of isov0ooo from jane so its to june so its from the sale of bard liquors and in addition it had a profit of i30tst from the five per cent tax on beer wines ate this means that in addition to am enormous bill for hard liquor the quebec bill for beer and wines etc amounted to zbu1iu0 and then onr brewing and distilling friend turned to us with solemn faces and assure us that they are almost wiping out drunkenness in quebec and yet the sale of beer and wines alone has reached over uc0o090o i they tell us there is no drunken ness in twenty- mlhioo doqara worth of beer and wines web if so alcohol has ceased to be intoxlcaanjc what a howl would go up if ontario sold 8ooqo worth of beer and wine and yet they tell us the quebec system is much better than ours it certainly hi for the brewers and wine makers but it certainly is not for the general public we wonder bow many automobile aoojdenta would be found in mstwo000 worth of beer and wine very like a whale the great cjeorga washington who could not ten a he or better would not if be could hardly suggests him self as a suitable attdleece for a fish atuiwy of the flahlett7p- neyerthe- v it la not likely that any modern t osherman however email hla catch and conscienoe and however large hiavlm- agination would venture to equal the i claim pace made by baron steuben j in hla preecnoe th om german soldier never- thoroughly mastered the language and tils i occasional allpe ware the delight of his fellow offloers once when dining at dobbg retry a with genera waafclngton and hustafr tho conversation turned on fublhg and the baron avenged that a- alagje-ax- perlenoe had extlnaushed all hla aa- plratronsto ahlne aa a flahernuuu he had fished for three hlasuis hours on the glaring- waters of the north river one breathless day with the mercury i near a hundred it waa misery not rr pleaauraahd after all he had caognt only two llabea what kind of nsh ware thayt in- quired general waahlagtdn n un ot sure but i think one of tham was a wbale repfled steuben a whale baron i la the north- hlvarl- jtea i assure you a t fine whala waa it nott persisted aron slteubeh turning for oonflrmauoo the aid who bad been hla companion an eel baron corrected- the young ofooer laughing t bea tottr kacosllencrs pardon said steuben undisturbed by the mer riment that had spread rapidly round the table i understood the gentleman it waa a whale jt was not the german baron hut one of our frerfch allies the llarquut d cbaatallttx whossn like manner misunderstood wa liifortnant after dining at the hospftahle board of a jboalpasrcmfctvnot the slualve eel however or any other nsh but featjh ered game of ituai deoeptlvely slmt- lar led him into the natural error of eusfurtng blahoeteaa with- enthusiasm that never had he partaken of a mort deuoious dish than- the wbale on iiommu just helping mr thomas q thompeon drew up k obalr bealde his wifes sewing machine the other aftarpooisand remarked ddnt you think its runnltur too faat ioot out xoult sew the wrong seaml slow down or youll stick that needle in your finger i why whats the matter with your inquired sirs thompson ive been running this machine ten years t was merely trying to assist you jasaayoti try p nelpme drive our ear explained isr thompeon but jftook a cheek fpra mw hm to square it juat the same 1 main rtye an epllspuo dropped in a fit on tho streeu of boston not long ago and was taken o a hoapltaj upon re- movtsr hla ooat thane was found pin ned to jiia walatooatallp of paper on which aa wriuan thie la to jbform the aargaon tbat tola 0 joet a case of puln fit not ap- i pandloltsb ostjr ag haa already arent going up today are you dext the worried little oman asked as her hu band gulped down tbe last of his breakfast and puabed bacli his cbalr why not the wlndal blowing a emit end and i dont wuovc that scaitolda safe ill be afraid all day if you ol j nonaensel he laugbed havent i been at this grind fur elaht years and never got hurt yett whats a utile wlndt lie kissed ber laughing have dinner right at twelve for me if you can theres no time to loee on this job- he took his patched coat and his hat a minute later he was in the treat- he waved his bond eoeerlly as he turned the corner drtrrl but that wind does- blow some he muttered he turned up his collar and quickened his pace he hastened on through the early morning chill reached the locomotive works- passed through the high red gates and rapidly made hla way to ward the monster stack which loomed aloft in its meshes of cobweb scaf folding then be started on his lonx dlasy climb up the rickety ladders toward the chimneytop more than two hun dred feet above halfway up he noticed that the wind had twisted part of the structure and wrenched oft a pbraoe he stopped to hammer in a tew nails then started up again he was now out of the protection of the factory buildings and the gale waa be- j ginning to get a grip on him it flap- ped his coat cnd stung ms faoe wttlalo ed the breath out of hla mouth but still he kept on i wont go back now anybowf he respjjted almost angrily no nr theres ho wind on earth can back me down not even the ominous creak ing of the stagings frightened htm up and still up he climbed till too city of camden began to unfold be neath bim likeamap till he could catch the sparkle of the delaware in the mornlnx sun and see beyond the great hive of philadelphia there almost there i panted then suddenly he stopped cllnglna with a sudden and deadly fear to the ladderrounds for some where far below he heard a sudden of wood felt shuddering sinking of the framework and knew that something had given way- thai the staging was about to fatlt an instant he clung with madly throbbing heart sick with horror while the scaffold reeled beneath blm then the topi ive got to reach the top he cried and sprang up the vibrating ladder he barely made it for even as his trembling bands grappled the rough brickwork the whole flimsy structure cracked buckled and went down like a dardhouse in a huge pile of mam moth jackatraws whence rose thick clouds of duu with a last desperate output of strength he pulled himself up and over the topof the chimney how he never oould remember and clung there bis hands all torn and bleeding deathly sick trembling sweating like a spent racer t i a great noise reached him from be- i low a manythroated shouting mujl glad with wild yells he opened his eyee and looked down all about the jackstraw pile tiny figures were running like ants from disturbed nest he saw scores of little faces upturned saw puny arm waved to him he was lying alone the top of the curved chimneywall about eighteen inches wide all rough covered with loose mortar his previous days work had removed the large cap of the stack which would have given him far more room ha had only the bare thickness of the wall itself which swung- round in i jfreat drcleof nomo nine feet in diam eter behind him yawned the black interior of the chimney before him the smooth red brickwork slanted down down down tin it lost itself in fthe tangle of broken aoaffold far below overhead the scudding clouds were driving on urged by the wind which at every gust made the chim ney shudder in sjckeplnar vibrations he hitched hi body sidewlse drop ped one leg- down into the interior of the stack and mt the other fail out side thus astraddle the wall he fait fresh oourage ha was still alive at any rate and the dlxxmees was be glnamat to leave hinv for long- years of steeplework had made blm used to birdseye views atayberu get down after alii he urmured now if x only had phtnk to lay across the chimney and alt on or a rope or anything not a thine remained to him save his own strength and the poeslbulty of dinging tin help should help what help could there be for him to rebuild the staging would be a of days and meanwhile why boors would end the tragedy jtavel your stocking a cry floated up to him he looked down and saw a man shouting through hollow hands hey i ravel out your stocking and drop the yarn many other voices echoed the cry coald it thought dex but even at the moment he saw the futility of the idag with that howling wind and trembling chimney the plan was hopeless lone before he oould have got a shoe off or unravelled a socio were that possible he would have been whirled off his precarious ledge he did not answer and shouts died away some other plan would have to be devised he waited waited and the erowj grew now it- to him as if a aea of faces were upturned hundreds thousands i he dared look no longer bu cast du y aeray across the river at bight of something there hope quickened laj- over the roofs of philadelphia a uxiy kite v floating a kltaj try a kite i he shouted with ell his lungs sad the people must have heard for the words were repeated taken ep and spread about ilk wild- fir a kite a kite he saw i few men running- across the yard out of the gate goln for a kite ttent iltrrl 1 tvlfli ilnrrri for a long walt i said dex to himself- lang he waited while the wind mauled and buffeted him not thinking much but juat holding on til finally a jubilant about arose and he knew ths bite had w he looked and saw not one but half a daan and with them boys foe what men will impel with boys in flying- a kite t yt do tr gaspednh prison- and again be waited presently he peered over the preci pice onoe more and blank despair as sailed him two of thaaltes were up but tbey were wbbleqf about far be low j in the yard there waa nelthor wlnd nor space to raise tham property and outside however ntlll remained among them several policemen and all eorts of impractical suggestions were made dex all this time was setting terribly cramped his hands had become i if paralysed and he was rapidly grow- injr weaker ills head began to reel light and heknew hla peril was in creasing from uuj position of the sun he judged that noon must be close at hand good ijurd he aroanedj cant they do earnethm for met a few more hours of suspense and reason would desert hint that would be the end they must do noma thing he lapsed from thoiufht and the next thing he knew was a vibrant blur of sound tho mill whistle i it must be the djnnerhour atlastl kul consciousness leaped back to blm carefully ho craned out aver the edse the crowd was very much bigger why thouabt he theyre till there waiting to see my finish yett lie snarled with savajre laughter flung a wild glance off across the vast ocean of houses the curving river must getting on towarn night some time he thought and i rues that will be the end of me the torture of hla horror his weak- ba for jie bad been since morning lthout food or wnter would very soon be over and his wife what of hert what was thatt across the yard a figure was running others were running too h heard a wild cry in a familiar voice dex dex hold an helps com ing i at sound of annies words rising faint but clear to him et sight of her face so very small and far but still hers strange courage welled through the miserable man as from unsounded j depths of hla subconscious holug with bis wife he saw a hurrylnff eager man a man with ropes and a idng board hold on well save you he heard the man about his grip tightened again all now depended on whether ho could hold on another hour could not try he shouted down to them hla voice sounding strangely small and empty in that void but hurry hurry vaguely hesaw the man clamber- inf up over the brokeri scaffold to where the chimney projected from it eaw him looping- one rope about the shaft then- another and after rtha the nightmare got jilm again with frightful agotay of dinging of sweat of weakness how long this lasted he could never tell but suddenly in bis dreams he was conscious of a mans yoloe speak- 1 l mythical merits oi govern- ment control a recent advertisement by the mod oration league i rt piaklng nn appeal jjor financial support contained the following mora mil i ions if not in prqfltajpt least in sales are being- lout by our manufacturers wholesalers and job ber bocainto of the increasing tenden cy of buyers not merely from tiii west but from within ontario itself to favor uontreaw if this statement be true then busi ness should be bigger and better in montreal than in toronto one forceful fact in this connoc hon is enough there is no better index to the vol ume of trade than that shown by bank clearings the following table gives a com parlson between the bank clearings df montreal and toronto for the years mo and 1122 montreal 120 y10blstou toronto 10x0 tm10s77fl montreal 1023 sm102hs0x toronto 1mi ct91 618208 decrease in montreal le 0132 s3 increase in toronto ll8t3s3- ii the moderation league in their ad vertisement aleo complained that still more millions are being lost to cjtnhotols and restaurants retail stores thestres garages oil stations etc by ths throngs of nutomobllo tourists from across the border tree spenders all of them whom we di get but whom we might get and the feeding of them while hsrowoull be a welcome addition to the market of our farmers agaln cold hard facts smash i smithereens the unsupported wall these boose protagonists the government records show that the number of automobiles admitted for touring purposes during tho year 1922 the last for which figures aro available waa aa follows quebec 2s1 ontario 882026 xj l the telegraphpoles why soap cleanses ing to him a familiar voice too oo away i dex murmured rudely let me be cant you when i was getting ready to fly t tot me fly too tho voice answer ed walt ill go with you the voice seemed very near hold on u minute more it said dex murmured something he knew not what and then there was a nwri face near his own a mans shoulder coming up the tree was it not a uee7 from which dex fancied be was about to fly the man seised hlra firmly dex recognised him om fran cis chase his wifes cousin and a stonemason of camden let go prandsl cried dex delir iously youre rumpling my feathers m a bird x tell you let go forget itilxetortsd francis eels ing him firmly youre craay just keep still now i keep stdll- as dex tried to flgbt him away dopjt dontl youre pinching my arm offt cried dex querulously say where am i anyhow t then suddenly understanding camj back to him he began to tremble violently keep still will yout chase com manded roughly here let me put this rope round you now then let go thoeehrlekal grab the rope that right all ready youre going down down going down stupidly re peated dex than he burst into shrill laughter down i hal ha thats a good one say its dark what sure why nott the suns peon gone an hour- know how long youve been up here more than twelve hours and thats a fact now then hang tight- suddenly dex found himself sliding and slipping down along a wall a very lone wall seemingly miles an j mile ion tinder hla arms he felt i the pull of a rope- aa he d limp with lolling heed the wreckage of the scaffold was all swarming wifh men some bearing lan terns the yard was crowded and tbo atreet outside when francis chase the mason lowered from the chimney- top the all bdt unconscious steeple- jackr chase bad ascended the chimney by s trick of his a simple yet fearfully difficult manoeuvre which had it not been actually done might readily eneugtibe pronounced impossible he had brought with blm two stout loops of rope a board and a long cable securing the cable and the board to his wail he had passed the loops round the chimney and fastened them then he had kicked off his shoes in order that his stockinged feet roiint get a good hold on the rough brick work standing on the broken scaffold h had cast one of the loops upward about three feet apd pulled it tau getting inside the loop ne bad leaned outward against it for support and had walked up the chimney for a shor distance then- he had thrown tbv other loop still higher and had used ths t for support while he had loosed the first and had thrown it in turn higher still i in this manner using first one loop then th other and always throwing the loose one higher while supporting himself inside the taut one ho hj walked ail the way up to the very top where he bad been able to get a hand grip and pull himself up on the coping once there he had lashed- hie piece of board right across the ohimney and from u had lowered bex by meana of ble he had then made caiila fast and bad gone down it hamv under hand altogether a deed strength ooolneas and daring akin equalled by few in the industrial an nais of our- country a berot no just a plain american working man and without reward or more than passing words pf praise he went back the next dato hla loll but before he left the yard that night hlrrm waa sore with a hundred hearty nahdabekes of congratulation one feeble grasp he prised more than all the rest together the grateful tri bute of the fellow workman he had reecued joined to it was art ales for she kissed him before all the crowd grlmad and sooty as he was it is often curiously interesting know precisely why things we have always taken for granted are so it is like making a wholly new discovery for example we all know that soap takes off dirt but how many of ua know how it acts the cleansing power of soap says prof alexander flndlay id chemistry in the service of man depends on 1 phyaical as wall as its chemical quali ties its most important property is that it lowers the suriaeo tension of water everyone knows tmtwjwn water la brushed otvr a greasy lur face it does not wet the surface evenly but breaks up into number of separate drops as if each little drop was surrounded by a thin elastic akin the force that keeps the water in the form of a drop is called tenalou that is what dissolving a little soap in the water does soap enables tho water to ooeae into close contact with even a greasy surface there ia another property of soip solutions that plays an important part in the cleansing process- the power uf emulsifying oils and fata when you vigorously shake any oil with water the oil breaks up into a large number of droplets and takes on a milky appearance that condition is not permanent in the course of a few minutes the droplets of oil run to gether to form larger drops which then collect as a separate layer on the surface qf the water the milk- thus disappear if however instead of shaking tho oil with pure water you shake it with water that contains a little soap the droplets into wloh the oil breaks up are much smaller and they do not run together and form a separate layer when you allow the mixture to stand the oil is permanently emulsified that is what happens when you use eoap in cleansing a greasy surface to which dust and other dirt ao readily adhere the glm of grease break qp owing to the emulsified action of the soap solution and then you can then readily wash it away the removal of dirt is also facilitated in a mechan- idal way by the lather or foam that the soap water forma another result of the lowering of the surface tension of water lack of understanding- rather than raallclnubiiosm- lies at the bottom of many international difficulties kleclflly true is this in tho dealings of iyi uncivilised people bo apart are llho ranges of experience that a mutual ground at comprehension la hard to find ono no longer wonders at the mhiclunco to iwss though country when he roads tho true reason of the natives refusal the story told in mr hushs itelndenr dogs and snowshoos tho company surveylns ths ground for the talsgrupli wished to bargain with tho lamuta for deer to be used the construction of the line the chiefs received tho agon a with great dignity and gravely listened to their proposals then they announced that they had plenty of relnfeer and that they were perfectly willing to sell them tor any other purpose but not for the building of the elegrnph tji inking they did not understand the nature of the line and its object the- agents carefully explained telling the chiefs it consisted simply fn series of poles extending through the noun try with a email wire strelehed along the lofit they enlarged on what advantage iho natives would gain from the fort and stations established along th way from which tlioy could obtain supplies and clothes but nothing seemed to satisfy the chiefs at last one asked in whet direction the line would go on beltlg told they became gloomy and evei moraxoluclant the agents wore pusxled not being able to imagine why ihey were tt apposed when one latnul as lmtruck by a now idea asked how far apart the poles would be placed when this point was made clear all faces bright- anod and they assured the agents that they would sell all thdtelndeer needed tbo reason of their former objection was explained they knew that the line of telegraph would cross their usual routes of trrfvol and they had supposed that the poles would be so close together that they could not pass between them with their deer thh difficulty disposed of they immediately promised to furnish two hundred doe- great future for western canada peace river will yet yield as much wheat as the whole of canada is doing now that the wheat growing possibilities of westxum canada still remain to be developed to the full waa intimated by sir henry thornton chairman and president of the canadian national railways in an address delivered re cently before the members of the board of trade of the district of sud bury if only 60 per cent of the acreage the peace luver districts were brought under cultivation said sir henry more wbeejjw would then be produced than la ddrfc at present by the whole of canada this country abounds in what the nations of the world want poultry cattle sheep and grain these are raised in abundance the only lack la settlers here we have another great empire in the west awaiting development and an empire which will be rich -tn- prod uctlvepi in the time to come sir henry spoke in- an optimlslia tone of western canada as ha found it some time ogo x made a prediction that the crop return would yield 2500000067 bushels he said since then there have been rains and as the result of these ibelleve the yield will be approximately 100000000 bushels of course this figure la not to be as large as that of last year but on the other hand the farmers will get better prices personally i found the farmers optimistic in a healthy way mixed farming f proceeding rapidly and this la a- good sign when one oqds the great peso illyer district awaltlnir development when one understand there is more coal in alberta and british columbia than there laln tho united states- one cannot be but op tlmlatio a to the future of canada believe the day will soon come when the people or the united states will depend largely very largely upon can ada ror aaeens of sustenance then ourtbeef poultry dairy and agricul tural products will find their way o the markets of the united btates to the enrichment of us personal liberty itecently there wo an impulsive in dividual in tho city who decided that he must inevitably begin tho erection wooden frame building oi vacant lot in tho downtown business tlon when he wont o the city halt o gut his building permit he was sold it could not bo granted why nott he asked it is my ground and my material and bo as long as i pay for it cant i put up anything i like on my property whats liberty for any way no was tho reply you cant put up anything but a fireproof building in that locality he was mod all the way through things have come to a nice pass when a man cannot do what be likes with his own property he aajd ho went out slamming the door jumped his ford and drove oft at thirty miles an hour when he had gone several blocks he was stopped by a policeman who took him to tho sta tion tu deposlto boll for appearance in court you broke the speed law he was told it la my car he sold j and i will drive it as fast aa i want to if you persist in it we wllf put you in jail was the answer he was madder than ever going outside he spat con tern ptouely on the aid own ik and was immediately rested by another policeman whats the matter now he asked cant man oven hplt where he wants to no was tho reply not in this city youp personal uborty does not allow you to become a nuisance and spread disease will not remain in this placed he shouted getting into bis oar be started for home intending at once to move but when he got heme he found a placard on ths door with smallpox on it and waa quaran tined for six weeks no mans personal liberty reaches y farther than where the otheh roans rights begin straight tips if you repeat ugly stories you mny expect them tn return- a wise manneyer makes a foe of one he admires enough to imitate force yourself to take an interest in your work and the effort will sooi become a pleasure instead of a hard ship kvll speaking can do no lasting- evu for the wall of friendship that is so frail it will crumble to dust beneath the lash of an evil tongue la notjworth having in youth wo make teniples or hovels of our castles in spain in age we simply live in the structures we have bullded going back to lpeo acroe the nrldge of memory the good opinions of others are mental crutches by which we hobble into better and higher walks of life most of us struggle to be what those we lore beet believe ua to be men often talk to hide their real character but it la a small personal ity that can be hidden behind thct narrow strip of red velvet the tongue for the nose lip nl mouth or all traitors to the cause 1 some muslo is so poor and weak it will not hold even the words of our grand old hymns they slip through and ore lost while other muslo la so noble and strong that u enfolds them tn a deeper and tenderer meaning- and flings them back into the heart how to judge men george horaoe lorlmer editor the saturday evening post gives this udvloe on slslng up men look in a mans ey for honoatyi around his mouth for weakness ul he chin for strength a- hut hands for temperament at his nails for eleonllnoea his tongue will tell you hu exjerlepco and prove or disprove bis atatemsntaaa it runs along it is interesting to try this test odt on our niflnda and others that we finaw so many tupjat these physical characteristics oheeltstd with the qualities of a man that it la not neces sary- to ascribe every mens success iopull an easy mark lady up in front it the tail buildings made the attempt tmpeaedhfe ror more than an hour he watched the theres a lady up in frotu who repeated efforts au of wbloh ended wants to buy an oriental in failure cortodealora assistant the crowd had thinned tjow for the doea aha look aalfghe had meneyrj works had started and not eweor a ttoey but aha doeeut look as if shed i human life i iriloa atop the wheels had ttlooa df profit a targa aomher pf num lbod fl wdt m bar ijtynelf- who says oh whats the user a young man ran for the leal- lature of illinois and was badly swamped he nextentered business failed and spent seventeen year of his life pay ing up debts of a worthless partner le was in lave with a beautiful young woman to whom he became en gaged then she died entering politics again ho- ran for congress and was badly defeated he then tried to get an appointment to the united states land office tut failed he then became a candidate for- the united tit to senate and was- badly j defeated then hebecame a candidate for the vice presidency of the united states and was once more defeated one bad failure after another bad failures great set bucks then he became one of the greatest men or america abraham lincoln who says oh whafa the usef cats a schpdl boy wrote an essay on cats the chapter on ouffetrent- braeujt sup plies jhe following information cats thats made for little boys and girl to maul nd tease is called mai- tese cats some cats 1 known by their queer purrs these are called persian cetcht with bad tempera is called angocrle cats cats with deep feellne la celled feline cats 9tomnwml a beneficial mealtime habit your children should form carrie blanchards offer 1 vmi oh ta in lmtom for labia d x mat i tut ywi mil- oa jaat tmt by gmmt rm ant w apply itow umt u vwda b to pua for ita or tawr bmu wui jta rmd r rmr mim od m tan w wafca klad 70 ut irauwt partem m fwtraa cmal ta klntrov ball ill m lat yi a ta ant i aopplr haat awar fssb mali this coupon now i canadian poatmn cereal co ltd 45 frtmt 8t salt toronto ont itwaat ta awka a tabtdar urt af portam plata arad a wttamit mat ar obuamli la ant li apply of xnstamt postum t cbaaka pobttjh ctptu tptadtf nam 1 b4rapt mui cu pro you naturally hesitate to give the children tea and coffee because of the poisons caffejpe and tannin these contain yet it is hard to refuse when they want the same as- you have serve as your family beverage instant postum the wholesome invigorating delightful hot bev- erage which all may enjoy with safety and benefit have better health yourself through ridding your system of these irri taring poisons form in the childrens minds a habit which will ksep them healthier in later life instant postum is a pure cereal bever age made instantly in the cup with hot milk or boiling water economical c6sts halfacent a cup for those who prefer it there is postum cereal made by boiling for twenty minutes ask for instant postum at your restaurant your club and on the train take advan tage of carrie blanchards offer send the coupon canadian postum cereal co limited head office 45 front st east tdronto factory windsor ontario thertfs a reason i nstant postum you know bow many children do not like tbo taste of milk ton know how they like to have the same drink aa the grownups yoa know too how good it is for them to have a bat drink cmildrim lovs make instant postum for them using bot milk instead of boiling water i theyll like the taste immediately and they will get the food elements of wheat plaa the nourishment of milk in a hot drink that is economical and so easy to make a hundred eyes he who buys had need have a hun dred eyes said poor richard that was quite true in his time whenever you needed anything you had to go to this store then to that store- across the streetto every place that car ried the thing you needed if you missed any one of them you might be overlook ing the very place that held tlie bargain you sought not so to-day- your own two eyes are plenty- now for every dav the free press brings right into your honiell the stores jyou would want to visit nd the goods in which you are interested comfortably seated in your armchair you simply take the paper and read through the advertisements so later when you go exit to buy you know exactly where you are going yaui know just what you are going to get you know just how much you are going to pay read the advertisements in the free press they deserve your at tention they save you tim lahor and money it is to your advantage to read them newspaper advertising is a straight line to best good and lowest prices vote for the wtati ursday october 23rd

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