Acton Free Press (Acton, ON), March 19, 1925, p. 3

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hp rtflt fw houi thursday matlch 19 1mb the wicked world its a wicked old world ive heard you say a wicked oldworld and ill agree that trouble and sorrow block the way and the sunshine 1b oft hard to sen its a wicked old world hut tell me uo p r are you trying to make it a better t onot are tho you adding your sigh t mournful chant or jirjuyou lifting a song of chper are you lending your voice tp the tone of cant or are you scattering sunshine hero its a wicked old world but tho work youve done has it hoped to make it a better ono did tho word you spoke tend to atop tears j did your hand ratae aome one who chanced to fall 7 did the hope you preached put- an ond to foars did your rush to aid whqn you near tho call jts a wicked old world alaa ray eon but havo you- made 1 u better tf jp jg thayer i beekeeping vor womenu many women are now included in tho ever browing ranks of beekeeping enthusiasts a few have taken up beekeeping as a sole means of earning a livelihood but the majority of them are keeping bees simply for the pleas ure and recreation afforded by these interesting little insects not only do a few colonies of bees afford their owner pleasure and relaxation from routine work but with proper care may be made quite profitable for teachers or bpajnesa women beekeep s tng- provides a means of spending pleasant and profitable sunnier vaca tions out in the open air and not few of these aro owning and operating fair slxed apiaries for the housewife beekeeping is especially adapted for not only will beekeeping prqyjdft her with a complete change and rest from the monotonous routine of household duties but it enables ber to provide nr delicious sweet for heromeat-jlttlo- cost and also add considerable to her income a row colonies of bees can be made quite profitable even in small towns afcd cities for the bees will travollpng distances in search of nee- tar arid there lano reason why a- few colonics should not find a place on almost every farm in the country oa well as the small flock of poultry many jind tha operator wears yell and gloves tftky irus tninjntrifflihla source should a sting be received it should at once- be scrapped out land not pulled out with anger and thumb as thin will force all the poison into the wound after a few stings how ever one usually becomes lmmuno and little notice is taken of them a certainamount of hard work la attached to beekeeping especially at ljlhptunowhenthecrop hnlngre- movod this however can be reduced by the use of a small shallow supers for the surplus honey however there should bo little difficulty in getting a man o lift off the supers when they are ready wintering outdoors in packing cases also- does away with a great deal of heavy lifting and carry- ing a beekeeping on a email scale does not require a great deal of time or labour but it is necessary to bivb at tention to detallsanother reason why beekeeping should appeal to women tho bees need very little attention but the little thoy do need must be given at the proper time and unless- one la prepared to give them this at tention they cannot be made profit- ablerc b gooderhom dominion apiarist experimental form note nr r the ra poptor lvo trlod tho hiffhtoncd up ecia lists who doctor folks today lvo heard tho throat man whisper low como on now jot us spray tvo eat in fancy offices rind waited ions my turn r and paid- for fifteen minutes vhaf it took a week to earn but wnlle the scientific men aro kinfliy one and all i miss ihe good old doctor that my roother used to call the old time family doctor oh i am sorry that hes gone he ushered us into the world and kriw us every one go didnt have to oalcn lot of questions for heknew our histories from birth and- all the aliment wed been through and though as children small wrfear- ed tho medicine hed send tjib old time family doctor grow to be our dearest friend no hour too late no night too rough forlimtoheedoorcall r he kney exactly where to hang his coat up in the hall he knew exactly where to go which room upstairs to find the poterita htostite3xbc36e and saying never ml rid ill run up there ftyaelf onaaqq whats her mother arid father had lived bo- foro sho was born wowcre nil glad she had tho chance but i believe some of us were juat n bit jealous well maggie became tho mother of a splen did family seven sons and two daugh ters and his strangely enough was i bellove the sizo of fabilly hor mother had rbovoa sons and two daughters and i wns well acquainted- with them all well well hovthe pupils of the lato mr little aro hlnntng- out two more go no this year already causing all the fuss it seemed we rewto look and loanenlcnseof li himois one of us and nurse keaggy yere married while t v l bp was in acton arid they have had and now to resume the story of my doctor friends who lived in acton pretty nonr twentyfive yoars ago dr gray came to acton from parkhill he succeeded dr kelly who went 10 hamilton to open u sanitarium for patients with nervous diseases dr gray purchased the brick residence across the street from the old dra residence of dr shook dr mcgarvln ct al this was the reodonce jiimw moore built in 1881 nntv lator sold to ansonsmltnv mrs v h storeys father dr gray grew in popularity from tho outset both because of hs professional skill- and friendly spirit ho was ono of the best surgeons i think wo ever had in town the dr had had a flne experience he riot only graduated from mcqlll modfcal col- xogomoritrcdlbiithe was also a grad uate of famous london jind edinburgh medical schools ho mado the beat of his opportunities in the cities in th9 schools and in tlo hospitals and he nevei etoppp studying when he hot an active practloo his experlonce as a medical mlssforidry rn newfound land and in parts of labrador where dr grenfell is doing such splendid service now were rare opportunities for practical experience- for- twenty years dr gray practiced 4n actqn with marked auocoos finally ho was laid aside himself with an incurable aiimont and suffered for some months with patient reifgntlon it was a bene diction to be privileged to visit him during his lllnoas he never forgot his friends a few weeks aftor a happy chnlatmastlda tho dr left us arid wept to bis reward mrs gray and the- talented daughter miss laura are still well and very cbmforable in their new home at the comerof fred erick and church streets tho only son cpl claude gray mado his homo iriqwinhlpeg about tho tlmo dr and mrs gray and miss laura settled in acton a brother to 3trie world dr hope practiced- in acton several years- while dr foray and dr ault were here -he- ffell iii7 nurso who was on ono of his cases while he was hero it was evidently a zzmptmimmmm tha spcwiwt7arclnyer- men and ibuwyxieii kitow r- and bavrat time to doctor as they did lopfif years afiroi but sonoo day he may come again the friend that we can call the good old family doctor who will love us one and tall tion plat er get aboard if youre going to boston the train will start in a mo ment he said the good samaritan smiled cheerfully a iolice ofllcci- boarded tho train in a small town one day lutt full with i prlhonpr whom ho wnaj taking to the jail at the countyseat a young farth er followed them into ho car and took thu opptjolte neat undaunted by tho officers stern face nd brass buttons tho young mnn- engaged cheerfully in conversation nice day ho romrked the officer- grunted hut that wiuvall aii jeeothogiante- woneoterdftyv went on thei young nian th pollceman said yeojind do- camc silent j c inv on my way to boa too to nee ri copple of those games the young fel low continued confidently i suppose that is tho greatest baseball that is ever played ive always wanted to ticq some firstrate baseball games professional you know im sonic t hint of a player- myself and i surely enjoy the game the officer had nothing to say and looked- uninterested you see i used to g o to school with one of tfio fellows thats catching for the red sox known him all my life hes a great player there isnt any better man behind the bat in tho country the young man spoke with evident pride butctho ofilcerwas unresponsive despairing of nialdng any progress with baseball as a topic tho young farmer turned his attention to tho prisoner and asked tho policeman where ho was going with the chap tho ofllper repllod that tho man had committed a mtsdemeanor and as he was u nab jo to pay the fine imposed by the court would have to servo a short tlmo in jail honest ofilcer do you mean to say that he line jjot to go to jail just be cause hp hasnt got ten dollars nuked theyoung farmor tho athor as sured him itnatsueh wasa fact may i talk with him a minute yea after a short conversation with the prisoner he basoball enthusiast turn ed again to tho officer he says if ilf pay his fine hed send me the monoy just as soon as he can earn it hes a stranger to me but im going to risk it can he go free now if i pay you vas abqn as i take him to the re corders office and poy over the money well heres the ten dollars iho olflcor and his former prisoner lost no time in leaving the train brit a the tur to leave the station- the iw tht farmer standing near him on the sta- neighborhood news- town and country milton it w fox has sold his 150 aero farm near omagh to mr williams of woodbridgo and advertises a clearing milo of stoqk and implements seo notice in a not lie r column divjhfel ofgorebay c of manltoulln district was in town on saturday ho met a number cf old friends made when teaching in the public school more- t foriy years ago drr k anderson m p who nas been attending to hla- parliamentary duties ratt ottawa spent the wtfekend at his home here v vo understand that bob long of iho milton spinning mills has pur chased from mr x robertson tho brick factory buildings north of tho cpr station thoso who were presontin the knox church school room last thursday evening heard a vcryjtaosing and inp structlve address on tho bcautl- flcation of homo surroundings illus trated by lantern views by mr h q moor a ovorririiont loijturer th moetlnb was held under the auspices of the local horticultural society which is dolng- much toonbancevth appearance of the town reformer ventilation jfgood moctllng said mrs northey an alio greeted her cullers at tho front door como right into tho parlor- although im nuro im most ashamed- to ask anyone in after what thy nolcev annie from the city has been oayingl what did she say why sho says to me a week ago auntie this house smells terrible close this bad foggy weather youd better do something about it erin v a winsome humility it was a lato sunday afternoon and two youns men were returning from a days fishing one of them uttered an exclamation as ho recognixed the new minister mr morton on the little foot path that led up from tho lake but the other had met reproof and went on upjjoncerncdry i suppose you dont go fishing on sunday he said to tho minister wjthivears ago i hear peter talked church no vi rl h aa thr m and x dont make iriuchof a practice of hi but tho morning was so flne it was a temptation no i never go fishing on sunday tho minister replied vtouknoir sun day is my busiest day but i havent any doubt that i do other things that are just as bad in gods sight he spoke so- simply aixd sinceroly that his words had more weight with me than a hundred stern rebukes the young man said afterwards i felt pupels of the old school days during the post webk or two the names -of- two of my fo s mates in the early days of our acton school have been prominent in my thoughts theso were peter smith of saskdtcliwan and mrs thorotfe gow- dy of ouelph tho vlalt of peter smith to the scenea of hts boyhood and youth called up many interesting recplieqtiopb peter lived with his- parcrfts oatheold rutherford farm- whero thofirstbrook trout pond8 okd now and i believe his father also worked tho timothy wardley place across fronv the ryd3r homestead on tho third line peter attended tho public school- in acton the lato robert little was his teacher x remember that ho thought mr little a paragon as a teacher and mr little always bad g kindly worl for peter ho was a pupil when john douglas was attending and they become fast friend i remember when they both attended v reunion for the pupils of robert little held here in 10 00 they had a grand crack together on that occasion and now john has gone- died those of you who read this column will remerabor in january last peter found quite a number of the i friends of his youthful days re maining herd still i observed that hp seemed nior anxious to see the old girls than the old boys well i sup pose that was natural enough ho used to vlalt those same girls fifty rather a there 1 oeueve the dr coincidence that dr mcgarvln moved from actors to markham and conduct ed an office practice and a drug store there for several years well now i mast quit for this week mary has hot pancakes and new maple syrup for supper and just callid to mo that theyre ready so au revolr for this time damages by ourselves and preaching to us he know he had temptations of his own oven if they weren our temptation and he knew that he was quite an liable to fall as we were ijsaw how shallow was my fling about his going fishing on sunday i knew by his face that he understood what it means to be shut up six tlays in a mill and then have the sunshine and the whole bright world outside j beckohlngte you before youre out of your bed sunday morning ho as much as said it would- horve affected aim too if hed been elmilarty placed but after wed talked it over jim and i 1 both felt pretty sure hovt the tussle would haye come out wo agreed toward the last of the week that wed go and hear mr mor- ton preach the next sunday we liked his way of counting himself in and if a man speaks a dbxen words that seem to strike tho right spot the chances are that hell have more to say thats worth listening to he did and neither of ua have ever been sorry for tho change we made in our way of spend ing sunday its a rest to get away from the things youve been carrying week but sometimes as jim says a man needs more strength to pick them up again than he gets from an excursion or a picnic or a days- fish- in nlon wxiorever he went -about- town het was always a great fellow for church doings and wasn regular at tendant at knox church when tho family lived here i believe he has beerik commissioner to as sembly on several occasions well he told moiriqwas a thorough unionist and he felt that the presbyterian church la iloing the right thing from his point of view in going into the united church of canada it hag juat occurred to mo that an- thathe was not putting us in a clasr esteemed family lived on isitnat rutherford farm afttr the smiths about fifty years ago mr arid mis charley cameron lived- there and i can remember how neat arid tidy the place was then mrs cameron was always great for gardening and both her vegetable garden and her flowers looked well there were two or three penr treea in that gardon which at tracted the boys when thoy were fish ing in the trout stream there- in tho fall the cairieron boya were more generous with tho pears than perhaps their mother intended anyway i barn pled tho pears more than once and i thought they were very fin o fruit theres some people said mr har tlnffton thatll got all they con out of a boarder for his board an charge hira extra for tho -toothpick- j if i hadnt an insurance- ori the plapej id a let that feller put his outdmoblle in our barn hero does it hurt in the insurance asked mrs harrington course it does if anything should sef fire o the barn while tho auto mobile is there jiary a cent of insur ance do you get thats why i aont him over to betty youngs sho aint got any insurance jari if guedfe sho could take tho risk fer the money she got an sho got it i saw tho feller this morning- an i asked him how ho mado out hed left hla machine there for a weolj lacking one day while ho went back and got soriio parts how did you get on i soys to him- he sortpf laughs and says ail right miss young treated yewell oh yes butahe has a queer notion in her head about making out a bill overcharge ye 1 says knowing bettys ways well he says shes charged mo for things thah clearly aint had al though she may have lost thorn then he- handed me tho bill betty had made it was queer supper breakfast and nights lodging severityfive cents that was all right one automobile in the barn six days and nights a dollar and a half that was all right i suppose then came the other itema damage for burning green wood on account of not being able to get to the dry woodpjle because i wnrf afraid of the automobile two dollars cost of one calico skirt tore lp going round pie automobile to get the scythe on account of being afraid to go near the thing sixty confs mental anxiety one dollar total five dollars and eightyfive cents quite au expensive week for that young feller but i guess those that can afford to run one of the things can afford to pay for stabling when theyre laid up for repairs extyearwhi do just as well an eskimos trade among tho eskimos of thcberlng sea region there is no fixed value for whalebone furs or anything else they have to trade it ono of them has any thing of value he will keop lt until some white man apppara with some thing that appealn to hs eye and morieyvaiue of whav piay takq him does not make any difference to hiin if he has a trinket that may bo worth a dollar ind some one offers to give hlrii for it something thut is worth a thousand dolars7 but of which ho has no need ho will refuse to trado but ho will give anything ho possesses toe what he really wants an eskimo of st lawrence island in bering sea7maaoacaifchhobeaa- on of a bowhead whale the head of baleen was worth between to riband fifteen thousand dollars he knew tha approximate value of the head but he held on to it with no apparent dcslro to trade one day a trader appeared with a small gasollno launch valued at perhaps two or three hundrod dol lars the alght of that so tqok tho native that heatraightway- traded his head of bone of it for out in the straits one day he raft out of gasoline ho abandonded the launch for the canoe he was towing and paddled back to the island but he did not regret the trade ho was satisfied and ready to try for another whale mr h g austin proprietor of stanley park is already making pre paratlons for he openlngof the park on monday may 25 john b young departed his- life on march 3rd at his home in hfilsburg ho was born siktyflvo years ago in tho township of chlnblacousy there passed away suddenly of heart- failure at his residence speed- side on saturday march 7th 1925 ellas p bardcn son of the late robett bnrdcn ani mrs barden of erin tho btfildlng committee of the bap tist church hillsburg had a very suc cessful bee at mr harry parraschuk6 bush last friday and saturday get- ting- out the timber for the new sheds to te butttirtho near future rev j a evans and miss florence mcdowell went to north bay jast week as a delegation from lo l no 112 anditob a no474o tho grand lodge of wostern ontario the pupils of- tho public school un der the supervision of their teachers stftss mckinley and- miss porslow gave a very enjoyable arid efltortain- lng cqneert intho town hall on fri day evening march 6th the pro gramme was followed by games and lunch provided by the womens in stitute mr g il walkprlhnppencd wlth a distressing accident on tuesday af ternoon while operating a circular saw cutting wood at mr s nurses his left hand came in contact with tho saw and was badly mangled medical aid was summoned and it was found necessary to amputate two flngerp only last week mr walkers eldest son was caught in tho same saw and la ulso nursing a sore hand advocate bo i got right to work and- yanked most every bit of furniture exoept tho piano out on the porch and then i wepi and i cleaned and i beat rind there wasnt a mite of dust or dirt on anytbln and then i shut things up agin tlghts i could but this morning annie conies in and says tho very same thing aunty how awful closo it does smell in here and there hadnt beci a thing- an furs i could see would get it close for a week i was clean dla- cou raged i tell you but lvo mado up my mind now what tho trouble is continued mrs northey as sho sunk her voice to a whisper and looked brick cautiously over her shoulder weve got a summer boarder up in our front room ive found out she keeps her wlndowajpen a crack all the time and i think tho fogandthb damp ism oils has just got into the house by her room and thats why it smells close not extraxdinary the following story 1 attributed by- titbits to a famous scots colonel a young subaltern of his own nation ality was one day on guard with an- other officer at gibraltar when thcj latter fell over tho rock and was kilted tho subaltern however made rio men tlon of the accident in his guard re port but left the addendum nothing extromiriary77itnmuardqunung7 standing without qualification some houra afterwards the general came to demand explanations you say sir in your report noth ing extraordinary since mounting giard when your fellow officer has fallen down a rocky preclplco four hundred feet and has been killed- well general replied lioutonant sandy slowly i dlnna think theros nothing extraordinary in that if he had fraun doon a precipice four hun dred feet and not been killed i should ha thocht it extraordinary and put it doon in ma rcepoort sugar from artichokes burlington mcphees reinvestment if fir- times revenge ft every one who has rend tho lost pays of pompeii 1emomberu ita deli cately beautiful aesciiptfora cqrloiui- ly enough bulijrer lt author nttcr- warda lord yytton vnxa a man whoim host taste was entirely lven to his ifi2p h1 t house at kneb- worth was originally very handsome but he did his best to spoh it by false jstuccoornaments externally in the way of rarsoyles and quasudothlc pin- naoles on these says an english publisher c ksffn piul time worked its in evitable revenge and when the estate bad passed on to hla son the second jbord lytton better known under his literary pseudonym owen meredith which hgd been supposed to be per- manent oheiaay t happened to be walking with lord lytton up and down in froil of the house after i sharp nlghtr wost when the gardener came to teji of the fall or another gargoyle his message was in tltese trdrdsi ff you please my lord there in another of them bjpody monkeys fall en down iif tiie nlgbt v the btlver member of mr littles group of pupils i referred to was mrs thomas gowdy of guelph who passed away full of years a v ago last saturday i believe it was mrs dow dys death that brings backa flood of meniorfes of the eary days her school name was maggie moore she was a daughter of mr and mrs thomas moore sr of the first line and she was bom on the old farm there nearly eightytwo years ago all of us boys remember mother mooro of the first line she was a fine old irish lady and always aeemed tp havo n smile and a word of sood advlco for us whctlier we were irian or scotch proteotant or roman catholic and she always used to have something good f or us too well the boys used to go often to the moores and of course wo all got so well acquainted with margaret as her mother called her though she vtfas al ways mnggto to us we went to school together too and there maggie was quite a favorite some or the boys used to sldb up to her and make heepseyer to her but while she wits friendly with them she never took jtheir advance soripusly finally tom gowdy of ouelph came down to the farm to visit with johp imopre mag gies brother who was then working in guelph and was quite a ohur theae vialta became more and more frequent and then one fine day just after maggie had turned twenty aha up andmnnlfd mr dowdy and went to guelph to live with him and sho had a happy life arid hor husband aspwedjnd wayerywhere ijv teemed una jjbiulylyiiars ago orap theyr eteolecl him mayor of guelph he passed away ten or eleven years ago and her life afterwards waa very lone ly i remenniber about flityyears ago that mrand mrs gqwdy -took- a plcas- nre trip to the oldcountry a most unusual thing in those daye my how wonderful it eeeipbd to us young folks to thjnk thatlhaffgio moore was going over the sea ho old country and would seethe homo snd tho olty where when you do not feel like it an irishman named mcpheo lived in a shanty that stood in a field near a main highway put west the founda tions of tho shanty wero iowerthan the road through which ran a tlg water main js the flying floor or tha placq- was raised by ppflta o make it level yylth thp hlghjcay it left a largo cellar undorneath jyhero mcfhep kpt a dozen hpns 1- ono day the water main burst flood ed the cellar and drowned the hens thereupon mcphco entered a for damages against the city after mtich delay influential frlpnds succeeded in getting tlilrty dpllprs in setioriiant of his claim tvo got mo monoy ahoutod tjje old man to his nextdoor neighbor glad to hear that was the- reply and how much money was it mc phoo i thirty dollars and phwat are ye goln to dirwlth thomonoy ijp going to buy thirty dollars worth of ducks said mcfhee on account of an outbreak of scarlet fever in burlfiiori the east end school except one room has been oloaod until tho 23rd inst- mr and mrs w f w fisherare holidaying at st petersburg florida br and mrs a n day were tpo host and hostess of o delightful house party inhonor ofmias r sylvia clarke 9 on saturday evening last- about thirty friends gathered at tho homo of mr joseph cadman and gave htm a surprise party in honor of his birth day the publicity committee of the chamber of qommerco held a meeting in the chainbcr room on tuesday evening when a number of important matters wore dlsctfssed t rev e val tilton of lutoncton nb has accepted a call to tho methodist chuncb here subject to th6 approval of tho stationing and- transfer com mittee wednesday night waa railway night at burlington lodge no 165 a f a m when a number prominent railwaymen were present from toronto and london districts and the chairs wero also occupied by railway and exrallwny men on tuesday evening a number of friends fromoakvllle and burlington paid a burprlso visit to the newlyweds mr and mrs albert england and had a most enjoyable time the evening was sperif in games etc afterwhich dainty refreshments were served the response of the methodist con gregation on the sabbath to the ap peal of the frnfir pastpr r p hamilton jn thp interpsts of tho ev angelism and foclal service depart ment was very flno airipuntipg 13500 garotte by a process discovered by experts of tho government burcauof stand ards sugar ono and a half times as sweet as the cane nnd beet varieties maybo extracted from artichokes thy rofining treatment netfeasary is simple and it is said the cost ofmanufac turn ing the product can be greatly re duced because of the lowjexpense in cultivating the vegetable and its yield when compared to other sugar- bearing plants tv is believed tho artl- choke may extensively bo employed to provide a great part of tho future crops- lack of means of crystallxlng tho extract has been a bar heretofore bound to bargain iwbatvitheprlceor9silk denf old ladynskod of tho young shop man t seven bhuungs was- tho reply soventeen shillings she exclaimed im give you thirteen only seven shillings maam is tho prico of tho silk replied tho boniest shopman oh seven shillings rejoined the lady bharpely well tji give- you- five state of torment little girl what is the state of matrimonyr asked an examining priest in ireland please air its just a state of tor ment and agony by which men aro prepared for a better life was the reply give the kiddies all they can eat you wont have to coax the kiddfes to eat more of it once afiefhavetasted satisfy their growingappetites more with every siice and highly nourishing well baked of thebest ingredients the kin that builds for sturdy bodies and roy cheeks fairbanks bakery phone 116 mill su acton get your jobprinting at trje free press to georgetown y- r the smoking 8tove 1 when you- do not feel like smiling that is tho time you should smile when you do not feel like singing that is tho tlmo that a song will do you good when you do hot feel like mak ing yoursolf nsreoable that is th time you should make an effort to talk if your hoart is light and every thing looks promising it is all right to take things as solemnly as you please sorfftfusness will not harm you when you are in- that mood if you are downcast and appebhensfve however forco yourself to srallp sing tips and tips a canadian spending hla vacation in scotland had an opportunity to piny goif every day bp a worldfamous links moreover he had assigned tb him tin exceptionally fine caddie who had frequently carrloat the bags of the best gblfcro in scotland donald my man i expect t6gt some good tips from you while i am here said the canadian whilemakfng the first round on the and i oxpect returned tho thrifty bondjld the lllfo frtto you one day whon tho english states man benjamin disraeli was walking through hiscstnte he found ono of hla tenants eating dinner by the roadsldi although hla house was very close by well henry asked tho kindly landowner why aro you eating out here by the road oh sir stammered tho tenant greatly embarrassed i caateat in side because because the stove is smoking so much apd well thats too bad said diaraoll i will see what the trouble is at once and beforo the tenant could utto a word disraeli hastened toward the house but scarcely liad he opened the door when a shrill womans voice piped out you take yourself right out of here you lazy good for nothing very much perplexed the statesman then returned to his watting tenant by the roadside ho put bis hand on tho mans shoulder in a kindly fashion and said choer up henry my boy my stove at home sometimes smokes too two culprits revenge jtonjiuiflrto wkly tell ua that after jlmmvo tppnwan drawn ho rout from tho chair hold out hirvnie hndand fld give it to me please with an accommodating rimilo q deritlstrwrapped the todth in pripor and extended it to jimmy what arp you going to dq uh it ho asked i ani going to take it home ws tho reply cram sugar intp it and you naughty cruel boy said the very fashionably dressed young wo man who was taking a stroll inv the parks to the urchin whom aho found despoljlng a birds nebt how can you bbw heartless as to take those- eggs think- of the poor mother bird wheri sho comes back and thats all rightpifln interruited uio boy tho mother bird is dead the young womans reflections re flected disbelief how do you know she asked sharply coh i sees er on your at was the rppjjv l- mrs evans and mp keptner have been pppqlnpd delegates tq hc school truatees convontiop in tpioptq in easter week at tho annual meeting of the hortl cultural society last week h b minims was elected hon president j b wallace president and j d kelly secretary treasurer tho hydro office will not be open saturday evening- but wilt bo open on monday evening from 7 to 8 baroness do hucck was a guestai the home of mr and mrs ralph ros during her visit to georgetown mrs j e newall of audubon iowa is visiting with hor slater mrs henry wilson at ashgrovo f mr fjoydvareyhasao far recovered that ho was able to return home from toronto general hospital last sunday ho is now ublo lo move around with tho aid of crutches owing t tho damage dono by chil dren at tho town reservoir properly the chief has been instructed to pros ecute any ono found trespassing on these premises at tho annual meeting of the can adian florists and gardeners associa tion held at toronto last week mr s kirk of georgetown floral co was appointed representative at the royal winter fair in toronto v a grape fruit measuring 22x21 inches was received by the editor last week from dr f r watson who is holi daying in florida the fleshy part of the fruit waa pink and the flavor was delicious mr george a wilson of tho 6th line who has been quite seriously ill is improving mrs wil son who returned from the hospital a couple of weeks rigo after undergo ing xl serjous operation is also con valescing nicoly herald an optlmlst watch it aohol snmriiywns not prone- to exert him self in the classroom consequently his mother waa both surprlfliid and do lighted whori ho came home one noon with the announcement i got 0110 nupdred this mojenlng thats lovely sammy exclaimed his proud mother what was n7j fifty in reading and flfty vrlthr riietlo wfls sammys prompt reply breaking the recqrd the thought that every day records are being broken la ah inspiring one frequently we hear that some qno has swum farther has run faster or has flown higher than ever before there is no reason to think that tho best pictureshave been painted the beat poems written or the noblest songs 8ungli4 bf perfectly poasiblo that some of these records may be broken- any day as a prellftilnnry to breaking the worlds recordlt is first nccessnry to break- your own and that should be the pinvjof air intelligent ybunflt people if you did homethfng well yesterday do it lietter todoy never accept uio reeovd npiw final rior any otpor record forthrit matter- always take itfor granted that somethlng can bo- dorie better than it has ever been done be fore the publisher of a large new york gity newspaper is credited with the fol- lowirtg statement to his advertising stai f- when advertisers tell you that their advertising is not paying or that your paper is not pulling dont be discouraged- k all advertising paid at once the imlls could pot produce enough white paper to supply the demand r advertising is based on business and business is often a failure if you will notethe failure in any given line of busi ness over a period of seven years you will understand that a business often fails with and without the assistance of advertising howy then can advertising be a sure suc cess when based on something that is often a failure the best advertising in all the world cant make a successful business man out of a boob and the weakest kind of adver tising never denied a good business man progress f advertising fails when business fails you can mike both successful 7- w jhzjszjnzici

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