PAGE TWELVE Fletcher's Castoria is strictly a remedy for Infants and Children. Foods are specially prepared for babies. A baby's medicine is even more essential for Baby. Remedies primarily prepared for grown-ups are not interchangeable. It was the need of a remedy for the common ailments of Infants and Children that brought Castoria before the public after years of research, and no claim has been made for it that its use for over 30 years has not proven.' What is CASTORIA? Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregory', Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contais neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, therefrom, and by re, the assimilation of F Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising gulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids ood; giving healthy and natural si The Children's Comfort--The Mother's Friend. GENUINE. CASTORIA Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY [ALWAYS Drink Charm Black Tea Sold in Packages Only GEO. ROBERTSON & SON, Limited +4 | the employ Why Start Your Furnace Now? The Perfection Oil Heater provides plenty of cheery warmth for the cool Autyum evenings or the early morning ill, No need of starting a big furnace fire that keeps the house hot and stuffy during the day. The Perfection saves all the trouble 'worry and work of tending a coal fire until it's abse- lutely necessary . Many told of the heart broken wife who i a ---- | "EFARIOUS PRACTICE ABOUT FARES ARE LAID BARE {Western Official Reveal Tricks and Deceptions Which Invariably Come to Light and Result in Arrests and Dismissals, { re iscusaing the recent arrests of sleeping car conductors charged with Tom passengers for the i quent arrests of slee in i and train conductors by vay | in whieh fraud against the ! y exposed always bri a certain amount of adver criticism. | and generally expressed opinion be- | ing that "4 is not fair to the em-! Ployees to 8Xpose them to the tempt- ation or detectives,' generally known | fe Spotters, who are popularly sup-| to board the trains and offer the conductor an amount smaller than | the regular fare to be carried between | cartain points, { "Recently telegraphic despatches | appeared in Milwaukee and Chicago | Papers to the effect that 'further ar-| rests and disclosures were promised | for today in an alleged $75,000 swin-| dle whereby the Chicago, North Shore | and Milwaukee electric road was the! victim, | "One of the men arrested is the manager of a film agency, another | a film salesman and the third a con-| ductor. The mode by which this! swindle was conducted is an old one; | the conductor simply neglected to punch the dqtckets collected by him and turned them over to q syndicate | of his friends who fn turn resold] them to friends at reduced rates. he service for a swindle of the same kind. It took no spotters nor experienced detectives to catch this man. A clerk In one of the de- partments of the company applied ito his principal for a reduced rate {to a point about one hundred miles {distanf. As the clerk had been in of the company only four {months he was not entitled, under the rules, to a reduced rate and was {told this by the head of the depart- |ment. He (the clerk) remarked, "Oh, {that's alright; I can get it through {my aunt." Naturally the head of the {department began to thnk. He won- jdered who was this aunt that she {could break-down the rules of the jcompany and' with apparent ease. He reported the circumstances to his {superior officer Who in turn made a | report to the ticket auditing depart- {ment. It was easily found out that! {the clerk boarded with his aunt as {did also the train conductor on the jrun between those two points. The | aunt was asked to come to the office {of the auditor and at once confessed | | that she had been the broker between { the conductor and friends of hers whom she could trust. It took no spotters nor detectives for that job. A Conductor's Dilemma. "The fare between the stations A and B is five dollars. A man who frequently traveled between those two stations one day said to the con- ductor, 'Why not make a split on this fare. I go over tne road every week and you might as well have it 2s the company,' : "Half fare was agreed on and the traveler paid the conductor two-fifty. This went on for two weeks and one day the man said, 'I don't intend to pay you two-fifty any more. Here is onefifty.' . The conductor de- murred but the man told him he could efther take that or nothing. He took it. That price was paifl for two trips, then one dollar, then fifty cents and then the crowning of it all came when a cigar was tendered. The con- ductor said, 'This has gone too far now. You can pay full fare or get oft.' 'Get off, will I? You put me off and see what will happen to you.' "The result. The man rode for nothing. Not only that, he would send his card to this conductor with Jim, this man is alright' Finally Jim got to the breaking point, went to the auditor ana confessed and asked to have the man prosecuted for offering bribes. Illegal Ticket Selling. A short time ago a hotel in Mont- real was raided under a search war- {rant on suspicion of being the head- | quarters of illegal ticket selling. Of- ficers found a curtalned-off aco in one of the rooms where the ticket buyer was accosted on entry. If he produced a card which sald 'All right' and signed 'X.Y.' he was given a ticket. These tickets were furnished by conductors who neglected to Punch them and were resold. has pleaded with her husband to stop the pratice of taking fares knowing that most of the pickings are going into illigitimate channels. Nearly all the cases of such stealings can be i i it if E A 5! j il i : i i i ! i il i H z i g £ f ! : a iy THE DAIL | i E i Es Al ahd i Si FT Y BRITISH W THURSDAY. NOVEMBER &, 191m ren used. The suspicion of the agent Was aroused and he checked back over his ticket sales of the date on them and to his surprise found that these were the two tickets given to the relation of the officer and whom he knew had used them. He then began to trace the letter in which they were sent under a ficticious Dame. He traced them to a teamster in the emiploy of & coal yard and from {the teamster to one of the owners, who finally told him that he had taken the tickets from a conductor in part payment for coal How the conductor got those tickets is clear, but the part that railway. officials cannot explain is that the coal dealer had no hesitation whatever in con- doning the crime against the railway company. I, The Use of Spotters. While it may be true that spotters are used the public should be fair enough to companies to grant that {none are used until evidence is ob- tained that fraud is being carried on, and then, in order to procure direct {evidence, the spotter is used. "Do not believe that auditors sit In their sanctums and devise ways and means in which those who have the handling of the company's funds may be caught red-handed. The "Cascarets" work while you sleep! 'When you are feeling bilious, head- achy, constipated. If the breath is bad. stomach upset, or for colds, sal- Iowness, just take "Cascarets" to regulate the liver and bowels and all is well by morning. "Cascarets" never gripe, sicken or The Power of Inspiration 'S ambition was to build up a Great that would be a source of inspira- ding generation to go forward. them in reading The Globe to get a broad and sympathy for, as well as an understand- * EORGE BROWN Family Newspaper tion to each succee He wanted outlook on life, p-- facts are far from the case. How many such are brought before offi- cials in every year d given a new start is never taken into considera- tion?" News From Lavant Station. Lavant Station, Nov. 3.--Arthur Jacod, of Port Hope, is holidaying at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Jacob. Mr. and Mrs. John Thomas have returned home after spending the past week with friends at Ottawa and Pembroke. Mr. and Mrs. John Browning and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barr, Lavant, spent Sun- day at the home of William Brown- ing. Stnomas Bafff" spent | Sunday at his home, Watson's Corners. Miss E. Grant, of Tweed, is visiting her slater, Mrs. J. Flake, Lavant Hotel. Misses Hazel and Minnie Leslie, Watson's Corners, spent the week- end with their sister, Mrs. J. E. Lee. The Hallow'een social held on Oct. 31st under the auspices of the Womans' Institute, was a decided £uocess. Thomas Lee received the sad news of the death of his nephew, Robert Wilson Lee, who died Oct. 24th. He was the youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee, Edmonton. Rev. R. J. and Mrs. Wilson and RA keep you anxious all next day like Calomel, Salts, Oil or violent Pills, "Cascarets" are a delightful laxa- tive-cathartic for grown-ups and children. Switch to "Cascarets"--Cost so little! \ dem baby, Lois; Mrs. Wilson, sr., of Wat- son's Corners; also Mr. and Mrs. N. Girls! "Your hair needs a litile *Danderine"--that's all! When it becomes lifeless, thin or loses its lustre; when ugly dandruff appears, or your hair falls out, a 35-cent bottle-of 'delightful store, will save your hair, "Danderine" and seel dependable "Danderine" from any also double it's beauty. Try Mn ~ for his annual hunt. A. G. Boswell, Ham!lton, has arrived 8. Lee and Robert Stewart, of Lan- ark, are holidaying at Thomas Lee's. Mrs. John Prasky and baby, Clifford, Folger, visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Boyd last week. G. A. Mitchell, Queen's University, Kingston, conducted services here Sunday. Mrs. William Roohe, Wil- bur, was the * guest of Mrs. Lee last week. 8. B. Jacob has re. turned after spending the past six months up north. Mrs. B. J. Me- Farlane spent last week with friends in Drummond. Joseph Burke, Oso, spent the week-end at William Thomas', HiH- view Farm. Mr, and Mrs. William Thomas spent a few days last week with their daughter, Mrs. . Robert Ferguson, Lantana. Mr. and Mrs. George Sproule and babe, Reta, spent Sunday at the latter's home, J. BE. led GOT LIQUOR FROM TOURIST. Young Man Was Fined For Being Intoxicated at Battersea. A young man arraigned befora Justice of the Peace George Hunter on Wednesday afternoon, plead guilty to a charge of being intoxicat« , and was fined $10 and cos amounting to $18. Of the amoun levied for costs, $8 was charged b: the constable who made the trip Battersea, where the young man lve ed, to serve the summons, ! The young man said that he sed cured some whiskey from an Ameris can tourist he was rowing on th lake the latter part of September. H drank the liquor on' Oct. 14th at boarding house, and then went oul on the street. Some person com plained, with the result that « sums Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Horne, Poland. in court. Z b ing of their fellows that make men and women of us all. He urged upon others the same unsel- fish devotion to public service that he himself rendered, All men and women cannot rise to po- sitions of fame and fortune, do 'something to leave the but they can world better for their coming. The Globe has been ily life a part of the fam- of many men and women who have come from humble circumstances to rise in the fellows. . service and estimation of their It has réceived a daily w&icome in the omes of thousands who have left the world brighter and better for their so- To give some idea of the ional The Globe has in pr of its readers, take the result of a test of The Globe's circulation. Out of 2,949 renewals of made to The of business subscriptions Globe in the usual course for a period prior to April 1st this year, 1,960 subscribers answered the question "How long has The Globe been read continuously in your family?" This is the result: -- . Readers for 50 years or more 255 or 13% » - -« rs "- "" ~" 20 - ~ "~ 10 - On the basis of this test, out of the 30,000 families who subscribed to The Globe 30 years ago, 17,000 families are subscribing to it today; and out of the 45,000 families who subscribed to The Globe 10 years ago, 30,000 families are subscribing to it to-day. In the 75th Annive Edition of The Globe on March 5th, 1919, names and addresses were Jrinted of 300 families e who have read Globe continuously for 50 years or more. The Globe has enjoyed three genera- of leadership and inspiration of the le. What it h hs as been in the past it mons was issued for his appearane(