AGENCY FOR ALL OCEAN STEAMSHIPS For particulars apply to:-- J. P. HANLEY. CP. & TA, G.T. Ry., Kingston, Ont. ME res ----_ CUNARD ANCHOR ANCHOR. DONALDSON, RMGUULAK SSR YI0me XMAS SAILINGS TO GLASGOW From Portland From Halifax Dec. 10 Saturnia ....,. Dec, 12 AUTPLY MOUTH CHERBOURG & HAMEOURG From Halifax--Saxonia PEEL0000000600000000000000 | England Looks to Future, | Which Promises to Become Brighter as Time Goes On | { PEOCCOCOOO00000TOCPOOE0E0L It will scarcely do for either the | political enemies or the sommerdial | rivals of England to assume that that | country {s down and out because business is languishing there and times are hard--because mines and mills were compelled to shut dgwn, and the unemployed are even now clamoring at the doors of town halls. We have been told that Englishmen have pow only to choose between starvation and emigration -- that England's markets are destroyed and that she can neither feed her people nor buy food for them with her ex- port business. If this were literally true, says the Boston Transcript, the spectacle presented would indeed make of England that which she has sometimes been called, the modern MONTREAL--GLASGOW BRO 33 soo tiraansnee or Cassandra PORTLAND--H ALIFAX--GLASGOW From Portland From Halifax Dec 10/Feb 16--Saturnia-- lec 12:Fab 1% Dec 28{Mar 2--( 'assandra--Dec 10 Mar 4 HALIFAX --PLYMO1 TH--CHERBOURG & HAMBOURG Dec. 10{Jan. 23 Mar. 15 ..,... ..Saxonia N. Y., GLASGOW (via Moville) Bed LL Columbia | Dec. 21/Jan. 21|ieb. 25 Algeria | Boston to Moville--Liverpoel & Glasgow | Dec. § Assyria | ERFOOL Albania Scythia | on | Afquitania | . Carmania | and HAMBOUKRG | 16 cesve-: -Sazonia | | | | NEW §OMM--LI Dec. 10/Jan. 14|Feb, 1 Dec. Nov. Dec. #tbec-31-. "4 N. Y, PLYMOUTH Dec. 8{Jan. 21|Mar, MEDITERRANEAN CRUISES FROM NEW YORK TO Madeira, Gibraltar, Algiers, Monaco, Genon, Naples, and Alexandria Nov. 19(Jan. 10 ameronia BE aera Syveucis Caronja || Buth steamers do not cail at all ports || Por rates of freight and further Parculars apply A ents or THE ROBERT REFORDCO., LimiTen GENERAL AGENTS 8 KING STREET RAST | - TORONTO, ONT. | | Hunter Ogilvie INSURANCE and GENERAL BROKER 281 King Street HOLD UP and BURGARLY Phones 568j and 1087 er Dr. H. A. Stewart, Dental Surgeon Wishes to announce that he has resumed his practice, cor. Wel- lington and Princess Streets. Phone 2092. Dr. H. A. Stewart McNamee's Patent Bobsleigh Lighter draft and the only correct thing for piteh holes. Recommended by all who use them, It will pay ou to give them a once over befeore buying. Cor. Princess and Alfred Residence 118 Colborne. Phone 2372w, Ninn, SATURDAY SPECIAL Home-made head cheese 15¢ Ib, Fresh Eggs Choice Cheese Rose Brand Butter ««.40c 1b, 3 1b. Black Tea . $1.00 Western Beef, Pot Roast 12¢ 1b Mutton Fronts Mutton Hinds ; Home rendered dripping 10c¢ Ib, All kinds of smoked hams, meats, ete, Please get your order in early. | uation. To his conclusions may be Ff His druggist sold him a Carthage. As a result of such a condition, the owl and the bittern would soon be the only inhabitants of London and of Manchester, and | the lonely New Zealander, from some spared lvy-clad tower of London | Bridge, might indeed brood reflec- | tively over the miasmatic ruins ot | the once proud metropolis of the world. It one were to accept the recent lamentations--or, in some instances, ee ------------ ee oe. the jubilations -- based upon the assumed total ruin of England, one | must be afMicted by the thought | that the destruction sought by Ger- many has been achieved in spite of | Germany's defeat in the Great War | ----that the prayer of hate, "Gott | Strafe England," has been answered, notwithstanding the Allles' costly | victory--perhaps on account of it. Can we actually suppose that this is the case? Certain indications have favored the supposi'ion. Business of | all kinds has languished. The war | put a burden upon British industry | which seems impossible to bear. Pro- | duction In all lines 1s weighted down by a staggering, even a paralyzing, rate of taxation. Cost was pushed beyond profit. To make matters worse, the workers of Britain, her immemorial pride and her saving re- source, her true bulwark and de- fence, the one great guarantee of her very existence, seemed to fail her In her emergency. In her pivotal in- dustry, the mining ot coal, they de- manded wages which the industry would not yield, and asked privileges and power which threatened the very bases of the s'ate. The founda- tions, indeed, had seemed to totter. But though the situation was, and is, 80 serious, the fact must be noted that England is s Ill there, and still Dossesses industrial resources which can be employed for her salvation. The fact is made clear by a state ment made to a reporter of the Transcript by a highly competent authority, Trade Commissioner Wil bur J. Page of the United States Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, a business expert, who has been attached to the American Embassy in"London for the past two years, and who is fresh from a deep study, on the ground of the British industrial and commereial situation. Mr. Page believes that the British récovery has already begun. The | coal miners have gone to work. They have learned the lesson that they cannot hope to receive an unecon- omic wage, nor to dictate in their Own assumed, not real, interest the polities of the Empire. Britain has a large reserve stock of coal which she is able to export, and to sell cheaper tham any other country can sell it. Her shipping is In a position to hold the business of the seas, being economically organ- ized and managed, which is not the case with the U.S. German rivalry on the seas has been removed. And In the meantime, general trade and conditions have tangibly improved, and unemployment has somewhat diminished. In the meas- ure that the outside world recovers from the wreck, the awful waste, the paralysis of the war, there is every indication - that the industry of Great Britain will stand ready to march step by step with it. This is substantially the view of a Practical business man, an American, who has been closely observing the whole sit: industrial added the general observation that the workers of England have never yet failed to prove equal to the de- mand made by their country's des- tiny and career among the nations, and there is really no good reason to doubt that they will prove equal to it in Britain's greatest crisis. Not in a year, not in a decade of the strangest of all events can the es- senitial character of that nation be destroyed. The workers are there, and in spite of fercely-propagated Bolshevism, they will work. Moreover, there are resources, tending to make England more nearly . self-suporting, which have scarcely been touched:»and which may now be availed of by a farsee- ing statesmanship. The landholding nobility has learned its lesson as well as the working class. Deer parks and grouse preserves will yield to the public food requirement, and in- tensive production will be organized. But the greatest lesson of all will have been learned if the workingmen realize at last that their best assur- ance of prosperity rests upon thé solvency of the business in which they are engaged. Evidently they have learned this lesson, and if they have, they have learned it in advance of the workingmen of the United 'es, who, in their organisations at least, still cling to the idea that they can get more than the business will bear. With the recognition of this principle, England may gain a long stride in advance of Ameriea in | the race for the recovery of pros- perity. In that event, she may be in a position to teach us most valu: able industrial lessons, : A stainless steel has been invent. ed in England. Over three hundred languages are spoken in India. 'His - Flesh Horribly Burnt cheap Acid corn remedy, instead of giving him good old reliable Putnam's Corn which 'has been for fifty years the standard remover of corag and warts. "Putnam's" never fails, it Ys always a success. 2c. every- where. Refuse a substitute. FM. WHY HE FELT AT HOME Homestayer: Nothing makes one feel so much at home as seeing a few chickens walking about. Corner Sport: | guess that's why | feel s0 much at home in the streets, A NATURAL MISTAKE Near Sighted Bug (looking at red and yellow striped mandolin): Great scott, that's the granddaddy of all bugs. AND FLYER "Sorry to hear your business has gone up." "Yes; took one flyer too many, you see." | : EA Es] "WONDERS OF HEAT Lady Teacher of Physics: Heat Is a wonderful agent, children. Everything contains heat. It en. ables or causes wg to do remark. able things. Pupil: Yes, ma'am 'cos look what we do in the heat of the moment. PROPER "Qeorge got fresh last evening, and | canned him." "When they get fresh with me, | TM, FOOLISH QUESTION His Mother: You spent my change on candy and the movies? Didn't you know you should ask me before doing that? Bobbie: | didn't think it neces. sary to ask you cause | knew just what you'd say. You'd say "no." STILL TO BE His Poet: This, sir, is the only poem I ever wrote, cheer up; notody's Editor; Well, going to take it away from you. THE DAILY ERITISH SWEEPING CHARGES Gang Boss: Do you call that good work? None of you know how to handle the brush! Street Cleaner: Them's sweep- ing charges, Boss| GETTING BACK She: Mr. Daubb, you try to put too much expression in your paint. ing. He: And Miss Phlipp, you try to put tae much paint in your expres sion, Mrs, Cackel: corn off the cob, My how | do love LEAVING FOR HOME "Don't think I'll ever get this trunk-strap fastened!" "Oh, just buckle down to the Job." Te = INTHE TURTLE SOUP "80 you lost your brother?" "Yes, poor fellow, | fear he's In WOULD HELP SOME Farmer Wheatley: Ain't there nothing you study at that college that'll fit you to run the farm? Son: Well--er--there's the fenc. Ing lessons, you know. WHIG. ONLY PARTLY TRUE "She's pretty wealthy." "Only part of that statement's true--she's wealthy." DRY'S THE WORD Trans-Atlantic Passenger (step. Ping to pler): Back to dry land! Bibulous Friend (sadly): You've said it, Bill, a3 YOU UNDERSTAND, OF COURSE "Do you think a man ought to be allowed to run an automobile un. der twenty years of age?™ "Well, I should say one over that age wouldn't be fit to run." THE FALLING LEAF JACK FROST'S CARD STUDIED NEGLECT "She clothes her ghought with such completeness and taste." "Yes; but leaves the rest of her "o lamentably bare." FORGOT TO TIP THE HAT "When you passed that lady why didn't you tip your hat? "Well, she's my waitress, you see; I'm so In the habit of tipping her | forgot to tip the hat." REVERSE "Jack," she sald, as he settled down for his evening smoke, "I've got a lot of things | want to talk to you about." "Good," sald her husband, "I'm glad to hear it. Usually you want to talk to me about a lot of things you haven't got" it's just my luck » be on a diet. JHIS WONDERFUL HEALER 4 "able soothing, healing and disease-dispelling properties, ~is scientifically blended, refined and concentrated into TUESDAY, NOV. 15, 1921. TERT EG] Actual test will quickly show Zam-Buk's remark- Prepared exclusively from rare herbal oils and essen- ces like the precious balm of ancient Rome, Zam-Buk convenient form for modern use. Use Zam-Buk for any wound, sore, or eruption, and note how swiftly it allays pain, irritagion and inflam- mation. It clears poison and disease germs from the inner, as well as the outer tissues, and finally it grows new skin as by magic. Nothing can equal Zam-Buk for cuts, burns, scalds, chapped hands, chilblains, cold-sores, etc. Also in more serious dis- eases like eczema, ulcers, abscesses, ringworm, poisoned wounds and piles, you will find Zam- Buk simply wonderful. Get a box to-day! - Toobtain Trial Sample Box send this paragraph with 1c, | stamp (for return postage) to Zam- Buk Co., Toronto. | CUT THIS OUT! We Serve Good Meals For good meals prepared right come and try us -- you will be delighted with our service, Everything you could want served as you like it, Dainty Restaurant 83 PRINCESS STRYET WILLARD SERVICE STATION This is the time of the year that your BATTERY needs a 10t of attention. Do not hesitate to stop at the Willard Sta- tion and we will gladly look your outfit over without charge, also starting and lighting systems. i Enquire about new prices for WILLARD BATTERIES, I. LESSES 19 BROCK STREET, PHONE 1340, Absolute Evidence in F avor of Ground Cylinders All high grade automobile engines manufactured in this country as well as in Europe have their cylinder bores finish- ed by grinding. Some of the American cars that might mentioned are: Apperson Brewster Cadillac Cunningham Dorris Franklin Haynes Mercer Templar Holmes Packard Winton In fact, 84% of all the m anufacturers of pleasure cars use engines with ground cylinder bores, and 91% of the com- mercial motors are ground. H eald Machines are used ex- clusively, Automobile owners we have one of these Heald Cylinder Grinding Machines, and cap guarantee first class work, Ground Cylindery is a selling point with many cars, Automotive Grinders R. M. CAMPBELL, Corner of Queen and Wellington Streets. Peerless Pierce Arrow Rolls Royce Standard Stevens Duryea Stutz Hudson Kissel LaFayette Lincoln Locomobile Marmon | | | | | \ Carleton Place school board has ; i decided to charge high school pupils {tion with the Boy Scouts of St. Jam- Ne {other |ton a ORDERING SUITS "TODAY" Requires the most careful considera- tion. You may also require expert ad- vice as to wearing qualities of certain Cloth. After over 35 years in the busi- ness, we claim to be able to advise in this direction. It cos nothing to call and have a talk with us on woollens. Drop in to-morrow} CRAWFORD & WALSH TAILORS BAGOT and BROCK STREETS ---- an weap A fife and drum band in connee- es' chureli has been organized in Larleton Place, than front Lanark and Carle- fee of $5 a month,