Vinegar In Stomach Jrookiyo. N Y Mr A Arnstan "="No matter what | ate. it 10 turo 0 'a vinegar like | #9 Woon as it went down | Bilous, beiched gas and acids Ww my mouth Appetite was I touk Carter's Little Liver (Or Just one week This ger © was a fine remedy for me." a coustipated condition In Sensible nner. cause the bow ths 0 move daily free from pain, fers Little Liver Pills are for very member of the family Small. HEar coated. sassy to take ists. 26 & 75c red packages, : ~ 9 jie are of Bladder Weakness Vitality, States Physician Whe Home Treatment. Men and women who are constantly 0 cand distressed by Bladder oak: oss or Urinary Irritations should fe immediate eteDs to combat their ifouble before it reaches & serious or dangerous stage! ches, Headaches, paling in feet , lessness, fre- r ut scanty urination with burn. and pain, getting-up-nights--these a of the more troublesome signs der Weakness or Irritation that have prompt attention. matter how stubborn your case seem to be or how many different nes you have tried without sue~ don't give up, and think your hopeless or the natural ocones- ge of advancing years, until you s tried the special private prescrip of Dr. Southworth, a physician of ly B0 years successful experience. order to reach the many thousands cannot come to his office, % 1 th has placed his URATABS ood, local drug stores--and invites i to try them without risk of cost, pleased If URATABS bring you certain comfopt 3 they do not gatisty, the: ou nothing-----so, If you nee: medioine, try it to-day! All good RE DUE TO ACIDITY 8 of Pleasant Home Treatment to * Bring Swift Relief. lled Stomach Troubles--indiges- epeia, gas, sourness, etc, are, bably nine cases out of ten, evi- of Hoo much acid in the stom- & the food, causing the f gas and starting acid indlg: diatends the stomach and causes x oppressive burning feeling as heartburn, while the acid ir and inflames the delicate stom- ing. Get rid of Gas and Acidity, you get rid of Indigestion. stop or prevent the sourness and to neutralize the stomach acids and the stomaoh sweet and free from pn, a teaspoonful or four tabs Bisurated Magnesia should be in a little water after eating or &r gas, soLruess, pain or acidity is quickly sweetens the stom- ralizes the ity, stops the is harmless and Inexpensive to n of resin, wder or tab. obtained from any eo keeps the 3 bling If to work without the ald of artif- or [3 It | estra. ous motto appears. The motto is s Up!" Horizontal. 1. Ralliery. 6. Trustworthy. 11. Beer. 12. At no time. 14. Eggs of fishes, 15. Squirrel food. 17. Obstruction stream. A shower, Part of verb to be. Exolamation of langhter, Myself. Behold. To grow dim. Soft brooms, Banishment, Metal string. Will not. 113. Like. {85. Point of COM Pass. 137. Second note scale. Mother. Adult 38. 39. 41. 3. 45. 46. 48. 49. Rall. To fly. mn a H20. 118. 119. 120. ority. 50. 22. 23. (24. "26. 28. 130, |31. Trite. Half an . Bearlet . Bdge of El er. Agé. oo L i L 5 1! E | E REA Ww CER. A ® Crossword Puzzle Answers. RADIO | lt THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11 KDKA (309.1) Pittsburgh. 6.15 p.m. --KDKA Little Symph- | ony orchestra. i 7.20---~Farm programme, news. 8-<Radiotale by Richard Kountz and Little Symphony orchestra, 9---8pecial Armistice Day pro- gramm®, 9.66~--~Time and weather. 10--Post dance programme from Morrowfield apartment, WEAF (492) New York. 10.30-11.30_ a.m.-- Armistice Day programme; taps. : 11.06 a.m.-1.15 p.m.--Talk; Lest We Forget," David Crosswell, beri- tone; Farrell's orchestra. 4-T--Tea music; English enter- tainer; Parnassus string trio; tenor, concert planist; dinner music; hymn sing. T7.30---Famous characters in liter- ature, 8--Coward comfort hour. 8.30--8chickering crystal gazers, 9--Cliequot Club Eskimos, 10---Goodrich - Zippers. 11-12--Lopez and orchestra. WIZ (455) ~ew York. 7 p.m. Pennsylvania Grill Orch estra. 8---'Voice of the Silent Drama.' 8.80---Fireside Boys. 9--Royal Hour of Music. 10--Armistice Day programme, 11---Denny's Frivolity Orchestra. WGY (870.5)' Schnectady, N.Y. 6.30 pm.--~Ten Eyck dinner mu- sie. 7.30----WGY Book Chat. 7.45--Programme from Syracuse University, 9--Royal Hour. 10-~Armistice programme. 11---Instrumental programme. 11.30---Organ recital. ff WBAL (246) Baiimore, Mr 3.30 p.m.--Reeital. try! A 4-<String Quartet. 4.30--Plano quintet, 6---Sandman Circle. 6.80 Dinner orchestra. 7.30----Organ recital. §----Musical programme. 9--Ensemble. 10---8taft concert. 9--Dance orchestra. WTA (380.4) Cleveland, Ohio 12.30 pm.--Austin Wylle's orch- 6---Hollenden orchestra. 7.30-Studio programme. 9---Cliequt Club Eskimos. 10--S8tudlio pre e. _11--Lombarde's Roysl Canadians WEW (422.3) Cinéinnact, Ohio. 4 pm-~Mara's Kentuckians. T--Visconti's orchestra. 7.30--Bducational talk. 7.40--Viscontl's orchestra. 8--Armistice Day programme. When the correct letters are placed in the circled squares a fam- male of the red deer. To mention. To perish. Submitted to anth- Manifest. Vertical. «+ Astringent. Tennis fence. Correlative of eith- ! Westport Folks' BA Talk, 'The Nature of Poe- 10--Dance music from Castle H~-io ifmidar In meaning to "Don't Give 9. 10. 13. 16: 18. 21. Loose earth. Tendency. Mover's truck. Forming. Complaints, To love exceeding- by. Engine. Not many, Before. Craw, Drunkard. Lariat. Punctuation mark. To pierce. Lard. Principal. Affirmative vote. Evil. Corded cloth. Poem, 46. You and I. [47. Sun god. 12.15 a.m. --Night Howls by the Crosley Sky Terriers. 22. 24. 25. 26. 27. 29. 32. 34. 36. 38. 40. 11. 42. 44. em. a skirt. BYW (586) Chicago. 6 pm.-----The bedtime story. 6.30--Congress dinner concert. 7--~American 'Family Hour.' 9-10.30--Edison classical concert. | 10.30-12--Congress carnival. WOC (481) Davenport, Ia. ~The Serenaders. Chimes concert. 7.30--The "Moline Plowboys.' 8--The 'Clicquot Club Eskimos.' 9--'Goodrich Zippers.' Complete radi programmes sold at Canada Radio Stores. MOVEMENTS OF PEOPLE. Are Great Enter | of Friends. { Nov 8--Mrs. J. V.| Noonan and children, Joan and Richard, returned to their homes tainers Westport, in Ottawa, on Monday after spend- ing the week with Mrs. Noonan's | parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. McCann, | Messrs. C. F. Yates and N, G. Scott, | spent the week-end in Athens. Miss | Helen Porter, Brockville, Dspent the | week-end at her home here. Mrs. P. J. Ryan who has been vi- siting friends in Hamilton and Tor-| onto returned home last week. Mr. | and Mrs. C. Trobridge, Norman, Kerr and Jack Ewing, Kingston, | spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Ewing. Mg «and Mrs. C. | 0. Richardson and children, Balder- son, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. John Forrester. { Mrs. George Wise has returned | home after spending the past month with friends in St. John; N.B.| Messrs. G. 8. Conley, J. 8. Myers | and 8. J. Sully leave this week for! Madawaska for a two weeks hunt. Messrs. Lillian and Anna McCann | have returned to Brooklyn after spending the past month with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. 8. T. McCann. Everton Last hap returned to Westport after spending the past year in Detroit. Mrs. Irene White left Monday to attend Brockville Business College. Miss Mary Tobin has returned to New York after spending a few weeks with her bro- ther, Mr. P. Tobin. Donald Scott, Smith's Falls, was a visitor in town last week. a ---------------- » A species of warlike ants which will mot hesitate to attack a man bodily are found on the banks of the Amazon. Argentine"s Government meat packing plants slaughtered 3,300, 000 head of sheep and cattle in the ORKS like magic on any WR of corn, no matter how old, where it is, how bad it hurts. 'One touch and pain Is eased. Almost unbelievable. Then the corn shrivels up and A scientific way that hy 4 Beware tors and millions use. of imitators. Get the real *Gets-It" at drug stores. GEIS Ir Made id Canada 1 George Si. Toreame | 50 to $6. 1810.50 "Co THE "INSIGNIFICANT MINORITY" . Russia's "'insignificant minority" is pictured here. They are, left to right, Kamenev, ex- misars; Trotsky, ex-commisar Third Internationale. signed a pact admitting. failur Stalin, Communist chief, and promising to be good. [ PRODUCE MARKETS LIVE STOCK. Montreal. Butcher steers, medium, $5.50 to { $6; common, $4.50 to $5.50; butch- | er "heifers, good, $5.75; medium, $5.25 to $5.50; common, $3.50 to $4.75; butcher cows, good, $4.75 to $5.25; medium, $5.20 to $5.50; canners, $1.50 to $1.75; cutters, $2.50 to $2.75; butcher bulls, com- mon, $3 to $3.50. ; There were no top quality calves. Four of the best were picked out at $311.50, but the | balance of the suckers brought from $9.75 tv $11.10; grassers $3.75 ro $4.10; bulk of sales $4. Good veal, $11 to $11.50; medium, $9.75 fo $10; common, $4.70 to $5; ale $4.50 to $5. Common and mediu lambs brought from $10 to $1 bulk, and a few common and very ordinary lambs were 'sold flat at $10.25, and culls out at $9. Sheep, $3 to $5.75. Quotations: Ewes, $3 to $5.75; lambs, good, $11.50; com- mon, $10 to $11; bucks, $9 to §10. { Hogs, thick smooths, $11.95; selects and lights $9.25 to $2 per head, premium $11.25 to $11.50. Sows, $9.50. ' Buffalo. Hogs, 150 pound down 25¢ higher: bulk 170 to 240 pounds, $13.25; 150 pound down largely $13.50; packing sows mostly $10.25 to $10.- 75. Cattle, top yearlings, $12.25; bulk good ateers 1,000 to 1,200 pounds, $9 to $10; medium heifers, $6.75 fo $7.35; bulk medium cows, $5.50 to $62 medium bulls, $5.- Calves, top vealers, $14 .- and common, $8.50 to Sheep, top fat lambs, $14.- 50:bulk culls, $10; fat ewes, $6 to $7. 50; culls top yearlings, killers, much killers, Chicago. practically short load. to smal $12.50; weighty yearlings, less active; best weighty $10.75; medium weights,~ $11.50; she-stock closing dull to lower; bulls, scarce. strong; no change in vealers; bulk wvealers, $11 to $12. Hogs, 219 to' 280-pound weights, top, $13; no eriterion, bulk, better grades, 210 to 280-pound averages, $12.50 to $12.75; most 160 to 200 pounds, $12:25 to $12.60: bulk, de- sirable slaughter pigs, $12 to $12.« 50; packing sows, very uneven, gen- erally steady; desirable kinds in spots, 16¢ to 25¢ higher; shippers took 15.000; estimated holdover, 5.- 000. Sheep, top natives to ship- Cattle, $12.25 pers and small killers, $14.25; bulk, | $13.50 to $14; fed westerns to ship- pers, $14.10; to packers, $14 down, comeback Jacking finish around $13.75 and below; culls, 25c lower at $9 to $8.50; sheep, steady; balk, tat ewes, $5.50 to $8.50; top, $6.75; feeding lambs, strong at $13 to $13.- 50. GRAIN QUOTATIONS, Toronto. * Manitoba wheat---Nb. 1 notthern, $1.52; No. 2 northern, $1.47; No. 3 northern, $1.43, cif, the bay. Manitoba oats--No, 1 feed, 67c, c.f. the bay; No, 2 feed, not quét- ed. ' American corn--No. 2 yellow, track, Toronto, 87¢; No. 3 yellow, 85¢. Manitoba flour----First patents, $8.10, Montreal freight; do., second patents, $7.60. y Millfeed -- Cariots delivered, Montreal: Bran, per ton, $29.35; shorts; per ton, $31.26; middlings, per ton, $42.25. * Buyers: -- Ontario oats----Good, sound, heavy oats, in carlots, 48¢ to 50¢, fob. outside. : Ontario whest -- Good milling quality, in cariote, $1.30 to $1.32. Barley---Malting 60c to 64c per bushel, fob, Ontario points, in car lots. ] Ontario 'winter wheat flour---90 per cent. patents per barrel, in car- lots. Toronto. in bags, $5.80; sea- board. in bulk, $5.90. . | Rye--Per bushel, $8c in earlots, % \ At the right is Kalénin, head Union of Soviet Republics, Kamenev, Trotsky and Zinoviev have \ president of the People's Com- for war; Zinoviev, head of the of the e in their fight against Joseph | outst. Buckwheat -- Pér bushel, nominal, outside, in carlots. 85e, Montreal. | Wheat, No. 1 northern, $1.46 1-4; | | No. 2 northern, $1.41 1-4 and No | 3 northern, $1.38 3-8 per bushel, ex- | store, Fort William Oats, No. i Canadian western, 1-2¢; No. 3} {C.W., 70 1-2¢; No. 1 feed, 68 1-2¢; | { No. 2 feed, 66 1-2¢ per bushel, ex- store. | | Winnipeg. Wheat--No. 1 northern, $1.48 { 1-4; No. 2 northern, $1.41 1-4; No. | 3 northern. $1.36 3-8; No. 4, $1.26 1-4; No. 5, $1.15 1-4; No. 6, $1.03} 1-4; teed, 89 1-d¢; | screenings, $3 i Oats--Nak 2 CW, 64 1-8¢: No. | |3 CW, 61 1-8¢; extra No. 1 feed. 161 1-8¢;-No. 1 feed, 59 1-2¢; No. 2 { feed, 54 1-8c; rejected, 52 1-8¢: Mack, 61 1-8¢; No. 1 feed, 59 1-2¢: | | No 2 feed, 54 1-8¢; rejected, § { 1-8¢; track, 64 1-8¢c. Barley----No. 3 C.W., 66 1-8¢; No. {4 CW, 81 1-4¢; rejected, 60 5-8c; | feed, 59.7-8¢; track, 66 1-2¢. Flax--No. 1 N.W.C., $1.95 3-4; No. 2 C.W, $1.91 2<{; No. 3 C.W,, $1.70 3-4; rejected, $1.65 3-4; track, $1.95 3-4, ------ Chicago, Wheat--No. 3 red, $1.38 1-4 to $1.39 1-2; No. 1 hard, $1.45 1-2. Corn, No. 2 mixed, 69¢ to 71e; No. 2 yellow, 71 1-2¢ to 72 1-2¢. Oats No. 2. white, 46¢c; No. 3 white, 42 3-4c to 44 3-4c. Rye, not quoted. Lard, $12.60; ribs, $13; bellies, $15. Barley, b4c to T4c. . Timothy seed, $4.75 to $5.25; cloverseed; $27.75 to $34.50, track, $1.44 1-4; ! $4 Wednesday, November 10, . £ 1926. | Hardwood Flooring An excellent stock of $ Oak, Maple and Birch to choose from. ' Insist on Seaman Kent Flooring. ALLAN LUMBER CO. "Phone 1042, Victoria Street Cosy Home Triple Effect Heater It combines the flexibility and efficiency of the C Home heater with the forced heat circulation of the Happy Thought Pipeless Furnace. Beside sending out heat direct from the fire, it draws the coolest air in af the bottom--super-heats it and forces it out af the top fo every part of the room, It Slow with the cheeriness of a grate fire. It ns coal, coke, wood or any other fuel and produces more heat from the same amount of fuel than any other type of heater. Its beautiful design, and polished steel nickel trimmings lend a prideful tone -- well furnished room. And the price -- much lower than you would expect to pay for the most efficient and economical heater that you can buy at any price. Come in and see this wonderful new Cosy Home Heater-- there's no obligation, If you live at a distance send for descriptive folder and price, Largest Assortment of HAPPY THOUQHT Stoves In Kingston. Lowest Prices--Easy Terms. jacket with bright in keeping with any CRITa RANGES FURNACES SOLD BY Joseph Abramsky & Sons Ltd. is A a a ---- PN a to ~ a EE Ant hills are established at the Italy, to protect the trees from in~ base of certain trees in China and | jurious insects. srt ITH a choice. "The Lice Lute Set R-24 . .. $55 (without tubes) Successor of the famous R-21 The popular set of last year. selectivity switch to assist in the elim- ination of local stations the R-24 is a popular . It isextremely reasonable in cost and affords entertainment for the entire family. An exclusive and improved regenerative circuit-- the best known for volume and distance. ondry "A" and "B" batteries. ; "The rich, walnut cabinet, tastefully decorated, conceals all batteries. By using three of the famous Peanut Tubes, extreme economy and greater sensitivity are assured. Obtainable at all Victor-Northern Electric Operates Simple two dial control. | Victor ; Northern Electric bh