Dryden Observer, 11 Jul 1924, p. 3

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THE DRYDEN OBSERVER SEEDLESS RAISINS, CANDIES, Mixed, pér PICKLES, in jars, per Canned TOMATOES, SIDE BACON, per ib BOLONGA, per ib ... FRESH EGGS, 2 doz SUGAR; 10-Ibs for ... These prices prove the advantage of the Cash Grocery Pronger's Grocery Store Do not ask to have your goods delivered unless its impossible to carry them, as I would ask the public to save the high cost as much as possible. ANDERSON & HARRIS, FUNERAL DIRECTORS, ® XX % Day or Night Calls Promptly Attended to. PHONE-- Day, 62 R 2; Night, 62 R 4 Health Talks By Dr J. J. MIDDLETON Dr Middieton will be glad to answer all questions on public health matters through this column. Address him at through this column. Address him at Spadina House, Spadina Crescent, Toronto, Ontario. F o¥ kX perib .......... coe 11 Brooklyn's bobbed-hair bandit has been ih Se oo 15 landed in prison. The record of crimes . committed by this dare-devil young Jar vane 125 woman has occupied the front page of Standard, 2 tins 35 all the daily newspapers for some > weeks past. What is the record back release a 15 of all this hectic career that led to aa 2% prison? It is a sorry story, but one 2 too often told. The young girl, Cecilla or aaa EE Cooney, had no proper upbringing. She : was born on the East Side, the squalid EE . . 99 section of New York City. Her Father Dry Goods, Groceries, FLOUR AND FEED FRUITS, VEGETABLES, CIGARS, CIGARETTES, AND TOBACCOS CANDIES, SOFT DRINKS ICE CREAM BUTTER AND EGGS was a drunkard. She was reared in neglect. Sometimes she was cared for by the children's society and sometimes she slept in the coal cellars when there was no other shelter for der. As a child she had to live by her wits, and growing up, she lived with whatever men she chanced tomeet. Finally, she adopted as her philosophy the im- morial attitude of criminals, "What the world does not give me, I take." From the very day she was born, Cecilia got a bad start. Her mother could neither read nor write. The father had very little education and had been an habitual drunkard all his life. He never worked steadily and never supported the family. What little support came into the family came through the mother. The children _ there were eight ofthem, and Cecilia was the youngest, were sadly neglect- GASOLINE AUTO TIRES AND TUBES H. A. JEWELL & Coy. er ater TE Garden Tools you need A"lT THE Right Price A.J.GARDINER | General Merchant, EAGLE RIVER. Agent for Frost & Wood IMPLEMENTS. COCKSHUTT PLOW COY. EN SEE SE a ZR SESS 223 25 N Sharple's Cream Separators. M. J. CROSIER General Merchant, OXDRIFT, ONTARIO Dry Goods Groceries | Boots and Shoes Hardware and Farm Produce A. KLOSE E. a iil, 3a isan Frost & Wood and Cockshuit Implements their father whisky. they were scantly clad and had very ed; they were sent out to beg, and as little children has been known te sleep all night in the coal cellar and in the morning be aroused and sent out on the street to begfor penmies to buy Half the time little to eat. It is a sad story all the way through. The mother, heartless and indifferent, the father, a drunkard. What is the likely fate of the children of such parents? Just what we see here, a life of crime and then the prison. Character-building, uprightness, honesty and decency are products of heredity, but they are aslo products of enviorment. The family life, the home circle, must never depart from .our country or its doom is sealed. A nation's greatness depends upon the character, uprightness and trustworthi- ness of its people. Ahat a lesson there is here for par- ents to learn. What a clarion-call it ie for them to bring up a child in the way he or she should go. The care of the child does not cease at weaning- time or when it goes to school. In- telligence supervision, kindly interest and true comradship are necessary | even up to college days, and after if More Safety More safety and fewer accidents is a great need of this country. There are too many preventable accidents on the streets, in the homes and in in- dustry. In this Province alone, in- dustry pays, through the Compensa- tion Board, an annual tax of about six million dollars Hor accidents and this is only part of the loss, for the em- ployer and employee alike suffer every time there is an accident involving loss of time. Safety is largely a habit of mind, and like other habits can be acquired. "Thinking safety" will, therefore, praduce safety, so that both management and workers should give thought to accident prevention to the end, that the awful toll in human suffering and he very comsiderable sums of money lost may be reduced to a minimum. More safety is a reasonable demand of industry in this country and is a demand which both workers and executives will support. The First 100.600 There are upwards of 100,000 people in Canada actively engaged in con- verting the products of the forest into wealth in some form or other and with the families they represent, this means that more than half a million people in the Dominion are dependent on the forest for their living. The value of the manufactured pulp and paper products alone is $250,000,- 000 per year. The pulp and paper companies employ 33,000 men in the mills and pay them each year $40,- 000,000 in wages. The value of lum- ber, lath and shingles produced in Canada in one year is $150,000,000. If the question had been put to you would you have figured much more than a quarter of this? When you reckon that the lumber industry prop- er has an invested capital of $250,000,- 000, employing 55,000 men and pay- ing the $60,000,000 wages, here you have a forest business that reaches the stupendous distribution in Canada of $500,000,000 a year. The security for this annual income is neither mines nor wheat fields nor fisheries, but only one of the family of resources that is inflammable, viz. the foorest. A Fair Question:-- "I consider that the world owes me a living." "Ves, andwhat do you consider you owe the world ?'--Exchange. ee the young person is to benefit to the fullest from parental care. If more of the old family spirit, carried out amid the right enviroment, was in "evidence, it is most likely that fewer young folks wauld stray away from the paths of uprightness and honesty. #Eoronto Rowing men and Swimmers Kingston, manager of the rowi Tommy Walker, Turner Chapman. REBELLION IN SOUTH AFRICA BUENOS AIRES, July 9.--Latest ad- vices from Rio Janeiro indicate that the previous announcement of the capture by Government forces of the yebel postions in Sao Paulo was pre- mature. The positions are Now being bombarded by heavy artillery, with airoplanes co-operating, it was stated, and the official word is that "all is ready for the final assault." ng eight; R.S. Hunter, Front row - M.W. Taylor, No. 5; W. Lang sailing on the Canadian Pacific 8.8. Minnedosa for the ) Bow; H.B. Little, University is accompanying the rowing eight; J.D.S. Smith, No.3; W.B. Snyder, No. 4; ford, No. 6; A.A. Bell, No. 7; i. J. Camnbell, coxwain. 7 The uprising has already cost sev- eral hundred lives and much property damage. After the loyal troops with- in the city have been defeated the ar- rival of Government reinforcements forced the rebels to take up defensive "positions in the Luz barracks and the adjoining railway station, and it is these places which are under bombard- A battle between rebels and 600 Federal marines and soldiers trans- ported to Santos by the battleship LETTER COMPENSATION OTTAWA, July 9.--The bill to amend the Postofice Act, increasing the com- pensation that may be paid for loss on registered letters to $100, was Minas Geras occurred Sunday at San Bernardo, near Sao Paulo. According to unofficial accounts the Federal losses in the fighting were heavy, to- talling 250 dead and 200 wounded. Olympic games included, back row from left to right, J. M.S. L. Wallace, No. 2; Mrs. Louden, who with her husband, Prof. T.F. Louden of Toronto Stroke. W.L. Thompson, spare. given third reading in the House of Commons. Under the present law, the limit of the compensation it twenty- five dollars for registered articles, but insurance may be obtained up to $100. Hon. Charles Stewart, Acting Post- master-General, stated that the rates for registration for increased values under consideration were twenty cents for fifty dollays; thirty cents for seventy-five dollars, and forty cents for one hundred dollars. the aid Man's work, today, is mea~ gured by what ' given tune, with | The pace. of medern equipment. motor car sets to-day's If you are afoot you ars badly handicapped. : Overcome this disadvantage. See us regarding Ford terms Dingwall Garage MAN LOCKED IN BOX CAR Fort William, Ont.--Locked in a box car in Montreal, from which point he intended to beat his way west, Ralph Booth was found by Canadian National police in the Port Arthur yards, after four night and four days without food. Groans attracted the attention of jie police, who later discovered that He will spend 30 days fattening up- : on the Fort William prison farm for , stealing a ride on the C.N.R. the man was held a prisoner in the box car from the time he left Montreal A few sandwiches wrapped in a Free (Press was the only food he possessed. 2 ES Ua oir) ER OR Sl HAMBURGER STEAK PHONE © 2, SRR ROR Go to KELSQ'S for FRESH KILLED VEAL " + BEEF H " PORK » 5 LAMB EACH DAY. COOKED AND SMOKED MEATS. PORK SAUSAGE. GROUND FRESH WwW. KELSO, Prop. : Se ie RRs SAVES TIME Agent for:i-- Made in four sizes, from 4% to 7 feet. Either il J. S. CORNER, Oxdrift, Ont. CLEAN WORK, LIGHT DRAFT, LONG LIFE Get our literature and prices. Regular or a Ti Made in four sizes, from 8 to 12 feet. MONEY & HAY Tift or Vertical 1:t - {NTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY of Canada, Ltd :

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