own fault worry much about his hou pay, or his Jee ings. And just the same with our own 1% worry. We gave them foo yo £3 1 ©... #8 what more did they want? Prod: : P and Egg Well, evidently they did wan _Froducer. he time to feed it to the hens and cash in on the eggs. ndy of Excellence. rages shaw's Bol © orid Over. Moir': "Chocolates. 'A new lot in bulk just folks have cleared out. p did in the "good old days." And still a few of those Dollar Auto-Strop Valet Razors going at 750. each while they STORE. smile and make the best of it. last. : ~ MORRISON'S DRUG 'We sell everything you want in choice, clean, palatable, nutritious and satisfying meats. ~~... If you want it good - ~~ BERT MacGREGOR ~~ -Will do the rest. Ring up Phone 72. many hours as he used to work, to get. problems to meet' saw to it that more of the kind a ad giving was put into our rural schools. 2 A trip to a successfully con- ducted farm is a real education to any live boy. ™ | EGGS! EGGS! EGGS! ; pissy. yn Bue ess you are willing to put a little" extra care = A : = : ; : i farms, look on the bright and expense into your poultry business. Try a' f{®% ourfarms foot, | bag of Blatchford's Laying Meal and note the ~~ ||S1ioof things. and be as happy 1 results. It contains everything necessary for and difficulties. the zapid production of eggs. It is also neces- _}|- T.J X ~_sary that\you feed Oyster Shell and Grit. We ree Qe" ~ MYRTLE ~ have them all. Bn x 4 = = Regret to report that Mrs. John Here i8 areal bargain, 112 piece dinner set, Kingston }| Birkett who has been ill for some pitta for $20.00 A PRIA ae ry time was taken .to the Oshawa cd, Hospital on Sunday. "A speedy re- covery is hoped for. . ' The skating rink which is being 'erected in Mr. Roy Bright's yard is nearing completion and when" done should be a great drawing card: to the young people of the neighborhood as it is the only one between Port . amvasigeoy ----l Perry and Whitby. _-- Jn cong home from Port Perry LET US MAKE YOUR CHRISTMAS CAKE See our Special line of Christ- 2! "We pay highest market price for all kinds of Clover er 'and Timothy Seed. - Let me have a sample of your seed. J. F. McCLINTOCK 1 PORT PERRY ONY; : oy twice by cars that were going at a good speed. It is getting so that one going on the Highway with a horsq and rig is almost taking their lives ins their hands, as some motorist 'seem to ignore the rights of such travellers, . : - my Mrs. Roy Bright and baby have 'been visiting with the former's par- 'ents in Hamilton. ~~ ¢ : Rev. J. R. Fraser of Columbus will 'occupy the pulpit here at 7 p.m. next = Sabbath owing to Mr. Latimer taking {charge of -anniversary services else- y | Where. "Special music will be rend- ered by the choir. "Mr." F. W. Hodson spent the week end in Toronto and reports that Mrs, 'Hodson is improving, - ee Mr. and Mrs. Blake Dehart and mily of Brooklin spent Sunday with "Binch Maple Leaf Grinder in good order. Apply to Robt. Walker, R. R. 4, Port Perry. o aie Ee] A 1 80 to put up with: be plenty of| ough to his fi - * 0% 0% » A movement is on foot for the political union of Austria and ~for-many 'years past: was, : boys gi and girls. We had them at home, {and they had no other place to go, So there was no heed for u 2 B|shelter, and clothing, and a bit 8 |of schooling when it was handy: something more, for our young Now our prize grouch~on the farm, is that hired men are too scarce, that their wages are too high, and that they don't put in the hours or do the work as they _ It is quite likely that the only way to cure this' condition is to So long as the young folk hear us grouching around and saying that farming is the worst job on § | earth, we can hardly expect them bo aX E [to hanker to stay with us., sumes. -- : . 4NEEE ne : NERERERENEERERENAE, lees another Shing that we oxox Ny 9 NA- § shouldn't forget, the hired man on A NON PARTIZAN SENATOR 4 E The P eoples / Meat Market IE A A No! Not in Canada, but in the United States, Gerald. P. Nye, of hired man throughout the country don't have to work as hard as he used to work, nor as nor for as little pay as "he uded| very employer of labor |, in the country "has these same " Perhaps we could do a bit to- wards mending matters if we of education #hat Mr. Croskery is + What we need is to take a pride! | business, has travelled for years throughout the North West had the misfortune to be run into | | their friends were associated with the early Methodist, the Tem- further Teading of Kin, 'events which | dustrial and Railway town of Swindon in the County of Wiltshire, | sive works for the construction of engines, carriages, trucks, and dager SHETTY "If only Germany." They ha -one-in i Germany is not objecting to the unior} Wi The new Oxford dictionary has 750,000 words, paradise for cross-word puzzlers. » ~The lighthouse keeper of former days is to] may +live at som casionally. are used. and turns it on again when darkness tomes. rod absorbs the heat rays when the sun shines upon it. other rod is highly polished and expels the heat rays: Iengthens. In doing so it turns off the supply of aceetylene: a member of the Non-partizan League, has been appointed to the Senate. tional. Republican leaders say the appointment is unconstitu- * * * ENFORCING PROHIBITION IN THE UNITED STATES Apparertly the Government of the United States is making an honest attempt to enforce the Prohibition Law; and some sen- 1. sational arrests have been made. Our southern neighbors have quite a problem before them in the matter of law enforcement of all kinds. Unless drastic measures are adopted the lawless element will triumph, and the safety of the state will be in' peril. Tour of the Old Country. Mr.-and Mrs. Henry Doubt, Division St., Oshawa;- Visit Many Historic Scenes and enjoy Trip Thoroughly-- (Oshawa Daily Reformer) Mr. Henry Doubt who is known to a wide circle of friends and relatives on both sides-of the Atlantic as a man of extensive travel; having in the course of a strenuous business life journey ed much in the United States and also as representing his own . * Territory. In addition to journeying in many" of the chief in- dustrial and commercial cities; he has made various. visits to the crossing the Atlantic on some eight different occasions. \ He has recently returned from another visit of twelve months duration to-the Old Country. . Warmly attached as he is to it, he waf wishful that his wife should make.the journey and see it. : For Mrs. Doubt the event was one of outstanding and mem- orable interest, especially so, in view of the fact that up to a few years ago she had resided on her father's farm at Port Perry, and had never before seen the sea. The voyage was accomplished within eight days. = Mr. Doubt took up his residence in the famed and historic city of Bristol, adding, (as he naively remarked, two more) to its teeming population of approximately four hundred thousand, with its numerous and varied industrial developments. It was not his first visit, and Mr. and Mrs.. Doubt were warm- ly welcomed. : X During their stay they visited many places of much interest, not forgeting Lynton in North Devon--the English Switzerland-- world fe for its exquisite and varied scenery; where his brother has been in business for well over half a century, and with members of his family is much respected for his life long social and religious activities. The varied coast and inland scenery were of new and absorbing interest to Mrs. Doubt. : Other Devonshire towns were also visited ; including Bideford and Holsworthy (his native town), and adjacent places, where, in A Ye. an interesting group of Mr. Doubt'd relatives and perance;-and-the reform work of the Radical and Chartist move- 'ments of those stirring times. Interesting-and moving memories of the activities of the Rev. William O'Bryan, the pioneer Metho- dist preacher; and of the Rev. Charles Kingsley, Radical and 'Chartist, author and preacher, then working in that locality, and contemporaneous with Mr. Doubt's relatives and of his own boy- hod were.renewed.- > =~ - Doubt's requickened interest' found expression in a gsley's" writings of "those: days: namely, Yeast," Westward Ho!" storied names and ve in the nation's history, and will be reme 1 with ardent interest by many Canadians and their kin hailing from the Old Country. mE : 8 o Mrs. Doubt spent some time in the extensive in-| Mr. 55,000;-and here is one of the most exten- It has: a population of - 'railways appurtenances, All the engines for the British Isles, 2 iy ix t iis Company dre made here. Eighteen thou nd pec oyed in the worksy Fo 'Windsor Castle" and "Caerp- the rate of 70 to 80 mile "hour. i boring : Cm od many interests. The city is laid out in have been ten years | | --~Columbia Record. RNR > Cee ] "If we can have civilized warfare, why not civilized peace" | |i SE Sn --0il City Derrick. nations would wait 62 years to pay off their grudges." ; --Associated Editors, 'What a Jos be displaced by t|{ automatic devices. When these are installed no more shall we read of the romantic stories of privation and heroism. A man distance from the lighthouse and attend to its duties by merely inspecting the automatic lighting service oc- Acetylene gas, electricity and some radio controlled devices A device now in use turns off the light when the sun shines Two rods are placed side by side, one of them coated with lampblack. This blackened The When the sun shines on the rod, that absorbs the heat, warms and As twilight comés on, the black rod cools, assuming its accustomed length. This shrinkage opens the gas valve and the light re- two largest cities in the world, namely New York and London; | the British Temperance Movement Exhibition. The ladies of the pasion e Sound HEN the last animal has passed through the auction ring, when every implement of the farm equipment has been sold, what then? The vast majority of --farm auction sales are conducted on a credit basis, but if the sale is to be counted a success a trained banking expert must pass judgment upon the d: of all settl ts Consult the manager of the Standard Bank, 8 STANDARD BANK Branches also at Blackstock, Little Britain, Nestleton Station, Sunderland Ee It was here that Robert Raikes, a philanthropic printer (born 1785, died 1811), first started the now gfeat Sunday School Move- ment, and the building still exists; and the event is recorded by a tablet testifying that the good work comménced in that quaint old house. Here also is to be seen the house occupied by the saintly Protestant myrtar, Bishop Hooper, on the night before being publicly burned to death in the city in the year 1555. At the museum the charred stump of the wooden pile to which he was chained is preserved with various manuscripts descriptive of the dreadful event, A monument to his martyrdom Cathedral Close. The Cathedral, a noble pile, to be séen for miles round im- pressed Mr. and Mrs. Doubt with wonder and admiration; at its tier upon tier of varied and detailed work, and by its massive magnificience and awe inspiring age. The first structure, 4 Saxon Church dates from 680, and the main erection from the year 1000, and with the extension it was over 500 years in construction. Within, massive and noble nor- man columns carry the magnificent transept. As a Free Churchman, Mr. Doubt noted with interest that the city was the birthplace of George Whitfield, the eminent col- league of John Wesley, and an imposing church has been erected to Whitfield's memory. Over the arch of the main entrance is inscribed a true and memorable saying of Whitfield, "I will lift. up my voice like a trumpet" and how effectively it has lifted up the history of the Country, and indeed of Colonies, bears con- vineing testimony. Bath, one. of the most ancient of European. cities was fre- quently visited. Here the natural hot mineral springs burst up from beneath the earth and can be freely drunk from the foun tain in the centre of the main street. The waters possess val- uable medicinal qualities and the Roman invaders commenced to construct Baths there as early as A.D. 54, and founded a city around them 1800 years ago. In course of time the baths became covered over, and after centuries of oblivion, extensive excava- tions were made and they were rediscovered. They are the most extensive Roman remains in Great Britain. - In the course of time Bath, became a centre of wealth and fashion. It is noteworthy for its beautiful houses of the eigh- teenth century with their literary and historic associations. Mr. and Mrs. Doubt visited Bath on various occasions. Mr. Doubt noted with interest the care and thought of the City authorities in recording events, and affixing mural tablets show- ing various eminent persons had stayed in certain houses. Among the tablets seen were those recording stays of Charles Dickens, Sir Walter Scott, Wesley, Lord Nelson and Dr. Livingstone, and in the very fine Great Pulteney Street a tablet records that Wil- liam Wilberforce, the great anti-slavery protagonist lived for some time in a house in that famous treet, an event which his friends made the occasion of reminding Mr. Doubt that early Methodist relatives of his were firm supporters of the Emanci- ption Movement in the first half of the 19th century and during the time of the contemporaries of Wilberforce. A tablet also records that General Wolfe started from Bath in 1759 on the ex- pedition which ended in his death at Quebec. Many places of great natural beauty and interest were visited on an interesting tour in Somerset; including the important man- ufacturing and agricultural town of Yeovil, in which district relatives of Mr. William Doubt of Oshawa were visited, who farm some 400 acres--a very large farm for England--embracing some now stands within the the country. It is of especial interest to colonial born friends to note the great antiquity of memorable public buildings, and on this journey Mr. -Doubt was. able to visit the noble Minster. Church at Sher- - borne famous for its age, its beauty of structure, and its finely decorated roof. While Mr. Doubt was inthe church excavations were actual- ly in progress, which revealed the tombs, stone coffins of the early Saxon Kings, of King Alfred's line that is, dating back well over one thousand years ago. = ' {Their stay in London was a time of crowded interest, and, as may be imagined, especially so to Mrs. Doubt. Sh The world famous British Empire Exhibition .at Wembley was well explored. After sq much Colonial life ) was well pleased with the effective and often wonderful wa which the extent and resources of the British Commonwi 'Nations was represented. * ee Mr. Doubt testifies to the well organized, the ex and the fine and comprehensive display of the Canadian Mr, Doubt was at home here, and from being conducted the conductor of his friends throughout the section, and from t products, He own knowledge helpfully described the mineral various crops; the timber, fish, wild cattle, : of the Dominion being shown. He fel terprise was well sustained here.: SA It was with gratification that Mr.;and were highly pleased to receive Mrs. Doubt $e er from Canada and eagerly enquired formation from her con constitutes its centre, and the med from its ancient gates; North, | f of the prettiest scenery in the country, and most fertile soil of « -