an thas SE . the lack of one, or all, of three ships:| General to 0 supply all requirements f Workmanship—Friendship — Gen-| fll a high position cannot slways ing in pamsphiet form. Tt iy tx eralship. . estimated by the manner in which he teresting to compare the sit tion about “Fruit-a-tives”’ the great Fe Workmanship: There are a lot of} fills a lower one. There.is aiproverb then and now and to find how similar medicine; and it seemed just men who do not take pride “in their| which is true: “A man eonditions of fact and thought wore a ; Phone 72 ‘We are babeteings shipments. of Fresh Fruits: every day and movesging: orders. ee Plenty Gramaleted: Sogait--~ All orders for groceries quickly supplied. R. A. CLIMIE ¢ Wallace Street for quality and service. " When You Think of Meat Think of No. 26 At thee other end of the line is an ¢atablishment that stands If you want meat satisfaction, get the habit of calling “two- The choicest fresh and cured meats, sausages, bologna, head || themselves. Their workmanship is ‘Spaniard’s: lack i three ships—Sea- "There has been ritany a man Ww success in life aa Bae! been y eresked eo work. | They slight and neglect it. To them, work is only a necessary| evil by which to get money enough to live. and get away withit, the better. Then they wonder why, when a chance for promotion arrives, they are not chos- en. They.dccuse the fortunate one of haying a pull. They say that the boss discriminates and shows favors, when all the time the trouble is with poor. They do not do their best, and the result is that at the end of the year they are still working at the same job dnd at the same old wage. Friendship: The man who wants to advance in this world must make friends. In business, in political, in social life the man who has the most friends is the man who forges ahead. There are some people who under- estimate "the value of friendship, es- pecially in industrial and business life. “If I please the boss. I don’t care what the other fellows think of me; it doesn’t matter. I can get along i Matkamexsiip, * Lead ler-| The less work they-can do; good generalship has been the re hag of woe & Man whose prospects to uno particularly bright. But this ability to direct men and things may be cultivated. There; well, and groomed himself’for the higher position? Draft into your command the three ships, ‘‘Workmanship,” “Friendship” and “Generalship,” and you will come out victor in the battle of life.— Ford's Weekly. Gasoline Too Dear in Durham. Durham Chronicle—It is common talk that gasoline is from two to four cents a gallon cheaper in other near- by towns than it is in Durham. We have not been buying elsewhere and JAPANESE DIVERS. fhey Are the World's Best Salvage Men. There is, at any rate, one post-war activity in which Britons have to take of rowed funds and the new taxes every TO-| have compensation for his losses in ty. to account for the high. prices. of provisions, etc., and he ‘shows how the interest on these bor- year im must unavoidably i crease “For,” ies says, ‘a duty any commodity does not only add the Yalue of that duty to that commodity, but the dealer in it must advance the price double or treble times that gum; for’ he must not only repay himself the original tax, but must laid on trade by bad debts, and loss of in- terest by his increased capital. Be- sides this, every new tax does not only affect the price of the commodity on which it is laid, but that of all others, whether taxed or not, and ig which, at firat sight, it seems to have no manner connection. Thus, for instance, a must raise the price of a coat, or a pair of breeches; because, out of these, all the taxes on the candles of the wool-comber, weaver and the tail- or, must be paid. A duty upon ale must raise the price of shoes, ause from them all the taxes upon ale necded, so I desided to.try it. va joi haar ta ple would gather round various the oe they astery gates, it being the canteen AE i monks to ee what | *ughrove-tide, and Shrove e way, were in the first vouch for the tr of the drank by the tanner, leather-dresser, cheese, lard, otc., always in stock. cannot vouc é bank and shosmsker, whish-if bot a Iiule, statements. If true, the public will) seat, says an English made and received preparatory / soon find it out and car-owners es-| !xchange: must ote refunded Fast of Lent. Shrive, which m pecially will go elsewhere for their This is as dee divers in the No is immediately laid upon | confession, later came to be p-sea work of salving vessels which have been sunk by mine or torpedo. It is here that the Jap shows his superiority. The Japanese diver can descend to a greater depth than the British diver, and, what is more, he Shrove—thus we now get Sunday and Shrove Tuesday. Following this is Ash Wedne supplies, and at the same time make other purchases, to the detriment of the town generally. Holding the | prices too high on any staple com- modity is a fine way to kill business corn, Feary the price of it must nmeces- sarily be advanced, because, out of that, all the innumerable taxes paid by the farmer on windows, soap, can- dles, malt, hops, leather, salt and a thousand others, must be repaid. So G. A; Kennedy WALLAOCH ST. SUCCESSOR TO S. J. STEVENSON. . in the Roman Cath ing ashes ag a ai E 1 NEXT TIME in any town. If gasoline is higher here than elsewhere the vendors should come down in price, or con- vince the bayers they are selling a better article. A commercial man, who travels over a large territory in Ontario, told The Chronicle last week that Durbam is the worst place he will remdin longer under the water without injury to health. This is no mere boasting claim by the Japanese themselves; it is the rueful but truthful admission of an expert with a.long association with marine salvage work. Few Japanese divers are engaged at work round the coasts of Britain, their activities in that corn is as effectually taxed as if a duty by the bushel had been prim- arily laid upon it; for taxes, like the various streams which form a general inundation, by whatever channels they separately find admission, unite, at last, and overwhelm the whole. The man, therefore, who sold sand ass, and raised the price of Th of the penitent on that particular J consequently it came to be o as “Ash"*Wednesday. ese ashes were strewn on An Island Sonstanrr, ' About twenty miles f strikes on gasoline prices, upon an Utah, on the Great Salt Lake, Get your suit at Bradburna's and satisfied. - Island, recognized as the it during the late war, though abused for an imposition, most certainly act- this direction being mostly confined Be to the Mediterranean. Won't Let ‘Em Stock Up— Expert tailoring and No. 1. stock of suitings to choose from. No extra charge for better work. Fevor us with a first order that we Ww. E. The Tailor may convince you. BRADBURN Upstairs Over Kibler’s |} ‘ FRESH MEATS A full supply of Fresh Meats will always greet your eyes at this store. We take pride in cutting meats to please our cus- tomers. You are not urged to take what you do not want. Should you ever buy of us meat not as represented, bring it back and we will return the money. DOMM’ The Modern * Meat Market St. Marys Journal—The price of newsprint was increased forty per re by the paper mills in C on ly Ist. To prevent newspaper of- fices from stocking up, the paper mills and jobbers for months past have re- fused to supply any customer beyond the average amount, price of printing paper has increased sevenfold, and another jump is an- nounced before the snow files. Milk Bricks. The Chinese have, for some time past, been manufacturing a very gat- isfactory milk from small yellow beans. These curd beans are firat thor- through cheese-cloth, diluted with water, and afterwards boiled, when it is strained again and ready for use, In Japan, manufactured milk is being made from the “soja” bean. Here the beans are first soaked, and then boiled In water until a white liquid is obtained. To this is added gnoth n- alstency of molasses, when it is ready for use. Cocoanuls as a possible source of supplying milk should not be o looked. © South African satived Not Yet, But Soon With many s0bs Ss daa repetitions the good woman*had told her tale of woe to the English clergyman. It was full of “he sez” and “I sez,"" but the clergyman listened patiently until she had finished, “I'm sorry, my dear lady,” he said, sympathetically. ‘“Cer- tainly your husband does seem to treat you rather unkindly. But re- member that you,took him for better or for worse.” *‘Well, it’s allus been for wuss, s'far as I<kin see,” replied the visitor, dabbing her eyes with rooster is slightly heavier relativell what only politeness could call a * pocket-handkerchief. ‘Have you tried to cure him with kindness?” pleaded the man. “Have you tried heaping coals of fire on his head?" ‘No, I ain't, sir,” replied the woman, grate- ful for the new idea. ‘SO far, I’ve only tried ‘ot water." A French scientist says that by examining an egg he can tell whether| it will produce a_male or a female chieck. The egg that will hatch outa to size, ‘Western University London, Ontario Arts and Sciences Medicine - 4 HF \ ~~ Fall Term Opens October 4th { ‘OR INFORMATION AND CALENDAR WRITE K.P. R. NEVILLE, Regristar, \ Since 1915 the} and The greatest depth at which a British diver can work under water without doing himself a serious in- twenty to twenty-two fathoms—that is, at the most, 130 feet below the surface. Even then our. divers can remain only a com- paratively short time at that depth, they are obliged to descend and ascend very slowly to prevent the from gushing from. their In some of the Government salvage ships what is kaijwn as a decompress- ing chamber is now provided, which the diver on ascending can enter and gradually become acclimated to the natural atmosphere on the surface. A Japanese diver can work with com- parative comfort at a depth of twen- ty-seven or twenty-eight fathoms, or nearly 170 feet below the point where the salvage ship is m , end as a rule H% is not in such haste fo give the signal to be hoisted up as his a eettess tetaltsin enters largely into the gre neg! S| anit. Ro pgpancd divers, tithe yel- low men are tnelined to te take far below the surface, which British div- ers, 00 lene intrepid, would hésitate ®. to Unexpected P eset often confronts | 2 The pressure of the water fre- quently has the effect of crumpling up parts of the vessel near the spot utilise eo nut, apparently with satis- factory ults. The. siaatiaetere of synthetic milk from peanuts has been several times éxperimented with in various Euro- pean countries. The nuts are shelled and crushed, mixed with distilted water until a gruel-like mass Is ob- taimed, and then a starch-meal -is added. The whole is then subjected to a boiling process and filtered. Two ura or so later It is tranatormgtl inte a kind of milk. In Sweden experts have nuccocded in perfecting a process whereby milk can be chambed into a fine flour. .At will thia flour can be again trans- formed into true milk by adding suff- clent water, and it is claimed that thé milk does not lose any of its ali- mentary qualities tieromats | the chang- ing processes. In somé parts of Siberia, too, milk is solidified. and seld in cakes and bricks, which, while wig fey! facilities In handlHng, also the milk being kept in good condition. “ From Another Angle. “Do you think you can get me out “How much would it be worth to met’ retorted the lawyer p “Suppose we aay two hundred. pounds?" “and you. made ten thousand pounds out of the deal? No, sir. 4 don't see the slightest chance of.get-:| .m timg you a¢quitted for two hundred | pounds; ahem !——we might view the from an angle.” where the torpedo ae the —— = the sides, and | ary touch will ca wae the « in- tered hull to cause part “ the opts such ciroumstances of being envelop- sl, sy mass of wreckage is verer When We Were Black. Were we all biack once? According to scientists, there is no doubt about it. white men, they declare, are descended from k ancestors, the skin of nesting being originally black. The explanation is to be found in the fact that there are certain glands ineour eee which have regulated Seo and shape. According to Prot, Keith, the great authority on the history of man, all men are de-" scended from a common stock.. White men, black men, red Seen. brown — and yellow men arise from the e tree of life, and we ‘Des divided into three groups, white, Negro and Mongolian. go the glands began slowly to change their method of working, and so gradually to evolve three dis- } tinct races of mankind. Each type became slowly fixed, and there came rinto existence the three types, white, / Negro, and. n. Fy toa gland brings about In us Brad whieh we find in other races. For instance, gland failnre may make as dark as a Négro or as rer as a- eohinness. It may make a dwarf-or a giant. In a word thane glands, of which there are -+@nough in the human system to fill a gr aga our groweh and shape, and, ve ows beneten increase the price of everything whe- ed upon right reasons; for though there were no new taxes then impos- ed either on sand or asses, yet fotind by experience, that, from the taxes laid on almost all other things, Te could neither maintain himself, his wife, nor his ass, as. cheap as. for- merly. He was, therefore, under a necessity of advancing the price of his sand, out of which alone all the taxes which he pald must be refund- | ed. Thus the Increase of taxes must ther taxed or not; and this is one principal cause of the present extra- ordinary advance of provisions, and all the necessaries of life." The philosophy of that day has not changed ti the 153 years that have passed. This, on inflation, has a simi- lar sound: ‘The first, and most ob- ‘vious effect of the increase of money . the decrease of its value, like that of all aner commUities, for, money Bust be soigiises thet We depeadins upon the Sng of itself, and the quantity of thé things to be purchased pig {t. In every country wliere thére enty°of provisions, and but little money, there provi io must be cheap, that is, a be tors a little ere of th 7 On , Where th are otal little gtavisiens in proportion to the number of consumers, and a great plenty of money, or Gal wiahes for money, there they will inevitably be dear, that is, a great deal of money must be given to purchase them. The increase of money does not only oper- ate on the price of provisions by the diminution of its own value, but by ehabling- more people to purchase, ‘and consequently to consume them which must unavoidably iitewies ia in- crease their scarcity, and that must sul add’ ae to sheir pri e causes as in these; the right to Y eonk little = be idla, which, if denied, incited rebellion; all these are duplications of the present situation. “The consumption of everything ts also amasingly increased from the in- crease of wealth in our metropolis, and indeed im every corner of this kingdom; throughout all ranks and conditions of men, is no less amazingly altered. The shopkeeper, who used to be well reontented with one dish of meat, one ny 0 of each; his valle card parties and her ; and his ‘prentice has eo the: kitchen. fire to the ront boxes at the playhouse. The lowe ee ee And the mean- eat m will touch nothing. but the very best pieces of meat and the unit ai white. bread.” " Shopkeeper: “You say you've worn this hat for two years.” Customer: “Yes, and it looks all right still. Twice ['ve had it cleaned, and ‘once I ex- cHanged it in a restaurant for one that was entirely,new.”” Grown-ups may learn something) from little Johnnie. On the morning} ‘of Bisibirthday this notice was found; of pelicans. Bird Island derives ii name from the fact that only. bird, and, the of salt water. pelicans on the islands, and tourists leave Salt Lake in fact, only pelicans—tive island in the great inland: b There are countless insesteaed and the manner of living} N it gece Sgt Caregen thou- |. Saud pounds’ angie, 1 don’t see the siigaleat chance £95 you to be son ee sai Beek Ae 4 ; i ry ro : pa 5 oF ed, & reversion tothe} 7 ca pasted on the a 6f his room: “Re- birtnday: < give: ti ft