; ‘Business Ac to New Course in istration Oct. ath: Toe year c course B.A. Admission 5 pe Matriculation. FOR INFORMATION AND CALENDAR WRITE K. P. R. NEVILLE, Registrar . requirement, _ 10c 10c 16c 8c Gold Soap. » Comfort Polar White White Naptha | CUT PRICES’ Toilet Soaps from 5c to 15e. Surprise 10c P.&G. Naptha 10c Quick Naptha 8c Lennox Soap 8c . Gramalated Sugar $22 per ewt.. Phone 72 R. A. CLIMIE Wallace Street E fer quality and service. six.” WALLAOS 8ST. When You Think of Meat Think of No. 26 At the other end oft tho line is an establishment that stands It you want meat satisfaction, get the habit of calling “two~ The choicest fresh and cured meats, saugages, bologna, head cheese, lard, etc., always in stock. G. A. Kennedy SUCOESSOR TO S. J. STEVENSON. Fi ~~ NEXT Get your suit satisfied. Favor us with a The Tailor Expert tailoring of suitings to choose No extra charge for better work. may convince you. Ww. E. BRADBURN Upstairs Over Kibler's | TIME at Bradburn's and ona ee 1 ee from. first order that wo FRESH MEATS A full supply of Fresh re tomers. * eyes at this store. We take pride in cutting meats to please our cus- You are not“urged to take what you do not want. Should you ever. buy of us meaf not as represented, bring it back and we will return the money. Meats will always greet your DOMM’ ~ The Modern % Meat Market President Lawrence Lowell, ot Har- vard, said at a Cambridge tea:— “I shouldn't mind thé enormous wealth of our war profiteéra if they didn’t flaunt it .so. Flaunting it— that is their one joy. “A profiteer and his wife were glid- down Fifth Avenue in a new Eng- lish car that had cost some $20,000. - your own auto like this?” “Gus sald the woman, ‘ain't it) ‘grand to be ridin’ round New, York i }-in“the"same “fend he puffed on his jong Havans eigar-and sighed heavily. “Tt only what, Gus?’ . “ ‘It only, Maggie, it_was possible for us to stand onthe mayement and see oursel¥es go by!’ ” Japan has a censorship of movies i STALLED ! Mad Elephant Causes” E Lively Time Before First bsiniesisbie Of China Bullets Reach Mark (By Margaret Bridgman, R. N., Who has spent seven years in China as Salina, Kas., Sept. t. 14.—"Snyder,” a $10, 000 trained elephant, owned by a circus showing here,-met his death { this afternoon at the hands of a 2 ing squad. ' Prior to his death he furnished the curious who had: travelled to the show grounds-to see a performance a tragedy with thrills and fears— “When an Elephant Goes Mad.” Everything was in readiness for the afternoon performance. Under the great white canvass tent flocked the show-goers. “Dad,” mother and the children were ail there. The ring- “Master cracked, the whip, and- then from a rear-tent came a roar, “Sny- der’" had taken offense at the ap- pearance of a new trainer. He re fused to be subdued, and in a few minutes the crowd was thrown into a panic. They surged through the doors and crawled through holes in the side of the tent, while “Snyder” started to play ball with the cages of the wild animals. A meal of apples and marshmal-| lows mixed with deadly poison only added to his rage. A cage of. four lions caiight his eye, and with an-|. other roar he seized-the cage velit: trunk and tossed it thinty feet, ~Then a firing squad with five army rifles was put into action. The shooters took their places on the topseof cages and waited for an op- portunity to fire. another, and still another were poured into the enragtd brute. The elephant made a last desperate at- tempt to reach his enemies, but steel bullets had reached their mark. This Settles It— Forest Free Press—The city pap- ers are telling their readers about the great riches the farmers are gather- ing in this year... But they forget to say that these returns have been made possible only by the toil, not only of the farmer himself, But by the toil of his wife and his boys and girls, ail of whom are doing farm labor. The family on a prosperous farm do more hours of hard work, week days and Sundays, in three months than the members of a well-to-do city family do in a whole year. Any prosperity that comes to the farmer and his family is always well-earned... Do- mestic help is almost unknown on the farm, while in the city families, out- side the laboring classes, which are without help are very few. If the working lrours on the farm were as few as they are in the city, starvation and famine would soon be the result. \Community Dance Mockery T 0 F allen Stratford, Sept. 15.—Stratford’s main thoroughfare presented an ani- mated appearance this evening, the occasion being a Parisian Boulevard Dance under the auspices of the Mer- chants’ Association, John McDonald| Chapter, I. O, D. E., and a citizens’ ‘committee. The proceeds are for the soldiers’ memorial fund. Ontario street was recently tepaved and advantage was taken of the situa- tion to materially increase the mem-= orial fund. Citizens‘entered heartily into the plan and not since the armis- ‘tice has such a celebration been held. Two blocks of Ontario street were in- closed for dancing and two bands pro- vided the music. The stores were gaily decorated and the a a the inclosure “were bedecked | flowers and ‘branches. ai ke ‘the Great ‘War Vete pine. SS when Se a (3 } 2% Le a aed |, What impressed me was ener physical One volley, then| river another four hundred miles, and uree, giving special attention to child welfare.) - Naturally, one likes to pass on one’s first impressions of a town, city or country. It was not that. Shanghal seemed to be the greatest cosmopolitan city of the world, nor that it had many but what seemed to leave a lasting impression on my mind and heart was the physical condition of the coolies. So many of them seemed to be tuber- cular. Passing up river by steamer from Shanghai, a distance of about six hundred miles, we came to the city of Hankow. This is another busy treaty port. Here again we saw men who looked as if they needed medi- cal attention at once. They were bearing heavy burdens. “ Bales too “heavy to be lifted by one man were being carried on the back by coolies. One man fell and died before our eyes from heart failure. Many seemed to be physically unfit for the heavy tasks assigned them: I could not help but think of the slaves, and thought how much better off the ‘black slaves of the South had been when in--bondage than» these. poor, wretched, half-sick Chinese. Again. condition. After staying in vbis pat a day, we changed steamers and proceeded up arrived at the city of Icehang. I have not come across a dirtier place in China than this city. We were compelled to stay here nearly two weeks, being unable to get a steamer to carry us to Chungking. I had a good opportunity to go; sight- seeing, and did go. One day another lady of our party and I went down into the “Chinese City.” We just seemed to wade in the worst kind of filth. I came home and was unable to eat my dinner. Here we found dear little innocent, brown-skinned, brown-eyed children playing, apparently unconscious of the awful’ atmosphere, but breathing in ali those foul odors. Here every con- dition existed for the propagation of disease. Perhaps my readers will be surprised to hear that China has no sewage systems, Here, for the first time, I met in- numerable beggars, dirty, ragged, and hhalf-starved looking. Here, also, I saw little children and other ones, some blind from birth and some later on becoming blind from uncleanness and disease. I met the lame, blind, sitk and helpless. It was truly a sad picture, At last we took steamer for Chung- king, the last treaty port on the Up- per Yangtse, a city of over one-half of West China. Here I Song: tel be month. I found the streets na and dirty, and all kinds of, aith b te ing carried through them ‘without being covered. In the city of Chengtu, the capital of the province of hwan, - we found things somewhat better—that is, the streets are somewhat cleaner and wider, the receptacles for carry- ing filth away must be covered. But here, too, as in all Chinese cities, we ead the lame, blind, sick and wretch- ed, afd the ragged, dirty beggars, | with the dogs Heking the sores on their legs. Men, women and chil- dren-suffer from curable and prevent-| able diseases, some of whom have reached the inctrable stage. You will find the same conditions existing all up the Yangtse River, and In the great western provinces which, ‘with Tibet, contain. one-fourth the »population of China. When travelling from one city to another. ‘in West China, f caught a "| new vision, or 1 might-say, that my -yision of the work te be done was én- larged. For the first time the ache in heart fine buildings, pretty_Jace shops, etc.,‘~ ailiawthee commercial metropolis) service workers, and the very great need for many ‘doctors and nurses to do public health work and nursing, to say nothing of the doctors and‘nurses needed for our medical college, hos- | pitals and training schools for nurses. e never expect to send enough doctors and nurses to China to heal all the diseases there, but we must | send many more to teach them san- itation, hygiene, and preventive medi- cine, ahd to teach the young Chinese men and women to become éfficient doctors and nurses so that they can teach, train and heal their own peo-4 le. Business Adminis Now Taught At Western University London, Sept. 21.—Western Uni- versity has taken another step in its development by opening a_ special course In Business Administration. There has been a crying need throughout Canada for years for a specialized course in scientific Busi- ness Administration. The need has been but imperfectly and inadequate- ly met by correspondence courses with American schools and colleges. The Board of Governors of the Western University recognizing the opportunity open to them to serve the people of Ontario in this most important branch of industry have planned at four year's course that will satisfy the need completely_and efficiently. The extra professors necessary to carry out this course of lectures have been sought and found from among the most brilliant and successful. busi- ness men of the district. This new course comprising as it does, lectures in Arts as well as in the special subjects pertaining ex- clusively to Business Science, leads to a Bachelor's Degree in the College of Arts. The subjects dealing strictly with business administration have the most modern of business| methods. They include lectures in Accounting, Law, Business Organtza- tion and Efficiency, Advertising, and the systems of Credits in vogue at present, as well as the theory and practice of Banking, also anexhaust- five study of business mathematics and intensive work on tistical methods. The other subjects necess- ary for the conferring of the B. A. degree are similar to those regularly used in the general course. Prospective ‘students -are required to, hold certificates of Junior Matri- culation. . P. R. Neville, Reg- istrar of the University will give full information regarding this new course of lectures to’ all enquirers. -_t «© ¢ + & # ¢ & @ © BE YOUNG IN SPIRIT .* st @# #¢ © - @-@ # @ 8 6 Get rid of the thoughts which are making your ambitions sag. Suppose! you have had the fiu and you feel weaker than you did a year ago at this time, and you tire out so quickly that you get discouraged at the little you accomplish In comparison to your ‘past efforts. Don’t you know that you are great-| ly influenced by your state of mind? Unhappiness and discontent prod- uce headaches and lack of desire for proper exercise atid {ll health is per- fectly natural under these ¢onditions. The simple fact of being & year 6ld- er shouldn't make you feel nearer -your grave. Why think of each year as taking so much vitality and strength. You. know persons who are twenty years older than you are spry and happy and seem to get more ‘éut of life than you-ever did, don’t} you? - You know others who are young- er but drab and complaining. To which class do you belong? Be ‘young in spirit, in heart, in hope. been carefully chosen and embrace! it who are}: sures us that the ‘Codacil. occurrence as mutch as any one. with it, it was as a private cith not as a representative of the Cor The farther the matter goes,: the mysterious it becomes, The Council knows nothing about it; lice Magistrate Laidlaw denies & the cause; Constable McLean say he had instructions to take the nu bers, but doesn't say who gave —and there you are. The only thing we have been able to find out is that in the neighborhood of thirty "pas fines, and a Government car, pincl with the rest of the bunch, bro ‘a letter from the Department questing that as it was a Govern car the charge be not [ do not know whether or net the re- quest was granted. Why should th Provincial Government make la for the private citizens to abide and then request to be exo: when they themselves break own laws? a + A NEWSPAPER PROBLEM — - (Border Cities Star, Windsor,), Hardly a day passes in-a newspa) er office -without the request bel preferred in.some form, ‘'Please.dai publish such and such an fem : times it isn’t even a qu co an. insinuating smile, ni would it-cost to keep such and a story out of the paper?” It may, well to set forth some of the- ciples upon which a newspaper ju the merits of requests of this Hard feelings are sometimes causéd, quite eaneoetY when: such: re, quests are refus ee newspapers feels quite free to granta request of the kind. Really, theted which a responsible mewsp: give the matter. It is for‘ the pa ublished.: of the public, it must be p If it is information which the public) ought to have, the newspaper is m6L justified in suppressing it. re public. interest is involved, if it\ merely information, which even * intéresting, would be worthleas to the public, the newspaper is entitled ‘to’ use its own judgment in superenene) -There is a school of journalistic, ic: thought which holds thet all newsiis) good news, and that its chief function is to be interesting, no matter may suffer. It is this class of m paper that specializes on “news” is merely criminal gosaip-and scandal. It boasts that there is no ee: on any of its columns, ‘that it thinks the public might like to seat is cere fit to be published. ~ - There is another class of néwspay er which never, by any chancey'prinis. anything that might furt--aay feelings. Serious scandals x : velop in the public efforts of its munity, but-they are ‘woft-pedalled for fear they might hurt someone's sen- sitive soul. ° This kind of xe arere recognizes no responsibility to the public.” It is published to make mon- ey and seeks to accomplish this by making friends and no enemies. * Between the two lies the “ha: DRY medium, the paper which, wliile sym- pathetic, kindly and fair, recognizing the frailities of human nature, never- theless also recognizes: its ngi- bor to the public in all matters of mportance and refuses to comprom- ise ‘with its conselence in them. o Mistaken Identity ‘ She was. very stout,..says Every- body’s: Magazine; she.. must. Bae weighed near ly three hundred pounds She-was learning roller erat ie she had the misfortune to f: ‘eral. ts rushed to her nt were unable. to_raise her at e sald. : :