Thursday, Jan. 22nd, 192 - Services of Reliable Busin ; Business Directory ‘Patras These Advertisers Whenever You Need the ess or Professional Men LEGAL MEDICAL ROBERT G. MacFARLANE Successor to Late J. E. Terhune Barrister, Notary Public, Convey- ancer Office over E. D. Bolton, O.L.8. ‘'Phone 48 H. B. MORPHY, KE. ©. el, verton, wood. Offices Listowel and Milver- ton. Money to loan. J. C. HAMILTON, B. A. rister, Conveyancer; Solicitor Be ra octios on : th ai Money to loan on. son of Main street, over Miss Gibbs’ Mill. inery Parlors. . Bonds for Sale. ©. MORTON SCOTT, B. A. Barrister, eres arr Convey- Office over oem Hardware ¢ Store, Main street. ‘DENTAL qj _W. G. E. SPENCE Dentist, Graduate of the Dentist M. B. Physician and Sur; . Office | over Livingetens’s Drug Store, corn- oa and geo streets. Phone ). Night phon DR. JAMES Seal (Physician and Surgeo: Office second contneptas Reeth of =~ betel, Wallace street. » A. G, SHIELL, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Diseases of Women and Surgery. one 1 Office, Inkerman Street, West. Opposite Presbyterian Church. | DR. ALEXANDER FISHER Phone 997, Stratford. Special attention given val care of; Infants and Childre DR. F. J. R. FORSTER Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Graduate in medicine, University | of Toronto. ~ Late assistant New York Opbthal-| mic and Aural Institute, Moorefield’s| Eye and Golden a Throat Hos- | pitals, London 53 Waterlao St. ‘Bthat ford. Phone 267 Will be in Listowel the first Monday, in the month, from 10 a.m. to Surgeons, Toronto. Office over Schin- bein's Stor re. For painless extraction we use nit- rous oxide oxygen gas, also conduct- ive <eausthes>. BR. F. TAYLOR, L.D.S.; D.D.S. Graduate of the Royal college of Dental! Surgeons, and of Toronto uni- versity ‘Nitrous Oxide Gas for Extractions. Offiie over J. C. McDonald's store. | Phone 60. { F. ST. C. WILSON, L.D.S.; D.D.S. Graduate of Royal College of | Dental Surgeons, Toronto University. | Office over Ba Phone 23 ior appointments. nzley's new store ; an solicited. E. D. BOLTON FUNERAL DIRECTOR | W. F. McLAUGHLIN Embalmer and funeral Director Graduate of Canadian embalming school. Residence and parlors, Main St., one a half ocks east of Baptist church. Night and day calls promptly attended Phone 22 Metor or horse drawn equipment as desired. {to attacking forwards. There is no “Th n The Realm O ‘af Sport Al haga nea ee And oat to WaIaK Gat Listowel ia e team that holler over the rough play Wiartta: indulg- in last form shown jas bunch is oup should squeal if ape" other fellows hand them back some of their own rough stuff.- Chesley Enterprise. ‘ ENFORCING rime RULES (Lou Marsh. in Toronto Star) “The instructions of O.H.A sued last week to their referees ord- ering them to tone down the heavy body-checking which has recently crept into the game is having a won- derful effect on the speed of the game. In effect the governing body told its referees to eliminate all heavy and unnecessary body chevk- ing on the forward lines, and to ston the defence players from crashing in- ‘new rule. against charging is wy. bolus strictly en- ' forced, and t . is backing its officials up. ror oe last uple of years the cry to the defence nen has | been “Step o them,” and the re- j sult is that the majority of the body- in defences has been charging pure and simple. Defence players, __| usually big men, have been skating | into attacking forwards and knock- jing them flat or opening out anil sandwiching them savagely. Players who have passed the puck on reach. ing the defence have been slammed hard to keep them out of the play, . jabbed and harried all over the defence =p any time they come in to Sart & pass or a rebound. The day for that stuff is over, according to fr Defence players are still permitted to use their bodies to block attacking forwards, but they must not hurl themselves into _Diayer simply because he has the puck, the “sandwich” has been re- duced to a squeeze and no more, while players who are in possession of the puck may be covered but must not be slammed all over the lot. On the forward line hard body-checking is to be cut out altogether. Nothing more, than bodily-contact sufficient 2% t}and Cavell was very effec! is-} Lis to any of these as n no goals were DP towel played his usual the ‘locals saan yeen eb the goal out- wards ev credit fering cage his injuries daverat otfensiy sive play. Ke Kelle in gout, was just has been the other anes and that is werine. ‘ Tot. ae and White also turned in re © games and filled each pontion assigned them in a very ef- fective manner. regretted, he having failed to arrive from Wiarton where he was spending a few days and the management was forced to play Kelly who should have been given as much rest. as posite} n order to recuperate from his in- ury. The first period was lightning fast, the players of both teams warming up to the game immediately. Both teams appeared anxious to secure.an early lead but hard backchecking and good defensive play made it sible. This period was heavy checking ands five penalties were handed out by Referee Jacobb who was determined fo keep the game under control. All were the 3- minute variety. Kelly of-Listowel to- ward the close of the first period, got away with a minor penalty § after making a particularly ‘bad cross check at Root which should. have drawn a major penalty Listowel ap- peared to be willing to rough ft but Palmerston did not back down an inch. There was no score in this per- iod though Palmerston appeared to have the edge of play The second period waf just as fast as the first and was also featured by hard and close checking. Severn) times during this’ period several bad cross checks passed unnoticed by the referee. ‘Peck’? K possession of the puck must not be touched at all. The net result is wleaner play, fewer injuries and a INSURANCE FIRE INSURANCE in best companies; tomobile, burglary, plate glass and — insurance. Automobile insur- 85 cts. per 100. Your business also accident, au- CHIROPRACTIC wetter spirit among the contestants LISTOWEL 7 CHESIL EY 5 (Chesley Enterprise) While Chesley had to be content with the short end of a 7-5 score when they entertained Listowel here on Monday evening, it was those games worth going to see, and she sort of encounter that sends the ocal fans away with sweet tastes in nats mouths even if the home team did lose. There was action in this Chi ve AUCTIONEER game from gong to gong, and any of rte specators who did not get their ney’s worth would kick at paying 2, RUTHERFORD | W. J. DOWD, Auctioneer fifteen cents for an hour's ride in an ‘ t le. Get our terms.|#@Toplane. The game wag fast for gpractor eat ts eas? Eos our list. Need af the whole 60 minutes, with just er- . Require an auc- "office on Main street, over John- ; stone’s Jewellery store. Hours 9 to; Woneer? Phone 246, Listowel, Ont. 12 noon, 2 to 5 p.m. &venings by ap- pointment. Phone No. 9. Consultation free. OPTOMETRIST: / DRS. J. BE. agit ANNIE PATTERSON | W. A. Johnstoné 0 Registered Optometrist. Over 25 Graduates of onto College ot | yo? experience Chiroptactic. Of and residence Main St Listowel. first door eust of Blackmore-Hamil- iene ton factory, Main street. Office hours to 1 to 5 pam, 7 to 9 poate) Listowel, Phone No. 64 A MUSIC | ! FRANOIS SUTTON “Teacher of plano, villa, ———e and theory, Pupils APiacatict rvato’ xamin Apply at aa Philip” Nickle's dence e 169. ‘tor = Con- resi- O UR employ- ers, the pub- lc, haye found us to be reliable and capable, ‘The duality of -the service rendered by us reflects credit- npon our profession. DR. H. S..MALLORY Registered Optometrist Graduate of the — eolege ot| in L. Oli- Science, Toronto. Offic ver's Jewellery store. THE fi oetg algae - By “sta (T tar) Once Bsn _ » midnight sinful when I t ful ered with a skin e With = odor which - “distance) I often smelt be’ There's _ dead fish ‘sound, I - aybe lying on the e Only wey and nothing tg But I found a doubt remaining as my eyes, through darkness strain- ng, . Caught sight of a lovely critter as it mbled on before. Black and white it was I made o ere the age made it fade out. at on 5. een I atarniy sw. But pl a quite comathin awful, at is, are unlawful, They “should surely be abolished, and go rambling nevermore. Well, the idle notion pleased me, and in -fact at least quite seized =~. And I cried: “Come pussy, pussy,” m its trail I tore upo Noticed that the beast, unheeding, 5 trolled ahead, despite my plead- e ing, was Till I fiercely up and kicked it off th rid and to the shore, But that _ before it left me of de sire to breathe bereft me, For it squirted something _ mips that ‘d- never touched befo "Twas a skunk and perhing more, but Well this ery gente RS telling, the truth { pelling, That ru Sarr Peiy finish ere my t to snore. u bet I hasted, not a waste: entf folks, was 3 lamplight gleaming | m jed, but Kelly broke away and sniped dugh vigorousness to it to meet tha approval of those who like to have a little action served up with the hockey. However Ike Masters of Kitchener caught most of the rough stuff and paraded the boys to the penalty box when their behavious did not come within the rules. Listowel got away to a good lead in the first period when they our- scored the homesters 3-1, and in the second period repeated the same stunt, leaving it 6-2 when this chap- ter ended. The locals peppered the Listowel goalie fom all angles dur. ing both periods and it was only the sénsational work of Freddie Johnson the Listowel nets that kept the score from being much evener. The last period, from a local standpoint was the choice tid-bit of the whoie evening and when Chesley ran in three goals in a row before the stan- ne was half over, the crowd was an uproar and howling for the equal- zer. It looked as though the loca would pull the game out of the fire and they had Listowel badly outplay- a goal for the visitors on a pretty Piece of work which settled the issua right there. While Listowel worked hard for their win and showed a nice brand of.clever hockey they got the breaks and had Chesley received its share of them perhaps the score bg have been reversed. However the locals aren’t cmabites and as they play in Listowel on Friday night they can be relied on to do their best Creighton cae Kelly, also our old friend, Cull Reuter Played a nice game in the Chesley nets, and the local forwards showed some nice stuff. Mickey Mc- Naughton played his best game o} hey season and Jimmy Green check- d hard and rushed well. Jack Brown i hard and with more exper fence will come into his own. Blohm Boehmer each scored a pair of merkers and Barney grabbed off the fer any visible souvenir of the gam his right eye being a beautify shade of azure blue . ¢ : . LISTOWEL AGAIN SCORES WIN (Palmerston Spectator) ; Over 650 spectators piece the opening gathe of the N. L: senior series when: Listowel hacia Pak merston 3-—2. The came was the best witnessed locally for some time and the issué,was doubtfyl tntil the sounding Of the final gong: One could atnlsaed, “I! this period. Score at end Pe 2nd. in| May discard the bandage, that caught the far corner of the net beat Johnston casily. Only one penalty was handed ont duriag per- fod: Listowel 0, Palmer | The third period pa with a fast attack by Listowel which netted them goals. Cavell being responsible for 2 and Kelly for the other. Pal- merston came back in a desperate ef- fort and scored 1, Johnston turrin= the trick. ‘Time after time Palmer- ston started well on an attack only to be called back on an offside play. Changes were made in rapid succe: sion in order to keep the tiring play- ers as fresh as possible, Listowel con- tinued to attack but did, not get far owing to“closé back ebecking. To- ward the end: Listowel played a 5- man defense and ragged the play. The period ending with pews one goal to mes od.~ How To V View The ___ Sun’ s Eclipse Provide yourself wit with a large black or colored piece of cloth for bandag- ing the eyes. After yon have looked through smoked glass at the begin- ning of the eclipse and satisficd yourself that the eclipse has really commenced, put the smoked glass in|. your pocket and bandage your eyes carefully with the cloth and keep the bandage on ‘Yor more than an hour. Millions of people on the day of the amg will fail to see the beauty of he sight unless they take this prec tlh When you see the sun as a thin crescent, thinner than you ever saw the crescent new moon, then ou but pro- eee Saad eyes well with the smoked eT those who have selected a high elevation, observe the following ex- tra instructions: “Tara your back to the sun and look to the northwest, directly Sync to the position of the sun. Watch without any glass for the oncoming shadow of the moon coming at a rate of fifty or sixty times that of an express train. If there are any animals near, note the effect on them. The anes will come like a bank Led night. You can see it but an insta: is the last raye shining through the Mountain passes of the moon—and then—that wonlerful, beautiful halo, the mysterious corona surrounding the sun will be-sden, THE OFFICE TOWEL (By Burdette, in Brooklyn Eagle) When I think of the adel 1, The 6id-fashioned to That used to hang by the -—— house door, I think that nobody In those days of shoddy, Can hammer out iron to wear as, it wore. 3 The tramp who abused it, The devil who used it, The comp who got at it when thesw two were gone, The makeup and pareting. The editor, poor ma: Each rubbed some aad oft for the heap they put on. In, over and un It was blacker yr thunder, than erent to. pa bee aarise rare = veniste. with effort. me] ta hard poverty, Tougher nded It never > ana Ape aD shaw effective game while } ie pe stills 2 be n't have The absence of Macdonald is to be| Other means of hardenin’ their mus- te’ -| word what Va told her and der folas ‘|would jump w. yone was in gfict ste pennies t sat box. peseiog player on both teams Peasl layed hoc for bout the same’s common fur’s I'can +) make out.”” “I ain't feelin’ éame's ” said days girls to compare ‘em: ka boys; they did- mnasiums and cles, “J g Bcndals! ae ike ‘nough,” samitted t hg deac “You can be sare of it,’’ asserted Caleb, it ou feel like takin’ my word for And now I'll tell you It is really hund cups Pure and rich heading ‘to the pound. Printing! ==: The SSE Guia oa orders ‘ Only the hevter grade bd 1 wit ellen soe P Listowel Banner what an ola fool ro be like if he casts jedgment one side and sets ont to see-how big a fool he can make of himself. “Whenever me and my wife _ yisited our folks in the city,"". he plained, “the young folks have al. ways made me tell ‘em of the good times we young fellers used to have here in the country when we was growin’ up—the places we used to go and the campin’ trins we had and the long jaunts off after fish and the like of that. Time after time I've told ‘em over till they eenig repeat ‘em word for-word as well me— mebbe better f'r all I eecwr “Well, here two- three days &go one of my nieces—frand-nivce, ruther— come on to spend a week o- two with us and yest’day she was »oind she'd see some of the piaces she'd heard me tell about times when ['ve been at her house in the city. So she came down to breakfast all rigged in ‘a short skirt and thick shoes. read» to start. And, thinkin’ I was weak and unthinkin’ ’nough to f'git my a, and tell her we'd make a day O° <a sighed and rubbed his other “We sartainly did!’ he observ- He leg ed. “Come to git our lunch packed and her cape in case it rained and for lookin’ at things fur‘off.and a few other knick-knacks, it made a sizable pack, though’ when I Hove it up on to my shoulders, ready to it didn’t weigh ponderous. ant I comforted myself Witn thinkin’ that she bein’ a girl, would git tuck~ ered b’fore we'd gone far ‘nough _ make a pack a burden to me. little I knowed then! I keteched sir cht of my wife lookin’ at me ‘sif she was minded to say somethin.” but... she never spoke a word—then. I wish," he added plaintively, “tant she'd metimes say a word beforehand when it would do some good ‘stead of sayin’ so many-sft@rwards wien 1 don't care to listen to ‘em. Well,” continued Caleb, started—-and of all the jaunts! Meb- be I may have done it when I was fifteen-or so; she says T did, and she give me chapter and verse of how I've told it to "em; but that was fifty years ago. You know how warm nd sunny y itvwas y yest’day; well. I hadn't been travelin’ half an hour when I'd begun to wish we hadn't took so much dunnage,” I'd been’ grateful rto've lightened the load by so much as them glasses. And b'fore we'd iiveradr ansther mile my kned begun to plague me, and all thut kep’ me up was the thought that a girl coauld- n't stand much more of it, and she’d wilt and want to rest. “But she didn’t; she kep’ goin’ till well past noon b’fore she even men- tioned eatin’ and we hadn'd more'n swallowed it b’fore she was at me to start again. She wanted to see the old stone bear trap I'd told her about —a good three miles away aud pl travellin.’ I managed to git pack up, though I could hear my J'ints squeak, and we set off again. “Lysander,” ea soberly, “that girl took me places yt forgot I'd ever seen, tellin’ for “We 4 about ‘em; and she tramped me a cod twelve miles doin’ it. I man. bet that oe to gs the day out, was about all. “And ‘etoad of goin' in the gate when be bg home she put one hand on the of the fence and went over it pony light and limber as a deer And me lookin’ at her, so tired and wore out I could hardly shove one foot forrard of the e my wife why she didn’t have me a ‘nough to forbid me bein’ su fool she only said she'd tried ‘both ways and this one was the surest. And then she said somethin’ "bout. experience bein’ a dear dae I didn’t stop to hear her o “Hum!"' said the deacon “I sh’'d say ‘Hum!'” peevishly. said Caleb rs in ehurch and elsewhere Singe are not always as careful as they ought to-be to articulate their words distinctly. A. little. girl enter- ed the meeting-house not long ago— as related in the New York Tribune ~-—just as the choir was singing the anthem. “Hallelujah! Hallelujah!"". said thought were somewhat preoccupied, we may imagine, did not catch the words correctly. After getting home she on her aunt by saying. ae Ww such a nice choir, They itneped right in the middle o: the tend and spoke to me.”’ y dear,” said cher aunt, "y didn’t notice it.” te os see: ey. did. ee al I bees and as 7 oo "abot said, ‘Hardly 1 knee Hardly knew you!’ two or times.'’—Selec ted. Household Hints blanket to set on and some atl , ental service js provided by the Can- fs singers; but the little girl; whose | ¢ sont including dining car, Tourist, Stand- thrge jard "an and Compartmen Tt fs sald that one of the best pre train makes the cautions taken against Mince Dessert : This_is mince pie made into im oecee patties with layer ot| chopped nuts instead of top crus’ | Make these patties very small te. cause of their extreme richness. Bacon Butter eee Half ‘inch » white - bread strips spread with softened butter mixed with chopped crisp bacon; and toasi- ed on two sides in a hot oven. Spinach Canap Take halt cup cold cooked spinack chopped finely with a bit of onion and seasoned with a drop of Worces- tershire sauce and a mild French dressing: Spread hot buttered toast oblong with grated cheese, then spinach. Border with «pimento stripes and top centre with white of egg star or crescent. Baked Bean Rarebit 1 cup cold baked beans. 1 tablespoon butter. | # cup milk, l cup grated cheese. 1 teaspdon table sauce. Melt butter in saucepan, add the — which have been mashed with ork, salt and milk. Stir wel) and heat through. Add the cheese ang table sauce, and when cheese is melt ed pour the mixture over thin slices of toast and-sérve hot Cream Puffs Cream puff always make ious extra for the Sunday and the following recipe is a very good one: One cup of boiling water poured over half cup of butter. Place on the stove and bring. ta a cil. Then add 1 ewp of sift _ ae 5 minutes, stirring constant When cool add 3 unbeaten eggs aad beat for 10 minutes. after yen add a_pinch of soda the size a pea, and bake in a hot oven ioe 30 minutes. a delic- supper. Holiday Salad This has a foundation of raspber- ry gelatine made from the granulat- ed gelatine and raspberry juice from canned berries. Pour a little warm ne mixture in generous individ- a! molds and when fairly firm presz a own-to bottom a- white of egg ‘star. Ring this with peas and chopped on- ion. Then add more liquid. When this is firm add chopped celery and String beans. Then fill molds with gelatine. Turn onto salad leaves and — with mayonnaise in a separate 8 When filling the cookie 4ar, the following recipe wi be a grea. help, for it makes a batch of do. licious white cookies: Six eggs, 3 teaspoon of salt, 2 large teaspoons baking soda eifted in flour, macs, cinnamon and nutmeg (enough to make 2 teaspoons in all); 1 largs cup brown sugar, 1 large cup white Sugar, 1 cOp lar ‘ Beat the eggs well: mix the dry in- gredients and edd them to the eggs Then add enough flour to make a ‘_* —— rol] thin and bake in a hot o Mutton Broth Half a pint of stock from ‘boiled Mutton, one aliced carrot, one smal) turnip, one small onion, one smal mer until the vegetables are quite soft. Rub all through a sieve, return it to the saucepan. Mix the milk with the cornstarch, and stir. it in; adding salt and pepper to sane. Stir unti it boils, then simmer Very gently for ten minutes. Add the chopped par; sley and serve MADE N AND tps ¥ THE VANCOUVER EX. PRESS agg es CON one FOR SASK! TON A greatly improved transeontin- adian Pacific Railway January 11) for Vancouver. Direct connections are made at Regina for <i pie and at’Calgary for Edmont ve Corot 9.00 p.m.; ar. Win- hipeg 10.00 a.m.; Ar. Regina 11.06 p-m.; Ar. Saskatoon 6.05 a.m.; Calgary 4.30 m.; Ar. Edmonton 1.10 p.m.; Ar. Vancouver 7.00 p.m ‘The equipment of the Vancouver! ress is of the highest age toi higiinnce gents. “West. ‘on. fted finur § t ent-Observatioa | ¢ised | Hereand There |) A contract hes been let in Alber- - ta for the eredjion of fifty cottages for Hebrideane who are coming”in. the spring, on the mein line of the Canadian Pacific Railway, between Edmonton anf Red Deer, ~and>on the Hardisty line, as far. east as . Strome. ' The dancer customs and folklore of Old Quebic are still alive and show no signjof decline. Thousands of persons réently witnessed a per- formance of these at the Monument National, _pontreal, and joined heartily in he well-known choruses which havel'made the picturesque asp¢ f Chebec world-famous. iver .Tarzan is rap- rc mei etion at the B.C. B.C., and will S90n., . This t of - $200,000, ndsamest marine ttr- jan S TEcenuly cx ieee is i The termin the i Service it~ nal houses the British Co- of the Cann- ‘ - The in building -is ig, 54 foet wide and three a fcurth storey “r the structure, i tori Pe 7 {fices p Rafa will never again rival Car- ada # a whctat exporter, accor: ine } L. W. Lyde, Professor. of G_opiphy ai Loidon- (England: Univgity. - He believes that grain growg in future lies with the Cansan farmer. Russia eannor proply supply its own needs. Pre- wer iperf of wheat was purely ar- ae } drawn, not from a naturof “s, but from the needs of 2 w.stor and | Repay peasantry. Aventy per ecnt increase in the busiss over the Dominion Atlan- tic tilway, serving Nova Sestia, washe approximate summary af the immer’s travel recently given by G. J. Comeau, General Praf- fic rent,of the line. This is attri- bute to the growing appreciation of : beauties of the Annapolis” Vay and the charm of the Evangp-- lineounty among -tourists every- wh. /extensive programme is being rured connection with the wir sports activities of the Cim- te:Frontenac, the Canadian Pa- cifRailway's famous hotel at Que- beE. Des Baillets, newly appoimt- edorts director for the hotel, is pliing the formation of the Frea- te: Winter Club and the holdieg opmpetitions in curling, ski-tmg, sring, skating and other pas- tis of the season. irprise packets in the shape ef 2s containing two lions, a male cand a full grown female, consti- td the most interesting shipment ied by the Montreal and Te- yo offices of the Dotninion Ex- 4s Co. this year. ‘The animal, @angcd for specimens of Cana- 1 deer, recently arrived from jlin and -were dispatched over jadian Pacifie lines to their des- ition, the zoological gardens at ‘onto. Needless to say, they were Gully handled, Oe ter morning service when the fiy dined, the church and its pre- e@ came in for criticism. Father the sermon. Mother disik- eile blunders of ‘Let your agent supply concerning . the The daughter thought the choirs was atrocious. But the > be dropped