BEWARE of the traveller who comes to your home selling furs. In many cases he represents himself as an agent from some reliable company and often misrepresents his merchandise. When You Buy From Us You AR E Buying Direct From Manufacturer We can truthfully guarantee that when you deal with us you can buy cheaper than from others, because every coat is made right in our own factory. . . you buy at factory cost. And our 33 years in business assures you against misrepresentation. 1932-33 MODEL FUR COAT NOW ON DISPLAY “FROM FACTORY TO WEARER†LA F ON TAIN E’S FUR STORE 359;. GUELPH 95 malls? St. All the new Text. Books tor Public or High Schools. Special; values in Scribblers. Loose Leaf Note Books. nun Pads, Inks. Fountiln Pens, etc. Struck down and dragged on the bumper or the car driven by Dr. Pub; on No. 10 Eighty rods of pavement is the ex- tent oi the work done during the past week by the paving nrm engaged to lay the 6.2 mile stretch from below Dundalk to the Melancthon corner. No pavement was laid on Tuesday, due to the fact that a vein of very coarse gravel was encountered at the Porter pit. Paving operations were resumed on Wednesday in iront of Ted Wood’s place. Quite a bit of difliculty has been experienced in getting material to make shoulders on the side of the road. When the big steam shovel gets a fair sized hole dug, the hole insists on ï¬lling with water. This has occur- red on two or three farms between Corbetton and Melancthon.â€"-Dundalk Herald. to carry their permits with them Dundalk Herald. {anions Coldstrearn Guards ior three and a hall years before coming to Canada three years ago. The new trai- nc officer has been busy stopping mot- orists and asking for permits. We would strongly advise local motorists Escapes Injury in Peculiar Accident Provincial Constable A. Bosworth, oi the Dundas Highway Motorcycle Patrol has been transferred to No. 10 High- way with headquarters at Shelburne. Constable Bosworth will patrol No. 10 highway to Chatsworth and the Ar- thur-Orangeville highway to Grand Valley. Oflioer Boaworth was with the mt timothy has been inflamed 1n the Met, he says, has given a good new mid-August record 10:- his zso-acre turn. The returns from his grain crap were very satisfactory, according to Mr. Dempsey. Roots and corn also the nearly half-century that he ha; been fuming. He is through haying, A. Dempsey, well-known mac 'I‘p. tumor, rewds with satisfaction 3 con- dition which has not existed on his farm at this time 01 the yen during “Set-loco"! PAGE 2 mums McFADDEN’S DRUG STORE t Lowest Prices C.P.R. Tickets - Week-cod - Toronto and Return $4.25 '5“! d!â€" SEE OUR DISPLAY School Supplies h-hfl be no wrong-doing in securing relief and hope that the case against Simons Ed. Simons, a German immigrant, who has been in town for some years, came up before Magistrate Spereman in local police court last Friday on a charge of having secured aid from the town relief fund by means of false pretences. Constable Meyer, on being tipped off to the fact that Simons was said to have considerable money in the house, although also on the re- lief list. secured a warrant and search- ed his house. ï¬nding $300 hid away therein. In court Simons produced his bank book and also had a credit bal- ance there of $74. After hearing the evidence the magistrate imposed a year's suspended sentence and ordered him to pay costs of the court. and also refund to the relief committee all aid secured from them. The town author- ities felt very keenly that there must has ever been brought to this news- paper. The stalk was 12 feet 4 inches high last week and it was not yet out in tassel. so that it would probably have gone another nine or ten inches beyond that if left to mature. Mr. Hamilton has 3% acres of corn, all good, and the variety is Wisconsin No. 7. He used no fertilizer but. the corn was planted in an old stubble field, plowed down. He is quite Justified in thinking that the farmers of Erin township can grow as good corn and potatoes as anybody anywhereâ€"Fergus News-Record. Fined At Hanover Stalk of Com Over have Feet A stall: or corn was brought into the News-Record oflice on Saturday by George Hamilton, 01 R. R. No. l, Orton, and it it doesn’t hold some kind of a record, it is at least the largest that without serious injury. The doctor was Proceeding along St. Andrew street in Godth when the incident oocm'red and was apparently unaware of the plad's predicament until shouts from eyewitnesses caused him to brine W cartoastOp. Theladwasthrown back on the bumper, with his head and shoulders forced down between it and the radiator, where he hung sus- pended by his knees and suflered bruises and abrasions in the course of a ZOO-toot ride in this fashion. An ex- amination revealed no bones broken.â€" Lucknow Sentinel. Simpson or man, on may, Donald Garrick of Goderich had a harrowing O "_â€"_ nto on: Return free on: Pay single f August 30 .. .. . . August 30, 31, Sept. 1 September 1 .. .. _ _ September 1, 2 or 3 September 6 . r. A ...September 6, 7 or 8 September 8 .. M ....September 8, 9 or 10 GET E'I‘S AT OUR STORE ‘lt’s cheaper to go somewhere than stay at home†C.P. In direct contrast was the attitude displayed by the Globe, which paper constantly hOped for the best even in the face of disappointing news from Ottawa. No paper in Canada displayed a better attitude than did the Globe which constantly applauded the efforts of the Canadian premier.â€"Palmerston Spectator. Newspapers and the Conference Readers of the Toronto papers can not but wonder at the attitude of the Toronto Star to the Conference at Ot- tawa. After careful study of its re- ports and its editorials, one is forced to the conclusion that it hoped for fail- ure, although no reason other than pol- itical can be attributed to such an attitude. The Imperial Conference is of greater importance than politics and the paper that plays peanut politics in reporting such an important event has not the proper perspective. “Thank you.†she replied, “But I have just found one.†“,"Good he replied, “then perhaps you wouldn’t mind letting go of my tie?†Hang On, Girlie The lights in the crowded bus had failed and the passengers were thrown into confusion. “Can I ï¬nd you a strap?†the tall young man asked the young lady at his side. OTHER PAPERS’ OPINIONS Mr. Passmore had all this season’s crop in the barn and threshing Oper- ations had just got under way when a burst of blame shot up form the blower and soon the whole building was a mass of flames. Several horses were got out safely and none of the ' other livestock fell a prey to the flames. Although we understand Mr. Pass- more carried some insurance, it is said his loss will be considerable. The! barn, which was of steel construction and was only erected a year ago, was of the most modern type and it will be difficult to replace it at anything like its real value.â€"Orangeville Sun. the CPR. skew crossing on west Broadway, went up in smoke. At 9.30 o’clock Thursday morning the ï¬ne steel barn of William Pass- will serve as n wunlng to all that false pretenoes will not be tolerated.â€" Hanover Post. 'or One†Bargain Everything i: Medicine for man or beast THE DURHAM CHRONICLE Tattooing of chickens and hens has been adapted by the Carolina, UB., Poultry Association as a means of com- kee he saw a small bird alight on a willow branch overlying the water. Suddenly there was a swish and a three-pound bass shot from the water and narrowly missed catching the bird. It wasn’t the ï¬sh that got away that Alfred Casselton of Toronto, by his prompt action and efficiency rescued 15 person from drowning when a motor launch in which they were riding crashed into a submerged reef and hurled all the occupants into the Sev- ern River at\0rillia on Friday. This ï¬sh story comes from August Simian of Pittsburgh: At Lake Chero- Silas Richard Parsons, chairman of the board of the British American Oil Company, Ltd., died in Toronto on Saturday. He was 78 years old and had been ill for some months. Five men standing in a service sta- tion at Gravenhurst on Friday to es- cape a heavy downpour of rain escaped with a scratch when a cyclonic burst of wind wrecked the building and threw the roof 100 feet away. At the time of the blast a motorist had driv- en into the station to refuel but he stepped on the gas and dodged the falling roof. Unemployment has brought a new complication in its wake. The Mont- real city hall reports that toes, ï¬ngers and hands en masse are suffering in the carrying out of city works this year, claims for compensation for in- jury are rolling in upon the city in record numbers. The reason is the large pr0portion of men unaccustomed to manual work, now handling pick shovel and crowbar. Owing to the fact that the South- ampton Continuation School will carry only two teachers for the coming term no upper school subjects will be taught. Those pupils who have several subjects left of their upper school course will have to attend high school at. Port. Elgin. About ten or twelve pupils are in this position. Pioneer in the ï¬eld of bicycle trade, and a former publisher, Robert M. Jaf- fray, died in hospital in Windsor on Sunday. Mr. Jaflray , who was 73 years of age, was born in Galt, and became the owner of the Norwich Gaz- ette at the age of 19. He afterwards, in partnership with his brothers, ac- quired the Brant Union, which they named the Brantford Telegram. James P. Jaffray. a former publisher of the Gait Reporter, is a brother. Claiming that with every fly killed six more appear to mourn its death, exasperated members of the summer colony at Point Pelee have sent an SOS call to the entomological bureau at Chatham to do something about the pests. Swatters, sticky paper and poison pads have failed to eradicate the flies, some of which the cottagers claim, carry two-edged swords. A bee caused the death of Frederick C. Jackson, 55, of Ottawa, on Thursday. Five minutes after he had been bitten by the insect, and before medical aid arrived, Jackson was dead, dying from a sudden seizure engendered by shock. Two years ago Jackson was stung by a bee and rendered unconscious for several hours. Before the early winter sends the ice floes charging down to block the passage through the Hudson Straits, more than 2,000,000 bushels of grain will have moved out of the new sea- port of Fort Churchill on Hudson Bay, to the markets of Great Britain and Europe. Two grain laden ships are already on the high seas after loading there. Stanley Balitsky, Kitchener young man, learned at Goderich that he can- not drive with one arm round a young lady, even if the lady happens to be his bride of one day, as was the case. Stanley faced a reckles driving lcharge perferred by 'l‘raflic Officer Lever. In traffic court the officer at ï¬rst refused to be swayed by sentimen- tal piflle about newlyweds, but the magistrate softened. He ï¬ned Balit-l sky $5 and costs on a reduced charge, told him to get along with his honey- mooning, saved his driver’s permit from cancellation and the situation generally. News in Brief in 1839-1843 and professor of moral philosonhy in the University of Vir- ginia from 1845 until his death, in 1873. He compiled the so-called “Eclectic Ser- ies†of readers and other school books, of which immense numbers were sold. in 1825. He was professor, ï¬rst, of ancient languages and later of moral philosophy in Miami university in 1830-1839, president of Ohio university William H. McGuï¬ey, author of Mc- Gufley‘s school reader, was born in Washington county, Pa., in 1800, and graduated at Washington college, Pa., been found to exist in the endowment funds of the University. John A Machray, K.C., prominent in religious and educational circles in Western Canada, chairman of the Board of Governors of the University of Manitoba, was placed under arrest in Winnipeg last Thursday and charg- ed with theft of “7,451,37 of the Uni- versity’s funds. Arrest of Machray fol- lowed the disclosure that shortages of several hundred thousand dollars had intimation of high authority at Ot- tawa last Thursday. October. about the same time as the British House and Parliaments of sev- Canada’s Parliament will NOTED EDUCATOR Give Every Child a Chance! at a shameful recordâ€" what a start] appeal to both mothers and motorists! This year let us 104 Children killed 1,827 injured by automobiles in 1931 MOTOR VEHICLES BRANCH ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS Leopold Macaulay, mama! recocmaed as the real western white pine. erosion, causing the roots of trees in that section to become almost trunks in their own right. But this great tree. growing on the west side of the can- yon. has never suflered from the ei- fects of such action. The great size of this giant tree is partiularly amu- ing because Idaho, and not Oregon, is more than one thousand years of Ice. is in Crater Lake National park. One- con.Itisnieet.aihchesihdrcum- ierence, the measurements being taken breast high in Woe with the Spaldihg rules of measurements. Its height is 140 feet. The pine is located in a canyon on the middle fork of An- BIG “emu warn PINE TIRE IN NATIONAL PARK Hora. WAVERLEY WAWNCJWSM ï¬ Manama. o HOTEL WAVERLEY HAS ALWAYS BM WAR WITH MOYORMS ‘CAUS OF ITS M ROOMS-1A8" IWVE FOOD AND PARKING FACILITIES. tr! GARAGE Is ONLY ONE mum: WALK. AYYENDANYS YAKE (AIS to GARAGE AND mum "(M WNW at mnemorcuu PARKONG SPACI MOTORING TO TORONTO (I'OKLL.~ Single $1.50 a $3.00 Double $3M co ‘5.†Ind estimated“