BAï¬ actdras d £..0. + been known to attack a scarlet-cjndl child. The excitement animals display in such cireumstances is similar to that caused by the smell of blood. Here is the theory: The color remindsl the animals of blood, an association which invariably suggests bodily dis-! comfort and hurt. So they express’ their terror by the only means theyl nossess. 2 (/ _ DuUs are not alone in this. Sheep, usually so meek and gentle, will apparently become transported with rage if they see anything of this color. Geese and turkeys are similarâ€" Iy tleckOthâ€"tnt FEFMEF BW Aemebl Other Animals Are tlow many people know the ‘caning of the phrase, "Like : ig to a buil?" Hawker and Grieve First Reâ€" cipients of the Air Force Cross. A despatch from London says:â€" Harry G. Hawker and Lieut.â€"Comâ€" mander Mackenzie Grieve, who reachâ€" ed here from Thurso, Scotland, after being rescued in midocean when the airplane in which they were attemptâ€"| ing to cross the Atlantic alighted | near the Danish steamer Mary, were| received by King George at Bucking.! cature be enrag arlet cloth is fin Why How KING RECEIVES ATLANTIC FLYERS Hawker now lives in very solid comfort at Kingstonâ€"onâ€"Thames with his wife and their baby daughter, but when he went to England from Arsâ€" trulis eight years ago he was a very poor man, a young mechanic barely twenty years old, able to earn a few shillings a week. When he landed‘ in Britain he knew nothing nbout' airplanes; he hoped to get a job as mechanic in a bicycle shop making‘ and repairing bicycles. But it was‘ hardly a year before Hawker felt Cevi/ aviator, and it wasn‘t safe to predict any morning that he would live through the day, he has been canny enough to demand a salary that for several years has made him. the highest paid air pilot in the world, as well as one of the most skillful. He was a test flyer for the Sopwithi Aviation Company and made severnl' flights each day to test out the crei-i tions of the Sopwith engineers. For. this he got $125 every time he went! into the air and it has be>n estimated | that during the last few years his earnings have averaged more than $100,000 a year. | bulls are increased a hundredfold But although Hawker devil aviator, and it w; predict any mornine th During his term of service w Sopwith _ company, Hawker chances with his life half a times a day that make the a mortal tremble to even think â€"and he has never, so far as : show, received any injuries mor ous than a few bumps and t lne luck of H G. â€" Hawker, which has stayed m him for eight years through the thrills and dangers of his work as an experimental and test flyer, did not desert him when he came to the crucial moment of his career, RED RAG TO A BULL ie Hawker lu obs up again ith his repu Took Chances With His Life Half a Dozen Times a Day Testing Machines For The Sopwith Companyâ€"Earnings # Average $100,000 a Year. HARRY G. HAWKER, DARING AUSâ€" TRALIAN FLYER, NOTED FOR HIS LUCK they made their~ owd also gave them hey left the palace Majesty bestowed on Hawker leve the insignia of the Air ‘ross. They are the first acâ€" ‘ipients of this order, nmense crowd gathoral in The luck of â€" Arrival who we uld a bull, or any other : enraged when a piece of h is flaunted before them ? Searlet Object. ngham Pal sout one chance in a milâ€" ing out of trouble alive, luck holds good and he rin, safe and sound and putation as a daredevil «o TT S CISP‘AY in| Not forever are the rains â€"or the win s similar to that ] ter snows; of blood. Here| A11 must passâ€"nought shall be over. : color reminds' Iongâ€" , an association, Yet with every lovely June cometh the rests bodily dis-! rose, Jo they express’ The scented dusk, a night bird‘s nly means bheyl wonder song! Hawker was a dare Hawker â€" and loudly _ cheered oir â€" appearance. them an ovation Affected by w the real Like a red at Bucking { with the in Evgn through the city where the. roads run, Blue runs now the river to the Tender is the twilight where the day is done, Infinite the stars trananilitv Once again the summer her magic loom, Cloth of cloverâ€"fairy w Only Mary‘s alabaster box Ever made the passing s weet. Green are took I i’RECALLED FROM _ â€" NORTH RUSSIA _ _A despatch from London says:â€" The Canadian force in North Russia has been recalled. It is about six hundred strong and consists chieï¬y‘ of an artillery brigade, commanded by Col. Sharman. The Canadians,’ who have done splendid work acainct Canadian Force Will Return Via the Pacific Coast. (O June, y gold!) lambs go, tds ireen and glad the forests that are old. of $25,000, but engine trouble kept him from finishing, although he flew 1046 miles. He was compelled to land off the Irish coast, near Dublin, and so failed to finish the last 500 miles. That same year Hawker took a plane up to 13,000 feet, carried two passengers to a height of 11,002 feet and three to a height of 9,000 feet, great and important feats in those’ days of aviation experiments. Two years later he established a British altitude record of 20,000 feet at Henâ€" don and in 1916 a world‘s altitude record of 28,500 feet. Hawker entered the great race around England in 1913, for which the London Daily Mail offered a prize M ic Anlatu BP inclinly ds A ud ) d d in 1913, Hawker and Raynham again met in competition, and again Hawkâ€" er won, beating Raynham by haif a minute in an aerial race across counâ€" try. \ | _ Hawker hadn‘t been flying more |than a few months before he began ,‘winning medals and trophies and prizes. He won the Michelin trophy in 1912 for the longest flight from sunrise to sunset. He was in the‘ air eight hours and twentyâ€"three minâ€" utes, beating his nearest rival by fortyâ€"five minutes. And it is rather a coincidence that his rival was Fred Raynham, who was Hawker‘s keenest rival in the dash overseas and whose machine crashed as he was about to take off at St. John‘s just after Hawker had started. The next year, He would attempt to fly anything that would get off the ground, and it wasn‘t long before he began testing the Sopwith planes and taking out experimental machines that none of the other aviators would attempt to[ hadle. Even in those days when a man had to be a daredevil, absolutely reckâ€" less and unmindful of his life, Hawkâ€" er soon became noted for his daring. the lure of the air and he abandoned the bicycle industry and got a job as mechanic in the Sopwith aviation works, becoming a pilot a year later. cvery meadowside the butter ips blow, the uplands where the little Midsummer Day. you are spendthrift of your summer weaves ter box of perfume, passing wind more fairy web of wheat tranquility Virna Sheard dusty sea; long on ONTARIO SO0N TO HAV "On to the Bay," survey party leavi 13, 1919, showing a car load of provisi teen miles to the Abitibi River.â€"Photo missioner, Cochrane, r s s set ies & ] T d t r ©"% 3 *ï¬s ts " ie " o t t o i n t t e c 2 $s , _ ; uce "-,':{"_ i uen ’:("’f misé, : ’%;@"’;u{( 9' pva Uk $Â¥ e vl'\;‘;q,g‘ Pss o ig eme ie on onl N Audlnr P Ee teng S Wt t n B +ss 9{% # «5’ \;*; *&“ e;vé‘t "“‘ s on ie ns T: ie * it e c Aasa ... . aat dn Sm eaei i n Neith i2 en o. o. on io o amnamenenenatene in ithe 6: ountrnintirind, netin riatiatile PC OCVA PVb P in esnt ol hisr is i t i4 L | Fort William, |plain, 48 to 49c; backs, bonel American cornâ€"Nominal. ltO 57¢; breakfast bacon, 45 Ontario oatsâ€"No. 3 white, 79c, acâ€" Cottage rolls, 36 to 37c. cording to freights outside. |_ Barrelled _ Meatsâ€"Pickled Ontario wheatâ€"No. 1 winter, per| $48; mess pork, $47. | car lot, $2.14 to $2.20:. No. 2 do, $2.11), Green Meatsâ€"Out of pick to $2.19; No. 3 do, $2.07 to $2.15 f.0. less than smoked. ’b., shipping points, according to| Dry Salted ‘Meatsâ€"Long cle: freights. 't_ubs, 28%4¢; in cases, 29¢; clea Peasâ€"No. 2, nominal. lies, 28c to 28%c; fat backs, 2 Barleyâ€"Malting, $1.21 to $1.26,] _Lardâ€"Tierces, 34%e to 35¢; nominal. 35' to 35%c¢; pails, 35% to â€" Buckwheatâ€"No. 2, nominal. prints, 36 to 36%e¢; compound Ryeâ€"No. 2, nominal. tierces, 28%¢; tubs, 28%c¢; pails Manitoba flourâ€"Government stanâ€" prints, 30c. dard, $11 Toronto. | er enc E EREI N GING Breadstuffs. Toronto, June 3.â€"Manitoba wheat â€"No. 1 northern, $2.24%; No. 2 northern, $2.21%; No. 3 northern, §‘2,17‘;‘$‘;.‘I‘{o. 4 wheat, $2.11%, in store Markets of the World There is ONE stronghold in every is the home town NEWSPAPER. in the for forty years and steadily refused the are being spent by the "catalog kings" in pap@r. But the country Editor is standin enemy. He turns down all kinds of induc with the enemy of our Home Town. Let bribed by a seeming bargain. t io it w m e e ONTARIO ARC TORONTO survey party Iea_vi_ng Cochrane for B e o en i en e ioing s eennig of provisions b'eing_ freighte_d by teams fifâ€" YOUR NEWsSPAPER. )1d in every community that the mail order house has not bee °ER. In the face of all kinds of bribery the Home Newspaper ref‘ufsed .Ehe advertising patronage of the mail order houses. HAVE AN OCEAN PORT. to| Dry Salted "Meatsâ€"Long clears, in tubs, 28%e¢; in cases, 29¢c; clear belâ€" 'lies, 28c to 28%c¢; fat backs, 25¢c. 6,| __Lardâ€"Tierces, 34%e¢_ to 35¢; tubs, | 85 to 85%4ec; pails, 35% to 36 %4¢; prints, 36 to 86%e¢; compound lard, tierces, 28 %4¢; tubs, 28%c; pails, 29¢; iâ€"| prints, 30c. | ngs" in a CONTINUOUS ntvtenrx})t“i(v) -s:aâ€";:ure as on standing SOLID by his Home C\ munity. He ref per bag, car iétg, Eivté 55‘10,‘ hogs, abattoir killed, $30.50 lard, pure, wood pails, 20 I 37c. by J. Stewart, Industrial Comâ€" »moked Meatsâ€"Rolls, 34 to 85¢; hams, medium, 40 to 42¢c; heavy, 38 to 35¢; cooked hams, 54 to 56¢; backs, plain, 48 to 49c; backs, boneless, 55 to 57¢c; breakfast bacon, 45 to 48c. Coltage rolls, 36 to 37c. Live Stock Markets. , Toronto, June 3.â€"Heavy steers, | F o POOCs Oe Tny PELtl ger gal.; do, in oneâ€"gal tins, $2.50. eansâ€"Canadian, per bus., $3 to $4.25; Burmas, $3,.50; Limas, per lb., 12 to 13¢,. Provisionsâ€"Wholesale. 6 Smoked Meatsâ€"Rolls, 34 to 35¢: Maple 'Syr‘upâ€"'Per 5â€"gal in,. qAz jz °_ O 0 "@ _ attempt to secure as an ALLY the Home Town Newsâ€" ding SOLID by his Home C:« munity. He refuses to "SELL OUT" to the ducements. Let US think of this the next time WE are tempted to dicker Let US take the stand taken by our newspaper. Let us REFUSE to be PATEHEKEEE Montreal â€" Markets the North, May . tin, $2.40 order house has not been able to reach. This mail order houses. Right now MlLLlo}\TSâ€" In many respects the women Finland possess greater social â€" political rights than the women any other country in Europe. "The war was over before she got her sock knitted." ter These ancient marriage superstiâ€" tions were related by the Christians in the Middle Ages, and even toâ€"day June is copsidered by many to be pre-emineA the month of marriage. Superstitions Regarding Best Month For Solemnization of Marriage. The first péople to adopt the month | of June as sacred to Hymen, the g'od, |of marriage, were the ancient Roâ€" ‘mans, who considered June the mostl | propitious season of the year â€" for entering upon matrimonial relations.' The Romans held that June wed-] dings were likely to be happier than| alliances contracted in any otherf month of the year, especially if the| day chosen were that of the fullj moon. They also held that of all months May was to be avoided, as in that month newlyweds would come under the influence of spirits adverse to happy households. Monfreal, June 3.â€"Choice steers, $15; poor, $9 to $10. Butchers‘ cattle, good, $10 to $12; inferior, $7.50 to $8.50. Calves, milkâ€"fed, $8 to $12. Choice select hogs, $22 to $22.50. C C e t oi y ce to $14; choice lambs, $18 to $19.50; spring lambs, $12 to $15; calves, good to choice, $15 to $17; hogs, fed and watered, $22.25; do, weighed off cars, $22.50; do, f.0.b., $21.25. $14 to $15; choice butchers‘ steers, |$13.25 to $14; butchers‘ cattle, choice, $13.25 to $13.75; do, good, $12.25 to $12.50; do, medium, $11.30 to $12; rdo, common, $10 to $10.50; bulls, choice, $11.50 to $12; do, medium, $10.50 to $11; do, rough, $8 to $8.50; butchers‘ cows, choice, $12 to $13; do, good, $10.50 to $11.50; do, midium: $9.25 to $10; do, common, $8 to $8.50; stockers, $8.75 to $11.75; feeders, $12.50 to $14; canners and cutters, $4.50 to $6.50; milkers, good to choice, $90 to $150; do, com. and med. | $65 to $75; springers, $90 to 8160;1 light ewes, $13 to $15; yearlings, $12 on Left in the Lurch. What‘s the matter with your sisâ€" z.‘ I |HAWKER‘S PLANE BRIDES AND JUNE poi has stood its ground the women of . of and F us Sun ue nc mt apoinl eril of ammonia and turpentine. Saturate the spot two or three times, then wash out with soap suds. ; on which the German treaty can be lsigned if no obstructions are enâ€" ’countered. but June 20 is the more Iprobable date for its signature. The | German counterâ€"proposals have been :received with the greatest interest by the members of the Peace Conâ€" gress, especially the claims for imâ€" mediate membership in the League of Nations, for a plebiscite to decide the disposition of Galir‘q and for the fixing of a definite sum for 'indemni-.f ties. Paint, no matter how hard and dry, can be taken out of woolen clothâ€" ing by using a solution of equal parts w# $ ult c B on cagal 7 8 The net national debt is 500,000,000. The Can,. T secks to awaken a realizat fact in every man and wo; Dominion. A despatch from Paris says:â€" June 15 isA_theAearliest possible date JUNE 20 IS PROBABLE DATE FOR SIGNING OF PEACEB A despatch from Basle says:â€" Germany lost 198 submarines during the war, according to statistics on ‘this branch of the German . naval service published in the Berlin Vosâ€" sische Zeitung. This number includâ€" ed seven submarines interned in for-,‘ eign ports and fourteen destroyed by their own crews. | More than 3,000 sailors lost their lives in the submarine sinkings, the statistics show, while several thouâ€" sand others lost their reason and had ; to be committed to lunatic asylums. Premier De La Croix and other officials delivered eulogies before the coffin left the Town Hall of Schaerâ€" beek, a suburb, Mlls. Petit was put to death in 1916. J 198 Uâ€"Boats, 3,000 Sailors Lost by Germany During War The streets were lined with thouâ€" sands of spectators, and the city had the‘ appearance of national mourning. Piles of flowers covered the coffin, and troops, patriotic societies and school children followed the cortegei to the icommunal qemetery, where military honors were paid. ’ A despatch from Brussels says:â€" The transfer of the body of Gabrielle Petit, a young Belgian woman, whom the Germans executed on a charge of treason, was carried out on Thursday with impressive ceremonies. \ BELGIUM HONORS G. Konody, Englishr rkzvzxri-t-,i'c,"u;d. Capt. Percy F. Godenrath, attached to the Canadian War Records Office. war, and embrace representations of every sphere of Canadian war preâ€" paration and activity, together with portraits of â€" generals, statesmen, Canadian V.C.‘s and pictures typifyâ€" ing Canadian history. The exhibiâ€" tion is under the management of P. 4[f>. s ’ A despatch from New York says:â€" The Duke of Devonshire, Governorâ€" General of Canada, will open an exâ€" hibition here on June 10 of war paintâ€" ings, conducted by the Canadian War Memorial Fund. The paintings are largely those of Canadian artists sent to the fighting front during the GOVERNORâ€"GENERAL WILL OoPEN CANADIAN EXBIBIT A despatch from London says:â€" The steamer Lake Charlotteville arâ€" rived at Falmouth on Wednesday with Hawker‘s machine on board. It was bad‘y damaged. ‘The plane was found on May 23, tail up, 1,200 miles from Newfoundiand. It will be landâ€" ed by naval authorities, who wiil take charge of it until the Sopwith repreâ€" sentatives arrive. . Hawker‘s mails are intact. The airplane is to be sent to London and will be on view on the roof of Selfridge‘s establishment in Oxford Street, Hawker expressed his delight at the finding of the ma-’ chine. "It‘s recovery," he said, “wilil‘ be of the greatest value. On it are | many records which will be of great assistance. Some appliances of most delicate construction and adjustment are attached to the machine, and these we hope will give first class informaâ€" tion for future flights." | Badly Damaged But Mails Intact â€"Records Will be Valuable. REACHES FALMOUTH 00. The Can. Trade Com. awaken a realization of this HER EDITH CAVEIM and woman in Vth; about $1,â€" All of the prominent universitiecs in the United Kingdom, saye Oxford and Cambridge, now confer legal deâ€" grees on women who duly qualify, | and with the disappearance of t I-now in the spring, patches of brok glass are left in the winter‘s mcoums lation of rubbish and filth, a coustan menace to all rubbertired vehicles Often, too, such bottles are broke: near the entrances of homes and, 1 stead of being gatherod up and r« moved, are left as they fell, Paints and more or less serious accidents have occurred to many children, who have stepped or fallen on broken mil} bottles, Civic @ythorities might well consider the advisability of making such forms of carelessness ‘punish able offences, By making example 3 of a few, this class of offenders might be made to realige that sooner or lato> inconsiderateness of others acts as a m.fll‘. w UmEn iess Dangercut. ! Many ?ople who live in citic towns evince about the mintmu sideration for other members . community. They are quite ob! of community rights unless, ; same time, their own personal fort or conventence s endanger simple concrete ilustration of t the careless manner in w hich b glassware is left in city streets, ing the winter, many bottles an, are broken by delivery men, broken parts are left where the cures its supply of energy struction of its stored and the stuff that, when eat, makes muscle and blood., privation be kept up long succumbs. Death ensues, What is the , immediato death in such cases? This that has not been fully set The human body cures its supply of struction of its stoj the stuff that w1 Experiments have shown twentyâ€"six day fast the mu 42 per cent. of their weight 28 per cent., the brain and & 22 per cent., the blood 48 per liver 50 per cent., the kidne cent, the stomach and int« per cent., the lungs 29 per kidneys 55 per cent and the per cent. I Suppose the starvation is to ‘unue. Then, when the fat has used up, the muscular and other sues are drawn upon for fuel to nish the energy required to syu; the mechanism of the body and it in operation. _ But this is v more expensive, physlulogk’a)ly 8y ing, because it takes about tw pounds of muscular or glandular sue to make an equivalont (as 1 for one pound of fat. The fat stored in the body is un« such circumstances the fuel m available. Therefore, as one obsery a starved person becomes rapidly th ner, losing weight. ’ How long would it take you to starve to death if unsupplied with any food? The answer, so far as experiâ€" mental observations would indicate, is that it depends mainly upon how fat you are. If you are a skinny person, you would not last long, How Human Body is Affected. You see, the human body is an enâ€" gine and food is its fuel. When th» food supply is cut off the engine must for fu@ draw upon the tissues of the body and burn them. More recently there have been selâ€" entific studies made of this problem. Dogs and other animals have been the subjects of most of them. But the Carnegie Institute, not long ago, emâ€" ployed for the purpose an Italian named Succi, who was a professional faster, He did it for a living, the pay being high. Bucei‘s best record was thirty days of a fast, at the end of which there set in certain "anteâ€"mortem" sympâ€" toms which persuaded the scientists in charge to quit the experiment. Mani festly he was a weakling; for a Paris faster named Merlatti kept the thing up for fifty days. Per contra, Doctor Tanner, mos famous of all fasters, died last Fobh uary in San Diego, Cal., at the "sir ripe age of ninetyâ€"one. He Lad . theory that health and long life co«) be improved and lengthened by ox tended periods of foodâ€"dGeprivatio Famous Dr. Tanner Fast: The most famous of his fasts »~. tended more than forty days. He v carefully watched during tho perform ance to make sure that he ato nothing Barring the sucking of casual oranges, it could not be discovered that in that period he touched anything that could be called food. It cannot be said that th« faculty has ever indorsed thi: able notion. The view he!« sicians and physiologists go: that such performances a against nature and impose a | ous strain upon the human «. Notion That Abstaining From Food Promotes Bodily Health is Not Endorsed by Medical Men. Of recent years there has boen a fasting fad. Some people have asâ€" serted that bodily health was proâ€" moted by going without food for conâ€" siderable lengths of time Broken Glass D scIENTIFIC stuDies ane BEING MADE OF THIS PROBLEM. WHAT FASTING _ DOES T0 FOLKS in starvati re in cities > minimum iembers of quite obti â€"*mimum conâ€" embers of the quite oblivious unless, at the personal comâ€" endangered, A ition of this is which brokon ‘ streets. Durâ€" ottles and jars ‘y men, The vhere they fall rance of the nd the ) by If t t} p and med m d 1y by rl th of Lond of Patria wl Se f1 m SYR!L, TUR Sa s poovn M