West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 30 Jun 1932, p. 7

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W Is Cause amine in China M R int lonbled at ho Tib at 10 n In rarnt ty 100 wl in hh 0 Life is made up ;l sobs, snifies and wrmiles, with snifies predominating.~â€" 0. Henry. Offical statistics show that at the end of last year there were 95,518 motoreycles, 211,844 motor cars, 9,078 buses, 73,321 trucks and 986 tractors a use in Italy. An idea of the inâ€" crease may be formed by comparing theso figures with those for December 31, 1923, when there were 39,915 moâ€" toreycles, 21,785 motor trucks and road tractors and 53,755 motor cars and motor buses. * The region with the largest number of motor cars is Lombardy, the greatâ€" est contribution _ being given, of course, by Milan. The Roman region «comes sixth, after Piedmont, Emilia, Oltawa.~â€"So great was the success ol Canada‘s participation at the Briâ€" tish Industries Fair in London and Birmingham this year, that already hall the Canadian exhibitors have apâ€" plicd for space at next year‘s fair, acâ€" couding to a report of the Department of Trade and Commerce, while others have tho matter under consideration. Foronto, Out.â€"Live stock receipts «l the eight leading stockyards of Canâ€" ada« in the first four months of the preâ€" «en year are about equal to those of tho similar period of last year, there being decreases in respect to cattle and horses, but gains in the Pfl?e‘l’“ of aclves, hogs and sheep. As comâ€" piled by the Union Stock Yards of Torâ€" onto, _ Limited, the receipts for the period in question, with those of 1931 in brackets, compare as follows: catâ€" tle 187,910 (211,879), calves 90,471 185.6890), hogse 683,916 (546,978), sheep 148,290 (104,132), and horses 20,389 €31.756.) Venetia and Tuscany. More Autos in Italy Rome.â€"Italy is still one of the counâ€" tiies of the world in which the numâ€" ber of motor cars per heads of popuâ€" lation is lowest, although there has been & rapid increase in recent years. Quebec, Quebec.â€"Quebec‘s producâ€" tion of gold for the first quarter of 1932 was oneâ€"third the total of the province for the whole of 1931. The h.ures compare as follows: first quarâ€" ter. 1932, output of 101,456 ounces; whole of 1931, 300,877 ounces. Queâ€" bec‘s gold output last year was valued at $6,2190,679, and the current rate inâ€" dicates for 1932 a production of well wer $8,000,000. Montreal, Quebec.â€"The report of real estate sales for the city of Montâ€" #al and suburban municipalities for tho month of April, as issued by the Montreal Real Estate Board, indiâ€" cates that a total of 746 tnnsactlons‘ was recorded over this perfod, with a valuo of $5,661,324. _ Over the fourâ€" mwonth period of this year the number‘ of sales recorded was 2,831, with a total value of $20,620,807. Montreal, _ Quebec.â€"Aeroplanes of Vanadian Airways, Limited, flew a total of 1,832,794 miles during 1931, acâ€" cording to the annual report of the largest commercial operator of aeroâ€" planes in Canada. The flights involyed a total of 19,143 flying hours and 459,â€" 459 pounds of mail, and 764,449 pounds ol revenue passengers were carried. The company operates throughout Unsada, and a substantial portion of ts activities are connected with the transportation of men and supplies inâ€", to new mining fields. As at December I, 1931, the organization had in serâ€" vice a total of 46 aeroplanes and 71 engines Olttawa. â€"So great was the success Yaint John, New Brunswick.â€"Plans aro now in progress for the third anâ€" aual convention of the Maritime Coâ€" operative Institute at Mount Allison University, une 23 and 24. The anâ€" aual meetings of the Maritime Egg Exchange and the Canadian Livestock toâ€"operative, Maritime, will be held in connection with the convention. Fredericton, New Brunswick.â€"The construction of some 36 miles of transâ€" mission Ine« from the new electrical plant of the New Brunswick Power Commission, recently started, will supâ€" ply additional localities with electrical ticus, should do well on most farms. The farmer growlng corn for the fArst time, however, would do well to grow a small area, not more than half an are, and look after the crop well." soummerside, Prince Edward Island. the annual convention of the Canaâ€" dian National Silver Fox Breeders‘ Asâ€" scciation will be held at Summerside on July 13, it is officially announced. Halifax, Nova Scotiaâ€"Conventions announced for Halifax this summer inâ€" wludo those of the Canadian Electric Kailway Association, June 8 to 10; the Canadian Commercial Travellers‘ As sociation, July 19 to 21, the c‘mlln thamber of Commerce, September 13 io 16. and the Dominion Association of Fire Chiefs, July 19 to 22. Fruro, Nova Scotia.â€"Nine hundred and cisghtyâ€"five feet of lumber have been cut from a single log taken from the property of Mr. D. B. Burgess, of Clifton, near Truro, recently. The log measured 33 inches in diameter at the butt, 18 inches at the top, and was the largest ever bandled by lumberâ€" wen in Colchester County. of the Charlottetown Experimental station, "Corn as a fodder crop and as a supplement to fall pastures is valuâ€" able in Prince Edward Island. Durâ€" inz the past four years on the Prince @dward Island â€" Mustration Stations the average )‘ield has been about 15 tons per acre of fairly mature corn, and. under favourable weather condiâ€" Charlottetown, Prince Edward Isâ€" tand.â€"According to Mr. R. C. Parent, {anadian Notes The storekeeper himself was a "man of parts." Shrewd at a bargain, keenâ€" minded, just, kindly, he was a leader in the vicinity. Among his neighbors he was known as a rich man. His house was the largest in the village ard boasted steel engravings and horsehair furniture in the parlor. He kad sent his children away to school. His wife‘s black Sunday silk was rich With a flourish of whip and a sceadying of reins that almost swung the leaders to their haunches, the driver brought the stage to a standâ€" still. He flung off the leather bag, and the storekeeper, who combined the duties of postmaster with those of vilâ€" lage trader, carried it inside the dimâ€" ly lighted store. There was an excited buzz of expectancy as the few letters from the outside world were sorted. The storekeeper, however, was n~t allowed to read his two letters from Boston! He owed his community anâ€" other duty. Since he was the only man in town who subscribed to a newspaper, he must first read to the assembled group the news. . . . The loafers, seated on the long benches before a New Hampshive country store, stopped their whittling and desultory gossip and indolently sat up. Even the farmers‘ horses, nuzzling their sott noses in the three gnawed and weatherâ€"beaten feed troughs, raised their heads. An imâ€" portant event was about to happer., for the stageâ€" coach which carried the mail and an ccceasional passenger to the mountain village was due on one of its triâ€"weekly trips. The rattle of the huge wagon, ard the clipclop of the horses‘ feet sounded down the narrow, dusty road. If A leads a diamond or a spade, Z trumps and leads the eight of hearts. His quee» of clubs must now make. If A should lead a trump, Z must still win two trump tricks. Played in this way, Y Z must win five of the eight tricks against any defense. Solution: Z should lead the four of hearts and Y wins the trick with the ace. Y should then lead the dence of spades, which Z should trump with the deuce of clubs. %Z should then lead the king of diamonds and follow with the deuce of diamonds, which trick A must win. Whatever A now leads, Y Z must win two trump tricks. Heartsâ€"8, 4 Clubsâ€"Q, 8, 6, Diamondsâ€"K, Spadesâ€"none Clubs are trumps and Z is in the lead. How can Y Z win five of the eight tricks against any defense? If partner‘s no trump bid has been overcalled by a suit bid, don‘t bid two no trump unless you have opponent‘s suit stopped at least once, and also a trick or two on the side. If you hold a big hand, and no stopper in the suit bid, double. The opponent cannot take eight tricks when your partner has a real bid of one no trump and you also have a big hand. What do you mean when your partâ€" ner has been taken out of his no trump bid by an opponent and you double the opponent‘s bid? Do you want your partner to go on with his no trump bid, or are you doubling to defeat the bid? Answer. Your double means that you can defeat the bid if your partner has a no trumper; â€" that you either have a big no trump yourself or that you have four or more cards in the suit bid and prefer to defeat the bid rather than to go on with your partâ€" ner‘s no trump. Your partner should not g£0 on with his no trumn nnda» awar Heartsâ€"9 Clubsâ€"7, 5 Diamondsâ€"J, 8, 7 Spadesâ€"A, Q \MGtbe Snb dith 4400 ... â€" M + 11 4 ways to learn Auction or Contract is to study examples of "What not to do," either in the bidding or play. Knowing what not to do is particularâ€" ly important when partner has made a no trump bid. Supporting values for a no trump bid by partner are aces,, kings and queens only. Jacks and tens are countâ€" ed as supporting values only when held in combination with higher honors of a suit. hdst<tPicics 7. 10 these articles that ways to learn Amneti BABY‘S OWN TABLETS Teething "Baby‘s Own Tablets take away that teething fever," writes Mrs. Alfred Bungay, North Sydnq, NS. Effective It often has The Passing of the Crossroads Store rump. Your partner should with his no trump under such suit bid, don‘t bid two you have opponent‘s least once, and also a the side. If you hold no stopper in the suit been pointed out ‘ pointed out in one of the best Heartsâ€"A, 10, 2 Clubsâ€"none Diamondsâ€"5, 3 Spadesâ€"K, 8, 2 ‘g@ / AUCTION..., / CONTRACT " frwyone Ferguson *32 ARTICLE No. 28 Problem MISFORTUNE It were a misfortune to have friends until I have learned in my loneliness not to be lonely; or to have wealtbh, until I am rich without it.â€"Muriel Strade. In 1840 he had opened a small genâ€" eral store. Now, in the sixties, he had taken his young son into the busiâ€" ness, and had moved to larger quarâ€" ters, taking it for granted that he would pass his "trade" down to his son and his son‘s son. _ He never thought of this village, where his perâ€" sonality and individuality were so strongly felt, without his store. Twice a year the storekeeper went to Boston "to stock up." He was thrifty and careful in buying; blue drilling for overalls, shirty pieces of calico, hoop skirts ard bustles, cotton *aread knotted in "hanks," red and white spotted bardanna handkerâ€" chiefs, cotton batting, "factory yarn," quaint buttons, pieces of glassware made by that "new company down on Cape Cod," a few webs of lawn, a piece or two of sprigged muslin, some webs of lace, needles, pins, an occaâ€" sional piece of silk, hard candies for the children, as well as the groceries and hardware needed in the daily life of the village. Finally he added a few wallpapers. World‘s Oldest Map Found Iher Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pilis, _ They The oldes‘ map in the world, so far; are no temporary relief, They banish as the science of cartography has yet' the condition by creating new blood been able to discover, drawn more| which imparts be;;lsb vigqur angd vâ€" than 4,000 years ago upon a clay ub-. tality. Equally g ‘lor all runâ€"down let three inches square, bas been or nervous conditions. At your drugâ€" found in Mesopotrmia. I gist‘s. 50c a package. The following years, after the storeâ€" keeper‘s son had inherited his busiâ€" ness, found the village growing. Small lumber mills were bringing workers from outlying districts. Summer boarders were migrating in increasing rumbers from the c';»ilfx. The country store grew to meet the demands. and heavy. He was a deacon in the church, a justice of the peace, first selectman, chairman of the school comâ€" inittee, and had represented his town at the general court. Then appeared two factors which have sounded the knell of the general store as it was krown twentyâ€"five years agoâ€"the automobile and the mail order house. There still remain stores, one is willing to admit, where everything is nandled, from "knitting needles to plow poirts," but the crossâ€" roads store as it was, is soon to be a thing of the past.â€" â€"¢ rom "About Anâ€" tiques," by Ella Siâ€"znon Bowles. It should also be noted that Z may first play the king of diamonds and then lead the four of hearts and let Y lead the deuce of spades. When he trumps the spade, Z should then lead the deuce of diamonds, obtaining the same result as in the correct solution given. This is ~ tricky problem and should be carefully noted. _ All of the variaâ€" tions given should be played out. It should be noted that the lead of the king o° diamonds by Z at trick one and the lead of the deuce of diamonds at trick two is a loser. A should lead the nine of bearts which Y must win. The lead by Y of a heart or a spade is a loser. Played in this way, Y Z must lose four tricks. At Contract, A would probably not have bid so freely as he did at Aueâ€" tion. The heavy penalties at Contract have curbed a great deal of free bidâ€" ding. A now decided to try three diamonds. This also was doubled and the conâ€" tract was set for 400 points. Study this hand, the bidding and the score and learn "What not to do" under similar cireumstances. Auction Bidding No score, first game. Z% dealt and bid one no trump, A passed, Y bid two spades and B and Z passed. Here‘s where A started to give a fine exhibiâ€" tion of "What not to do." He didn‘t stop to figure that his hand was worth probably three tricks if spades were trumps so that, if his partner could take only one trick, they would save the game. He gaily bid three clubs, which Y doubled. B and Z passed and cireumstances unless he bas aâ€" sure game hand. The use of good judgâ€" ment in this situation is highly profitâ€" able and what you do serves to indiâ€" cate whether you are a good player or a dub. The other night the writer was playâ€" ing at one of the wellâ€"known New York Card Clubs and supposedly with high grade players, and yet observed some very fine examples of "What not to do." For example: Heartsâ€"K, 7, 6 omm Clubsâ€"K, J, 9, 8, 4 * YÂ¥ t Diamondsâ€"K, 10, 8, 6, 5 : A B : Spadesâ€"none a 3 + How to play Bridge s unless he bas aâ€" sure The use of good judgâ€" sltuatrop is highly profitâ€" Heartsâ€"Q, J Clubsâ€"K, 9, 3 Diamondsâ€"6, 4 Spadesâ€"6 Write your name and addr>ss plainâ€" ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 Vest Adelaide St., Tor »nto. Jean J. Brown, Calgary, writes: "When I was 11 years old, I had a nervous breakdown. Had to be put to bed. Mother knew about Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills and at once started to give them to me. _ After taking three boxes I was myself again. Mothâ€" er thinks there is no medicine like Pink Pills for run€Gown, bighâ€"strung girls." Don‘t let anaemia rob your growing daughter of health and vigour. Give her Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pilis, _ They are no temporary relief. They banish the condition by creating new blood A voile or batiste in a small flowerâ€" ed pattern gives it such a quaint air. Crope de chine ir pale blue with pink bindings and ribbon or eggshel} crepe satin, selfâ€"trimmed is exquisiteâ€" ly lovely. Style No. 2747 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. Size 16 requires 4% yards 35 or 39â€"inch, with 2 yards ribbon. liams‘ Pink Pills with the result that now, at 16, sbe is a healthy, lively girl," writes Mrs. G. Stimpson, Winniâ€" The shoulder capelet forms a yoke effect, And isn‘t tho beruffied hemâ€" line attractive? And it snugs the waistline in such a dainty way. Just another you‘ll adore it zeckline. Grateful Testimony to the Way Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills Tide Them Over Danger Period "My daughter, at Soon 13, was a thin, nerâ€" the Picture vous child, 24 lbs. of Health underweight â€" I commummmmmmmmmemm~ g$4YÂ¥6 RBer DF. Wi)â€" BY ANNEBELLE WORTHINGTON llustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furâ€" nished With Every Pattern Now you can laugh at the people who pay hundreds ::Â¥ dollars to lose a few pounds of fat, and you will know that the 6 vitalizing salts of Kruschen have presented you with glorious health, Kruschen by cutting out pastry and fatty meats, and going light on potatoes, butter, cream and sugar,. Then weigh zourse'lf and see how many pounds you If you are fat, why not do what thousands of women have done to get rid of pounds of unwanted fat ? Take one half a teaspoon of Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water every morning before breakfast, and keep it up for 80 days, You can help the action of Anousands of women are getting fat and Iosu\& their be.u:z‘â€" just because they do not know what to do. The above headlines appeared in a New York newspaper, in connection with a divorce trial that has attracted wide attention, * She was a beautiful woman," one witness testified, * but she got too fat and is not attractive any more," _ Lost Husband‘s Love WIFE WAS FAT HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Highâ€"Strung Girls What New York Is Wearing No Longer Attractive French nightisâ€"ard with its new round Things that have a common ever quickly seek their kind. Johnny giggled when the teacher read the story of a man who swam & iver three times before breakfast. On other dishes at tifis colossal feast there would be a halfâ€"tou block of butter and & 224â€"pound slice of cheese. The sugar bowl would be six feet high and the salt shaker would weigh 800 pounds. There would be an egg 12,000 times the average size, and apple seven feet in diameter, an orange weighing 1,100 _ pounds. Around your table would be piled 1,â€" 120 tins of canned fruit, 124 cans of salmon, 600 tins of sardines, 336 lbs. of dried fruit, 888 cartons of breakâ€" fast food, and more surprigingly still 280 pounds of rice. To top off your meal you would find a 672â€"pound box of candy and near 6,000 sticks of chewing gum, not to mention 56 pounds of walnuts and 1,176 pounds of If you were served at a single meal all the average person eats in a lifeâ€" time, you would sit down to a breakâ€" fast weighting as much as six dressed steers, confront a giant potato too big for a twoâ€"ton truck to haul, cut slices from a loaf of bread higher than your head and your milk from a bottle as tall as a bungalow. In the fiftyâ€"six years that the aver ago American lives, recent statistics compiled by the United States Departâ€" ment of Commerce show, he consumes 106,400 pounds of foodâ€"enough to load to capacity several freight cars, says ‘"Popular Science Monthly." Average Amcrican Eats Lady Speakerâ€""Now, is there any man in the audience who would let his wife be slandered and say nothing? If so, stand up." A meek little man rose to his feet. Lady Bpeaker (glaring at him)â€""Do you mean to say you would let your wife be slandered and say nothing?" Meek Little Man (apologizing) â€" "Oh, I‘m sorry. 1 thought you said slaughtered ..‘ * _ The Teacherâ€""You do not doubt that a trained swimmer could do that, do you, Johnny?" Vacation is a short period during which the college student wears no collars or pants except his ewn. Johnnyâ€""No, sir, but I wonder why he didn‘t make it four times and get back to the side where his clothes were." It takes the presentâ€"day girl to get down to casesâ€""vanity," "cigarette" and ‘divorce." A scientist says that mankind is of vegetable origin. _ Obviously, _ Men descend from monkeys, monkeys from trees. In our opinion the biggest chump is the fellow who shakes the plum tree while others gather the fruit. _ Nowadays England expects every man to do his duty, and pay it too. One wife out of every three is the ideal helpmate, we are informed. But how many of us can afford three wives? Our idea of an ideal marriage is one where the husband is treasurer and the wife is a treasure. A man‘s ideal wife is one in whose society he can spend a whole evening and not noâ€" tice it. It may not be polite to stand around with your hands in your pockets, but they had better be there than in somebody else‘s pockets. A man who falls in love with himself never bas any rivals. People with lots of pepper in their makeâ€"up are the salt of the earth,. The strength of a building is in its frame; the strength of a salesman is in bis frame of mind. Movie Queen Joâ€""My lawyer just advised me that owing to the general depression 1 had better use my old bhusband another season" The Same Old Story "My grandpa notes the world‘s worn cogs And says were going to the dogs; His grandad in a house of logs Swore things were going to the dogs; His dad among the Flemish bogs Vowed things were going to the dogs; The caveman in his queer skin togs Said things were going to the dogs. But this is what I wish to stateâ€" The dogs have had an awful wait." your graduation. Was it political inâ€" fluence or faculty carelessness? 6. Accept our congratulations on your completing your college course. It is truly astonishing. James A. Chapin is the proud father of triplets, two sons and a daughter, born to Mrs. T. M. McRay, wife of Thomas McRay. All are reported doâ€" ing fine.â€"Item from The Uhrichsville, Ohio, Evening Chronicle. â€" All except, possibly, Mr. Thomas McRay. Movie Queen Floâ€""Why do â€" you look so downâ€"hearted, dearie?" 3. Father and I have just seen your name in the list of graduates. We can bardly believe it. 4. Family has just heard of your graduation. You could have knocked us over wl;} a featther. 5. Pleased beyond words to hear of 1. Congratulations on your graduaâ€" tion. It was a great surprise to me. 2, News of your graduation just re ceived. Wire confirmation. 106,400 Lbs. of Food Wire & n Â¥* i Nearly 200 landJocked salmon (Sal mo salar Sebago) were caught by angâ€" lers in Chamcock lake, New Bruns wick, last year. Efforts by the Dominâ€" ion Department of Fisheries to build up the stocks of these fish in Chamâ€" cook have evidently been productive of results ed; now, only when the best interests of those concerned would suffer by granting the request, did she refuse. Besides this she explained the reason, and so, to a very great extent, peace and contentment reigned in her houseâ€" hold, where once there had been fricâ€" tion and turmoil.â€"Issued by the Naâ€" tional Kindergarten Association, & West 40th Street, New York City These articles are appearing weekly in our columns. When the vacation was over, Mrs. Wilderson did not lose the benefits of her rest for she put into practice the lessons she had learned, chief among which was when to say "No." Before this, she, like many another mother, had thoughtlessly said "No" to many appeals which should have been grantâ€" Mrs. Wilderson noticed, also, that when hber sister said "No," it was alâ€" ways after consideration and for some good reason. For instance: it was too near dinner time for Donald to go home with Bobby Brownâ€"then she gave Donald something interesting to do until the meal was ready; Helen could not get pieces for her doll‘s dress just now because Mother was lying down and they would not want to disturb her, but after Mother was rested Aunt Margaret would ask if Helen could not have a little bag of pieces of her own, and then she would always know where to find a piece of material when she needed it. At first Mrs. Wilderson thought it was because of the newness of Aunt Margaret, but as the weeks passed and the newness wore away, the childâ€" ren were still on the same good beâ€" havior, Then the mother began noâ€" ticing that whenever the children asked Aunt Margaret to let them do some definite thing, or to go to some particular place, she took a moment to consider before answering, and then usually the answer was "Yes." Yet she was not spoiling the children; they were more obedient, as well as more quiet and less mischievous. Mary Starck Kerr Mrs. Wilderson was almost distractâ€" ed. HMer three children were continuâ€" ally running into the house to ask "Mother, may 1 go over to Bobby Brown‘s * or if it were ome of the girls instead of the boy, "May 1 go home with Mary, and stay till supper time?" Or perbaps it was a request to use some of Daddy‘s tools or to get some pieces for dolly‘s dress out of Mothâ€" er‘s peceâ€"bag. At any rate, Mrs. Wildâ€" erson was worn out with her own conâ€" tinuous stream of No‘s, followed by the childrens pleas, then tears or reâ€" bellious cries. Very often,, just to get peace, Mrs. Wilderson would finally say "Yes" instead of "No." Then during vacation, the time she most dreaded because of having the full care of the children, ber sister, a student at the kindergarten training school, came to visit her, and relieved her of the burden. While Mrs. Wildâ€" erson sewed or rested, she observed her sister‘s methods with the childâ€" ren, and the atmosphere of peace that prevailed. What was the secret of the change that had come over the children? _ ‘They never teased Aunt Margaret and seldom cried when with her. HIGHEST PRICES PAID The Canadian Wool Co. Ltd. 2 CHURCH $T., TORroNnto When To Say "No" In the midst of a world of depression, the Gold Mining inâ€" dustry of Ontario has risen to a new record production. The Gold Mines of the Province in 1931 produced precious metal to the value of 43 Million Dollars, which is 20 per cent. in advance of the output for 1930, and fourâ€"fifths of the total gold production by the Dominion of Canada. For Geological maps and exploration reports of specific areas, and for general information, apply to T. F. SUTHERLAND, Acting Deputy Minister of Mines, Parliament Buildings, Troonto, Canada. HON. CHARLES McCREA, . ~~**~ THOS. w. GiBsON, Minister of Mines, _ .: #=***~ Deputy Minister, WOOL areas, and for general information, apply to T. F. SUTHERLAND, Acting Deputy Minister of Mines, Parliament Buildings, Troonto, Canada. CHARLES McCREA, . ~~**~ THOS. w. GiBsON, inister of Mines. _ #=** Deputy Minister, e »abs?, .‘«v_:,.; c-oâ€"““"-? Red Rose Tea The Golden Province of Canada Every Package Guaranteed. ONTARIO ARCHIVES € Red Label 254 i lb. ical and good RICB RDSON DOUBLEB TABiN cruiser, mbout thirty feet, in use aitogether only four or five months in two seasons; complete equipment includ ing carpets, bed and table linen, china, glassware and silver as well as al} marâ€" irs equipment and many extras. . This cruiser with its two cabins and its well equipped galley is an vunusually comfortâ€" able boat for weekâ€"ends or longer cruises for four to six people. it is exâ€" ceptionally seaworthy and has cruised al. over the Great Lakes, it has a aigno class and very economical 60 horsepower, sixâ€"cylinder power plant with compleie electric lighting throughout and speed of 12 to 14 miles per hour. it is a ipeâ€" clal paint job and very attractive in apâ€" pearance. Owner will sacrifica for nalf its original cost. H. Watkins, 73 W. Adelaide St.. Toronto. AEROXON even with the house screened /37‘ Hang up Acroxonâ€"the By catcher with the push pin and onger and wider ribbon Aeroxon is irresistible to flies secause the glue is fragrant and sweet and will not dryâ€" rood for 3 weeks‘ service. * At drug, grocery & hardware stores. s Sole Agents s J. E. M. GENEST, P.O. Box 22. Sherbrooke, ue "LY CATCHER Gets the fly every time s WUULD LEASB WEEKLY NBWwSâ€" PAPER in Ontario. Send oarâ€" ticulars o Box 16, Wilson Publishing C Ltd.. Toronto. Folly It is never foolsh to do a thing be cause we want to do it. The folly lies in doing a thing because other people think we ought to wast to do it, and we do not.â€"Fowler. WB q AVBE $2 PER HUNDRED. LABG»= w HORNS, 6 cents; Rocks White, Rocks Red, 9 cents; dellvered any time. Month olds, 18¢c. Pullets, all ages, prices aurnllhod. Model Matchery, Kitchener, nt. Ip D MA n C RTLSICCOEE M7 THmee aC â€"â€"take Siendor ‘Tablets, the harmless vegetable corrective that gives you a slim, svelte figure in a natural nonâ€" radi 1 way. $1.50 three weeks‘ treatâ€" ment, postpaid. Roy Kitchen, The Careâ€" ful Chemist, Dept. N, London. ocKER EDGE GARDENS CRANâ€" BROOK, Kent, England, specialize in rare bulbs as supplied to the Dominâ€" on Experimental Farm, Ottawa. Cataâ€" logues free on request, ____ Y URVES ARE IN raAsw1ON, Bur (/ not rotundity. If you would have ‘rnc:rul lines do as scores of others do EDC S Ogh 200 NPW W C L are sure " to get in / MOTORB BOAT FOB SALE.

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