K1 girl and it‘s even. | and she hat‘s odd. «h. Southâ€" UVING hands) v maniâ€" are of o have rood to em lar oing Prof. 1 bef M v nes 0 100K3 outh re expe nan PC. e and Writâ€" the an oc« to the in afâ€" ater rtant. is of of 40 temâ€" are kidâ€" they with you, ) im well you your your int vou IM= 1 Accidents are mental, and the moâ€" torist alertly conscious of the fact Instinctively works a reduction in Ais hazard. So far as the "mentai" fac. tor means something in his own menâ€" tality, he can do much toward taking care of accidents before they happen. He can study their causes, toreaml against them. He can do a splendid, effective job in prevention by testing out his thinking even as he tests his brakes. Does ho keep his thinking properly fueled. probably lubricated? Is he ready to slap his fourâ€"wheel brakes on every wrong, it seeming. ly slight, traffic temptation? Know. ing and doing what he ought to know :‘ and do covers amazing ground. He can promote safety by expecting safety. Accidents are always unbeâ€" longing, wrong » They should novor' be consented to in an alert motor.‘ ist‘s mind. â€" Christian Science Honl-l tor. i« observers now ifll;m,'_' ;r-e mental. The greatest number of accident deaths occur on the highways, Motor vehicle victims in 1935 numbered 36,â€" 000. Since jurisdiction over highways is almost wholly within the states certain difficulties of uniform control _must be overcome. Next are 34.500 deaths occurring from various acciâ€" dental deaths occurring from various accidental causes in homes, These will be deeply investigated and new light is anticipated. Out of last year‘s 100,000 fatalities 16,000 were recorded as occupational. Washington‘s sudden, determined activity in attacking the accident situation grows out of the inescapable conviction that many of these fatalities are readily prevent. able. In fact, the investigators hope that certain facts will presently out. stand like guideposts to avoidance. One may be a fundamental discovery | â€"Accidents, as many physicians and | Accidents Are Largely Mental Possibly Farmer brain child wilt ti tor. We will an 1 Farmer Giese uses a rope, which can be manipulated by _ the poor devil on the stool. It would be unfair to reveal the entire scheme, because the inventor hopes to get rich with its development, but obriously «the big idea is to let that tail swish just so far and no further, The editor must regretfully com. ment that the fundamental thought is not new. Other deep thinkers, long before the day of Inventor Giese, sat up nights with the tail problem and not a few perfected admirable schemes for removing the peril from milking. (p ingey, 22 C _ PT BYer â€" the Irient. liest of cows is a weapon, On occa. sion, it positively zooms bast the ear of the husbandman and whistles as it whams his eye. It is an impersonal instrument that _ swissres without malice, but it is probably the world‘s most hazardous fy swatter. Now the scheme of Farmer Giese is to hold that â€" tail by artificial means. Many farmers have assigned their little boys to the task and have found the practice entirely satisfac. tory up to a limit of approximately three cows but after that the little boys turn restless and are worse than, nothing. Without being too techn It, the editor gladly explain milking it ig vsual for at lea to be exposed to the cow‘s If the milker presses his or against the side of o‘d Bess, possible for Bessie‘s tail to lently in contact with th Just try it some time intabtediiensas dhs: ... On the authority _ of Fay ventor Giese, 2,100 persons in ca last year lost the sight of one eye because 2,100 fretful swung their tails with unwa vigor. As the viectims sat t] their stools, humming innoce lads and wondering what was for supper, tbhose wicked tails out and irreparable damag done. s‘tion to duck, She has been concessions, but to any body who dairy industry, \ has perfected a d rants will keep t] out of the eye of a will eliminate one all hazards on the City people who tion that milk flow Spigot, 2s do root or that the moder makes it bossible to remain in the p bage with his hire cow‘s tail ig only a for chasing flieg â€" ed persons are her & cow is essentiall when oupr forefath one eye because th sition to duek 1 child will turn out We will al be honin And the y 3 positively zooms he husbandman and y ; , [ _"" T006 and Other beers, hat the modern milking machine °s it possible for the dairyman emain in the parlor playing crib. ‘ with his hired man, or that a ‘s tail is only a gentle instrument thasing flieg â€" all such uninform. ersons are herewith advisged that. w is essentially Tust as she was i our forefathers went blind in ©ye because they were in no po. N t dAnal with the tail probleix; and few _ perfected admirable or removing the peril from boys to the task and have practice entirely satisfac. & limit of approximately but after that the litfls _ _ ","*___ 2CTSOn$ in Ameri. ear lost the sight of at least because 2,100 fretful bossies eir tails with unwarranted the victims sat there on ols, humming innocent ba1. wondering what was enmin« do root ar e modern n bossible foj _Dut she is still a perfl who sits and squeezes, authority _ of Farmer.In. mg too technical about gladly explaing that in sual for at least one eve try, The farmer ed a device that keep the tail of ye of any milker te one of the gr on the farm. â€" Inventor Giese‘ 1 out much bet. hoping so. , ___â€"~ > eve 08 B0 flows merrily from a 86 ~Nat was coming wicked tails lashed cajoled into _A rope, which by â€" the poor would be unfair t cow‘s tail. Even may have the bast the ear whistles as it n impersonal 16es _ without y the world‘s damage was largely : that he war. il of any cow nilker and thus ie greatest of her brow one eye XÂ¥ndhurst 1143 THE UNITED FARMERS Co.0PERATIVE COMPANY, LIMITED LIVE STOCK COMMISSION DEPT. Shipping on the coâ€"operative plan has been productive of splendid results. Selling on the open market means real value for the owners. Get in touch with U# . ..; : ind a few Mr .Harold G. Hesler, Secretary of The Royal Bank of Canada, was born in Humberstone, Ont., and joined the Welland Branch of the bank as a Mr. James Muir, for the past four Iyears General Inspector of The Royal Bank of Canada, is a native of Scot. [ !and. Like Mr. Mitchell, he has been | engaged in the profession of banking since boyhood, and has served the ;) Bank in the Dominion and New York. >| Mr. Muir joined the Royal Bank of | Canada at Moose Jaw in 1912, after | serving three years with the Comâ€" | mercial Bank of Scotland. Ltd., and one year with the chartered bank of India in London, England. In 1916 he was transferred to the Inspector‘s IDepartment at Winnipeg, and later in the same year became Accountant in the Winnipeg Grain Exchange Branch. In 1917 he was transferred to the Credit Department, Head Office, and appointments as Inspector, Supervig. | or‘s Department, Winnipeg, and as| Assistant Supervisor at New York, j followed in quick succession, His loâ€" | cation in New York as Assistant Suâ€" c pervisor of the bank‘s business in j Central and South America extended C over three years. In 1928 he returned g to Winnipeg as Manager. His apâ€"| j pointment as General Inspector, with r headquarters in Montreal, followed in t December 1931. & _ _ the balance at 4% interest. _ . State your requirements and write for details to: FARMS FOR SALE IN ONTARIO Some good properties at fair prices, part cash and extended terms on Union Stock Yards, West Toronto LIVE STOCK MARKETING Appointment of M:. Burwham L. a | Mitchell, Mr. James Muir and Mr. 1| Harold G. Hesler, as Assistant Genâ€" || eral Managers of The Royal Bank of | Canada has been announced. | Mr. Mitchell, a native of Merigo. | mish, N.S., and since 1934 Supervis. |or of Ontario Branches, becomes Asâ€" sistant General Manager following a ‘long and extensive career with the | bank in many parts of Canada and ’Newfoundland. He joined the Union Bank of Halifax in 1903, serving as a 'junlor at the New Glasgow Brancu. When the Union Bank was absorbed ‘by the Royal Bank of Canada in 1910, Mr. Mitchell was moved to Halifax, and two years later became Acconâ€" tant of that branch. In 1915, he was appointed Manager of the St. John‘s Newfoundland Branch, following two years‘ service as Assistant Manager there. Between 1919 and 1925 he serv. ed successfully as Manager at Haliâ€" ; fax and at Vancouver; in 1919 he was , appointed Manager at Toronto; and f five years later Supervisor of Ontario ¢ Branches. As Assistant General Man. g ager, Mr. Mitchell will continue to suâ€"| , pervise Ontario Branches from head. : quarters at Toronto. 4 NEW ROYAL BANK APPOINTMENTS Next year‘s district Scout Jamborâ€" ees planned in England include a Northern Counties Jamboree, to be held at Raby Castle, the seat of Lord Barnard, County Scout Commissioner for Durbam. ’ Nearly 400 Cubs, Brownies, Scouts, Guides, Rovers, Rangers and Scoutâ€" ers and Guiders attended a special Sunday afternoon service in St. John‘s Church, Kitchener, to witness the presentation and dedication of the colours of the 6th Kitchener Troop and to participate in a service of . worship led by Rev. J. N. H. Willis. B. L. Mitchell, James Muir and Harold G. Hesler made Assistant Genâ€" eral Managers An old _ English village, including castle, lychâ€"gate and maypole, was the setting of the Ulster Boy Scouts‘ Bazzar, at King‘s Hall, Belfast. Her Grace the Duchess of Abercorn was Chairman. has been presented | to Church Scout Group of N.B., the gift of Mr. anc H. Northrup, in memory | a former member of the "Scouting develops a reliable and Latest census figures for trict of Toronto show a to 700 Wolft Cubs, Boy Scou Scouts, Sea SCOLLG ank Can: new permanent Scout 20 6L RCICHCC;â€" @nd ipervisor of Ontario stant General Manâ€" will continue to suâ€" ranches from head. to. , for the past four ector of The Royal s a native of Scot.| tchell, he has been . fession of banking q d has served the 1 ion and New York. f he Royal Bank of © Jaw in 1912, after 1 ‘s with the Comâ€" i cotland. Ltd., and | ; nhoytawat z_1 ‘"s Scouts énd Scroiuterl. Group of Sai}xt-:l_(;!;-r; _ Mr. and Mrs3. Isaac memory of their son, for the Dis a total of 9,. Scouts, Rover t camp site the Trinity troop. "'W&u!" roared the farmer. "You thieving rascal, it is only fifty cents usually." "Yes," said the blacksmith, "but I have to buy some of that high priced pork you have just sold to the 1 butcher." Now let me wind up this crack at the farmer by relating a story â€" it happened during the war. The farmâ€" er in question came into the black. smith‘s shop with a share to sharpen. Whilst the smith was doing it, the farmer regaled him with his latest exâ€" ploit. He had sold half a dozen hags. He had expected at the best ton dolâ€" lars a piece for them, but, he added, "I knew heâ€"the butcherâ€"had to have them so I charged him thirty dollars & piece, and he had to take them or leave them." The share sharpened, the smith handed it to the farmer. | The latter said: "How much?" "A dollar and a half," said the forgeman. ‘ "What‘" roared the farmer "Yan ’I know I have to pay twenty.â€"five cents for each couple of bags, so why fill wheat sacks or flour sacks when bran and crushed oat sacks hold so much more. I guess I am not better than the other fellow. We all want as much for a nickel as a philosopher would want for a dime. "*]| (By "Irish Cobbler" in Port Arthur X, , Newsâ€"Chronicle) t« We farmers often cuss and swear S | about the prices we are charged for * | goods we buy, but seldom do you ©lever hear a farmer berating another * | farmer for services rendered . I often â€"| wonder why no kick is made, Long a arguments often take place over the $ | sale of a horse, or a hog or a beast, 4| as go price, and it ends in a take it ° | or leave it, or a compromise, both sides * giving way on a fiftyâ€"fifty basis. But ~| when it comes to threshing, or buz-' + zsing wood or grinding grain, jobs that some good farmers take on as ‘| sidelines, often wonder there is not | | more grumbling. Take threshing, for | instance. It is a thing that has to be | done, but whether I get fifty cents | a bushel for grain or a do‘llar, it makes|â€" |no difference to the price I pay for|â€" threshing, and threshing is a costly affair. Threshing clover seed is a slow | ! business, but the clock ticks along| © inexorably, I am paying five cents a|| minute for threshing, and the seed may bring three cents a pound â€" or thirty cents. I suppose the only truth | is about it is that the law of averages | t works out in the long run, and that what I lose this year I gain the next. The same naturally holds good of| n grinding that grain for feeding on the farm. I must have chop for the stock, | en and whether the barley is worth forty | be cents or ninety cents a bushel I must| w pay two bits for each two sacks I take down to the grinder. Here, howâ€" ever, I can get a bit of my own back.| pr Farmers vs. Farmers The appointments of Mr. Mitohell, Mr. Muir and Mr. Hesler become ef. fective immediately, junior in 1910. He served in various capacities in _ several branches throughout Ontario until 1915, when he was transferred to Winnipeg. Afâ€" | ter enlistment in 1916 and service overseas, he rejoined the bank at the Havana Branch in July 1919, and shortly after was appointed Accoun. tant at Cienfuegos, Cuba. The follow. ing year he was transferred to the Su. pervisor‘s Department, Havana, and in 1928 became Joint Manager of Haâ€" vana Branch. In 1930, Mr. Hesler was moved to Head Office, Montreal, where he has since been closely in touch with the bank‘s foreign busiâ€" ness, having visited personally many of the bank‘s foreign branches as well| as the more important offices across the Dominion. He was appointed Gen. | eral Inspector in 1931. A further tribute by the Chief Medical Officer to the work being voluntarily done in the quakeâ€"de. stroyed city of Quetta by Indian Ro. ver Scouts: "Yesterday I went in the morning to watoh a group of Rovers take a dead sweeper‘s body from a house. The sweeper had be n an out. cast, yet the Rovers, high caste Hin. dus and Mdhammedans, did the work which the authorities did not desire to ask the soldiers to do. It was a magnificent effort on the part of the Scouts."" Photographs of the Rovers at work show them, in gas masks, carrying bodies from the wreckage, digging graves for hundreds of vie.| tims and giving a last salute to the| unknown dead. The Scout Bronze Cross, given for gallantry at serious personal risk, was awarded a Jamaican Scout, Marâ€" tin Watkis, aged 13, of the 15th St. Ann (Mount Zion) Group. Scout Wat. kis entered a burning house and res. cued a crippled woman 90 years of age, whose presence in the building had been overlooked until the house was aflame from floor to rootf. efficient citizen. In these panicky days Scouts_wm be needed â€" men who are prepared and can meet un. of mind _ and resourcefuiness," â€" Lord Somers, former Governor and Chief Scout f0f Yictoria | AusiFralin ow s ‘mer Governo'r†and' Victoria, Australia. l DRUMHELLER, Alta.,â€"It should be a Merry Christmas in this coal minâ€" ing district this year. The biggest payroll in five years was distributed last week, $137.000. Some of the 30 mines have been working at full caâ€" pacity. \ The Institute of Practical and Applied Psychology 910 Confederation Bullding The behavior ofo mankind seems to prove that we never need doubt the patience of heaven, George â€" I think he‘s a bookkeep. er. At least, he never returned the book he borrowed from me last winter, Helen â€" What‘s Franklin‘s busiâ€" ness? T hose The chief draw back to twin beds is that you have no fellow sufferer to get for an extra blanket. The Golfer â€" Let me remind you that the hole is only 4% inches across and there is the whole world outside It. anyone missing a putt as short né as that. The fellow who "does it now" has time to do something else while the other fellow is still thinking about it. Sambo â€" Lomme see. Oh yea. De wust scared Ah ebber wuz een ma life was when ma wife lost her job. Mose â€" Once Ah had a cirevs lion dat had broke out ob his cage take adder me and run me for‘ blocks. Dat‘s de wurst scared Ah ebber wuz cen ma life. When wuz yo‘ de wust scared een yo‘ life, Sambo? \ there‘s Ein. Gert‘s verses are punk, Ep‘s statues were junk. And no one could understand Ein. Issue No. 51 Physician â€" Are you ill? Let me see your tongue, please. Patient â€" It‘s no use, doctor. No tongue can tell how bad I feel, THE STEIN soNG There‘s a notable family named Stein, There‘s Gert and there‘s Ep and: The Spectator â€" I can‘t understand Some of these city slickers visiting on the farm soon learn there is more to milking a cow than simply drainâ€" ing her crankcase. Young Father (wearily) stairs in his cradle. Canvasser â€" Is the master of the house in? start something to help the communiâ€" ty, those who have the most, give most", Bright Lad â€" Chiefs. Teacher â€" Correct. Now can you tell me what the women were called? There was silence, â€" and then a small boy waved his hands. Teacher â€" Well, Junior? Junior (proudly) â€" Mischiefs. URRUITP 2sE ECCCE €2000 equip yourself for ‘better things. Study leisurely in the gum of your own home. Write or particulars of fascinating correspondence courses â€" They were discussing the North American Indian in a rural school when the teacher asked if any pupil could tell what the tribe leaders were called. Why Not Em&lï¬y Them Proâ€" fitably? Specialised training leads to Increased efficiency. Increased Efficiency _ means Increased Esrnlnf Capacity. Overcome Inferiority Complex, develop mental power, and ** i8 YC) QHnet.t ior a woman to keep a secret, especially in a modern bathing suit. Girl (readily) â€" Not at as I am able to hear the At a fashionable restaurant during ’the Christmas holidays & girl had jJust finished luncheon and was pre. paring to light a cigarette, when the waiter showed an elderly lady to the table. Newcomer (acidly) â€" I do hope you won‘t mind me eating whilst you are smoking? Correct this sentence â€" * And he who i for a little prune THE WAY oF a MAN He picked the peachcrinos, the blondes, the gay brunettes, _ _He.wagered he could make them all, and won a lot of bets; The maidens with the painted lips were prone for sweet romance, He liked a slendcr platinum for rhumbas at a dance; But when it came to marriage that was a different tune, ‘ It is very dificult for HJAVE ncARD y o U favored peaches fell Hours â€" He‘s upâ€" all, so long orchestra, When we Astaire, however, also is a careful dresser out of pictures. He has a yen for neckties, with hundreds of them én his wardrobe. l Astaire‘s high rating is attributâ€" able to his recent pictures, especially "Top Hat" one tailor said. "He has done more this year to encourage the wearing of tailcoats than anyâ€" body else." 1 K. Mellon of Pittsburgh, nephew of Andrew Mellon; Walter D. Teague, New York industrial designer and Fred Astire, the dancerâ€"actor. ; Edsel Ford, Detroit auto manuâ€" facturer; William â€" Rhinelander Stewart, New York real estate operâ€" ator; Anthony J. Drexel Biddle, New York and Philadelphia society figure; William Goadby Loew, New â€"York broker; Adolphus Busch II, of the St. Louis Brewing family; â€" Marshail Field, Chicago merchant; Isaac Newâ€" 2n_Perry, Chicago financier; Richard | 1 EOASSDPPRUTIUE t EC 420 U01EW, The ten leaders, drawn from a composite selection by recognized style authorities: NEW YORKâ€"The sartorial paceâ€" setters of Unitd States are its busiâ€" ness leadres, a group of New York‘s leading tailors agreed last week in picking a list of ten bestâ€"dressed men. Hollywood contributed only one! actorâ€"pim‘!;le-_footed Fred Astaire. | Big Business Leaders Set The Pace For Sartorial Perfecâ€" tion â€" Only One Actor in The List TEN BESTâ€"DRESSED MEN IN U.S.A. With this country taking 50 out of {the 87 prizes at the international !show, a certain amount of crowing by Canadian farmers is excusable. Our agriculture â€" like that of all the rest of the world â€" has been havâ€" ing a hard time of it, but it is not for lack of trying or of keeping the standard up. | As usual also we have grounds for pride over the repeated success of Canadian sheepraisers. Ontario once again sent sheep that could not be matched. With the blue ribbon for sheep coming so often to Canada against the best exhibits of the huge Chicago show, we‘are clearly in a position to take care of our own needs, should a revival of the longâ€" depressed wool market call for an inâ€" crease in the depleted Canadian flocks. to It is when we turn from the wheat n awards, however, that we have es. pecial reason to cheer for the Canâ€" adian farmer. Our wheatâ€"grower may A have certain natural advantages of climate and soil which aid him mn-l ol it terially in winning championships 6 but in barley and oats, in which growing conditions here and in the United States are more nearly equalâ€" ized, our grainâ€"growers did equally l: well. Perhaps the most interesting of ‘|all the awards for field crops is that *\ for soya beans. In this comparatively new venture an Ontario grower took| first in the grain and hay show. It!! will be interesting to see whether, 1 with this encouragement, there is| any increase in the acreage of this|] |crop in the future. The soya bean has|© been described as the most valuable|I product of the soil yet discovered in |® the sense that it may be used tor"l more and more widely varied pur.| t poses than any other food plant’fl grown by man. Research into the reâ€"| i! markab‘y diverse uses to which the|a soya bean and its very numerous pro.| {, ducts and byâ€"products can be put S is being carried on in more than one:P‘ laboratory in this country at the pre.‘ it sent time, and the decision of the| h Chicago judges that the Canadian & beans exibited there were of the| m highest qunlity is assurance that we‘ f2 have the best possible raw malerialiai to work with. providéed we can grow | ar it profitably against the enormous'g'e Oriental production. 1 5.: Observes the Montreal Star: "We have grown so accustomed to a Canâ€" adian winning the trophy for the best wheat grown on this Continent at the annual International Grain and Live. stock Exposition at Chicago that the repitition of the feat this year may | , | be accepted more or less â€" and perâ€" "htps too much â€" as a matter of |course. Both the Grand Champion. ’shlp and the Reserve Grand Cham. | pionship have once again come to this | country. It is interesting to note that | the latter award went to a sample of durum wheat from British Columbia linstead of from one of the Prairie ,Provinces, the usual breeding ground for "extraâ€"special" specimens. Year by year the frontiers of Canada‘s wheat areas are pushed westward and northward as the patient experiment. ‘ing of breeders and students develops stronger and quicker ripening vari. eties. Should the high hopes of those who have been working on wheat disâ€" eases be fulfilled and a type which will be immune to rust be put into farmers‘ hands â€" something that is reported to be on the eve of accomâ€" plishment â€" an â€" enormous increase in the potential wealth of the country will result. Some Grounds For Crowing ‘C*]| My fortieth birthday came and went ’}‘,wlthout causing me a pang. I was *‘ busy with my family and content with "tlife. One day the youngest, with the "â€" callousness of youth, informed me "*! that the "kids" would be much more + |comfortable if I would go out some. ; where on the nights he had them in. ‘C| With a feeling that my family had _ |outgrown their urgent need of me. I was being shelved with the other fortyâ€"andâ€"overs. It happened on the street car. I sat down beside an elderly woman, whose chin was quivering ominously, I fearâ€" ed she might not have a ticket, and Ust wiil be presented for t submitted in this contest w December 23rd, 1985. Other next five best designs. Make a copy of this design 4%, inches wide. ‘The choice of a Water Colour Landâ€" > scape Course, or an Original Magazine Ilins. ~ tration, a Political or Sg)ortm. Cartoon, or a Comic l?nhw-ing made by a professions] arâ€" . bink t sevsue ie is ts s o o Then there is the great soul who ’hu spent years nursing an invalid. Release comes, but it does not bring happiness to the sweet.â€"faced, middle. aged woman. Her hands are empty, her days dreary. In a darkened room she sits and weeps for the yoke she bore so long. ‘ To every woman who has been busy around a home until she has pass »d her fortieth birthday there comes a day when her duties grow less and for the first time in her life she has | spare hours. She has never been a | member of any clubs; there was alâ€" ways too much to do, and if a kind friend takes her to one, she feels rather a misfit, She isn‘t up on cur. rent events, and she doesn‘t know ‘ who‘s who in musical circles. Misorâ€" ably she wishes she had stayed at home. The Entry Fee is ty| _ In the storage of potatoes; it has y |always to be remembered that the 11| potato is a living organism and that r, there are two periods when respiraâ€" is| tion may become of practical imâ€" ig| portance. One of these is immediâ€" ; ately after digging, and the other a e|period of several days following a n sudden rise in storage temperature, p| To prevent sweating, special attenâ€" .] tion should be given to the ventilâ€" t|ation of potatoes handled in â€"bulk â€"| immediately after digging, and also >|after sudden rise in temperature â€"| following a period of steady cool t storage. The lower the storage temâ€" :| perature, the higher will be the inâ€" .'itiul rate of respiration at a sudden | higher temperature. Sudden rises jand falls in storage temperatures |are to be avoided always. The early _ fall is the time to provide all possible | ‘air cirulation by keeping ventilators | and doors open until there is danâ€"| !g'er of freezing. _ On warm days ' ldoors should be closed and opened | only at night when the air is cooler. | & ‘The amount of ventilation required | * is thatâ€"whinh swill Ressucan o 20 E2C 4 (Janet Jameson, in the Toronto Mail and Empire) T se en t P eired is that which will keep the potatoes dry. â€" From early December onwards all ventilators and doors should be closed and protected to prevent the poiatoes from being frozen. Women,A Forty HAVE YOU A FLAIR FOR DESIGNING ? ONTARIO ARCHIVES When Potatoes Breathe . 39 drcamed vel for , 39 Lee Avenue, Toronto, Can. return o(.:'nu: p:n?::. PLUG SMOKING ToBacco DIXIE O v e r treatments cost only one dollar. _ "l‘llv& lxgâ€"fâ€"-.sl(),omo o% 150 tablets IE: .00 or 50 for 50 cents. ourdnv-t' it. ‘Try Philling Linm Vaam _ imelle it, Try Phillips Live Yeastâ€"it‘s nicer, it. ve Yeastâ€"it‘s nicer, it‘s better lnrnon economical. _ s« 1 g e OOY noV Te Cl plexion clears up in no time. Pimples MM‘.MI’ A-no" “mwyn skin takes on the fresh, rosy colour of health and beauty. And furthermore, Phillips Live Yeast is more economical. Jt dm»t'ï¬l It keeps indefinitely. You can pu «mMmps Jive Yeast helps natural digesâ€" tion, improves the appetite and mikes the sluggish system active in a healthy normal way. Constipation is overcome, the blood is purified and enriched. The acids and impuritiee which clog the skin are carried away and the comâ€" necond it is very rich in the vitamins B1 and B2 so necessary for health and myn Yeast helps natural digesâ€" your dealer or write Fairview Co., 49 Abell St., Toronto. "*. Remover, Exp« asites. Saves feed Live Yeast, the new English disco is different to other forms of yoast. First of all it is pleasant in fiavour casy t:) take. You will enjoy it. SING A SONG OF DIXIE! LIVE YEAST Clears Up Pimples Pi:lTla and many other skin :roublel yield to Phillips Live Yeast. Phillips ’ CHARLOTTETOWN,. . E iz hq Prince Edward Island foxes purchasâ€" ed by the Japanese Government for an experimental station have left Charlottetown on their long journey, The special pedigreed male animals, shipped in two crates, will cross Can. ada by rail and be put aboard a linep for Japan. Classified Advertising Japan Purchases Foxes From P.E.1 pipe, x> ® Fine tobacco, aged and ripe. Longer lasting, fragrant, too DixiePlug‘s the smoke for you ! the conductor did look cross. 1 asked her if I could help, but she shook her head. _ Then evidently feeling the need of a confident, she told me the trouble. She lived with her son and his wife; the girl was the acme of modern efficiency; "gho doesn‘t want me muddling about hér kitchen." What a tragedy And yet the story had its use. I had a little extra money, My new friend is a good knitter (which I am nct). Result Four pairs of mittens for little hands taat other. wise might be cold this winter, and two fortyâ€"andâ€"overs taken off the shelf. Fresh as a daisy al _ weeks‘ supply at one timeâ€"â€" save money .;..f‘!?‘f,’.'.“‘," days‘ sHOOT Your Horses SUR tâ€"8H( BoT ANXD w pels @ll Internal ed, costs a trifle. & stamped odâ€" English discovery , good to your , and M