West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 27 Feb 1936, p. 3

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ESSING 4 BUDGET \A )} 1 d 1e Visitor (In Florida)â€"Tell me, aro these alligators that you see around here amphibious? Youthâ€"I‘ll say they are. They‘ll bite hell ou; of you. Bacon sationalist and wit,. was a much sought after dinner guest by the great hostesses, But on one occaâ€" sion he came a cropper. When seatâ€" ed at dinner next to Lady Griffin on whose other side was Sir George Alexander (handsome actorâ€"managâ€" er ), with whom she was obviously anxious to talk â€" observing signs of inattention as he spoke to her| had dwi play w «+ :\ r SA lunch at After lunc mund tGosse, noted critic and author is told by Ernest Rhys (in "Every man Remembers"). Gosse â€" "a mai Charlie Chaplin â€" once negotiated a $10,000 a week contract while in the bathtub of a New York hotel. It was shortly after Charlie had burst into fame. He had finished a $1,250 contract, made in Los Angelâ€" es, and before signing again, he deâ€" cided to go to New York and "see what he could do for himself." reâ€" lates Benjamin B. Hampton (in A History of the Movies"), Accomâ€" panied by his brother, Syd Chaplin, Charlio registered at a New York hotel. Before they had time to unâ€" pack their suitâ€"cases, a visitor was announced. Charlie was in the bathâ€" tub, and while the visitor â€" a movie magnate, of course â€" _ and Syd Chaplin tramped around the bedâ€" room, "the comedian conducted busiâ€" ness negotiations between splashes."| "I want; $10,000 a week saiary,"| Charlie presently announced. ' The magnate wrote a brief memo-r randum agreement on hotel note.| paper "Cha; If Oh .. [, [ C CCInt COVit Declall aside â€" I shall never forget them!"‘ she adds {in â€" her reminiscenses, "Discreâ€" tions.") Lady Warwick adds that she and Charlie Chaplin "became friendâ€" ly very quickly." and that "he opâ€" ened up his heart" to her. This is what he told her: \ "If I‘d had my will, I would have been a tragedian, for I feel the pity | and tragedy of life so intensely, You' cannot imagine what it meant to me to wake up day after day, and reâ€" member that before bedtime I must have devised some fresh buffoonery to make folks laugh, It is the one fly in the ointment and, at times, robs my success of its savor,." "Those quick xi»;w:émem whether the rain was at an the umbrella could be laid > nvaiiarissindilh, s 0h .0 k 1 4 01 â€"who is visiting Hollywood â€" are old friends. Lady Warwick tells of an evening spent with Charlie at H. G. Wells house in Essex, England â€"â€"although he doesn‘t live there any more since his wife died. After dinâ€" ner, relates Lady Warwick, there were _ charades, One . was _ "The Flood." Charlie was Noah, and when he came out of the impromptu Ark his antics with his umbrelia were "absolutely irresistible.‘ "Those quick movements to see Lt se & 1 stand ! Cencious surprise for not sound very thril body, but those who off from treacle puc length of timeâ€"well The "piece de French so inviti treacle pudding weakness with t median. And it v eyes" to see the into that puddi: delicious surprise not sound vervy Speaking of favorite dishes Charlie Chaplin last visited 1 â€"his old home, by the wayâ€"] guest of honor at a Ilunchann Pithy Anecdotes Of the Famoug r Exports Up A Million Dollars T C harl_ie Chaplin exan 1y would lle @nate wrote a brief memo agreement on hotel note id, _ adds _ Ben _ Hampton ething bitterâ€"sweet about So it went until the circle led to four, and the next led out to N. P. Wills, the ngue 1i NY leave ers ). Gosse â€"â€" "a man ue" â€" was host at a : Saville Club, London. the company sat around as one man after anothâ€" 34. This incrtase, ,153,500 pounds in tly all in the British ok 98,843,900 pounds, . Lucas (ofg " m timeâ€"well, ir!_vitinglyi ~call 1934 pray do. aid Lady *k contract while in a New York hotel. after Charlie had : end of Septâ€" 1y â€"100,000,000 of â€" $15,756,171 $6,700 _ pounds n the first nine e brilliant conver ‘"sly Call it was a _ â€"â€" a particular the â€" grea; little coâ€" was a "sight for sore ) way Charlie walked Wi e«vorite dishes, when last visited London by the wayâ€"he was at a luncheon given (of "Punch" fame), resistance," as the AbDc 6. 1t was,â€"too, a for him, It may thrilling to everyâ€" who have been cut pudding _ for any well, they‘ll underâ€" poke Dominion‘s 4oo sNOW a lollars over Exports of and H. G of at an end, and ut oir Ed ind author he bath i bou Sn n Ed dnve out pains and stiffness, and give you a new lease on life. PHOSFERINE has been remarkably successful in alâ€" most countless cases of poor health and depressed spirits. It will prove just as good for you. PHOSFERINE is splendidly effecâ€" tive at all ages for combatting fatigue, sleepiessness, general debility, retarded convalescence, nerves, anaemic condiâ€" tion, indigestion, rheumatism, grippe, neuralgia, neuritis and loss of appetite. Get PHOSFERINE from your drugâ€" gist nowâ€"in liquid or tablet formâ€"at the following reduced prices:â€"3 sizes, 50c, $1.00, $1.50. The $1:00 size is nearly four times the 50¢ size, and the $1.50 size is twice the $1.00 size. 16 Wells is concentrated energy. You take just nfewtinydropseechday...butthey are drops packed with new life. Quickly they build you up, soothe your nerves, From the very first day you take PHOSFERINE you will feel better, sleep better, eat better. PHOSFERINE Don‘t stay low in bodily health and spirits. Do what thousands have done. Take PHOSFERINE. And recapture fresh, vigorous buoyancy quickly. PHOSFERINE, the great British Tonic, will do that for you, as it has done for thousands in England and Canada. see ASK YOUR DOCTOR FIRST, MOTHER REGAIN VIGOUR quickly PuriLLirs‘" Milk of 1h wine Pt Magne PReR U Vatmiets umt 44â€"1.0 d "Phillips‘" When You Buy. Your child deserves it; for your own peace of mind, see that you get it â€" Genâ€" wune Phillips‘® Milk of .€1uynesizv. Also in Tablet Form: l\nnw, chance l.very day, unthinkingly, mothers take the advice of unqu;fiified persons â€"â€" instead of their doctors‘ â€" on remedies for their children. If they kmew what th» scientists3 l\‘{ww. they would merer iake this In view of the increasing popularâ€" ity of goat keeping in Canada, it is 43| observed that goats require approxiâ€" e! mately the same care as dairy cows. ,{lGoats should be housed in wet, cold ; weather, and Curing the fall months d' they should be brought into the goat barn at night As the weather beâ€" l}’ comes colder they will be more and " | more confined, until finally in the * | winter months their only outing will ©| be once. a day for exercise. Clover or ‘|alfalfa hay is the best _ allâ€"round k roughage and goats should be fed °| twice daily on as much as they will eat up readily. Cabbages or roots in 9' the form of turnips or mangels are !| also relished and may be given reâ€" *| gularly. Oats should constitute the | main grain, fed twice daily, morning | and evening. Five to ten per cent. of ) oileake or 25 per cent, bran may be |added to the oats. Goats vary â€" in | their capacity for grain, so that each goat should be given â€" what 'seems to be the necessary amount to | produce the greatest flow of milk. |: | Goats always like browsing and their| craving in this connection, states A.| j ‘A. MacMillan in the recently publishâ€" € |ed bulletin of which he is the | , author, "Goat Husbandry in Canâ€" ada," issued by the Dominion â€" Deâ€" partment of Agriculture, may _ be satisfied if a few tree limbs from the bush are brought to the yard in which the goas are turned out for exâ€" ercise. Before You Give Your Child an Unknown Remedy to Take llips‘ Milk of Magr are now on sale a es every where. Eact s the equivalent of aspooniul of Genâ€" ur child." nember this Winter Care of Goats Of calnmaal m..s 1 _____"_ * + * 007 do the work of calomel but have no calomel or mercury in lhm.'tnkkf&r Carter‘s Little Liver Pills by mamea is t NS ®" mame! Stubbornly refuse anything else. Z¢, ell, it takes those go« "â€"Oi Carter‘s Little Liver Pllls to got these two mfsiiineetnien e cel ‘up up". make the bile flow freoly. They do the wo ‘The I!ver should out two pounds of hflbflohhmm . If this bile is not flowing freely, your food "t digest It just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats your stomach, Ymnteaa:&p.u,nng Poisons go into the body, and you feal sour, n:ku:vl.hwlwldbohm mere bowe. movement doesn‘taiways get &t the cause. You need something that works on the liver as well. It takes those good, old ‘artas‘a uy y S And You‘ll Jump Out of Bed in the . _‘ Memlag Rera to Go WAKE UP your LIVER BILEâ€" tors Say PHILLIPS® For Your Child child." Ailk of MADS IN CaNADA And .j‘leyay:e Say equentlyâ€"used ctors, for over "PHILLIPS® e safe remedy & !Growing Deaf With Head _ If you are growing hard of hearing. and fear catarrhal deafness, or if you have roaring, rumbling, hissing noises in your ears, go to your drugâ€" gist and get 1 oz. of Parmint (double strength) and add to it !4 pint of hot water and a little sugar. Take 1 tablespoonful four times a day. This will often bring quick relief from the distressing head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breathâ€" ing become easy, and the mucous stop dropping into the throat. It is easy to take, Anyone who is threatâ€" ened with catarrhal deafness or who has head noises should give this preâ€" scription a trial, FILOSOPHEE: Don‘t undo others as you have been undone by them.â€" some of the things I don‘t like : lBrisk peopleâ€"lots of cream in cofâ€" feeâ€"oneâ€"minute eggsâ€"ninety deâ€" grees in the shadeâ€"wall mottoesâ€" zero weather â€"â€" rare steak â€" long goodâ€"byesâ€"pep meetinzsâ€"rcommun- ity â€" singing â€" narrow beds â€" short bedsâ€"excessively dignified personsâ€" potato _ salad â€" spinach â€" telephone solicitations â€" smugness â€" insistent cheerfulness â€" applause over the radioâ€"slavish servantsâ€"high pressâ€" ure salesmanshipâ€"secondâ€"rate hotels â€"â€"secondâ€"rate drug stores â€" genuine tea partiesâ€"reckless drivingâ€"habâ€" itual backâ€"slappersâ€"persistent cigâ€" aret smokersâ€"lipstick application in public places â€" cold filoors â€" warm bedrooms. _ . _ For the best essay of not more than 260 words on the subject of Chrad * Modern Hand Lettering was A SMILE OR TWO A football player in a small colâ€" lege was extraordinarily dumb, but to the surprise of everyone, he passâ€" ed of all his work, including a specâ€" ial examination in chemistry, _ The chemistry professor was asked about it, and he said, "I decided I would let him pass if he answered 50 per cent. of the questions correctly. ‘ "I asked him two questionsâ€"one he _ answered wrongâ€"one _ right. Therefore I let him pass, The first was ‘What colour is blue vitrol?"" He answered, ‘Pink.‘ That time he was wrong. The other was ‘How do you} make sulphuric acid"‘ â€" He answered that he didn‘t know Thas simeâ€" L. mend your essay in on or before March 7th, Twentyâ€"Five Cents. 25 per cent of bo""l_r_d_oq to the winner, 15 p‘c‘t for tha «e Here is a themselves Noises? Try This. _ The annual gift of Australian Boy Scouts to Roland House, the East London Settlament, and Rosemary Home, the Scout Association‘s conval. escent home at Herne Bay, was not overiooked at Christmas, It was, to The Alberta Scout census shows 7,156 Scouts, Cubs an and 736 leaders. Seventyâ€"tw o camps were held. the thira L21," 2110@ 15 p‘c‘t for the second prize, and 10 p‘o‘t for the third prize. All contestants will receive the results by mail. ‘* fo The highest Roumania: decoration the Virtutea Cere (Scout Virtue), has been av His Majesty King Carol II Baden Powell. "In all my years in connection with the Windsor Juvenile Court, I have no recollection of a Boy Scout having appeared before me on any criminal charge." â€"â€" Magistrate Brodie, ad. dressing the annual meeting of the Border Cittes® Boy Scouts‘ Associaâ€" tion. right HJAVE y scouting @ f Here * There ( y Everywhere â€" A brother to every other Scout, without regard to race or creed . Q WHAT I LIKE (or do not like) ABOUT MODERN HAND â€" LETTERING ncARD real opportunity for artists, authors, everyone to express on an interesting topic and also win a prize. A possible sale offered for practical essays. highest Roumanian Scout y o U acid. ~He answered know. _ Thay time he Virtutea Cercetaseasca been awarded by 39 LEE AVE., TORONTO nsus for 1935 s and Rovers â€"two summer to Lord We have noticed in recent years that people do not carry umbrellas like they used to and they go into hard rains withou; coats or hats and just take a good soaking. Husbandâ€"Shut up! This is ter carriage than ours, Woman-Goodness, George! This is not our baby! © This is the wrong carriage, Opimion, and we are taught not to have any opinions.â€"The big ideas are not conceived by the timeâ€"clock system. They are the spiritual efâ€" florescence of humble minds.. (This was true last week, but not today).â€" There are too many people in the business, Let‘s you and I get toâ€" gether and have some of the other joints closed up.â€"If you can‘t say No, you can‘t expect to live within your income.â€"If you weren‘t speedy, employers used to be satisfied if you were accurate, but now you must be both.â€"Loneliness is universal . . . No human soul ever finds a perfect match. biessed are the meek, for they shall imtherit what is left of the earth after everybody else gets through.â€"The reason people don‘t vote as they used to . is that; voting presupposes an opinion, and We are tanrht ‘nai ka wey, ngland, H. W. Waters has been retained as consulting exâ€" pert by the president and directâ€" ors of the Pacific Exposition on the World‘s Fair to be held in Los Angeles. _ His first task will be the selection, in conjunction with the civic authorities, of a site for the forthcoming World‘s Fair and an examination of transportation facilities. a 00 q OGg D VC V Cdlld« dian National Exhibition for 12 years and consultant to the Briâ€" tish Empire Exhibition at Wemâ€" bley, England, H. W. Waters has Dr. E. Benes, the the Czechoslovak 1 many years been Czechoslovak Boy S Universal tribute was paid by Boy Scout troops to his late Majesty, King George. A notable example was that of a Toronto troop in one of the poorer downtown sections, which met on Monday evening for its usual moeting. Before the Scoutmaster‘s ar. rival word had been received of the King‘s death, and when the Scout leader appeareq threeâ€"quarters of the boys, many of them of foreign par. ontage, had voluntarily entered the chapel and were sitting in silence, 1n1 token of respect to His Late Maincty Boy Scouts . of Rajputana, India, were highly commended for two days of continuous reseue work during the recent _ heavy floods in nearby dig. tricts. 1936, with an entry fee of General manager of ’ A party of Scoutsfrom the 20th, 58th, 1%3rd and 136th Toronto Troops were January weekâ€"end guests of the 1st Huntsville Troop for the local Ski Carnival. In a ski race, honors went to the local Scouts. During their stay the Toronto boys were shown the plant of the Angloâ€"Cana. dian Leather Company, where the dif. ferent processes were explained and} lemonstrated. each a choice frozen lamb for their Christmas dinner. Boy Scouts of World Fair Expert e new President of Republic has for President of the Scouts Association, was paid by Boy is late Majesty, able example was oop in one of the the Canaâ€" in silence, in Late Majesty, a betâ€" Writâ€"Wireâ€"or Telephone LÂ¥ndburst 1143 THE UNITED FARMERS CO.OPERATIVE COMPANY, LIMITZ LIVE STOCK COMMISSION DEPT. Union Stock Yards. West Toronto 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 us. Mr. Ignatieff is a grandson of a famous Russian statesman of the In the first place, Mr. Ignatieff is the sixth student of Trinity College during the pas; ten years who has been awarded a Rhodes scholarship. The list is as follows: 1926, Mr. Esâ€" cott Reid of Toronto; 1927, Mr. W. Lyndon Smith of Windsor; 1928, ‘Mr, George 8. Cartwright of Toronâ€" to; 1929, Mr. C. H. Little of Owen Sound; 1931, Mr. J,. L. Stewart of Toronto. At Trinity College the number of students is strictly limitâ€" ed and it is, therefore, remarkable that so many of its students should have been chosen as Rhodes scholars during the past ten years. The selection of Mr. George Ignaâ€" tieff of Trinity College, Toronto, as one of the two Rhodes scholars for 1986 from the Province of Ontario is something which suggests several very interesting comments. Sixth Trinity Student Awarded Coveted Scholarship in 10 Years Rhodes Scholarship Awarded to Trinity College Student The school prospered and the origâ€" inal stock holders donated their shares to the school so that the school now "owns itself" as they say in Denmark, This is the position of many . of the Folk High Schools. They are free of debt and they beâ€" long to the farm group or the labor group who use them. They are inâ€" dependent schools, _ Some of them are owned by individuals No govâ€" ernment department controls them. They live their own lives. There is none to make them afraid,. lt is such a school as might c@@ne into existence in Minto Township through the coâ€"operation of the Women‘s Inâ€" stitutes, the Agricultural Society and the Township Council. In Swedâ€" en they are County Folk Schools. The Principal works under a Board| of Trustees appointed by the Small Holders and the pupils of the school. | He is given a free hand in selecting | his staff and managing the instituâ€" tion ‘within strict financial limits.| The school must be self supporting. |: LIVE STCCK MARKETING Let me tell you of one I visited near the City of Odense, famous as the birthplace of Hans Christian Anâ€" derson, (It was established in 1908 through the coâ€"operation of the Small Holders‘ Agricultural Societies of Funen Island. _ These societies have a membership of about 10,000. A joint stock company was formed and the nonâ€"interest bearing shares taken up by the local societies. A beautiful building was erected in the midst of 20 acres of gardens, experiâ€" mental orchards and demonstration fields. In addition a farm of 35 acres was bought. ; As intimated in the last article the Danes have developed a very reâ€" ~|markable system of education, parâ€" ; ticularly suitable for farmers, It is known as the Danish Folk High School. At present there are 59 of them scattered over the country and l’ in addition 22 Agricultural High | Schools conducted on similar Jines to |the Folk High Schools. No two are ‘falike. _ They do not standardize schools in Denmark as we do in Canâ€" ada, They are all boarding schools attended in the five winter months by young farmers and in the sumâ€" mer months by young farm women. They believe thay it is a very valuâ€" able educational experience to go away from home for a while, About 10,000 young farm folk attend these each year. Over oneâ€"third of ‘ the rural population of Denmark has | come under the direct influence of | these inspiring schools since the ( first one was started in 1844. They a have spread into the other Scandinâ€" q avian countries from Denmark and ‘ have exerted a tremendous influence 7 on rural culture in Northern Europe.|, The nearest thing we have to them 7 in Ontario is the three month Winâ€" & ter Short Courses, such as that conâ€" c ducted in Harriston a few years ago by the County Agricultural Represâ€" { entative, Issue No. 8 â€" ‘36 a series of articles which were pub. lished recently in the Harriston "Reâ€" view." While written specially for <the "Review" and addressed to resiâ€" dents of Minto Township particuâ€" larly, we believe they will be found interesting to many of the readers of this paper because the problems of the farm folk of Minto Township are the same problems that con-‘ front rural people throughout the ‘ Province, 46 The law has become so strict that there is no legal way to rob people unless you are appointed receiver, (c) Physical vigour, as shown by participation in games or in other ways, r \ (b) Ability and scholastic attainâ€" ments. __ These Rhodes scholars are selected from the universities of the province. In accordance with the trust estabâ€" lished by Mr. Cecil Rhodes, in the selection regard is had to: (a) Force of character, aevotion to duty, courage, sympathy, cap.-‘ city for leadership, in Canada and is connected with the Russian. Red Cross. Mr. Ignatieff will proceed to the University of Oxâ€" ford in the autumn for a period of three years to study. C PR PCV RE!s Mrs. Fred Longstaff of 22 Lane S., Guel + Ont, said: "I was trombled terribly m headaches, heartburn and indigestion. Paing in mg back were so severe it would be im» Picad 1 nained ot Dr Pieree‘s Gotien afeait . Pietre‘s Go cal Discovery. I took tiree botiks and I knovlwo&mcrhvebetnsu:tnifl npil!‘,‘ludm;uke.h." 1 Ne# size, your druggist now! New tab» l-:"‘ cts. Larg® size, tabs. or liquid, $1.35. nineteenth century. â€" His father, Count Ignatieff, was Minister of Education in Russia before the revoâ€" lution of 1917, He is now residing I shall tell you more of and of Danish education | article. led an Agricultural High School inâ€" truction is given in animal husbandâ€" ry, plant cultivation and fertilizers. For those who wish to prepare for milk control work (we call it cowâ€" testing) an extra month‘s instrueâ€" tion is required. Practically nll‘ milch cows on the Danish farms are under strict and systematic testing. Much emphasis is placed on the culâ€" tural subjects of literature â€" and music and the social subjects of hisâ€" tory and economics, The Folk High Schools are not Technical Schools. They are schools of Culture. They fit Danish youth for the right use of leisure, no less than the right way of working. And their graduates are coâ€"operators and not competiâ€" tors! HAVE vou Stomach Upsets? C ol c ic e s c €20000 40 admitted _ before eighteen. _ Folk High Schools are not for unsettled youth, but for young adults who plan to live their lives on the land. They are not so fussy in Denmark as we are in Canada :bout giving everyâ€" one a complete High School educaâ€" tion topped off with a university course. Fourteen is the limit of their compulsory school age, Their philosophy of education embodies the principle that work is a valuable educative force and that honestâ€"toâ€" goodness manual labor is more worth while than loafing or aimless atâ€" tendance at a High School. So the years between fourteen and eighteen are working, growing and maturing years. While the school is not callâ€" l ui CR PCE CSer CuRve,s ed farm folk in the world are in that country, And for this greatlyâ€" toâ€"beâ€"admired achievement in Denâ€" markâ€"and greatlyâ€"toâ€"beâ€"desived unâ€" dertaking in Canada, such schools as this Small Holders‘ Folk High School must be given much of the credit. The Winter course is attended by from 50 to 60 young farmers whose average age is about 24. None is admitted _ before eighteen. _ Folk High Schools are not for unsettled t 0e tPc a 1 music and folkâ€"lore, in calithenics and play, in nistory â€" and theory of home making,. And this is one of many _ such _ schools! Wellington County might have such a school located on its County Farm at the Old Folks‘ Home between Fergus and Elora, _ It is no wonder that one commonâ€" ly hears it stated by observers from abroad, that the finest quality of Danish culture is in the farm homes of Denmark, or that the best educatâ€" C aP SOmoely w * 7 2 And here they were living toâ€" gether in a lovely schoolâ€"home, in the open country getting inspiring instruction in _ Danish literature, munula O3 ko aoe r T OpineiPctig sds Soiss: 4.4 The regular courses conducted by the school are a fiveâ€"month Winter term for young men and & fiveâ€" month Summer term for young woâ€" men. When I visited the school in August, the fifty or so young women were busy in cookery classes. Their average age was about twenty. three and a fine looking group of young farm women they were. Just about as lovely, I thought, as the farm girls one meets in the Junior Women‘s Institutes of Ontario. There is no governmental fairy godâ€" mother to take care of deficits. The farm, orchards and garden must yield reasonable revenues for the support of the school, Five acres are a Poultry Farm operated on a paying commercial basis, So with the Dairy Faria and Apiary, mpiph 0000009 5 school educaâ€" a university the limit of 1 age. Their ‘ this school in the next SCOTT‘S EMULSION WITH THE PLUS vaiuFS For Salt by YOUR DRUGGISI A THE DIGESTIBLECOD uver OIL Are you tormented with the itching lut-‘ tures of eruptions, eczema, scales, tashes or other skin afflictions? For quick and happy relief use pure, cooling, antiseptic, liquid D. D. D. Prescription. Its gentle oils soothe the irritated and inflamed skin, thus aiding nature itself to heal the disorder. No fuse â€"no muss. Clear, greaseless and stainless â€"â€"dries up almost immediately. Stops the most intense itching instantly. A 85¢ trial bottle, at drug stores, will prove itâ€"or money bukr.“i). D. D. Prescription is made by the owners of Framax Bara. Cod Liver Oil when digested sup plies many necessary elements for proper growth of body and bones, Scott‘s flduoa of Cod Liver Oil and the Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda, prepared for easy digesâ€" tion he‘;:tinmre proper body and bone lopment, without the unpleasant taste of Cod Liver Oil. ps t m P CSTEEE n "*~_ List oOf wanted inventior Information sent free. THE Company, World Patent Ar. ‘iTechinc Classified Advertisir_l; Nlk ... ...}..... Ice Cream .. Total ho In a spasm waiter to two total investme trifle over $3 All the Vitamins of COD LIVER OIL As I say, I had thought there a depression. But the price of lunch today makes me wonder, had it in a restaurant which is especially noted for high pr either, I had oysters, a small 1 chop, some potatoes au gratin glass of milk, and a dish of ch late ice cream, The check was $2 As an interesting exhibit in cur sociology, I recorded the items 1 produced this total, They wore: Bread and butter (untouched) $ Ojibers _ ....:....} prvs £ P NO . se neniine nb e en in n rneis ty vevre i Pobsioes _ _ . ‘ >‘ N OFFER TO EvEH (H. V. O‘Brien of the Chic Nfl_vu writes home from N. MINERALS Bone Building Street, Ottawa, Canada PLUS OGDEN‘S P.$.â€" Keep up with the Times! they are again rollingâ€"theirown with Ogden‘s â€"the "headiine" attraction in c]qum 'oqu Smoke this better fine cut yourself. You‘ll want to use the best papers, too â€"flike ‘Chantecler‘ or ‘Vogue‘." ‘\Catch up with the crowd! They‘ve gone back to Ogden‘s Fine Cut, now that better times are here. That‘s why you see so many more :nihng smokers ‘round you =â€" A New FINE CUT Your Pipe Knows Ogden‘s Cut Plug rlicadivalicadcllunntvtuntadia INVENTORS | a restaurant which noted for high had ovysters. a smal of economy 1 held the bits, thus keeping the nt (with tax) only m York Lunch wl Wmich is not or high prices, Ts, a small lamb es au gratin, & a dish of chocoâ€" INVENTOR, cago Daily New York.) * _and ’Il“' RA MBA Y rneys., 278 was $2.80, in current items that ed) $ .20 â€" / 0B A0 % .20 . $2.80 my

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