come racticality This n EVERY MARRIED COUPLE AND m}m- cogtemplating _ marriage should readâ€""Sex and Youth," 104 pages, postpaid 25¢. Our 12 page illustrated catalogue of sex books, drug sundries, etc., free upon reâ€" ?.en. Supreme _ Specialty, 169 onge, Toronto. QUIT TOBACCO, SNUFF, EASILY, inexpensively. Home remedy. Te#â€" timonials. _ Guaranteed. _ Advice free Bartlett‘s, Box 1, Winnipeg. PERSONAL â€" |ROBLEMS SOLYVED from your handwriting and signa~ ture. Write us in confidence. Send 25 cents today. Kingsley Docuâ€" ments, 221 St. Sacrament Street, Montreal. ENLARGEMENT FREE WITH EVâ€" ery 25¢ order. Roll film developed and eight prints 25c. Reprints 3¢. Fstablished over 26 years. Brightâ€" ling Studio, 29 Richmond Street _ East. Toronto ROLLS DEVELOPED AND EIGHT beautiful . enlargements _ 30c. 8 regular prints and one FREE enâ€" largement 25¢c. Service Guaranâ€" teed. _York Photo Service, 183% King East, Toronto. e tops Radio«, $10,00; Dressers, $4.95; chifâ€" foniers, $7.95; Gas Stoves $4.05; Sewâ€" ing Machines, ®1250; Beds, $2.50; Springs, $2.00; New Mattresses, $3.05 China Cabinets, $10.00. Write for free illustruted cataâ€" logue showing hundreds of other outstanding values in new and reâ€" conditioned furniture ind free gifts with purchases, Lyons Tradeâ€"In Dept. 478 Yonge St., Toronto BR Smart kitchen cabinets 314'75 with nlid‘in,'; porcelain mw Beautiful walnut bed room C suite, chiffonier, vanity with Venetian mirror, full size bed and sagless spring. mw 4 picce bed room suite, hq dresser, chiffonier, . full size bed and sagless spring. _ snw Large English oak dining Â¥ reom suite, buffet, cabinâ€" et, extension table and 6 slip seat chairs with cane panels. ww Beautiful solid walnut dinâ€" C ing room suite, buffet, china cabinet. extension table and 6 china cabinet, extension table and 6 blue leather seat chairs mw 4 piece bed room suite, dresser, chiffonier, . full size bed and sagless spring in walâ€" nut finish. cabine »aureÂ¥Y suite, buffct, extension table and 6 leather slip seat chairs. mm Eight piece divanette suite Â¥ in rich walnut finish, bufâ€" fet, refectory table, and 6 leather $SrkIy us "he seat chair $4.95 ‘ $13.95 $24.93 $49.00 GEORGIAN BAY sUMMER CAMP HIGH NOT TOO LATE TO BUY YOUR chicks, all Government approved, Leghorns $6.95, Barred Rocks, New Hampshire Reds $7.95. Also day old pullets, cockerels and started chicks, all ages. Baden Eleetric AMP FRANKLIN‘S PRIZE ESSAY Contest. First prize, one hundred dollars; second prize, fifty dollars, Themeâ€""Camp Franklin â€" the Camp with Ideals." Full informaâ€" tion regarding Canada‘s unh}ua and ploneer recreational camp for youns men and young women, from Camp Franklin‘s Toronto oillce, $3 Yonge Street. d dt ToP QUALITY CHICKS AT A LoWw price for July. Leghorns $6.95, Barred _ Rocks, New Hampshire Reds $7.95. Large Egg Quality add 1c, Leghorn pullets 2¢. Also storted chicks all ages. Top Notch Chickeries, 16 Wilson St., Guelph, Ontario. FARVM MACHINERY FOR sALE \BRADOI, QUBBEC MINK BEST foundation stock, prices reasonâ€" able. Write Miner Minkery, Kingsâ€" ville, Ontario. share of the profits with Bray chicks. Get your order in today! Prompt shipment! Bray Hatchery, 130 John St. North, Hamilton, Onâ€" 1+ W weeks old, available July 15. Last chanee to get Bray Started Pulâ€" lets. Get your order in now while the supply lasts. Bray Hatchory, 130 John St. North, Hamilton, Onâ€" tari AsST CALL FOR BABY* CHICKS! Bray‘s dayâ€"old chicks available for immediate shipment between July 12 and July 26. First there, first served! Order today! EBray MHatchery, 130 John St. North, Hamilton, Ontario. ) DELAYS WHEN _ YOU ORDER your chicks from Tweddles. We give prompt delivery on day old or started, 10 day old to three week old, Barred Rock, White Rock, New Hampshire Reds and White Leghorns, pullets, cockerels or mixed chicks. Send for price list. _ Tweddle Chick Hatcheries Limited, Box 10, Fergus, Ontario. L Y O N s TRADEâ€"IN STORE 478 Yonge St., Toronto BARCGAINS GALORE (HF BABY CHICKS PoULTHY AND POULTRY EqQUIPMENT FILMS AND PREXVTS EGG _ PRICES PREDICTED next Winter. Cut yourself a D Benutiful 9 picce dining room suite, buffet, china extension table and 6 leathâ€" chairs. PHOTOGRAPHY Classified Advertising AND 10 x H M PERSONAL PVR FARWING trik M RURNEPED iNE b In esterficld bed suite, : ces (Krochler) velou ible Marshall cushion» hery Limited rio. Rumely Diesel Like n h ful thoroughly d sold und guarantee h x 20 McCORMICKâ€" rs; 16 x 30, 20 x 35, imely tractors; also lesel Power Unit ke new. _ Over 20 iull sizes uand makes, or prices. Hanna‘s Sales, (Guelph, Onâ€" allar M ch tertic h dinin h ersibl ld, tapestry ible â€" spring rfield L W chesterâ€" ushions. sterfleld w earing le cushâ€" i d suite, room ilis= bl Jasperâ€"How did George break his leg? 5 Casperâ€"Do you see those steps over there? Jasperâ€"Yes. Casperâ€"Well, Géorge didn‘t. . Scotsmanâ€"Doctor, what can I do to prevent seasickness? Doctorâ€"Have you a dime* Scotsmanâ€"Yes, sir. Doctorâ€"Well, hold it between your teeth. The fellow who tells his best girl he isn‘t good enough for her, usualâ€" ly speaks the truth, but she doesn‘t believe it, but her mother does. McDonaldâ€"So you love spinach? MacPhersonâ€"Yes, it‘s my middle name. McDonaldâ€"Really? MacPhersonâ€"Yes, Thomas Sandy MacPherson. Bobâ€"Oh, quite a bit; in fact I had to do it over again when she was looking. Jimâ€"So you kissed Bess when she wasn‘t looking? Was she anâ€" noyed? "For underâ€"eye puffiness," advises a beauty hinter, "use powder unâ€" der your eyes and add a tiny tinge of rouge there." Or, suggests our wise friend, try going to bed for a change. Dentistâ€"Open â€" wider, pleaseâ€" wider. Patientâ€"Aâ€"Aâ€"Aâ€"ah! Dentistâ€"(inserting rubber gag, towel and sponge)â€"How‘s your family? The local paper in each issue preaches its sermons of social and civic righteousness to a larger auâ€" dience than the combined audiences of all the preachers in the terriâ€" tory. Londoner (barking)â€"You came here with good testimonials, and do you mean to tell me you don‘t know the king‘s English? Discovering yet another mistake in his letters, the enraged employer â€"a Londonerâ€"summoned his new typist. Typist (indignantly)â€"Of course I know it. Otherwise he wouldn‘t be king, would he? Little Nature Studies There are a lot of funny things About Dame Nature and her flings. Now a fly, with greatest ease, Lights on doggy‘s nose, then flees; But a flea con‘t fly away, Because it isn‘t built that way. So to flee it has to jump To get away from Fido‘s rump. It seems hardly fair to me, Since a fly can‘t flit and flee, Strangerâ€"Tell me, have any big men ever been born in this city? Nativeâ€"No, sir, only babies. That a flea can‘t fly and fit When the dog grows tired of it. Theore are few familios left who are so far behind the times that they still enjoy the simple things of life. WEEKLY NEWSPAPER PROPERâ€" 1 AM OFFERING DARK SILKY REPRESENTATIVE WANTED, To sell mining stock in the Malartic area. Generous commissions. Parâ€" ticulars, 407 Central Building, Toâ€" ronto. SWOLLEN UDDER â€" GARGET â€" en d u_ INFANTILE PARACYSIS CRIPPLES recover the use of their limbs unâ€" der our new treatment. We give the famous foot treatment for tired aching feet. Hay Fever reâ€" sponds instantly to our treatment. Don‘t suffer. Consult us regardâ€" ing your case. Adanac Health g‘linl_‘c. lglll_e west of Erindale on TRY DR. MeLEODS SCIENTIFIC remedy Stomackic, for your stomâ€" ach trouble. Clears up gas, nauâ€" sea, bloating, indigestion. Drug stores or direct. Write for free information. 191 Albany Ave., Toâ€" ronto. + tw n n on s mecl e on Suithe "cies n aeg oo onto {AV® ty and Job plant for sale in thrivâ€" ing Ontario town. Excellent job printin« business, complete equipâ€" ment i; splendid condition. Reâ€" quires $14,000 cash, balance on easy terms to responsible purchaser. O. E. Brown, 114 Moore Ave., Torâ€" Mink kits off choice Quebec stock $25.00 each for July and August delivery. C. Reilly, Richmond, Onâ€" SmeL‘ e e C Lang‘s Mineral excells anything obtainable for Swollen Udder, Garâ€" get, Bleeding Teats, Ringworm, or Scratches on horses‘ feet. Results quick and complete, saves worry and expense. Sent by mail. Free information. Lang‘s Mineral Remedies, 946 Robson Street, "anâ€" couver. tario. Dundas Highway. NEWSPAPER OPPORTUNITY MEDICALâ€"LIVE STOCK SALESMAN WANTED ncARD MINK FOR SALE y 0 U MEDICAL If the speaker‘s voice is indisâ€" tinct, a blue light flickers on the control; if too high, a red light glows; a steady green glow means "okay for sound". Our House of Commons might do well to take a tip from New York, where public speakers and afterâ€"dinner raconteurs are likely to be controlled by "traffic sigâ€" nals". Actually, the fish must remain within the fresh water area where a river empties into the sea or they become lost and never reâ€" turn, Dr. Huntsman declares. The return migrations from the sea to fresh water also depend largely on floods or freshets which give the fish their cue to start up the rivers again. It has always been believed that salmon swim far out to sea and then find their way back to the same tiny stream in which they were born with the accuracy of a homing pigeon, he declares. Salmon which breed in the headwaters of fresh water streams and spend their adult life in the sea are not as smart as they have been supposed to be, says Dr. A. G. Huntsman, of the University of Toronto. Salmon Not So Smart, He Says When the collaborators on this novel write of the natives, of the storms and primitive life on these deserted islands, they catch some of the sturdy vitality of their earlier adventure books. Their novel has enough momentum of events and energy of characterization, too, to make it easily digested. The Dark River, By Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall. « . . 336 pp. . . . Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 215 Victoria Street, $2.75. Laid in the setting which these gentlemen nmiay rightfully claim as their own private literary backâ€" groundâ€"Tahiti, "The Dark River" is one of their more sentimental works, concerned with polite Polyâ€" nesians far removed from the rough characters of the "Mutiny on the Bounty" story, and abounding in lofty romance and quiet, discreet emotional conflicts. A Lovely Nature The story is based upon a familiar and perennially effective deviceâ€" that of one woman, & native Polyâ€" nesian in this case, appropriating the infant daughter of another, an Englishwoman who dies at childâ€" birth, and bringing the child up as her own. The authors thus create a lovely daughter of lush Tahitian naâ€" ture, wandering among the glades and tropical streams of the island with the abandon and dark beauty of a native girl, but with pure Engâ€" lish blood in her veins, a fact comâ€" forting somehow to Nordic readers. The love story of the girl is the main theme of the book. THE DARK RIVER By Nordhoff and Hall Messrs. Nordhoff and Hall‘s last novel, "The Hurricane", made a most popular "movie," and you can have considerable fun casting this new work, "The Dark River," for it will be gobbled up by Hollywood faster than you can say Dorothy Lamour. One of the most important branches of scientific work being undertaken in Canada today is the research on parasitic worms, which is well into its initial stages at the Institute of Parasitâ€" ology, Ste. Anne de Bellevue, P. Q., says G. T. S. Calder, writing in the current issue of the Câ€"Iâ€"L Oval. Parasitic worms, which are in no way related to the earthâ€" worm or the lug â€"worm, do an enormous amount of damage to livestock and probably form the greatest single source of loss in Canada. Work to date which has involved the carrying out of over 12,000 experiments, indicates that the most likely means of ridding Canada of the menace of these worms, many millions of which are swallowed during the lifeâ€" time of grazing animals will be through the use of chemical ferâ€" tilizer. # With a Few Drops of 1 "Okay For Sound" POULTRY RAISERS Check ROUVUPR The Worm May Turn BOOK CSHELF Issue No. 29â€"‘38 By ELIZABETH EEDY mm a@pâ€"sremnentwantmscryteormeny y yer~ A% qB YILSA «ip «No talking pictures may be shown in church," declared Dr. R. G. Parson, Bishop of Southwark in provisional regulations for his diocese in England, but he will permit approved silent films. In Sweden‘s new reformatory at Skena each boy has his own room with comfortable furniture, a playroom has games and radio, no walls surround the building, and windows are not barred. This could not be said of many countries. In many parts of the world, the heritage of the past was the greatest stumbling block to good neighborliness. Their exâ€" perience justified fear, suspicion and distrust. As the years passed, said Dr. Riddell, the original inheritance of Canada and the United States, their machinery for settling disâ€" putes and their voluntary agenâ€" cies "have paid substantial diviâ€" dends which has greatly enriched our heritage of goodwill." Such a heritage made the two countries good neighbors. Former permanent CanaGian representative at the League of Nations in Geneva, Dr. Riddell said he was convinced where the League and affiliated organizations failed it was due to "the irreconâ€" cilable attitude of a few of the powerful shareholders to the principles and policies of the company." Only Permanent Foundations These nations "either did not want peace or they did not beâ€" lieve the words of . President Cleveland that ‘mutual advantage and convenience are the only permanent foundations of peace and friendship between states‘." The world today needs a colâ€" lective system more than ever, Dr. W. A. Riddell, counsellor at the Canadian Legation, Washingâ€" ton, declared last week in adâ€" dressing the final session of the conference on Canadianâ€"American réAations at Orono, Maine. If enough nations wanted that sysâ€" tem, they could get it. From invasion by the tubercle bacillus which is ubiquitous there is no escape. Sooner or later evâ€" eryone is infected and if the priâ€" mary lesion occcurs in early life and the dose is massive the patient succumbs. If on the other hand the primary lesion heals and perhaps succeeding small lesions heal withâ€" out any manifestation of disease then the individual‘s resisting powâ€" er Will be gradually raised to a point where he will "be protected under any ordinary circumstances for the rest of his life, First Act of the Drama Therefore it is perfectly apparent that the solution of adult tubercuâ€" losis depends almost entirely on the study of tuberculosis in children. It is in the children that we soe Of Collective Securityâ€"More So Than Ever Says Canadian Legation Counsellor, Dr. World Of Today Needs A System (1) Every individual who lives under‘ the ordinary conditions â€" of civilization is infected after birth and at some period between birth and adult life with the tubercle bacillus. (2) Such ~infection, alâ€" though it produces a definite body reaction, is not necessarily followâ€" ed by disease. (3) In the vast maâ€" jority of cases the individual deals successfully with the infection and all that remains is a minute scar. (4) In . a certain percentage of cases, however, manifest disease occurs at a later date, this being due to reâ€"infection. by the tubercle bacillus either from within or from without and this reâ€"infection is comâ€" monly preceded ‘by a lowered resistâ€" ance on the part of the individual. Control Active Disease It is obvious from the‘above ‘that we can have yery little hope of avoiding contact with the tubercle bacilius throughout life. Therefore our efforts must be directed to conâ€" trolling the amount of active disâ€" ease and consequent .deaths from this allâ€"invading organism., The following article, in a brief way, will try to outline what 1 conâ€" sider the best method of controlling tuberculosis. In order to appreciâ€" ate and intelligently carry out any campaign against tuberculosis one must have at least a working knowâ€" ladge of the pathology ~f the condiâ€" tion. vâ€"HOW TO AVOID TUBERCULOSiS By Dr. Norman Russe:l St. Mary‘s Hospital, Timmins, Ont. Health In " ie y ulkeetnto pie nsm en . _ =, f ex » fnale e on o *T usc ae s 1 *k« 2 Parua c % 7 ° F MC" > c Pis wiatindrtee. T 6« s h t * Iâ€"=l. Any leaves which have a tendenâ€" cy to décay in water should b~ reâ€" moved. Keep the flowers for a few hours immediately after cutting a~d before arranging in a container of water deep enough to allow the water to come just below the flow r parts. This treatent also often revives flowers which appear to have wilted. The water should be changed daily and a piece of the stem cut off. This helps to preâ€" serve the flowâ€"r. An ice cube dropâ€" ped into the water two or three times a day also is beneficial. Flowers, just as human â€" beings, need air to breathe,. so do not crowd them tightly in a narrow *onâ€" tainer. CLOTHES PINS IN THE GARDEN When â€" cutting a new eduï¬ for flower bed or lawn, or truing up an old edge, use a string or cord raâ€" Most flowers should be picked in the early morning before the heat of the sun robs them of their moisâ€" ture. How»ver, according to an anâ€" nouncement made by Cornell Uniâ€" versity, gladioli, when cut in early afternoon, last longer,. They may be cut when the first flower on the spike begins ‘> open. Most flowers should be gathered just when the bud is unfolding, although dahlias last longer if cut whgn fully open. This is also true of crysanthemums. mums, With garden flowers plentiful at this time, junior gardeners will be interested to know how to keep them fresh after they have been cut. The first and most important step is to cut carefully. Flowers should never be pulled or broken from their stalks, but cut with a clean, slanting cut. This can be done with a sharp knife, or a pair of specially constructed scissors which do not pinch the stems as do ordinary shears. Cutting the flowâ€" ers on the slant prevents the stems from resting flat upon the bottom of the container, thus closing the many tiny cells. KEEPING CUT FLOWERS FRESH "Conscience boxes" for passenâ€" grs who have omitted to pay fheir fares have been placed in ‘Johannesburg trams and buses. ;/ "Conscience Boxes" Wheat fed, or to be fed, to live stock and poultry in Canada during the 1937â€"38 crop season has been estimated preliminarily as 18,938,000 bushels, as compared with 15,794,000 bushels in the 19386â€"37 season. (1) the coâ€"operation of either the Med Health Officer or if he seems indiffercnt, find some mediâ€" cal man who is vitally interested in chitdren. It is an established fact that the death rate from tuberculosis is deâ€" creasing.: It has gradually decreasâ€" ed from first place to sixth place as the cause of death in all the ‘age groups. â€" But we must .remember that tuberculosis is still by far the leading cause of death amongst adâ€" olescents and young adults. Mcihods in Preventive Work Bearing all the above points in »â€"mind it can be readily seen that the schools should be the centre ‘of préventive work in tuberculosis. It is not suggested that the schools should be burdened with any more than they now bhave on their hands but it is perfectly obvious that the school is the logical point of atâ€" tack. . The question of ordinary byâ€" giene is taught in all our schools and undoubtedly is a factor in con: trol and also the habit of spitting is a bad one and the question of bad housing conditions plays an importâ€" ant part in the spread of tubercu losis. All these things, however. are secondary to an intelligent tuberculosis ~survey of your chilâ€" ‘(en cartied out year by year. (5) Do an intracutaneous tuberâ€" culin test on each child from the kindergarten up to the top forms in the high school. (2) Enlist the services of your school nurses and also district nurses in m,klng the survey, (3) Buy your tuberculin in quanâ€" tities large énough to do your whole group. (4) Get the written permission of the parefts to have the test done. ... Gardening Notes NOTE: â€" This serics on "Health in Secondary Schools" is being discontinued during vaâ€" cation time to be resumed in the autumn. method I would suggest is tainer, then place the bag in a warâ€" mer place for two days and nights. This practice is especially recomâ€" mended for beets, carrot and spinâ€" Gardeners need not, of course, hunt up a canal or build a cow barn, but they may hang the seeds overnight in any waterâ€"filled conâ€" According ‘~ a plant breeder who came to thi: country from the Nethâ€" erland», the Hollanders place seeds in a cloth bag and hang the bag in a nearby canal overnight. The bag is taken out and hung for 48 hours in the cow barn, where it is warm. By this time the seed has sprouted and it is broadcast by hand in the garden plot. THEY SPROUT THEIR SEEDs Interesting customs of the enterâ€" prising Dutch gardeners might be follow d by garleners elsewhere who wish to speed germination of This : "iiii- method â€" of using stakes, string and clothes pins can be employed for planting straight rows of seeds in the home vegeâ€" table garden. Common clothes pins can be very useful in holding the string or cord in place. Even though the cord may be tightly run from end s ke to enad «ta‘e, one is apt to move the cord back and forth with the edgâ€" ing tool, unless is pinned in place,, at fraq ont m&u. with clothes ping.; + Ligying /8 ther than rely upon the accuracy of your eye. In spite of his years of exy e. â€" a professional gardâ€" ener v "Il always "run a string" to keep his edges straight. Mecneacs on as aateBive ie mc ieet ze y s un es arlfientatien ay i unteneameres oc cce 200 The earth spins like a giant squirâ€" rel, cage ; Its bars are swiftly glimmerâ€" "ing nights and days, And we the squirrels scrambling . . . neither time Nor precept ever changed a squirrel‘s ways. â€"Otto Freund, in "Wings." For years, since the Grading Act has been in force, it has been the custom, generally, for a buyer to purchase the farmers‘ hogs at the pen, the shipper doing the grading. f The gross revenues of the allâ€" inclusive Canadian National Railâ€" ways System for the 9â€"day period ending June 30, 1938, WIETC : s+rssrnntenricisncitabeeess â€" @ApBD 4R T as compared with ........ 5,056,183 Hogs Tattoed ~_ Before Shipping ALVINSTON, Ont. â€" Under a new ruling which went into efâ€" fect in June, all hogs shipped from the counties of Lamkton, Huron, Kent and Essex must be tattooed by the shipper, prior to being sent to the packing houses for slaughter. P for the corresponding period of 1937, a deâ€" BNRNSELAOL ... ... ....licccuccll Tie up with a seal treat! Rollâ€"yourâ€" own cigarettes with Ogden‘s Fine Cut ‘and you‘ll corral â€"the fuller smoking enjoyment that this cooler and more fragrant tobacco gives. You‘ll roll them even better if you make sure to use "Chantecier"" or Progress to Date Railways Revenues $ 661,906 C wlC COOoray l HOOMLOOL car, 8. Compel the adoption of radâ€" ial bars on all cars so as to avoid torque on front axle. 9. Reâ€"examine all drivers every five yeéars after they have reached Wmni,g. ; M s ® ams mds t id d & 6. Compél the adoption of glare glass in all cars. road immediately in front of ed. y A Re-duiga“ih-e“h;od- of cars so as to enable driver to see the hesue d apuc oo se s en 5. Give j-ail 'l:nt;;;:-instel‘ of fines in cases of serious acciâ€" dents where death has not resultâ€" has been found negligen license should be cancell life, Change Car Design 5. Givc Snf! â€" custhfuntrinrss 3. Give all those involved in ac> cidents both a mental and physiâ€" cal examination. 4. Cancel licenses for periods of time proportiansl in ho _a fence. 1 from an 2. Train those who show themâ€" selves lacking in skill, or have some defect which can be compenâ€" sated for, before grantingp Hcon«. 1. Subject all candidates for automobile licenses to carcfully supervised tests, Prof, W. D. Tait, MeGill psyâ€" chologist, lists the following remeâ€" dies for prevention of accidents on the highways: For more than three hours afâ€" ter he had been consigned to his grave, the hearty old farmer stood beside the coffin he hewed from a walnut jlog and shook hands with hundreds, He "autoâ€" graphed" scores of cards and paâ€" pers with the scrawled *X" that is his signature. "A Time For MHappiness" Breazeale, dressed in new suit and hat, rode to the prdve in a hearse that called for him at the little farm home where he lives alone. Mr. Jackson praised Breazeale‘s idea of funerals for the living, saying: "there are no tears and heartaches but only happiness at this service, a time for sober reâ€" flection." 12 Suggestions "It was the nicest "funcral I ever heard," the 74â€"yearâ€"old Roane County farmer said. "When I die there won‘t be another one. This was my last funeral and I‘m mighty well pleased." "Ny Last Funcral" While Rev, Charles Jackson, of Baris, II1., praised the manifold wmerits of "Uncle Bush," a crowd estimated at more than 8£,000 swarmed over the peaceful little Cave Creek Valley grove which Breazeale had chosen for his obâ€" sequies. KINGSTON, Tenn. â€" Powlisâ€" kered Felix (Bush) Breazcaie â€" who wanted "to hear what the preacher" says about me" â€"â€" sat happily beside his handâ€"made cofâ€" fin last week while a minister eulogized him in a lengthy ‘iuâ€" neral" sermon. Farmer Sits Beside Own Coffin, Listens to Lengthy Sermon About Himself. Had A Funeral said to have been airplanes and high explosives. Fears of a new flareâ€"up were echoed in the Buenos Aires press. The newspaper La Razon said neutrals rd disclosed eight ships laden with war material for Boâ€" livia recently bhad arrived at Arâ€" ica, Chile. ‘The chief cargoes were tions over the.long boundary disâ€" pute renched3 : deadlock. Both natio said to be reâ€" arming to the of their reâ€" sources in the region where an armistice has stayed hostilities for three years during peace conferâ€" ences with neutral intermediarâ€" ies. Long Boundary Dispute Fearful of a breakdown of the negotiations which might end the truce between the embittered neighbors, arbitrators attempted to persnrde Poraguay‘s represene tatives t demands ‘ _ proportional to the of. Where death has resulted J neeidel_lt. and the driver Car Accidents For ThelLiving to modify their boundary granting licensâ€" even without for