-.-vuol uawzm ua l.Ul' ga,ua.nu'y. It is the Scots Guards Band that Canadians are most particularly in- terested in at this time. Thnv will tour Canada. during the present sum- mer, under the auspices of Canada's Great Wa.r'Veterans, and Canadians will have an opportunity of hearing one of the world s finest bands in concert. This band is itself century old, and critics say it has never before achieved the high level of musical reputation that it now has, under the leadersllip of Lieut. F. W. Wood, who has won an outsmnding position among the world s great interpre- tative conductors. q__:n ,_n_`_ ____V_ ,____\_____ _| 1-,,, .1 n In a ruined city of Ceylon there still exists a sacred Bo tree, over 2,000 years old. war included 5 Victoria. Crosses, 26 Distinguished Service Orders and 561 other rewards for gallantry. It in Hm Qnnm flu.-.mJ.. 0-..; nu; of cereal will usually be right. but itvis well to" experiment alittle with an un- familiar cereal, since failure to salt mmha properly very often leads` children to dis- like them. Page Seven Arrears 9.20 9.36 ' 9.36 10.70 6.55 (32! ers. Phone 6l1r2-3. Ferndale, Barrie LARKER S wonxs FRACTED IEY 51.25 |1r Pm rice. n 6.87 12.53 3.57 17.10 4.70 39.25 Total _ 19.15 22.88 BARRIE MARBLE WORKS Lugust 10, 1922 OFFICE AND womcs, 79 BAYFIELD s'r. % Phone 734 JQhn.F. Murphy, Prop.- P.O-. Box 642 The Cost 0! Living SHOP WHERE You ARE mvm-:9 TO snop Issued by Canadian Weekly Newspapers Association Advertising costs you nothing-ii is paid for by the profits on increased sales, - Advertising is eqsy--it'is simply saying in writing what you say to the customer; in your shop. Tum over stocks quickly, if you would make m,ore.money_.y ' This, also, is generally true: You will find 7 better goods, bettervvalues and better ser- vice in. those shops which turn overtheir stocks rapidly. This means, as a general thing, shops .which`advertise. ' A Ofthis you may be sure: Prices/in a shop which adv_ertises are not MORE than in a shop which. does ~no`t advertise. , The chances are that they are oftentimes lower. ADVERTISING turns over stocks rapidly, and therefore multiplies profits. This means thatprices in` a shop which adver-V tises can be short rather than long . . A NOTE TO MERCHAN_TS . GEO; ROBERTSON,_ Asst. Dom. Poultry Husband_man_. C. E. F. IRTS izes 98c ,--..-.. u. rnnvuvllllvn A M'il`he\reader will` readilyisee how desir- able it is to have all nests,`roosts. and dropping boards made movable to facili- tate cleaning and disinfecting operations. If yours are stationary at present, you will find it a good rainy day job to change them and make them movable. It will be `time well spent. n.._.-.7 ____, uu u. 'auu 51ve MIC LIUUSC 3: morougn Soak` ing with a `good strong disinfectant. forc- ing it by means of a spray pump into the cracks. Whether mites are.known to -be present or not. the roosting and nesting quarters should be treated weekly during the summer, since the mites breed very rapidly during the hot weather. Ordinary coal oil will kill mites but as~it evaporates quickly its effects are not lasting. A good disinfectant mixturegmay -be made by acid- ing crude'carbolic'_to'fhe coal oil. about a quart to a gallon of the latter, or by adding one of the coal tar disinfectants such as zenoleum or phenoline. : n__ H, ` . .The control of mites, however. is not so simple, Unlike the hen louse these are not, as a rule, found upon thetfowl, neither are they killed by dusting. They are found usually in cracks around the masts and nests and will be readily detected upon examination of these localities. At night, when fowls are on the roost-s, these mites may readily be seen issuing from cracks and running along the roosts. The only method of control is thoroughp cleaning and disinfecting of the premis"es'. Remove all droppings. litter and . nesting material, scrape and sweep out every particle of dirt. and givethe house a. thorough soak-I in: H mmrl strnna rliainfnni-one tn... ` (Experimental Farms Note) No man keeping poultry, either upon a large scale or small scale, can expect a profit from his operations if his flock and his poultry house are infested with lice` and mites. Both are easily brought upon perfectly clean premises, possibly by the introduction of fowl purchased elsewhere. Sparrows are also a frequent spreader of these troubles, and there are numerous cases where no apparent source can be. thought of. yet lice and mites arefound to -be in possession. The former may be readily controlled by providing a good dust bath and by the use of blue ointment or one of the many lice powders that are on - the market. ' ,,j.._ .__.__.-no GUARD VAGAINST LICE Aub MITES um-ncu Inn: uuur at Least. Breakfast foods made from grains with the outer covering left on. require more than those with the outer covering remov- ed--whole barley. for example. more than pearl barley. Many cereal foods. partic- ularly` the rolled and flaked types. have been partially cooked at the factory. These require less cooking in ,the home than those which have had no such treat- ment. but if they are to be served tn` child- ren such cereals should be `cooked at home for at least an hour. ML--- _._- _L_ -.___I I 1 o . .- . av Icnau bu cusp H1811]. Oatmeal. cornmeal and manv other 'gtanular cereals can be put directly into uu av ufzlala uu_ llUl.Il'. There are also cereal breakfast foods wh`ch have been still more thorouvzhly cooked at the factory. either by marching in addition to "flaking or by some other snecial method. These are improved by "putting them into the oven long enouzh at least to crisp them. nofrnna` nnvwivnnni no"! u....._-- -L`--- uuumuuunung uucul. _ Some grains need longer cooking than `others-corn meal. for examnle. needs at least three hours and rice hardly more than half an hour. ' ' I -3. -1, W. ' I-I ` I .. $1.50 uuau uau nu uuux`. _ 0In general. whole grains. like whole wheat. or grains more or km finely brok- en. like cracked wheat. require longer cooking (three hours at least), than more_ finely ground grains. which should be cooked one hour at least. D_....I-f....L -_.I_ ...-_I_ IL." ' '-' ...- v-v.-_-v-..-u. -_ l It is hard to give general rules for cook- I ing cereals, for there are so many kinds, but it issafe to say that the/re_is' no*dan- ger of evrco_nking and much danger of undercooking them. ' Qnm- .....\:.... .......1 1--..-- ---1-:_.' ;L-_ Ill "llU{` tlllll quzlllry. ' But if Mr. and Mrs. Shonner are pro- perly seized with the value and immrltance of buying at home, they will give the local stores the first con_sidera.tion. That is all] that the town merchant needs or desir-es.j _ over what can be got elsewhere and even` nu: In auuu ii (iullullulllby. So_ long as human nature is what it is. there is little danger of people buying things at` home at a big advance in price; if town merchants were able to do businese on that basis through the lovalty of their customers. it would not be an unmixed. blessing as it would mean a great economic I waste throughout the CL(3IlnlI`_\ . In our oninion we can only ask neonl-a to buv at home or to -buyVmade-in-Canada goods on the basis of goods being substantially equal in nrice and quality. I nu} i` Mu any` new QLV n - - A - n - A - -- I I no awamsucu. } In a town like St. Marys, pomessing rm I haps the finest -stores of any town in West l ern Ontario. and with citizens noted for` their loyalty. the Departmental Store cat-' alogue no doubt has a very small place. But "there are down-at-the-heels -town:= where the neonle ask themselves why theii town is so dead and `you will findtha post office piled high occasionally wi`h tons of catalogues. We -are glad we don't- live in such a community. .qn Inna no kurnun nah"-.. :9 u.L..t :4. 3.. r .waum.~.~.:._y mwcr in we count-ry towns :nan| I in the cities, country merchanrts shelves being heavily stocked with goods bought; at _nr'e-war prices. Still many small town! folks patronized the catalogue houses liber- i ally. partly we presume through indiffer-l ence to the claims of their local communit". nartly through habit. and partly because they had the 4idea they were getting as =1 good or better value, an idea that would; have been dis_r~.roved. had they taken the; trouble to compare values.` Had these} people felt even to a small degree the im- ' portance of patronizing their home com-: munity. and investigated the stocks of, theirloca! merchants, it is safe to say that}: the town merchants would have got their 11` business instead ofthe catalogue house=.l ` `And right there the need of Buy-atHome 10` education is shown. Nor can a live com~ ' 0! munity spirit flourish until such indifference is awakened. `L. .. L-._._. I:L on It C cl }IuI- uu uu_v-zunuuule euucanonal campaigns. 1 The most striking `evidence that man-yf people do not give their local merchants an , equal chance for Itheir trade. was furn3s`.wed 3 during the recent war years. T It is inrlis-! putable that during those years the sellingli prices of various lines of goods [were sub-I 1 . lower in the country towns than in H19 I-Hing nnnnheu mm--..k...\.o.. ..L..l....... mum vvccnny ucvvapupel teen If necessary; to preach Buy at Home! and frequently * put on buy-at~.home educational campaigns. I The mnsf gtrilrino `nuirlnnnn time ..........' yuuub 3 ' I Well. apparently such advice is necessary. Many citizens of rural communities do not even support their own home town to that extent and that is why The Telescope and other weekly newspapers feel it necessary to nrem-.h Rnv at T-Tnmnl" our` C.--..-...,...4-l.. nu: Icwcl Ul u 1UX'()IlI0 E98087. 3 We will put our answer to his question` in these few words:--Just so long as! quality. mice and service are substantially the same-V-giving the home merchant first chance." V I r`r`ears Costs Tots! 15.78 2.62 18.40 "|"Yf\ vuauvc. I Does that seem very little to ask of our _ public? [ `XTAH ..............4.l_. ____L , ,1 .' ELCKVLCI uclzzn ll`UHl 1118 IQICSCOD9, ""_D"rt`-OH I at least of the money leaving Walkerton, for outside nlaces -niigrht be left at home. Newspapt-:r's Reply We have read with inteyest the %thovi1ght- ful letter of a Toronto Reader." WA 111:" nub r\I\- ..........-._ L- L2, ,,,, A uuycl . Needless to say every citizn shduld be loyal to his home town. and possibly with greater detail from The Telescop, '1-phrtion Rt f fhn Irnnnnu `Ann:-up TI7-"---1--- Uub ucuuuae UL MIC quauty 01 I No consideration. other than quality guides It-he Walkerton or merchant in his -purchases and will. in a general way, guide buver. KT.....lI-,... L- ..-__ `-` ncapc,-11:11:15 uu-set BU IHCEE tile (llnerence? Then there 1s often some syecial reason for sendmg money away from home. For ' some years, I have sent from two to three hundred dollars to St. Marysfmvn Tornnto. not bcafxsef the price was less than hee. but because of the quality of the gnodz. N0 nnn_=idm-nnn nu.-m Hm... .---I vxillnn 4 um uuuu: rucwuarw nus 110 control. `The Telescope goes into `the market to purchase newsprint. There is a mill in Walkerton. we will assume. The condi- tions under which its products are produced are such that a price equal to ten per cent. over other mills -must be charged in order to live. Would The Telescope be justified , in bovine` this mu-.p:c Ilnrlnr m-A:...,.... ..:.. uu uvv. vvuuxu 1.11: .l.ClC\`.'UUp8 De Juslllneaw paying this excess under ordinary cir- cunlstances or unless there was some cor- responding off-set to meet the difference? Than Ham-a L~ n4`+m. .(II\ . . . . . . . -:-1 _,-,- I yuan] bum au\/JUV- ~Preume that I can buy in Toronto to the amount say of five hundred dollars in necessaries at a profit` of fifty dollars as compared with the prices in my homel town. am I justified in sending hatxmnney away? It might be that the profit to the Walkerton merchant is no greater than to the` one in Toronto and if he sold at T0- ronto priceshe would lose -money. yet it is not clear to me that I should lose fifty dollars because of a. condition over which the home merchant has no control. ~'l`1\n Tn`nEnAnn pun-.. 1..L.. `LL- ., , I umn us vuuuuuu scum: In [[18 BOVICB. It would be interesting; however, to know to what extent The Telescope would `carry this advice. n............ .1.-. r __ L. - - I LIUII LIUUUE. This-advice sounds well and has a good? deal of common sense in the advice; I I4 nynnlrl Ln 2..4........;2...... L--.A_--r- paves ~ I A Toronto reader recently wrote to The Walkerton Telescoge, on the Buy At Home: doctrine so frequently preached by town newspapers. In h`s reply the editor of The Telescope showed why he urged home purchasing upon his readers. Here is the correspondence :- - ' _..v -ovvvvn I Dear Sir :-The Walkerton Telecope ad- -vises the purchase of all articles by citi zens in their home ~t_own as against send- ing To other cities for any portion of Ttheir_needs. __ _ _ 7 3 {BUY AT HOME ADVICE PROPERLY COOKED, CEREAL V The Letter Thursday, August 10,1922 __. _._...;_._ -_ .____.._.__ avhat ale :e price 10 ;y 1 unmixed. F. I , nu: 3-guulh. price and` any other the same the retail uuu uuuu uu:u.uu::euuveruur, wan revlewea them. A Later in the day` exciting pony races were held, and archery and other feats of contests of skill and etrength were held. Little stands of rough boards accommodated .a crowd of - on-lookere which included \ Lord and Lady Byng. a large number at tourists `and ~. .:uuu;u Lu uul. wzzwr. I ' A convenient method for cooking cereals! Iis to mix with the usual quantity of water, }bring to the boiling point, boil for three! lor four minutes, and then put into a_fire-! 4.37 10.03 1.07 14.50 2.20 `6.11 LL ouuuuu puny uscen lulu 01.116!` Bp0l'(-8. The1r arrival in Banff was a dramatic affair. In all the glories of ceremonial paint and feathers, they rode silently down from the mountains in single le to theenew stone bridge` that crosses the Bow River, and there met.the=aGovernor, who reviewed them. ` I.nf.n~r in Ha. Ann" uvni-an mauve `...--- _-._- LA: icold water and cooked satisfactorily in 3' [double boiler without stirring, the method `being A_ particularly good in the case of lcorn-meal, which is likely to be'lu.-mpy ifr :stirred in hot water. 1 A ......... ...; ____LL- I 9 I` ' ' .... -., '-.--.-u we `nu uuyu. V) `The race: were keenly contested and many exciting Inlehee added largely to the fun. ANFF, nestling down among the mountains, ever beautiful, and always -interesting, was more than, ever so when `Their Excellencies the Governor-General and Lady Byng spent a few days there recently, while on their way west over. the C. P. R. to the Pacic Coast. It was natural that they should plan to stop . over for a quiet rest at this most delightful of Canada's mountain resorts where the glories of the Rockies are seen at their best. The occasion of the .Vice,-Regal visit was made the more notable by" the arrival in Bani! of about 600 Stoney Indians, who came to greet 1 Lord Byng, the Great White Chief. and to hold their 1 annual pony races and other sports. 1 Thnir in-rival in Rural? mm. . .1...........4.'- ..a'-:_ I- ..._.. -._vv- 5:: unv unsung (3) The arrival at tho '1'helt Excollenclca. the Gov stately yuan! of old dun. as `am. on-not-General and Lady Buy. ;__.A., (1) men uixceencxos. unto: um Lady Brag. W01 ! 30:! Ipoctaton It the, sports. 4:) The law: Ilolpod an the gu-umnc and chub their haven in the ruin; uld Jthor -llol. (SI `Nu nvrlwnl A0 olu- A-._._ n_;.a-_.. ,_ n - ain s big and age-long task of making That splendid British regiment, the Scots Guards, as they are known to- day, looks back to the merry monarch, Charles 1., as the chief authorof its regimental being. In 1649 King Charles. authorized the Marquis of Argyle to raise a regiment of 1,500 men to protect the recently plan ted Scottish colonists in Ireland. It was a fateful beginning. The regiment had its birth in a troublesome job, and has fattened in glory on troublesome jobs ever since. ' Its.hist0ry_ is the history of Britain's wars, and it is a long history and a stirring history, for through all the almost 300 years that have since rolled by, it has been only now and then that the Scots Guards have languished at` home in peaceful : ease. Their colors have {lapped in ' the bullet-torn breeze of every coun- J try, from Hull to Halifax, in which 1 Britain has had a war, and as Kipling ! intimates, that's a long way if you g.-: in the right direction. if they weren't with Wolfe at Quebec, it. was because they were otherwheres engaged in nailing down the blessings of British civilization with clap m are, bullet and bayonet. and altmretlier the Scots Guards has taken 21. giant part in Brit-. the world `sage (or democracy. ln the (lava l'\ni*'nrn r`1m..1.i. nut` k:.. In W()I'l(1 sage ml` democracy. In the days before (7ha.2'les and hrs . Thevfce-Regal Visit to Banff A ]__z_4\ND WITH A HIsT(5iiY . ussu , funty of `Simcoo. gunuou UR: JJCLIUKI/CU DeIOI'e Servlng. r The quantity of water required differs with the cereal. A cupful of rolled oats re- {quires at least two cupfuls of water; oat- gmeal or cornmeal four cupiuls, and rice I three cupfuls. V I A law.) 4 ..... ....:..I -r _-u ., n - Iless cooker and -leave for ten or twelve lhours. Porridge or mush made in this way must be reheated before serving. 1/ Tho mmntitv nf ulnfnr .-.....:...,1 ,::u-..._ ucrtsu. vv nan me DCOIGS Uruards did in the Great War would take columns to tell. '111e list of their battles is too _ long to be quoted here-. They were an important part. of the ever~giorious contemptibles. From 1914 to the end they saw it all. s Again and again the Scots Guards came back from the front a tattered remn.- .*1t of what was once a regiment, and just as often it went back again, stepping blithely into the maelstrom of death and de- struction to do or die according to the Scots Guard's standard. The regi- .m'ent s decorations won during the --.v.- -ruvL\.u.AUsJ uu uuc lull wuvwxlvuge ll was necessary to go farther abroad. Thus, we nd a company of Scottish Guards upholding the` national repu- tation at the court of the French King, Lous XL When .a Scottish King came to England, the Scots Guards followed, and most of them later found their way into Argyle s force, since when the regiment under one name or another has retained its en- tit-y, and had added to its standard the names of most of the historic battles of the British army as well as a. cloud of others less well remem~ hered. What the Scots Guards did ill thll nPD9.i. war \I7f\`lIll' fnlyn nnl...~..... jovial court, ,t,he hard ghting Scots were not popular in England. Their stout blows were usually directed too near home, and if they were toemploy their talents to the full advantage it necessary` to on farther ahrnurl Ill. CU D I-Ikll U15 I A level teaspoonful of salt to ti cupful wnzchel ., .....-. aumuuuulus 01 me mstrlct. Lord Byng went for an early morning gallop every day ovet; the superb bridle trails that lead in all directions into the moun- tains. Wild Rocky Mduntain Asheepl and goats, deer and even bears were frequently seen on the"-e occasions. -andwall the many points of interest were visited. the `Indian squaws of varying ages from little girls to comely maidens and old women, who displayed the greatest interest in the prowess of their braves. At the en d of the day the prizes were distributed to the `win- ners in the courtyard of Banff Springs Hotel. by Lady Byng, and some of the ladies of her party. " During the visit, Their Excellencies were delighted by the attractions of the district. Lord Byng early morning gallon even an lunar n... ..........L uwul vl:' uuuuuuurrb`. This tour was arranged for the bene- _t of the Great War Veterans As- sociation. and its purpose is largely to direct` attention to the ne work of the Association. An important fea- ture of the tour is the fact that it is under the direction of Dr. Charles Harris, whose unrivalled experience in connection with the British Em- pire s most important musical under- takings is world-wide in its scope. The band will arrive in_ Canada about May 1, on the Canadian Pacic liner Empress of Scotland. 16.48 20.13