V.-av run. vvuunlcauuyj At the home of Miss ? Agua- marine blue dress, elbow length sleeves, buttons of same material as dress in front of dress, collarless `with V-shaped neck line, a ower on shoulder of dress. A well dress- -ed hostess. .. JNSURANCE. MINESHIG} bAi.s'1'oN _ VJ uasuv Monday Mrs. a1'ticle.< - visitors zu'1`ied N013: and Was It You .....,......., Laucu . ; the week end. 5. Mulholland, 0. LC week end wi c' Caston. Earl I isa p pea street W `ors at Ernest ;. McMaster Ellsmere, of I E`{iE}"`Fl"E`H .\I'eafo1'd .u unu- has 1 'yphoi( food Page Eighf Turner the the influ .___:Z. , Dr. Marston T. Bogert, recipient! of the Priestley Medal, the highest award of the American Chemical G_-2.L_ __..I.l.A_ LI._L LL. .1,,, ~ {son spent Sunday at Cookstown. `MI. .....1 xx... 1 n____v._ ,1 1: luval uyvuv uuuuu_y cu. uuvnauuwu. Mr. and Mrs. L. Handy and Mrs.` Jas. Handy spent Sunday at D. f`nunnu.-.u ,~ nun-xvi], ynwnuvla unt NIB U5] Ia Iui sight when ,if necessary, our food- could consist of capsules or pills of concentrated, scientically correct~ synthetic nutrients ,although at pres- ent this would be too expensive. A woman's evening dress made entirely of aluminum is being ex- ' hibited in England. |..t.....y any vvuun yuu us J.\lLUH|1U- I Mr. and Mrs. Morgan and Mr.` and Mrs. Robt. Brown, of Brant-i ford, called on Rex Watson on Sun- day. navvsoam mu. uuc ruucnnuzu uuculwal Sociot , predicts that the day is in} manna. -1...- :1 .................. ...... :_-_a THIS CHRISTMAS . ....,.u.. .~. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Harold Osbornei spent a day in Toronto last week! Mrs. Lewis Wilson and family. [spent the week end in Toronto. | 11.. ..__.i IA ..- 11., , _,, I- A GIFT FOR YOURSELF NEW BEAUTY ! --------- --.-v about gifts for everyone else . . now, how about yourself? You want to look your best during Christmas, so why not come in for a permanent, and facial, and manicure '. --Treat yourself . relax . . .and be lovely at Christ- Phone 93 for Appointment Regina Curl Shop YOU'VE bee . and thinking TUESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1938. CHRISTMAS FLOWER PANS PRIMULA POINSETTIAS The deputy-reeve s order reads: From now on, by order of the town council of the Corporation of iwallacebury, all moo cows, compris- Iing bulls, heifers, steers, halves. must carry red tail lights on their -left rears when being driven through the gown ,'ozf Walacdburg between the hours of sunset and sunrise, in-. asmuch as the driving of such cat- tle through the town of Wallace- burg between the hours of sunrise and sunset is forbidden. Wallacebui-g.-Instructions have tbeen issued to police by Deputy- 'Reeve Harry Shirley, chairman of lthe police committee of th? town `council, that all cattle passing through Wallaceburg at night must carry tail lights. [COWS TO WEAR RED TAIL- LIGHTS IN WALLACEBURG 389 PERMANENT COMPLETE 3-PIECE SUITS E311` :- `.~ `. .-i 3 v 5% "sfu'~[. `r` ` QVERDOATS `I. W 1:9 V: . ,;u`.;; .14..~:,=e V. '- ` ;-""- ~' '1). W. ,, ; . . ... ,3; .14: .1. `A Dry Cleaning PRICES R-E-D-U-C-E-D ALL GOODS CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED W. R. Allen POTTED PLANTS FOR CHRISTMAS "The Gift of Good Taste" GIVE HIM A GI. EDSTQNE Firth & Moore I N 0 Need to Send Your Dry Cleaning Out of Town. Quality Workmanship Guaran- teed. EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY, until. the End of the `fear, We will Dry Clean and Press Suits tmal. 0'.'=.r<:o.:.1ts at the following` Prices : CYCLEMAN AZELEA WAX B EGON IAS (2 varieties) BEAUTIFUL imomf Erna I3`a_Y Sgrvic 1014W E 32 BAYFIELD PHONE 557 E EFi`EE:`E; uE_iEEFa&`EE%`;%%E`v3%a m.:FaEE$EE _ vvAA\4L nunua UL uvu auuun GAG null. The factor of kind and quality of `feed available is also important. lThe roughage and grain should be .home grown as much as possible inl [order to keep down the cost of pro- iduction and {he supply and quan- ;tity must be such as will enable the l feeder to keep the ewes in a thrifty `condition and to develop the lamb [as quickly as possible in the early [stages of growth. Alfalfa or clover _hay is essential and fresh silage or Iroots should be available. Oats are considered the staple concentrate Aifeed and if they can be supple- gl mented with bran and a small n( _________ EARLY LAMBS BRING HIGHER PRICES T0 SIMCOE FARMERS MORE CARE REQUIRED, BUTEZ LARGER YIELD MAKES VEN-gh TURE WORTH WHILE. ; When Simcoe County farmers are con.=,idering next year s lamb crop] they should consider the advantagzesi of producing early market lambs. I... ....,....u.; Juuu -nuns. nIu|u;_\ ln.:| lgmund than is paid during` the fall months when the bulk of the lamb [crop of. The influx oi |tou1-i:<,t.< and the growing apprecia~ Minn 01' I`1'0. lamb, :11! the yczxr 1 v n v n I 1 l I With these a(lvantag`es in mind.l the sheep breeder should place him- self in a position to prot by them` if operating conditions are favor- able. The most important of these conditions at breeding time includes housing accommodation available at lambing time and kind and quality of feed available. l Ewes require about two months after the weaning of the current lamb crop in which to dry up their milk "supply and recuperate from the strain of nursing. They need good pasture and usually some grain] thew Latter pan of this period to: put them in good condition. Whenl the current lamb crop is late, or notl. weaned early enough this attentionl is sometimes neglected, but it is necessary to insure large and heal- `thy lambs the next spring. 1 _, _ . _. l \ 'I2n'l_\' lambs: bring: higher prices: Lambs marketed during the sum- ;mer months yield more money per ,_ V . ,y.v, -1 . . .1 .... .-.x u.-. u`\ inu;xu puA(|>1LI:.~. IL In i`.iiu.< po.<. to .~=cr:Lu'e mpid ziml `i:-vnm)mi('(':1! _u`:1in,~' in the 0:u`|_\ : iof _9;i'o\\'th. On i':u'm.~: with p:u':i.-:itz-' infested pastures this point is ofl - t'0l1. importance. -1? zuidition, when ozu'i_\' iumbs arci being; nished on grass they may he' ready for market before the pasture becomes scarce or is needed for~ other kinds of live stock. I ,_,,_.C, In the matter of accommodation warmer quarters than the regular sheep barn should be available for lambing. In small ocks this can usually be secured by providing '|.ip1Ce in a corner of a stable where lother kinds of live stock` are kept. Tlnn Fnnhuu .-`G? bind -nu! .u.n1:L-. -4` I .... .. kll . ground, by |ul'. fz1ctor.< lsonal variz u p-.1.~.rtum ood co nd iti c Another v '10:! >Lh0r 1(l\'11!)t1f0 is U10 f'21('ll vhen lambs: are turned out on! '0 :1ftv1' they have obtained :1 . under dry lot f'r*odin~;._:! u...v ...u._ u. x, by internal '1! md Canadian consume1'.< are ,4 n-ontrilmtinr to this sea- intion in price. `,..,......... u not .` af-i p211'asites. It is: . ... J ,, 1 lUV|aIaCl.a As the period of gestation in lsheep is from 147 to 150 days and e it will require at least four months pllo produce a market lamb of the Si(lCSl1`C(l \veig'ht, 21 period of at least _ninc months will elapse from date Liof breeding until marketing: time. _`I1. is very important when raising, ,.!early lambs that all ewes be ear-. 1lm:u'l or otherwise identified so? ,lt|1:1l l'z1i1'ly Zl.CCll1`1t0 breeding records i~,n1uy be kept. This will enable the _!'hrecl(`1' to zivoid losses at lan`.hin;-2 rltime tl1r011g'h unexpected droppinyz". clot l:lmh< in cold weather. l ... 1. 1-1 . vi cake for the lambs, so much the ibetter. aquantity of cracked corn and oil- I u - v p ,._,,A,,A5,,, novv pun. nuulauay? Crossing the Five Points. Shel wore a black velvet coat with silver fox collar, -black hat, black shoes, plum color angora gloves. l The somewhat higher cost of lproduction and the little extra care Int I:\mhin:.-,' Limv should be well ll-mnpx-n.-ml in the increased `return 'I`nr well nished lamb ma1`kete(1 `run-l.;r. In addition the efTe(-t of this `practice in stabilizing the mnrlcct land building` up consumer demand . not be lost sight of by`t 3r3 l':x1'-seeing` producer. Lulu rc- I I y I K Maris, by Grace Livingston Hill. lightful romance of a brave and very devoted family. The story opens just three weeks before +he wedding of Maris, the eldest daugh- ter, to young, handsome and weal- thy Tilford Thorpe. `On awaken- .in;: that morning Maris is depressed land has a feeling of foreboding. That very day great trouble comes to her, and as the story progresses, Maris is shown quite plainly -that money can never bring true happi- .\'lr.<. Hill has given us a very de- _ iucn nc-V, spun; ` Here is a real thriller which you "won't feel like putting down until it is nished. Norman Conquest re- lturns home from abroad to demand `an accounting of his lstewardship from an uncle, Mr. Mortimer. He discovers that all is not as it should be and suspects further that Mr. Mortimer hides some very shady . transactions under a cloak of phil- : :1nth1`opy. From that time on we are kept in suspense as one jitter - follows another. Mr. Mortimer Gets the Jitters, by! Berkelqy Gray. I YY...... 2,` . ......I LL..1II-.. ...LZ..L ..,_..| Mary Mallon, internationally known as Typhoid Mary, died a week or so ago, a medical prisoner" at North Brother Island, New York, where, for a quarter of a century, she had been isolated in the public interest as an innocent carrier of typhoid fever germs. She \v:i.< 70 _vear;~: old. But though 21] typhoid carrier." that is one who,1 not at-tu:1ll_\' lmvin.-_r the disease her- self, is Cil])lli)lC of _:ivin_:' it to! nil1('1'n', she rlierl not of typlioi-l~' it-\'r*i`, i.-:1 lrnm 1114- nziturul <'.::1..4z:i q1H`I1('(-.~ old :x~:e, l1'd\'lll_I had 21! p:u-:i'_\'ti' .~Li-oke six years ago. l ln her earlier .i-.i_\'.~w .`.l:n'_\' .\II'.l)i],i :1 plump Irish Cook. was, in the` .l... , . _ . .. I...... I This little book was one thatl Lady Tweedsmuir g`raciously donat- ed to us and a very charming book it is. Each of the twenty-ve short pictures of life in French Canada is accompanied by an equally charming illustration. The pictures have been purposely made to resemble the de- signs woven into the hooked rugs for which Quebec is so famous. Old and young` cannot fail to be charmed by the original designs and I color contrasts. : well. `TYPHOID MARY DIES` PRISONER or SCIENCE ._.l ulwimxs, p:11'ticu1:u`_\' if. allon, they are cooks \l7.'AL Ll... ....... lu...u.u...._. I4 u... ...u_ I 1.\Iz1]lon, are or hnmllc `fund. With the enormous 1`t'(1L1('t.iui1 lin late years of typhoid fever cases, the number and conseuuent inu- once of the typhoid carrier have been corresponvdingly decreased. '1"....L..3A 01....-... .~. 3........:..L'l.. Ans. ' Opposite Wellington Hotel A Phone 581 1014V |I\ \ we mu. uv 1. \1 .. .,........ nu..- corresp onvd'ing1y Typhoid fever is invariably car- ried from person to person by food, ngers or ies. Water, milk and French Canada, by Hazel Bos- Library Nook `death. mu. . or of typhoi-rl fever to 1.. . A . . A .- .'....`'I . ... .. 1. J (Contributed by Barrie Public Library) : xi-.1`\';-,2 Mullen th` _\'c:u'.=. the inziocen aid 2R pm` x1|\.A vuovu ;\.uu;u - zzing market ; by `the The Barrie Advance ......,.., , m the} iocenp. % pm`-` 1 I 1.00 p.m. Thuraday-- f'........:_... 4.1. .. `m..._ A lifelong resident of Barrie pass- ed away at St. Michael .< Hospital, Toronto, on Tuesday, December 6, in the person of William Slqouldice, in his sixty-fth year. runs 1 .. nu nun c,:.xu_y u4.uu _v\.u;. Widely known in Barrie and throughout the surrounding: district, where he was engaged in painting and decorating for many _x'e:11`:~', the late William Shouldice was educat- 'ed at the Separate School here,-an ;institution which he has served as 121 trustee for a lengthy period. He was Q1 faithful member of St. .\Iar_\".< Roman Catholic Church, :1 member of the Knights of Colum- ibus and the Holy Nmne Society. His death 'l'0llo\ved an illness of slie'htl_\' over 21 _\`em'. rn1., L-__._,_. 1 ,,,,, , 1, ,1 1 r, rv. Mr. and Mrs. Murray Ronald and son Ross and Mr. and Mrs. G. Durnford and son Larry motored to Toronto on Friday and spent the day. ll ..- TY_._.... `|'.\-`._L__ _- ,, 5,, 1'3`, I (Fhe funeral was held from St. [I\1':ng\".< Church on Friday, Dec. 9, Mass being sung` by ReV'erend I7ntI1c1' Dean Clair. Pa]!-bearers were P. l{0z1rns_. J. Moore, Wm. (.`1'o.<.~'Iand,' A. Overs, J. Brennan and F. Can-. ciH:1. Inir,-rment took place in St. Cemetery. ._._ ..-1-L:____ 1.. 41...]. nun; - Mrs. Harry Foyston was in Elm- vale on Tuesday and Wednesday at- tending a. leadership course in Buy- manship conducted by Miss Col- lins, of the W.I. staff. I`-.. I1 `I _1___L-_ ____ 3,. rn,,, _,. .....,, I-I]. .....; ..... aw... _ Geo. G. Johnston was in Toronto iattending the National Conservative iConvention last week. _ \-...c.-._,. Surviving relatives include twol bi-others, GC01`}.`,'0 of Toronto and Gus of `.211-vie; also two cousins, Mrs. Geo. Chase of Capreol and Mrs. Norman Semon of AshtabuIu.| Among those attending the fun-I eral from a distance were Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Shouldice and daughter, Toronto, and I\'I1`s. Geo. Chase, Cap- reol. - vvuvuusuvu auau "GUA- Ronald Orchard visited his bro- ther Joseph, who has been in To- ronto General Hospital for some week receiving treatment, and is still conned there, but improving steadily. c......_-u... :._ _._4.-__1_.v A, :1 .. also .. .. ... I ! other I`: % vehicles 1.40 p.m. Friday-- ` On the south side of Dunlop St. (`Continued on page seven) nu-a.-uu; o Sympathy is extended to Mrs.` Harold Bowen, who received a cable from England this week advising her of the death of a. sister. Mrs. S. Fralick and Mrs. George Y..L....L-.. ..LL_...'I_J n, Hypo nun. u;;u. ucsu `\./aavvu. Mrs. Greensides and Bill, of lingwood, spent the week end. Mrs. Harvey Greensides. Mrs. Harvey Greensides and ' :1`. Inc`; .... \r.__..1.._. 4--.. rm, A.u|uAA_v, u; uugaz Mr. and Mrs. Blanche, of Hillsdz C. Craig during Mr. and Mrs. M1 ronto, spent the w< and Mrs. Bert Casw I 1 Al. uh 44; v c` Har ily left on week. I Mr. and `Sunday at E Miss Bah Week end` ` DENT, SICKNESS, BURG- FIRE, AUTOMOBILE, ACCI- 109 Dunlop St. CLEANERS Phone 229 ' LARY AND PLATE GLASS OBITUARY 110 WILLIAM SHOULDICE food `T; can vb. 4 and I\ also `Baker CRAIGHURST