Ontario Community Newspapers

Acton Free Press (Acton, ON), September 2, 1926, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

f jn artan3ffrggpyggjfl thursday ijeptember 2 1026 out fi8hin a feller iant ttitwux moon out huhln his thoughts nro mostly good an clean out nahln ho doesnt knock iiib fellow men or liarbur uny grudges then a fellers at iiih finest when out jliihin tho rich are comrades to tho poor out fluhln all brothers of a common lure out nshlrt tho urchin with the pin an string can chum with millionaire an king vain prldo 1h a forgotten thing out flahln a feller gits ar chance to dream out llshlni ho lcarnatho beauties of a stream out flahln an he can wash his soul in air that hms foul with aelflbh care an relish plain an slmplo fare out flahln a feller has no time to hale out flahln he iant eager to bo great mfrout flshlni ho isnt thinkln thoughts of pelf or goods stacked high upon a shelf but he la always just himself out tflshln a fellers clad to ho a friend out flahln a nclpin hand hell always lend out flshln tho brotherhood of rod an line an aky an stream la always nno men co mo real close to cods design out flshln a feller isnt plotting schemes out flshln hes only busy with his- dreams out flshlnr hih livery laa coat of tan his creed to do the beat ho can a felleraalwaya mostly man out flshln 3fret prraa blott tot into a mantrap by shirley w smith scenic gbandetjr in nevada ft b k in herald and presbyter doing others vvork y- tho world could hardly set on with out those who do the work ofothers as well as their own how many men and women arc there whose shoulders are bent with their own burdens who yet have to take on a dally load of what belongs to others and get no thanks and no credit cor it how many make ft good showing and are praised and petted and ad- i vanced who yet really depend upon the silent watchfulness of some one that stands ready to fill the little gaps and smooth the rougrh edges vicarious labor of that order is not to be blamed or criticised by anyone but there is a disposition to do others work that la less commendable wo all know the ordinary meddler who neglects his own taslc in life if he has any to watch bis neighbors to comment to find fault to tell how this should bo done or why that should be undone without any proper know ledge of the conditions of labor or the means of accomplishment or the object to bo achieved sometimes per- 1 sons of that sort even kindly volunteer to do the work themselves and do it better with results thatwe all know and do not care to dwell upon there is however a much more sub tle form of the tendency to do others wor than this mere uncalledfor meddling a tendency that is really more harmful precisely because it springs from the desire to help and from a sense of responsibility for what is actually done it is seen especially in people who have or ought to have on immense- deal of e were three undergraduates bicycling through canada twenty years ago from do- troit to niukura fans curter and croleman were seniors i- was a junior at ancaster tho wellgraveled road begun to fall off sharply and had it only led straight on we might have coasted several miles into hamilton carter wanted to atop in the city for dinner but croleman and i were in favor of riding the few miles to gfimsby as wo had agreed to abide strictly by majority vote wo contin ued on our way but we hud hardly left the outskirts of the town when croleman ran over the stub of a nail stlckinjg out of a horscshoo in the dust hcls tire was flat in ten seconds when wo had spent half an hour in repairing the puncture we were so hungry that every one of us wished we had stopped in hamilton we even thought of turning back jjut a short distanco ahead we could see big prosperouslooking farmhouse and there we thought wo might get some bread and milk the family gave us cordial recep tion a gallon of nillkv fresh and creamy and cool from tho spring- house and a gjant loaf of bread were sot beforo we offered payment for our feast- mr gaston our host bluffly refused to touch a penny on the other hand he insist ed that before we went away we should let him show us his new stock barn which was ho told us the pride and envy of all the country round the building was not quite finished painters were putting on the second coat and one or two carpenters were working inside wo noticed one man just about to sot a pump in a cistern the roof of the barn had been on nearly three weeks mr gaston said i and almost his whole hay crop was into the cistern when i thrust my head above tho surface again x s iw that the- oponjne was nearly filled with slowing timber ends while var ious smaller pieces of burning wpod woro in alght now i thought tho danger is all past the flromon will soon extinguish tho arc and i shall bo discovered and taken out even as i looked there was a hiss ing of steam above and a splosh of cold water came down upon me it wasf of course from the flro hoso there was plenty of water tp fight tho flames fotf the splash that fell on mo was succeeded by other splashes then the splashes became a small stream and that in turn a larger one still the water poured in a steady jet as largo atf myarm it could not come directly from the hose it was too large and it- hod not sufflcont foce it fell more as water falls from the open end of an eavesspout durr a hard ralrtstoiim- suddenly i realised that instead of being only waistdeep the water was almost to my chest for a mo ment i did not comprehend the mean- i inff of this then i grasped its im port and for tho first time that after noon real fear selxed upon me i tried desperately to get jup the sloping floor of my trap it was of no use i might gain a couple of steps or even three then- back i slid over and over i tried it and when i gave it up the water was nearly even with my shoulders by its impetus the stream above mo feel a little to one aide of the centre and i was spared receiving the deluge on my head x grot the pall- under my feet and thus raised my mouth a foot higher above the water there was a gleam of hopc perhaps the water would cease torun in but as tho flood crawled slowly up to my shoulders again i grew as frantic as work dono by subordinates the mark of a good executive whether in the i much as we could we ran- out wagons household or in the nation is the land carriages hauled out bags of readiness to trust others to select the grain and tied horses so that they right head and hands for a certain icoutd not rush back into the building task lay out the general outline of i but rapidly as we worked and with it and then leave the head and hands fall the assistance that arrived from to got it done in thedr own way fori the neighbors wo were soon con- somo people even for some who have vinced that some of the animals were other important elements of leader- doomed ship that is impossible- they not the thought was a terrible one to only plan a general scheme of what me i remembered a pen of two or they want done they must be dally three sheep that i had seen as we hourly superintending it giving a passed through the barn and 1 be- hlnt here a suggestion there critlclx- lieved i could and them and drag ing and commenting no jn an un- ut at least one in i dashed but iclnddy spirit but with an intense de- it was a foolish act the smoke was sire that everyu detail should be car ried out just as they would carry it out themselves meanwhile tho larger functions which they should properly perform are likely to be negjected- usually the best way to do our own work is to let others do theirs j 1 auuuiucxa ugum t grew as iranuc ai stored away in the vast mow most bofore jsautilb ripple as it touch of his stock was turned out to pas- ed me fo hke tho c j of turej only the work horses and a tew mer creeplmj nea my face cattle- and some smaller animals being i shouted and screamed again and again i tossed up bits of charred wood craslly hoping that they would in some way find an opening and rlse as a signal to the friends who were unwittingly kiping me each piece fell back as regularly as it was thrown often rhoy were too light even to reach the covering of the cistern tho water was lapping my neck when i thought of my pocket knlfo and my blcyclo wrench i got thorn from m pocket and threw tho knife there was weight to that it carried well but when it struck a timber end it dropped back into the water with a hopeless yswlaah tho wrench was my last hope 1 poised myself as carefully as 1 1 could and then with all my strength hampered by the water and by my unsteady foothold i tossed the little piece of shining at eel straight ns a ray of light it went into the point where the stream of water was flow ing through and as the pail slid from under me i knew that the wrench was not going to fall back where had landed had it risen into the air and been seen by some eager eye or was it onfy lying out of sight beneath rubbish that had stopped its upward course when i could get my head once more above water and hay e my feet i flxeotas firmly as possible on the pall pny blurred eyes strained tgward the jncomlngstreftm i knew it was still falling and that the water was at my chfn but it might toe lt might be smaller and was i right did not my waterdimmed eyes mock me the flow wap certainly less it was grow ing still less every second and then it ceased there was only a succes sion of subdued drops instead of the splashing hounding torrent of the last halfhour now in the stalls and pens after our inspection we sat down on the plaxza for a fow minutes rest when we were suddenly summoned into an experience that literally came within an inch of being the end of me mr cjaston was discussing domin ion politics when i saw a thin twin- ing strand of bluo smoke float out i from a ventilator high up in a gable of the big barn the farmer saw it at almost tho same instant and ho rushed down tho steps but even before we could get half way to the building the line of blue amoko had become a dark cloud and red flames threaded its rolling mass smoke and flre were to be seen at a doxen openings we found out afterwards that a hired man had been taking a smoke in the stables and that a spark from his pipe as he went to get hay for the horses had started the blaxe gaston and his men could make every effort count as they knew ex actly what animals were in the earn and where we three boys helped as in other word8 pay in advance automobile tourists ore likely to meet with arousing experiences in their travels round the country the morris family drove into a small western town some time ago dog tired lets go to a hotel tonight said billy im too tired to get this tent off and sot it up all right mr morris replied accordingly the party sought out i the one hotel iu-the- town can you give us two adjoining rooms mr morris said to the proprietor yeall i guess i can was the re ply theyll be two dollars apiece or four dollars for the two a minute later laden with baggage mr morris and silly reentered tho hotel followed by mrs morris and alice tho little girl show asb to our rooms now will you said- mr mbrris r yes sir theyll be two dollars gjdflcft or four rtnllnrw for the two- of them the proprietor replied suro l know mr morris agreed ive got my hands full- now ill nay you in tho morning all right tub proprietor answered nonchalantly ill show you to your rooms in tho morning then always mj8fit8 all of us would be misfits if put in certain places a man may be a big success as a photographer who would be dismal failure a premier of can ado some of us are misfits simply because we are not in the riht work but there are others who seem mis fits everywhere- they do not bet on with their own family they do noronjpy anything the other members do at school they ore misfits they are always having trouble with their teachers and their classmates when they get out of school and o to work they are always losing a job and hunting for another they are mis fits not occasionally but always the girl with a distinct talent for music does not need to worry because she would be a misfit aw a bookkeeper there is no reason why she should try to change herself but one who is a misfit everywhere needs to oie no time lrti learning adaptability guard your babys eyes surprise is sometimes expressed at the very large nunvber of people who suffer from defective eyesight nowa day it i only partly true to say that this is caused by j the greater strain of modern- life matny cases of defective vision aroauetoy of those in charge of bables foolish act the smoke was heavy and before i realized what i was doing i was groping wildly about with no thought but to find my way out again then suddenly i stumbled over some rattling metallic object and it and i dropped into space i felt the nlr grow darker yet cooler and purer and then i struck water and went under it to a stone floor like a flash came tho recollection of the open cistern i had noticed on our trip through the fbarn was i to drown in that dark hole7 i remember that there was an instants comfort in the thought that i had better drown than burn to death i fought my way to the surface through what seemed to be fathoms of water inlawing and strangling i managed to get a breath and stood up then i knew that no bones had been broken- in my fall and that tho water was- only waistideep- the galvanised iron pall that i had tripped over was float ing halfful of water beside me but my plight was bad enough tho hard work in the heat of the day and the blaxlngbarn had drawn perspira tion from every pore of my body and now to be plunged into this chilling place for i knew not how long put me in danger of rheumatism or even pneumonln and the lmtnedlato dan ger wos great enough it was im probable that the smoke would settle nto the cistern to disturb me much but high overhead i could see the flames in the timbers of tho roof and already good sited pieces of burning wood wero dropping to the floor the opening through which i had passed 00 easily was certainly big enough to admit a falling stick whose weight could crush in my skul like paste board worst of all the cistern had been built- in tho shape of on egg the big end was down but even so tho bot tom sloped rather stiffly to a point exactly under the opening- it was almost impossible to stand anywhere except at that lowest central point for the slippery cement let my feet slide bnck to the middle as fast as i stepped awny two or three small sticks fell upon me and in avoiding another i slipped and got a second complete ducking by the momentary light of trie little torches that dropped in i saw that my head was at least ave feet from the opening above mo and that there was absolutely nothing within my reach that my fingers could grasp thenre roared above while i could hear the trampling of the frightened animals in- their stalls nnd now and j then a hoarse shout from n bumnn throat outside little by little the air in the cistern grew warmer and the noise of the flames seemed to increase rather than lessen suddenly i heard the elnng of a flreenglno bell nnd then a clear resonant command that must have come through a firemans trumpet i surmised correctly and already the rubbish above bo- gan to shiver and resound under the rapid blown of axes in ten minutes more i was looking up into the full light of the afternoon and croleman and carter wero lowering a rope with a big noose at its end i got the noose under my arms and then my overtaxed body and nerves foiled me i came to my sense again after a few minutes and found myself lying in bed between hot woollen blankets and my chums and mr gaston wero rubbing mo so vigorously were their efforts that i felt warmer than at any time before that afternoon i begged them to treat me with less violence the next day proved that their treatment had been good for me i felt no iii effects whatever from my experience and insisted on going on with our trip tho gaston strongly objected and would hatvo been glad to have us spend out whole vaca tion at their farm but we did not wish to give dp our excursion to tho falls and our time was limited so after dinner we bade thorn goodbye and rode off toward grimsby the burned barn as i examined the ruins that morning plainly told the stor of how wo m w hnn nm i ihir to be poured in upon me tho south end of tho bunding was still stand- ing nnd the partly burned roof slop ed thence toward the middle of the barn where the cistern was when the ridge pole fell the lower end of it charred and splintered had come to rest just over my prison al though the trough thus formed was full of holes and choked with rub bish it was still sound enough to much of the water thrown on the j ruins to work its way into the els tern- vivid description of noted places visited by rev j gulp dear brother moore i am sitting uiion a ijhihhivo rock in tho shudow of another which evi dently in sonic century lias boon heuved and hiiccci and set on edge by a combustible stirring of nature all around in for perhuph ave or six acres in a j tumbled pllo of boulder of such immense slsotlmt no crane i ever saw could lift in front of mo is tho beautiful luko tub 00 in appearance it socms to bo about two miles across but it is actually fifteen miles from shore to shore to my right and to my loft extending about twenty miles ouch way are ntoro of those immense boulders across jo the west if thdiuuc uf california shurlug luke taboo with nevada a rolling skyllnoof mauntaln peaks of various hclghtn with hero and therein white spot or lino show ing what little snow thero 1m left to supply tho waters of this lake and the irrigation ditches wherever arable land is to tie found for ranching tho greut cross continent lincoln highway posses a few rods from our hosts cottage and winds along the shore jcadlng pvpr mount uloso to carson city and reno a distanco of fifty miles a mile south in u hoys and girls camp nameof under excellent supervision this is a boon to tho lads and lassos avow rods from whero i am in the oh ad of a beautiful pine fllt miss wagner an artist of rare skill sketching while mrs culp and tho other mem bers of the wagner family aro look ing after the culinary department of outing for the holiday guests i have been doing a little munuel labor clearing up around the cottage and putting some necessary equip ment in- thekltchen ndbed rooms i still enjoy the mechanical pastlrno with saw and hammer excepting when- i nit the nail of my thumb with the hammer this is a beautiful and ap petising spot and mr und mrs wag ner are ideal hosts we wero privileged to spend a sun day in fullon a few weeks ago do ing supply work for tho pastpr who was east on holidays on his re turn home after preaching but one sunday he went in for a swim with his two children ho jumped into the irrigation canal for his swim and in a tragic manner was drowned in tho presence of his children pwns called upon to supply a sabbath again it was indeed a sad calamity to see such a popular pastor and successful ser vant of god snatched from his people by waters which have converted this district really into tho richest of the state nut the irrigation canals an nually hike their toll of life as we motored around a few miles over territory where nothing but sand and sagebush could be seen a fow short years ago we saw a flrst crop of alfalfa cured and stacked hun dreds of tons of it while tho second and third crops were still in the grow- ingteattle sheep and turkey ranches 1 melon patches of 10 to 80 tho melons now being shipped in car loads to eastern and other markets iallon boasts of tho finest hearts of gold cantaloupes in the united states a town of 1800 and the surrounding community supports one general store that has a turnover of a million dol lars worth of business per year this is certainly a demonstration of mak ing the desert to blossom as 1 the rose another place of peculiar interest which we visited lately is donnor lake this is about forty miles from here up in the sierra mountains we motored through truckee over the new highway along the banks of the truckee river with the mountains towering high above us on both sides and the roadway winding in nnd out giving glimpses of rare scenery at al most every turn we first stopped at the statue at the cast end of tho lake in 1846 a party of about 90 persons set out from homes in illinois iowa ohio missouri and tennessee for tho west the jmrty was organized in sangamon county illinois by george and jacob donnor and james v held their caravan consisted of 40 wagons cattle horses some milk cows 150 pounds of flour and 75 pounds of meat etc for each individual de pending on the land and forest for additional provender and fuel they set ou on their long and trying journey after a varied and often trying ex perience they reached the sierra in november and there took a few days to rest and recuperate this was where the city of- reno now stands this rest caused them to miss the crossing over tho mountains before an earlier than usual fall of snow nnd resulted in the tragedy of tho death pf forty of the emigrants in crossing the desert there was great suffering and loss of cattle through luck of water on one oc casion 18 cattle ran madly as thy scented water and were never aeon ajguln indiana wore constantly on their trail and often stole from them which they needed most to sustain life the most harrowing experience of all was the forced imprisonment of the company at lake donnor because of the snow in tho mountains the lake wad afterwards named donnor in memory of georgo and jacob don nor who had organlxed tho party be ing caught by tho storm they were obliged to build rude temporary shacks for protection and await the outcome as tho storms continued shacks and cattle and all toecame burled in its depths numbers of the cattle smoth ered as they sought shelter thoy party august but cool nights always wo nru glad to li6ar oftho rood season you aro iniyttlttvit home when god glvju the owur guotl returns we alt feel tin- ikiuflth out thouglith lit dully buck to ur frlcnils and uhmo- eliitluiih of tin tumi a nicret ycarn- intr in nivci- uliseitt wo wlhh all t lire good upon you their is room to contain hincerhy j cjulf f1u4 wells aveiilh luim nevada atiklkl ilhh jliwo curing hay keeping a diary keeping a diary illco it good ninny other thlhtfti in n matter of habit at lliht it huuiiih immensely difficult forget and tho days slip jy unro- mirdeil you liavcvnothlng to ht down otyoirllttvotoaliiuclr mariy ijukiii diaries but comparatively fow porslt with them yet keoplng a diary luui great prac tical advuntiikih you do nut appre ciate how irciicherouff memory is till you compare it with actual written records some one suys that you did 01 said ho and so you think that you did not you turn to your diary and thoro aro tho facts- vresoncc absence lllitoss health even happiness or uri- liapplncss are often substantiated by a ro for on co to diurloh and thoro is tho fascination of liv ing your llfo over again when you abound in youth and strength und everything in bofore you the past j counts for comparatively little but if a friend is thoughtful enough to urgo upon you tho keeping of a diury and you take the advlco thoro comes a day when you thank him there in a curious aimoat inexplicable charm in going back to what you did and folt in chiiclhobd and early mrtturtty in those faded years of long ago and if dlarlps have u fasclnritlori for those who write tiiey liavo a islngr ular attraction for those who read them hero is no literary artifice no deception no pretense but the plain and simple record of a life as it was lived and fow books dollght us more because thoro is u common humanity in us all and the record of one life has strange revelations as to all lives it- is true thnt the habit of writing in a dlury has its dangers it tends to turn our thoughts inward and after all wo wero meant to iivo outwardly unless tho habit- is properly under- 1 stood and limited it tends to intro spection and morbid analysis and perhaps aggravates those tendencies in persons who aro naturally born with them in fact it must be admitted that the persons most likely to keep a diary art those whom it is least likely to benefit yet keeping that drawback in mind and taking gain and loss together the practice is on tho whole to be recommended hay to bo pf tholbest quality must bo cut when tho crop is at tho right stuko of maturity nnd muut then bo cured in tfto best manner overrlpo hay iohos n- largo percentage of leaf ind in of inferior food value la general tho principles of buy i making aro the name for all hay crops the crop must bo cut at u stage of maturity that will give tho highest yield of palatable hay above all tho crop must nut bo permitted to ripen jjnufar or tho resultant feed will bti woody with it high percentage of waste when fed in tho making of clover liay tho best vj tin lily in obtained whore tho crop ih cut in full bloom or when thfl heads are juftt beginning to turn to brown it should bo cut jin tho morn- tih soon an froo from tiuto it may ho todded or turned by hand and then colled in rather small but carefully made colls or cocks in tho evening huy of tiiln typo cures best under con ditions which prevent very rapid dry ing of the leaves if favorable weath or obtains the hny may bo taken in after several days directly from tho coll although if help is available very fine hay results if tho colls are shaken out several hours previous to haul- intf wiien a heavy rain has fallen on clover after it has been cut tho oper- atlon of curing becomes difficult if very wet and left in largo colls it will mllddow if spread out jn tho hot sun the leaves blacken and break off readily leaving a stemmy hay if the weather in fine following the rain a fairly satisfactory method in to leave tho coils undisturbed for the day in tho evening if tho weather appears mottled spread the coils npar- ingly and leavo open all night the uny may then bo fit for drawing in ibhvicctooiie uearslb secure the right underwear make f nne you see the label on every garment you buu dodsknit underwear what am i 7 0 following day or it may be neces aury to coll for further curing haul and storawhchlhehay rustles nicely the addition of one or two pounds of common salt per ton of hay as it is beinf stored usually adds to tho koeplng quality and palatablllty timothy hays and mixed hays al ways should bo cut when the seed is forming or ns most farmers say just after tho second blossom falls cut in the morning after the dew is off tedded or turned in the afternoon and raked and colled in large well- made coils in the evening it is fre quently possible n take in hay of this type on the following day under favorable conditions one may dispense with the colling hauling directly from tho wlndraw when this method is feasible considerable labor is saved under very favorable weather con ditions timothy and mixed hays arc sometimes cut in the morning and stored away in tho afternoon there are arguments for and against such a practice with hay cut at the prop er state 6f maturity to ensure the greatest palatablllty it is doubtful if it would keep properly in storage un der such treatment r0se is good tea tea my form is odd nor squaro trlangrular nor oval yet my shapo is fair in every household in every sort of way tin busy every hour in the day aty nature is cold ray temper is quite serene f yet in hot water i am often seen sometimes im dull and sometimes very bright and yet i hnvo stirring times mom noon and night from high to low not one disdains to sip tho solace that i bring to parched up do you know mo no then i declare your friends will call you by tho name i bear answer a spoon at a later stage i however or with hay somewhat over- im neither round lt ls uute nobble to follow such a practice successfully b p tinney dominion experimental station charlottetown p e i golden note8 w jwiv eyes irritated by sunw1nddust 6cinders ucohjfcmded fr sou bt dmjggut5 opticians want ro nma its cam wok mviuh 1 co uucamm a vain mans motto win gold and wear it a generous man and share it a misers motto win gold and spare it a prodigals motto win gold and spend it a usurers motto win gold lendit a fools motto win gold and end lt a gamblers motto win gold and loso it- a sailors motfo win gold and cruise it a wise mans motto win gold and use it motto win gold and full line of l m p goods stocked by jas symon acton ont 50000 15 aug 31st aoiita to winnipeg k ecatper mile toptjnulxyood bot not tnonton macleod nod calisrr ftrocn station in obtrto smttk fasa t and 1 ltno and hajockfwhoro from all station klnmtoa u kmn fraan all station borta pwo all slrttoa on toronlawlkuiy jlroct- f tnt wanted 20 rinom pfc h oor vox from all statloa in ontariosoutaad woafc of toronto a woiuuhl roaju fall and wlndaor from all stationa n oww sound walfccston otanfowiua t01 godarich st majrya port burwall and su tknanaa- branca fwom ll stationa toronto and north to boltocw uactnat stationa tn ontario on tfca mlcnbcan canual para 1 a stun 0ifc wn sept 3rd i t root u station tn untifo on tfc mlckton cmu1 pm mtwpmt wblm4 i and toronto hamilton buffalo rauonyn special train service from toronto fvmm tlt-ir-l- v 1 r w t it liiiiilnan n x i fvc full infonmuon front nor canadian faaam nnl canadian pa no one had noticed what became of the water no one had thought of my belnir in that hole the still smoklnff remnants of the barn were full of eajjer searchers for my body when carter had seen my bicycle wrencji shoot up from a small opening in ijt- shoot up from a small opening in tho litter and fall back out of sight in the wet ashes berry piauerl pined for using undkkd poxes as i afterward learned that the hamilton firemen had managed by pleelng together many i flections ofy hose to get within reach of the blaxe there was a sudden shower of em- byery vummer you will e babies lying on their backs in peramtiulatora gsslns up into- a rasmhng cloudlese idty 171 ey cannot eecape fromv the glare and the way in which thy blink c and rub- their eyee mharwb how trying tfftriet be fcsxir xater on is 1t any wonder that jthese evy yletrns of carelessnoas require the at- lions iof an eye peetallatt toerisa wrenching and criihohinn onii hlwflnff above and a awlrl of fiery air wa forced toyn throivh the open ing the roof w talllnt x ducked beneath the water to escape the biff parks trylne to orawl to one- aide overthesllpiwry aloplnff bottom and oxneptinr to et crmrhlnf blow from mmii detached timber or the fall inff i leuiimt a imims but qniirf vu- vrixv -4- 1tr v- tl ift v allpaaea oamelottaw acconllns to a provlilon of the now fruit aot of the dominion boxe con- talnlng hefrle or ourrnnt packed in canada for ale muet contaln when level full tin nearly aa practicable s36 or 172 cufilo inchon whloh le the equivalent of one full pint or one full quart the first charge for violation of this law itas laid before- magistrate shields at oakvllle on june 23rd the defendant wan accussed of offer- ins american strawberries for sale in thp 4fi qunrt berry boxee formerly uod he was found ullty no minimum fine of ten dollars was im posed the dominion fruit commissioner expressses the hope that this con viction will serve as a warning to other dealers in berries throughout the dletrlot h also urjes that con sumers should always insist on the fgll- staed boxes of either one pint or one quart when ptrrehaslng berrlt issued by the director of publicity dominion department of grlcalture s after the storm by poking sticks down through the snow to locate them the few thnt were recovered became the only source of meat for the dis couraged travellers some of the braver and stronger ment went out seeking relief and never returned or reached their destination before starvation overtook the others one by one at the wintry camp rescue parties were sent out from california but the delays and unsurpassible dif ficulties added a toll of dcathto the rescuers as x stood bareheaded before that statute illustrating a father of niurdy physique of bone and muscle shad ing- his eyes as he peered over tho summits with an expression of hope mingled with fear for help to come beside him the flguro of his wife cling ing to his strong frame with an ex pression on her countenance which only a wife and mother could give and at her breast a tiny bojbe a helpless mite donled its needed nourishment because of its starved mother and helpless father i thought what a change hau been wrought at the sacrod apot luxury of food unbounded pleasure and safety luxury nnd safety or travel jboye the line of nhow is the railway paverfd where needed with nnowsheds and the nulatlal oache transferring the travellers i over through the mountains defying storm and cold and hunger looking dawn from this altltudo the beautiful blue water of donner lake siiucored in the valley und its shores dotted jvjth coy and comfortable dwellings- ani wealth evident every where in these days of auto and aliv planc of hill and mountain graded and valley exulted of snowthoes and 0kljs how can we appreciate te tfaljth and j courage the seniufl in pfiyical r do ranee of those who suffered with starving and death about them not knowing bat that they should be tho next to ijq overcome aa 1 read and lint en to the history of the intrepid flrirt settler i confess an admiration for endotjrno tltrough human trag edy we have had a very warm july and start aug 30 guelph business college g qnt and receive individual in struction from buiinesa exptrl- encfid instructors thorouoh modern courses special facili ties for assisting graduate to locate no waiting list of graduates looking for positions prom seven families the fifth member has attended skillful advertising may bring one en- rolment but only quality ser vice bringia repeat orders send in your reg is t mlion now al bouck principal and proprietor skinny men run down men nervous men dont miss this youre behind the times if you dont the trail once so dangerous know that cod liver oil ebctract is h hft mimiinir r- ono of tj0 ffrcft fleah producero in tho world 1 becauso u- contains more vitalising vltaminch than any food you can get youll o alnd to know that mc coys cod livor extract tablets come in sugar coated form now so if you i really want to put 10 or 20 pounds of solid healthy flesh on your bones and fool well and strong and have a com plexion that people will admire ask any druggist fop a box of mccoys cod livor kx tract tftbeta only 60 centm for go tablpts and if you dont train flvo pounds in 30 days your druggist is authorised to hand you back tho wotioy yau paid for thorn it isnt anything unuuual for a por- son to gain 10 pounds in so dayand for old ieoilo with feebleness oyer- taklng thorn they w6rk wonder t works for you advertising gets out and hustles for you did you ever think of that long headed business men are quick to put adr vertising to work for them and keep it at work advertising in the acton free press can be made the most useful and productive employee advertising is an employee that never loafs on the job or quits or gets teniperamental and has to be coaxed ad vertising pulls its share of the load always cheerfully and willingly and with real result y the thrifty housewife who does 90 per cent of thepurchasinisasystehiatic and intelligent dreader of advertisements vr mm -i-avv-

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy