Canadian Pacific Families CL â€" taking part in terestsd listen:s from Home‘ kx WRUL on { : > 2 in Can\-’lda 1 safisfactory. Why He Could Not Rebuke the Disturbers Directly (From Blairmore Enterprise) A clergyman was annoyed by people talking and giggling in th service. He paused, look:d at the disturbers, and said: ‘Some years since, as I was preaching, a young man who sat before me was constantly laughing, talking and â€"making uncouth grimaces. I paused, and aclministered a reâ€" Bbuke. After the close of the service a gentlsman said to me, ‘Sir, you made a great mistake; that young man is an idiot.. Since then," went on the minâ€" ister, "I have always been afraid to reprove thos: who misbehave in chapel lest I should repeat the mistake and reprove another idiot." During the rest of the scrvice there was good_ orâ€" (6 Rxcursion tickets good in Tourist, Parler and Standard â€" slecping cars also available on payment of slightly higher passage fafes. !}lus price of parlor or sleeping car accommodation, ROUTESâ€"Tickets good going via Port Arthur, Ont., Chicago, IH., or Sault Ste, Marie, returning via same route and line onlvy. Generous optional routings. STOPOVERSâ€"will be allowed at any point in Canada on the going or reâ€" turn trip, or both, within final limit of ticket, on application to Conducâ€" tor}; also at Chicago, Ill., Sault Ste. Marie, Mich.. and west, in accordance with tariffs of United States lines. posssible â€" on toric importan( cast to the M parts of tha F Under a sch eration canuar now gzors to Saturday at 3 the form of _ titled, "News DAILY FEBRUARY 15 TO MARCH 1 RETURN LIMIT : 45 days Ottawa, Jan. 11: (Special)â€" The Canadian Legion is helping to make radio history by instituting the first regular Canadian broadcast service to the British Isles Up to now this Dominion has been heard but seidom on the dials of British pradios becaus> of th> lack of shortâ€" wave brcadcasting facilities. Only through the use of the expensive transâ€" Atlantic beam systom, cab‘!» or United States shortâ€"wave stations has it been possible â€" on special cccasions of hisâ€" toric importancss for Canada to broadâ€" cast to the Mcther Country or other parts of th> Empire and the world. Legion Sending the ‘Voice of Canada‘ to the Old Country Regular Radio_ Broadcast from Canada to Britain Each Saturday. Special Bargain Excursions THURSDAY. JANUARY 104 1 Pull particulars from any agent WESTERN CANADA Frank Byck Son Canmore Briquettes, Western Stoker, Iron Fireâ€" man Stoker, Western stove and furnace Coal, Alexo, Pocahontas, Coke, Steam, Welsh, American Blue and Welsh Blower. 86 Spruce South TICKETS CGOOD TO TRAVEL IXâ€" COACHES ALL STATIONS IN GOINXG DATES heme eme taat went into opâ€" ‘v 4, the voice of Canada the Old Country. every pm. E. D. T.~ It is in halfâ€"hour programs nâ€" from Home", designed ~â€"thaâ€" Canadian ~forses the men overseas, itnose i the broadcasts, or inâ€" ‘rs may hear the "News sadcasts by tuning in to 25 meter band. Reception is reported to b> quite ay. FOR COAL AND sERVICE Coal and Woodvard and Office Just Phone 32 for prompt delivery Phone 32 so a writer re:fuses the honour That I had bestowed on the pastie As it seem‘s that the gagz, is To extol the hasggis, It followsâ€"the pastie is nasty. It‘s true what they say about Scotland, It‘s true what they did to th> Boche, It was Haggis that done it And Haggis that won. it, But the Haggis was INSIDE the Scotch And if that dcesin‘t prove my contention If you still don‘t believe what you se>, As a noble example. (‘The preoof will be ample) I suggest thut you just look at me. â€"Wilson Thomson To lef; his cmployer know what he thought about his alleged salary, a voung New Yorker carcfully wrots above his signature when he cashed his cheque : "Any resemblance between this and a living wage is purely coinâ€" ecidental." â€"Exchange But Secctland is not a big cou And Cornwall is quite a bit litt] But who would have tho‘t They‘d have given the Scot. The honour of finishing Hitler. "I shudder", he wrcte, "when I think of the calamities (of our time. Scythia, Thrace, Macedont‘a, Thcssafy, Dacia, Acheo, Epirusâ€"all thes> regions have been sacked and pillaged by Gcths and Alans, Huns and Vandals How many virtuous women have betn made the sport of thess> beasts! Churches have been overthrown, horseos stalled in th: holy placss . . . the Roman world is jlalling . . . the wolves of the North have bsen lot lOose and have overrun great provinces. They havs laid siege tz Antioch and invested cities that were once the capitals of no mean states . . . Who will belisve that Rome has to fight now within her own borders, not for the glory, but f5r life . . . Rome has been bessiged. . . . Famine, too, has done its awful work. The world sinks into ruin.. The great city is swallowed up in one vast conflagration . .. ecould imagine that the proud city with its careless security and its boundless wealth is brought s9 low that her childâ€" ron are outcasts and bezgars?" London stands. London is awake. The days of London‘s careless security are London grimly fights off the vast conflagration whereby the wolves of the North would destroy her. In cargless socurity New York, and richest of all the world‘s capitais, Icsoks on fromâ€"afar. Is it so far? Is New York awakse, or does she slumber in careless security as once did Rome? Doss she listen to jackalâ€"voices in America®? JAMES N. ROSENBURG New York, Doc. 31, 1940. They Can‘t Get Away With That Can it be that those linesâ€"written for. t:dayâ€"were set down 1,509 years ago? Can it be that history now so tragically rewrites those bloody pages of the past? Vienna, Warsaw, Prague, Oslo, Copenhag?n, Brussels, Bucharest, Rottedam, Parisâ€"they t:o were proud cities. â€" They too, lived in careless s2aâ€" curity. They, tco, possessed boundless wealth. Their children, too, are now beggars and outcasts. Can it be that they, like ancient Rome have fallon prey the wolves of the North? It cannot 42. No, such things cannot happen. We cannot compreh@nd them. Yet they are the facts. Today space measured by time brings thos> selfâ€"same wolves of the North nearer to us than they wore to the ancient grandeur that was Rome. (A letter to the New York Herald Tribune). Sir:â€"In an immortal létter written fifteen ctnturi¢s ago by Saint Jeroms, he told of the sack of Rome: For 10 years Witt has cperated ai restaurant. The fixtures belong to him} and he has never paid taxes on th>m. He appeared before the Racine city treasurer with $137, saying his conâ€" science hurt him. But the treasurer had no record of the matter and refusâ€" ed to take the mon®y. European ‘Wolves of the North‘ Are Again on the Trail Said the treasurer: "It would be Interesting â€" Reference t o History Repeating Itself. This is not from Ripley‘s ‘"Believe It ~r Not", Gut from Racine, Wisconsin: Poor Axel Wit‘ can‘t even, give money away. Eureka! A Town That Will Not Accept Taxes Offered PLAYING SAFE Timmins‘ est of warâ€"time econom of new Public Building: |essity. been cutailed, e | which rej>eted bef« ‘wore projected before occupied by Post Offices 1. 1940, viz; at Jasper, kasing, Ont.; Milbrook, ville Que.; Prince Geéeorg reiber. Ont.; Star City, © Following a Money Ord>r system by | General, the Post Offic placed revised rates on N. S.; Sutton West, Ont.; Woodvile, Ont.: Rosemont Postal Station Montâ€" real, Que.; Thetford Mines, Que.; Alâ€" berni. B. C.; Merrit, B. C.; Cabano, Que.; Lanigan, Sask.; Gatineau, Que.; and St. Ours. Que. Postal Activitiocnsâ€" In February the revalidation fee on laps2d Money Orders and Postal Notes was fixed at a straight charge of 10 ~eents, as rosult of which the Post Office Departmentâ€"provid:s a uniformity as regards Money Orders and Postal Notes operation. dir:ctions. In November 1940 Air Mail service‘ from Edmonton and from Vancouver to the Yukon, which cperated on semi-i weekly frequency during the stumme2r| months only, was placed on a semiâ€" | weokly basis all year rund. 5 On July 16 Air Mail service open?d on daily frequency between Toronto London, and Windsor, Ont., by which Air Mail conection was made between the main Canadian system, cities of Central and Westorn Ontario:; ‘and the United States network (via Dotroit). On July 25 the frequency On this branch line was increased to semiâ€"daily in both Reviewing the activities of th> Canâ€" adian Post Office Department, during the calendar year of 1949, Hon. William P. Mulock, K. C., M. P., Postmaster General, states that it has maintain:d its normal services whilse rendering exâ€" tensive coâ€"cperation in warâ€"time enâ€" deavour. Among the important addiâ€" ticons made and facilities in postal service were the following. Postal Service (Air Mail). Canada‘s Postal Service (Air Mail). Canada‘s Air Mail System on a Transâ€"continentâ€" al basis since 1939, continusd to develâ€" op and to extend. On January 1, folâ€" lowing familiarization flights in Novâ€" ember 1939, regular Air Mail servic: on daily fre2auency op>ned over the On January 15 (after familiarization flights towards the close of 1939) Air Mail service was extended from Montâ€" ton on regular daily schedules sunday) to Halifax, N. S., and St. John N. B.; and an additional frequency was commenced between Moncton, N. B., and Summerside and Charlottetown, P. E. I., connecting dir:ctly with the Transâ€"Canada mail planss. Because Of these connections Air Mail may travel from Halifax, St. John or Charlotteâ€" town to Victoria, .B. C., in under 24 hours. Frequency was 1} from daily to Transâ€"Canada 1 and intermediate C( Montreal on April Review Activities of the Canadian P. O. Department on daily frequency opened over the final link of the main Trans-'Canada svstem, betwe>n Montreal and Mon:ton, Danger every minute is the lot of the 18,000 rescue workers in th> Lonâ€" don area. On ths job while bombs still fall, they carry on amid falling timbers and crashing masâ€"nry after the raid is over, digging into the dsbris to bring cut trapped victims of the war on civilians.. They work in 24â€"hour shilts and one party burrowed for 48 hours without a ha‘t to reach a nurse in th»> wreckage â€"cf a hospital. CTIVILIAN FIREâ€"FIGHTERS UNDER FIRE creased nfiâ€"daily 12 Arom ti€ dGirc:ctly Wiin lanss. Becaus: ‘ Mail may tr: hn or in under the war, wWwere since January Alta.; Ont.; L>nnoxâ€" ce B. C.: Schaâ€" he Postmastet > Department Postal Money | Many firms merchandizing <by mail (both ways) !wer:e benefited when, effective. Novemâ€" over â€" the) berâ€"18, the Postmaster General reduced | the Pargel Post C. O. D. fee on amounts Toronto and| up to and including. $2 in value, from | 15 cents. tojust 10 csnts. : COnester; Wooaville nt addiâ€"|} Resulting from the Buenos Aires Conâ€" inded in | vention of the Universal Postal Union ing. ,m 1939 som>» charges became effective Camdas in Canada‘s Regulatmns which ntinentâ€" !mcluded two of particular bensfits to to develâ€"|the blind, â€"As result, the: maximum y 1, folâ€"| weight limit of a packet of printed in Novâ€"| papers, and also of ssund. reproduction l service records intendsd for the special use of over the‘the blind, were raised to 15 pounds. â€"Canada| The Postmaster General opened A Mon:ton,! Postal Conf:rentse at ~ London, 4 â€" 5. (under the auspices arization| of the Ontario Branch Canadian Postâ€" 939) An'mastexs Association,) : which he had n Moncâ€"| inaugurated for the purpose of proâ€" 3 <~x:°ept:moting »fficiency among Postmasters, St. John| po%tmlatxcss'as and assistants, by means sncy was, of special instructionâ€" in postalâ€" subâ€" t, +N Bi, 'vectc ott“mwn! To mest; warâ€"time nseds: the Postâ€" with the| master Gsneral on September 24 orâ€" »cause Of dered resumption of morning mail deâ€" ay Ll‘:’v\":‘.l: liveries on Saturday holidays fallinzg on harlotteâ€"|aâ€"+â€"Monday, and a four hour. posital inder 24‘ wicket service on Holiday Mondays. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TTMMINS, ONTARIO of war iol‘ hostilities .continues to be a maJjor ‘warâ€"work of the Department, a staff éhaving been established in â€" Ottawa and \ in a> total of, 21 censorship bursaux across Canada in this necessary, work of mauonal protection. "At> the ~central |eensorship bureau at Ottawa alone, it l is estimated . 250,000 letter are sent |mont.‘nly {or examination. | â€" Boldiers‘ Mailâ€"The work of the Canâ€" adian Army Postal Corps during 1940 showed a continuous growth. This unit ;xe“xuited in 1839 from executive offizers |of the Department, and trained â€" p°râ€" ‘sonnel from Postal staffs thlou“houf ~the country is handlmg the mail for our forces, and is operating the | Post Office, and other military post ‘ offices in Canada. The Canadian Posâ€" tal Corps overseas consisits of the Heoadâ€" 1quax ters. Base Units and Field Post \ Offic:s serving the members of the 'Canadlan armed forces. ; special steps were taken to safeguard ‘to the utmost degree the mails despatâ€" Ich :d to our forces overseas, and to provide special mailing facilities for them, and for their correspondents in revealed that the nonâ€"arrival, in the main, was due to circumstances enâ€" tirely beyond postal control rather than to any defegct in the service, i. e. faully packing, insufficient addressing, enemy action, and in some cases to thase who promised to send parcels having ncâ€" glected to mail them. Hon. Mr. Mulock introduced a system to safeâ€" guard parcels of cigarettes and tobacto mailed our scldiers from tobacco comâ€" panies, thereby those firms and the Post Office Department in ensuring their safe transmission. Under the new arrangements a Pos Office offizial "bags" the tobacco parcels at the despatching office of th> tobacco company after the parcels are careâ€" Canada. When some complaints were heard of the nonâ€"arrival of parcels (tho:> containing cigarettes and tobacâ€" co, in â€" particular), the Postmaster Gensral crdered a widespread enquiry both in the United Kingdom and in Canada. and investigated such comâ€" plaints from the point of origin to the destination of the parsel. The results Orders© in eff:ct on December 1. The Survey indicated that owingâ€" to certain minimum operating charges the scale of. rates prevailing forâ€"a number of years was inequitable and resulted in a general operating loss. The new scale of rates provide for increases at some points, and â€"at others, ccupled with other economies being ofâ€" fected, will place the system on a selfâ€" svstaining basis. It is interesting to note that as result of the adjustments made. . Postal Money Order ratss to Empirse countries are lowered. Postal Censorshipâ€"The zensorship of the mails undertaken sinc> the outbreak In these, and in other ways too, it may been seen that the Canadian Post Office Department is endzavouring to play a full part under present day conâ€" ditions. The Post Office Department in coâ€" cperation with the Public Information office has disseminated to selected mailâ€" inz lists, speeches, (prepared in pamâ€" phlet form) on warâ€"time subjects, by members of the Government and Opâ€" position. Coâ€"operation in War Workâ€"Through its postmasters in approximat>ly 12,â€" 557 post offices the Department has becomes perhaps the greatest agency in promoting the sale of War Saving Stamps and War Savings C:rtificates, and at the outset of the campaign in May aided the War Savings Committes by distributing application forms "and literature to every hcuseholder. Provision was made to facilitate th: use of Post Office Money Order and Postal Note services for remittances to our Canadian forces. Among the postal privileges granted for th2> benefit of our troops overseas may be mentioned the extension of the cheap rate of 12 cents per pound (a maximum of 11 pounds being agcepted), on parc>ls mailed to our forces in Iceâ€" land, to personnel aboard H. M. ships abroad, and to members of the Women‘s Auxiliary services in addition to memâ€" bers of the Canadian or other Empire forces in great Britain. This cheap parcel rate later was allowed on parâ€" cels mailed from Canada to members of the forses of General de Gaull> and to those sent Belgian, Polish and other allied forces serving with the British Army in the Unitsd Kingdom. The rate of 10 cents a pound was granted on parcels addressed to Canadian forces in Newfoundland, and 12 â€"cents a pound to those in the West Indies (limit in ecachn cas> 20 pounds). Free mailing privileges for letters not exceeding two ounces in weight, if posted to Canada at a Canadian Army Field Post Offic> was extended to Canâ€" adian forses in the United Kingdom and Icoland. Arrangements were made whereby letters postcards and n>wspaâ€" pers for members of the Canadian Army in Iceland may pass at domestic posâ€" tage rates. (Written for The Ottawa Journal by Ursula Bloom, wellâ€"known British novelist). Have you, as a loyal citizen of Britain ever realized how much vou owed to Gracious Leader of the Women of the British Empire «ive cheer and sympathy and comfort. she has ns spared horself. She is among refugees, she walks on the ruins # houses and does hor best for the howeless and the helpless. It was the Qucon, who, recognizing their diffiâ€" cuillties was the first to send furniturs from Buekingham Palace for their aid. Every moment of her day is booked. It is ceasy for her, some of you may An instructional campaign was carâ€" ried out by the Department in proper methcds of addressing mail and packâ€" ing parcels, and <encouraging results were cbtained, though there is still room for improvement. that Râ€"yal lady who is zsivingzg every momert of her time in the causes of freedcm? Quzsen Elizaboth is doing a magnifiâ€" cent jo». Wherever there is trouble and distress she is there to help, to Have you ever thought? H~y many miles a day do you supâ€" pose the Queen walks? She walks round factorigs and establishnments through encampering, along ruined streets. She must never show the least sizn of fatigue, and shes must never be bored. Perhaps that is her greatest attribute sh> is NOT bored. Watch her on the films, sh> is enormously interested in everythinz that she sees, practically interested. She asks qusstions about shells and ammunition, and she knows the right thing to say beside the cot of some rather shy little child who has besn bombed. / I remember when she became Queen. at that tim> there were very difficult circumstances in England, and there was much talk. £â€"mebody said, "The King‘s greatest attribute lies in the Quzsen", and it was true. It must have been very hard to folâ€" low in the footsteps of a Queen so beâ€" loved as was Qucgen Mary. And to find that she was reigning under much the sams circumstances, only perhaps even more difficult ones, for war had come again. She is the first citizeness of a groat ffilly numbered and listed to facilitate recording. Every one of these parceis is checked during the course of handâ€" ling at the Base Post Office for ‘onâ€" ward transmiss¢ion. â€"A further check is made in England to ensure safe d:â€" livery. Soldiers‘ letter etc., are also safeâ€" guarded thrcugh a system of unit sortâ€" ation, which permits bags to be mad»> up and sealed at the Base Post Office Canada, for each unit ovtrseas. The seals of these bags ar> not broken until sach one has been delivered to its proâ€" per unit. The Truth Proves a Tribute to the Empire‘s First Lady. y do you supâ€" ? â€" Bhe walks establishments alcong ruined show the least must never be She was not born to be qusen and probably would have preferred the quict country life which once was hers, whsre she could have lived peasefully and enjoyed ho society of husband and children through these perilous times. But the highest place becams hers, and she took it without a murmur, though it meant goodbye to the things that every woman holds dearest., She has never flinched. She is the one woman in Eurcpe to whom everyâ€" bedy l@oks for example, and is confiâ€" dent that they will get it. Her crown is not only the crown of England. It is of sympathy, and love, and underâ€" standing. "Mind, noo> an‘ dinna loas yor gasâ€" masks, children,", said the Scottish teacher. "Yer lifo may be dopendin‘ on them. An‘ whit‘s mair imâ€"poartâ€"ant if ye l>as them, yer faither‘l hae tae buy, ye a now vin."â€"Globe and Mail. Her day begins earlior than coutrs, and ends lator. She has not the comâ€" fort, of being able to rélax, because she is nearly always on show. She can never look tired, becausse instantly there would be Job‘s who would prophesy defeat because "didn‘t you soe how worried the Que>n lookâ€" ed?" Empire, and she is giving everything she can to that Empirec. A Only the other day I was talking to a woman in the hotel where I live., It was 10 o‘clock. She couldn‘t get up befors 10 in thess hard times, becauseo "the war t>ok it out of her so". And it struck me suddenly, that the first lady in the land, out of whom the war took infinitely more, had been then up azout for two and a half hours! I don‘t think she gets noml\ appreciati>n. She has done mors than any cther woman in England for this war, beâ€" causs she has given every moment of her time and every effort that she could for it. More than all else has been the magnificent example of couâ€" rage and endurance, the fearless cleayâ€" ing to duty. That smile, that handâ€" shake, that word Oof encouragement which carries the downhearted forward more than all elss. A message was sent to her from the evacuees at Windsor, when she had visited their emporary homes. Hor visit, they said, had given them exâ€" treme pleasure. To be a queen is not an easy task, to be a good qugen is harder still, but to be queen who walked upon the burnâ€" inz ruins of houses, wha . turns lovâ€" ingly to subjects who have suffered the greatest tribulations that England has ever been called upon to suffer is to be supreme. Glance at her the next time you ste her pass by, or catch a glimpse ¢f her pxcilur'x on the silver sergen.. She is the leader of the women of the Empire. We owe her a tremendous debt. 24 Third Avenue JAMES R. MacBRIEN FRANK H. BAILEY, L LB, BARRISTER sOLICITOR NOTARY 13 Third Ave. _ Timmins ~14â€"28 H. RAMSAY PARK, B. A. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC 14 Third Ave., above C, Pierce Hdwe PHONXE 1290 TYIMMINS 119 Pine Street South TIMMINS 4ARCHITECT 7 Reed BRlock Timmins Langdon Langdon Dean Kester, K.C. LAWYEK, AVOCAT NOTARY PUBLIC Hamilton Block, 30 Third Ave. Telephone 1545 Res, 51 Mountjoy St. 8. â€" Phone 1548 MacBrien Bailey BARRISTERS and SOLICITORS WILLIAM SHUB, B.A. Reference Schumacher High School and many others on request. Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Bank of Commerce Building Timmins, Ont. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC D. R. Franklin S$. A. Caldbick Barristers, Solicitors, Etao MASSEY BLOCK TIMMIN®, ONT. and Ssouth Porcupine PHONE 3832 -..n--xa-uu.â€"--d_ enough so now, Australia, Mighty Commonâ€" wealth, We hail the triumph as another gem Set in the crown of Britain. Not alone Your pride exalts you, for your pride is our; So close and â€" interwoven are. our realms That seas unit> them under different stars. We pledge to thee our love and this resolve, % ' That., come what may 6f hardship, gricf or death, we too will stand undauntsd to the end To share with thee our Empire‘s vicâ€" tory. FREDERICK GEORCGT Quetec, Jan. 5, 1941. B A little. girl attending church for the firss time was amazed to see all the pecple suddenly kneel, and asked h<r mother why they were doing it. "Shâ€"hâ€"h!" the â€"mother whispered "They‘re going to say their prayers". What!‘ the youngstor exclaimed, "With all their «alothes on?‘ Not only through the heart but through the limbs Of our greage Empire flows ths lion‘s bloodâ€" That full rich blood of courage, love and right. That brother blood which binds strong men in ons, That dauntless. purpose scorning pain and death. That wild, free life rosistless as the | O. E. Kristensen ‘_TO PEOPLE WHO CANNOT SWALLOW PILLS Swiss Watchmaker Graduate of the Famous Horological Institute of Switzerlard Phone 1%65 Third Avenue Registered Architect Ontario Land Surveyor Building Plans Estimates, Etc,. 23 Fourth Ave, Phone 362 10 Balsam St, North, Timmins, Ont. Accounting _ Auditing Empire Block _ Timmins 14â€"26 Arch.Gillies,B.A.Sc.,0.L.S. S, W. WOODS, O.L.S. Systems Installed Income Tax Returns Filed Phones 270â€"228â€"286 P.O. Box 147 CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT 60 THIRD AVENUE Phone 640 P.0. Box 1591 Timmins, Ont P. H. LAPORTE, C. C. A. J. J. Turner Sons, Ltd. We Manufacture and Carry in Stock If you feel sluggish, depressed, liverish or are inclined to constipaâ€" tionâ€"just try this treatment for two weeks: Take enough Kruschen to cover a dime, in warm water every morning. ‘onst ipati0®@ is caused mainly by lack of moisture in the large intesâ€" tine. Kruschen contains carefully blended â€" mineral salts that bring back the moisture. Besides cleaning out stagnating poisonous waste matter, Kruschen helps to rid the bloodstream of other poisons resultâ€" ing from constipation. Nothing could be easier to take, and Kruschen is not harsh, but is a mild, gentle laxative. Get a 25¢ se of KWruschen from your druggist and within two weeks you‘ll feel your old good health coming back. Other size _ at T5e FLAGS HAVERSACK 8 SNOWSHOES DOG *sSLEIGH: TOROGC ANS TARPAULINS TENTS DKR. E. L CHIROPRACTOR Xâ€"RAY NEUROCALOMETER Bank of Commerce Building PHONE 607 SPECIALIST Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat PETERBROROUGH, ONT anada to Australia our Tawoeal Dealer 10 send your order 1+G. N. ROSS Agents Everywhere SKIIS DO( HARNKE HORSE PACK BAQGS EIDERDOW N ROLBF Empire Block