~~ . ”“ » :arf 4. " > - :'41 ' *IHI BHAHIIIIIETIIWNSIBIIIIIIIIIN -TMJ! pal ful' (la advance) mailed ln funds and llailod Bioha- lnuag nally an-ada iam moo per yur ul “vowel 4°ll'°f°4- *V rrnmou-w. churn s. xox -ro. \'l~.i>v»u»¢i-.|. a. ummm. _ » laefetary--Llvat. l`ol..D. A. lafllinlura Il. l. 0. ' - . . llller and lallger_J. K. Burnett. Anoelllo ltdilol-D. K. Carrla. IOSTON-Old Baath Nova: 3|. Aadlafmaa, M4 Tremont BC. NSW YORK-llolallnga .\'owa Depot. 303 \\'eat “th Bt. _' NIR' Gl»A|l(i0\V, .\'. H.-)l. B. lfailllaof. Bl.'llE|lfllDD-Hunter Book Sh re. " iloxraorat-w. A. Johuurou. . 501815-Bl. B- Aw"- fnz ollA|in|A.\' rn bo ohuluod from no followi-ls -rents In ¢‘hlrl°\¢°l°'l- L Brown, Pool Olke. S. Duffy, Richmond Street. ` g, p. 'ruylor Gramm nrror. Alu. :li-ll'l;:elr»o:»`. Queen B\"¢l~ ~ .. _ .\'. Twee , ln ve. ;"_,‘:,,2;“"s',';¢|‘f,:,°,',‘.:_G°°'“° sm" 1-..o.llw._c»oro.-y. cor. mu: a rioehmd L Thornal White. 125 ‘Elm Are. J. 1'. Daly. Queen Street. ¢g»~¢.» ¢ co., queen street. cuba. sow. co.. nopot. I. Whitlock. Great George Street. blrvn. Jarobaon, Dorchester Street- ", Frank N. Kaya. 18 Llllahorn Street. " WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 23, 1929 Qw- ` 'rms wlN'rEa._ snnvicc. _put of the mishap that has t~:'_~~r:- yeh to our winter service a few fa.-ts stpnd out very clearly: bfi-'C1111 C155* tie” seem, go bp, g poZ':".cal haze 'mia evident facts are that the 'sal I gg,-ymuirgobonalifax for repalrsll tlht no other ice breaker of years performanceswill be no eI°¢l>' tion to this rule. While we have much lt:-ful :£lc:.Z. along the lines H5031!! :`f_u;o:. ed in these concerts. an ex°¢P' uohol feature is added this yw' 111 the person of Miss Smith of Toronto. vshcse musical talents are very high- ly spoken of in the press of that city, In all the other roles the best pdwer' and capnclty of the car ferry* :hat the city can produce will be in igipvaiiable; and that the aeroplane; service will be negligible even in SJ, 1§r as the maila are concerned. Tliel 5?. S. Stanley. now an old shin. 15 available und would do passable Stl- viée between Georgetown and PiCll0\l~ (ii-tain politicians, in order to Clll'YY favor with their constituents, adv0- cited the placing of the Stanley b¢'i tween the Capes. The railway au-I thorliios. to whom the suzseStl°1=I nieans the avoidance of the cXP¢US¢1 of; the long haul from Island P0111*-S to Georgetown and from Picton to spokvillo, have inparent1y_ Allen ln' with the idea. and it lla now. an- uiiuhood that the stanley will rim °l1' the westem route. ,11 this project is carried out one more fact may be added to those pbove mentioned. That is, that the interim Service will be crippled irre- ti-ievably. It has been proved through pipuy years oi ootuul mul thot. the dgorgetown-Plctou route is the only winter route that can be operated e§en with partial success by such a a§'ea.mer as the Stanley. It will be _recalled that several years ago the stanley and the uinto were removed. evidence, and the two concerts of 1929 will, in all probability, pass into his- tory as the greatest yet. MABVELLOUS, IF TRUE! Mrs. Beatrice Houdini. widow of the celebrated magician wh0Idl¢d several months ago, says that a mes-_ sage has como to her from the spirit. world, and that it is from her late husband. , ' The situation is an ironical one. As an exchange points out, Houdini. a magician himself, and the clever- est of his time was the arch-oppon- ent of ali the mediums and "con- trols" and supernatin-alists among the exponents of the psychic phen- omena. He could perform more marvels than any man, and wuld out-fake all the fakirs-and he could always tell you,-and generally was perfectly willing to tell you- how the trick was done. He professed to know how the tables were suspend- ed in the darkened seances. and whose was the fleshly hand that performed the ghostly i-apD\ll8¢ and he dismiss- ed all the apookincss and the creepi- 1-iirough political and sectional pres- _ to the caper route, with sum- nierside as an alternative port. The Qperiment was not only a complete failure, but almost resulted in the loss of one, if not both, of the ateamers. mails were carried across the depot by ioeboau, while the smiley drifted helplessly up and down the Straits for weeks, at the mercy of the ies and tide, resisting 'even the at- tempt at being dyuamlted out or hor predicament. "There neu bolus khowo. who lus- gificatlon can be offered for placing Stanley again at the mercy of the ice-flows at the Capes and in gpg Bi:ra.if-I? To all thinking men there is onh' one route on which the Stanley can' give even a semblance of and no political or other in- ziueriooe should be permitted ro in- terfere. On the Georgetowrl-Pictou route. with the help of mother ice breaker which should be provided lm- lnediately, an emergency winter ser- nesa as so much hocull pocu.b-sel.f- deiusion when it was honest, and impudent fraud when it was not. The poets have reflected, Omar and Shakespeare among Ithem, upon the brooding mystery of man's des- tiny, and of how we are all unre- turning travellers to the dark bournc oi’ an infinite shadow and an _eternal silence: "Not one returns to t/ell us of the road, which to discover we must travel too." Beatrice Houdini tells us that Harry Houdini has spok- en out of the silence and the dark- ness, that he says he will try to undo so much that was done by him. But surely we are no “forrarder§" on this quest. We do not know what Hou- dini is, or wiicre; but we know what he was. and we know that the tables never moved for him by any glicstly intervention, and that the rappings were not echoes from the tomb. What can we say about this, except that the people who believe that sort of thing will believe that Houdini is (1 'iw' mcludmg mans’ passebxragers ar; ispeaklng from the country of the ”'°’3ht' might ""°°°bly expec ' spirits, to challenge the assumptions od. The situo_tion,of the Province. with stock of all kinds .very low, in- cluding °°°']"”°ur md. “her neon' of thing will hear no voica at all1 caries. is very serious. and no ex~ by which he lived? And that the people who do not believe that sort and will reject it as a profuiation of I pm” ‘hmm be 'Duet w do the mystery. and will say that the best under the eircums ances. mysnry' splendid md awful’ u not htcreah of the Province should not be sacrificed to parochial interests or the more differences in cost between mg niiwpypauls involved. The mat- qr is a pressing one, as the Stanley ipdue at anytime now, and if any action is to be taken there is no time 00 lose. r TB§ BURNS CONCERT. The Burns Concert. always regard- `ed aa the greatest musical, ferpslc- horeaa and -iilmioaio--zemvul of the year. will in held lu the strand Theatre, ton-ir`irrow..’I'hunday evening. and Friday under the aus- pioee or the club and the dlniuruabedfbabohlgo or nu nort- to be profaned? EDITORIAL NOTES A cont,ei'nporary defines a pedes- trian alla man whose wife has gone out in the car. The Federal Parliament ia an- nounced to meet on February 7, one week before Valentina Day. A or aumu,_who'oo- ioolverury wlu be oeiobrwéd bythe colodoruan club this week. Carlyle wrote: "Whilcthe shokupou-eu and uutooo ron on like mighty' rivon through the oouutry of 'rhouzht. ben-me dem oz irat- flckera and assidiious pearl-ushers or on Luuuoaui aonruor ood nu' on abou wuvoo; thu limo vuloluu .woruiip tram you fund ure. voo. llbluntain willvullo arrest our 018; f -. 1 .-for tliealmytbe ”°°“ °'Z.!'?‘I" ibn umivénary odmm uiorsz- ou- ror ihuuboldorumirnowuuod n_ioa_t_cunning workmanship, buratl fromthedepthloftfseeartlkwitha _ ' ,gp gg, E rho full guihioirurrout. into urn when ." . wlhaiwrmmevblcnur day; aaltoften will the 'travallarhira abide to drink of ite clcur Ulhflmnd " 5 I' lauibi|.r_a»,nr. this nun omouglavreqnnaa until” A V _(1/,_-»»~. -.,., ..__..¢»--- .1 f' ' " ‘A ,I K Ui ` _ ' ~’ - »~-~'-- »-~f - ~’~ '~ 'V ‘ _ '_ - .~ -T. .1 '~ 1 *`-'ja -»f’.v_"`» » . fr . :l"~» 1,, _,_ ,L-~ '- l-fl-`*"' `, 'I..»~ "’ _ . _.. ' . . _ ; ~ I ~~ '.15 .' f ~ n g I .» -13,3. Notes By The Way Wan' bavo our `Qwn'= Cwnty rude;-gl representatives been thipkihg about to allow the s. s. Btanleytobepiaoedonthewestern route? It is claimed that throl-lib the activities of Mr. A. L Mclean, M. P., the transportation service. during thetie-u.poftl'ie¢ll’l¢l'l’Y\li3b°¢ll diverted from the oeoraewvn-Plcwv route, its proper channel. to Borden and Tormentine, with Bummei-aide as an -alternative port of cali on this side. It wo,uid be just as feuible to have the service between Charlvtte- town and Pictou, so far as the ice conditions are concerned. Evidently Messrs Sinclair and Jenkins are not so 'much "in the k:w'.v" as their Prince County cozifrei-c-_ who general- ly about no .aps ahead of them when it comes to currying favor at Ottawa. The local Liberal organ assured the public that the Queens County representatives are aiertly watching developments. They are evi- dently watching from the shore while their colleague in Prince County is Lndilstriousiy paddling his emi canoe. The appointment of a 'Irade Com- niissioner at Toronto to develop trade between the Maritimes and Central Canada should work out something to the bencflt of both. The Trade Commissioner. Mr. Burnaby, has the reputation of being a live wire. It was because of this reputation that he was appointed to such an import- ant position. We believe he may be depended upon to do his best; but we must not expect him to do it all while we stand idly by and watch hiui do it, and oriuolzo him if be mls. To _nite this undertaking the suc- cess it deserves to be will require co- operation and mutual understanding between the Commissioner, the Pro- vincial Governments which have em- ployed him, and the producers and business men of the Maritimes. He may be depended upon to look after his end of the business, but we must not neglect the end for which we are responsible. ' The local Government organ, which is ardently prohibitionist so long as prohibition does not interfere with politics, has so far refrained from ooinrnentingupon the position which the Federal Government has taken with respectto the Customs clearance of ships ¢&l'l'yin8 liquor to the United States. Canadafs position, as outlin- ed in the statement made a few days ago at the conference with American representatives of Congress at Ot- tawa, appears to be this: Violators of the law of the United States may buy liquor here and pay for it and the Dominion Govemment will odicially emotion its sale and its shipment to the United States, but the Gcvem- ment piously hopes the shipments will never reach their destination. After the liquor has been bought and paid for and cleared from a. Cana- dian port the Government will co- op_er_'ate_"in every way" to suppress the .trade ~tliat it has licensed and despatched. A booklet. or 141 pages devoted to the conferences of the British Par- liamentary Association during the visit of that distinguished body to Canada last year, has been issued by the Canadian Branch of the Asso- ciation at the Govemment Press, Ot- tawa. A considerable part of the work is taken up with a record of the conferences between the visiting parliamentarians and the-members of Provincial Legislatures. Three pages of this section _are _devoted to the "Maritime Provinces.” On pages 139- 140 we have a -record of the New Bnlnswick conference: on pages 140- 141, of the visit to Nova Scotia. "The rest is silence," The remainder of page 141, where the reader would naturally look for some reference to the visit to Prince Edward Island, is It seems thatso far as the tish Parliamentary Association is concerned, we do not officially exist as a part of the bierlliniesi lt will be remembered that tlielr\visit here was confined to Sunday, and that this was _due to the failure of the Provincial Govemment to arrange, when the itinerary was- being drafted, for a proper dateon which the visit- ors could be formally received and en- ,Tllo Brit _ Industrial -clty of the Mai-itlme Provinces, according to a report recently issued by the Cana- dian Pacinc R.aiiway,_is Saint Jobn with a capital of $32,192,490 invested lu lirics industries which have u production _value or waiom. nurt- molftlrin Nova Scotia occupies sec- ond placafwlth 10 maior industries. capitcllned at 017,088,062 and with a production- value of m,4as.oos. rbi- lhvlnrfn order of .productionvaiue coma 8y_dney._ Halifax. Moncton Bathurst, Edmundlton. Bt. Stephen and New Glugow. Charlottetown. fun lprlneipai~mdu|¢rial-oohuooi Princrllfward Island.” has a manu- 'produoiiou value or elm,- li . ' ; . _ _ __;gE_ 'itil-I £§§§§§ ;s§§§g .§>§§ - WIS lftat livbr of Quota no-oo.-u.o. ~ < ` covaaok mon 'nav ' » Some years ago I :poke of the work dcne in some European hospitals to get the patient strong before he was allowed to go home or to work. Whe- ther he was a medical orsllrgical caaehe wastaken outdoors as soon as possible, and given light exercise. similar' to t.he‘ caiesthenicsi given -to recruitsintheamly. He was given Just a few minutes daily at first, and the warg gg-gdq. ally increasedfuntil it wu‘f-hougbt that he could complete' the "cure”. at home. » _ , ' The exercise stimulated heart and lungs, worked the muscles ofthe body. gave the patient the natural Dllfletite, and so tired him physically. that be wanted to sleep. and so got ia good natural sleep. Unfortunate- ly we haven’t anything like this in Am:-rica. and yet. the wisdom of get- finf: patients strong before _ they ‘cave hospital is at once apparent. Poivever. 'we are gradually coming to it. rs we read about the work done at the Burke Foundation, whim Plains. N, J. v Dr. Frederic Bush savl "sleep. not and peace of mind form the largut rilrt. of the treatment of our patients who are recovering from their umm but th-se things alone will not carry del-ressefi and dlsheartened persons Sllfely back to health ~of body and mind. And Svslmea 'are used. because Dr. Bush says that these convaimcents. as 9-My arecalled regalncouraze through "‘Bv. S0 golf on a "ai-nail" scale is used. with holes from'10 t.o~'i0 yum; in length. Golf gives exercise ln "'”'?""¢'- using the club. in strokm, '-Gd the patient isintensely interst- e _ ciuoit illtcbinlz and baseball. and lirht. forms of football. lawn bowling. are other forms of Sames that are not too strenuous. _ And as you think about it, then can be no doubt that an exercise like bowling or baseball. that reailylntor- ests the patient. _wili stimulate him to effort much more effectivelv. than the ordinary nale*th°nic exercise. Pllw is worth a ict to everybody sick or well. GHQ4 _ Household _ Scrapbook nv nonlara ,Lam ' QQ+§§§O% ' clombi; ruiut. Mix common whiting in 'warm wa- ter to the thicknemof paste.. Rub briskly with a piece of flannel and then wash in cold water. » Fruit Juice 0`dors When-fruit. juice runs out iri an oven or on top of the stove, of salt is thrown on it there will be no odor. It is easily cleansed when burned to a crisp. ' Weak Antica To strengthenweak ankles, _bathe daily in a solution of salt; water and alcohol. Beneficial results will be noticeable after a few applications. e Land We Love BY FRANK IIIOII M ' Area of the Prairie Provinces. D‘\f*O'Q'9f Q. What is the area of the Prai- rie Provinces? . _ A. The total surveyed area of the Prairlerrovinces is 203599327 acres. viz: 37,115,866 in Manitoba, 78,601,050 in Saskatchewan. 87,882,905 in Alber- ta, land available for agricultural purposes estimated at l37.022.447 acres, of which at the time of 1926 census. 88,929,994 acres was occupied by farms. or less than 65 per cent. 14.41_i.597 acres being in Manitoba. 45 945 410 acres in Saskatchewan. 28.- 572987 acres in Alberta. Of the sur- veyed area, 24,549,000 acres remain undispoaed of. available for home- tteads. of which 4.135.000 acresuft in Manitoba. 3.744.000 acres in Bask- atchewan, and 163,850.00( acres in Alberta. ~ ___.___ A I Daily Lessons , in ,English - By W- L. ‘GORDON 0-0-0- 04940,-+090-O-0060-O-O-O-6-0 O-9 WORDS OFTEN MIBUBED: "She had leamed, to readvand write" does ngilrequue repetition of the pronoun OP'l'E{;i MISPRONOUNCED: an- cient. onounce an-shent. no; au- shi-ent. _ _ _ OFTEN MIBBPELLED: lent, cent, scent. ' ' ' BYNONYMB apparent, ` clear, manifelt. evident. conspicuous, plain, obvious, visible. f ‘l woito sruny: "un" a- woiii three times and it in youre." Lotus increase our voc`abulary'by_ mutering one word eachdey. 'Ijodayk word AEUNDER: apart; separate from each other. ‘ _"Har hopes were torn -asunder.” _- ` " V ,ul sg l§§§s.I§ii ’;f§Fl§§3 §¥SF§;;s§ l§§§§§;§s l.§_rrs.s;. I :ull l' *luv Petticoat Lane (J. B. Priestley in The Saturday ' Review) -1-but curious 'smoky l°l1°!lll¢=‘ whim is London on a winter Sunday mm-mpg was shattered. as if a gigan- uo bomb had f\>.\“`=°-_¢l‘.° l=l°“l°°‘ I turned the corner, from Ald8l.f¢ H1811 sh,”,_.mw Middlesex Street. This wiu not seam oddto anybody Wl\° "- members that Midfile-*X 3'f"°°° ‘"5 once called Petticoat Lane, and IS pull Petticoat, Lane every Sundnlf morning. At first I saw nothing ex- cept the tops of stalls becel-iS! 1 W55 wedged in the- crowd. We pushed. md they ,pushed-not angrily bill in quid; good-humour-and gradually we began to move until we achieved something like a yard a minute. Then suddenly the crowd thinned and I found myself ejected-and_ a little mm wg dangling gaudy suspenders not six inches from my nose- “TBKB a look at 'em," he was r08l'1ll€. After escaping' from these susP€n- dere. I ,tained the group in front of a. seedy-looklns man who was talk- ing in an astonishingly loud and angry voice. He had not shaved that morning or perhaps the morning bl!- fore either. and wore neither collar nor tie. but nevertheless his stall glittered with gold watches. dozens anddozensof them, and not very far from the dirty fist he kept bang- ing down was a heap of money, a whole heap of it, pounds and pounds. There was nothing very Jewish about his appearance, but never before have I heard such a strong Hebralc ac- cent. When you heard his talk of “dose vatches" you would have sworn he was doing it on purpose. “In de Vest End you go and pay six tibes de prize for desc vatches. And vy? Be- cause. I tell you,'-’ he cried in a tow- ering rage. “dey're all robbers." And in a more tender mood, that man, I am convinced, would not have hesi- tated to call you “ma tear." Atmospherelof Dickens I had imagined sucli accents were no longer heard in _the world. In- deed, I have never met them except in the harum-scdrum novels of the thirties and forties of the last cen- tury, early Dickens and Thacker-ay and ‘Valentine Vox' and ‘Ten Thous- and A Yea_r.' But indeed I might have suddenly been plunged into a chapter of one of those novels. \‘Vhcn I waspa boy and stared at those old illustrations by Cruikshank and '_'Phiz."_ so farit.astically~cl-owded and crazily energetic. I thought that London was probably like that. but afterwards I ,came to the conclusion that there was nothing realistic about those old illustrators, who merely re- ported the doings in some dingy elf- land of their own invention. Now I see I was wrong. I am prepared tp of their day. ‘That London still pg;-_ sists. every Sundaymornirig in Petti. coat Lane. I had 'pushed' my way into a_“Phia":'draWlnlr-I I-lere was one of his streets-not simply crowded but bursting with humanity, and not ordinary humanity, of course, bu; queer gargoyle-like beings, mom. trously fat, lean as hop-poles, twist- Gd- SHHKKY. battered, sinister. This l'°ll°W serving ielllod ook. that Siluml-U18 IOVN mln. accompanying a cheap gramophone record with a solo on a little toy trombone, mis vast waddie of womanhood offering Us “ ”'“¢°|' 0f KTGBD Deus. the curly Jew there smoothing out a pair of secondhand trousers-where have we seen them before? Why, in those queer scratchy illustrations we used to stare at, half fascinated, half re- P¢ll°.. f - .» -.,J~, », ’.~ _, -, ._ » f _ -. _- 'F ' "" """ ` I' ` -' ' 1 1' ""5 J! gf' _l.'~-~ ='~ I' -‘V4.1 ‘ 'vi “- "`-""‘ " 5’ '@5I“_v1~+ “ ' 'Ii A ’ *f "-lui... I-`»"" "fi-if 'Z _. " '~-i'>..1;'- ~_ >.. ~’ I ' ~ I _ 1 _ - . l . -,,,,_,.r.J,, ._ l _ . ~ , ,, u , .I . ,,». 3 ~ is li believe they really drew the London' And the next moment there were showers or out glass ialllnz round him.`tlirough which you saw his ey- ¢-ll gleaming wildly- - ‘ _ _ Brik` Work It was a cold morning but the in- numerable young men who were sell- ing cheap sweets were in their shill- aleeves and even then looked uncom- forcibly bor. -'Not they crled ui a kiud or eostasy.SlBl>n1nz lmlrel-'» of chocolate and butterscotch into paper bags. “Not One-Not Two - Not Three-But Foul* Who‘ll have the next?" Whenever one of these people-had a drlnk..as they fl'€,~ ., ,,,..»:,. _-I. ' . . . _ _V ` , _`, _ 'r-“ ‘ . ,_ ~ . ‘ , ~ _ . V “ ltubberset Sha Brush _ IYouSmok I f 6 R O SE B and Scwe the “Poker Hands” The large 10c package of Rosebud Cut Plug contains 1 “Poker Hand". The larger 15c package Contains TWO “Poker Hands". ~ For FOUR complete sets of “Poker ‘ Hands", you receive this genuine. Rubberset Shaving Brush. This is only one of many valuable pre- sents you can get by sm0_kll‘lg f-I1i'S_ SWCEYI. mild, satisfying tobacco; and saving the 99' f'\ _ \\ Y If u ` /* ‘fv/' ‘ a OO900c 9 I Modern Etiquette BY ROBEBTA LEE ‘Joao 'OQOOOO4 a Q 'What must always be remem jo( frienfs riding? I§ The Poef`s .rl I ”$ aboobr RO%+§O-Of-OO-94§YO¢~ ~ -lr l 04 Ar 'mls cLos.r. or' '; r 'iii' tl-‘rom “The IAt the close cf the c` hamlet, is still, o ‘And mortals the sweets _ / I ness prove [When nought but the . ` heard on the hill, And nought but the nighting.ile's I s:ng in the grove; , 'Twas thus, by the cave of the moun- = tain afar. Iwhile M6 hifi! rung symphonlous, a hermit began; No more with himself or with nature ` et war. ll-le thought as ~. sage. though he felt I as a man.... ,"I`wiis nicht. and the landscape is . lovelv, no more: I mourn, but. ye woodlands, I mourn not for you; For morn is arnrcacliing, your I charms to restore. ,Perfumed with fresh fragrance, and I glittering with dew; NCI' Yet. for the ravage of winter 1 mourn; .~ 9 fs :J r. E' " 1 embryo blossom will save: But when shall spring visit the moni- derinlz urn_ Or when shall it dawn on the night of the grave? -James Beattie, 11735-1803.) ZEUZIPPOS BATHH FOUND IN TURKEY coNs'l'ANT1NoPi.E Jun. 22-.The British Acadenl_v's expedition, vi-im-h this Fear is being generously pup. D°l'1ed by Sir Joseph Duveen, has been work!-ns in the iargg square be. tween the Sultan Ahmed Mosque and Saint Sophia. ' The work at first chiefly centred round the further clearing of the circular buildinig found at the and of last season. which appeared to be mme P°l“l\°n -of the once famous Bmw 0! Zeuxlbnos. A hugo wuu, probably the exterior wail of the Baths, which was juet, wuphm im yelr. is being more completely clear- ed. On the inside of it to tho west are two large piers constructed of slwmallns courrrr or briok and stones. They are 'identical in coil- struction with those discovered last war. but it is impossible to day until after further clearance ln what con- nection they lie to the iers of last. year. The piera were orignially joined above hy a vault now broken ln. Ba. low they are connected by a brick floor from the side of which a cem- ent basin curves gently dowriwugig, At tha corner formed D1 one ofthe plan and the outside wall _ a deep boiagiveaacceal tnadrainoroon- duit of Byaantine date. Further ox- cavatiom are bulb! carried 'out to lay bare ‘the basin. and it ll hoped they willwbrllll :O ltigltb sufficient °'_m°U°° WWI Iillding to be dcfifdtely dated. A ~ Ihaddition to the work on me Batliaalongtfcncliiabeingdligto the north gi-agus' pavemen or bunder! toon, but. (yen at 'thiactl sl §_ Fe it l. rii; is elf mt i . M vi v»;»,,,,`,_r.'~ _. " ,‘ _l I ' » - 1,- .,, V _-,_-,.~--,» _ .. »f _ . ._ __ ,, l~,,~,:_,-I t if-#_ J.. » - »i..a,,,._ vi Q-oo-eeeeoo-oeeo-eoeo-e-eeofo-o - ‘ ‘ Auction Sales _ l 01-’ their prophecies on slips of paper at ibered when extending an invitation I{LlW l"ul'.\ an astounding speed -c\'»‘r the tolwlllone? _ _ Shipping bags will bc furnish- : A. That. the ln‘.'lta.tlon must |73 nd without charge by applying _ “mired salesmen las correct and gracious as the_in\'it.2-» ‘ _ to lt. T. Holman, Ltd.. Sum- ltion extended in black and white. = luerside, P. E. 1. The mst B-l'Ul\¢5 °_f U16 Fl”9llCll R9-| Q. What are the proper refresh- Represented by volution could never have known a‘ilne\it; for a children‘SkD3"f'fd._ \If1'ed~ Ff‘fiS?l'. IUC. more _militantiy democratic spirit,” Il” cream' ca "' °"‘ 212 Firm Ai~<»n-..- than the one that sef:med,io lllspirel gc; R hostess ¢2;.__! kv' New vu-ru \ \ all thesefrenzied salesmen. "I,{i€lfl'l iren alone when she inn" ' 'v' l"¥.”..‘i;~iI`l7i_ H1118 lfter time. scores and scores off Yes' if she IW I “ ____ _ ___'___ them. No matter whether they were I °mlf’,"”‘ h°“ ‘° b°h“V“'_ ' " ff rigging; I "ti '- L~_” fi. Lumpson Llo.. V _ ..lhiu'x~:n. di Queen Street . |.u.u!nn. E. C. 4, England i 'fl Check The ;- Influenza Take time by the fnreloek and start protective treatment AI ONCE. Right. naw while FLl‘ is prevalent every pre- caution shoulll be taken. therefore procure immedlaiuif a lla: of Mads Cold Tablets ' AND A Bottle of'Mac’s Syrup of Tar' AND . N 3 ~ ' (od lover 01| ll. lhc past they have givin l gui-.r.lniek~_d sallsiaciiuu in tile prevention ol I-`LlJ and have liken.-i proieii an »:iii'eilen\ system builder kfler mild ur severe cases. .wsu urn.. _'rub p The Z Macs DRUGSTORE anu your wanis will be given prompt attcnilon. Send Us Your Mail Orders sb fur are a large capital apparently b“l0l`li§l1l8 fo the Hlppodrome and thc frzlgmclit of li cornicc. Byzan- tine pottery is plentiful. including IlfH€il'i€nls und two or thrcc \'e.=sel.1 which are more cr less complclc. Oi ` rvmains of the Turkish period il lffiltnhiu plate ani-| u fine jug, hoili broken. are the best specimens from lhe new trench. BOTTLE TRAVELS 6.500 MILES Finding of a bottle on the shore 01 a small island near Japan recentli completed one of the longest "b°l"° vcyasec' ever kr.own. Accordlnz W the message it contained the Phil' had traveled atleast 8.500 miles. 0°' wrdlnz to the drift oi the wean °“" Mita. and probably much farther. Tilt message read that .t was thrown fl’°lll a ship about 250 miles wut of M¢Xl°° November 24,1920. lt. was one of i uurubor ol bomoo ret bdrm. by 01° hydrographic office with lnatructiolltl ~ that tho rluder rotum tho-paper 1"' sidoafler it. nad been marker' to WU , tha date and place of its recovery- 5° that data might. bo obtained as to l-ll' , dlmtition and' speed of tho sea wi' len . .. ._ . l I l I-