‘E .1 tl ~_~<"f .éili fl ee . One of the most useful articles in the home. Gives instant heat where plain, $6.00. Enamel $7.0 'Ii stove boards, fire shovels. ' inspect our stock. i' Quccn `Strcct< \\/ s - 1 -- - ` ' --T ---J’ 1-un ' _ _ - a fain on utittfryoir giffid and our Prices aref Right. 'L Prices From $6.00 up I Let us help make your home comfortable this winter. We have' a style to suit every taste and a price to suit ev- ery purse. Prices from $6.00 up. _ it OH’ it is most needed _ Price pond, but how are we going to ,prevent it? ' ` 0. Vf It will pay you to call and ‘P , " B 'li inercial career, a trade. etc. And h-ere too is where he i' l l\ Co' \ Q needs' advice and training. Hard work on the farm, ,i ' when- offset by the prospect of owning-a farm of his own ‘ ~ f . __ wh _ Grafton-Street? ___ \ "'O'O~§ O~OOOO§O¢ C4-040-004-Q¥G¢ 5 f Others View Point § WHAT THE PRINCE MISSED cnt counsel of Mather Nature, who other S0..cg_Hed “learned pyOfeg_Si0nS”._neVer into farm_‘ -2 liids us i\ici‘ease_:iiitl multiply, feat' L-5 - tGl-t'e Buy iiuzetl. 'i`:uit the i’i'tiit‘c \\'ou‘ii have herrn glad to see the sp:-t»\\i1vi'e his ;,'i'.1nd- father the lzitc King lEd\vui'1l first so' toot on ("'inadian .soil we may ue cer- tain. Just what was to prevent the ltenowii from dropping anchor in Syd- ney l1at'bort`ora it-\\' Iuiurs is not easy to conjecture. She would scarcely have had to :liter her :~oui-sc and thu royal party would have been anipiy repaid hy n ,eight of one oi' the ilu~ t-.st iiurliors in the eiupirc as well n.:' thc ;;i'o.'itcst coal mining and steel maiiufacturiug center of the dominion. The Prince during his tour has visit- r ed Dvrts which his ship ivtis unnhle to ' enter. Thi:-i at lcttst would iiot_ have been the casc ns rcgnrtis Sydney. l‘ci‘- liaps his upper Canadian advisors are unaware oi' this, or possibly: they tiiiiik the hrtrbcr is no\v frozen over for the winter. Nor could they lie liianietl much for this seeing the sort of in- formation conveyed by recent domin- ion chnrts oi' the linrbor. Nobody in Cape Breton can he convinced that such -a visit could not have been ar- ranged had the (‘a`nudian nutiioritles thought tit to suggest it. SMALL FAMILIES MEAN BUT ONE THING! (Hy E.B.()sliorn in Loudon (‘-lironiclet The one fatal thing a people can do is to limit the output ol' children. Small families inoan a snutll future for all oi' us; ii falling birth-ritte menus the fail of England for ever. "Get P°nu|au°n and au else wtu be added unto you," uns Joseph ('liainliei~lain's _arivicc to ('ai|:ulu, and the obverse ui' that true saying is tliis-lose popula- tion, nnd even that which you have shall be taken away i’roiii you. There is, i believe it certain bishop who is in favor oi' Cu Danny mother- hood. of limiting families to one or two children so that life may he a prlmrose path for mother and father alike. _ 'My Lord, how chu you liuvc the cheek to preach a sermon on Holy in- iieceuts Day? The same thought is l ‘on your-head. I-lave you been tight- " ' ' l, working in you, my Lord. with inspir- ed itobespierre to discuss the redur- tion ot' the population oi’ France to two millions, and inspires Lenin to wipe out whole classes of the Rua- slon people. ‘l for one p|'et`ei° the sil- ll it-ssly allowing thc most \\'~Jnt|rous oi 'ner conceptlom; (a ninie or fcniale in- , tant) to come to birth into the ‘ovous I J _ daylight _ itation ot faniilies. Prices ot living are high; houses hard to tiuri and jobs _ H0* “HSN to get and keep. I in these hard (lays, lint they will not last lor ever~not so lung porliaps as '3 it takes tt but-_y to learn to ruii and - arise from destroying the unborn t child. Tho woman who \vill have ren no child~ ,_ Ut all sells her future happiness ‘_ fel' 11 Hives of portage. sue eitnnet hold her mate; she shall not keep her t health; and long before middle age what looks she had must be caught away in a net of joyless wrinkles. N0 WOMA.-N 'CAN BE A ,MADONNA WITI»i()lI'l‘ THE CHILD. _ only selections in Guardian Readers 'Furnished by W. S. Loulon WHAT MAKES A GREAT LIFE ___ t l)o iiot_ wait to do great things; you inity waste all your life waiting t`or tlie opportunity ,which miay never come. But since little things are al- I ways t-_lnimiiig your attention, do them fr rear n tlve-- as they coine, om it g _ to _ .for the glory ot' God, to win his smllt, of approvni, and to do good to men. it is harder to ploii on i-n obscurity acting thus than to stand on the high places ol' the fields, within view ol` 1 ali, and do deeds-of valor at which rival armies stand to gaze. But no t such act goes without the swift re- cognition antl ultimate recompense oi Christ. To lultll faithfully the duties of your station; to use to the uttermost the gills of your ministry; to bear chnnng and trlvai lrritations as martyrs bore t the pillory and stake; to find the one noble trait in people who try to moi- est you; to put the kindest construe- t 'tion on unkind acts and words;` to love with the love of God even the un- thanktul and evil; to he content to be n fountain in the midst of a wild voi- iey oi’ stones, nourishing a. few lichena and wilrl flowers or now and again ti U thirsty sheep; and to do this always and not for the praise oi man. but for the sake of God-this makes-a great ‘ life.-F. B. Meyer. ' . It Got n Rin Out of' Him "why Johnnie. youve sol n lump ing again ?" 1' Ce in at all it wan an accident “F‘ig!ttir|’l Not mei” "But gohiebody struck von!-” “Nobody struck me. I wnnn't tight,- the ~ A e if Since been dl HWII L0 01.11' OWU Cltl€S Qof wage of twenty or thirty dollars a month on the farm to Q accept a position at double the wage in the city; but the ,ip _young man himself expresses no regrets, unless hehas Q made a mess of his city life, and some have. ’ "' of - city. This flow is as natural as the proverbial rolling __ We C_______y a full Stock of Stove p_pe_ e1b0WS_ ____ lietter his position. If the city offers better prospects li; choose the' better prospects. A pertinent question here is w who can blame them? driven out of him during his schooldays. The great| ‘ majority of the boys are sent to school _by doting parents, only a fraction of that fi'action make a success of it. IfI@ he boy’s thoughts were directed to the “learned profes-_= n” of farming and a course in some one of our agri-; few 0 ' 0 initely better for the country. ', i, In the oldest and most progressive sections of On-l(5) - ` ario, the great aim of the well-to-do farmer is to send-. ©@@@@@ @ @ ./. ' ‘ ' ' ' " ‘ ' ' f ' ' boy or boys to an agricultural college and so qualify! ?’q”....@@?©_@>@' to take charge of the home farm when he comes of§ '"' "' " ` * ' r" 3 of """ if '""' " " rr" T" sio T““"<’ “"“~ I *“‘"‘if- 1‘<’=‘~<"“-< 0" the cultural colleges, it- would be better for the bov antll siii'1'zu:e oi' things for advising tht- lim- tl is it hard tiinc for poor intithers .ll1S him and therefore progressive. ' 'ince is to increase in prosperity and in progressiveness or proven by the fact that we know the exact moment of an may be incalculable millions of miles and its journey of ho :if t a -_.___ _ -.-.-y-, _,W .THE UHAill0lTETOWN‘ 0UAll0llN_ "r -~».- _ ` _ ,:i' f 'f '_ _-:N I ll°r~l~t~D~U¥~’-ftfollwlvvl 19?) MAJOR L 4- ~lAn'ri.n'r'r. |'n~_»la¢nt"| per your (dellxaled) ajlyillce, 1 _’. n'n»n-' nun 5:'}n§:'iina's:|.;d"r»n'.:p.'§.';.”f' -!°|':».ni'£. l'1l\.`il_'t|s||4.' »lu'ff:»::i'1l;“|qutf: )_-,_ _- Y. rr; Y _ _ - lg. ---_ _ _-_-_ _ 'rim t‘i'i‘\'\\-'Aim TRENIQ. _ -, who is ortff nizing the farmers fora rand farm- l _ _ _ _ fs” , g _ i " '-_;`_l_’_;fs’_;l:t',i1i1leniti;ii o ,_.~i_whi_ch he ii ‘to be the chief, has) stated ' '. ' _ -_al“rt 'nfst e et do w 'L-1 _ _“us __Wi,ntel___ Y_w_wd_|___ p o ec io 1 e gr a s curse an ra ac 1n_ _ ilfI»'a-ii‘ada’_’ because;-it has drawn the people from the farms the cities. ' ‘ ' ~ ~ '_ t - 'It isl quite true that protection has been largely in- ,, erican cities in about as reat numbers as the havel C _ . _ . H5 . _. . _ _ 1 l_|!_+|1 ' ' ' ' ' Q It is regrettable from many points of view that our' 'l “ ’ , _ ”. ' ' »- _ E____ _________y_§>_|51n_gi glen anddyoung \tonien_1n_sucl% large _ i;_umb?I‘§' i`H5i`éiTi'-$-laléi-‘;lfi‘-Ei?“;l-i»'ai?‘ ‘ i‘eH':h‘Eli§3";iC|`l-‘zld t 1 3 -;. THURsDAY,*NoV`EMB1}1ij27, 1919. _ ` fi [Mp to _._ T. A. Cg_'¢;rar,~_head of the Western Grain Grow- P anadian cities, that is. Before the inauguration of' , "National 'Policy men were drawn from the farms to ' r ` ‘ ' ' rj ' ff- "_ ' NEW I COMING--in. Serpentine Crepe for_Kimonas in pleasing patterns.__ - Ticking, Sheeting, Quilts, Linens, Towelling, Beach Cloth, Turkey Red, Nainsook, Organdies, Voiles, Pique, Nainsooks, Lawns, Palm Beach Cloth, Mulls, Middie - Cloth, Cotton Suiting, ,Repp, Pure #Linen Qamask, Bath N Mats, Glass Towelling, Crash, Table. Cloths, in pure linen, ' Napkins, _Towels and etc. _ _ _,ff Special showing of Figured _ _Serpentine»“Crepe in- Rosc, Grey, Mauve, Pale Blue, Light Navy, very pretty designs. ' - » ~ “ =f'_ “sf-=._sf-=fsF~=.f-_ss.sffrsfsss. are Looking for Here " strumental in drawing men from the farms to the cities -ill Ecfmomy sinh Nainsook and Mum in P-‘Pie blue- Pinki ’ 1 ` _ ____ ' L ` m §@- >- C- "- \ _ apricot, and white, for lingerie, etc, . P 1>AroN.s‘ L1./wrfii » . The fact of the matter is there has been a good deal nonsense talked about the flow from the farm to the 6( a log,” as regrettable often as rolling off a log into a The aim of every boy who is worthy of his keep is to han the country he would be a poor sample if he did not' hether the boy chooses wisely and in this case every- hing depends on the prospects at home and on his natur- bent, whether towards farming, a profession, a com- en he comes to young manhood, if he has a taste fo arming, would not drive' him to the city, on the otne and hard work on the farm and no prospects of owning farm of his own until his father dies and he himself is middle-aged man, has lured` more boys to the city' than he movies and all the other' so called attractions. And A taste, for farming is either instilled into a boy or o be transformed into clergymen, lawyers, doctors, anog rs. Only a fraction of them reach the desired goal andl @'@@@`e@@@@@©© @'@ ' © ` o easeseeseeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeee © u eentice to the c1ties,iegietta le from t epoint view of production that a young man should leave af ~‘-f, " j* = ~~--‘- ~» P f f --~ , ~~ `=- ~ _-__;__. OVERCOAT SALE $18.00, $20.00, ._ $22.00, $25.00 0verc_oats Bought at Special Price and the, Saving Passed Along to You _ Double Breasteti Beiters----Half Belts, Uisters--- _gg llisterette_s~-Chesterlieids and Young Men’s Form- " ‘ Fitting Overcoats $18, $20, $22, $25. - s it-_.i1 _ ` _fl»_,'_r__ These Overcoats are exceptional values at the _ ;~,Z/-_ ` 'L' price. Despite the existing ' onditions which has K H' made it almost impossible top procure an overcoat , 'i__|_s.' at these prices we offer these coats in assorted pat- ’ " W terns at a price far below their market value. _ They come in assorted shades of brown, greens _ t and greys in neat, check and stripeeffect. Made ~"" ' double and single breasted style with wide conver- ' _ = table collar which can be fastened close around the " " ' neck. Full or half belt atback. ' _ This is an unusual opportunity to secure a Warm ~- fik well made coat at a low price. Size 35 to 44. fi I .1 Coats worth $22.00 for $18.00. Coats worth $25.00 for $20.00. Coats worth $28.00 for $22.00. Coats worth $530 00 for ‘$25 00 Come in and save $5 00 on your Overcoat @@@@ @@_@_©©@©@_@_@@@_C@@@@@_@@l©@@@Q@@i @ \ _ P gg -_Z A ` mfr* E_;;" ' 1 1?” ‘fl ____;;'_ A ,\ -:__ \\- V” @@_@_@©_@@@, i, _»; v \ @- ge. The result is that the best. farms remain in the fam-- ,,,.,,,,,,,_ ,md ,,,,_,,,m_,,_ _,W mls _"___ ily, gen-eration after generation _and are improved_as the gr@.,i,.,,, if ,,,,,,,.,,, ,,, ,_,,,p,_g,,,g_ uw, years go by. Another and very lmportant result is thae he farmers in those sections are as a rule, well educated If we are to retain our rural population, if our pro- he school boys’ minds must be trained towards, not away from, the. farms, and they must be encouraged to set up housekeeping -on their own account while they are yet young -men. ___..~.._ y 'l‘lll'] (‘l|I‘ll5`\lKl"I'I. l’l{()l’|I l‘I'|`. ' _ 1 -_ l Fi-om time immemorial theorists and faddists h'ave,' either through ignorance, or love of sensationalism, startled the credulous with prophecies of some impending dire event. The end of the world, being about the most stupendous thing that could happen, has always been' a favorite theme and dates have been set, at regular in-; ervals for this much dreaded catastrophe While the met- hod of the grand finale has been given in detail. The usual manner of disposing of the old earth is to have a ~lanet or. comet collide with it. This of course would be quite possible if comets and planets and other heavenly bodies were in the habit of running around loose through space. But they are not. On the contrary their move- ments are so faultlessly governed and so accurately timed hat throughout the few thousand years of _human his- ory not one of them has swerved an inch from its course deviated a second from its scheduled time. This is eclipse, of the arrival of a comet although its orbit hrough space be hundreds of years; that the movements the earth and of the sun and moon are so perfect that he tides of the ocean which covers the etarth.as»a mantle and which they control: have risen and fallen without deviating an inch during the thousands of years of which we have record. ` We 'know to a second the revolutions f the pla ets and their respective orbits ;' we dmow the relativepdbitions of the fixed stars and their,g_roups~and we see the same constellations that Job saw when he sang of Arcturus, Orion and Pleiades. ‘ \ ` ' When a prophet or a crank tells uslth~at"one of these pr* - ‘ ._._._:__...:..._..:_.__,_ ~ _, ;:,_ -_ -_1-3,,--f --- fr” ----» || IS IHIIOS _ = -1. .'-»-_` ' Q' '-'f.-4"' -`§ ‘,-»'.'f ‘_'i. -3 ' ' l _ si: 1,. _ ,gf '_ . l __, _._ _.__.__ .__ __q_._.__.c, _.,_;_ ;_;_,~_-___. _ ~ jlv:i._eéf:-*-_i_.»t__‘-_- . Stand all - ” i Ti-IRT I-`_.~.~¢ '~‘-“-1.5?-'-7' i'f-?»7‘1'i`-L'i-"5-'tfl;'£_' '_ _ » . » T t I \ P' . o.-__»=l'lvF§‘l’_.'.iw*w-_t.. ~.=-t-»~- ‘sggqfss es S-r ‘~_- » #__ '.’._"Z’:\.1¥iL*--- _ . l~ 1' “~"5";“. "y ._,_~- ._~.1- -»>'-"'~"""" -1"/T _, » I f 1< r ~'l , ~' »---“Y” “f i __ the FaVOYlt€S ‘_ ____,_,,,,.,-_~ -e_'§§;g,<,y.1;ji§;;.j,_»_;‘- _ ' . .i*,»¢»:1_&Jf_ 'E ‘_,¢_n__,~7'7_f"`\;4‘,;_*_;Q,4t _i of Experts _-_i ,_ ‘P ti-.; it , ___ . '_A ,___ __ 1 . ,= ____. i _ The Willis Piano is the fav- _ ;__-¢,_\___,__i_ _,sim_§_$,_,g__,,___,_, _ orite with experts, concert play- ="“<{,_ii§;;_;;,§f,,,__;_§;-'_;¢f'§§§_-gfi - \-_,'1_~j._§,,.,._,__. :_ ers, teachers and students alike. 'iv 1-.f.:;“»_='l"-~`~'~" = " -f 'l' ht ' " --»‘5,‘\\:.‘ ' _ It stands every test or ig _\i_i§g;r_f;+fc»@- sympathetic touch, rich, ~sonor_ iii, ous tone, high rade construe- » tion and splendid finish it is without doubt the best family piano that has ever been placed on the Canadian market. - ' _ il' _l, _ 'F53 r is ’ J alll” .__s 4-’ _ The WILLIS has received highest praise from all expert performers, includ- "lg all the stars of the -Mplltreal Grand Opera Company. It fills a want, long fell, for a superior grade family piano that can meet the exacting demands of a concert pterformer and also stand the heavy strain of continual use in the average home- IS ,' \ ' 'A High-Grade Faniily _Piano And Priee within Reach of An a_nd all delightfulqualities you find in it on first acquaintance remain with it through life. It is not an-instrument made for show or for exhibition use but one to Sfand the severest of all tests-continual use in the average home. , ' “ t ' _ _Call in to-day and see our splendid assortment of these famous 'Willis p'ianos» including the celebrated self-player, which is without~~-doubt -the g-reatest__aohiev9- ment that piano _makers have ever wrought-a monument to artistic craftsmanship and mechanical inggnuity- See our fine stock!" '"""" 'W' " " '"' \ . . ' ___.___....-._~ . " A A.E. TooMs ie? Qudan sr cnnntorrar' wh ' dies is going to run outfof its course and hit, us,” we can I , , _ t ' ' l) _ ' ' " ' _ ‘ ord to smile at him. One of these prophets 'has re- ntly caiculated(?) that six of the planets in -ourisolar »---- _ _ ' _ _ WEN,” ___ ,_ ,_ _ __ g system are going to get into 'such a position d‘n’a certain) . . . » , ~ _ _ ~ -_ 1 ». .. in Decem r of this ear that all kinds of calamities “nemngly since “me began Should 5°m9thln8` 'ha Ren Th’ "°’ 'W ”° ""';'li _j_ - ,, ly' bE 'Y _', ` ' ~ "_ `- _ ~». em t',turlrtliit'l'i , .§,‘,{,‘,,-'°","‘2,'},‘,,” ,,,,,,,,, ,,,, -,,,,,,,,,,,, will follow We need not_worry over this t; The planets w puht the macmnery °f th°'“"“’e"S° °“l?°_f 85°” W1* £7516 "'_' °"'-~" lu* -°“"‘““_ _ ,nn lor. till' P” ~ ’ " nfhwhfi nent -mn 1 fm-not to hold ’""‘ "H51 the stars 'will' foilowthe' courses they followed Prop- eta Wm kn°w."°-thing °f it tl" it happensimd the" "°" "°""'° “°‘T°°‘ d°'i'l' lg'l'~Y~ _ ,,,,,__»__,._ ,__- ___ _Q _ __ ._ , __ . _ _ it wiiibemolat6\iUEél'3ii12y notoriety-ou_tof_'it~' _.'_ _ » _(.- 1 l " _. , t » _ ,nt s l °