réG-‘ffimi ‘ p ‘iiiillitll l _nsssesas-w.easnue.usaars. t.0ol. ldltevasIInllsIr-e-Llarastn WN- Blllliilllli l.‘ Barnett- . S. 0e dlter-D. I. Carrie VIoe-Prilllfill-vwl. D, A. Inellnlell. I) Aeeeclate ii FRIDAY, CCTOBER 15, 1926 ‘III CUABDlAN may be obtained town! A, Drown. Stamp Vaader. Inllvvly kltnll. Iaritlnso Stationers, rnlton Street. I. D. Taylor, flrnften Street. flatter I 00.. Queen Street. Alex. lefhoreon, Queen Street. Frank N. Keys. l9 SUlhIllSlDE-P- J- SOUIIIB-I. A. Plquet. IONTILIAL-hletropolltan ‘News L08 ANGILBS, CALlI~—Allnl NB!" NEW YORK-Helm!!! News Stands- B. I.‘ Cor. 47th Street I Brondwlyi Depoti N. E. Cor. lind l Hotaling’: Newa Depot, Enroll! WHY THE UNEQSINESS? lSome of our lLiberal contempor- aries are greatly concerned over the appointment of the d-ion. Hugh Guthrie as ‘Conservative House ‘leader during the coming session of Turiiameut. ' ‘Well. perhaps if our nervous friends would remember that the choice was for the Conser- vatives and by the ‘Conservatives they would find nothing peculiar about the situation. The Liberals. it is true. were not consulted inpho matter. probably because those Agency, 15d Peel Strut. Sixth Avenue, (Opposite Irena the following nlenh inmharlotto- Hrs. L. Doaeett, 2i? Spring Peri Bond. G. Tonnilns. Kent titreet Welt. Stephen Duly. Richmond Street. B. Thomae White, 12B llrn Ave. N. Tweed. M Elm Ave. Fred Gnuslet, Greet George Street. liillsboro Street, hfolnnia, hlehlell Building. MONTAGUI-JV. A, Johnston. stand, Towns Ave. and 6 Street. S, E. Cor. 48nd Street A Sixth Avenue: 42nd Street, Opposite Grand Central Glnsbel Bros.) lml Street Entrance, Woolworth Building. dictators as an answer to Bolshe- vism. Long ago men welcomed despotism as an answer to feudal anarchy; they look toward despot- ism es a cure for democratic un- archy. a condition brought aboutby professional politicians. l-lere in the United States, declared. we have the most iucrctl- ible extravagance and waste ever shown by any nation. life is less safe than in any country [lfilltfllillllg to be civilized, our criminal law is administered worse he i than in any run onannorrnrowu (MQUARDIAN- Notes by the Way "Let the Inquiry be' Impartial." says The Toronto Globe, and goes on to observe that “it is regrettable that the newly elected Liberal Gov- ernment haa left itself open to the charge that tho prosecution of the misdemeanors in the Customs De- partment has been entrusted whol- ly to counsel and officials _whose political affiliations are with the mier King in summarily dispensing with the services of Mr. W. F. 0‘- ‘Conuor, -KlC., the one Conservative who was retained in connection with the investigation, has not cre- ated a good impression in the pub- lic mind, nor has it added to gen- eral confidence that the inquiry is to he conducted along the line of the Premier's pre-eiection promise." We might let it go at that, but we may add our endorsement to The Globe's concluding words:- "The Customs investlgaliomil it is to be satisfactory to the pub- lic, must continue in a fair, non- partlzan fashion. Mr. King- will 'be vcry badly advised indeed if he attempts to make it a political machine." From what is above recited it would appear that “the attempt lo make it a political machine" is al- reudy well under way. And most fair-minded readers will agree with Mr. O'Connor, the dismissed coun- investigatiuu into irregularities and‘ LibEYB-l lmfly- Thewctlon of Prei _ Bifgnes Wlluumllb. t. PAIN LOWER LEFT sins‘ I spoke once before about a chap who was having considerable pain in the lower left part o! abdomen. If it had been on the right side ap- pendicitis would have been the first thought. An X ray examination showed that he had an extra loot of large intestine in that region, and when gas accumulated there Pain resulted. ‘A surgeon examining the X ray with him suggested that he could remove the extra foot 6f intestine 8nd give him relief. However he figured out that he and yet it was only during the prev. distress. Why? - lBecauso he had always been an active outdoor man, an engineer, but during the ‘D851 two years he lied become n desk or indoor man, He concluded that. his best plan was to take more exercise, and await results. The extra foot of intestine could be removed if the exercise didn't give relief. A drug firm advertising their BTW duct makes the statement "There are no detours in the intestines." This is true enough, but when an extra loc-p one foot long is located, l had had. that. extra foot all his life ious two years that he -hud‘felt any Pagan Virtue8:anh_ l‘ Condensed from The Atlantic Monthly (June '28.) ' latitude Royden. There are certain virtues which are practised by pagans; our Iiord took for grantedthat every Chris- tian would practise those virtues. "Except," l-lo said, “your righteous- ness absll exceed the righteousness of other people." We Christians halve been very much inclined‘ to emphasize what we may call the Christian virtues; to seek to prac- lse those virtues which mndelChrlst different from other men. ‘We have forgotten that Tie took for granted the pagan virtues, and lhuilt the soaring edifice of Christian holiness upon that splendidly laid foundation. ‘What are the virtues that pagans store by? Courage, perhaps. illrst oi all, Ibut also a high sense of honor, dom. Without those, there is n real virtue at all. "Christ took these virtues for granted. ‘There is nowhere in ills teaching the dreadful doctrine de- veloped ‘by certain Chrisilar‘ call- ed “the total depravity of man." Christ never suggested that human beings’ were altogether evil and must be entirely changed if they are to be Cliristians. ‘but rather as- Ghristiau Graces —that is, non-Christian pBDpl9——-BBt and loyalty to ones friends, inde- pendence, magnanimlty, and wis- - . . i to the worker to‘ tbp society that we belong to, Christ did not care about these thing's, and we try in vain to imitate Him before we have info the ‘ouudqtiuwof character. ll have vfound common honesty to be the rarest. of the virtues practis- ed by .' people. ‘We want the coinmon, decent, pagan virtues in God. There is something that disgusts in Christian grace on a shoddy foundation. it is like a poorcnd cheap building which we cotver with elaborate ornament. It la like any- thing that is false. And the aver- age decent pagan is revoited by its dishonesty. ’ d-lumility is loathsome if it is not founded on self-respect. -'We must have the pagan virtue of self-res- pect beforo we dare to have the ‘Christian virtue of humility. iliad not Christ just those pagan virtues that a0 many of us Chris- tians lack’! With all ‘His love and gentleness and mercy, how utterly courageous was l-lis denunciation of all that was false and cowardly and had! ‘The tendernesswlth which ‘He speaks of the outcast and the sinner is matched 1b!’ His fierce denunciation of spiritual pride in high places. That was why His tenderness counted for so much. llad ‘He done as we are so fond of doing, shutting our eyes to things we love to praise, re-fusiug to see what is blamowortliy because it of loyalty to other human ibeln8s p before we lhegin to talk about trust - that we know are wrong because y p. ,,\ 7 g OCTOBER 15,3926 Hamsters/renamed ' for over a century has been serving the ‘and farm- ing interests of Canals; is-cquip- pad to handle large bank accounts and financial transactionsof first importance. ‘ At the same time, it renders the fullest and most careful service to smaller accounts, which are equally welcome. whose business n was m make m European dictatorship, our tnunlclp- just where the gas prosstire cambe “mes m,“ mo,“ people are decent, appointment thought it was none of the Liberals‘ business and so they made their own choice and. so far as we can ‘find out the party is sat- isfied. The fact that the Hon. Mr. Guthrie was a Liberal in the earl)’ sol, in his remark that “perhaps it would he just as well for all others concerned to cease contending that the Customs enquiry is in its scope and intent non-partizan and nou- political." al governments are the worst in the world, our cities the dirtiest, our taxes the highest, our corrup- tion the greatest, our gangsters the most numerous”; " II l‘ Equally savers is the indictment of iDr. Durant. Seeking the causes Mala" "mm" :5 dread)’ "e7"- Yel"? Eleni. then trouble can natur- ally be expected. ' Alld if you are one of those folks with pain down on the right side which is present only at times, go into the matter of possible gas pres- sure there, not necessarily from an extra length of intestine, but from an intestine that has been dis- ten-tied so often that it has actually assumed that people were, on the people. When ‘file wantetYto tell us what IGod is like, l-le said that God is like a human father, only greater and-better. Christ assum- ed that most fathers are decent and kind, Or again, in the Sermon on the Mount, how persistently He seems cruel to see it. His praise would have ibeen worth as little as ours so often is; ‘l-lis lolve would have effected nothing. iBut because men knew‘ that l-lis mercy was jus- tice, because they realized rthat He was able to see through and through them and lovc them all the same, 4 r BANK or ig/iourasm. Total Assets §§t§l'f§§$?;=o.o»»..q» ‘because lHis love rose upon the red to by many newspapers. it is I. I j too soon yet to expect that mellow season “which. if pleasant, is often too short for general satisfaction. dilated or enlarged. whole, decent people. Christ did n, h x H, f , _ great foundation of truth and jus- m m“ s “My m“ S a “e n“ say’ u‘ km“ m“ W“ “Qweritlce and clenr-sightedness, it moved quent cause c-f this trouble. That is too many Dotatoes, or too much keep your vows‘ and thereforqflgithe world as nothing else has mov- ‘ed it. i _ a of the decay of democracy? in Am- years of h s politic career was not eflca he finds that the disappemu - hi . h Lounted against m He as beenlance of economic equality and free- tell you not to swear at all.“ a Conservative sufficiently long to‘ have been thoroughly purged ofuny Liberal taint that might have clung to him when he left the Liberal fold. Anyway, there is no danger in his case of reverting to his orig- inal type of Liberalism as that type is as dead. as the dodo and the iohthyo saurus of happy memory. The party, now masquerading under that name, hyphenated with other for mutual assistance is not Liberal. Our friends may lay aside their uneasiness about tho Conser- vative choice. ‘They had lots of. material to choose from and they’ made their choice. I DEMOCRACY. fill- Maklng the world safe for democ- racy was a phrase commonly used during the Great ‘War. This was said to he the purpose of the war. The war with its millions of slain, with its awful cost in life, property and sorrow still unpaid and never to be paid, is over and the world is not yet safe for democracy. ils democracy safe for the world‘! ls it sane and dependable and whole- some? ‘What do we mean ihy dem- ocracy. The answer is always at hand". “Government for the people by the people." The laconic rule. The people are supreme, Tho voice of the people is the voice of qod- etc., etc. liow do the people rule? Are they intelligently convinced that the form of Government they stand for and work for and do anything but lie for is the best for the people? ‘How many of them are really concerned about it, and do they really think‘! Two able American thinkers deal with the general subject of democ- racy in recent magazines andboth express their view that Democracy is on the down grade. ‘ _ ProL-Wiilbur C. Abbott of Harv- ard writes in the Yale Review on ‘Democracy or Dictatorship," and Dr. Will lDurant considers in Harp- er's Magatlue the inquiry "-ls De- mocracy a Failure?" iAmong Prof. Abbott's points are these: in the last few years lPortu- gal, Spain, lltely, Greece, Turkey, Russia. iPolanil, Quiche-Slovakia and Belgium have endured. even where they have not welcomed. dictators. Germany had Hllldeil- burg. thence has been looking for I Inllt stroll: enough to rescue her from her troubles. There has ‘been s determined elort to replace par- liamentary government‘ in England ' with some form of class rule, and the and ls not yet, for the general l "trusts nblv-betfneteverflrhere forces in- tiie world hid“! the aubvsrstm of " ‘fleldflyltthis. hnogmau , ‘tom's: to is»; tau» On rare occasions it may ‘be pro- longed for weeks. There is no fixed _ (lat f0 Ind‘ t l l , of government. and the imbecility!“ ‘Emir [In Tgzstryrxgegnaga lief i} of men are responsible. “The the- no, expected “um after cold ory of democracy had assumed weather has set in and some snow ratloml ammaL Bullhas fallen. The Boston Transcript notes that there must be a. “Squaw dom, the growing size of the polit- ical unit. the growing complexity that man is n nzan is an emotional animal, occa- whlte bread eaten at the same time. Sometimes a little baking soda in wid- in effect "Don't you realize the water in which cabbage and that all th-ls casuistry about what 0W8!’ "8891811165 are 719mg milked constitutes a. binding oath and what giszillklotlgieilhammlu‘ of distal‘ does not means that your bare word However the 51mph bending. ex_ is not enough. Iln future do not ercises,.that is bending from side Bweill‘ at 511-" welchflsfians WE“ to side, and from from. to back, will to be so honest that no one will tighten up the abdominal mUBCIBS-reqtiire us to swear any oaths at and prevent any sagging in this ,;‘~e. sionally rational; and through his feelings he can be deceived to his heart's content, lt may be true, as Lincoln pretended to believe, that you can't fool all the people all the time- . but you can fool enough of them td-rule a large county" Which is what has taken place. The trouble, says the Boston Her-- ald, is not with the theory of tin-- mocracy; the trouble is with oar- selves. Let the people select their own rulers. Possessed of this great prerogative they of course will go to the polls to put in office the men best fitted to manage the difficult business of government. In- falllbly it must. be that the most honest, able and efficient menin the community will direct the course of the state. Thus, says Prof. Abbott. men reasoned two centuries ago. ldasiiy they pointed out the bad logic of the hereditary principle. They com-pared the worst of the old aristocratic system with lilo perica- lion of the system they proposed. But their predictions have not been fulfilled. For under such a system the conduct of affairs falls into the hands of those more anxious for their own fortunes than for those of the country. 'Dr. Durant has only a single prac- tical suggestion to offer. He would have a school of political adminis- tration connected with each of our great universities that should train men as thoroughly as do our medi- Winter before lndlan Summer." The Squaw Winter is marked by cold weather and snow, which dis- appears. leaving the ground bare. It is quite true that Hon. Hugh Guthrie, the newly chosen Conser- vative House iLeader, was in the ILaurier days several times elected to the ‘House of ‘Commons as e Lib- eral. ilils father before him, Hon. ‘Donald Guthrie, was also a Liberal ‘MacKenzie was iPrime Minister ul’ Canada. But why condemn him or belittle his talents on that account. as some Liberal journals seem disposed to do? lt is surely of some importance that a public man shall follow his honest convic- lions. While many Liberals, notably in Quebec, were opposed to Canada entering the war, and these and other Liberals later chalked at Con- scription. Mr. Guthrie joined the Union Government am‘, helped in carrying on the crucial struggle to its victorious closc. lils constitu- ents, who know lihn best. have ap- proved his course in four general elections Qlnce and now his Con- servative fellow members in the House of iCommons have selected him as their leader during the coming scsslon._ ils not all this to his credit, alike as to his ability and integrity? There are msny reasons why pub- ilc men who were once Liberals have become Conservatives. Some have become wiser with advancing years. A more common reason is that the Liberal party has many times changed its platform and principles. The Liberalism ' of in the days when Hon. Alexander" particular region, and every other part of the abdomen. "An abdominal belt for old folks is likewise of help. wti-O-m- DAILY LESSONS ' IN ENGLISH , By _W. L. Gordon Q-Q-O-Q9-OO-O-O-§9-Q WKLRDS OFTEN MISUSED: _Don't say “his exit from Chicago. Say “departure" when from a place, “exit? when out of, as a room or building. OFlTlEN MlSPllbNbuUNChlli: pre- rtense. Accent last syllable, not the first. OFTEN MlSSPEL-bbli): com‘. instantly, directly, inendablc; two m's and able. SY-‘NIONYM-S: immediately. forthwith, at once, WiORD STUDY: “Use a ord three times and it is yours." Le us increase our vocabulary by master- ing one word each day, Today's- word: PORT-ENTOUS; foreshadow- ing evil; ominous. “lt was a porten- tons clash of dominant I])6l‘i'lOllflli' ties." -———-¢0>—-—-_ l Dailyselections E0 R Guardian Readers O§+O1 October l5, 1926 THE WORD VERLFl<idD—~"And now, 0 God of vlsrsel, let Thy word, l pray Theo, he verified, which Thou spoakcst unto Thy servant." 1 Kings 8:26. rlilllAYlfilb-Surely, O Lord, the righteous shall give thanks unto Thy name. cal schools for the practice of medicine. fife would then strive- somehow-to inculcate in the popu- lace the opinion that it is unpatrl- otlc to allow unprepared men to rule them. Finally, he would hope that—somehow—-it should be or- dained tbat no trained administrat- or should be eligible for a higher office who had not twice ‘been elect- ed to a lower one; from mayor twice to Governor, and no on. ---—-<-OQ>-——- EOiTORIAL NOTES, JMr. A. E. Mscbaan, M. P. an- nounces that he has received a iat- ter of congratulation on his elec- tion from the Woman's Liberal Club of Montreal in which they ar- dontly declare their admiration for the "works of the men" which is "the strength of a party.” Now why out of the three successful Liberal candidates " here would these Montreal ladies pick upon Laurier was not the same as that of Alexander Mackenzie and much less like that of Mackenzie King. The old-time Liberalism was oom- psratively safe, sane and patriotic. The Liberalism of the King Govern- ment is lncspable of definition. It has no fixed principles and nobody knows whither it is drifting. Hon. Mr. Guthrie, after his elec- tion as House leader was Interview- ed by s leading Toronto Liberal journal, and made the followiuu brief statement: "The honor conferred upon me today came as a great surprise. I was practicing my profession in Guelph yesterday with no thought of this. d realito that l em not the best qualified man. for the position. The hearty support of the entire caucus was pledged to mo, though I was not elected on the first bal- lot. ‘While ‘Hon. Rudolph Lemieux is ‘Dean of the House. -l em the iienlor member on the Conservative side, having tevieeentod South Wellington for the laetyhtl years.” M Mr. Guthrie had not sought the the esteemed pauper“! m: ooiigratulstisus!‘ The other two w a. .1, iwmgw p colleen”, confer- rtd" sperm» Hate not only the ‘ a P1,.‘ Q at» ~ u __ g; . ,. .J.I.i,a‘4,.\.. Q "rwo Wontos There is a world of clay . And a spiritworid where gleam: The light of our loudest dreams. And one is of the day, Noisy and coarse and known, And the other we dwell in alone. There is fame in the world of clay, And money and pomp and placg Pain, suffering and disgrace, And nl-l of these pass away. ' But ever the spirit clings To its simple and lasting things. The world of the spirit glows With the good man has tried to d0, And whether‘ his dreams coma true Or whether their foes ‘he known," In that world which ‘no keeps alone The ‘host of his life is known.- ‘iTls there that his friends gen found ‘ ‘Tia there that his loves abide; There is all of ‘his nohier aide,- When otilied is ‘life's battle sotmd ‘Tie the eplrit aha not the clay That wakes to the brighter day. present House, but also one ‘whit was never defeated at the polls". 0f bit personal appearance and equip- ment The Globe says in pert: \ Mr. Guthrie is leerneddn consti- tutional law and Commons prose dare, makes .0. good speech. deep soaorouvvolcelillll 150400.", " ' “ " ' t ~gqi . l‘ i times due _to lack of moral cour- all. ‘“Ye have heard that it hathibeen saidflfhou shalt love thy neighbor, and hate thine enemy." Our Lord, did not say ‘ii-fateful creautres! You, are incapable of loving anylbodyl You must ‘be completely changed!” l-le assumed that Bis hearers really had lived up to that standard, but‘ il-Ie said that it was not enough. They must now learn to love their enemies. {At every step in this great argu: merit, Christ begins with a pagan virtue, and goes on from that to Christianity. ls not some of the IIn Christ every Christian grace was founded upon the rock of honor and loyalty, courage and justice, land a great strength. iIt is only the ‘strong who can really ‘be gentle. The gentleness of the feeble has in it something that. repels; but the gentleness of strength, as with Christ, is adorable. When Christ stood before .l’llate -wlth no protest on iHls lips, Pilate was afraid of Him. ‘Ono can see that at every step. ‘Christ was the judge~not lPilate. And the world has been Kin love with Him and afraid ofil-lim ever since. We Chris- tians must not expect any more that the world wlll'1bo moved- o1" attracted, or anything but repelled, by grade and beauty sought with- out strength, by a IChristian grace of character which has not the common honesty and courage at the heart of it. We have to realize that disgust. that our religious profes- sions aud even our religions life have awakened among non-Chris-l tian people due to the fact that we, seek to practise the Christian graces of holiness and sanctity, without halving acquired the rudi- mentary vlrtues of honesty, cour- age. loyalty. self-respect’! A person who is really religious, a person who is truly lChristllke, is a person more gracious, more love- ly, more adorelblc. than‘ any pagan character that ever existed. IBut one dislikes the kind of person-mo terribly common-who seeks to practise the Christian virtues of humility and‘ self-sacrifice and lovc and peace ‘before he has got cour- age or honesty or honor. ‘How often, for example, Chris- tians "sacrilico” themselves, before they have not the courage to do otherwise. lSelf-sacrilice becomes merely abject. unless it is made by e person who could assert himself if he chose. iChrist allowed ‘Him- self to the insulted and injured without making an effort to vindi- cste Himself, yet by that very con- duct commanded the worship of a world of warring men. Christians lay great emphasis on such vlrtuosas toierirtion and cour- ‘shell has been found satisfactory we Christians often repel the world as much as our iLord attracted it, because at the heart of our mercy thercis weakness. at the heart of our self-sacrifice, ifesr. Fresh Water Mussel t.. ll-KASI-li-NGTON, Oct. l3. A solution of a baffling but; indust- rially important biological problem was measuroably approached this summer by research work at the Bureau of Fisheries’ station at lFuirport, ilowa. Dr. M. M. illlis of the University of Missouri successfully hatched out in a special culture, at the end of a series of experiments, the em- bryonic spawn of the fresh water mussel. Shells Are Valuable A sedentary, inedible and unat- tractive creature from most view- points, the mussel ordinarily inha-h- its the mud bottoms of the ‘Missis- sipplbnd tributary rivers in the middle west. lln rare cases it secrets a true but misshapen pearl within its shell. and has labels lonll hunted out ‘because of the trait. lu recent years, however, its entire raw material for the manufacture of pearl buttons. i8ome,time ago, it became appar- tosy. sis not our tolerstlon also “m. age’! When our Lord found a per- son who illtreated o. child,'-He did ter for him that a millstone were hanged albout his neck, and thsthe were drowned . .- ."When ‘He found real spiritual vllonoss He .1 n0- ed it in language that terriilesdho not say, "Le; us reflect that this’ person is ‘probably a badly brought», up person." Ho said. "It were their; out that the drafts of shell-using industry upon the natural stock of mussels was rapidly exhausting the gupply. Tho government's scient- ists ibegan to study the possibilities of artificial propagation, and ran into an almost insurmountable ob- stacle. Nature had but one way of bringing up Ihaby mussels. it was discovered, and that was through the use of a most weird and uudup- licateablo floating incubator. Produce Pearle modem Christian, altliough'lt we! generally people of power and pell- » tion whoexcited that indignation. It is eaey for us to persuade our- selves that we have to practise the . Christian virtues of gentleness and grace, when our real trouble is that courage to begin wlthf, is proposed that. we mt u: wrong. and we decide’ that not be Christian to ladle." J11 ' not, that ye lbe not ludaeli." refrain from "inflame"; we rs ma"; mhiaganh‘ public an.» e drsadmlpflllfiiweeyvf” . ‘ _ | ‘a s. we have not the pagan virtue or Over sud over again, IOIiIIi-lllfll A V, ma; m, ting. One of the molt “m”; While the parent mussel rollas- ed uncounte myriad: of its embry- onic spewn nually. only such in- significant. propcrtious of the pro- _ geny have ‘aver survived as coud attach themselves by accident to the rifle and ‘inner. isws of certain fishes, on which they had to live “parasites. Al. the ad in detaching themselves and ihio the» ed a norliei life and perhaps pro- i; or fabricated the . a. blouse. til supeees this summer ra- Dr. Hill's work, no mussel every , - Spawn Hatched Out I . tdka and of that period, if they succeed- ‘diopping upon a niud bottom, evad- ins the easier chance of getting "nwm Nliacent stomach of the , llllllll‘! lhqdbbfor fish. they attain- usm snusnss at Big Discount y lie get a Ladies’ Hair Brush 1-3] Off Now is your opportunif at 1-3 off regular price. We are clearing out these Brushes to make room for new stock. The, White Drug Store a J. omlulison xxxxxxx’x xxxxxx x xx xxx x_x vvw v w.vwvvwvvvvvvvv v vvwvvviv A‘ x xxxxxu. Oww¢¢¢¢vv "YY FEED ‘MB GOGO COAL needs good coal in order to give ou propy- ssr- vico. _l|y use inferior grades and run the chance of its burning ‘poorly? ' Let ussuppiy you with coal end be assured of rttingjhe beet service rorn your furnace.‘ . s ‘ Atiwlcksnn [hone 240 ,' \ xxxxxxx ““ xxx. co," new artificial propagation process to work out, but the fishery experts on the basis of success achieved now have considerable hope that the mussel supply can again be built up. and place upon the firm foundation that h been given by scientific research i0 the growing of oysters and the hatching of salmon. Wife Nagged Him i Once T00 Often CAMDEN, N. 1.. Oct. l2. -—ll<‘orf,y~ two years of nagging. married life. was too much for Benjamin Wai- lace, T5 years old, and yesterday he got ‘mnd’ and killed his wife, Mrs Mary E‘. Wallace, aged 65. with a chair. according to a confession made to police. "lShe flagged me," ho told police, “lf ll didn't hang my clothes ‘up. She nagged me for dropping ashes on the floor. and for taking too much sugar in my coffee. She used to nag me for wearing dirty shoes and tracking up the floor and the carpet. iShe didn't like it when I wore my old clothes, -but they were mine, and why should , not l wear them." ‘f- Wallace. bald except for a fringe ‘ of white hair, stooped from years of labor in a glass factory and re- 4,, ' markably placid in face and mau- ner. called st a. local ‘Methodistl Church where his son. Clarence, is, x Superintendent of the Sunday g‘ School, to notify him of the crime. ’ “You'd better come homo quick " he said to his son. stamping hes fly upon the platform where the lat- ter stood with a hymn-book in his TESTED jfsmw GLASSES FITTED New retracting room with modern equipment. Our experience ie aTyour service. E. W. TAYLOR PHONE 153-1.. ASSISTED av a. s. TAYLOR orromermsrs 142 Richmond Gtrest \. hand. "Mother's pretty sick." As soon as he could Clarence- who at the age of 41 is a grand~ father—dismissed the children and went to his father's home. where he-found his mother dying. 1PM‘!!! of a ‘broomstlck nud broken-chair lay near her. . H,“ a n ‘by Parcel Post’ ' Is Whatbur Coun- try Customers. ~ Write I Gilt-Trial! Order deplrllllfl" "has baseline-tn important e6- .‘ . Janet, to briefing-d new ' resolve ‘ i ' "larl vvhlflh NW“- ' “ _‘ :'“."'“~:w', RUG? U! IMF- ,‘ ‘ kw ..~ ‘Hon’- ap ills to shop in parsnip‘ ,- n<»i.|.:~§“- J~ Kl cm EY o-owww",