1 1 1 1 1 QSAIURDAY. AT THE Empress Beauty Salon 4, Empress Individual Permanent Reg. $7.50 for -— $5.00 Duchess oil perm. Reg $5.00 for - - - _ _ -$3,5() ’l‘ruart oll perm. Reg $3.50 For your protection Shelton Omu Neutralizer ls used as a pre-treziiment ln our permanent waving. Now is the time to gel your fall permanent. EMPRESS SAL PHONE 1604 HUGH 3e v re o o m7vwexmTo-Tee-e3ee-ogvowewv NOTICE slaving taken over the business 0f the rate Russell McKinnon, we hereby solicit your! We carry a ‘full line 0f meat MURPHY ‘ BROS. patronage. and fish. EYnEF-lnfi-i sci-ax. ' OPENING SPE-GIALS l National Temperanc ‘ 9 4ow++e+4++0+>+e4uooe4§4 STUDY III. October 19th INTER. shim: ALCOHOL AND By RICHARD ii. ciwumoiu l BodY-buildin foods in the stomac l. The Si‘: cilliifiiggg‘ the form in w ch they are] “W! lo aiotlier form that ls good- ior our bocles. Unless they are pie-j flared for the use of the body tn this Wltilklhev d0 not build it u . When a rink containingl alcohol taken. some of this alco ol passes, undig- Qbwd. through the walls of 1he stomach into the when we say that into the blood sLreasn “X1411 mean that it does not un ergo this change but that it is carried in the blood as alcohol. lConcentration of Alcohol in the Blood ‘o for - - - - - -$2 . 50 BEAUTY ON ES’ BLOCK-Znd FLOOR As all the alcohol taken into the stomach does not enter the blood and only that which does enter she blood has an effect upon the- vous system, the CIIEIIIISLS have worked out a system of measuring the extent to which a man is under the influence of alcohol by the con- centration of alcohol in his blood. ' _ in our body about the quarts oi blood. This is about two hundred ouiiws. If we put into iizis one-filth oi aii ounce of alcohol we should have one part of alcohol :,o one thousand pu-rts of blood. This is a concentration of .1 ofer cent. With this concentration alcohol in the blood a man staggers very perceptibly, With a concentration 0f .2 per cent. he needs help from someone else to walk and has no memory of what he has done. with a concentration of .3 per cent. he is in a stupor and with .4 per cent. he may die of the effect. As you ems see .4 per cent. is only four-fifths oi "e '03 +24 (“we e ev+eeo+oon I CONSER KAII-SIIIFIED. A W'QKLY OOLUDH M PBAUIIOAL OPINIONS 01' I‘!!! VITAL ISSUE MTIC/‘ITNG THE USES AND ABUSES OF NATURAL B! M11 LUDDOW JENKINS - " ~- ~ an ounce. "llie blood is pumped through the heart every thirty-seven seconds. ' About lllLj dive penucllt. of the Every iici. we perform is controlled ‘I A I ’ blood goes to the brain. by the brain, 'l‘iiere are certain cen-, tres in the brain that have to do with motor control. That l: the 1 p0\\'0i‘ oi movement. If these centres .tl‘(.‘ paralysed we lose control overi me tics of the body. Alcohol l ".s .1 p.‘ ysing eilect upon these tits oi the brain. Large nuiiibeis of and l. l . - and the I~‘1.~h1 inuiiti Rovers. Suncriiitci. of h ~. ~ f h c t, . , , ..1, _v a - iiiieicpoit o t e ominitee w‘. ‘Ya. (f, l XQWM-“Qlbt Pflfk. 1110 F1111 11W appoinwtl b_v the Central C0ll‘l'0l . ‘ SR?!“ ' me I 0:111 '1' Mon Committee ‘ -' lloiird oi iiie British Government iii ,_ ‘ ' ‘ i=1 i 11in irziinpziiqxi. Mi. L. ‘ 1213b there In a description oi >1ll‘l'6 I i’ {NI .11 summer - . of hi" tests conducted b? 11V. it ‘ lNiiii . . of n1.- Pnik. r. 110w k 111.? gjllklllfloyed‘ “Vlfullfvlyll '1 , 1~1 11 1 e- 1 .. . .. . , l .' Z ‘E11? t) ll ' l -" m3?‘ ‘MUM H “i ‘Fxmiihd ‘Mm ihmhhlli '-\ll\\)l “viii? Howell-Lid‘ bi P-(iTIzllnKW-‘i. _, um me 1 Isl-mo ;11id 111.0 Until, leiiiiiing anil1 he “mm m“ in the m“, 0t an“, . - '.llf‘1\ it" lllflVlllil pictures of the ‘ ’ - iilfl1llJ--i-- - ~ " . oi them their speed was (le- iffriiiiiiw-zer Mr. iifuifor is n ital-i, SM Mm. taking a drink mm ire (‘i If‘ ». and hits n norm who] In “million m H135 bu‘ miuhi y“i' [i ii: numbers had it i - law !’lllf‘:\=ly killed — for its for fwd. and because. ales! gunner 1; intrigued to de- v n llfillirlfffllitll‘? so cnnspzc- . 1 , irris once a staple ari- 1 i» . commerce, and uniofd thniisnriis of Trumpeiers ivere slnuchtered by the Hudson Bay (vr-mpnny. Though mat/lire swans a-r “totizh as an old horse", the h less young an 300d eating, and ly Mken from their nests: a single eff? L! a meal that fills a cup. The Trumpeter disappeared. and ornltholoqists, boo Often dofeatlsta who seek only appeasement with hunters, have done it the further wrong of writing about. tit only in the pest tense. Nevertheless, a few Triintpellers have survived in northwest Can- mo, in Yellowstone National Pods. . 01nd at Red Rook Inke sanctuary, nearby in Mon- 1-1 Yellowstone and at Red Rom, ever-y came and protection Yfiive been given the Trumpetei-s who thrive ln the wilderness sur- rmirxdaiir; them The officials of Yellosvslone Park and Mr. Arie-hie H1111, Superintendent of Red i 11m Sanctuary. have made the Tiurnqw-u-rs their qieclel charlie. tans 5P1!‘ for the past seven years have 11.-.1i»>cv~rd them through successful lyeeilinir-seiisrms during which 92'! cjwvnedn have been raised. f, ‘r mix-ins over a per of"! 3 1;.- hns been only 69 individuals. A1 'hc opening of the i940 season twiie were il'1 adult Triunpeten. ‘ rs "gioinsl. 4B ‘fr-umpetem ll» til! vwuincz of the i934 season. tn s‘. of me 371 cyg-nets raised dur- h" sovv-n seasons. The renstm why n. greater num- h~ of Trumpeters have not sur- fii-cd is not for to seek. W0 "lid §~ 1,. gdflvilliflg State-Idaho. In autumn, the few remaining Trum- ywers no longer mlzrsle in shin- fzic chains acmss the skies. but when the shallow potholes and lakes vrhere they have nested from over, they move southward l» the valleys of Idaho and lute n com-er of Utah. along the Snake and the Beer Rivers Here their increase is making them conspic- uous 7110mm specifically go- lected in the Migratory lrd Treaties, they are shot in numbers. whether in malice or through lg- norrmeo. Hunters usually offer the excuse they believed their quarry to be a Snow Goose. A nmeivarcen recently permitted I rumpetcr to be display“! l! I 511w Goose A gnmewarden re- ("Putty permitted a Trumpeter to lx- displayed as a Snow Goose in roircnflcd r 1"‘ i rf’ llllClt,“ lily, and useful experiments 111.1111 been tried by scicntisis all ovcr the world to deieriiiiiie the effect of alcohol ujioii skills and efficiency. ‘ We shall outline some of these. ecuizinoii undertaken by ll privaw: orgiinizai-ion, which shall an; "e the jieople of Idaho to the irnictly of destruction puipetruied by a few Eiuiiiers. . - .. Wiih the iipprovial of Mr 1- Typing Iests The more i u-ss tnls l"l'll \l‘l'lllill'('., trlnk “as ink: n on ll minty stomach‘ < 1 more \\'1lS :1 urcrih- r effort than \‘.'fli‘ll taken i0l'(_Y-ll\‘(‘ iiiuimes alter 1'0 id. Th‘. Neville ‘Ilireiuliug- Test ill (JTE GIYOPS. fl ’l‘oltcriii'.tn of Helsinki . s K M. 1'1 "r expo F Ulllhlnllt conducted this experb‘ re the Roinigv,‘ me-nt, using himself as the suujt-ct . Iilier clubs W11 lie practised threading needles for, xfr Mwrior “~11 .11'(1\15_~ twenty minutes a ilav for lollrk n1 - , n of {he Wong. of ilziys. He found at the end of tiiut _- . n. - . ,3,_,,,{.,.1(.n time he was nble to thieiid .84 ‘(i0 needles in twenty minutes. For the; I 'l‘:i zgiiciynr-v ing the 'I‘i'uir.poi4 r the WfllTl of rife i l‘? pl ice 1* " v» iii iilcre-iicc. next ion (lays he took a small noun-j mak‘ iiiy cf iviiie iequal to less thin a; pint of six per cent. beer) every day, at ii o'clock In those ten days of 11 ll (l pe- pie of I"flllD, to be jealously glllrffliffiihdltll‘ future genfiuionsi omciencb loll ‘to tlée poii1ié4 wheée vii" i is wnr - new a fui 1f l1 w. a c to irea ony ne‘ - 511m and m. mjyefgy Ln. rutlslnfffl Ills. ‘Iilien lie tried another i'icd._in l)l'(Illyli~}'iY~ floiiiiiions What. money wlllcl1_l1€_ 1.00% 1t10 tlnlenegomlt-l “mm. we d“? 3W” t.” bring ‘lack lldkviiaisnhxlflitihfio tlliread 1191 neeill. s. an (‘Aiélflllllilfifl speces _ such as He men resmned m5 dam, drum of the Passenger Pigeon $1,000 is a small sum to save ourselves frrm l’1‘€£?l?5m'°“’°"€{$lv‘° "m t R, . . . Erncrgenc Conservatizzn Committee, Mrs. CI‘ flciency he found also that the ei- N. Edge, Clhalnnrin, 734 Lexlnn. fecis upon his work were fall. for as ton Avenue, New york ° "long as eleven hours after the drlnk had been taken. wine. In fourteen dsv she had droPq pea to 151 needles in the twenty, minute period. in addition to flnd-, ing that theie was this loss in ef- thls test the subject ls driving a car. Attached to the car are two revolvv ers. One oi them is fastened to the brake pedal; the other is fired by one wheel revolving at a certain speed. The subject drives along a certain test stri of road at a . rate of speed. ne of the revo vt-rs is discharged and shoots a buile into the pavement. As soon as the man hears the shot he is expected to stop the car. When he presses the brake pedal the other revolver is discharged and a second bullet 1S shot into the pavement. The dis- tance between the two bullet marks is then measured. You will reacily see that the faster the subleots brain‘ the shot and then| into the mus- pigal, the shorter will ce between the two bullet marks. It was found that in every ease when the man had had a drlnk oon- alcohol the distance between reatei’ than To sum up we érhuote from 80 "i of the re tof eCentral ontiol Board. " (Vernon lfound in n11 his subjects and with all the amplified that the accuracy oi e musc or movements was mpaired after alcohol had been taken. In many of these testsm the sub oi! . ey much better after taking than before. The reason for this ts WANTS ANOTHER "WACK" that the brain cells which control~ the wer of reasoning and. of judg-l A lmlllnf you»; Llncllhlrg Ind men become affected and therefore what; ‘in: Tough five torredoln]: iudsment ll unreliable- lll I II B t e hole of h Nas i on w. Hum", prison shp Altman-k, joined the tal fthCa dl bltl- ln; echo-s in». irlnln.aor:v.vdll,raliit. A Wm" 8011mm" W" 41'1"" Ho's still anxious to "got a whack E;l‘%:i€fi‘“_ygh:lw1 “f”: zxsri at the blooming Germans . Harry M m’ glide o m. m“ d quad‘ of hlm Y "m" nlng in the same Holmes’ persistent attempts to get he was travelling. Being we ac Into the Canadian armed forces were rewarded when he started, - his duties as l hospital orderly. Iquglnmd with 5mm boys and hm.“- ,habiis he decided to watch him carefully until he was safely past hlm. Just as he was about to miss the boy, the. lad darted across the, | road in front of the car. The drlyer| immediately jammed on his bra (es no dr MAIL VIA SWEDEN SIUCKOLM—(CP) - ‘The Bril- iw» ivndew of A butcher's shop 1"": 111r:~_::..< are made in propor- qm, m ‘he numhem u; Trumpem-s toners’ mall from Germany to Brit- “1-1 we shot Because in winicr' 1Y2.“ Trumiwiers are removed from fir‘ one glvm thrm at Red Rock j. SWHPWiflYy and in Yellowstone Park, 1 the rnly hone cf savlniz them from l extinction lies in a campaign of tsh correspondent of a Stockholm newspaper reports that war pris- and the car screeched lo a sto . He was not quite in time to svol hat- llllR the bo . The fender knocked hlm forwai- on the pavement. ‘Pie driver picked up the boy and m- quircd of hlm whether 01‘ not m! W1! hurt. The bov insisted that he ‘was all rl ht. In order to be sure nf aln and vice vcrsn will no by way, if pri-senn in , of Sweden ln future negotiations being carrind on innrlon nro s - Keep bllnabrilts in the to his mother and had her care- Anne, consulting the L walls, eh?" Dr. Blac soon. for I thLs t e driver took the boy home t rue qigiktorrarowu OLlARDIAN eooomreo-oeeveo-o-eoceewe-oeaooo-ooeevoeo-o-eeoa-oevewo e Study Course For Sunday Schools, 1941 00-94 r1111 ami back. "n1 m uni iix we? armed. ridwinriiii iiuuww ivioiuus Piano Recllal '1 '0 "u “W” l“ m“ "° u“ W M3 been travelllne at i-hlrtv- ‘russclsy. L-Nl-IO-IB-Ii, older generation) to need descrip- tive miles per hour. At that speed a car covers over i‘lft feet in one second. If the driver o this car had had one drink of ltauor containing only two ounces of cohol the aet- ion brain slowed down by one-fifth of a sec- ond. Du: that time his car would have trave fore he had a plied his brikes. ‘lhink what wou d have happened to ihat boy. lcgiuuitcii nallEliVICESécSundaiL Oct.‘ rat-her vague term. built-fie W100 é:- swn- n...?..1.?..“w.s.§.‘.'1‘}.‘?“ .3. ‘£43k. Eel‘: 3'53” qyggrtmegyggm: m? Nearly awry boy and elrl wmi-I IgptVIIIIIsJIiWIlI-‘Shig ivi ivifll‘... M" l‘ mm“ “m” M“ Th‘ to do well in athletes. Here is what gnaw, mg 1,.5'35_1o'.15.11, stems are uld to have mild some well known c es have to stomsohlc, bitter, and ma, qua- say about athletics and alcohol. “The cardinal rule for condition- inf all our athletes is abstinence at a1 tlrnefl-Warren Stevens, Dir- ectg o! Athletics, University of ror- on . Anyone who wants to succeed in athletics and maintain his olaoe. should regard abstinence as a first condition. —.Sylvanus A ps, Oentref grward, Toronto Mape af Hockey am. "I hate to see an athlete take tid- uor because I know it won't do nun, any good. We allow no drinking in p the Magic Leaf Hockey Club."-| Connie mythe, Manager. Toronto Maple Ieaf’ Hockey Team. “Success in athletics demands ac- curate rception, cool judgment,‘ res ns ve muscles and an enduring! wil. Alcohol discounts these. It ls the ally of defeatP-King Clancyj Manager, Montreal Maroons. | The followln quotation is Jrom “Alcohol and uman Life," by C. C. Weeks. “After the Last Olympic Games. French sportsmen were so rturbvd at the brilliant success of he Finns and Americans that they looked into the question of alcohol. A commiixee from twenty-four sport associations in France, representing wrestling,‘ boxing. fencing. cycling, walking, swimming. football, fl "ing and mo‘.- oring, was formed. heir report is ‘experience has shown in these var-, fous sports that alcohol is the woi=t enemy of power. rapidity and endur- ance in sportsmen.’ " QUESTIONS 1. The managers of the Montreal. Marouns and Maple Len! hockey» teams agree about the effect of also“ ‘ hol 0n athletes. What do they advisel their teams to do? (It) marks.) ‘ 2. Tell in your o\vn words the story of filly one of the examples given of the effect. of alcoholic oev-‘i c-rngs-s on skilled movements. 110* marks.) l CHAPTER III. OCTOBER lllili TllI-I HOUSE THAT GEOFF BUILT _ _ llit. nruugii the nose, but the able as a diuretic and heart stim- BY MARY I. fllTLllllt isgllciulfilllshiltlli- l\l.1l$n\l.'l1l‘y01g; glrt-flixivltiggululant. The have‘ are warm.‘ ‘a a a . . JUNIOR "Then what. illill/Q we to do t0| ca?“ p" 1b‘ ,, . lkeeji it rignrz" ilskfld Pliil. " e Dmlgriisi cut l‘. “Med ‘l’ a "And how lo the binlilmc gflblfl couldn't Still) it working that wav if cents per lb. This is what we call 011 liliikly?’ U11 BIKER $l00d 111 '- we wanton 1o." ' lcouchgrass (Agropyron repens) and dooriviiv and looked at the . " 1-we coup, m“; 1L from u“. [Jul-i] d1 u d f the children in the room with his usual 51m.‘ ,1“, h) ,_.‘._,,Ubmg 1L u, w ' 5 a “re C" I have M“ ° smile. "no strikes among inc lack of good materl ' 1-_\'ihii1g's going fine. Do . but we've just iliuuulii. of _<,_1u1c-, thing," replied Jenn, "\Vl3—--\\'U ‘nut iii 2L room DLIOI’: we frail the iviils built, and one just can't do that in building a house." _"'1'ne room would full out if one did.” adclcct Alice Aime, sifll with pencil and piincr in hand." Poor Geoff." she lucked down at the buy in the bed. “rt sioiii:icli-—I mean a _ElElfllllg—l‘OClll——-i\lld no walls around l "You make it sound so siliy_ Alice Anne." Cvcoii" frowned. but there uns a. smile mixed up with the frovin. “I all sccms silly anyway. Dr. Black. to be lying here and every- one talkliig about me as if I weren't here at nil. You don't know now olish it feels to lie still and near people building you up." "What's what you need though, Geoff, to be built u . The broken leg and the injury your chest have taken a lot out of you, so real building up ts what you need, and Ilcaln assure you you're coming on n cc y." '"So’s the building," said Alice a. Co-ordjnallon Test gggghllgtxgheigorghigfnvgw§lgélbtigi§l . 1 t“ d . some o e parts. ou on’ u_ a cribedmilfyieétlilfliflsexgtiflixiritgé‘ Ln Si. house of "iakln and flesh and hiiigs, mo? article "Alcohol and Motors." In “k0 thal- "Thai/s what Geoff's house has to be built of,’ declared Bill who, being busy on an errand, had arrived later than the others. "l-Ils house is st himself, Alice Anne; that's why it! sounds queer when we speak of‘ building it." "And today we're gutting up the smiled agmn as he opened his little bag and drew out the thermometer that always, went under Geoff's tongue thing. "You'd better get them up can almost see him growing taller each time I come, and it had better be clone while there isn't too much material need- eld‘. We'll start, of course, with the s n." "Of course," echoed Phil. "That's on the very outside. There won't be much to say about it. It's just —hist skin that's all." "No, that isn't just all. Phil. The skin is a very lm rtant plart of the body and. has to thong t about if this wonderful house oi Geoff’ is to 5 k bore are brought pro- b‘ u‘; be“ hon“ DQ551519 for ‘ m, o‘ 5 bro en , into the earth. (IIIIQIGIII Hill»! l° m" 11"’ “mt T" ‘"1" l-"l" "i.Ifidybwliiifiiiiiguiilliifnieviaelfilvifii tome to 11am: they may wallet o! bmy- n 1' mi 3"“ wmeflw" so o'n nits them closel t-ogether y) soil, as ln the recent deposits, sand fuewhegdméefl blmefl that, ‘in time they will he one again. or sandstone chalk, coal or other llrgtegtiiveedniil a ‘lood purifyufiwllh m" who” blood m “$535352?! "““°"“- “t!!! W111 always recur part of this wonderful thing we ca our body. In fact we not only have’ one but two sklns—" "Two, Dr. Black!" exclaimed Joan. “You can't see two." "There are two, nevertheless, Joan each having its work to do for the, body, but we won't go into l that now, While one of the most mport-l ant dutlu of the skin ls to protect the body, its other uses are very.‘ very important. too. What happens on a very warm cla when oirvc been playing hard? the "When you get leo warm your skin lets all wot.’ "lllxactly. The skin ls a regulator Iiiamii u Inliiitlainfirt $5.3‘ .°.1.‘;°“¥e s ow: s brings perspiration out alter eiiiar- cise, or when the da ls overly‘ warm. The little g ands-owes air poisons that would do harm lf may “*-’1°°1‘..l3$.'°°1'11.“§“l1.§'“tti’§" " pores“ in ' tilt; t leaves. 1 MrhJtone-s cillilsns,’ lglld “Bllii Ieavles odin 1.13.931 as well as human beings, and ‘hey do ltlgigouizh these very tlny holes a l" "That's right Bltllihflo one can: ll! we 0 01' autism this house for “ " would have been] ten feet farther be-i , Catherine Sylvia 4 Doctor ‘(use we slioiilfl slO|l its l‘! gulai‘ wo" '0‘ 5° "m" "mills ma.‘ °“ “may r1111 fashion. The hole plant ls bitter first so CENTRAL GUARDIAN Ihln column lo reserved for none oi local lnterolt, but. Qdvnrtlnlng of a news! nature Ill! In Inserted st ll out: a word. strictly payable In - NEWSY . CONFEDERATION use msun Mia“ BOTANJCALS m "‘"°'* ' “l” m. w» Cstnlpmepota 0mm) i- itlon. Catnip ten. was l home rom- KINSMEN PEANUT DAY wdfly;'edy of an anti-spasmodic kind. Every dime buys Milk for‘ Britali1.’| (This plant, 1n ,, gush ‘mu’ h“ ; Q L49 ‘lo-la-‘Listmnge effect on the nervous sys- ivoriu: DAME ALUMNAE Homefllm of the domestic est.) ‘nu 00mins. Sunday afternoon, 3 o’clock.- leaves are quoted at 32 cents pot Children of Mary . b_ L'524'1°‘1a‘n- cherry stems are quoted at ‘I0 NEW GLASGOW CHRISTIAN; wit! Der lb. “Cherry stems" is s @.l§§i§.-....E'.l“"iii.” .. . W es cc 1 1 wh h; emwmv 1,1, lgggmig=giggg==hslll1ilillmidl.l°fi .41.: m. Barnett, son of w. and Mn. Alex. oer 1b. (whole)- Banie of Woodstock, N. B, Msr- Chicory Root (Otchorlum inliy- rinse w take glaze the latter wart o! bus whole, is worth 11 cents per 1b, Omb" l“ ° "1°“e“1*{g§,_m_,,_,, as a bitter. "Whole in tile lists, ______ ' meam not powdered, xranulated or your}; mvm; 359T |5T otherwise maehtnediThe chicory ls glflélflllzllilis.gsuiidayglOg:tohlzerol9hh.isometimes called the Blue Dande- or var, ervce . . ‘y e _ River, s. School 2 P. M. Service a "°g;m““",,,jf,,g°',,‘g',‘°°'ggjg “Md .M.Ki ,Se'i 7:30P. M. , Fairvlew, nigstigiihoolulliceA. M. Long 01W" mp5’ l" l mkdlca‘ Hal-Th” cmek, 5, school z p_ M, you sre- are catalogued at 30 cents whole. cordially invited to worship with 11s. Again we are not, told why, m“ A- E- TW-d- Mlnffggadodsdi Colifsfoot flowers 50 cents, and ‘coltsfoot leaves, 34 cents per lb. “up To 151,51“) _ My‘, andlThls plant (Tussllago fsrlsra) is, I Mrs. James Irving, their oaugnteubelleve. now extlrwt in this cro- Mrs. Hazen Buiy and Mr. andjvlnoe. The qualities ascribed to it fiffs- gwnilllfrrfmxfilgigo? xgyclglgffiire demuleent and expeotorsnt. D08 and Woody Llands going over The root is quowd M’ 68 cents‘ ’ The High Bush Cranberry grows Sunday and returning Monday. They vgsmd Mrs_ nvmgis 515m.’ in certain localities, one of which Mrs. Wallace MacKay. - New ls included in our National Park The berries are sometimes used in ,making jelly; but the bark is the _ . _ _ \ _ part used medically as a. uterine ggfffiflfilfil°fiebliclgfififjlhé' ‘$11 sedative. Whole. the bark is list/i’! ers." Tile anthem Novellos "bike as 11f 35 0011b‘! per lb. Glasgow News. THE BAPTIST CHURCH. - The . "*7 "' .--~».‘*-'. t" NOTES — " piegnaled, (and which gives it the nisty cut) is destructive of any oresnle unsatu- But “at New Innrlon." lays new: in" o! w» luv o! s Dlnouunil not-lb, called hthy- gnnthls boreolls, was discovered on dlrstncswolhontlutsnnetur. n. McLeod. This animal has been described u a moderate clued Alli- ulor. mm one canted. mounted erect on a pair of powerful poe- tor-tor limbo which enabled it u; leap with the agility of s fioit" its jaws were short and power- ful. and armed with sabre- aliapod tooth, four inches in length. It! whole ltruetiun exhibited great strength, agility, and ferocity. It helonlod b the rnost perfect family of reptiles that over spouted on the earth. 11s length was about ten feet, and with a bound of six- teen or eighteen feet it leaped upon its pay." Thus for Ham's account of the dioovory. Ono em imagine the in- terest aroused by the discovery of the only prehistoric animal native to P. ll. Island, and it is certain that bofou its some could be made known, the tells had been shmped to some institution devoted to the study of thus monsters: most llkelv to the Bmithsonlsn Institute at Wlslilnglnll. (Oui- iellcs of various rlptlons now go to other Cana- dian museums; which, when one comes to think, ls s reflection on our Province.) Whether the creature had two “brains? the writer is not prepar- ed to lay. Certainly, some of the lower forms of life have a ner- vous system which might be said to include two or even more rudimen- ar" brslnl, so one must suspend judgment on the following effusion tlll one is better acquainted with the structure of- the Hart." The Church school will Block Currant leaves are worth meet as usual aihlatial‘. ‘At the 60 cents whom evening service ie_ ev. _. unson he. W"; “h2'?~'-“.l.'§°‘.';,“"* ...T.“..°":..“.';f.°"““"".......%."t"§£?$.’ irsoa se 1. ecuig . anthem will be Mauiiilerls ‘Provo the British call Cornflowers, and, ‘tale Loid QoJiilllsillclllYlJullll Ines, bomnlgtg ca]; gengaul-ea cylnum» us. mic, l“'ll.ll'SL mii cioirni-s- "I h- e to build it for inyseli.! The Dandeml“ "ecu m’ d9": "cnjinued Gem“ ~you sup cription. Both leaves and roots are so yourself. ‘lliey are JUSL lwlpingfemployed as hepatic, tonic and; 111v 11111-11: the ultws." lstimiilaiit drugs. Our soil 1.1 perhaps . "That's so, iiiu. uiid llltj"l't.‘ Ucfilg not rich nor deep enough to we ll. 5n... .1o..1. A5 Ltlii says, liic skin, m e _1 t! t 3 like the leaves oi a nee. nus ...._.. i‘ 0" ""574? m9 ° some Ell-WP’ l:(ll'i‘.'> iliiougii winch it brctiiin-s.‘ can countries. The leaves 50 cents! "i iiiougiit you just breathed and the roots (whale) 7g can” pm tlircugn your nose-oi‘ through you!‘ 1b moutn if you didn't know that tliu. ‘The cultivated (garden) Fm“ glove. Digitalis purpurea, is sale- \\1i..\1.'1' 111.1 rrujiicil Alice Amie. Alice Aiiiic. We co SO, o . . inucii iieui and burning ii, or ‘.00 "mmng mmamcks hem “sedi much cold and ircvziiiu ll. 1n whirl? lgerllilpfl the)’ a"? mefll-‘Illi- 19 W" - e necessary enqu e. l‘ a _\\'llvllC. ‘Liicndvvc lfllllifllllllllvll'l‘it‘itt,i 1g is not ngcesgafy to Qxplaln ' l "1101" m5‘ ‘-‘ "5 “'9 i 3' l“ '1 what Sarsaparllla berries are 21n- soineiliiiig iiilo .lie blood Lihlb‘ , ' _ iusis tliiougii the little blood v~.s-, elerybody klmws the!“ They "i" sets that would make theiii SIU\V up. U16 IP11“ 0f Afllia hllllldl a P151“ u Ull. Alcohol l5 one of the thiiigsiof the rough pastures. and some- tliat would cllo that. Ill/(Clfifitlfiils the,‘ “mes caned the Dwarf mden n; nerves enougi to ma e icni fuss . ready lo nci, and the blood, flowing wot‘? are dmgnc ‘and almmu” more fjilllikiy’ lllllll it should gets to f? h 35 ca“ Per ' the skin in a liurrv and mums .i. ..u swampy places there BTOWB slow atoll JcelRYHlLLIKH-L the real Elder. with clusters of nuusli fist. u cu ‘S’. e ' ‘i H l - who llIllllkS Lilfllit i118 was ivai-lmeo up illglzilisgv lblznvlfegweiéhefolgoxarfitgl b‘!!! ' ~ ~ fl. ass o; ' isldniicifiiiiilgycoiituiiiiiiig l-IICOIIOI. Ikiflti 50mm“! 00110001151! and ll Wmlld fools himself badly." almost pass as the British S. nllra. d ;I'l1 have (L10 tell the traxlinaiiiwho The fluweys are worm 45 cents, and ‘i W5 Gwlli meme“ °“..§9n‘e->'_“‘°s" the berries 26 cents per lb. They about that.’ said Blll. lliats tin.- um diuretic and dlaphoretlo. ' l ' ‘ "l * hes Wll'.l F10?!’lcllfigwgdlrgfdtllgfllhliigllds IlOIISE." g The herb Eyebrlght ls worth as icents per lb. Botarilcally it is S11 B°~"°1 e .1111 ‘,Euh 1 ffti lls, itl i“? mm“, “s liigctfiudliifif; hi‘: COIIIIITISISIE gvefiyxwaherelndthouéhveri .1’.§1°..1".‘.Y1...l"1'.u1-...s1v. .11’ .1... 031.51 lime dirriwit- w describe o that a parts of the body, too, remember. |novice would know it. It is astrin- “is skin the only wall the house germ b55113“ Buck?" asked Joan‘ wil-lei Tile little Gold-thread (Ooptls iriléimbliheiiifiifisgaudnagiliilltn “Ilia; trlfolia) ls so named from its yellow helps protect the important parlmifibfllllfi roots. ls a 10w sprink- " iflowerlng plant with smilll while “Yea. 101m- Thfl flesh- made "P, flowers and leaves divided in tre- scarcely tiiiderstund it nani them. such things as albumen, F-"dlmllc and 15 W011i‘! 51-10 P01‘ 1b- phosphaie of sodiiun, lime. fat—" ' The Mayflower, also mlled Trail- MIWeAkInOW Ialijolll-e Ifggijégeflggad lng Arbutus (Eplgaea repens) ls ce no. " av ' . - that?’ why rm so chubby‘ Daddy: glrilgapéstllslglétlltloer lb hole. Diuretic lsayfind all these things can oe| Sometimes, ln gardens. one may harmed ‘JY Bl001l01> 01100 l!» H005 mil) come across the Greater Celandine the blood and b88315 W "like P5. or Tetierwork, (Ohelldonlurn way through to all part5 0f me WW“ ir-ajus). It has yellow flowers, ' 1 r 11, Wallis‘ slfiiuviitiiii iigahftifinirllhu 13:11‘ bright zwen. divided leaves. and need to remember the things ihatiyellow acrld juice, which, they my . makxeqdthterlm Wollklllnd lgetlifl-li-gowsjwlll burn off warts. The whole '1 i ‘Kmusc '35- 0“ ° ‘. i plant is worth B3 cents per lb. It ggflfili: ‘mm’ m“ help hold up ‘he is an irritant and is used in skini "They are very important, neon, affections. N?‘ ttma knows beasrhglxn yotgallé ‘lrhil list, whloéi l: alphabetical W 0 "1""! wil be resume in next week's b ken. Until it ha knit ageln- - rgKnitl Lillie Mothser knits socks for “W”- the soldiers?” asked Joan. A F‘? 3M3!‘ "Not exactly, and Wt I b1! U10 sa.ine, perhaps. When the two ends we “my may, u we d]! down ood, the knitting time as with someone whose blood has been harmed by—” by alcohol" interrupted lght. "That old alcohol seems to do harm every- where it oes. doesn't it. Dr. Black " "Is the? why Geoff won't have to l'e there as long as the truck driver has to be laid up with hli broken bones?" asked Phil. "Because .tne truck driver's blood has been mode all wrong with sloohol, and it had made eaegythlng else about hlm wron _ " "Exactly, Phil." "Then we'll kee old alcohol sway from the walls you! new house- "m r- °°1‘1’1“"'1““‘ Al" ah‘??- fiillfifijfifif P...;;",,.';.“.,'!.'.".=, $1 m“; In the different stun. fossil 1- be as easy to build as new leg ones mains of plants or animals an em- -—{hm¢11fl livid lgd 001,114.?" “k111i 1°- bedded, and by studying these re- !‘ 91' W“ "- l l" ~ llca geologists can get a very good ‘Tc’ be “minim” idea of the general condition when _ ' QUESTION! the rocks were deposited. Now and D hylurxke lrrdirmigmgo: wvéhs}; again fossils have been lent to the l’. ll alcohol upon “h” me m“ do”? writer with the information that in a certain order wherever one digs down. For instance the chalky strata will always be above those containing coal, and the coal will always be above the slate strata. Now, from various calllfl some of the upper strata may bl missing: and we may walk on I surface which ought to be hun- dreds, even thousands of feet below ‘Phat is the one in Prince Ildwsrd Island: whose rocks belonl to the Triassic and Permian strata. which "hold a middle place in the wok- wrltlen history of the pest" as Bsln lays. T“? DINOSAUR Behold the mlshty Dinosaur, Famous in Prehistoric lore, Not only for his weight strength. But for his intellectual length. You will observe by these remahi The creature had two sets of brains One in his head (the usual place) The other at his spinal base. Thus he could reason a prlori As well as a posleriori. No problem bothered him a bit: He made both lieul and tall of it. So wise he was. so wile and solemn Each thought just filled a spinal column. If one brain found the pressure strong It passed a few ideas along; If something slipped his forward mind ‘Twas rescued by the one behind; And if in error he was caught He had a saving afterthought. As he thought twice before he spoke He had no judgments to revoke; For the could think withoyt conges- 0X1. Upon both sides of every question. Oh, gaze upon this model beast, Defunct ten million years at least! -—B. L. Taylor. In spite of these evident advan- taafl the Dinosaur followed the usual evolutionary course. It can be traced as originating from some smaller form: it increased in size. and then disappeared. Why this happened in prehistoric times it ls not easy to say: at: the present day the larger animals are in process of extermination by the arch-enemy and man. NEW BRUNIWICK BIB-DB I have just received "A list of the Birds of N. 13.," prepared b" Mr Wm. Moore. Scotch Lake, N. B. The preparation of the list, the Fore- word tells us. was undertaken at the request of the Fredericton Science Club, and the Hon. C. D. Richards. Minister of lands and Mines. published the list in the annual report 1f his department. In this preparation Mr. Moore has given us l. model of what such a list should be . The classification is according to Family, not Order: and not only the popular name but the scientific (or Latin) name of the species ls glvm. Nearly all t-‘ie birds have notes descriptive of their localities nr habits. and initials which convey information as to their relative abundance etc Scotie and Nov! Brunswick: QCTOBER 18. 1941 BRIGHT PROSPEBTS Fur experts pfedlct marked increases in (he price of furs. Now is the ti after your Toexcteg ‘in’; worms and fleas. we carry a complete line. Nema Caps 75c to 31,00 French $1.00 Pulvex Flea Powder all sizes. Ear Mite Lotion, the best proeurabie. F O LE Y ’ S DRUG STORF S’side Phone 37. "iw -— h; and not forgetting the number given by tho A. o. U. The lncluli -u of the list in the Annual Report of the Minister e1 -La.rids and Mines, is a highly com. mendable action. This ls often (long in the U. S. A., with the result ma; the Reports of the Departments ac. quire a value far beyond their own borders. I have reports which 1.11, practically text-books dealing with Odonata, Mollusca, Plant Life, 1.11s other Natural History subjects. The private printing of such 11,14 i, often delayed on account of the ex. pence; and the writer knows of valuable papers that have hover seen the light because o: m], handicap. It is pleasing, too, to see tlisi Fredericton has a Science chm, and althouzh only a few manual-rt are specifically mentioned in the List, I note that they are genus. men of high standing in the scion- tlflc world. We are perhaps ion hi- dlviduallstic t0 join in a like effort! which is a matte; for regret. NOVA SCOTIA HOTEL MANAGER JOINS FORCES OFITAWA, October ifl-R. B. Pitt, manager of The Nova sCOliitn Ho- tel, Halifax, having been granted leave of absence on taking up mili- tary service, a number of cluinuu have been effected in management of several hotels in the Canadian National Railways 811d these were announced today by Jos. Van Wyck, general manager of the company's hotel department. To replace Mr. Pitt at Halifax. it. Sommervllle, manager of the B borough Hotel at Saskatoon. assume the management of Nova Scotian. C. A. Mann. hitherto manager o! the Prince Edward hotel at Brantl- on, Manitoba, goes to Saskatoon u. replace Mr. Sommervtlle at The Bessborough, and A.R.J. Hodson is appointed acting manager or The Prince Edward Hotel at Brandon. The appointments take effect to- day. Mr. Pitt has received a commis- sion in the Royal Canadian Army Servfiie Corps and his first ap- pointment ls that of catering and messing officer, military district No 8 Halifax a pint for which hi: training and experience has fid- mirably fitted hlm. SUN vidY SERVIC E IS RESUMED MONGPON. N l3 , Oct. i7- A Sunday Oar Ferry sci-vice tn uNl from Prince Edward Island lxiwt e11 Cape Tormenilne. N. B. and Borden, P. E I will be operated commencing immediately unill the end of Novembenihe Inst trlnhviflii on Sunday Nov. 30th. ii(‘t‘.'u'f‘l‘i'ii1 io an announcemrnt by R .7 s Weoiherston, general DIWSPUECT agent of the Canadian Nations. Railways here. Car ferry will lcrlvt Borden pier at 9 am. and 445 um. and Cape Tormenilne pier at i005 'l":i e am. and 5.50 p.m. ANIMALS IN (‘OUIIT Durln the 1.11.1.1}? Aces aiizmels were so mini)’ tried ilwmihlllllll Europe for such rrlme= nr mulli” and rohber_\_i______ ‘Q°Z"°Z QQQQQQQ ‘Wfwifltoivéél? Q"? *3“? '1' '1' '3' WAR EMERGENCY IRAINING Meeting! will be held on follows for the examination cl conddotci for War Emergency Trade Training in the Training Schools of N0." Department of Agriculture, Charlottetown, Tuesday. October 21st. 3 om. Department of Agriculture, Montague, Wednesday, October 22nd, l0 u.m. Clifton Hotel, Summenide. Thundny. October 23rd, l0 um. "Ill" Vllllllllfl to take than training colmos in New Brunswitll and Nova Scotla schools should present themselves at the uppoilllfll pItICII on the above dam, when an examination will be conducted under the direction ol u representative of the Federal Labor Depart- ment. Applicants for Machine Shop training must be 25 years ol ago and over, except In cam when they have been discharged or refused entry to lilac mllllnry forces on account of physical disability. l" Wlllill “l! llil flee will bl l8 your: and over. Applications lor Air- craft Meclionlci or Wireless Talegraphy must be between l8 and 30 yuan of no. you u medical examination, and have o Grade 9 edutfl- lion at least. For lvrtlm particulars appb. W. l. SHAW. m they were picked up tn the Island, “lailufiihtlfihvnlt happens when "new"! 0" "l9 905-51101‘! Th9! the two ends oafr a brogetn laoingeg mo‘ illzulitllbly the 33mm“: or" " o - s,o IIIIO Io- Why did Geoff's broken bone inks a no“, n.tuN: ind “any” .11 u"; lmcrkmdrltvlhfigs broliieon Qliiglltimdhltltlig‘ they ‘Wmuwy dulnumwd’ Th‘ 1o marks.) . l iron with which the sandstone llj Department of Agriculture, ' Charlottetown. liTIGHT eluding