l", flcoyal Winter r."- ,, characterizes our local administra- . v In the light of the new wis-i . M g >1 "If; __;;'\_""'.. " ‘saur-arr-biaq-‘o-l-h- aiallal h pulled‘ ‘stem 91% uner aaa Ianagaau-J. a. oar-no. p air-unai- alum-o. r1. curl..- portodintbo flservetoromind us of‘ the "stupendous forces con- .»- Vyoar. u: adoaaao) ‘lallvlril " iitantly operating within, the earth. wlw-Proaidaat-J. l. Barnett 1 ‘ A. Maolilllaon, I), B. 0. porty they have wrought in past _ roarrxcsr. acouomll ' " new arrears. according‘ u» the ‘. 3/ f yfltiblrlollPfillllly that our po- ‘groworsl our shill!!!" and “ ofTradcworotllastray lb "central Provinces tdeirendour ygtoto market.“ J-wisdem would for- Ybjflysuch an expenditure". To think Mislrplaylnr Island whines at the ' Fair in Toronto would be, “funny, if it were not so ridiculous." pal-lying coals to New- cbstlc “would have nothing. on such all attempt." We are afisured, inore- over, that “itcould not possibly re- suit in any benefit to our farmers." Qfoourse, the New Brunswick Gov-T 1 rlt has “nsnced sufil an un- ing for the New Brunswick l mars, but they are evidently lack- ing in the scrupulous economy which ‘twill be love’s labor lost.‘ I “The sourness of the New Bruns-I wick grapes is at least refreshing; lortunately for the success of the proposed publicity campaign, it is not dependent upon Governmental initiative, and it is unlikely that any _ serious attention will be paid tothis crude attempt at saying the Gov- - MONDAY. NOVEMBEKZ.‘ loss .- f pi-obloms, and the n... and... L tronomers have explored the heawl ena and medical science has made visibleTthc interior organs of the human . but science has yet no X-rayato penetrate and solve the secrets of the doop interior regions of the earth belles“ us: H’ A? Governments alight work in goassal co-oporation, ' but tbat' till!!! should attend onabelal aid to the‘ Maritime Board ‘where such expenditure, as in the case of the lrelaht rates mat-- Everybody ‘knows thatfrom timo- Nrould be clearly in Iihe publia w time the earth voniits tlllough Interest» 1, v 1 .. volcanic cratersand fissures red- hot molten lavi, flame, ashes and . smoke; that thisprocess has been‘ repeated tin _ and will not doubt. be continued through ages tofcome. There are _ ~ said_to be 300 to 300 volcanoes that mmuumml "wbles m‘! We“ have beenin eruption within com- WRPB. 811d 11 W°"1d_ Wile" a‘ lfur-1paratively recent years and, hun- Hearst were creating a situation. in dredsmore whose craters have been- the United States which. may lead active but are now quiesosnt- Near- » r “rpié-r-mv-e- m" - :l..:'".:.":.::::.":.:::=::r:.:'*.11" recent issue oi some oi his publios- iveslwius and strombo“ in the “"1" °"°’ h“ °“"‘ 519mm“ he-Medltcrranean, and ‘hundreds or ma11mimed m“ the “mud 89'1"] others are examples of this. The entered‘ the Great War solely for three noted volcanoes just named the purpose oi preservingiBritgin are within some 200 miles of each and France from paying the penal- mm" and str°m1°°lLhu flumed m‘ tics of the overwhelming defeat “gum-w for mow years at intervals which they had already suffered in of five minutes. - i the held. In support of this allega- tion he asked why General I-lalg Volcanoas have been" roughly de- scribed as of -two types-the expul- himsclf‘ had stated that England "was fighting with her back to the sive and the explosive. Oi the first Hekla, in Iceland, Stromboli. and wall and could not hold out jllllqll longer?" “ ‘ Manna Loa in the Hawaiian Islands aregood examples. ‘ They pourforth ‘To this The Toronto’ (‘imparte- plies: "No more despicable llewas" grub: lulscllulr Malian. soon men l. William Randolph Hearstfhave been the cause -of masses oi’ lava which fiows like molasses. '0! the . 0nd, or explo- sive type are Vesuvius, Mount Pelee, the. volcanoes of the West Indies. . {ljlq I SyOOBSSIVE "aeuptlooaof Mount‘ ‘ stun. ‘and ant Vesuvius, i-s- . . ‘the vast. destruction of life and pro- " ages, and the mystery which sure, ." "rounds volcanoes. and’ "their fr»; _ oueiltly attendant earthquakes. As- " t the ages past 8M ‘ever penned. It is true thpthwhon’ But what is ‘ho going to knpw about “Hem “ahoutflle relation of one ailment to another, about the different typos of individ- uals there are in the world‘ physic- ally, mentally, and morally’! _ " Thespecialistisanwsmityirrthe world all right, but it would be bet- iteip for ‘him and forthe ii he were to spend at least flvc years in general probtzicé beiiore" be- coming a specialist. ‘ .‘ ' ‘Dr. Chas. H. Mayo in speaking of the ‘glen-t number of specialist- the world today said "almost all the rncdiosb. students . who graduated last J1me were going to take up specialties. lit will pu/t a» terrible burden on peisiple to know what is the matter with them, in order to pick out the right specialist.” ‘ I know the albove will nmke you smile but as a matter of fact. ifall d‘; the nmjority oi our medical grad- uatcsjare going to settle down im- mediately ir'1 one branch of or surgery, what are folks olng to do when they are not feeling well, and don't lustllnow why? You can see that a. gelfiral prac- titioner is ‘necessary to m e a. com- plete examirlaltiolrand firld ou-‘t the trouble. ‘ - h " ' If there arehno seneml practit- ioners in the days to come. then the i! . '15s 1 ‘ (November. Adams , ,a gentlemiauin even university ‘ ‘ s. gentlema" nfiand a.“ A , oi tile/man in the street!" ‘A few . meat, do so lmt they be considered-liter- _oryposeura.'l‘herealpooointheir __ flsents on a railroad trainf ' family and a young university grad- 111 has recently declined “to take fore- j Mill-WV from saw. '38) -Janlos 4 1 fleveral of my friends have re-_ oently put to mo a1 question which I have been harlutluclv asking my- self on successive returns from Ibwod- “Why? tho? ask._“is it that America nowadays seomsaliraidtaappaarasauoh; that ._ . unculmrsdl and thepose of scholar isithat uiirhts oeo a literary friend ofllnine complained that the verbal critic- ism of many of theqn-loors whom- bo iknew haddcdcended to thslno-e‘ ronic clamifications. of "hot stuff," "bully," "rot" and. so on. ‘Ihese writer's often meticulous ‘in the ar- tistry of their own work and tilor- I oughly compétent to criticise acute- ly that of others, appealed. afraid to ~ .4.“ cases ‘was in. talking like‘ news- Tho mucker s do not con- tent themselues with like " tMhaif-Iwits. They also em- ulate the language andimanners of the borgee- and the longsho email.- A member of a most distinguished uate described hi new position in the banking-i world as “the most interesting job in the world." Both. among men and women of the supposedly cultivated classes such profanity is much.on the increase. I know of a man who A Valuable ' “Poker Hand" 1's now attached‘ ’ to each plug ign visitors to ‘his club for dinner any longer on account oi the un- fortunate impression which would be made upon them by the hard swearing oi the American genltk: men, mucker-poseurs, at the sur- rounding tables. - ‘ I Q o ‘ 1* In the case of the young this ' pose is more understandable, Just as it isTnole international. But. what of their elders, men who have] ' lived long enough to have develop-i ed personalities oi their own, meni who appreciate the value of culti- vating both mind and nlanners? Why should they assume as a pro- tective coloration the ‘manneirs and V level oi thought of those who lire beneath them? ‘ are PLUG. oChewing '1 Tobacco . i “1r-2-_~3'-.-—i : 911 Flects of. -Mcl7ritimes BIG BEN is “the prize catch." It has the rich flavour that big, hardy men demand. Firmly pressed, , e plug stays fresh and moist-so the is no drying out, no chipping or crumbling. _ You slice off just the right sized chew; . there is no waste and the plug fits any pocket. ‘ - ' ‘You ‘certainly get‘ big value for money when you chew BIG-BEN. your It would seem as though no sane person ‘with a knowledge of the past an A O§§§-OQ-§§4-Q-Of§ , _, .. . g ‘ jffcftiizzf "fhiir of Cbéwiziéfilitlikiifcd Hi3 i"’“’“ Ernmcnts face for its neglectbto in- rtarest ltseli.ln the matterfThe men behind this movement are live, en- ergetic business men. They have "already succeeded in ‘arming the and those of the Andes and Mexicollpflglen; Wm "pfck out" d, igpeciallist Canada has no active volcanoes andiocccrdln! $0 WW1» 11¢ mm!“ it: is but very rarely indeed that 15 M11113 ‘mm He Wm magmas his case- t. either an expulslve or an explosive 0% Mhoug}; men as than; we m“, eruption has ever occurred within 9gb place inanediclne still ‘bolb to the. family DIWPEWB-Ywr ‘m5 h? 3 of his own species and any adequ- ate insight lntorhuman nature couldx. fail to believe in the absolute need‘ pi some standards, some established values to save us fromjvallourlng about in the 'welter of sensations, impulses, attractions and repulsions the Germans launched their last great ‘drive in March, 191a, Field Marshal l-laig "issued his immortal rwsmge in which he appealed to his - able effea; on the oolledlions,_it' is- " reported r . . . Dally Lessons‘ says warns. wlal. OUST coal. - in English liylllsnewmetllodofusingwat- eraafueltlhiollquidwlllsoorltnke‘ by w. n. Gordon p‘ . . . ‘tloops fighting with their "backs to the vast domain of ‘the British Ern- A . v ‘ _v , initial steps of a campaign which, _ irate‘. And seflous earthquakes have come nix: 11B own 988-111 in a which form so much of this strange H the pm; o; “m, @9013,“ Drhvqq , . , _, , _ ~ n p, hoped’ Wm create wldesprfid 111° W311 B1111 111B "Si? 0f the qilfl- been of equally mm occurrence um years because the public vxziflli dream we call life. The standards, lmhonau. who lment/ly Placed infor- _ . " " ‘ ' tation is derived from Mr. Hearst's ‘ ' » _ 17-" 1111111 '11" 15 m“? “he ° 1' 1’ 1 the values, vrill. undoubtedly fl-lifll‘ motion be- .~WQRD 0111-51; 341311331); no _ PWWQ . fore the German and British Obv- cmments. Hi1. clalllned plvins sioian with thepcmpiote know’- from-tllne. to time and from place lcdge- to nlake a. dlfldmfm- . . to place; but that does not invalid- " . =. ate the need of having some 0i R1939 not say, ‘ he boat authority are the works of LDumas." Say," “is. the works." "Authority" is the subject. demand for _Prince_ Edward, Island. sources. They are cspablejwe be- ‘ der, the ‘British Flag. .. fertile. if dcmonlac. ‘ tion. frllciatter is well aware of ‘this fact tilai: by ap- to waiter very high vibra- mnlsup o; Naglona] “venue, All-S, POOR. COLLECTIONS lieve" of pushing the matter to --- m t 1 one given time and - “m; " " "" .~ . . . v . - 1 d edl 1 r . Hon. w. n. Euler hasgiven liotice em a‘ my y - _ _-- he ‘We oble to release the OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: al- . 311115955111 conclusion. and, they will “s " ° w s aware o m? m °‘ "1 ‘mportani change in the re- wwewfieeaeaaseaeaeew» Pm“- A 5”” is wld M an ‘English ah?“ “ch “‘~‘“"°'"“.°“ “f fm- Mama" m” ’°° “mm All“ iésorv: o as in "soz" oiiesoric. o ‘as g not be “unwed by the-ad son why British troops were then . s gentleman ,'who was sent -out as 1e Beflfildo resorts in France m“ m. n from m, owgmgm “My . governor o; an island where me mfltake little orvhointermt in church tire population was ‘black and sav-‘afiairs, was tile-mout- puipit deo- alre. He dressed "ior his solitorvlflmim "f B- Pflfis clflisvmsn- He . ‘dmhér every night 53111011811 he ssysbetilmtfhi: wigs-so struck by tme .. 'l.eabolztto,takeamxlto1hgnllm ro'ux lls oars often . ' ' ' ' ' "f" "figural-test. residence in Park Laneldnawriln up in front of 311s chulrch “ S H did so not from habit but ItOm 8J1 1B 5111811111685, . 01’ i l! 001 c0- CANADNS. ~RAI~LWAY PROGREs ikriuwledge of human nature. "If,"'tions. In ccncludirlg a. sermon-on what are the evidences of he said. "1 “w” ‘imp this oon-vhwt-Y he $8M? "When I See so '1'!» iwdiptm ooulii thou be wed w OFTEN MISSPELLED: alumnus :1 898 1;} "ism 881116 WHY‘ PB cal (:8 ‘and alumni‘ (masculine), alumna and i used or- orpvrposes. . - itimnad rfleggnlpq," , clared that dost of-tlholvifl- ~ BYNONY : » barbaric, , lessen, ‘$35 mum "w"! ‘We end 0f 00111 E5’ diminish, dwindle, shrink,‘ subside, ‘waste, decline. " Ilse]. Dr. von Hoihleinau ills been w “Wins on 1115 process-for 13 Yosrs- w WORD srunv: "Use ‘a word ‘ ‘three times and it is yours." Let us WANTS WORLD TO PUFF PEPES mgr-gage our vocpbulgry by mggtgr- qulrements of the British preference ‘lighting as llalr. described. Because as applied w lmpom Downmme of *""‘*'.1°“1$-‘>.1 M“ 5993151‘ stripe present the regulations have limited not‘ o’ single "United states army the preierencejtbigbbds of whlch~2s " idivisicn was then in Vthe ilghtlnglper cent. of the value was the pro- __... " line, although almost a year had duct °1 BY11131‘ “b” and mamfml‘ Tm“ °" ‘he "w" "ljelapsedslnce the United States had The “w” ‘m’ w" w" by m“ "The Land We. Love f '- ' "ay Frank rm criticism oi political axe- ‘grinders. ~ . . IIABMONIOUS SPIRIT. Minister is that on‘ and after the . 11115-1 1119911118 °1 111° Miflflmwdeclllred war." ganpdg-s gauway ‘fifqgregg? lvention of civilized society, I slrouldimany in front of the I _ m8 one word each d”, h Today! , gqgpq o; “ma, m. saint Johni - - befllmm‘ °r F°bmfw “m 5° p“: A. " Canadian Railways continue to find myself some day bevy}?! dfliP-‘fggm Orr ??‘1;uf“’§£gén j We” N“ Sfltisfied with Bend-ins», its word: Pnrulrcroltv; mechanic- ‘ n‘ u h .1 " -‘ ‘ ' <">——- °°"”' °t ‘he “m” °' the 3m“ m“ Show msrkedprozress in keepins W! one and “Mlle-Y ° e "mg ma“ ‘M on m‘ S“ I e movorto America. for publicity pur- al; indifferent; careless. "His work- , "m" ‘ “m” “Y5 i“ "m" with other developmehtsuThel s important conventions M1111 B" "m .° ~ 1* 9° N" m- poses. Saint olaude. the lime town in the Jura. mountains which makes ' ‘be oi British origin to get the bene- mcst 0i the bniar pipes in the" world h _ was done in a" perfunctory manner." . fit of the preferenoe._ T e chanse moral-and lower myself to the level ed’to add, ‘Where are fthc rich?” track mileage reached in i927, 41, d mt have my not“)? miles, an increase oi i214 in a year.‘ 0f thew 1918016- EVEN!!! ¢1°111°$ Even ‘V1118 1111 .“’I‘he~ striking feature inicorlncc-i gunman, yoTgg ‘ '1 I‘ sliiletfllgs/woro never truly, represen- ‘p were nfldsdithat tl1e_'old __tllon with these resolutions wasthei hearty unanimity of ‘feeling among‘ delegates. This is the more in- ‘U ., because thqmqeting was the largest and oat-representative or ail- Parts Ol’ p t ej ljsrrltlraee that ___- _ . promises to prove beneficial, I15 1t The wild life of the country is well|will shut out frequent imports com- worth conserving. _To save tha best ins from Germsnv and other E1111’- m- it, 1t may be necessary w desfpean countries by way oi England, and so getting the undeserved ad- vantage of the British preference. llwninister Euler would deserve more icredlt and at the same time got troy the worst. There are many enemies in our wild life and efforts The total operating revenue reached are far more impofiiflnt hi"? '11'11"1 a record of’ $409,064,201, and the thcYel/fi‘ were 111 I-Ondm id total operating expenses rose in pro- Our lack of culture is rnlost ev 1 portlorfto $401,646,280, leaving a net ent, in. dur extreme slovenliness n operating revenue of $91,417,926, a the use of_ths English language. slight decrease over the previous There is, of course, some slang which year. The freight tonnage carried .is not slowly "but W111“ 119-5 been "made another- record of $125,967,439 born in some flash of genuine in- tons. The number‘ of passengers sight. But. this is not true of the vast \ " has ever been held by the Maritime1511°111d be made 1° 3'31 11d °1 111°21- lloard. ' Therels a real unity of Cllemclue as to the sensational more revenue if- he would enforcp the “dumping cause" of our pre- . ‘ncss man of ‘the thieepl-ovinces. xrfftheilast three years. lb was nt- p spirit and of action among the busi- such as neverflexlsted. before. Per- iiaps the strongest impression made upon the mind of an obssrverwould be the demonstration bryhat spirit. g -“'I‘lwse who have amended annual meetings ‘of the Maritime Board of "Ifrade in the past were able on Wednesday ‘to vmdke comparisons o! ulnar; gratifying nature. The 81d liiimplalnt that time was wasted on matters, of concern to small locall- tiesonly could notbc mode at this wyvtntloo- Every matter discuss- od was of real". ilnpiertance to the filial-limes as a whale. In former Iilnull meetings there were usually great differences of opinion, and the tatlive of the boards. oi the three provinces. »Oi course, the new spirit air-unity has grown out oitho labors ting that the convention a Halifax should make-preoord in oféattondanco and 0i boat "to ‘promote uni-lune weir-wt. ';_"> -‘. ‘fitiwaa again emphasized, item- uraalaiyaa "in that-respect, charges at the Vestals inquiry is Chelggiffi tar-m against proof that some of the despicablyyjlnpglited 1P0!" 1119 Unmd States false charges were forwarded ‘by 1"“! °th°' “Em” K anonymous writers in envelopes of Premier‘ at Toronw was 81v. 111° United SW1" Lmes- cp the-courteous reception to which —-—- ti led as Prime Minister N0 one is quflmed 1° “V!” “'12: £51132,- liut with as little pros- other as to how much land he should peat of winning the political sup- devote to any one crop. The man port of the Torontonians as Sil- who plants the most of his farm 1r; Wilfrid Lauri r had in his day. And ‘mews m" "m l '°"""° i" - |i§..‘f..§f.“‘i..‘;’. ‘QZ,°??ZE.’.T“Z"EZ..Z.§ on the other hand he may _ ._ . pirty such as the Liberal. party in 1°59 "ewnflng- The 591°‘ °°‘.u’*'that province has not becn for many always is to follow the middle way yggrg, They have had many leaders and avoid extremes. since the dayspwhen the Ross Gov- 1ernlnent rotted down. Under Row- Old King Winter will shortly ell, McKay. Dewart, Welliliston Hay spread his whpu bunker; o; forgive- and Sinclair in successiomthere has ness ~ and forgetfulness over the ~ "m" b“? a “m? °f dismnmnwd . I Liberals clamorous for another lead- debfls m“ dm we have ca“ essw er than the one they he'd. And it left lying around, but we shall meetflsfl, may them again in the spring. Better- ~ ' have‘ them removed novrwhile‘ the removing is good. . ,_,,__ Tho Liberal pron of tho Maritimes have heed to follow the lead of their more courteous Conservative "coll" tomporaries in the matter of party names. _ The Liberal party is desig- nated‘ by that ‘name in Conservative papers and Liberalism flis called by that name, and‘ nobody ‘can take cil- oeption to the prpdtice. "Torios"and “lTdl-ylsm" are thseplthefi that are flaking of Halloween pranks] The iuarbrd Mirror recalls that, "oneyoung man now occupying Ia" pulpit In aha of the blfgoatflchurché ‘oa lnjorltariifspont a night in Jail on Ballowdsn night." Perhaps. sill‘ . “it n“ .. Hum!‘ m” hurled back from Liberal sane-- nhhVwaa‘ responsible fofputting yum‘ mlmmy “".‘»““°.° w“ m“ the whore lie-how a. “Tm” m“ “MW”. J . - . _. ,. , ‘ ' .' jlevon women ‘orsholoetedtotlts sir Robert moon's I1" of "i! abuse bi Representatives‘ at warli- nmaemwiileh m fatliu-waa born lngfofl on "Noveinborvd. Four or '11.¢'"".*15" "u row. " suit-ro- oiq up» Jun-mo . . . ., . _.. . g . ,. a one which main wall so dupil mid in b: ala- ion wniblfhava" hitorioal ca... argon The arbeavllieilmra‘ or and ‘nuns. Community murdilm . . Iii-I‘ gwx, , atflraill Pro to aorvaaa a muaeuiululofll "t 1" 1114* W1 “"5525, _ Among the n‘ praoentativu is __- am. Ruth Bryan Owen. elected in Florida; "She laatdaiflhtoroi Wil- liam Jennings man. former leader of the Demofl ' i r t. -» _ QQ§§OOO ‘ very alight. - carried 41,840,550 was slig " less ithan in 1926. The average nu ber of |employees_durlng i927 was 176,838, s. farm products few hundred more than 1926. A large G186; and anyime hflibmlfllly 1181111; hdditional mileage is under con- struction." >-—- IVOOOOOrO+Gf§Q-Q O4 Modern Etiquette u By Roberta Loo r e44 o-o woeooaoo-eo-o Q. Must ovary course that ls pass- ed be accepted at a formal dinner?- A. Yes: whatever is passed is ac- cepted, andat least a pretense is made of eating it. Q. If a woman's husband is a Junior does she use the abbreviation ifJr." after her own name? A. Yes ii herb mother-in-law is living in the same town. . Is it-proper, when writing a social note. to separate a word at the end oi a lino? _‘ , g A. No: thewhole wgord should be carried over to tho next line. , -—-—-—-¢0-@---'- o+§+eo++4 V‘ Household Scrapbook zy aebma u; _ _ t hsha _Grlnd a littl Possible and add-a small nulveriaad mid-root. s well over tho scalp. a iow minutes ‘hilmilshly. . I A _, To Silvery "I 7 had tum ° ""“"" ‘m a flannel Amy l . their polish-vial tame LET" m‘ ’_ lloillng Cabbage ‘B0117 in’ an on "... AAA A - IDPOO Lot it remain mass oi slang words and cheap and easy expression which are in- telleotuully slovenly and nothing, i salesmanship the “personal ap- proach" is of first importance. And so it goes, "_ 1 In order to gainthis popularity, one thing is fundamentally necess- ary._You must never- appear to be superior even if you are. To dis- play a knowledge or. taste in iirt or literature not possessed by your "prospect" may be fatal. It is safest *-_‘__ §.. w l .-0n_/ n unpréoe- v v. tarcltly unilerstoodbut‘ n°13w°m 19119.4( nehjepeniy acknowledged. there is Pmwflltv sot I _ _ . i . I co comma _fl 1 gfgok °\ ...::..::;:: it... with your ............-.» ... prlnklethis ‘ . p "and then brush out‘, 1M.- and apply with ‘to lum i hfkeenness of his p P ywrse.“ d?“ w m5 level |ggg ‘sparing as _he_wm“d thelat once. This uresslire of the ma]- strength of his body by Mung in ority was. amusingly exemplified to a hammock an his ma The“ is no‘ me the other day when I was look- question but that me constant “gluing for a house to rent in a. pleas- of slang and. cliches worn smooth in“ suburb‘ In the mu“ shwm me blur the sense b: discrimination-t" 515119-115’ the vase-the lawn The-very first step toward a cultl- w“ *5 W” °° the Piibllo sole. as vated mind is the development of "i=- smet ilself- I thousht of de- the ability rationally tb discrimin- 1191111" Emmi“ and French simi- Me to distinguish between “m” ens, surrounded by hedges or wall, values and qualities. To describe when-Q“ “"1 anything accurately-book, picture, 1W9‘ @198 plants. or read ono’s book‘ marl or woman-Arc as to bring out and remark” 11° ‘the “WW1¢°Y'.' thflt their unique individual qualities. it wmld be 919mm to 115W a 119559 calls for mental exercise of no mean thwzih I ‘uppmd 11? ""114 11°15 ,1” order. Ono has to train one's self 5°” m‘ $911111"? °1 191'"? "BR111965- to do it and keep in training. If one I My 1!"- "wwemd Wm! P8111- dodges every call for discrimination “urpflfte- u 1'1"} B"? 8°10! to be if one‘ gets n6 farther in describing 11181‘ h" Y°"‘W°" ""11""! 11° a book than “hot stuff," one‘ losos ‘hm 5°’ and s? mm’ 11111188 1fl-thl8 the’ power after" a. while even if “mt” “e 1115.31‘ m‘ wh1°h 1" one ever possessed it. slovenly lan “m” 1m“ 51111913’ 1111-1116101‘ Bone guage conrodes the mind. - ”‘d'°‘1m"1'°d-11'111l ‘that 114 18 I10 Perhaps. in our democracy. 5119 X..°.“‘.‘.$.'..°““..i..""...."."".;'°“ '3“ "he t oh idlldual . H.110. Peodsnd 551% §l'§."3."a.°'tary° 0.3.1.. a. ww- iwt w" om on ha pop- appears to others-fro assume a pose "1“1'11Y- h“ ,1" "13 "@111!!- -l5“ business. Nearly every‘ man I" i"! . .1». U16 "lllllckfif D080" wants to makehlmself popular with the sootlormu p, hot, bi course, his employers, his fellow-workers. is"!!! or low. ‘ o, "miwke his office superiors oil- his cilstonlers For els re it is essential does. in self-d ems; ibi- the sake that ihen should be atlcast mod- l i 01' passe and quiet-for Jausiness suo. W" miilvlfntlifl like of iéodlna‘ tile. rmtley crowd- of his saoocb b: his rillmifcnd_'th aver- ni tion foi- personalpopularity. W“ brokerage it is neodiul to ¢ T1118 "MIG Z1311?’ Wwzerfi-wllvilit: we‘ hiflhandthobdor will be i A m. .. ?'-"~"-~"’"' "Lin; w" . ., v .19? i, d putter absurdly W“. has ihunded a dengue lnmnoting pipe smoking. The association in- tends to corlnhat cigar and cigar- Dally Selections for etteismolcing, and will issue post- . . I f m Show“ pmmmmtnm mm“ _ Guardliu Reade s away at their briors, presumably w-eweee_+9-o+o+o+++¢»"* mode at Saint Claude. Among thenrl, " . - it is said. will be Premier Baldwin ». November 1°- 49" - oi Erlgland, M. Her-non. bl France, FEAR NOT MAN-Emmi" “"1” and prominent men of America. The motto od the ‘a-tilon is: “Snlnke Ia. "Pipe." A fund for the .-, association is being raised MYSTERY leosn WINS rluzs While specialists argued over the scent arid color of the new mys- tory nose, “Portadown. Fragrance" from‘ motor. ' Upland. judges * at Riovyal Agricultural! Hall. Iohdorl, re- centw awarded the bloom the 100 guineas Clay Challenge Vase for the "best new scented ' me, ye that know rlghteo I e55. 111° people in whose heart l8 my 19-“? fear ye not‘ the rcproaohwof men» neither be ye ‘afraid of- their revil- lugs-Isa. 512']. , PRAYER-My soul, wait Thou on. He shall strengthen thino heart. THE CHILD THAT ONCE . YOU WERE 0 hopeless face lot middle-use. ‘ O disappointed eyes. And lips oi, ihllliflnality: _ ill/hat. sad soul stalks behind 111111 - cage, ' , . Those stern bars oimortallty? I saw the child that once you were ‘Blit to your l: one day. ' - ~A tender-Joey ood 111st besionlflit slid hufck throat “rose 1111111 with tears To thinkpf all the sodden Yo!“ Hints ‘than; and albino-sirloin! The trusting child that once 31°11 Not wholly drugged to sleep. i and "allthost dreadful c9111" ° i‘, d. I . b yo more esp u" u ‘yogi-mes Wilkinson- velbelnn. Ooogh and M! ..,. ._ an“ p. ,,ugvggu.w places, _or allow your child tanner In from Whooilllls 3'1"" .g,~ I‘ " " "oral-n prune “ God, andbc of good courage. N“?