12 1953 OCTOBER UNCLE RA Y S CORNER TIIE STORY OF COLUMBUS V LAND IN SIGHT' one night 'a flame of ii e' was seen streaking the sky, and itl seemed to touch the ocean about.| im miles. from the ships. ` Columbus called ' ni-e_" in his diary; ably a meteor. sight amused new hearts of the sailors. but it was prob- Such an unusual( fear in the A flame of fire streaked the sky A few days later. the three ves- sels began to pass through sea- weed. Some of lt was green, and Columbus _said that it must have drift/ed from a seashore. The sail- ors. taking on new courage, thought‘ that they might not be doomed toi death. after all. A reward of a large sum of mon- _ ey, to be paid each year by the king of Spain. had been promised to the first man who saw land.‘ The seamen strained their eyes it ‘a flame of_ The sailor.. began to lose hear .il agi . . ` 1’10Dull; to win tllis prize I dal/S whi~h followed, li memblcrtkbg the crow wa‘i often heard to cry (Special to the Guardian) (By British United press, WOODBTOCK Ont Oct 10 - LONDON October, 11_.There in Land. Land 5 1 1 Another post alll i t i false alarm.-l the slllldrsclhfiii ‘mise 3'1°"°“°° his d¢V°1§D°?1pp?nnS!bl3;l\ bilsliilelsghlxnalliflenll.-Iosludgblelulloggptblcterl o taken clouds hanging over the .va "‘ un. but at last came a night rivicn oval the appointment of commands Luther Iiu<::ey has held this ap- g1n;¢rs_ A piece of snrannel lodged when Columbus was on deck at ten “"’""“e“t 1°* U10 1355 15 Y€B\“S`BDd in his head is said to-be the most t el' called to on: of his compan I hs Look! Is that a light?" The man addressed said that hr W ter for lan:l._ one of the rural mail carriers out He is G,mon_ formerly Sergeant as been giving excellent service. fgasibl 1 . - ms yea? he m'~d° 3 Wide' _°f *W9 able eiiccieisrsésnllrtilytxhiftlglkllzs rtetglllilllrgi f or the work and another man, The other day he demonstrated ‘th no previous cxperience of the 'ns nbumes before n nntnenng of thought it must bc. but _ service made a tender of exactly were doubtful. other the same amount. To the sur- 1;,sggh;;_)?-‘£333 mld ITN;-'llCB1_men, . At ‘W0 0’¢l0c1¢ the next morn 91159 °f` the °°mm`~111;5Y me new ‘nee but were unasblgetb ellmlraicllnixtl "5: a gi rl was fired from aboard the mah was given the appointment. As' a nl_en_m_nm_y to the gmt mg Pinta. Trisha. a sailor on that 'I Ship. had seen php _dark outline °¢ Ottcrsville over the lnattei' and :i Kam 1 A- _ 1 . p-edging, cver which was plab- ‘ land, ._bout six miles ahead! He 5t1`°”9_1ff'ff 15 b‘225_f'“mfd' _d two medical pads and a thick was the first man to see actual land. but the prize was later given to Columbus because he had seen the li ht. °_'°1°°k- He razed ln the distance 1* , _ _ _ le 1 “ 8 The seamen were ordered to take in_tlic sail and wait until dawn b¢~°"c tryin: tc land. Hcw cx- cited everyone must have been! I closed on board any of the three ships during the rest of that night. 1U The 3Pa_r_iéards were now close to H _ one of t Bahama islands. about President of the Canadian National ,1 m lock t b I ed Gaston 200 miles southeast of Florida. Railways, by the members of the nxxndytgem nrolncgtgginln Again! doubt that there was a single eye e Ca Great Britain. George A. Royle, the Iudiencc. Gaston _“cited than qA/weaéb l Fgeiident of _the organization, said Told mentally L., nam; the num ~ th° "w° °‘ t e greatest feamres °f hers on Treasury nctcs bclcnizinz to - une year mward addms. 15° 8' better the audience while they looked at Talk." K Haunted R Engl isli Shin-Bone Believed , __`__ In <11 7th Century 1. Wus Conscious Room. be aliuman bone under one ofthe u bedrooms at the'Vlcarage here has into so desperate a state of mind§_ given color to the reputation which_that he attacked; her-one night in the bedroom has had, for many,th years, of- being haunted. tered her heqlln. “There iS H0 Sus- The seventeenth century house'gi.sticn as f_ar as I know," said the being rebuilt and the menlvicar. "_th%_t_he murder was' com- it lhlnd’¢‘lIe upper part mitted ati ree ofclo_cl§_,",J_ api quite , Ri nib the~uppeax‘ahcei of lunab_le¢og'ac_r;punt f9l1`lTl1Y.sieep_1qB§.- room " e tely under the \‘s§__é§~_ _n 1 _1;3l.'°_li';\_ti$3-_~iyas_inin-df-i_t _ n_ ¢2h;l}l_vdlIl& _‘yi _c Bev. lailcn. he was ‘inte ted in thefdlscovery J# ° o I' Si f “Presence in 5, 'D / c e bedroom _ith a poker and bat- Oigher _ pl,§_ in .the vill_.age____ ` tbaaioaxfs wife, aocgrd- cls[\b__,'i,h,s ‘they ha,ye_ seen, appari=/'th s, though no one claims .to have 1 rl the ghmt of the womannmurd- yn ed at .the vicarage Miss Long, who 'lives near them; cause ‘lfehad ,been convinced church, said: Once I saw the fig- some years that _theroo was haunt- ure of a priest kneelinir at the altal'|stmng demand “___ the ______ __M______ ___e___m ___a____ ____co__d______ ____ omcm ed.He handed the bone o1VIr,._Qow- rails. He had a dark face with a ty ~ _ P . f _ er. a medical student of the village. sad expression. I saw him so dis lstmng and sturdy ___g_____o___ o_l_-___i__nf\ _s_:n_¥eF___ but ___ Cars had cleared . __ . who took li;.up to arbondop ihospit tincly that I went up the chancel o is not yet definitely estapllshed. t At any rate, the Vicar is quite on the day I saw the figure. I am n _ c clear that when he sie in the room not a spiritualist and have no psy- :_‘n";'s‘; gelixfsiggfggégs _‘)1_1;_’3_1;fY__e_l;$ Canada ls old that the former vicar had died hcrc is considcro.i;le feeling il ends were fastened down. with 0W~’1`V1119~ ` Gnstcn Oiivrieu. cf the French En- / _ 'ms cHAnLo'rrE'roWN GUARDIAN _ _ PAGL SEVEN -1--_ *S inexperienced MAN READS ' Man Appointed THOUGHTS to Postal Service UNCANNILY tialities and the posgibfllties of Ah- ' 1' _“A Lim S ¢ d » f the test with astonishing ease. °'"°"°“' e 1" “r “Y glo-Canadian trade has been the At the end of tnree_quam,rs of viin’ w the Br"-35h mes °f the 'in hour, he sank into a chair cx | r :fd by the °°l°"1za"1°“ de1’°1't"‘°“1' tilevtesting he breathed in asps. I 0 of Ca_i_nada by.~,the “Young Ambma' ~:lid. "‘that the flow of blood is stop d°rS' 1 p'=d. This is necessary for me tv. mast’ - reed with Mr' R°1'1e ‘md I work in a sort of coma. _ added:-‘gf sincerely hope mul? the “But this alone is not. enough. I1 1 _iésitnot the young Ambassadors will ,nust have me sympathetic assist-I o Y :ca rage ... Yfggd l I h = . Y we come n t e Dominion." .1 it I nm bound to fail ’ ` Sir Felix Pole said that in 1914 0-qi, eve;-fa'1¢d when my siih~1` H Ilfnan FOlIn¢! the raliwaymeri of England had glv- ject bglgvlgs that 1 :lm going to def __ en House _..._ Vica* an/ing to the way in which his com- he » i f *med by the former in railway Engineer S Death ansportatlo during the war, and --- . . __ . This demand ap li to h ‘ train struc... i al He said that thegeneralin-kiression later to see if he was still there, but “nets in the N}’___*_?:_m__s l;\:_\__ 13313 when C B BXPWSS _“__ _ is that the bone is human.. but this he had vanished. Afterwards I was xcunmy NeWf0u__d__md_ M________ __ _ :lack bandage _ ' 'rhus blindfclded. hc cbcycd the i (Z _ ` which involved a zig-zag coursel to Thornton *etween chairs. tables. pillars and , other obstacles. No word was spoken. (Special to The Gimrdian]_ 1;_’_l;_§__€"_1:_S.tg_l:____:l_f_1_;¢__i'_ringly _obeyed the ` LONDON' om" oct" 1°'”"A° 8 Then members of the company “W Th°""'°“» °1‘“1f"‘““ “"1 which they wished the hands ci a nadian Chamber of Commerce of numbers were thought.” by me derstandmg °f c9'md°'5 1“°"°“` them in silence he came through up °f Ganga-1°" mrmers “san” liausted. During the latter part nfl the Nations; system and the tour “MV ncnd is bound so tightfy-_-~ h-3; Sir Henry. in 1`e5P°nd1"¢ 1'° 3 rgceive the thoughts of other people. followed by a considerable num- ., f subj¢¢i__ If he ask; me _F of older ambassadors, and I can ,nr;(;fm‘;1ym{0 do anything but iq? “re y°“ th" they ‘V111 "nd H thinking all the time that 1 cannot; ‘ Sir Henry rather a cool reception .1-hm 1 am i,°1d_" g was then announced, but when left for Canada all of them C h C d °H"1Y fellretted his departure. ras ause arm tributes were paid to him by 1’ Felix for the great work per.. Y `" from Chicago to Buffalo. ls de:itl_ _ . 'hentai command of one of the com- lg ys Tribute pany to follow him about the room i “°he°“ wday t'end°1'ed "° sn' thought oi’ varicus positions in 1 M *_ .f 5; Your Home Needs the Comfort ` That C I 0 ly ith 1 .. 2; _ 011138 I1 I a~ _ ~ '° . for the succe achie ' . » ` The tradition is that a vicar of , - "‘fC11f\l»1'l€‘ C011- (S i ii, lim Gum-diani _ _ The discovery of what appears to Cromwell's time hadpva' wife with an|`;:g::'/go; °f the Canadian N“1'1°11“‘ WELI¥;‘l~I`l) JIIUNCTION, Oct. 10. 0 ' _ npleasant. temper,_ who drove himi y ' ' __The engineer of passenger Train _- e I. _-1 . _ no. 6 of thc Wabash railway. bound g. , I and scores of passengers. asleep il -_, . . . _ ' - i t - il --.in cn ~ ti can irc _ _ Nothing you can buy can lve more co fo t a d Peters Road ` “‘;“1' °°c°“1’);l1‘rc‘i;“1‘[1n`"“]°r“ ‘he °“` members of the family at all segsons of the yI::1a1'rth'aili1 a Ilbflliilirgéilwostgr- ,g ' _ _ 'ins plunged into the rcar end of a | _ _ mn. _ _ , _ . _ ,_ _____h_ ' '»~ " ti' " -' 9' ° `°' . _ . ~”. ich' . f; - - ish ._ _ , . _ i' and- -I/lffinitil' i.'?.'f.‘.`d§@"nd'if§f.1§“§ldl§§i§§Fiy‘{§dccil,Qlnfnf ....It..§ 0.1..!.°.'_32.1eCe of f“1'“1tU.1`€ f1\3»f Days for itself a hundred ~tlm,es:_@lliu-.» _ ' " ‘ ‘ M” " l as e yield and quality are both very tivo daughters and a_son. The fire- ir. Large areas cf Certified Stnck man William ‘Tolmie'.’of St. Thom 1°"-fe Brees have been d d - ci ith li ht iniih-ies and was 9.91319 STOCK basis with xtllrbpiorztf gsblzpso lvilave sthi scene. The crash lv °“ V°r1¢t1e3~ 51155 u0W. there is a occurred at 1.40 this morning. The rc" with its ast fam also ment. had entered the switch t be prudent for ou f ° r armers tr Well *W0 D8SS€d lnspe'ctlon,"while equaif-' as, formerly of Bridgeburg, Ont.. _ .- ` ‘lm-_.Chesterfield End End Tables CHESTERFIELD TABLES add the Qnlshing touch to a choice cheste held set. Here at $12.00 tc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $40.00 And END TABLES. for occasional reading, smoking set, etc. At $3.95 to $18.50 'l`ilcrc‘s it splendid showing of Holman Chester- ficlds here now-ready for your _selection-regular and show-wood styles, upholstered in mohairs, velours, brocatcllcs, Jacquard velours and tapestries. THREE PIECE CHESTERFIELD SUI'l‘En'. cl1f:;t~:`fle~.ld. wing chair and arm chair al. $125.00 lU....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..$-125.00 And TERMS if you desire. -~ - - h lvl ._ _ _ Pctaic-digging in this-scctlcn cf clggrdggdoingénfaoinaic___n_______§_ _ _f_______:"§_0mf0l't, })I__i_`£,'¢l_Slll‘€ and Zl1)D8P1_l’3!‘iC€. t. . _ an ,___ .rg ' _ if pr°1'1n°° 15'"eHF1t1€"C0mpletlon. an enginenian. I-le leaves a wifc. 'ff 3% .~ - - 1 " =` "f 11 ""' ;.}".~° 1 -1 1~ ai . ii " . ._ /.1 - i. 4. h., » _ Bookcéise1'~j ~ and Desk - THE GOVERNOR WINTHRO DESK AND BOOKCASE shown above is the smartest of its kind we have ever shown. Made of solid mahogany with book-case, desk and storage compartments as 5|-mwn. Complete . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _. $05.00 _ 1 _., _ haw” conscious 0 H presence chT(l1e|i?gw3-3 villagers who claim to se”-50% for any emerseucy which ' i l might occur? ver . for which he wits unable to account' It was a queer exp‘kr'ience,‘ he said have seen the ghostly figure of an as he looked at the dismantled old grey-bearded man at the cross-, Mr. Robert D. Dewar a form- i l t The Guardian) 9 oads in the centre of the village. (SIRC H ° f cw 2;. ;‘*f.‘.‘.‘.§.':f.. it “fi °°‘» are :.‘“ii.‘:;‘:.‘r 129 f “Wwe me dmsuc rebuudgzigbgg' Somerville Massy rrliztgreécd an htls lg;ila1Clti;rillSi;ll:: ghd grestldeilgt of the ` al I nt actuall see a mains to be seen. The haunt - nanve pmvnlw during his vacation C______d_____ N__no_____ Ranwayghby _ _ am room. "Each tim'e`I slept there I r was awakenedpiiiictually at three in the momlngiiand felt that I was s no one. _ y ghost. but I, was conscious of some~ SOUTH MIMMS. Eng.. Oct.-0, ini' -i _. . 1 o _ ` _ _ r _ .. :. .pp _ _ . . _,___ r hnmlm shin bone inirnets _ ,,:_§l_ . ._ _ .____,__ _ ,_ _ . ._ . _ _ e 1 , i _ . ' This . _ '=*~ as room \ is now exposed to the air and renewin a , _ _ _ _ _ hysterious p"nésence. ‘Other people nothing will be left of it when the-many ngsnvggufng ”;_f‘i‘;‘_’&|_WI_'n‘_ tmfj mffmbefs °f ther %""“'3 Eitaln Ml, ° ' ' who have slept in the room have wolik is completed. ' included 8- b"1°1 V13" 1'° éeuss <<§¢€Y1;Tn:-rcéogle. ttf; president of Furnlshers Slnce had the sdnie experience." ' ' ‘“' “’ U. On the eve. of his dcpal'i.urr for the ihc Organization said that W0 01 S. He was accolilpanicd by his the greatest features of the year to- NEW -1 EY MAN SMNAT ON ARMY EDITOR' relatives, Mr Alex Campbell and wards addln to a better understan- ll# . Mnnnfas Frances i ' divas nun. Esrarrz chasm crrv. us.. oct. 11.- iUP)..~‘I‘wenty-four hours beforci publications in Toronto for thc _ past four years. died Saturday aft- IS ernoon at Winnipeg. hc Thomas Madigan. former Sh of Hudson county. N. J.. sunbioned his fiancee, Miss Emma Cllfton. and was married to her that she 'might obtain his fortune. / \ l ____ QITISII HARVESTERS PURCHASE ~WES’I‘EB.N FARMS Impressed by the opportunities of 'Western Canada. two harvesters. Fefsua Bmith. Walbottie, Northum- berland, and his companion, R. Muagrqve. employees of C. C. Gai- loway of- Lomond, Alberta. have bought a quarter section of land from their employer with' fthe in- tention .of _ settling in Alberta. Smith is retiirning to England to hai<_i__ther- to canada. Musgrave is &._rkl_ng»_buyca an, 'lumbe`i1<:,to'build1pa home: I-felaxpects .his fiancee to accompany the Smith, lfamlly to Canada. The harvester! Paid 000 eaelf for the land. com- prising I00 acres. already cultivat- ed. Taylor‘s services in the Army Nd transferred to Winnipeg seven years M ago. Two years lat/er he came tc __ Toronto as head of the editorial __ staff. Deceased was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel a T yea ago. n his death had been appointed Prin- ___ cipal of the Training College in_ san Francisco. War' he was in charge of the Sal- "°°’°"'“T€.’ "'“”?‘.1§°‘i..‘33l.;"2.f 2.22 _ o 11141118 his wife, mother and youl\8 LI;_:_§;<;guth;’“o_B_E_ He was in nn mi-thy-fifth year. Deceased was re- garded as ‘a brilliant writer and an able platform speaker. His fa- ther is one of the oldest Salvation Army oflloers in the organisation. Hia widow and one son survive. DI?.,AD; BPENT SEVEN YEARS IN CANADA . _ _ E iss Emily Campbell of Montague. ding of 0anada’s potentialitics and M Mr. Dewar holds an excellent pos- the possibilities of Anglo-Canadian 1°" 1" 5°1"\°1'V111¢ Ou 9110 P011Cc trade have been the visit to the Bri- ~ _ it Efnxgglbxifgnrnfnfy staff of that city. and with his fam_- ugh Isles of the group of Canadian ily all located there, deserves special Fapmers. organized by the Coloni- don at the moment may wiii The greater part of Lieut.-Col. o -_ un Ambassadors the yo g - Messrs Annear Bros. of Lower.` Sir Henry in replying to a toast N Montague accompanied by Miss Mc- agreed with Mr. ncylc and added: been ¥1"°“ 1" E“‘1""“d' H” wa? Kcnzic crchat place, and Missnildd ~i sincerely nope that the visit of C1-|906 Of CBulbl'1d8€. MBSS-» H105- the Young Ambassadors will be fol- 1‘¢d to Peters Rd- recently- The lowcd by a considerable number of uni! ladies mentioned arc about to older ambassadors and I can assure Blum to the U- S. Bflftl' I1 VBCHCEP you that they will find a ready wel-, l>€nt in different parts Cf KUIES 0 come in the Dominion. The iluests l t S r and B' short time pr or 0 nd have been visiting relatives and included Sir Felix Pole, General During one period of the Creat` ‘ / _ __ ~ _._ _ _ rd) ' ir, H’ ' , .if ` ` rious protracted illness in her ...__' ' '1'1“*q"\l° f1"°' ""1 l‘““?‘| ‘1"‘""°’ "7 .liolnee before entering the Hospital _ & Nicholson ’s 'M,_ “i _Blliclcfioist Chewing Tobacco H2 isles 1 hiujirlgrtoanybrlndtlleyhavoavermod. I motions or nop oem many & Nicholson Tobacco Co., Ltd- 1 qualntances in the province- Manager of the creat/ western Wi _" i ._ “muon as one Of our successful muon Department cf thc National _ tn n. Norfolk home land boys. System and the tour of 'Canada by snlaghgneaopenini of payiiament uni . ovember sixth. .K-4 In Memoriam 3 lvm. l.'a:lvlUl-:L _ ivlEu.n'r'r I I Mr. Lemuel Mellett, formerly of‘ Somerville, died suddenly Sundayi morning, September 30th., at his: home, 280 Mount Auburn Street! Watertown Massachusetts I-Ie wasl ligioli’ :leafs full? “"1L1"- L1\~f iI.¥C~-1 cigarette cuiitrrversy in wlilcli f_i.e_ Was involved Curing hor visit ~‘.ii tim United States as lecturer null' preacher. One religious journal pub-1 licly addressed to her a kindly! courteous appeal to "set a good ox-_ ample" to the wor1__d by abandoning a habit which coud be no greatl sacrifice. y “I explained," writes Miss Roydenn "that I did not believe that religion* was a matter of such trifles as thc smoking of six cigarettes ii week-i and added that I did not smoke at all in Lent I did not dream that it -1- FEII l th L l ' ' ~ Rauways' Bu x Pole sa d E n Wm 111 1’1'1“°° Ed“""`d Ismnd' and |was necessary to explain that I did The f0ll0Wlh8 VBSBBI-S hlW8_ luildetl 1914 the ,railway men of England I ted 1 so _ with produce here this season: Qchs had given Sir Henry rather a cool.” ‘"1 °‘;:;1fe“_f_¢_: ‘_’fv‘;d fgr n‘:;°_:y |tl_iis ord_;i_i___to_;,es;__my__own___£_;::_i;/_iii Brie Bush" Gosbee Bros rece iicn cwlng tothe wayin which Ville- W in 0 se con - s me su -_ Y t nslllt lid tl f th Cahndi Ni' ___ . ventfu. hiwuismluy u'°U*1’1° "9" ' ‘thirty-six cl ai-cues wcilid 'im rcss' This port "Calhouns" is acces- gray;-sg; §:1“;,:h¢;t.|)11f£1;|¢¥re|ayE }Y¢v:ili|flt10u5 t0 1115 ¢1'9d1'f- F" the 9°" or interest Cgodf On this I abanIi,ion-1t1”11""1°l1- sible for iarae ei-dir., is surrounded way transportation during che Wu- twenty years he had bein sn_lnv;};u- ed me co,,,,0,,,,,sy_ The ,dea.,ha,_ speaking ci inc naman mill as a b an excellent nS1`1¢“1W|`\\1‘\l‘°l. and for the success achieved in the HC 1” suwwfld by hs wolel' by Biviuil UD Suwklus. _I should im-;“1'e"\9u¢`10US d1S“0V€\‘Y" C- T- Cur- and much trade has been ra - Conso a on o ° e an .-im" A' Meuen' "W° ‘"’“S'd Pveg ai press young (female) America with '@1153 D11'°Ct°F 01 Al'0hu0108y. Gut- cd nl its commcdlcus wharf. ilcnal hallways. ,M¢ll°u- 01 S°m¢W11\°- “H _"CV _,thc excellence ci my _examples lined the Swry of muuns-one of ,_ | gl;_/I__e_l_lctt_.______of____m':_t;er;___o;:cr_i_______n;1_: nguncd to mahridicnlons and nfe_-Lhedcldist i_nd_ilstr_ies-as itwillsoon °‘*'**“*°“°‘. Her many "tends ‘re pleased to , au . - ~ _:_ n ous efflih .When it came to a `é‘ p aye ri tic museum. ' 1"” "lm M" °°"1° "°h“"°"' ‘ '° nmrglhzrs 1535;? AM;/!lellcti.eloi hge; iff" impressing the Deny' I Brill/dir; “ityctrze diglhcggdhislorstllgli "B°nm° r ` D hi l ter ears - Murray Harbor. now in port. second ni, ...ning was men ,,,,.°,,,,c,,d_ but years. spendins S H Y _ ly ciwlcus. time, and Schs. "Hazel B. Millar" whecli he left for Canada all of them nf_1_1_f:_:':n__ and W”°"°w“' Mass t__“Th_e ei_l_it_c;:',hl_i___owever, returned to Ca t. Sydney Munn. Murray River rent regretted his departure. “ '- _ e a tae next issue by ask-' novl: cleared for Sydney. N. B. gilarrliytributes were paid-.._ . . Q 1 il °“°J°f.‘l3.2”n?FZ$i.§“T&kl Open New Bridge .1%,¢§;*;_";§';_°,;°~;_f“;§§°§g§°3g§§; Ui 'I\>r0h0O. Willard ast Mi ff0m and lt institut- courteonil mil. mn, --4- left night their and is the Tuesday. October Univer-. Mus. of- was at Nartt __"ocl MN- LY¢11l U1'°°1l€'»f» 01' P1995' Wo rkmen aril:\o"1` :ind strenuous eonsistin! and MiAs_Mlim_;I:;|_1_9Wi _ _of criirhing the ,:"nin between two and M11. MHC! U B11 ' ° specially shaped stones. The i t - Prince Edward Isl!-hd» Burled In |cs‘il~.g fsiturc of t`1is is that egalit- WEN held in M°\ll'1¢ -i ily t.he same- meaiir. was used by the Chapel at Water- PRAGUE CZ¢¢ho.s1°v_<;,ki._ ongyivci. roast Indians of America. In - 1 I H r _ rac 10.-Collapse of an eight-storey sinne office building being erected in the heart of the city today buried more' than |00 wcrrkmen. the lrsjor- lt of whom were believed tohave Cemewry, Milford. killed. Eighteen bodies had -'--"*O**---~--- been recovered by 10.40~p.1n. ID- AHIBICAN WOMEN ‘ ' i night. AND lEl.lGIONi _____<,, ____ _ According to a Japanese scientist nerves will not conduct im- eiirroundod by an ample staff? of Life Story Complete TORONTO. Ont.. Oct. 9. - Thcl Royal Ontario Mus(-um after years] of search, has just been enabled to complete the story of bread with data relative to iz. conical Roman mill recently uncovered in London. England. The only other mills of this type were found in Pompeii standing as the slaves: had left them when they fied from des- -damp climate. Long before the 1Fiomans came they had built kilns to dry the giriin which they had to icit dar._i The hrst milling was is done by the women, the men from time immemorial having man- aged to shirk it. . With the advent of large towns A better mill had to be invented and some ingenious Roman applied n proper leverage principle tn the stones and made them conical so that the grain would fall away when ground instead of part of -il. being ground endlessly ln the some place. _- -¢¢>--- SYSTEMATIC THE!-'I' OF SIL- ' vsawns - MON'f'REAil.i. ‘Souvenir huniters temfty hlairned for KNO waiter ed with Judge Lacroix boys and not for 9. 5 Wig? fact It vils ilsrizi bv every e in the ircrld. Originally an Egyptian or Asiatic discovery ‘spread slowly and mysteriously am-' eng nil mankind before the begin-1 ning ci history. | The next step was two thru hundred Christian eh. consisted of TCI’