l‘. ‘QIQ. m. [aeuteranutuenseatd Ialrualaulnainvdhstsnd ' ......... llllmemllttnslsnkmhem Ilflilhaiyw can ash Qnlatnenmourame queue-snowman; ' " Ina-nouns. -X-ll-I-l euiesueeedymqyeeearne: Y," r. ‘n a -—- altar thelntnalve hvmtflatha IIXIllIlII-abeemin eeaduotcdbymaen m; mess aerating. lM-io-ee-ei snail-annual n» that the annal- --—- linrmuitsoiroreet devastation , v illvi i IIVI Ilibecolnlq gmgyq niek-euuaeeeusqentteetriem day. m" "m? tlltilh which llflfi Ifil III. IK-lfl-SO-Oi Referring to the main text oi my ll-illwt. namely business conditions, 1 1M4 lust the some amount of A o“ mar"- “m “m, ‘t veltlgations r could iind nothlal thot never, never stops! i 71H ,, y l . iundamentelly wrong on ell-Ml’ 00mm’ 1m u i, d i l a Covehsad and Stanhope “"°"" u"! "i" ""'"°" “h- side oi the line, euaapt use ahort- mm“, ‘M u'“'“" “"1 "m 2 n 0101mm, ....___ gtmf“ N“ lee oi our iorested aria. ‘there la h“ ‘m, ma" “mnd ‘u’ tpzpniuch p ,. Ilia _ - “at, E some succeeded Spring“ "13:: hut:- . I: 31mm“ m States m" " m" "‘ m‘ 1"“ " “m” 3 l‘ no!!!‘ ngpggul, '9; pygmy-pg m‘; 5 01 "ml-hing except confidence, or .- umn succeeded summer. and aocn but this is something that can and I h, W:- tbs chill aim winds will whisper “m” “WW “w” “"11 undoubicdl will be corncted. m‘ w 5"“ "m" "m" “‘ ...'me death oi John s. Holmes. the choicest Government-tasted in- Y other words the present slowing up t T. P “t? Oldest son ci the late- James Llolinee. Bradalbane occurred on ilsondey Sept. 14th in the Pushy- lterian Hospital, Chicago. at the gnge Blyears. :5 He leaves to mourn his wliernee fldaude Kennedy of Chicago, three Sisters, Eliza at Los Angeles, Mrs. finomes n. Yeo, Union Road Lot '38; Elizabeth, Philadelphia. and one fi-other Charles, also several rela- tives in this province. The late an. Jlolmes resided at nos ingeles where he amassed con- dernble property,, b61118 l?- 1°"?- jncst builder and real estate 6P9?- Qtor in Chicago as well as in his jome town. ‘Z His many bequests to charitable fitituiions showed hirn_to be a Iran oi wide sympathy and trill’ ihrlstian benevolence. The iunerll piss held at Graceland chapel. ill‘! v, m. Anderson, 4th. Presby- lerian church, Chicago, oiiiclating. m ‘gm. nsnsmm w. r. HOWARD The death occurred at his home sprlngiielcl, on Sunday. Osi- n, oi Mr. Benjamin W- P- KW‘ 3rd, a, well-known and highly-Til" ‘ipeetedu-eeident of that placa- M» n. "ard. who was '10 years a! ass» llld the misfortune a week WW7"! o his death to sustain quits a bail gall in the loft oi his barn, and » while no bones were broken the rc- iirlt was such that he suffered h-Qgfly, his becomlns Iiery serious and resulting in his heath as stated. '1- He leavu to cherish hi8 melllm‘? insides his sorrowip! Wld°W will’ ihiidren. Miss Emily, at home, Mrs. ‘J. A. Bentley, an... ‘ ‘ wn. Rnb- on the homestead, and Miss ituth, R.N., oi Montreal, who mirough the courtesy oi the Can- étglilll 41s.: Li sake . errlvevhqmein time to see, her ‘a ther beiors he passed away. ll“- : made that part oi her journey Moncton to Springiield by ‘flerovplnne on the previous after- There are also leit t0 Infill?" flhe following sisters and brothers: a Frank Howard, Cornwall; firs. Mnckay and Mrs. McRae. in fiestas, wash, m. n. P. Howard 1B1 Everett, Wish, and William in %regon to all oi whom the .pro- fiiound sympathy oi the community f)‘; extended. ifiirns funeral took place on ‘rues- day, Oct. 20th. and was vary lfllle- Jy attended. interment beins made "In" St. Elizabeth's Cemetery, Spring- ; “yidinn Airways Ltd, was nrivilessd _ "field, Rev. Mr. Bridgewater, rector pi Cropaud, officiating, assisted by ‘Rev. Mr. Ross oi Cornwall and ltev. m. Palethorpe oi Bradalbasie. The pill-bearers were Messrs. nobt. iiflslsm, Reginald Heslam, Hazen ‘Howard, (Cornwall), Baben Bald- erstou, ltrnest I-Iaslem and John dlsmaliy around the hillsides, as watchers in the night speak in low tones about the pillow oi the dying. The years go quickly by and on hickory leai and hawthorn hedge and briar bush and evening sky and flaming aurora we read “Passing Away." Rev. G. A. Christie, M.A., York, preached to a large and appreciative congregation in Covehead Church on Sunday, Oct. 25, Text, “Concom- lng the collection for the Saints , making an eloquent and forceful ap- peal to the churches ior liberal con- tributions to carry on the work oi ‘ 1 missions in Korea and vari- ous other misslon stations of the United Church of Canada. Thanksgiving day passed quietly here, the weather being unfavorable ior any outdoor activities. i’ Our beautiful country scenery is rapidly losing its richness and vari- ety oi color as the days go by. Mr. and Mrs. I‘. B. Auld, Cove- head. have returned from a very enjoyable visit to Bear River, N.S., where they were guests of their daughter, Mrs. J. W. MacDonald. I Her many irlends regret that Miss Helen Lawson, Stanhope, is contin- ed to her home through illness. Miss Isabel Brown, teacher at Covehead Broad, and the Misses Elva and Ruby MacLean, were revent vis- ltors with Mr and Mrs. F. B. Bov- ycr. Mrs. N. C. Brown and‘ family, Ccvehead, had as recent guests, Misses Barbara and Annie Walker, City, and Mrs. John Gill, Union Road. Lot 33. Miss Emma Auld has returned to Stanhope after a pleasant visit with friends in the city. ' Dr. Bovyer, Crapaud, visited friends at covehead on Sunday. The doctor reports a serious loss in the potato crop in his section of the country, due to the destructive work of the white grub. Miss Marion Clarke and her aunt, Mrs. Thomas Margeson, Fall River, Mass, were recent visitors to Stan- hope, guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. Marshall. ‘ Mr. Arthur Brown, Covehead Road, has finished his fail plowing and is about ready ior winter. Ar- thur always leads in all lines oi farm work. A number oi the young, people oi Marshileld were pleasantly enter- tnined at the bedutliul home oi m. and Mrs. Geo. MacMlllan on Wed- nesday evening, 21st inst. "i ii _ illllllllllfiiuilfllllllteillkllflill? Nichol // SON'S "Sesame and lilies" te tells us; "I spent the ten strongest yegrgd my liie (from twenty to thirty) in iilldW/Orins to show the excellence oi the work oi ... man whom 1 be. lieved, Mid rightly believed. w be the greatest; painter of the school o! England since Reynolds. I had lihell perfect taith in the power ct every great truth or beauty to ure- vall ultimately, and take its plgcg in unseiulness and honor; and I BlIOl/e to bring the painters work into this due place, while the paint- er was yet alive. But he knew, bet- ter than I, the uselessness oi talking about what people coiud not see for themselves. He always discouraged me scorniully, even when he thanked me; and he died beiore even the superilclal eifect oi my work was visible. I won't on however, thinking 1 could be oi some use to the public, ii not in proving his powerJMy books sot talked about a little. The prices of modem pictures, generally, rose; and I was beginning to take some pleasure in a sense of gradual vic- tory. when fortunately or unfortun- ately, an opportunity of periect. trial undeceived me forever. The trustees oi the National Gallery commissioned me to arrange the Turner drawings there, and per- mitted me t0 prepare three hund- red examples oi his studies from Nature, ior exhibition at Ken- slngton. At Kensington they were, and are, placed ior exhibition; but they are not exhibited, ior the room in which they hang is always empty.” ' In the sixty-three years since the. above was written Turner has come . into his own. The "Liber" plates that could be purchased ior ilve shillings apiece during his liietime, sold as high as one thousand dol- lars each in 1905, and today a Turner painting ls a valued pos- session. rt was not until his s.;.;-~*....... year that Turner began to experi- ment in the vivid colors that made his work lamous. Up to that time he had painted in greys, blues, and browns, using very little red or yellow. Yet, we are told, even his quiet-toned landscapes were full oi “diffused daylight," and in ‘the painting oi’ distance he surpassed all artists who had proceeded him. He excelled in portraying distant eifect work that demands the utmost skill oi a landscape paint- er. So chanseful ls the ski’ fllld 1°- motn distance that an artist re- qulrm either an. extraordinary memory or a sensitive feeling for eiiect to capture truth and beauty; Turner had both. This study seem- ed tc fascinate him and his power matured there was “an ever-in- creasing tendency in his ert in de- sen; the ioroground, where things were definite and clear, in .order to dmam in the infinite lllflostlv- noes and space cf dbtanoe." OrlgmllstSBdlTlllflQr in the original to appreciate his work: prints or ensravins give p001‘ idea oi his marvellous color arranse- ment.Uniortunate1Y some of his finest pieces are wrecks bmllle 0i his desire to achieve brilliant ei- iects. A love ior his quality in- creased as he grew older and in his effort to obtain it he ‘used oil as he would ule water in water- colors, and, one biographer tells us. vss utterly regardless oi results. Turner leit an lmmensequantity oi work behind him; he was never idle. For the pvfbd oi ten 70"‘! (between 1m and 1839i he sent fifty-five pictures to "the Royal Aoade , painted many others on private commission, made over four hundred drewinss ior engravcrl. besides thousands oi studies and sketches irom nature. Perhaps Turner's greatest service totheartofliiklandwasthe-edu- eation oi a whole school oi engrav- ers. The art oi steel easnvins reached its hllhest peak in Eng- land during his lifetime. Althoulll be “painted the Ilnglish country-side mu than anythilll else his lee pieces are and loved by tits general public. “The Hill"!!! ‘Ibineralro flicked-to herlialtllerthtobelrokenllp," Meonliderod enact his imeet wuhandtnowntoalloimm he used two mediums on one can- - value to the pound. Dwl-lil-flfl-Ol EVENING SEBVIOII AT TRIN- ITY UNITED CHURCH-The preacher at the evening service will be Rev. J. H. Arnup D. D., assistant Secretary oi the Foreign Board oi the United Church. Dr. Arnup has ‘"99"? l ‘ ’ irom a tour o! important countries in the iar "Bt- WhEPQ lie saw our mission- ails at work. he has wide know- ledge oi the work of our Church thrcushout Canada, and has orna- Blllrlllg message for our people. ._______-._ PERSONALS Mrs. Thomas‘ Wooldridge, City has entered the P. E. I. Hospital for treatment. She is reported seriously ill. Mrs. Robert Hudson, Stanhcpe. spent a few days at York the quest oi Mrs. W. O. West. Mrs. Alionseus McInnis, Gowan Brae, is visiting at York the guest oi J. W. and Mrs. Mcvarish. prints or engravings. There is e. depth oi ieellng in this picture that reveals the sea lover and the poet. He dipped into Mythology ior subjects - oasionaiiy; "Ulysses De- riding Polyphemus," in the Nation- al Gailery, is another of his well- known works, and has been describ ed, us “a poem oi matchless splen- dor and beauty.“ But it was in his Venetian studies that Turner really let himself go, so to speak. Venice seemed to him "a city of rose and white rising out oi an emerald sea against a sapphire blue." His pic- tures oi it are characterized by splendor oi coloring and “careless- ness of form." We are told that this man. who "short and stout, crook-legged and red-laced?‘ that he was poorly educated and what we call today "a poor mixer." His eccentricity and unsociabillty made enemies, and he was accused o! grave faults, but he had a warm champion in Rus- kin who wrote this splendid tri- buts; “During the ten years that I knew him, years in which he was suffering most from the evil- speaking oi the world, I never heard him say one depreciating word of any living man or man's work; I never saw him look an un- kind or blameiul look; I never knew him to let pass, without sor- rowful remonstrance, s. blameiul work spoken by another. Oi no man but; Turner, whom I have known, could I say this." ‘rumor was born in London 1775, and died there December 1851. He is buried in St. Pauls Cathedral. Iredienta, are highest in vitamins- mtwt and have the INateat roodi 'l‘here must, of course. it is only necessary to call atten- thelr banks through losses which simply storing their money in eaie deposit boxes or their homes. I The fact that the Ulnldiln dol- lar is at the present time quoted below par in ‘the United States should give Canadians no concern, in fact it ls a decided advantage to this country. a8 it will promote buying and travel in Canada. Our dollar is worth one hundred cents in our own country and that ls where it ought to be spent. What we cannot purchase in Canada or the British Empire we can very nicely do without and this desir- able hablt oi buying hfllng products once acquired will undoubtedly be- come permanent. If our industrial leaders and our bankers and merchants would in- augurate a comprehensive adver- tising campaign, not spasmodicolly, the attention oi the people to the nature, n, house, iactory or barn; almost anything bought or built to- day will show a ha dsoms profit and in many cases iabulous prol- or personal property. Ibehlnd it and above all hon successiul managem of suiiicient magnitude ‘opinion, start the wheels oi indus- try moving to such an extent that _there would be little or no unem- ployment problem within six ‘months time. honest bargains and roads to 31106885. icus newspaper advertising. be ‘ some- thing wrong with a system when approximately two thousand blah tail in the United States aa against not one in oaneda durins the same period. To prove that this ll something that must be 001151363 tion to the iact that quite 18189 numbers oi the citizens o1 that country having lost confidence in they have incurred, have actually withdrawn their savings and are '01 people from coast to coast, but week in and week out, calling fact that now is the time to buy build or repair, it matters not whether it be commodities of any its. I am oi course referring to real though I would include in this catego y any good stock bond that has real value ‘ and ‘. An adver- tjslrig campaign pi this nature and Bi ti" 'cuse for overproduction in the wood l loved and created beauty wasqprcflfillt time Willlld. l" my hlllllblflusing industry than in any other Ii advertising can sell a worth- less proposition, as has been the casemany hundreds oi times in the‘ past, surely the udvertislng of reaII alth t d will m t |"°"" “iii/midis: campaign, this we mus an , ee with I can speak irom personal ex- perience on this subject, as adver- tislng gave me my ilrst start in llie. I never ialled to use this ENE-l asset as long as I remained in busi- ness and I have no hesitation in saying that my success in llie has been almost entirely due to judic- When I say that I can ilnd noth- lng iundamentaliy wrong with this continent, except the ioreet situa- tion, I speak advlsedly and as the Audi newspaper audience. It a alert . . . because news excitingly. can easily turn this r scan the advertising as the news, and Thhs EDGE Always Shows Up Rain or shine, hot or cold, you can rely on the lwaye shows up, is always happens so quickly and so If you have something to sell, you eader - interest to your immediate profit. For particularly in these days oi unusual values, newspaper readers columns as eagerly with greater cure. Galvanlze this newspaper audience tum mctlon-buyinffl actions-Advertise your 800d! in newsy, convincing, sales - stimulating copy. 7 a! Business. now that deflation has been over accomplished, is largely d"! l0 psychoioslcol causes and this can be overcome by up instruc- tive prosram oi’ advertising. Think- ing one has cancer is just about as bad as having one, conversely, to hide our head in the sand as we are doing with regard to our dang- ilmlls forest situation is the reverse phi-is 0f psychology. The rapidity with which our forest area is be. ills wiped out is something that is visible to all, as well as the very serious eiiect it is having upon our i-‘lllllilie. our agriculture and our water supplies. Practically all de- serts were once well watered and inhabited till the trees were de- stroyed. hence this is the danger that today iaces this whole con- tlnent. When our governments begin so realise just how alarmed the gen. eral public really are with regard t0 W1‘ dansewus iorest situation, and I have interviewed hundreds wmeihins will be done, though when this time arrives it may be too late to save the wreck, in iaot it is already almost; too lute, The provinces say they are obliged to have large quantities oi trees out in order to procurg wnui; that’ Wwllsly deslsnate as income, though it is not income at all but capital they are using up, but; 1 would ask what they intend to do ior this so-celled income when the forests are gone? Why not begin now and reduce the amount oi the Wt so as to put oti the day of reckoning as long as possible? The overproduction oi various commodities from which the courn. try is suiiering will naturally r8811- late itself unless the producers are entirely lacking in common sense, though the strange thing ubqus common sense is the iact that it is so tin-common. Them is 1mg 93.. ls the raw material they are using up cannot be replaced 1n this gm- eraticn or the next and in the case of‘ the small amount oi big trees MW rtmainlns on the Pacific Coast, can never be replaced, In summing up the results oi my observations I will once more urge the‘ necessity ior a vigorous “Buy iosetner with an abiding faith in God and the iollowing or the ieashinss oi the Bible can only have one result and they; g; s, HD9911? return to normal conditions on a sounder ioundatlon, both Bpirltually and iinancially than ever bsiore existed. I will only add that it would seem to me that the stabilization oi silver at the present time would probably be in the interest o; the world at large. Tolimiv. October 2'1, 1931. i MT. STEWART lVlr. Ray spent Sunday Mount Stewart. Smallwood, Borden, at his home in Miss Edith Cameron, West Cove. head, spent the week end at the home oi her parents Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Cameron, Head oi Hills- borough. Miss Sadie Farquharson, Bridge- town, spent the week end at the home oi her parents Mr. and Mrs. llknnk Iarquharson, Canavoy. Mr and Mrs. Montague MacKay and Miss Edna Glover, Mount Stewart. were visitors to the city recently. Mrs. Victor Coiiln, has rotumed to her home in Savage Harbor, alter spending a short while vlslt-= ing her mother, Mrs. John MacU Kaig, New Haven. Mr. Albert Jay. Borden. 8pm! Sunday at the home or his parents Mr; and Mn. George Jay. Mount Stewart. Mr. and Mrs. Walter MacEwsfl and son Stirling. oi Bristol. W!" visitors to Savage Harbor on Sun- dan-I. * l The tobacco monopoly 01 mm" produces gross retinas or pearl! Ompoomiteyear. “The moment l laid W" elem l ‘mew n on you‘ Y‘ h mel" was all "P ‘m .3 [ cIear-complexioned girl. She ff, I0 “My *“"" i‘ so scanty smooth. 5° chum is wondflhm" Men fall in lave wit/i the sweet, natural loveliness of the 1. is the girgl they want to marry. Get a dozen cakes of Calay today. Use t/zem lo the exclusion of all other soaps. L 1mg br-fo re they are gone, your skin will Iiavea new beauty-a beauty known only Io a skin that is free of dirt. A brief minute with Calla)" s gene-mus lather ‘and warm water. Iiinsc with cold WZlICI‘. Yuur skin is satiny smooth. All dirt has left the pores. Get a, dozen cakes of Caiay, thc one soup praised by 73 leading skin (iudtors. You nccd Cain)’ to face \'Ol|l' perpetual Iicziuty Contest! The Soap ofB llnilc in (‘nnrulri caujtiful Women cvriistnv. CUMMENIJEB (Canadian Press Cable) LONDON, Oct. 28.—The Colonial Omce today cabled Sir Ronald Storrs, Governor oi the Island oi‘ Cyprus, that it planned, ln consul- tation with him, to review the whole THE agonizing aches from neuralgia can be quieted in the same way you would end a headache. Take some Aspirin tablets. Take enough to bring complete relief. Aspirin can't hurt anybody. Men and women bent with rheumatism will find the same wonderful comfort in these tablets. They aren't just for headaches or colds! Read the proven directions covering a dozen other uuas; neuritis, sciatica, lumbago; muscular pains. Cold, damp days which penetrate to the very bones have" lost their terror for those who Aspirin tablets with them! All drug acres, in the familiar little x: ccnsiiiiiiional iuture of the colony wiih especial regard to questions arising out oi recent disorders there aiming at union with Greece. The cable. sent by Rt. Hon. J. H. Thoiuas, Secretary 0i Stats ior D0- minions and Colonies, Dial-led 51!‘ Ronald ior the manncr in which he had dealt with tlic siiilaiion and expressed the Govcmmcntfs concern that trouble should have arisen so largely among persons who recently lmd taken the chili of allegiance t0 the Crorvn.