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Haggerty: witha prirse. asThe school ¢lass preiented | ‘flss ‘Mally, 1 mith abook,.” ” (irs, Kate Tucker, spent Avednésday : “ Qiulte a ‘number attended’ the récep- tion and.charvarl at the home of Mrs {” ‘Rost Melbortie, in honor ‘of ner brother SvpMtr,arehle Hill ‘and bride‘of Belleville. ‘The evenings was. spent :in: miasic and | igtmes after which-a dainty ‘tunch was days with thelr ‘parents, Br; and Mrs, _ M, P, Husband and Or, and Mrs, Wen, Pinney. oe a iMtr.. and Mrs." Roy. ‘MeMath,, spent ’ Suinday in, Deseroito. :! Q4r, sind frs., J. Mowers and family were visliors: at Mix. Charlle. Pringle's recently, ’ fr, vand) Mrs, AL ‘Pinney: ona ene neth are visiting thelr son Earl, and. other friends In SyracusenNyY. | Mr‘ and Mra, Olaytén. ‘Osborne and “(Mir and Sire, Fred Henderson, visited sunday ab the home, of her ‘brother, Mr. Vernon Oliver, Turner of Albert Colteg ei Mra: Bert Mowers,” Deser- ‘onto, ‘and Mr, ‘and Mri. J. Barnes were recent wisltora at Mr, ” Gibson's, .Gdn- » anoque. Sampo a “Mrs. Mt. ‘A. webanes, Js visliing’ at]. tS Mrs. Ny Haggerty’s, £ ma ’ ‘or last week) " qne Four Square met in’ the Sunday School rooms ' on” ‘Thitraday “eventaty, June 22nd, with a good attendance’ of members dnd‘visitors. At.the close ‘Mr, Milton read, an. address and’ pre- “vented Rev, H. Foley. and bara, Foley ‘mith two beautiful gifts, an upholstered arm chair; and an all wool comforter “although ,taken: by’ surprise Mr. Foley; and:Mis Foley made yery dtting-re~ ply A doctal hour followed and dainty refreshménts were served. |” * A large numberof the meinbers ‘ot the Tyendinaga East W. 1, attended the Lpistric} Annual héld nb, Plaintleld ‘9 * ‘Wednesday, : Mry “George” Put ‘ ‘Toronto, * also ‘attended and took ee ‘and. Mra. G, Richmond spent ‘Thure- day with Mr, and ars, Pred, Kinumierly. spent ‘Thureday at ‘Mr. ‘Herb, eimimers aly ‘Mrs; Eleanor Sitogton was a 6 ‘ So QMdss. Beatrice Mowers . 1s “spending. Pes , per Holidays’ tn. Trento visiting. with 1 trlends. “Mas, Ruby ; Rikicy, Napanee, “pent ‘aweek with, her. sitet, one Pred Hen 4, Walte#, Doldge, Belhy, Rey. H.W, Foley an ‘ise. Foley b were “guests Mrs" Wimn.. fWadding- ham? and Air. “Arthur. eed Gale Robt, Coulter. © R, Duffett, 4, Grange, X, Loyd. « HL Markle, 8, MeGriftin, “Mo McGraw, leaner Paul, , ML, Pigeon, HL Baider, w.Gaider, D. Thompson, - +F, Thompson. 1. Btevenson.” ee SENIOR TI TO "JUNIOR IV i A +, Louise Babcock, Lilian Bates, Eileen Barrett. Billy -Beaubten.* “Glenn Clark: . Makguerite Derby, | » Peay Dibb, a ‘Jeanne ollis, Annie Baboock, Jack Baldree. . Joyce Barrett, Shirley Blakely. .Biky Cronin, ‘Mary Duffett. * Darls Giroux. James Hil). Eleanor Metiow,, Yourence Markle, _ Maclean Bwitzer, Phyllis ‘Thompson. Cleo VanBlaricomt, Qfarlok; VaniVolkentrurgh. ‘Dorothy Baider, , Margaret Canger.-'- \ Arthur Fox> - SR. PR, TO, an “Blnofa Baldree.” . Marion Vine. Eleanor. Plunvey,’: Durée Rendell. Donald Turner, George Cavanatigh Bhirley | Cornwall,.” 3H, IL, 70 SB, 1 fe 1, iB SK. I. TO JR, IL | Sidney ‘Thompson, “7 : PER, Tee TO SE “Phigey:. broustit for “her. “It Ya. not-hard' to push a. , | acrording to. directorof the byte: Davia ‘Seattle, Joan Beattie, }| center of. gravity ta‘over ‘Helen Meltwaing, Jean Murphy . _Carmen’ O'Connor. ‘Billy. Plumley. ~ + Clifford: Rendell, Donald Rogers. ‘Douglas Sagar. Leslie ‘Scharf. Iner, Thompson. - George “Weester, Sadie ‘Wheeler, + Weil: Willoughby, .EAST WARD * JR. 10, “TO SE, tit, s oh ; 'M, Allison, s > 3, Balldace, MM, Conger, a W. Gilbert -CHistory). : ‘}us the sintar Hull fextival held by + ML Vine (History), rare D. Wilson... | E,MoParland; 1B, Young, \ ae Gi! Holme, " H. Moore. re J. Pollard, <0, Thompson. a ‘'T. Thompson, . G, Woodcock, fF, FIRST TO SECOND ~ sit. rE. .TO FIRST . “Bobble! Allen, Leona: Gilbert. . * Betty.Guffman ; + Cecil Ballotte, i ‘Mary Normile: : Betty Pollard, Jack Pybus, Vernon ‘Wagar. TO. 5R. PRIMER Shirley, Holmes, pig irda Ss ie eae tron’ ore .ADd If.90 ‘enttled becatise ‘In’ the ‘Polder plants the metn! as It comes fromthe blast furnaces flows through &trench - of ‘sand Into. Htte branch logteal: Institute. of the. Sua "Yat ‘Sen untveFalty fn Canton, Chinn, who made some: fuleresting > obserrations on: rate ‘of, work. pérformed .by"ta enalie drawing running. | exerted Is practically" all «The arms‘are held by the kharts af” the. vehicle; and. alnce the “yehiet axle, the’ coalie does‘not “have to exert ans up | arce. The, work be does ls con’ Sequentty.the sathe ux if.he were gull. Hag & welght by a gord ‘Fuantng aver ‘¥ putes, ‘The rickshaw. coetle runa-trom’ far ro ix mifleas.an hour, enenming dur ng {ort locomotion about’ onetentl fon, horse pawer=the same, Unit Brey in ff he wore drawing five ant tal! anda dine foot In each Keeyad, Tit “a over and ahore the umouiit af work he coulle would do white ruenind ut che Bame pace without pulling ihe tended sehicle, Tye expenditure of snergy Is much Jean, than dint of the aurinen tna. untveraity boat rac Jand Plaln Denter, Peculiar. tn + Still Matter of Doubt farioun thevries have been held as e orlgth of the custome and tre Utigia attending April 1 in western countries, hut there Is no certtln or vonchunlve explanation, - 4 ame have tried to trace thé ob- [ervanee to the mlracie, pliye former: | ‘ly presented at) Kutster the, and ‘ome to anclent pagan festivals” uch the Hindus on March 31 oF the Feast it Foola celebrated by the Romana. { Brewer's Dictlonary of Phrase and Fable declares: “A better sotutton In thin: Aw Murch 25 ysed*to be New Year's day, April.1 was fta octate, when is festivities culminated and ended." Tt maybe, he’ addy, *a rélic of the, Roman ‘Cereatia,’ lietd at the begin~ ning: of April.” The prohabitity seems to, be that it In a survival of sone such anclent spring featival, “Conscience Fund” ‘There are anonymous persons who feel. that they. owe the government ; "money for ane tenson or another. ; From tme-to time the Treasury dey! paYtment’ recelves contributions, from these unknown ‘persona, Sach sums are turned .qver to what fa known am started during “Madison's admintstra- thon In 1811, With the exceptions of ‘ot his predecessors’ had, than helt of it 15 still in the form of inoney. old bare held in banks a5 + |ecusity for. money. _ «have mined sbout-226 million ounces, Adckshaw, This ‘orm -of f ‘n-picking’ Eugene Black, of Atlanta, fof Governor. of the Federal Reserve (Board President: Roosevelt has follow- ed the example of Mis last Democratic Predecessor is selecting a South to head up the nation's financial aystem, Iam one af those who believe] that the Inte W. B. G. Harding. of \alabarm was the best, man. who ever "hela the Gost to which fr, Slack has deen appointed,” Mi, Black was-pleked, I am, told,| mainly because tit ts entirely free from cWall Giteet influences, Se das a big- ‘ger.atid more important tack than any eit ison ‘entire the cards, I believe.’ that ‘banking system of the nation mill be .ataken into the Federal Reserve System, ‘and the head of: that system will exer> cise financial control even greater than ‘that of the Governor of the Bank of ‘England, ‘Unlike many bankers, St, Black has ‘a sense of humour, Gut hjs reputation ‘for sound, homely common-senst is jot the highest. f |ROCKEFELLERS + «they more ‘anes change and landmarks pass, "The Rockfelers, father and son, are raoving from the historic uddress “26 Center, five mile’, up town, For more than fifty yeara “26” bas been the | ehondquarters, of the .| Standard OU in- terest. Nobody knows how many’) millions hive been made there, but 'protibly. enough to pay off our ma- itlonal debt, if the men who made it tnd kept it. ‘The Rockefellers "dont keep thelr ‘money, ‘They spend it largely in wast Jenterprises for the publleywelfare, edu- growing season 1s longer and the ely eation, health and the restoration ‘of, John D. Rockefeller, Ur, ts in the melight Just now because he objected to Communist propaganda belng put into a mural painting by Diego de been engaged to do some work in the Rockefeller Center, Some “Liberals” Broadway” fo ,the new Rockefeller “an the United States, since 1792, we Worth above’ $4,600,000,000 ; and that, ourlously etlough, Js just about the 8 amount of sionetiry, gold still in this eduntry, “im the same 450 seat gold pro: Guction the amount of silver mined in.” the’ worfd.emns a. fraction more then Sitteex thousand million: ounces; and ‘the ratto-ot aftver to gold'in the world’s ionetary “system. before silver was was just about fifteen to ane. Silver £9 coming back as money, but Hi is more Wkely to astine ot a rato ‘of nbout twenty or trenty-five to one” ‘than che traditional “sixteen to one of the old Populist days. POPULATION ‘The United States could support Probably ‘ten ‘times’ the population we: ow baye, It used to be all that ning» tenths of the population could do to: Produce food enough for the ten- work of only a fifth, perhaps less, to feed everybody. Population in the United States is aknost standing still, Unless there i+ an unexpected uptum of the birth rate: ‘or.we ‘open’ our doors agiin to imm!~ grants ¢rom Europe, we shall find our~ selves still Tess dependent on the pro- ‘ducers of food, Tt fooks.to me as if food farming, om any important geale, ill be a thing: of the past in Sifty or a: hundred years from now. Mare people will live in the ‘country, but fewer will be engaged in itrying ¢o make money out of growing food. ‘They wil get thelr cash from other forms of labor and of products. ‘of the land. $ - LAND What {s good ¢énm land worth ?.An. English friend told me gotlong ago that the best land in England, where the average production per acre of all jsvops {9 much higher than in Amer~ tea, the markets are'at the door, mate generally more favorable, can bo bought for $100 or less per ‘acre, when . it can'be bought at all, With an ex- perlence of two thousand years behind thent, English farmers are pretty likes ‘iy to know what values are, . i the “conscience fund.” This fand was | Viera, the Mexican artist who nad { 7 doubt whether any land in Amere ‘ea can earn interest on a very much yhigher valuation than that, except in the Monme admintatration and tle de- lare making o great fuss, saying that's very fem highly favored pots and peesajon of 1818 there hag not been « year that some conscience contribu thon bd not been recetved. From Its $5 etart In 1811 thin fund totals mote Chan $350,000.—Pathfinder Magazine. ~~ Keys to the City ‘Mr. Rockefeller 13 no judge of art. ‘That may be true, but. wouldn't he look foolish promoting Communism ? GOLD «ee eee wise 1453 ‘The custom Rous buick to the dasa} when towns had walts and gates, and, often, real keys, ‘The presentation of {been mind In the world valnde:any, and thelr m Ne te Keys wasn token of eatmisslon According to the United ‘Btates Bu- freau of Mines all. the gold that hns| kind of. records have been kept; that then only by intensive cultivation of ‘high-priced périshable fruits and gur~ ‘den. truck, One af the principal causes of much of the present trouble of farmers is ‘that they paid, ‘Or promised to pay, more for thelr Jand than it was worth, es represent more value, “thao thetr e@tual ce which n feudal town patd /13, from 1403, fhe year after Columbus Tana, lke anything else, is worth dae ne or overlord when he vlalted ie pret bestowal of keya on” Afstingulshed visitors in simply a ren- timenta} survival of He. old practice, .. _Atsoovered Am ica, down’ to, date, amounts ‘to a” over'.a' thousand: million otnces, At $20 an ouzice état 1s worth twenty billion doltars, and sues only what it will earn. Say you mtw.t in ‘The Express. trenches -or. moldi,’ where it hardens’ +. into ‘bars called: pix sometimes called the. ra the fron “and ‘eteel Induste Pig tron. fs terial ‘of 1098 from it most.of our steel and commer. |. otal forms’ of tron are Tanda, From Cow's Milk» ‘According. sto” ‘health authoritles something like 25 per “cent ‘of. all ta- berculaats Jn, human’ beings, can be Tabercata “L traced directly ta cows" mn! casea when cows are. consumptiya the kerma are present In: thelr. milk. Thi =] ie-why-we hase’ our. cows: tuberculin tested npd one of the reasons. tor. Pan tebrieing : “Hag: @ Maori Matden 7 ‘Too many Eiehiex may even lead ‘to absolute disaster, ox' witness “In the ens of Yetln ‘Mataraa, a. Maort glant- ena who was over eight: feet In. height, weighed more -than “420 pounds, : eo wan efttemely bundacme, © She Hy Isotated ‘spot. In New. Zealand, Bet-.hor-ta-n“hospital,, but.the -roads were too bad fata car and her. welght is iemarhed” the! “They” then Tannnged to ft her on ta x hitse lorry, + | but: she. ‘ato the Uospttal,* ‘ITPAYS TO SAY . YOU v want the best Your get “wonder ". Kellogg’s that imi Get ovensfreshness insured by ‘the’ sealed. . inside WAXTITE bag,. a Kellogg feature. Remember, when sibstitntes a are is seldom i in'e ‘spirit of. serviee. Sold by! . all ‘grocersyin’ the _rediand-green : packnago. * “Guaranteed, by we "Kellogg fi in yondes, Ontaris,,. Corn Flakes. Thea specify . “Kellogg's the originall/They hnive, been the standard of ‘quflity for 25 years ov by, for “the Inigeét-selling Corn’ Flakés in the world. r”? flavor and crispness in tations never equal, You offered, ~ . Kellogg. “Made eae dropped by ane country after another, | tenths; pow ft takes the tine and’. ee ele o What it. will cara | ~