PrevJentbl Prospect
I '( 'wen D. Voting %
V! vement in acconi]
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fit. l,< . uxr Uic l
teuton of promoti
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CRIMES* i
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M4VB 0ESM ABLE TO VTOKf
A 1929 f
•%Tft;C>e aftsw a
POOR START /
“/ Am, Sir, a Brother of the Angle,"
■Izaak V/alton
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WEU.. The OOY5 IN THE office JUST AOOUT60lftfc our fo UmCM NON#.
*^eUin Kirby, famous cartoonist at
•Oic New York World and twice wln
uer of the Pulitzer prize of 1600 for
the best cartoon of the year—he was
the winner, for 1920—Is not only a
great cartoonist but on ardent Boh
emian. as well., even rivaling Herbert
H'»ver. president of the United
in his devotion to angling
-No man can lose what he never
had.” said lzaak Walton, and that’s
'w! >t Kirby tells the fisherman who
says he caught the biggest one—but
U got away I Kirby has dshed In
many livers and lakes of Canada, and
declares that no better Qshlug exists
anywhere. His cartoon Indicates that
Uie fisherman la happy, far from bual
ness cares. and that he la sorry the
boys la the office are not having such
a good time. ,
Par-famed la the salmon fishing of
Nova Scotia. New Brunswick and
British Columbia and there are ex
pert guides a-plenty to care for the
angler and show him where the big
ones lurk. The Laurentlan Mountain
region, not far from Montreal, has
splendid trout fishing; big “muskles,"
pike and other fish lure the angler
to French River, Ontario, where there
Is an excellent bungalow camp, and
the famous Nipigon, on the north
»hore of Lake Superior, still holds
the record for the^lggest brook trout
?ver caught, the 1*14 pounder landed
oy Dr. J. W. Cook, of Port William,
Ont. There are plenty ef ®-pound«s
left which measure more than twe
feet in length, and a bungalow camp
to make visitors comfortable. Bvery
fisherman visiting the rieinity a®
Winnipeg should try hie look at
Devil’s Gap Camp. Kenora. on tha
Lake of the Woods, where there ta
fine sport catching base, lake trout
muscalunge and pike.
In the vicinity of Banff. Alberta,
famous reaort in the Canadian Book
ies. there le gdod trout fishing, cut
throat. rainbow, steel-head and Dolly
Vardon trout being the popular fa
vorites. Lake Mlnnewanka. near
Banff, has enormous whlteftsh. Sterols
to the boys In the office—may they,
too, go a-flshlnc and catch a-plentyl
jankers Back New Securities Mart
Pi, Jo Make Chicago Financial Center j
aet-ow
W/LL/A/1
R.DWES
VfC£ PWZ&.
C6NTPAU
TR. CO.
i
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IfiWRENCeH. WHITING
PRES.BLVD. 3RI0GE 6K
Chicago will eventually become thej
financial center of America, it is
agreed by nationally known banking
and Industrial leaders.
One of the greatest moves In Chi
cago’s financial challenge, the estab
lishment of a securities market by the
Chicago board of trade, recently was
endorsed publicly by a group of out
atanding financiers.
' The board of trade market, these
men made plain, will provide long
needed facilities for Investment of
unlimited Middle West capital at
home." ,. . .
, william R. Dawes, vice president or
! the Central Trust company of Illinois.
I described the 81-year-old commodity
• exchange’s new market as "an addi
tional financial facility that will bene
fit not only Chicago but the entire
; central West." , . .
Mr. Dawes’ remarks were backed by
similar expressions from Lawrence H.
1 Whiting, president Boulevard Bridge
t bamsTand chairman of the Indiana
Limestone oompany; H. A. Whae.cr,
vice chairman First National BanK,
ai:d John J- Geddes. representing
President Eugene M. Stevens, of th-»
Continental Illinois Bank & Trust
company. The latter institution is
Chicago's "billion dollar'’ bank,
largest of its kind west of New York
City. „ .
"The Chicago board of trade, de
clared Silas H. Strawn, noted attorney
and chairman of Montgomery Ward 3»
Co., “more than any other one agency,
has done more to build up Chicago
and the State of Illinois In that It
has advertised the city and the state
throughout the world.
"Its activities extend all over the
world. Until the recent 'bull' market
in st.ock3 the volume of trading on
the Chicago board of trade was greater
in money total than that of any other
market In the world."
This premier position will be re
gained by the board, it is confidently
asserted in Middle West financial cir
cles. when securities are added to the
present markets for grain, provisions
and cotton.
Why Be Gray? j
^EOR6iA O.GEORGe.
CHICAGO—Gray hair la not a badge
of superior wisdom, but an Index ot
slothfulness.
‘‘Silver locks usually considered
synonymous with intelligence, actual
ly betray their owner's dumbness,"
declared Georgia O. George, famous
hair and scalp authority of Loa An
geles. “Human hair should no more
become gray with age than cow’s hair
or cat’s fur. Gray hair Is dead hair.
If the scalp were allre and vigorous.
It would quickly expel these hlAuts
offenders.
"The hair needs food. Unless the
scalp is fed, the hair dies. Nourish
ment is supplied by the blood stream
through the scalp. The only way to
.bring the blood regvdarly to the scalp
and keep the hair alive and healthy
is to shampoo the'head dally. Other
wise. the ‘adult cradle crust* which Is
an accumulation ot exudations from
the pores of the scalp, chokes the nat
ural growth of the hair and starves
the hair cells." <r'' ‘ : 1
Sergt. George Sneram
rille, Ga., 90 year old coof
feteran, a« he appeared on tM
to Charlotte, N. C, where he
rt In a re-unlon. She rain hai
poet ot fade re-v
k. '■ .:-:rJ33^ESgw
Ml
PYRAMID
PRODUCTS 6
PITTSBURGH PA.
DON’T BE FOOLED!
ONCE BAllD—ALWAYS BALD!
— DON'T GUESS AT IT—
PYRAMID HAIR DRESSING la a proven superior.hair groom far
mm uf woman. Keeps hair In placa, soft, gioesy sndneat) tnvig*
#!rs Ike aaalp and promotes tha growth. Pries SO east* par jar.
F AGENTS WANTEO EVERYWHERE. ^
PYRAMID PRODUCTS COMPANY
•OX ST. UPTOWN station. PITTSBURGH. PA.
Sheep Breeding Important Sjurce ;
Of Revenue To Farmers Of Canada j J
O/V AN Ai8£« TV* AA NZ
TORONTO. ONT.—"Sheep" ts * !
word that liir/'.7 the old-time Amer
lean frontiersman Into a rage that .
frequently round relief in o!dz;n-’ i
guns, but in Western C mda today,
to be Identified with sheep is a badge
of respect and a sign of prosperity
Canadian sheep owners had an ex
ceptionally prosperous year in 1928.
and the sheep population shows a
l steady increase, according to a bul
letin by the Department of Colonlza
' tlon and Development of the Cana
dian Pacific railway.
"The 1928 wool clip averaged from 5
to 25 per cent above the prices ob
taining during the previous season."
says the bulletin, "and lamb prices
remained on the same high level they
were on during the 1927 season. The
four western provinces ahd Ontario
all showed gains In the sheep In
dustry.
"Canada’s western provinces and
Ontario are particularly adapted to
the raising of sheep. The rolling hill*
>n.l well-natered pastures grow varl
our kin'-1 • of.shor. swiet natural grass ,*
and whiclover, specially adapted tor ■
h--P‘ ’
"Ontario sheep have brought many »
laurels to that province. Sheep breed- |
ers of the province have won many $
important prizes at the large Amer- i
lean expositions, such as the World's \
Fair at Chicago, the Pan-American Ex- *
position at DuCalo. the St. Louis Ex
position. and the annual International
. Livestock show at Chicago.
"New Brunswick lamb is much j
sought after in the markets of the
United States, because of the excel
: lent gram and flavor. There Is room
for large extensions of sheep raising
' in Mew Brunswick, both on the or
dinary farm, where small flocks can
1 always be kept to advantage, and upon
rocky and rolling laud not profitable
| for cultivation.’*
I
blew^ Battle Fleet Head*
Kansas Singer
2' / Miss Iboa.'W(ul! ofGreat Bend, KanJ
7 'who was' selected from 52 singers!
4 from Missouri, Kansas and OklahomaJ
- as the winner of the Marini Talley]
•C-'.OOO scholarship,
yUrendon A.' Finn, 12, winner o< Tw
tlotitl Traffic Essay Contest* Thai
/.'who attends the Prescott Scliool
Somerville, Mass.,’ will receive£
to Washington and a isj^wafflll
' .victory; "
?TT Picked Asjhe Prettiest of Co-eds
| ir^4-*u*^‘i0”il w“!°“'l'!l!l2m,--s^
Dodd^^fuderus of Chicago University
. e _ -fie '*■ fudges of the National Beauty So y|
st of co-eds- judges o i c thesc two