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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1927-12-29, Page 7
Ski Jumpers Vie At Montreal Jan. 21 Trials Will Decide Dominion’s Entries in Olympiad to be Held in Switzerland *« Montreal Scene of Test Montreal.—The cream of Canada’* ski jumpej’s^-and there are none bet ter on thip side of the Atlantic-—will’ meet in Montreal on January 21 for one of the most spectacular competi tions that the devotee of winter sports could hope to watch; the Olympic trials which will decide'Canada’s rep resentation in this branch >f sport at the Olympiad at St. Mo.rtz, Switzer land*. The Canadian Ski Association, governing body of this outdoor sport; in Canada, has ordered elimination I trials to be held at tfie famous .Cote' des Neiges jump on that date, and! the best of Canada’s ski jumpers will be on hand to strive for the honor of representing their country in the in ternational competitions. Skiing has had a remarkable growth in popularity in Canada during the last few years, and thriving ski clubs are found in Montreal, Ottawa, To ronto and other Canadian cities. Ot tawa, in fact, has one ski club which has the largest membership of any sbeh body in the world, and each Sun day sees thousands of ski devotees trailing out from the capital to the, Gatineau Hills, which lie within a few miles of the city. Montreal is particularly fortunate in this regard also, since within the confines of the city there is Mount Royal, whose steep slopes afford excel lent ski hills. Every day in winter . finds hundreds of Montrealers and visitors out on the mountain or ski ing and other winter sports. The Cote des Neiges jump, where the Olympic elimination contests are to be held, is on the northwest side of the moun tain, and is reached within a fifteen- minute drive from any of the hotels In the city. The visitor has his choice of either horse-drawn sleighs, taxis or street cars to the jump. . That there will be plenty of both thrills and spills is assured1, for‘the Cote des Neiges hill is one of tfie most spectacular on the continent, and each . year, when the Canadian champion ships are decided, produces some rec ord-jumping. >. Canada will send two jumpers and1 two runners to St. Moritz for the in ternational competitions,,/and each club affiliated with the Canadian Ski. Association has been invited to send representatives to «the elimination trials, which will enably selection of the best men to represent Canada for the world’s championships. - This will be the first time that Canada has been represented in skiing competitions at the Olympiad and the first time that . Olympic trials .for skiers have been held in the Dominion/ At the Olympiad there will be three events for slflfera/ > Races will be run over distances of twelve and fifty • miles, respectively, and there will also be the jumping competitions. Canada will be entered* in the jumping arid in the twelve-mile cross-country race. No entries are being made in the fifty-mile crosscountry event, since Canadian skiers do not-train for such a strenuous contest.- ------------ ------ A 1-Book Library! Footprints. Children getting on a street car, Should be made to wipe their feet, Or they’ll always loave behind them Footprints on the trailey seat, Some men ape down and out and others are low down and in. Give to be happy—nothing else mat ters, very much. "Why, Mac, you’ye lost your stut ter!” “Ay, A’ve ben doin’ a lot o’ long distance telephonin’ lately.” O. W* U (On JVitb lengMer) Speaking of th’e high cost of living, the old fashioned dime novel lp now a dollar and a half, postage extra. The world Is amused f rather than impressed* by-the man “who doesn’t know when he’s beaten. Hell may bo paved with good inten tions, but who wants to go there to And out? "Motor, cars have been. Increasing by leaps and bounds, and the pedes/ trians have been surviving by the same means/ • ... ■ Revivalist—“Ah, my brethren, here the church stands,. offering to save you, and what will be your Answer?” Voice In the Rear—/‘Women and children first!” A scientist says the earth is a mil lion years old. Wonder how' long be fore it will be old enough to know bet ter? ' w • ’X"’ Japanese Novel in Serial Form Still Running After ., ,12 Years Tokyo.—A novel that has been run ning serially for the past 12 years, and that is not yet completed, is hold- ,ing the attention of a large, section of the ^Japanese: public. The novel, which is called “Dal Bosafsu Toge,” has already reached 25 Volumes, thus surpassing the previous record in this country in point ‘of size. . Its author, Kaizan Nakazato, ..was the recipient of an enthusiastic,^de monstration at Osaka, organized; by a society'devoted to the reading , of the novel and numbering among its num bers some of Japan’s greatest writers and poets. The book deals with men and wo- mdn living some years before the Im perial Restoration of 1868, and Is In reality an exhaustive study of the characters and conditions of that period in tho nation’s life. It has no one hero or heroine. When, 12 years ago, Mr. Nakazato first began to write it he adopted an original and modern style, departing from that of the classicists, which created a sensation In Japan’s liter ary world. No date has been set for Its ending, nor has any limitation of Its size been announced.---------o-----— ROOSEVELT’S MOOSE IN NEW ZEALAND Moose, the descendants of the ani mals presented by the late President Roosevelt,are increasing in the region of Dusky Sound, Southland. Two ex perienced stalkers* who trekked through that district recently have reported that tho herd- is* well estab lished, Several riioose wefo seen at close range, and there was ample evl- , dcnce of many more in the spoor of the cropped scrub. So close did the observers get that they were able to’, take photographs of two * well-grown bulls—a twelve-pointer and an eleven pointer—which were standing in a stream drinking, - These two hefty i beasts were under observation for i aboH a quarter of an how before they .'won’t take ’em. Why don’t .they make hinged wind- | shields for drivers Jo gp through w’ith- ■ out breaking the glass? 1 * Irate Customer—“Say, you cheated me!" " ’ 1 Grocer—“What do you mean?” ’ Customer—“Why,., darn It,, man,' I ordered "Irish potatoes but your driver said the potatoes he brought.to the house were grown in the suburbs. A doctor declares that kissing shortens life, but we suppose there will continue to ,be those who 'prefer a short life and a merry one. ■X ■ ' - Hostess—“What’S the Idea of bring ing two boy friends with you” <■: Guest—"Oh, I always carry a spare.” < "Are you a doctor?” asked, a lady tourist of a.young man at the soda fountain in a local'drug store. “No,, madam, I’m just a frlzzlcian." Resolved: ,.That hen'cefdrth I’ll en- ^'%vor not to nag, Nor ever show unreasoning heat; I’ll not allow ^he confers.of iny mouth to sag, . , For I look better when I’m sweet. ' And furthermore, my tongue shall not in gossip wag ’ About my neighbor, or Ills wife; I’ll keep my work up as I should, not - let 'it drag,. Since it’s a vital thing- in life. . > My care for simple, worth while things shall never lag; I’ll try to keep my ideals high; ODall these things I hope to do I will not brag, , Nor boast—I simply say, “I’ll try.” Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills Highly Praised by a Quebec Lady. Mrs. David Logan, Thetford Mines West, Que., gives unstinted praise to Dr. Williams’ Pink pills for the good they have done In her family. Mrs. Logan says:—“I have been a user of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for- many years, as occasion required, and have always found them a most reliable medicine. My husband, who was re covering from an attack of typhoid favor, and was in a very weak condi tion, took the pills, and through them ‘ gained health and strength. My daughter was in a run-down condition, and was forced to discontinue work. Agaip Hr. Williams’ Pink Pills were resorted to and she was soon restored to excellent health. Then my eldest boy had an operation performed for adenoids, which left his in a weak ened condition. Onco more Dr, Wil liams’ Pink Pills were tried, and he was soon in excellent health, So I can truly say that more than satis faction has been obtained by the use of this medicine. The pills have done more good in my house than hundreds of dollars worth of'more expensive medicines.” Dr. Williams’ Pink Pijls assist di gestion, correct the lassitude, the pal pitation of the heart, shaky nerves and the pallor of the face and llp^ that a^e the results of thin, Impure blood. You can get these Pills from any medicine dealer, - or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Brocltville, Ont. Ford’s Other Industry Airmen Asking If Ford Plane Is to Follow New Model Car Washington;—The American avia-' Dion industry, as represented at the first general conference in ‘session here under auspices of the Commerce Department, is asking whether a new Ford airplane will follow ’the new Ford car. According to William B. Stout, gen eral manager of the Stout Airplane Corporation, a subsidiary of the Ford Company, who wks’at the.conference, the Ford airport at Detroit ;.is second only in size to the great Tempelhof’ •Field outside pf Berlin, and proposals for the coming year will see it the largest in the world. The Ford air planes are all metaL So far the auto mobile manufacturer has hot gone into airplane engine production, but ,is using Wrigfit whirlwind motors in his 10-passenger machines, makijig round trips daily, in good or bad weather, to Cleveland, Buffalo and Chicago. Em phasis is put on regularity, reliabil ity and precision of performance. Those closest to Mr. Ford declare his whole purpose so far has been to carry out a first-hand test to satisfy himself of what modern aviation real ly. holds for industry. He is doing this on the largest scale yet. attempted by a private individual. Even those who know him Sest are not prepared to forecast how’ soon he will throw the full weight of his resources into the airplane industry. There has been but one accident in , a Ford airplane for two years, Mr. Stout pointed out. This one Was nqt due'to faulty aeronautical construe- tion, but to a cyclone, which wrecked a schoolho*ifbe, in addition .to injuring the machine. The smooth perform ance has been kept up with the pres ent 14 airplanes now operated. "I will not forecast w;hat Mr. Ford will do in aviation,” said . Mr.' Stout. "There is'Only one man who can ever speak f<xr Mr. Ford’s plans, and that is Henry Ford himself.” • Mr. Stout, pilot Of the'Ford venture in tho air, is a. mechanical engineer who at one tifne was head of the Packard Motor Company’s aeronaut ical branch. He believes? the airplanes of the future will be all metal. His corporation joined the Ford group and manufacture has ..continued on this basis. Mr. Stout founded Aerial Ago, was chief engineer in designing a new car for the Scripps-Booth Company, De troit, and diversified his already com plex experiences by designing an all- metal torpedo airplane for the navy. Ho is the author, too*, of a boy’s book on mechanical models, and has been a technical adviser to the Board, Washington. "Why doesn’t Ford make airplane engines ” one of familiar with Mr. Ford’s interest in aviation was recently asked at the aeronautical conference. "Give him a chance; don’t you know he has been busy the past year get ting out a neW model?” was the reply. Aid to. Fbnd Memory Young .Zoologist (who has beefl asked to lecture over the wireless)— though I shall lecture -------- J Baby’s Own Tablets Are the Ideal Remedy for Babies and Young Children Canadian mothers are noted for the care they give their little ones—the health of the baby is most jealously guarded and the mother is always on the lookout for, a remedy which is suf ficient and at the same time absolute ly safe. Thousands of mothers have found such a remedy in Baby’s Own Tablets and many of them use noth ing else for the ailments of their little ones. Among them is Mrs. Howards King, of Truro, N.S., who sayS:-*"i' can strongly recommeml^Baby’s Own .____ Tablets to mothers -of yoitng children j«Xha all the time, darling, Aircraft his own tho m en <7 ■ - World Famous Bronze Buddha One of the most famous and supposedly powerful Buddhas is the.Daibutsu, shown above, favorite deity of the Japanese, standing 49 feet.high. It is made entirely of bronze except the pedestal, this being of stone Inscribed with the fanciful words pf visiting, believers. At a level with the covered feet of the statue can be seen a container wherein a few joss sticks are thrown. As.the sweet-smelling smoke purls toward the huge head the worshipper kneels upon the stone, chanting the prayers carved upon a slab of stone nearby. DEAN INGE CORRECTS ERRORS IN SAYINGS CREDITED FAMOUS . Gloomy Dean Reviews Epigrams, So Often Quoted, to Arrive at Source upon our Empire"? It been first used of stfet imm-enae Of L?*pain, and Napoleon, when posedto "unite Spain Mr ever destinies pf France,” quoted the verb of Spain. A Frenchman, gome years’ residence in England, eald that as applied to the centre* of the British Empire, "the expression Jj- pf coureopurely metaphorical." i « >’■1 Another of Napoleon’s annexion# QF JP is the saying that there is only PhP ' ™ step from the sublime to the radio ■ lous*. It seems to occur first In Mar* montel, and then In the notorious Tom Paine, the Englishman, from whom Bonapartoprobably got it. He kept on repeating it during the retreat from Moscow, of which his unlucky Grand Army probably failed to see tho comic side, An epigram which has had a queer •history is: "No one is a hero to his valet de chambre,” Several French People' A'«s mAing mW and More Tfefe Valu® When the art of prihttor i&'ft utilized for the* publication Qf\b©0k» only a small proportion of* the with atlon in any of the then oJriJfiyafl wuru tries of the world could and la fact if waa a Joflr time afterwaFfla before people generally could nae books for ^maeivM Nowaday* more books aro hring sold than eve^writers, Including Montaigne, are quot- “79 ed as havlnrr said somalhlntr Ilka IL ’ before, but PQOPle bhZJbgg land use. With better Vwi < tlon the greater ip thes jbooks of all kinds. The 1 said to be true of maps; moi^peo- pie learn to use them »o floes the j demand Increase; and ft Is equally true that one must learn to read map. and be able to use It, just aa lone must learn to read words before the printed page Is of any rignlficance. A map la not a word picture, nor is it a photograph, although It contains elements of both*.- Especially is this ;true of the topographic map which l» od as having said something like it. But the epigram is possibly improved when we add: "This, however, is not a hero, but because the valet is a valet.” In this form it was first writ ten by Hegel- (in his Philosophle des Geschichte, p. 40). Goethe borrowed It from Hegel, Carlyle from Goethe, and Disraeli, a great collector of other men’s good things, from Carlyle, epigram is, howeyer, equally un to heroes and to valets*. "The Cup That Cheers” .few miscellaneous plagiarisms*. maY be added. Gray’s “E’en In our I the most complete example of the ashes live their wonted fires,” comes | map-maker’s skill anj serves many from Chaucer, "Yet In our ashes cold j purposes. It is the record of the pa ls fire yreken.” "The cup that cheers * 'tural and cultural features of aty but not inebriates,” is used by Cow- * area, and one of the means of aiding per of tea. But it comes from Bishop development. Such a map shows the Berkeley, who* uses it of tar-water, arable lands; industrial areas; forest whlih “is of a nature sb mild and areas; mineral areas; water power benign and proportioned to the hu-1 sites and storage basins; reclama man constitution, as to warm without jtlon projects; Irrigation areas; sur- heating, to cheer but not lnebrlatte.” * face conformation, etc. This Is from the Slrls, a treatise which | One of the large map making or is divided between the sovereign ganizations bf the Dominion Govern- merits of tar-water and those of the meat Is the Topographical Stuvey. Neoplatonic philosophy. I agree with , Department of the ' Interior. ' D iving the . latter; tar-water I have never ’ recent years this service has been tried. issuing as rapidly as possible topo- “He who fights and runs away may f graphic niaps of various areas llye-to fight another day,” which we ' throughout CanaGSraYi-heiJa^ know as Goldsmith’s, is from ancient I atej in the Greece, and ages' to fortune” Is from "dedimus tot pignora falls.” "w I ) National Topographio Thus, eventually thn whole will be mapped without nver- or without any part being Mapping is, however, a slow _ __ ____ __ ___ and it will be man’’ years be-, things, and dispute our rights in'fore th® wl!oie country will be thus’ them. But there is an. almost unex.,1 tecludcd. As each new. map is ls- plored field or judicious annexation in'sued more people are interested. In the proverbs of China.' A few sped-) order to inform people of the maps mens will show how useful they may j that are ^available* be. “Do not remove a fly from your friend’s foreheaxl with a hatchet.” “No needle is sharp .at both ends.” “Free sitters grumble most at a play.” “You can’t clap hands with one palm.” “A maker of Idols is never an idola ter.” "He who rides on a tiger can never dismount” (a warning to revolu tionists,) "One dog barkh at t some th}/' the rest bark at .him.” “When a \ \bor Is In your fruit garden, InaKw.* on Is the truest politeness.” "Everyone pushes a falling fence.” “We have given host- series. Lucan: 'country ______ _ ________ I lapping It looks as if au industrious invest!-1 missed, gator might hunt down all our good process thingy and dispute < them. ]' MISTAKES PLENTIFUL What is orginality? — - plagiarism. .This is probably itself a Plagiarism, but I cannot remember who said It before me. If originality means thinking for oneself, and not thinking differently from other peo ple, a. man -does- not-forfeit his claim to .it by saying things* which have oc curred to others*,"writes Dean Inge in the London Evening Standard. In fact, when we consider that mil lions of people have been thinking, talking and writing for thousands of, years, it Is not likely that anyone should hit upon anything entirely fresh, unle*ss he is inspired to utter something either transcendently wise or most abnormally foolish. Still, some writers Have, or deserve to* have, a special reputation as* pick ers up of unconsidered trifles*; they riVal the noble-minded Autolycus, who, according to Homer excelled all other men In thieving and the use of the oath. “What hast thou that thou didst not receive?” asks St. Paul. It is a ■good corrective of vanity to reflect how completely we are the children of our age, and how most of the giants In each generation are men of mod erate size, standing on the shoulders of those who have lived before them. Nine-tenths of what’we call progress is simply the accumulation of tradi tion—recorded trials and errors, and a few. lucky shots. When we talk of literary plagiarisms we think, not of whole systems of thought, which may bo lifted with impunity, but of neat sayings,, pre served. for their wit. and wisdom. It is tempting to Introduce one .or two of these to brighten our own argu ments, without spoiling the- sentence by the chilling parenthesis*, "as So- and-so said.” An excess of honesty, expressing Itself between brackets or1 In footnotes, makes Jack a dull boy. Unverified Epigrams I have collected a. good many of these appropriations, some of which may be mere coincidences. My first Class will be of notable sayings, which are constantly quoted with the names of their supposed authors, but which there is no reason to suppose were uttered by their* supposed authors at all. These are not strictly plagiar isms, but they Illustrate the love of | quoting epigrams without verifying them. •Plato rises,” never ___. _ not to be multiplied unnecessarily.” Numenlus Is not likely to have called Plato "an Attic Moses.” Julian can hardly have said on his death-bed, "Thou hast conquered, O Galilean!”] Even that gallant but not very Ihtelli- gent pedant must have realized that the so-cdlled Conversion of Rome In1 never said*, "God geomet- Wllliam of Ockham (I think) B&id, "Ultimates (entia) are Undetected (did not die, and In the second place, „ WQ surrender." This* did not pre vent the town of Nantes from engrav ing the words on the base of his statue. And did* Wellington say, "Up, Guards, and at them”? It seems more than doubtful, heard .to say, though there thought so. Shakespeare and Seneca Lastly, Galileo probably did not say, ."And yet it moves"-Hof the earth; but it does not diminish his achieve ment that he was anticipated In his discovery by Aristarcnus, and " ac cording to Theophrastus, by Plato in his old age. Leonardo, who antici pated most discoveries, wrote In large letters In his diary: "11 sole non Bl muove.” Several famous sayings In our great poets have been traced back to the Greek and Roman classics. Churton Collins collected^ long list of parallels' between Shakespeare and Greek trag edy. Either Shakespeare was better read than Is usually supposed, or “great wits jump” with singular fre quency. But this question cannot be discussed without quoting the Greek texts. In Macbeth, “Canst tlrou not minis ter to a mind diseased,” can be Independent of Seneca’s, pollute queat animo mederi.” Jonson’s famous song, "Drink only with thine eyes,” is a paraphrase of Pllostratus. Milton on Fame— that- last infirmity or noble minds— borrows a fine sentiment from Tacitus '(Histories iv. 6). The well-known "I do not like you, Doctor Fell,” Is may be more colnrldences*. My first nec possum dicere quare; Hoc tantum possum dicere, non amo te.” Dry? den’s* "Great wits are sure to madness near allied,'.’ Is* from Aristotle through Seneca. It Is by no means always true.. A very close parallel between Burns and Claudian must be a mere coincidence, since Burns was not a Latin scholar. "O poorlsb cauld and restless love, ye freck my peace be tween ye. Yet poortith a’ I could for give, An ’t^ere not for my Jeanie.” Claudlan has, "Paupertas me saeva domat, dilrusque Cupido. Sod toler- an da fames, non tolerandus amor.” By a curious fatality, nearly all the pet quotations from Latin betray their spuriousness by containing some sole cism. A typical example 18, "Quern Deus vult perdere, prlus dementat.” (The nearest original is 1 lius Syrus, "Stultum quem vult perdere.” not a classical word, ■responsible foi” mute recommendation,' penhauer" conveyed.” . Who first *said,"It is crime; it is a blunder” Louis XIV >was not "L’etat, e’est moi”; la no doubt that he hhrdly "Nemo Ben to me i h line of Pub- facit Fortuna "Dementat” is Syrus is also 'h beautiful face is a Which Scho- worse than a ____,___ _ . .. .... ? Two Ct the he fourth century was a victory of the greatest rascals in history must fight I Catholic Church over the Empire, not'tor it—Talleyrand, JA whom ills' jftt all a Victory of "tho Galilean” overjusually attributed, and Fouche, who; na- the forces which brought Him to the! claimed it, “ I Cross. * | Kosciusko did not say Question is raised as to the prop- Poland', 'No use erity in Chicago’s creating a monu- did not say at Waterloo. “ 1 M.S, O’Leary’s cow, But dios, but does not surrender uuucv u .xuu* . ......................... {anything to take attention away from bromic hinmolf, baOame aware of Dio nearness of hu-l * —— . Thompsons bull. Albany man belugBi [ Kc6p Mhiard’s Liniment In the house, erbocker Press. as I know of nothing to equal them wfiilbns may be listening in, for little ones.” ibe thinlting of you alone.” Baby’s Own Tablets are sold by J Darling—“And what’s your medicine dealers or by mail at 25 1 old thing?” I Young Zoologist—"Freaks lure.”—Bunch. I I .„.■■■ cents a box from Tho Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brookville, ont.of Young $on( to shoo clerk waiting upon his fastidious* mother): *T._ showing her the first toil pairs—shement to Mrs, O’Leary’s cow >» I 'The oml of Tho Baron de Cambronne ’The Guard Cam- f, twenty years later, Knick- disavowed tho saying, and added with &r<3&t honesty, "In the first place, we via.nx.tju /. These-two men, accord-1 ling to Emil Ludwig, betrayed ahd i ruined Napoleon, who knew their. I treachery, but could not do without them. 1A Famous Phrase | Who first said, "The sun never sots ISSUE No. 53—'27 > an Index of the ‘maps and publications issued by the Topographical Survey will be sent free upon request. ----------<,------— Ouch! "Mamma, can I borrow father’s trouser-press?”. _ 1 “Whatever for?”-' * “I want to play Spanish Inquisition with Helen!’’—Passing Show (Lon don Minard’* Liniment for Cold*. _________ A., „ ■_ .TL- ■ k, New Discovery in Cancer Campaign British Doctor Accomplishes Remarkable Cures of In- ' fected Rats London.—Valuable addition to the campaign' against cancer is described fin this week’s "Lancet” by Dr. Thomas Lumsden, who has accomplished' some remarkable cures of cancer in rats. Dr.. Lumsden conducts his research work- in the Lister Institute under a grant from the British Empire Can- j cer Campaign. He says his experiments prove that the body of the victim develops a re-’ sistance to the cancer infection but usually too late to resist its spread'. His idea is to force the cancer to re veal itself earlier in the stage of its development. For this purpose he in jects into the growth a solution of formalin which has a destructive effect upon the cancer cells. During this year he has treated tumors in 70 rats and has cured 54. Of 25 rats similarly treated since October last 24 have been cured. years, we first sen- American upon a American A constant reader of the political news for these’ last several are ready to provide the tence of a two-sentence Political Tragedy: "Once time there were several statesmen with convictions they were willing to stake, their, careers on.” The only convictions among the pres ent-day politicians are those handed, down in the criminal courts. Classified Advertisements SILVER FOXES. HIGHEST QUAL ITY. Lowest prices. Circulars furnished. Larges, Summerside, P.E.I. TT^GGS AND POULTRY WANTED, lb We pay highest market prices and guarantee complete satisfaction with each transacton. C. A. Mann & Co., Kinr *S^ London, Ont. Frost Bites Minard’S will quicken circulation and prevent furth'e? trouble, eases the burning pain. W SOUTH ENJOY WINTER in the On tlxe Beaiitifill GULF COAST Mild, equable temperature; hevet too hot, never too cold. A laud ef history and romance. Beautiful foliage; Inspiring water vicivs. Out door sports under perfect conditions. Modern, new hotels; also apart- mcnt8 and cottages. The Pan* American, all-Pullman train of de luxe accommodations, leaves Cincinnati daily at 10:20 A. M.t reaching Gulf Coast pcihts early next morning. Other through trains daily. In Qlarioti^ FLORIDA Never ImofiB beautiful, hcvtrraote nllu ring than this winter. SwJtn and fish tn tfnjplesl waters: ulny aolf. tennis, polo and enjoy iuintnet sport* tifjht throuph theWintcr. Every tbfftt i>f delifthtful ent cftalnmenta waits winter visitor*. Splendid through tW in *etVJc» from Detroit and Cincinnati on The Flamingo, and f.-orn Cihchmati on The Southhnd. Wvlte for fire clesiriptive Iterditire, or for in?oH;iAhah to faui, or Terctuitioajt— II, & PORTER, T»'«v. iWr Agent OF17-N (Dept ‘"W L”) 605 Traniportation Bu!kling, Dctrait, Kliclrigan LOUISyiLLB & NASEWILLE R. K,_ „