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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1935-08-29, Page 2'Li' ?W/P ■”/' '.Ed- Marriage Makes For Long Life nose-—which; is one. big’ freckle—mt-a recent contest. His smile makes PITY POOR MOTORIST •Haid^isifndea(L„.,4s^tjie Jot of tTie Sa ~ff^i4y~^;-(W^esXer-4ays afe a^egulL, i B * n J of4 the h uni hie.—Erasmus! ft 4 rS> A I II \- p. frr th'i ’•• • . Rob .Turpin won-the World’s Freckle Face Championship.. by.a- nose—-which; is one. big freckle—-at a recent contest. His smile makgs his freckles run together., . ■ ’ ' Sleep, *over and For I - am weary of and. fain would . —Angela ' i ** * Ft is vain to 'gather . . , . .. out humility; for the Sjyrit. of .God (lolfghtetli 'to, dwell in the. hearts KNEE PLUS ULTRA' ; reportx, O'laf Ih<» . ''.I on’s U',;d 'r .’Tiowhig, at <”’;i ,iel's Jvi-k revealed ' the ' fetnin;tie —---..----- 4 Or MODERN GIRLS after a period some- •to as “the good old .'.ppafontly ? Mr. Lloyd in spite qf year's that _.___/ FARM prices rising ' The/'most....saTiSTactory •.yedr~rtor- livestock production since, 1930, is his feigned violence, is appearing in -rMs-eri-e’o—of—ar-t-i-Gles—th-is_week.^... Th e “SEVEN DAYS IN THE MAD­ HOUSE” ■ ■ : CANADA THE EMPIRE THE WORLD AT LARGE Spotted As Champion By Freckle On flose ' CANADA.. ■ / FAITH in. humanity ; .. . :. jCliinese Uupd'ryman.• iii 'Bronxville, N.Sl; went‘for a holiday.-and left- a note in” tlie Window telling people to get’ ttfeir iaundry ..as tlie'door was-not. iockpd. ^W-eydpubt’ '‘wheflier ' tliis' gen? ' tlamanThas' been thoroughly civilized and Christianized since coming to ■ -this country. — Stratford Beacon- 7Herald. • , ' PAINTING BARNS ' After....a;.. lapsX ■. -oT.-five' full years., . Canadian farmers 'are beginning to paint their barns again. There is no general rush, but ' here.; and there ■v -tdivougih—mpst of the ,'mixed farming-' areas, examples ■ are ' readily nbted. • . While important endugh -in 'jitself in view of the immense area to be cov­ ered • in familiar red, green or white, ' the significance of the return-of barn pa’iftt is that it- means -the first real . indication of a return of permanent- ■ .ly better times' .to.-. Canadian -agrieijL’ ‘ tUF'et' Financial: 'Ppst:;■*-“'~ “* GOOD SALESMAN1 . . * - If. the large number of peb-ple Who hay© visited the Canada Shop in London since its opening -last week is maintained until', the date of'dost .' ing, • the. promoters should .be more. ‘ ’ than; pleased "with the publicity given : to Canadian food, products through this practical advertising medium. ■■ On Saturday last the number of. visi­ tors'. was checked.. Np. fewer ‘than .2,- _. 3,00 passed, along tke , counters 'and- inspected^ dhe Jo6dF^fuSsT-TK^'mar jority of them purchased samples,' as a result of which it . is. reasonable to anticipate enhanced sales by re- . tailers^ip the locality and in such . other localities as -were, represented . by 'the visitors. — Canada’s Wgek'ly," London; . - ' . ' . the report made-by a packing com- .... pany._,___ ____; __;_____ t ~ ■ There- are”, many "'other evidences' •of this condition. Prices in all lines of livestock have advanced a long way from, the low- .point registered about four years ago. The same tilling applies. to most of the other .-minor products ’of the farm y- dairy produce, poultry and eggs.’ and all the many products from which the . well-anaged farm ’, derives much of It,5 revenue. — Winnipeg Tribune. knee. .*You may 'romember, that joint, it was much.iu evidence before the . .ijeprbssidm Then,- along .with-stocks and - things in general’,■ ■ ^kif t tgemS'. came .crashing do-wp. For-tire p'a.:t ■ five .years it has, been discreetly con- cealecL.almQsf every\yhiefp except in £he Tudist camps.' * .a ' . May there hot be' ail outside ■Chiince that- business and. fashions are re- . lated. in.rsome way' or another?. Cer- ■ ytainlyM business jj-looking up. And now skirts are apparently following suit Chanel., has ■ chopped" off three- ‘ inches rtt One stroke/;an upswing' as convincing as’.anything provided by economists’ charts. . • . When ‘the ,coy patella' once ■ more .blossoms forth i ^in all its pristine p’erfOctibn we shall, perhaps known- the cornerihas been turned and that we .are again to find oursplv.es knee­ deep in prosperity. -—.Windsor Star. ' SUN TANNERS BEWARE.! Intense'’sunlight, lias, the , same ef-. • feet on the body, as it lias on the tap of .an automobile. It causes de- ' hydration, and' premature wrinkling. —Hamilton .Herald. > „■■■■■. ■ ‘ : LESS RELIEF AT THE SOO , There are one-third- fewer, families on relief in ‘ilie'Stiult- dWth'e’"pre'sent- time than there \\ere a year-ago,, the ' figure, now being about .'40.0 compar-. ed to 600 at the end of July, 1934. ■That is a welcome improvement in conditions, and contrastedto the .figure 'of over 1,500. families on r.e- - --l'i-ef~4n-^--Mayr--44)33^—shows.m...steady.;, -■'gain since that time, '• N - This is due to a large, measure tp' the betterment of. industrial con­ ditions here, .'resulting from the re­ organization of, the steel plant and ■ from the general ■ advance in 4busi? ne:s and 'employment . throughout Canada. ' • ' ' ' There are indications, too, that . -tii.iiigS-_wjIL.continue to improve . uri- ’ less,some untow'ard event happens -Lt:O'-eause-th-e-preseut—tden(l-to-'.be-u.ps.et^ —Sault Ste. Marie Star. ... .'s WAS COSTLY LESSON - . . ; Twenty-one years ago. — June 28, to be exact a Bosnian youth-fired a shot into Europe’s powder box and set "the world on fire. The nightmare that, followed resulted In the death pf 10,000,006. soldiers and 13,000,000 ■ civilian?,. in- 20,000,000 maimed,, im dollar losses of 500,000,000,000. Every nation, lost, - and every nation still Is paying for its defeat, says the Pitts­ burgh-, Press.- —^i-t'he-^ui4aee^the-4varld_ahp£ars^ occasionally give ■ him ten “days in jail., and sometiines actually deprive him of the privilege of driving a car for as such as a few months; And' all of this simply because lie delib­ erately placed a large number of fel­ low citizen/ -in danger of instant death or of the losfe of. limbs' or of - horrible and painful lacerations. — Toronto Telegram. ,A DEFENDER ?N.j .h anker er times referred- times” is, . George who, ' .aw occasionally considered - rather advanced', is- sulliciently youthful in spi it and .hut look to re.l'rain from’ tfie »1'.iult-tindiag ih- regard 'to the rising • g< m ration (,f whrch older people are 'Hi ol’Dn girilty. ' / ........ For from bemoaning, what. he finds ; in- 1)1 darn Touh'i, the former Prime Mi: 1 Ur ev',17?iNTy considers t/iut it i*?.’ (j'.iia”l ■ I".; per ' '-.day when Im (a product ol the . Vh" or.,.m c.. • p. ■Na.’:.'i gran1 pp._ f'.rt’--d i ' MuI'l.r’.,>n which makes h i.'./’-Thc' eld academii s' ■ ladro.-;—th--y wrio ’ d h.e wont' on w :ri exp.'iisiv w-r'l they 'were P,’-." „l’e . !{■■('(.rdor,' rinh’f, , at least t-tm t'e- :t: lie siid. so the, ;• ’d' it 'UA “prim ■ in.ii'kod' that he imidor.i girl and the r what she ' for -young not girls in those to ay, “aj b-st ivo joko, an I at. their •an atr.im-'v,” —1 and Tim-'s. ISM'’Illi 111 III II As"? / ||Eki I ■ -O’. Value -of- ; ■. . By Actual Test With Product — NEW. YORK,—Advertising' doubles the' number of persons familiar hvith a-•brand,- -•t-r-iples- -t-he - number--~w-ho—tr-y_ it and quintuplets the number of us-, ers. ■ •These figures are averages ■ from "a study of bond paper made by Charles C. Stech, research expert in advertising. Actually the "scanty, atK. vertiser gets a smaller rate of re­ turn. than his average. wbila-ptlie big one gets an increase much -greater,_ ___________■ .______ Stetcli studied the use of-27 brands mF“bcratI-paper-by-irr-i-irt-ers—Jl-e—lea-i-n=- ed the percentage familiar with each, brand, ’ the -percentage- who- ‘tried -oju-t- -each one and,the percentage who be­ came regular usdrs. / - ■ Therp? were three brands of paper know to more than 75 per. cent of the- printers. , Of theSe 72 per cent tried out-the three brands and 20.4 per cent were regular users of them. At theobottoni were seven brands of paper, known to 14 per cent of the’ -------? ---------------1—a—j„:............................. . printers. Six per cent had tried them out and less than half .of one per -cen.Uof---tlLes.e.„priiiiexs.,us..edt the^sey„en.. When the average of persons know­ ing about ,tlie brands .was ■ raised to 35 per cent, in a different group Of bond papers, the trials rose to 15,' per cent but the regular' customers rose, only a tenth pf one per cent. But when the papers were reaqjied^ known- to 50 per cent of the printers the users-rose to nine per cent. 7 Abdve ' 'th'at'' came' the "pherronremaT jumt> to 20.4 customers in the ,top- most three--kinds of. bond paper. * ; The' study; showed- an . unusually large increase in steady customers whed nearly everyone3 was familiar with the brand. No saturation .point was revealed. The highest single brand was known to 96 per' cent of the printers, and apparently its reg­ ular users were far greater in pro­ portion than those of any of the les­ ser known papers^’ According To Statistics Those Who Are Wed Live Longer .^^Thari Those Whose Lot Is: Single Blessedness Tliete are nearly 6,QUO marriages' every week in England; 857 a day, or. nearly thirty-six an. hour! A care­ ful analysis of thd British Reglstrar- Gbnerars- latest review shows that, dii an ‘average, thirteen out of. "each 857 marriages will end in the DL , vorc'Q Court; Superstitious p.eppie, {please take note. Thai"dreaded niim- 1 ' her thirteen. ■ ' Consider; though, how small- a .per/’ .'centagp- thirteen- in every S57 reprp. ?sent-s. Immediately someone is divor­ ced ql! tlip old talcs- about 'six-month marriages are-dug out and.-paraded with mubly shaking of heads. It’s iso Unfair. Divorce is.not nbarly as popu­ lar as some people would 'have us •believe. Roughly, about. 1% her bent, of our marriages end in diyor'ce. A very small proportion surely?. “People can’t afford to marry-young -t.odayTT-they.. leave..it tilL later in. life,’’, “Wd are-marrying, later.” How often, liave you heard those remarks?. They, have no foundation, in fact? PEOPLE-MA-RRY -EARLY^_^_- Let us 'take you/back to* the Reg- istrarTGenei’al. Tils accuracy i; quite' ruthless; hi A figures unquestionable,., And what do we find? Out of 367,000“ marriages in 1932 over-5,.000 men mar- r.ie.d before they were twenty, 13,000 married—iunder twenty-aine and a'n- . othe£_ 150,000 ' by the time they ■ were tWehty-six. . These' figures' Of course;- concern bachelor bride-grooms. Thus, <more marriages ’in. Ehg-land take place at or under the age of twenty-1 six than, at any other time. Why» teil iu. then, that men have* ceased . to' ~nTarry-youn-g-? -Ji^-^a4y^s-I-jMs--ba.r-ely: a- bath-chair age. ' " ' r ’ ' -With spinster brides 'it . is the- same: 47,000 married . before'.they were over twenty, 49,000 under- twen­ ty-one-and 161,000 before they yvere more, than twentypix: .... Th© average' age .of the bridegipom_ tod-ay is twenty-seven, Zand of the' bride* twenty-five. “Youthful enough. * , Incidentally, there has been little, variation in this average for the last thirty years.'Between 1901 and 1905 the actual average .was 25.37 for spin-ter brides,, and . 2G.90 for. bache­ lor bridegrooms. Extremely youthful marriages still occur.__In 1932 sixteen, men were married at the age -p?"s'ixT^SfiC'”hiid'’. -o-uftn-^OfiO-^hefoxfiL—they. were twenty. With women n0 fewer than 758 were married at sixteen, and 28,000 before they vtqpe twenty. ^-7—Visco-Unt—CeAiI in London the results of a great peace referendum.' The English electorate voted’ 11,000,OOO' tb 335,000 for Brit­ ain to remain in the League of Na­ tions; 10,000,000 to 800,000 for- a gen­ eral arms • reduction’; 10,000,000 to 700,000 for taking the profit out of arms traffic; 10,00’0.000 t0 600,000 to apply economic pressure to attacking nations. Here was a popular vote tor’, law and peace voice, as Lord' Cecil said, in ’ “pas. ionatij intensity.” • , When' the inasls.es are willing to fight the warmakers as passionately as they*v|haVe been fighting imagin­ ary enemies, tho sword-rattling rul-- ers . of earth -will, find themselves ..without armies'to fight .and, .without taxpayers to pay for their follie,':— SI. 'Caibarines Standard.’' HARDER TO MARRY ? It.is harder for young .men'to marry now than i.t was years ago, according . to tho United Statps Commissioner 6f Education, owing’ ’to the broader outlook of Women. lie holds that marriage is nid. • very attractive' to many of these bright modern girls— ■certainly not so attractive as to uhef,r grandmothers. They have the -alter­ native choice of careers and conse­ quent independent'>. . -- KingRon Whig-S fa’n dard. . . The1' above banner ' line appeared recently on the Chicago Daily Times .front page, referring to the experience of Frank. Smith* Daily Times report­ er, who S|Pen| sevent days and nights in an asylum.' The sensational' story- was the result of Smith bepig “com-' Ipitted'.’^to the Kankakee, I'll State Hospital. - • • ' , For the occasion. Willis O’Roarke, i another Daily Times 'reporter., be­ came Smith’s “brother,” and com­ mitted bis. to the state 'insane hp-- pitai, following the* receipt. >of num­ erous complaints by the Daily Times that conditions Were particularly, bad at the - Kankakee institution: To as­ certain conditions, Smith, a former college football player and life guard, who ' tips. tlie- scales at 200 pdfends, was asked Iq do a -series of articles. In. addition to interviewing officials, and other persons, he undertook to ^pend a week as an inmate in the hospital. . * ■ ’ • ■ His story of brutal treatment, be­ ing subjected to unsaditary condi­ tions. including 15 hours in a tub’ of dirty, flowing' river water to cure pel, managing editor. All marks of identification were re­ moved from Smith’s clothing before he and O’Rourke set out for Kanka-' kee. In relating his struggle with hos­ pital attendants. preparatory to .being subjected- to the “water treatment,” Smit^ states: >"" “With”1 -something like pardonable shame I have to admit' here and now that if I could, have made ’ myself, heard,, I vrould have given up-uncon- , ditidnally. I’d have confessed to ev­ erything. To hell with the investiga­ tion. .To hell with the job.” ' ‘ ■ After being released from the hy­ drotherapy ward, Smith .participated in the-routine of a patient, sub£0pted to the. common drinking Cup, vile food' afid general over-crowded condL tibns., ILej.said’ in. .his story he par-, tieulariy criticized over-crowded cbfi-. dif 'ns. . . - • j - ' •-------•■ World Weary ABUN%!&&&- 0!± CR<:)pS ' Nature lias’p^, good to' Canada tl'.u year.. Right across th? Dominion from NT-va Scotia to British Colum­ bia l-te.ro are bountiful’ Crops, it is d.:,ubt,ful if Oaiurio, and particular­ ly Western Ontario, ever had such a,l)iindaiioe of crops. I fay, wheat, oats, co; n.v vegetables, fruit,, . everything grown in this- f-rtile pofiinsula. will have yields ah > the average. L'ledon" Free Press, ' A?*% < ' •4 R wa< revealed last wook lh.it the donor of 'the . A'aonynwms ’’Education Fund- I'oi’' the (,’iihlron pf odiccrs ot I ho. Royal.-Air' Force. : which, since 1028, has exp ':.<iod nearly £4,000, was tho •into’Mr, 'T. E. Shaw, -y- Col­ onel jaiwronCo of Arabia. The fund was financed by.ih.« money received Ti’o'ni the .piihlma?i 4n of Lawfenco’s book,- “Revolt “ ip , I he Desert.” ’iV’e (incision Io make- this fact. ]:n .'v.:i' Was "I a .mei’H.ig qf' Ike c..'i:ic:,l of-'' th > 'Riyal Air Force Benevolent* Fund over which Lord Wakefield presided^ £_Ill..a letter to the' Press Lord ■Wa;k-<t(jeld said.: . ' - “Mr. T. K. Shaw allowed him­ self no share in the financial >. uC- cess of his book,’ ‘Reyolt in tfi'e Dosorl,’ and £16,000 receivdd ■' from this source was invested, so . as to establish . an 'educational - fund for .the benefit, of the chil­ dren qf officers of the Royal Air .. Force. “The Anonymot s Education Fund, as it . him always been known in defcrcnco to bis wisfi- • es. .has since 1928 expended ,nmy- ly £4;f)b(T; ditring -1934 alone it wits able Io. provide £795 towards.l|he ('diical imi'• -.pf 42 ’clfilhlrcn, the majority of ' wlKim are . l’al.lioi:.' les.;,*’ ’ - In fuliiro.^' Lord Wakefield sai’d; /the fund will ' Ire known, as '“.I’hp '• Lawimnvc of- Arabia. Educational Fund.” London Timos. Lay me down in the arms of Sleep,,' in the comfort of her breast. For I arfi wear/ of . all but her and fain would be at fest. 'Hide me'.close from the car^s that haunt Hie futile, » waking hours, . And round and over me shed the scent of unremembered ‘pow-’ ’rs. .’ ■-----—■—~ < At the atbpr extreme . 1,811 mej and-604 women .-married between th<^‘ ■ ages of-sixty^veAud’sixty-nine. T** cap. even that —r' eighty-six men am -ten women xnarried when Rnj.y wer past' eighty. , , ' ■ ' Which, is. the most dangerous yea of wedlock-.?' u-teople talk learnedly. ,1’roni experience . of t 'wflh;itj entire. Ih^k ’ofc. :fr6niaiice, its. dreaded-Anonut-ony. O ' perhaps "they will ...warn you agains ■■ .the fii'St..'' - • , ' * Exaniiu'ed in (he cold light of l^^r and figures? both seem wrong. Mw? xnarriagesl 'are,''.wreek-ed. ,i-n -.the t^ntl-. year-.i-llan at '.any- other .tiifiA. '■ ' '•'.Unions''-to the number of^ 1,0.4' .. ' Which, had lasted between" five aiw ten years were dissolved in 1932, am • 1,4.42' of between "ten and. twent} years’ duration.. ■ Only ninety-fivy sought separation ~ after 'le...s thai two'yea.F'S, anti"uiTdeF 4'50 after"merii." ttha-n- twenty, years. So' scrap youi • fears- about the notorious jiumbei thirteen-' and' beware-,of matrimonial: .bickerings'in the tenth year of mar-, .riage. ' - ■ Doctors , often advise their '.patients . to get married. .“It i^ manR. natural ’/ state.” they say, ' “and the; one in ,;which lie is likely to b^h**rao.st •healthy.’.’ Very true. Statistics'whole-'" heartedly support that view. ,. ’A ■CompaT-isbii-. Gf-'length-of-life ..an<L_.T,:_. marr.iage statistics reveals the fact that married, people . Hve longer, on the whole; than unmarried. . '. BRIDEGROOM’S AGE — 88 ! ■ We hear much talk of second mar- ..riag-es. these days. .'Certainly ;tjiey are' becoming more popular. It is argued, very reasonably; ■ that people who have married and failed once are not likely tp‘make the same mistakes if' they marry a second- time. In 1932' some 14.50.: Widows married again, 6,800 to..bachelors and' .7,700 t0. wid­ owers. "rnPflie "’sum A ”yeart~aT’proxnma-“ teiy 23,000 widowers remarried, 15,— 500 to spinsters and 7,5.00 to widoW3.._ From this it appears 'that Widowers are- twice as likely to remarry as widows, while widowers, are far^ more fascinating to spinsters than to widows. ;Actually, in the year 1932, c^ie of of every sixteen people mar­ ried was married a second time. ' ” ~Bbtir/tli?e~ Widow • and-' • wid o wei^Wre—- - becoming far more cautious of mar­ ry ing again, ‘Widowers, in partlcu- ~ lijr,. l.pave it until late , in life. Thiis. the greatest number of widowers re­ married in 1932. between the ages of fifty ant} fifty-four. Over 2,000 left- it. until sixty -v sixty-four. One Peter pin suddenly got the spring mad- liess in his veins at the age of ninety!-. The greatest liumbei* of widows- re­ married between thirty-five—Uhlrty- nihe. Nevertheless, 516 waited until, sixty-five—sixty-nine, and one even developed a soul-storm at eighty- ’eight. The average age' of wid'ower . bridegrooms . is forty-nine, and Of •wi flo-w—bi'ides—foi-ty4oijr.- ; . , iWfrWi. most dangerous yea * . of lhe sevonti!'with; it,j entire Ripk 'ofc glampur am :fron-iaiice, its. dreaded-Anonut-ony. O. Bid1 the darkness to fold- me, the; stars to veil .iheir light, ,, And mute. the pulse of eternal • life—the music of the night. I-Iush the murmur' of waters’ flow,' '" and let there he no song, , > But only an untouched silence in a night depp and long.' , JI ' * ‘.A Send me nought but . obliyidn: no thought, no dream, »no pain; Whisper , not through the darkness . tliht I must wake again, ut,: lay me dbwn in the, arms of ever blest, j all. ,buti her, ■■ be a^rest.X T\. Dawes. V virtues- wilhi .. 2854 Here’s one of those simple day.. frocks that finds an" important place in every waidrobe, . It’s fashioned of wooly -looking crepe, silk witjh satin-back in.rusty n brown! The e.a'^y-to-sew sleeves that -cut iii one with the ,'shduldf- ers,. made , of t-he ro verse si le of the crepe, provides smart' •con­ trasting effect, Style No. 2864 is' designed for sizes 14, 16, IS years, 36, 38 and ■10-1nch bust.--— - Size 16 ■ requires . ’2% yardA-Of 39-incli' With P/a yards of j trusting, HOW TO ORDER Write "your name plainly,-, giving r....' of'- such ■ patterns » 20c in/stamps or coin preferred; wrap il ■ care-^ ... ........- . and ad- order tp Wilson Bat- Werl Ailolai.-Io material-’ 3 9 -in ch con- FATTERNS ....~ and. address number ami, size* ... , ........... as you want.' Enclose 20c in'.’ stamps (coin preferred; wrap ■fully) for each number, dress your tern .Service, 73 ’St., Toronto. rying again', ’Widowers, in pafticu- spinsters the w^lower is, on an av­ erage,-ten years older than liis bride. Dark Thougrht For 1936 / . • While we naturally ■ admire thfl horticultural or biological expert with , a taste for research who by combining the best qualities of dif­ fering fruits- gives us a new and bet­ ter fruit, or hy careful selection and breeding furnishes us with thicker hnd' tenderer beefsteaks, yve may not Sufficiently reflect upon what might happen if Nature turned her hand; toward the production* of bigger and better pests. Yet something of the kind is happening in the insect world if w& are • to believe Winnipeg des­ patches. A mosquito has made its appearance there which has- so far improved upon the* ordb^i'y mosquito ’bite—from the* mcsqfiiw point of vipw—that it can remove a small­ segment .of the human'7 form divirie with'' eve'ry ’ nip.' Evidently, here is ■ something new, a grafting of the black-fly zbito technique upon that blight of the Canadian verandah, the ordinary house mosquito, that ventures where the black-fly dare not show its heqd- The nc.$'l step J3 manifestly to improve the mobility, of this new typo pest. Our godfl old-- fashioned, mosquito is a bit slow on th© wing and oven- slower aifd.c.t,- -■ its most serious handicap is the work of rendering human Bfo hijs- crablc.'Armed”-With a black-fly bite and the housc-by’s .pn;l speed of Wing, and pef^ps slightly streamlined, liext- year’s model of the mosqii'to ought to be someth,J-i# thnt Will' lift---Ganad.a out of tho' depres­ sion,-—or anything .else it may bedsit- ting in. If man can produce the <ttl- talo and the ugl'i, why should-Nature not come back with a patent mos . quite?—Montreal a-ily Star. ■ One luindrod and two years ago. JuncJfltlR 1893, John Wilson and Robert L-yon, two young- stu'dents-at- law at Forth, fought a duel' in North Eimsloy near the Ta-y Tti-ver on thfi. cyts’iirts of the town, tho latter bo ing, I'h'ot dead. Wilson aftorWardi hora’.mc-a Justice of the Sup'rem* (’0U|it of Ontario.;—Courier. .