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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1923-10-25, Page 2G. eTAIVAlt7 OTA.GOA.1-1,T &TAGGART BROS, • BANKERS . '.general Banking BU0Inee4 transaet. ed, Netes Dievounted, Drafts leaned, Interest Allewed ota Deposits: Bale' Notee"-Purelfased , , . T. RANCE rioc4i7 .pvbcco,, poirecyanoccr„' .tinandact, float Estste and Fire 10, salance Agent,• Renneienting: 14, VIre laseranee coinnautes.' Oiviaion Deurt Office, Witten. . W. 6.1tIVDONE 14arri9ter, Solicitor, Notary Public, etc. Office; SLOAN Eil-OOK 'CLiNTON DR: J. -C. GANI)IER omc -i-..--i.30 to 3.30 pin., 7,30 . tb 9.00 p.m. Sundays, 0,30 te 1.30 thra.. ' Other hours by appettitment only. Office end Residence — VIctotla • DR.' WOODS is resuming ,practie'e.'et his residence, D„firce leours,..—a to 10 a.m. andel to Buedays, 1 thee pare, for „ceel . saltation. , DR: S. BROWN L.M.t.C.. Office 1.30 to 3.30 p.m. 7.30 to 9.00 p.m. Sundays 1.00 to 2.00 p.m.' Other hours'by aPpointment. . Office,213W 'ReSideInCe, 210.7 „. DR. ,PERCIVAL flEARN • ,, Office andResidence: Huron 3treet Clinton, Ont. ' Phone 09 (Formerly occupied, by the late Dr. 0..-W, Thoinpson). -Dr. A. Newton Brady Bayfield 4,1radiaate Dublin University, Ireland. -Late Extern Assistant Master, Ro- tunda Hospital for Women and Ghil- azIren, Dublin. Office at residence lately occupied by 'Mrs. Parsons. ` /lours 9 to 10 axe, 6 to 7 pan. , Sundays I to 2 p.m. G. S. ATKINSON • D.D.S., L.D,S, Graduate Royal College of Dente: Sur. geons and Toronto tJniversity DENTAL SURGEON Bas office hotirs Bayfield In old Fog Office 13uilding, Monday, Wed. nesday, Friday and Saturday' front 1 to 5,30 p.m. DR. W. R. NINIMO CHIROPRACTOR • Consulting Hours 9.30 to 12.00 0.01,, 2.00 p.m. to 5.30 p.m, 7.00 p.m. to 9.00 pan, Phone 68 Normandie Block - Clinton, Ont. CHARLES B. HALE Conveyancer, Notary Public, Commie- afoner, etc. REAL ESTATD AND INSURANCE HURON STREET - CLINTON GEORGE ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron, Correspondence promptly unswered, Immediate arrangernents can be made tor Sales Date at The News-Recorci, Clinton, or by calling Phone 203, Ch erg 03 Alocierate und Satisfaction Guaranteed. - B. R. IiIGGI1VS Clinton, Ont, General Fire and Life Insurance. Agent for Hartford Windstorrn, Live Stock, Automobile -and Siekness and Accident Insurance. Huron and Erie and Cana. da Trust Bonds. Appointments Iliad° • to meet parties' at Brucelleld, Varna. and Dayfield. 'Phone 57. Little Friend the Partridge The Story of tt Valiant Little Mother Bird 1/Vho Reared 'a Lage Parttily—By E. L. ChIcariet. Although in the emirs° ef yearsstay in Alberta I have shot hundrede of partridge's, the most poig- nett memory poseees pf to geme little birds is not a the slatiettered one brought in at close of day to an PeaSe appetites, jeetifiably created, but et a little bird I never abet, ell'e I would into to' thinle nevee fellevictim to the gun of, spertsman On farmer'but, at a ripe old age,' peeped sereely out of This world to another where the existence of vvild oreaturee is not one continual euccesaion of dangers arid heZards. • The facto I will here relate occurred at a ,time and under circumstances when man had to make his friends of .the dumb animals or do withoet them,' and it surprising how many of the ereatures of the wild will come half Way to meet man's a v ne One morning I was made aware of the certainty of spring's arrival by, the loud and unmistakable tatoo ora, male partridge dpon a drumming log ' in the copse at the baek of our cabin. It rolled long and insistently, imperi- ous and commanding, brooldng no re- f nsal, and echoed -widely in the still air of the wood. There-tould not re- main in the minds of hearers any vestige of doubt but that this strenu- ous drummer had been left the sole and undisputed monarch of that par- ticular domain. By the way he was advertising his presence, however, he was not so keenly desirous of remain- ing a/one, ?RAMIE PARTRIDGE COURTSHIP. • It requieed most cautious stalking, and I made several unsuccessful 'at- tempts, to obtain a view of him en his log. But it was worth the waiting \ The McKillop Mutual • Fire Insurance Company Head Office, Seaforth, Ont. OiRECTORY; Thesident, James Coneolly, Geaerkh, elee., James Evans, BeecLwood; See.. 71 ensurer, 1 eos E Seaferth. Directors. (Merge McCartney, sea. forth; a F. McGregor, Seaforthi .1 G. ti ley e, Wei ton Wm, Meg, Seafeetia: 11. NielEwen, Clinton, Robert Ferries, Ha Hock , .lonn lienueweir,13rodhagen; Jas Connelly, Guderich, Agents: Alex Leitch, °uncoil. J. W. yea, Geaerieh, 15t1 Ilincliray, Sea, torth; W. cheases, Eiguaoadvillei G Jermuth, Brodhagen. Any money to be paid la may be paid to Moorish Clothing 00 , GliatOni Ot at Cult's GroberY, GOderich, Parties dewing to affect lus Or transact otber busiteos wilt be promptly attended to on application to" OW, of the above officers addressed to their respettive 0001 otE L Inspected by the Director who lives nearest the scene. CLINTON NEWS.RECORD CLINTON. ONTARIO ' Terme af Subsereptien--eeeer per yoftro in Ad vimee, LO Oaamilau 66dr/epees; • tee() te the U.S. pv ether renege cotestries. No paper dIseontibued MIDI all arrears alee paid unlese the option of the pirlieher. me elate to which evert atibeeription te teed le dehoted on the label, - Advertising Rateis—Traesfent adeeie •, efeeeteete, 10 cents per neeperell Ilea for drat ineertioca Iliad 6 ants P00 line foe tacit isubeeettent Meet. 000,, Smell advertleteneete not to eXtiecid one inch, sitelt 08 "Streettel," or "Stolen," dee itleetted ,once ear 35 tent% and each militias' <Meet tesertion 16 eente. Ceennunleatione int -ended- for pubil, eaten nutet, Itti it guarantee 01 gocd faith, be accompanied be the mime of , the writer, ' larnepegs ohe made teooi1tote eieele the two trees and filially retired into twine eeskateen 'hushes from which, no doubt,• she kept a carafe' eye ee until I was setiefled 4ed retired. • , A itfpramip mtnINDSMR. Every day afterwards I visitedlier net and slowly slie.everte'to realize I intended her to harm, for, little by little, I ohertened the dietaage betWeen 'us until I Was permitted to approach quite cloee and at watching her with- out her exhibiting any fineasinese gave to turn an occasional beady eye upon Me. Another egg was added to the nine end on the nestful she sat, soli- tary all day, except to adjoufa at feed- ing tiree to the drumming log er, to the creek to drink. During the period of incubation the warm sun and fertile rain brought forth luxuriant grasees and shrub e and soon the prairie round, arldeli had been shorn by the fire, was a mass of. young green, foliage, com- pletely bueying the nest .and forming a prothctive alcove over the sitting I bird, •" 1 "My Periodical visits were'interrupt- ; ed by several days of heavy ram Whiph discouraged excursions into the sod- ; den and, dripping timber. I rather wondered how my little friend was ; getting along in the downpour and, as soon as the weather was fine I enough, went back into the wood. A deserted nest greeted me. Nothing re- mained but a mass of empty egg shells and one whole egg which had failed • of ets, iesue. The last of my little friend, I thought, and proceeded once again to forget all about partridges. „ THE) -030Iital WING" RUSE. A few days later 2 was strolling along an old bnffalo trail which rah and trouble. A finer example of cell- past the discarded nest when "whir -r" bentraeed vanity and egotism it would and my old friend, now a mailer of be most difficult to find. Although he nine, flopped laMelY at MY feet and pretended not to know, he must have as if exhaested front wounds rolled been aware that it shy little hen part- painfully along the path, a wing deag- ridge was closely' obeerving him from ging In the dust. Simultaneously some place in the brush neither of Ils caught a glimpse of several brown knew, and he was engaged in exhibit- speckled little balls which as suddenly ing his fine points in a most sciimu- disappeared with the rapidity and per - Ions manner. His pompous strutting plexity of . a conjuring trick. First up and down tbe log left not a thing they were there, then they weren't. to be imagined. The ruffle about his There was no sound' save the pained neck stuck out, symetricelly rounded, cry of the mother bird enticing roe dike an Elizabethan collar.,His mag- to follow her and get away from her nifIcent tail with its seln.i-ereeller Pin offspring. I had not moved and knew feathers was showing to the best pos- eeractly -where those brown specks sible advantage. He Was certainly On ought to be though there was not the exhibition and knew it and exerted slightest stir to indicate their pres every dandyish lure to bring the little enee, caa,..eany took one step lor- hen to his feet. 'ward and. there was a frightened , At the next observation I managed to make I found the compelling attrac- tionand conquering hero attitude of the male bird had Overcome the mod- esty of the little hen and she had com- pletely surrendered to her wonderful mate. He strutted about as magnifi- cently as ,ever end she seemed quite sensible of her good fortune in having secured so snlendid a matrimonial prize. He was early training himself for family affairs, however, and scratched longer and moxe vigorously in the eaten wood, pausing occasional- ly to draw her attentioe to some dainty he had unearlied. Front behind a screen of willows I followed their progress down to the creek where they drank together. Then came a time when I suspected the male bird came to the copse alone. Every morning I heard the drumming on the log.but on the one occasion I could appitleach sufficiently close to the locality he was unaccompanied, and, I imagined, -different. He was still a bird supremely conscious of his own weeth, but soine of the conceit seemed to have been taken out of him oe his vain ehallow, egotistical bachelor atti- tude had disappeared 'under the res- ponsibilities of a pater families. mseOvenne THE NEST. I was returning to the shack one eveeinge, partridges 'being positively the last thing' upon my mind, when al - meet at my feet a bird arose so abruptly and noisily that for the mo - meet I was startled and unnerved. I tweet," the tiniest sound, barely aud- ible, but the mother had heard it. There was a blood -curdling cry that reminded Inc of a'wild cat and scarce seemed possible to have issued from the throat of a tiny bird. The noise she made, too, coming through the bush was suggestive of the progrees of some large, heavy animal. Straight at me she came, a pathetically tragic littIo bird, beak open, hissing and shrieking, the ruffle of her neck flung out aggressively. It seemed unbeliev- able that this could be the same timid little bird I had observed for so long. Forgotten were our frequent tete-a- tetes, everything obliterated by ramp- ant mother love. A, MOTHER AROUSED. She seemed in such.positive agony that I moved away but again stepped dear a chick for another frightened cry brought the mother bird again directly at me, completely heedless of her oWn safety in her frenziedanxiety for her children, flapping my, very boot§ with her wings, hissing wickedly. Her teiror for her family was so 111017- ing that 1 hastily backed into the thicket and sat down to wait in silence. But the mether knew I was there and her, brood was obedient to her, for neves' a leaf stirred nor was there a sound whilst 2 remained. It was futile to stay longer and I retired without seeing her go/then up her family. "- Many times afterwards I saw the litble fainly out in the Woods. . Each time the chicks had grown a -little turned my glance towards the spot bigger and sooe the mother could whence the laird had rigen and by the never have covered there with her body strangest chance nay eyee f ell directly. Or shielded them from the, sun with upon the nest with its eggs. 1 walked her fan-like tail, Later the family up to it, losing some of my respect for was reduced to.,seven, from what cause birds, for the location seemed absolute- I never discovered. and fi 11 t bit- come OH 01‘1E, MYeLOVe WITH Fr/ 4 41( ifiqd4, 'eat t riz1,- ‘"Vgio 11 1 e 11 4 WHEN PADDY C,OE, Ceurtship In Ireland is not the 6bliPle affair that it is le 4/Best, Other 001111010re In filet, it le IledgeerOdild by fermalltiee, nee the preliminaries that lege te an engagement would Cool many a lover'e metier. ' tleFelacilicleYM 0111;1;Q:6/vane 411°IrpYoelftiells,111P1r17..:, hoe alweye an eye to, the main ebanne SA that he rarely becomelf engaged to girl who hag nettling bet .locilte in, ,4e1:11a4vvlir:no-ti-ced a girl that he fan,clee , Paddy does 'lot proeeed to melte love to her. Oh, 130L Teat would create a , scandal, instead, usuallY he seake a I go-betvveen to plead hie cauee and to agaroyaBeenetchoessLather, towhee 04e yccounzerataine may eVen walk out with girl. "go.between, or Matchmaker—who is called the "IVIOUntainY" mari—is found in eVery village, and is usually bleesed with the gift of gab etd no lack of The metchmaker, first insidlouele creates an etmoepliere, so teat Yere $oon the weele country -side knows that Paddy wishes to marry ana win) ie the girl of his choice. Then, when the girl- beeself and lier father have heard the rumor, the mountalay man salliee forte to the village with the lover aed calls on the„father, a large bottle of whislcey, provided by tfie pro- spective. bridegroom, in his pocket. • etriking a Bargain. , ,--,,teeeeeefee. s e`elettreet,,,e,e0"IitA Iecee‘e_ NOT IF PAPA KNOWS IT —From the Cleyeland Plalndealer. Hew Earthquakes Are Measured 'The awful cataclysm that Plunged- . the ,Tapanese Empire into- mourning has roused, scientists all over the world In their' endeavoes to foretell, with ammo -degree of accuracy, the coming of great earthquakes. . These terrible volcanic upheaval's, are already -recorclea, and tabulated by _annaingly delicate' instruments, but all the devices possessed by science hays not yet been ablelo predict when and where the.overwhelming fordes of ; , „ Nature will next break „Iorme. Seismology, or the selence of earth- quakes, is one of the oldest of known tal boom whiclraWays according to the eerth tremors. A needle at the end of - the boom is slit to allow a snot of fight to fall upon, sensitized paper, and this show's a straight line when the Instru- ment le at eget. When there is any movement, however, the light shows It, and a clockwork attaChment re- cords. the exact time of each "tremble," The /ea.& of origin of the shock is located by the time taken for the shock to be recorded, for there are three types of earth "waves," ,Which rush outwards. at'va,rying speeds.: The observer knows that if, say, 166 see. sciences, for when the Romans were, oxide elapse between the first and sec - subduing ancient Britain' the Chinese ond -seocks, the earthquake is, 1,00,0 miles distant and ao on. I By means of recorda taken. at two or three different valuta, it is possible to determine almost exactly where the trouble lies and the area over which. It operates. At the West Bromwich Observatory In England about 4,000 distinct shocks are repotted every year, although, 'et course, nearly all of these are very slight most of them being the result completed an instrument designed to record the shocks. that so constantly. harass the Eastern, Empire, This took the form of a copper sphere, about twenty-five feet round, with a long pillar at the tOp which was suseended so that it could swing In any one of eight directions. The sphere contained eight dragon heads. In the mouth of each was placed a ball, so that when the pillar was nio:ved by any trembling, of the of disturbances beneath the ocean earth it would knealt a hall down, thus bed. showing in which direction the earth- According to the- most up-to-date quake had occurred,' authorities, eaethqualres are caused by The first Beitisli seismograph was the solid- outer "must" of the ea,rth siMply a, basin full of treacle. • When gradually "creeping" northward. This the earth shook, the treacle moved, moveneent, however slew, causes- an and left a mark on' the side of the enormous strain in Pieces, and When the strain becomee. too great the earth eracks. In order to increase their knowledge of earthquakea, some of the world's greatest scientists have experimented with artificial ex.plosions. in mines, and they 'hope that in time they will be able to warn the inhabitants of vol- eanic districts. when disturbances are likely to occur. basin that indicated from which di- rection the shock had come. The instruments are much more complicated now, and ehocks can be corrected and measured in observa- tories fully 10,000 miles away from the scene of the disturbance by means of the sensitive Milne -Shaw seismograph, This consists of an upright column supporting without friction a horizon. e. STORIES OF WELL- KNOWN PEOPLE -1 before leading medical associations in Paris, Glasgow a.ncl London. He uses no ifistruments in his treatment of the deaf, merely molding and ehaping the tube which leads froni the Inner ear to the nose, Office -Boy to Millionaire. LorJoicey, vvho celebrated recent - She's. a Grandmother. Bac\helor. • 7T'l''dlamond Jubilee of his en - The record does n.ot state whether tranIce as office -boy into the firm which or not the feat of the elder and ten- he still controls, Probably owes moee sorioue, Cato in learning Greek at 80 coalmines. than any other individual had anything to do .with -sparring her in the United Kingdom. The foremost ambition. At any rate, ‘after Mrs. items on his eecutcheon are a cullPle Sarah Shoemaker Parley et Swarth- of pickaxes and two ponies. more, Pa, had seen her three eons and Born in the atelesPehere of colleries a daughter through college on. a wid- and brickyards at 'Penfield, Duthana, ow's moderate means she decided it seventy-six years ago, he grew,up as was her own turn to join the rah rah a. boy ia the "black environment." ranks, even if she had passed the fifty His father, who Worked in a Tyne - year milestone.• Side collievy, was a man of foresight So she matrieulated at Pennsylvania and shrewd common sense He saw State College and when the,diploinas the future of the engineering; side of were passed around recently Firm, Far- milling, aild We, 800 laenefited by his ly open arid unsceeened, Two large tie brood so developed that it' was lei- lgreeeyf °out nbdaollheoliseerlfofp00':1580001: °I the "- poplar trees started at an .acute angle possible ,to tell the rnOther from heel ,All of th., neiv made bacheloe's child- . from a common root and between the offspring. November blasts came along ren are neerrie'd and between them two 'was the nest with its nine egge. and scattered there each; no. doubt, to1 have matte her the proud proprietor.of A prairie fire had -come right up to make a home of his own in the spring. ,ari dvee dozeia iraneehildree. the edge of the wood and denuded the' in the following March the old , - During her. student days Mrs. POs' - ground of ell Yerdare :and shrahherY leg hY.the ereeleagain gave ley .was affeetionatdly knoWn ' to her so that the neat had not a blade of out its fanailiar tatoo and" a youngttelloW andergieetuatee to "Mettler Far- . cock.partrjdge stintted in all his glory, ley,I' So her rekenthlancc te the tusey manner I marked ita location by ewe:- up, ancl down the prostrate tree. He old Roman who 200 years before by trees and Went, away. I might have been one of the old wood' Christ wee lighting for laws regulat- My respeet for the instinct of the brad—'I liked to thinkhe was—whilst' Ing women's dress and calling in Mid partridge Went uP somewhat, on the Somewhere else, her eamily raised with' out of eeasen 100 the deStruction of following day When I spent an hour; such difficulty and tribulation forgot- I Carthage seeies to have begun and I and a half imseeking the net, I really ten, his roogier was beginning to build ended with the retention of thirst ' Economy 9 roroarilia App4o4 10 eVeryfae011Y thetledaYe, Vann ree ether medibine pan yOu pt fie leech real Medielnaleffeet ite from tide, It le A highly imeemitritted eittraet pf several valuable medloina1 ingrediente, mere and wholefteluei, ...,311.0.110(feele Pude only a thaepOollfill three'tfieee dey. • IdeesPe I3ereeperifift , tonin--reedielne toe the bleed, stem - Rola, live.? Med Walleye, prompt in elyieg relief, It is pleneane 60 take, eereceible, to the' 'etc/emelt, gives 'Et thrill of neW u°t:I47 2t 2 , Nii,taliginvogs4ElteutistfieThla le d' .a.°11faurliadtgettu°41 law, It la tOgieed, and whim ertietteal- • ly coeceived may be ',gni; beautiful. By ',mane,' of thie- simple law smile-. which 1-411:g'mbeeandin71.f1013:dthielli:rtetlifiQerelnei. Now the Whale tendency of modern Mimic is to be thoroughly'lllagleal and . to disregard the fundamental /awe which aro eternal, and whieh, will, in dee course, dominate' and deetroy all that attempts to queetien their valid- ity, Certain effeeta may be produeed te' a series ,ofteliesonances, etesh Mut- eolVed, or by a ehain of chrOmatically,,I altered harmonies; but thee which Is described by such a series ie un- natuval as is their uriage. Heeee mod, ern music is interested primarily .with. the', abnormal and cannot therefore Idealize, through its Mode of eXprep- • sten, anyteing onneected with' fiese anti blood, er orclinary. human expert, mace, This coniDoSltion must describe grotesque things of. the Miagination, unnatural and fantastic, where, as in dreams, the laws, of life Mid reason do not hold, , Australia's Wonder Bridge. Will possess In the bridge to be built , across Sydney Harbor- , one of the across Eydney Hs.rbor one of' tera- greatest engineering marvels in the The total cost or title vast structure, for winch contracts are shortly to be allotted, will be alma seven million pounds, -nearly half 'of which will be - expended in Wages. The new bridge will 'elinaliaate the sloW-working ferry now in use, and W111 bear four lines of rail's/ay, beside a 57ft. roadway .With broad Pavements. AnStralians have dreamed of this un- dertaking for many yeard, and there has been much discussion us to what form. the .bridge sholild take, the pos- abiljties of fleeting and ,sespeesion structnres being consld ered, Finally, a high-level bridge has been decided upon, For pure grandeur, this great ton- etruction is expected to .eclipse the, IWorld-farnotis Forth and Quebee !bridges, for although its span of 1,600- : ft. le. slightly shorter"than either of these it will- be considerably higher I' above the water than they are.. - The- approaches to the bridge were. commenced some time' ago by A.us-• tralian firms; buttiiiey found it impos- sible to carry out the whole undertak- ing, and tenders were invited from en- gineering Concerns all over the world. 1 There are few greet difficultiee to be overcome In the construction, as the granite piers which will support' the bridge will have sofa rock founda. AO" I tions on both sides of, the harbor, time ' making the Ventura less speculative than has been the ce,se with other large.bridge-building contracts. ' Banff' Park. . I The Banff, National Park, Alberta, contains three gronps. of mountains,. the Assiniboine group to the.south, the Leggett group, centred about - Lake Louise, and the Howse- or Waputik, group along the ceest of the Divide north of the railway. Opening the conversation; he begins by reminding the father that -it is high time his daughter Were married, this remark being followed by othets equal- ly uncomplimentary, evidently in- spired by the desiee to make ae gem' a bargain as, possible. "Sure it's thn4 that daughter of Yours was oft your hands," says. he. ,''What way would she be leaving this place yet," retorts the father, "and she only a slip of a girl not much out of her teens'? ,1111 be a sorry clay for me when she goes, for there's not her like at making butter or oake.s. this side o' the (Mom," Then, with many glasses o6vhisIty and good-humored baInter, tire matcb- maker cleverly ,aseertains how many cows and pigs the father is likely to give With his. daughter; and, pointing to the young man, who has remained , silent throughoet, be indicates what a fine fellow he is and what, a grand home his farm would Make for the cows and pigs, and, incidentally,- the girl... Then, if bOth father and match-. maker are satisfied that they can etrtke a good bargain, they clinch mat, tars over another glee's, and the father geee to the door—behind which his daughter is listening— and drags her In, protesting and giggling; to a seat near her lover. , Kent Up :to Scratch.' - And's° thO two become engaged, and, after a short courtship, are mar- ried, the wedding festivities providing a further occasion' of boats of merry- making, after which the bl•idegroom and his friends leave the bride in her father's house till the morrow, whet, with his best horse and cart, comes over to bring her to her new home. • As will be seen, an Irish courtship is rarely improvident, and woe betide the father who fails to carry out any clause of his, daughter's marriage set- tlement. In fact; a lawyer in Mayo once told the writer, a week after one marriage, the irate husband came to see him, threatening to turn hts wife but 11 her father did not immediately hand over a particular cow that he had promised him. The Trend of Modern Music. Present-day life and philosophy de- scribed in music can but fail to uplift or inspire. Spiritual life, too, it at an exceedingly low ebb. The desire for entertalinnent without effort Is Para. mount Subjective stiMulation has given way to objective stimulation. All You may inherit wealth You have not earned, but only work will enable you„ to keen it. Youth is a folly for which age weuld° gladly barter all its wisdom. • this is •reflected in the music of the time, Modern music, striving kr. the unnatural, is objective, not oubiective, ' not made out of the Godgiven ole- TIME TABLE meets. The extreme raodernist mixes his elements as a mason builds a wall' ,with bricks. it, is not the expression of his innnermost self but the clever and, perhaps, dazzling 1100 of the ma- terial at hand. . ' IVIusic raust inevitably develop in the future as it has in the past; but aclaylitcoe i:auitindreintstarjuriotsloparic.ey Elwell every ivyt. cettiiinnao:t, pardoietssminnt,p8.7a1:ini,s reeest•t,rfaareieectuy: penny he could While learning all be ecnant harmony—the native, melodic could, Out of two pounda a week he saved enough to enable hint to make Itroangts tsheOeilacii,litgantilhethree3itlatrannleOSIlieWhIal SC011 IdIet-- his first mining investments. six. Men t jv,oCrayrivv`yeDekad,a Satary Cloloncl Sliattoed, of Mtmireal, ad- dressing 00e'2610 District of -Rotary at Toronto, painted his morals .with apt anecdotes. Here IS one of them that will go without adding on the Moral, Three mail boys .were sitting on a tence braggieg of their dade. The one ooulen t afford tile brae but it was too another pest and so center -ming to for knowledge et an age •When the , Said his father waS a wonderful money baffling tO be defeated in that Way), ,eaerY oat her destiny until 0110 of the minas of most peeptelave crystallised maker, why he Was'a lawyer and could Never was very far 0rom the spot Many fetes which tho arca- and sot in their final form. ' write out What they called a brief and ami must at times have passed within klres overtakes her. O foot or two of the sitting bird. There she was sitting, as my eye ell suddenly upon her, just aS it the pic- ture had been puehed into view, cora- poeedly watching me With one eye, and SO obviously in the open that I begat to distruet oevn ability to find my way about end Wonder how' she and ber „eggs ever escaped the many depredators of the wood. Then began to look Otto things and carue 10 apeeeciate how the nest in the ruas terials ' of its composition arid the sombre coloviefe et the bird harrnott- Famous Ear Specialist to Treat Spanish Prince, In a few houra matte hundreds of dol- I l'he seeond said that ' his father , The congenital dieease—deeinese-- cold pull but teeth, put them hi and • which has impaired the 'health ct Doe plug them, and. charge tees as _high. 08 : • .Talme, 'secouri son at ,leing telfehee of he lilted, and stillthe easterners woilld I 3' Spain, le,, soon te be treeted by Ter; be glad to pay Choi% ' . OUltia H. Munele, of DrheltlYll, N.Y., Bat the third Was a olergyman's ROn. wile is widely known as a speefallet„ "Why, it takes etc( mee to we're cladec ,fea affiletione of the ear. ' Dr. Muncie wagee eM to hint every week,""eald the trat iiat stilled ier 'Europe with the ad-, parsonte heir, . • • - ' -- Mission that he is go:ng to treat a "well known case of deafness, given -.' TUTII° for Al"thir Et1.1' up by mazy specialists of Europe," It Contessing recently that lier ideas ized with the general surroundings. has been learned , that tilts ,'well tor storlea came to her mostly In the known" Patient'is nomi other than Don bath, M1ss PILYIlla Amain, the Brialish and the bare coverkags of ,N,A,illi'a Fri ealmo, • noveliet, told, All IIMI1Sing 0.017 011 the I toolc a etep forward, end then an- young son of Cing ARUM* Was linable 130fOre tAking to tiOVel Writing, Jibe Until he iv s • 9 yeare of age the subjeet. e the matey spring. ' - •I ' other. She perniittQetne to approach to speak, but' It was later foetid that wrote a umber oflyrics which were within a few feet and then rose with this condition wile IhroUght 4bOut bY eV. le, music by he't, brother, Harold a discorieerting "whir,r4." She can ,..., . -' hardly have realieed that I had etl- '.""), in'thigr, WO ready 'seethed the ilesb for She flopped canupt marrY Jack. „ on the ground a foot ,or two :from me nee straggled away with hor wing, "Hitt haven't I told yen he dregging es if brolsert moaning the 're"' weak heart?" _ , i - while. Having had previous expebi- Going E,,tst, depart 6.25 Trains wiclinaurtro.i.nyeasatt3ainiodwd$e1P212 Dm. - Buffalo and Godor,ah Div. a.m. Gibing West oz. 11,10 .ans, " . " ar. 6.02 dp, 6.51 0 ex. 10:04 Pp.tal.. Lendori, Huron 6,.. I3rUce Dly ' Gong South, ar, 7;5617.00, dp1774,,e116:5 110..0110... , Going North, depart 6.50 p.m, 3 a.m. ' from, —if you feel bilious, "headathy" and irritable — for that's a sign your liver is out of order. Your food ie not digesting—it staye in the stomach a Boer, fermented mass, execorting the eystem. Just tette a dose of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets— they make the liver do ite work—they cleanse and eeeeten the etompeb Etna tone the whole dieentive syptotn, fool fin, In the ttiOnling. At ell drunlato, 20e,, nY Moil from ChatnterInin Medicine Company, Toronto 14 Ma ,he Fixer • deathese, tee hes beim taught lip Austita, end pablielied by flifferent 1- all Ilia la.anaY I reading and noW eouveriee fluently be trite. On one oecasioe, Mien another I (1" 1101 love that method. 'Ile Is net the heir te the totnpoSer was Particularly. struck with • throne, the Crown PrInee being the the inteC68.5 Of N lytto she had written for him, feel wbiele elm informed him later, wits "composed in 1110 bath, he Wrote, after 1.111'ee monthe, simply and witittellyi "Deer Miss Auetitteelen't 'It fluid .you, haft another bath 1" gAt4/.. 0' one() of thtB subtei:ftige I was liot to Aiming high' lan't ranch us Proprtaceir, jecAOle drawie awo, and still feignirig havo no ain unition. Priace of the Asturias, , Dr. Nfulicie hes. else aopepted InVi, fattens to delrielietrote big noW-mietlt- od Of "manipulatiVe surgery" ob , "re. conbtractien' Of the eliattiehian tube' av , `,., , , irY a Al a' 0 vccess : - What thee° men have ((ono, you Win 1101 to your some UV! Rod limn Amo2hu0 at home you ton 00eily motor tlie.seoroto of tolling Inkt mad frtorIes of 5U400111 Star SO61111011. VIMAteVer 05 00 cx erlmr h ' os H en whotevtr . i'.1.• fee" , • you way lit doing now—whatlior 68 /01700 thInityou—oe0,11-"""" 1 rni411,4 nut Totowa trill gaosnonl MO you ambitious to eorn 410,000 0 ri ilthOlatTollgt 061? 011,01,1t:Allio'switlInitt":6tAic5trelli 5711 yw 1611c leclr: 101.55r414 RI ,I1 ,neT 4"`S1,4 $10,000 A Year Selling Secrets f 101 A 8AlAtiri11111. 0141 ,00/W70'l bow tbo $000,,manasip 'manias ond VW,oBleriloyelent Serviee a the 14,8.1. ,,I,w111 help you 16 quiolc `8,1 Rums le tolling, d0,fi'r/etl601;tl"0lrtlet."14g..A01:0 ttb10ttt:44,41ZEti13 /0008(1(00/5, 5.,! t101tld07 44 smtlt py Of11NIhleyNil 1 01tAt 10011014We No tonAct .01 5, n 14 A5 cfain, 1.1.0 AM 0/ 6,17/00 505(0SW A b4 MUM 04 10‘1, Clill 40 00/! lEth TrUdilliilti Ateociatien Nogoic e. N. NA '11000,10, 0,01, 010