The Clinton News Record, 1923-11-1, Page 2vao0.4.
1, p. me,r4o4 T
'Me-TAGGART gROS
BANKERS '
eAegeneral fleekleg Besineee transact.
NOtes Pleeeented,'D.rafte Iestied,
Interest Allowed on Deposites. Sale,
Notes,Pueobased. •
H. T. RANCE
Notary Public, Conveyancer.
Real Estate end Fite in
aurance Agent.' RepteSenting14 Fro
440Orauce equipautes,
0)vitaort Court Office, Clinton.
W. BRYDONE. .
Orirrieter, Solicitor 'Notery pubIC, eto.
'
SLOAN BLOCK - CLINTON
DR. J. C. GANDIER
Otfle 1-lourei—L30' te 1.30 pen., 1-.30
, to9.00 p.m, Sundays, 1230 to 1,30 p.p.
Other hours by appolatmeat only,
Office and Residence — -Victoria St.
• DR, WOODS
Is resuming' Practisa at. it residence,
Hayfield, e
'‘OfIloc Hours: -9 010 tun. end 1 to 2
P.m. Sandays, 1 to .2 pen., tar con.
saltation.
H. S. BROWN, L.M.C.C.
• Onice Hours '
1.30 to 3.30 p.m. 7.3i) to 9,00 p.m.
Sendays 1.00 to 2.00 p.m.
Other hours ley aPtointrnent:
Phones
131jie, 218W Residence, 2183
DR. PERCIVAL HEARN
Office and Residence:
Huron eitreet • Clinton, Ont.
Phone 69 ,
(ForMerly occupied by ,the late Dr.
C. W. Thompson),
Po he
Boys ancl JirIs
of Africa tile dark ineys play a game
THE ORIOLE'S NEST
A Splaeh or geld in the tree -tap tall;
A gthsb IP tbo White of petaled
sprays;
A Nx 4 that anewees mate'S far tall
Aerese the garden And Mee the wall—
The self-eaene Sang a a thousand
An oriole'e nest is, swInging low
Where pear blooms whiten a gaunt
gray linsb;
Where pear bloorna weaVe a ruff of
snow'
And seetter themselves in the depths
below; "
Oh, reciting it is to a lulling hymn!
The net is there in the ehadowe deep
1Vhen crickets chirp at eventide.'
The nest is there When the we/4We
asleep
And stale down through the new
eaves peep,•
An airy bark in an ocean wide!
• Dr. -A. Newton lirad Y Bayfield-
• Graduate Dublin University, Ireland.
Late • Extern Assistant Master, Rese
• Benda Hospital for "Women. and Chil-
• dren, Dublin. -
Office at reeidence lately occupied
• by Mrs, Parsons. •
Hours 9 to 10 a.m., 6 to 7
Sundays 1 to 2 p.m.
Pane
G: S. ATICINSON
D.D,S,„ L.D.S.
Graduate Royal College of Dental Sur-
geons and Toronto University
• ciE.NTAL SURGEON
Hes. office bours at Bayfield in old
Post Ofilce Building, Monday, Wed-
,nesday,'Fridey and Saturday from I
to 5.31 pen. '
• DR. W. R. NIMMO
C 111 R 0 P RACTO R
Consulting Hours
9.30 to 12.00 a.m., 2.00 p.m. to.5.30pm,
7.00 p.m. to 9.00 p.m.
Phone 58'
Normandie. Block - Clinton, grit,
CHARLES B. HALE
Conveyancer, Notary Public, Commis.
eloner, etc.
REAL ESTATE AND • INSURANCE
HURON STREET , CLINTON
GEORGE ELLIOTT
Licensed Auciioneer lor the County
' - of Huron:
• Correspondence promptly -insweteti.
-Immediate arrangements can be made
for Sales Date at The News -Record,
Clinton, or by calling Plione•203,
elhei e ea Moderate and Satisfaction
Guaranteed.
B. R. HIGGINS
Clinton, Ont.
General Fire and Life Insurance. Agent
nor Hartford Windstorm, Live Stock,
Automobile and Sickness and Accident
Insurance. Huron and Dile and Cana-
da Trust Bonds. ,Appoiritraents made
to meet parties at Brucefield, Varna
and Hayfield. 'Phone 57.
The nest shines out at the dawn's red
beam,
A thing of web and fibre and floss;
A • tilting • cradle where • fledglings
dream
Beneath a warm breast's orange
gleam,
Arid under the petals trait soft
winds toss!
The nest, the nest of the oriole,
Afloat in the aisles of the ancient
pear,
Adrift in a 'sky with a cloudy shoal;
Ala it swings with the earth on its
leaning pole;
It swings, it swinge in the blossome
there!
—Leslie Clare Manchester.
IN AFRICA IT IS "LE-N-JEK"—IN
The McKillop Mutual
•Fire Insurance Company
Head Office, Seaforth, Ont.
OIRECToRY:
Pt et, Men t, JUILleZA CoLtso1Jy, G oth.u.101.,;
Vice.. James filvans, 13eecLwood; sem,
Treasurer, Then Fe Hays, _Seatorth.
Direct/ere: (barge hIcCal`theY. Sea.
forth, D. 10, McGregor, Seaforth:
Grieve, \velum; Win. Bing. Seaforth;
et. efeEwen, Clinton; Robert Ferries,
elarlock, Johe Bounew BrodbagoU:
Jas. Coanelly, Goderich,
•- Agents-, Alex, Leitch, 011eton; 4. W.
Teo, Coderich; 120 Illechray, sea.
teeth: W. CliesneY, leginondylilee
Jarmuth, Brotihegene
Any money to be paid In may be
- paid to Moorish Clothing Co., Clinton,
` or at Cutts GrocerY, Godoetch.
Parties desiring to affect lusuraece
or traneaet other busieees win bo
• monigtly attended to on application to
• any of the above °fibers addressed :o
their respective post Mile. Lessee
inspected by the Director who lives
nearest 1-10 scene. •
called "Lenjele" (prononneed
nyaele.,,) Like nany of the gnenee
nyaele.") Like many ef the "gainee
Of ekill, to teach boy e to do thinge
they, will have te de When they groW
to Mailhoett.
In Ordel. to Play this game it is
necesseey to lueee • a lenge reeled &se
of emne soft materials The African
boys Use a cross eection of a certain
very eoft and poroue tree. The lad
Who is "it," arened with thie die,
takes his place in front of the rest of
the group. The otherboys in the
game line up a few feet back about
two feet apart._
Each boy, in the line has a long
spear, made of a straight piece of
tough wood whittled to a very sharp
poiet et one end.
The leader cpins the disc through
the air at a height about equal to hie
ehoelder. It is thrown peependicue
tarty, so thae the flat side is towards
the line of boys. As it whirls past,
eaeh boy flings his spear, endeavoring
to pierce it. When one succeeds he
takes the place of the leader and
theows the disc the next time the
former leader retiring to the foot of
the line, '
This game trains boys to spear
speeding animele. When the mission-
aries introduced tennis in Africa the
natives thought that it resembled this
game so they gave tennis the same
name, "Le njek."
In seine parth of China the -boys
play a game similar. to this etcept
that they tise stones. Their leader
throws a large stone instead of the
disc and the other boys try to strike
it with smaller stones as it whirls
CHINA, "TA PAN.', past them. This game is called "Tae,
.Far a -way in the "Dark Continent" Pan:"
CORN GROWING IN
WESTERN PROVINCES
RECORD ACREAGE DE-
VOTED TO CEREAL
AND FODDER.
Era of Experimentation and
Development is Over With
Favorable Results.
An outstanding feature of Western
•Canadian agriculture this year is the
enormously increased.intereet exhibit-
ed in the planting of corn, and this
season sees a record acreage in the
West devoted to both cereal and fod-
der. It es met long sinee' the possi-
bility of growiug corn in the Prairie
Provinces was •regarded. with the ut-
most scepticism, which was -.followed
by Me eSthaUstive experimentation of
a few enthusiast& with a more or lese
desultory following on the part of
others, Any doubts of successful
growth have new been definitely die-
ilipated. • Corn has been firmly estab-
lished as a, Western Canadian crop,
and every inclination points to a on-
• CLINTON
NEWS -RECORD
CLINTON, ONTARIO
Terins of Subscription -42.00 pet year,
Ims adVance, to eant.ditto addres4e4
42.50 to the 'U.S. or other formgn
,,,Atries, No paper dieeontintied
teetil all arreare are paid unities et
the optiou of the nablisher, The
aeeiects. Not only does it prove the
greater range and diversity of West-
ern agrioultural prodection, but it has
a marked effect on other Phases of
Western farming, The corn -patch Is
rapidly followed by the erection of a
Silo, and now, where one scarcely saw
one of these buildings in a day's drive
a few years ago, they are becoming
the natural establishment of ,every
/nixed farm, This is having a pro-
nounced effect on farm feeding, which
lei again- apparent in tlee dairy indus-
try, in which the W,esteen Provinces
are making such strides.
The Western Provinces are only
starting- Mit on their careers as corn -
growing areas. The era of experimen-
tation and development is on/y just
past, but past definitely with its con-
clueions most favonanle. This may be
taken as the first year of really seri
ous attention to the commereial pro-
duction- of corn, and those to follow
will. undoubtedly see corn ranking
with other crops, which -have made
Western Canada internationally fa-
mous,.
Need of a Universal
Language.
Every so often scientiste and others
dePlore the lack of a universal or in-
ternational language. Dr. Max Tal-
mey of New York discusses this need
at length in'the current number of The
(seal belief in itis assuming a more im- Scientific Monthly, and makes. -out a
Portant place each year in the agri:- etrong case for Ido, the Inost modern
culture of the Western territorY- attempt toward this end. He tells
The first real 'profession of faith in why Velapuk and Esperanto have Wi-
th° putuee; of Western Canada as a
corn -growing area -was made in South-
ern Alberta wheu, at fill, this
Alber-
06 Corn Geteviers' Association Was
formed. Thee to prove that succesz-
ful propagation WAS not limited' to the that when fleet established it had only
southern area of the prairie, Prince
Albert, in Saskatchewan, several hum
dred miles north, held the first corn
show to take place in that province,
at which locally grown corn was ex-
hibited said to be the eq-bal of that
grown anywhere.- Now the Saskatche-
wan Corn Growers' Association lute
been organized and the first provincial theory was misunaereteed by all ex -
show will be held in Maple Creek in cept thole -with a full coMmand of
November next.
Active Results Apparent.
pected that Vaxiceuver will be called code -was to feed"Criminals. on bread
unmixed with salt. .The consequences
upom.and will be in better' position,
to handle ft larger proportion of the of this diet vvere terrible.
Oedinary bread contains half of one
grain outlet of tits Westernemairies.
per cent.'of salt, rind fresh beef 0310
In the crab year 1,91.9-20, when the
d
Per cent, iet movement of vein took place
c. •
A LEAGUE THATMUSSOI-INI FORGETS
• —From the Pall Mall Gazette, London, Eng.
GRAIN MOVEMENT
TO WESTERN GATE
FINDS OUTLET THROUGH
• PACIFIC:COAST. .
Vancouver Plays New Role as
Grain Port and Site of Eng-
lish and Oriental Broker-
• age Houses.
The proportions, of the Western
Canadian grain crop, whieh proxneses
to exceed in. size any previous yield,
are directing even greater attention to
the amount of grain.which, will prob-
ably ilnd outlet through the Pacific
coast. The prospective marked in-
crease in Alberta's yield, which is put
as high as 100 per cent., Is sure to
have the effect Of sending an even
larger volume through the Port of
Vancouver that has gone through in
the •current year now nearing an end
and f,-om every consideration it is ex-
[I ,S#4-APIES IN SALT
-
When paid your "Salary,"how 0100a
des 10 {seemtoyouthat the nieaniug
oe the term is "salt money?", For the
word salary is derived from the eater -
or salt allowanee, vvhich every
Roman soldier regularly Tecelved,
Oar connectioe. -With salt Is, indeed,
closer than weemay, think. Being a
'component oe the lobeen body, salt is
essential to life. 1-Vion, animals, plants,
all require salt. The amount neCes-
sary to the health oe 6 man is esti-
mated at half a noence a day,
There are, so far as is known, only
two people who.do not use ealt in its
mineral form, These are the Arabs of
the Hadrania,ut, a,nd the natives of the
Nicobar Islands, But the former live
on roasted meat and milk, both of
which contain a certain proportion .of
Carried by Pack -Horse. •
It is worth noting that in lealland,
in the Middle Ages, the worat punish-
ment provided by a very severe penal
e
WORTH MORE ThAN
,GO.LD
,•0,1
sosigiot well 'be called the
. ,
lOintlerella," of 1601018, 04 itew,as''Per ,
inexie, • eentuelee seamed 6,44 gine')
prebiated.' Now, bOlValler, It hoe .001:10.
inte. ite &en' Mid le Tegarded-.40 one o
the meet ;valuable and lisefel oO 111010
204 story .1e: as long lied ag easelnat7
'
,Ileg aa tbat (if, g1e d, •settliOu i I
gi 0 me.
never . caesed Miele wild exeitenient,
eteifb: eeld. Inieety. •• Itwasheeevn, to taut. OQUI.,ent ill tbe optophone,
the -,Anciente; 60 is -proved ••ley. die- I:selenium teridge Is •exposed to liglit
°ovaries of 0/4 , mines- et Tbebee, in puleatione that vary accOrding to the
EnYPt, and elsewhere; but they by no forme" of . the typewritten or printed
Mettles• appreeieted e the wonderful lettere that ' are paseed throtigh the
qualities of elle metals and it- was' lit- Machine, - A seeeitlee heed phone
.th employed by co- worn by the blind Peratcows-Oe, and it re-
tie Ses,ed, , • - , . t like those 'used by radio enthuslaits le
Later'on it wi
torfelters to make rale° coiee, and nesekla eingle netes and' cherde thrOugh
sem° hundreds of people- haYe bon '1110 eelenturn 'bridge. Veils sound al..
liege Yee strangely enougli, to -day i 001050015 nee, ha. ie easily leerned, and
8111710C1.0* ..‘tbl IS:
hanged fey using Teletinum for this pur-liPleabet 'le differeet from our own lie
metal" would he worth the Optephone pen be °berated at hide
gold coinix of the game' speed by the mare proficient, -
weight. . , Dr, E. 10. )1'ollen-lee _ d'Albe, who
The' modelle epprectatien' of ,pleie, makes his home in London, is 0110 man
eire,led: aIllnlo
num really dates from. 1730, --when An. wiae has brought the ontoptioneeto per-
tcsio aexapelilltn
al:lailluntaovaSloauffithoe hie l
- 2nattn; and'
ess'tortunate fellows - One oe the '
so taken from thousands
o
America-, There he found depoeits of greatest terrors o,f' being blind—IMcs1c.
an -extremely tough-and'durabie inets.1, of elentect with the mina. at lerge. '.
..
, The . 5uprii!cent.
trona Vancouver, a' inere 16,000 tons The part that salt haS pla.yed, and 11
Trplaying, in the history of the wornsleis
were moved. he Pacific pot handled_
NiA Neglect
Your /3100(1'.
$.4 is abnormal, Oonditlen, the
lenges"' yen"delay ticking 4 gOod blood
Medicine Elseedee Sareeparilles
the longer It will take And the More
difileult it wilt be for yeti 10 get
bank10 Pnerenaley," •"•
• blfohtzt,,xkoh3,"911P1)1(i5f prirpt).OriO,
gOne " felZ3tnPIITglrOtT:11;1'14 4g;
of Appetite are readily traced to Im-
pure bleed, Thoneande date getting
0I2 01M/Vit road to )seitith hem the
day they began taking Iloodee Serecte
patina, Why not try it ?
7,500,000 bushels oe the 1921 crop, area
seldom realized. ' The oldest road in
by the close of the season will nave Italy Is the -Via Salarla, along whioh
Shipped about 18,860,000 bushels of salt was carried, from the salt -pans at
the 1922 crop. This movement was Ostia into the Sabine Couritry, long
before the birth,of Rome.
divided between England via, the
London °wee its foundation to salt.
Panama Canal and tlee- countries of
the Orient and Antipodes, from all of In days previous .to the Roman. Con -
•quest the salt-pan,s of CheShire- and
wiiich dereetions the demand f
Western graiu is increasing. Worcestershire 'Provided salt not only
• f Or the whole of the Sbuth of England
The only handicap .to Vancouver s ,
development 6S6 grain -port has been , but also for Nerteern Gaul.
lack et' accoramodateon facilities, to The old pack route ran south-east
remedy which condition great activity across England and over the Thames
teen
In construction has featured the past a very broad but shallow
stream—at the ford- of Westminster.
two summers. A. subetantially
Sometimes the river was too high. to
creased storage capacity will b,e avail -
cress, and the- pack -trains had to wale,
able at the end "orthe present harvest,
putting the port m a better position to Naturally, therefore, a village with
.
handle the greaten bulk of grain it will a fortifiedstockade grew up at the
ford, and this village gradually _fie:
be exbeced to send out. The Hon. J.
31. Ring, Federal Minister of Public veloped till it became the greatestelty
the world has ever seeine ,
Works, who recently made an inspec-
tion" of the port, stated that lack of Food and Physic tool
ships was the only thing that could Th,e caravan trade ot the Saharaels
prevent Vancouver from beconi:Ing a largely in salt, which is scarce in
greater grain port. With the increase North „Centre' Africa. In Abyssinia,
in Government handling facilities, and pn nista-ace,. bars of met -are still in
the building of psiblic elevators the ithe as currency, Another ancient cei'a:
port would, he said, be in a position, van route is that along which, during
to handle a vast quantity of grain. countless eget, salt thas been carried
Royal Commission Enquiry. from Palmyra to the Syrian ports.
The only other some§ onsalt in that
part of the world is the Dead Sea, the
water of which is a saturated solution
of sodium chloride. Tile Dead Sea,
was foemerly the pereonal property "of
the Sultan of Turkey, and led ehoees
were guarded by armed soldiers who
prevented the Arabs from drawing sio
much as a pail of water. ,
Salt has always provided revenue
for ruler arid governorsteethe days
of William 211, the duty in England,
was no lees than fifteen shillings a
bueliel, or thirty times the prime cost.
The ealt duty was not finally rereuved
Which he .named. "platineet from
"pieta," the Spaniels weed for silver.
Later, large quantities were phipped
over to Europe, ,where the. scientists
at the day began to' experiment with
110 110 lie discover itsmarve11ous-quai1-
ed, stressing the point, for instance, The Royal Commission which is at
that Esnerarsto has only 2,629 root present working on an enquiry lute
words, a number totally inadequate. the grain trade ead hap been gather -
In urging the protection andemore Ing all information' poselhle on the
-extensive use of Ido Dr. Talthey says prospects of. Vancouver as an outlet
Lor the export of grain, says:
Grain will, like ,any other cone -
medley, naturally- follow thee line at
least resistance, and obviously the
westbound movement will increase,
dependent onlY -Upon, the relative ease
and security with which exporters
may make contract for water move-
ments to the United Kingdom and
Europe, and neeessary additions to
transfer rued storage facilities. in Eeglaud until 1825.
-
German.• In diplomacy, too, the need As a matter of fact, Vancouver elms APart from ies value in food, the
of a ueiversal tongue is apparent, and within the past two Years come t$ie. uses of salt ere, almost endless. In
s
the PortemoUth conference ending tied gradually mad deenitely recogeized medicine, it iused in cholera and
• ,
A prominent visitor to the prairies Russo-Japanese war, and more recent- having the status Of 4 grain port, as other diseases, 0114 as a solution for
tide epting was responelble for the ly the negotiatione at -Versailles, be. has been evidenced in the establish-
injectou in eases of loss of blood,
while the value of ealt baths does not
statement: "For every acre of corn Mg cited ae ample proof' of Its lack, merit of a grain exchange, fixing.coast
'
sawn in Alberta. hist year, ten is being In bueiness, however, the need is prices"ancl the location ‘there of Eng-
need, tobe empheeized.
sewn this." The provincial aseocia- greatest of all, not only to. prevent list and Oriental brokerage houses. It ee
•
tiers has indeed been -active in enceur- mieunderelandIng• et COntracts, but to the certitude of its future in this re- Gets Ocean Breezes at Home
aging the planting of further acreage do away ,witb the special :Aeries and ' gaed eeverlsh activity has prevailed at • *
51 every way: From Calgary. it hes interpretere to -handle foreign corres.
dietributed two carloads of corn seed, poridence.
this going from the inteenationi ,boun•
-
darY to Peace River and ottside,the • •c
oanctuary:
province as far as Victoria in the West ;
end the eeeeeee manitab, boin,dar,), In, There's a. tingly sort of feeling
450 farmers growing 00111, evlio-shonal
And the wild goose is starting
Isi the atmosphere to -day;
the East. The assoclatioe Mole has
rsccoun't tor the planting of 27,000 .cor tho southeand away.
mites Of this Mem in Alberta this year. '
-The tight wind ie crooding
Tli,e Movement of cermgrowing in
Dirges o'er the lonely neat.
Western 'Canada 15 of very recent
1tti,3, but hes been characterized by
startling repidity, and the develop-
ment of the last five years has been
' -bele b ()nix!" it le the tocsin
little short of phenomenal, Manitoba,
which 1917 raised 47,600 bashets of. of thc dllahY cavalcade,
corn, grew 210,000 beshels in 1922, . PlYhig evilftlY-nad unerring
increase of otter 250 or cent, ter the . the Sollthore everglade.
period. Saskatchewan in the ;tame • •
tinies Inceeased her production from The maTelelmul le lonely,
31,300 besible to 187,000 heel:els; or And losie the empty sleet.
by nearly 5p1 per cent. Alberta, in'. tha 1/I Ot•bird Jo veering
creased her Yield from 4,000 bushels! Fer I:MD(1,1a*, NEL!, t,
in 1917 to 82,000, bushels in 1922, all "L'thra°0 SeYmour
incredible inceease of 1,01.5 per cent. °
The Clover. M.art.
Manitube. last ' year achieved an
verago production -of 7,50 tone of fed- The ilowle-inatried couple were gas.
,irOwas , Ing ieto the window of the jeweller's
date to whiele every tubscrietion elio
1,000 Toot words, but now, after seven
years, has 'more than 11,000. He also
points out that it ie as musical as
Italian, uses the Anglo -Latin letters,
and has•Just a single rule of grammar.
The need .of an auxiliary language
-for scientific papers is especially press-
ing, it being shown that Dinstein's
Essential to Science. ,
. The Metal soon became more,widely
used and appreciated, although it did me -,--and then
not then attain the great c-ommercial I pray to lose the' curse of •memorY • •
aucli:tpritulustnilis
cre
vflon:ndin •
itensjmoyasligoreleaSypy, 1.1.r.eThat ffurlei-eftergetielinesS will malee 1510
ticlea along with other metals, includ-
ing gold and chrome -iron. Occasional-
ly.it Is discovered 111 the form of nug-
gets,. which are naturally extremely
valuable. A 25 -pound nugget of plati-
num would at s the present time Ise
worth over,$30,000. It is, found gener-
ally
in river deposits in Russia linden
the republics of Columbia and 13razil,
in South America. 33ornee, the West
Australia, and ' the, `United
State a 'also contain smaller.deposits be
the valuable metal.
Previoue to .the rule of the Bolshe-
viks., Russia supplied ninety per cent.
of the world's platinum, but to -day the
main- eupply comes from Celorabia.
The uses b which phalli -um is put
are almost countlees. It is essential
to science and.'climoistry, as it is -em-
'ployeil 'Make "crucibles', being *the
only metal that will stand really in-
tense ,heat without xnelting. Neither
is it affected in any way by the action
00 schemicale.- that would ' eat. .away-'
other metals. In the manufacture of
most electrical and telescopic Instru-
ments it es, also indispensable, as ,10
•can be drawn out into the thinneet
wire without ena.pping.
Platinum is used in- the making of
suliehurie -acid, anli consequently it is
irx,ulsiceel9utte4liyghn;c:psisoaseivypts6e_ ,the menufac-,
.-Dentists OeveO,S, great' debt to plati-
num, as et enables them to fit arti-
licial,.,teeth with plates and .rivets
Which do not tarnish oi.oxklise. .Thin
platinum plates have been used within
eecent years fon. makng artificial roofs
for the mouths of' soldiers. and-others
I go down on my knees and Pray, each
T.hatagerailleha,
ll neVer see your eface
-N6r newnevr
ariynonrewritevoice.•,that you.
•
That none will name your name
For the Pilot -bird le trailing
The boriece in the west.
then .46,00 par Ion, Or for the total 1). , 4
valet denoted en the label. ".Tohn" said the young bride, tent-
s 0- 41,200,000. Smits:dello- •
Advertising Rates—Transient advele -\".3era°aVee' a 601 4.21 . g 'to EU 4011Ir ClUtelifill Isis arm, "I'd levei 06
tisements,-10 COan per nonpareil 100 haVe that bracelet haegieg lip at ,the
•
line tor first insertioa Mid 5. meta
per line for eaeh !subsequent baser.
• Von- Sniail advertise:1month not to
exeeed one inch, such, as
Strayed," or "900100,!' ete., Inserted
onee tor 35 centa, Mid ettch:auhas,
queut insertion 15 cede, •
Connilimications intended for' publi.
.tatieti meet, ne a gueraniee ef geed
ealth, be acconspaeleel bY Oho name of
the writer,
0, 51, /PIZ,
LAXS
proDriator,
5.0511 V
per ton, or for the entire province, $1,- aaak at gla wintlaw."
300,000. , Aleut, .hna 1151 6951550 oL .1 can't effeed- to buy it, for yen,
5,25 tons Lo the acre, cacti ten being dear," 1:014150 the husband.
worth 45,00, staking the total provhe "But ff Yeti could you would,
mei eeso,weeie 4411,000, In en eeeoe wouldn't yen?" she naked anxiously,
"I'm neraid not," he retorted.
"Ols, lomb, WhYr ole naked in a
tono that altoWed beth eurnriae and
pain. '
"It ien'egoorl (sunbelt for Yon, doer,"
he olul leoder16, .
"Oh, You deelingl" 511 0',/1.11
the valtie of an aere of corn wile lime.
tieally double Ihe value of an acre of
Wbeat,
letsede to Muth Silo Construction..
• The poseibility'ot fleccoesfully grow.
10410215 10 Western Canada; has:realty
tele port both on. the part of the Gov- •
the adaptation, .00 eertain standatel
'cerement and prairie enteeprise to fine household artiOles ley'lerof. /seen.. Lew,
nish it -with the eaceseary qualities to Bride)) inventaxe tiering ,Lonclou's hot
pixie,' its new role. Already, 11M rela-
spell lett eurnmer, Prof. LoW.toolt an
lively meagre 'volume -of grain it has ordinary vabusim Mealier, Teinoyed the
been able tohandle hat made Van -
refuse bag tend bresh seed inetalled it
tonver the firstgrain port of the en- in an open windows' Near the intake
tti°tremPlinaecelliaincota, hlreagIlildrditsisPaIn8tslgrin"r:' Pirtl'aincee.cl- a Tjahrr vbaactLitulnarnnicgit'iorst'laNivcads
cant in view of the immense Pocciblli-- healeecl to ab electric light socket in -
ties of the eetere. •the vegulee way. and when lb full
-' operation blew into, the room a salt
• ; ladet breeze 8i±flltiSntly like a real •
ni :Mean zephyr to warrant eating me
contrapticin a eeccess. The cost of
running the breeze Maker was esti-
.. ..
Mated at twetience -per hear•. '
'Bedtime Stories. :
• 11 16 en accepted feet supnorted be
psythologiste that fele of the most et-
svedle-rouble. Naive roetlead,s of inetilling, rtght
ACtI Gotaa
thoughts anti hallite into a 011405 con.
Wife ---"Jest to tilink these Ameri- setensness is by stories told at bed:
p3ns ilea to go; all the Way 00 China thee, when the chlleee body le quies-
taHnanblillYaLti 'n'YPbec1)'b;1Zal
enet‘118iel;• cent
- ul d teat sleep. P115. eulmonseleus self,
. end the conscieue mintl drowsy
ee seen have steyed home for that. which'is then in Contr01,,may be Mottle
ed,Isy suggeetion, into 'What we desire
51 10 he. The mistake is often made
ot relatiug at title beer telee of thr11-
1113'- adVolilttre and netting evondee.
13ut I whke—eager for the coming:
And whisper to my heart: 'Another
dayl
It may be he will, come .
maY write ,
or T may see him in the street .
Pass by Me in the creewd and- I may -
Rig:voice—ea In the throng he passes,
neari." •
or 11e
,
And I invent male 161 keries tb make
Thoee who surround Ine name your
naive to me— '
Only to'heer it somehow seethes the
of longing that bubo on—undeae
Your name fella on my heart like a
caress—
Which they who :meek it do not know.
But—all the day is one -long ache ter -
Again at nig-ht 0 kneel and make my •
prayer— -
That you may be as one I never knew,
111Y..ears beseech God not to let Me
care . . .
With. SuPplications they assail His
ear—
But my heart prays that He will never
• hear!
—Roselle Mercier Montgomery,
Air Magnetizes Steel.
When steel is dipped into liquid air
suffering from factel injuries. It Is
its magnetlem is curiously affected.
the only metal over which wounds will
No -b. -magnetic nieleel acqUires. rang: •
heal.
• Eyes for the Blincl.
' Many-el:me etridee toward helping
the blind were made during the war,
but a recent Engliele invention pro-
mises to exceed almost eell of them
Every one ie ftmiliar.with the becks carefully chosen, as red blooms aggro -
made especially for the blind by the vate fever, while blue blossoms are
Braillie method, n Which the lettere seething.
are raised Or indented by 'means et
sharp instrument. It is a slow and la-
borious proc.ese at best, and the Sup-
ply of Braillie books is necessarily
limited by the expense of the output
and, because Braillie letters wear down
into unintelligibility.
But now coulee the optephone, a ma-
chine which makes available to the
blind all kinds of type -written matter
and even newspapers. It depends not
upon the sense of touch., ae do the
Braillie books, but upon the sense of
hearing, a faculty that is usually keen'ly developed in all blind persons. Only
aeiew lessons are needed for the blind
neer 21 1110 optophone to learn the sys-
tem;
The cherished selenium
m is the inipor-
netic properties after being imersed
for five minutes in liquid air. Man-
ganese steel s eindiarly affected. The
density of carbon steel is perceptibly
dec,reased after the -immereion.
- Flowers for sick rooms should
Diplomat,
"Father," said Oheriee, "Whet is a
diplomat?"
"A diplomat, eny eon," anewored the ITY sneh etories,' the child is wroutpt
father, "is a man who xementhers a .00 to 6 liervoms piteh that ofton nee-
woMat's birthday and forgets her Wets tinenehOut Otto night. 'The bed -
ego.
Tho olk, the est quadruped in
North America, has now a special res.
ervation 115 Vancouver Island, Where
Ole Canadian Government is preserv-
ing .a large herd of these animals to
etsve, them /rote extinction, '
Line: story should be one of Mother
Nature, or else illtentetleg 0certain
trait of character desired la the ehla,
and ,ebould bp told with a calm, yokel
such am inditetse 0 quiet, result' flute!).
t•
g s tongue Is alont two fa
in length., •
OkaTONAMORiOrg
TIME TABLE -
Trains will arrive at and depart trona
Clinton as follows: ,
Buffalo and GoderIeh Div. e
Going East, depart 6.252aan.
e 0 41. 2.52 p.m. 4
Going West ar. 1140 am.
"•" ar, 6,00 dp. 6.51 p.m.
, • 9- sr. 10,44 p.m.
London, Huron & Bruce Div.
Going South, an, 7.56 dp,„7.56 a.m.
• 415 pan.
Going North, depart 6,50
" " " 11.05, 11,18 a.m.
There isn't a member of the family need suffer from indigestion, sick
• headaches,leilionenes, fermented atonsaeh, ett., if be orshe will take
' Chamberlain's Stometh and Liver Tablets. They cleanse the stomaeb
and bowels and stimulate the liver to healthy activity and tone up the
whole systenr: Take ono at night and you're RIGHT in the morning,
ellatenen, 150, or by mail fom Chamberlain Mmaioino Company, Toronto, le
Tr
Itte..4 nue Amazing
6o*4esof tucceto
1,4 wirit.
cess 4i2 el/61,7:a)*
What Mose one liavo done, yOu can ciol In 3000 55-510 timo
11 halo you can Wily maker tlia•secreta of' saina that nuke
%at Salomon. WhateVer your eaperlenco hag boon-vehatover
you Inas, to doing nOw...whothor or nor you think yoa IOS so11,4,`
M gnawer OW question.: Aro you ambitious to cm 440.000 a
'leer? Then 751 11 tottoh with 85008 onoe will prove to von
Vt.hout teat or Obligation the you on re,silY 1ee060 A 0101
5,581150 buS afloW you bow the Saltesstoothip 'rousing mul
VTOtt VAPIOYISIOSIE SOHO et tea 54.0. T. A. will bele 708 00 guide
auccone in Selling,
$10,000 A Year. Selling Secrets
'rho 111r01: VA, Netamsble se matt tr tho 54. n; T. h., tat
004015 thnv000fig 01605 051.0161, (0 51.540 :Alittur far u:VOt ,deudgaty
:=Mg:,'gttZ7.41W112417gratatilti3gNit
1 10521,
Natletiai:S.alesMeni's Trainittg ASSociation
Pf4;YOZ.., 3.1054t0: go. „,