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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1921-12-29, Page 2SISS,SISTISSESS, 1*SsMsesssyssss g, MOTACCART MeTAGGART McTaggart Bros. Enn- A, 014RA:I MAN.Iti144 KIST, 'NESS TRATO$AC'PED, NOTES DISCOuNTED, DRA.FTS TaStIED, INTEREST ALLOWED ON D4- POSIT8,' SALE t4OTES PUlio CHASED. — T. RANCE ,--- 1.ZOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEY. ANGER, FINANCIA,L REAL ESTATE AND FlTtE IN$1.11te ANCE AGENT. REPRESENT- 1NG 14 VIRE J.NSURANOIA COMPANIES, LtFifISION COL/RT OFFICE, CLINTON. paynoNt. ' BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NC/ TA RY PU BLIC, ETC - Office— Sloan Mock --CLINTON lilt. .1. C. CANDLER - O ce lemma—Lae to 8.30 Roam 1.30 to 3,00 p.m. Sundays 12,30 to 1.30. Other hours by appointinent only. Office and Reeldence--Victoris LAA. DR. G. SCULLAILD Clines in Dr. Smith's old stand, Alain Street, Bayfield, Office. Hours: 1 to 4 and 7 to 9 pen, Phone No. 21 on 824. G. S. ATKINSON, 'D.D.S.; L.D.S. iGraduate Royal College of Dental Surgeons anti Toronto Univetsity.) Dental Surgeon gas office hours at Bayfield in old Post Office Building; Monday, Wed- nesday, Friday and Saturday from 1 to 0,30 p.m. CHARLES B. HALE. Conveyancer, Notary Public. Commonce Etc, SEAL ESTATE and INSURANCE Issuer of Marriage Liceneee el CRON STR EET, — CLINTON, GEORGE ELLIOTT Licensee .4 uctloneer for ihe Count of Huron. Correspondence promptly answered. immediate arrangements can be made for Sales Data at The News -Record. Clinton, or br t calling Pbore 203. Cbarges moderate And satisfactioa guaranteed. ' ' —Tn,IE TABLE— , Trains will, arrive at and depart front Clinton Station as fondest; , BUFFALO AND GODBRICH 'Lev, thane' east, depart 6.28, min. 2,52.pam \ oh-ine, West 81', 11.10, (IP. .1,1.15 fem 1.15 . ar. 0.08, dp. 6,47 p.m. , or. 10,03 p.m. LONDON, HURON & BRUCE DIV. Going South, ar. 8.23, Op. 8.23 tem. " e.1.5 p.m. Going North depart 6,40 mem " 1.1,O. 11.11 ate. :IcKiliop fantod. Fire InsuranOe Company Sealorth, Ont. Preeldent, eamem Connolly, Coderich; Vice,. Jamee Evans, Beachwood; Soc.-Treesurer, Thos. & hien. Safe 1) it octant : George McCartney, dee. eseth; le. McCrea. r, Seaforth; J. tL t.; Ft W7.1,4017; Wm. aloe, Sea- toetTi7.* M. Mae:men, Clinton; Robers ti ernes, Ilariock; John Benneweir* OroJeugcn; Jun Connelg, Coderice. Agents: Alex Leitch, ClIntOn; .1. W. floderich; go, Iliachrey; Seaforth; W', Chesney, Egmonevilie; G. Jae. teeth, 13rodhagetto .Any meniese o bo peld ra mat fie said to eloorish Clothirm Coe, elle:tom P,1 IU. Cutt's Grocery, Gotterithe Martics deetrieg to tare& Insurance ei. transact other business win be prompt!'' ettended te on Apple:talon to elm of the aria/emit:etas edureesee teas seopecave post office, leoesee hai„ „tee ay the director edict liege tat:lett the feceee. Clinton e s -Record "'CLINTON, ONTARIO, Teams of subscription—$3.09 per yeae. th advance to. Canadian addreteas; *2,50 to the ta8. or other foreign countries, No paper discontinued until All tirreare ere paid uniees at Om optima of the publisher, Tim, date to which every subseriptioseitil paid is denoted on the label, Ad: eremite rates--Transtent Ade en tinments, 10 cents per notesaviii liee for first insation end 0tonal eer line fon .ench subsequent inset., %tote :email advertisenttnts bat to caeca one inch, such e.s "Strayed," OV "Stolen,' ace ingots ad 01110 for 85 cents, and each suble. tment ihsertion le °male , Communieutioes intended for publieeto gen nattstiat a gearaetee of good (Fifth, be accompanied hy the name af �. writer. • E. HALL, AL It, CLARE. Proerieter. &Mae • Wenaen and Tree Planting. The women of the Prairie Provinces have energetkially taken. up the- sub - Jed of tree planting, which its We of the roomed for the steady develop- , bent of this vrork, Aside f TOM the erlal roturne whiat shelter -belie give On prairie &Tema they seld much to the AnDearratee mid 'comfort at the home end this eido eppeals especially to the heme-makelea Male:tort thine. Take an Mate match hOlt and an the iniside oa the top of the outer thee place, enough matehes to cover that whoSe side when they are Laid close tegether. Had thein in position, slide the troy foto the outer ease, And half close It. The eratehes will then be kept M,plece, Explein thee Although you oaten Med youe match hex ,empity beet when you most need a match, there is nova •thy need to be et any netionvensence 171 the matter, stove it le easy to prodeme 'meet-ei. at will when you knew .how. Close the. Vex milady, and thee at owe coon it egainand thew the nuathes lying in the bex, , . • Losing Control. r Altheugh be" has: his. weak Peiete, Wilfred Sintoes• was a good fellow. Ho linished Ms •eecoad. year in high sthool last yeer, but disl not make good reeords his goats. In the sunimer months he led to work if he were to dress as well as he wished to And weee to have any vending mon,ey -during the sohool yeas, am: his par- ents were not ofellote-do. He -got a job easily enough M one of the large betake, for they needed a messenger who eliould allsoabe a eort of "ansm of all work." There was a ensile on Wilfred's face when, after he had woeked two day% he said to a friend: Whom he met, "Did you know that .am a'beniter naw 5" "Good.," the friend replied. "I knew that you would make your meek some day." About a .month later the bank man- ager said to the mune friend, "I ean't keeja that boy, Wilfred. I find that he is, training with a group of the waist' boys in, town, boys who have tritely been in a number of serapes, I can't have mach a fellow in the bank, He gets throug.h to -night. I have toad him so." The next day Wilfrea again saw his friend .eo»ting down the street Aad waited fee hirn on the earner. As so -an as lee melted him he said abefilftlYi "I've lost my job," "What 1141% the '‘trouble'?" ' "Cth; the boas just teth ilielike te Met geese. He ditbat find eani with my work; just said be didn't like the boy's -I 'Iveht with, and shouldn't need me any longer." . A.s they.weaked, d-owastreet together, the: Deena /said, aWletred, why are there 69 mony automobile accidents on railroad eroseingsr "I den% kn,ows" he replied; "nolhody ever thefts 'to know just what' hoP- penal. The drivers lese e,ontrol, I geese, . I can't eee .whin they dimat stoe back wiime it is safe," "1 wonder if that 'wean the eetesen Bill Aldredge was- a/spelled. „from ethool Sate year," the Older man re- plied, 'flit didn't meal to get into that drunken Wage. Nthady plan's to do Sta.& a thing. He 'simply failed tee Aug when the stopping was good, and at a critieel time. lee loot oontrol. I wonder if that isn't the reason Sam Donoho failed in meet of bie studiee lase year. He got to giving more time and attention to the doings of Diet ronath Ward. gaotni of boys than to his studies. He didn't mean to, for Sem is a good felioev; but he went too far, and then lost control." "I' never thought of that," Wilfred replied, OI wonder if that isethe rea- sen I lost my job, I'm sure T haven't lost control yet; but the manager may think I wile lose control. T believe Pll ge ;back and make him a :remise and ask for nay jab agaia." Wilfred finished the summer on his banking job, and evhefi he quit to art - tend. sehool in the Sall the -manager of the bank said that he should like to leave bim again the next summer. When the boy told his friend' about it he said, Whill a twinkle in, his eyee, "I etoppecl when the etopping was good." BRITISFIEMPTS BIG SHOP WINDOW IMPERIAL EXHIBITION TO BE HELD IN 1923. Every Phase of Existence Un- der the Union Jack, the World Over, Will be Re- presented in London. 'It is, I am sure, unnecessary foe me to emphasize the importance of the Britisli Empire Exbibition, not only in eta pernaanent character es' the bonne 034 Britith Trade Exhibitione and •Bri- tish sport but also in its purpose as means of developing the resources and the trade of the Empire, , "I am convinced that it is o•nly by a general revival at trade that we may hope to regime the amount atunam- ployment in this country, and bring happiness and prosperity to the homes .of thoueances of our fellow -countrymen, who have been passing through a long- eleawn peried. ef depression and dis- tress." These words were 'written by _the Prince of Wales in support of the great British Etneire Exhibition, Nrhich is to be held at Wembley Park, Lea- den, Some idea of the vastness of the Exhibition may be gathered' from the facts that 'its initial cost will be 500,000; teat it will occupy at least 120 acres, and that, although it willeot be opened tin 1928, peeparations are already uuder way. Tile Exhibition may be visited be 50,000,000. people, and from this point of view, win be an object of great muter interest, 13ut quite apart from tbio, It is something width may bo of the greatest importance not only for the Empire, but to every citizen within it In the first plain, the -Dxbibition aims, at taking stock of the eesourees of the Empire, and owing how those, which are as Cly'unde-veloped or only partially 'lased, may be coneeeted into wealth. In this respect 345 15 hoped to diaeover teat we may be able to culti- vate within the Empire more glean and move wooleiiiiiee sugar and move cotton, more timber and more fruit, anti at the same time be able to mine a greater athaity of metals, In fitet, the Exhibition will, show us how the Empire may add in every imaginable way to our production of materials which boat me,et tho meals of the world. Solving a Great Problem Greater preelection le nrgently re- quired for the well-being a every M.D. 0511 naether be be employer or ent- ploghd., The SW has left the world von, poor. There fa a scarcity of a1. moot all of tee 'necessaries ta life, not only of food, but also ot thoee yaw Ma- terials which keep tem factories work- ing, , It was Mr. ITegheeeethe-Paimo Mints - ter of Austealla, Whoseatil:- "The Em- pire le able to supply alteee raw el -a- tm -MU necessary 'Oa merely -to Main- tain Britain as she is to-dayebitt. at a pinnacle of greatness beyond what elle has so far achieved," At tho sonle time, this liehibitioe will eitake the peoples of the Empire better known to each other quite apart 0. t d There will be, foe example, at the Exhibition, dramatic entertainments of 111 sate, in .which the performers will be natives of such avidely separated places at; Indio, and New Zealand. We shall learn how the peoples of the lent - etre live, how.thest have built and adorned their cities, what sort of nehools tear children tateed, whet s,ort of factories they work 111, and wbiti, aort ot homee they litre ill. This will without (1305±' be a very A rnan'e brain attains its 84axima:1i Weigat at the age Of evienty yeees,. ponalar feature of the Exhibition, be- eatme nothing of the same kind fine ever been attempted on such a large scale before. Many interesting Exhibits. In eveey possible case, the products at the Empire will be illustrated be actual examples It is hoped to build a gigantic aquarium, in which visitors to the Exhibition will see living ex- amples of the many thousands of strange fish which inbabit the waters over 'which the British Navy keeps sweaatsth in every corner of the seven Another point a great interest about this Exhibition is, that, for the first time, there will be shown the methods of the different countries in the Empire in caring for the health of their Peoples. That many ways In which scientists. now fight disease are a Tomance In themselves,. The study of :health will 1.10 a great feature of the Exhibition; along with it will be almost daily de- monstrations of the different sports which are popular thronghout the Em- pire, For this purpose a great sports ground as being built, and whenit is finiseed It will had 125,000 spectators, and will have seatin-g accommodation for 30,000. The last Imperial Ethibition was the Colonial and Indian Exhibition of 1886; but in this Exhibition no pro- ducts of Great Britele itself were in- cluded, 'The growth • a the Empire since 1886 has, of course, been enormous; Its area hat increased from 0,000,000 square miles to 13,500,000, The popu- lation has increased 'from 820,000,000 to 450,000,000. Exports from Britain to the Doininians bave risen from 275,000,000 to £500000,000 per year, and imports from the Dominions have risen from 280,000,000 to 560;000,- 000, Foster Empire Brotherhood. , And with all this Merease in trade there eas., of course, been a develop- ment in science which amounts to a moclern miracle.- Railways, steam - slaps, cables, wireless, long dietanee telethones, and marirother means of communication haver brought the Do- minions closer to the Mother Camara than their .have ever been before. It isCertaiu that if the Bemire is to keep its place Milting the nations of the world, .and the people of the. Ihnlaire are -to regaih the prosperity *lath Vas their34. beim% the wan those. "Hands Across the Sea" must be used In every moteibit way to' bring the Do - millions and the .Mother Canary still nearer to each other, It is arla areat ideal of the Batista Empire Exbibitioti to help on this lem Oro Brethethood, and to re-establish Dm)), ograin; beyond all challenge, the glory cf. the Empire. - Fifty Men and One Elephant. interesting tests *cove once made to determine the respective pewer. of 'horses, me» and elephants, Two horses, weigiting 1,600 Dounils each, together pulled 8,760 pounde, or 550 pounds more than their combined weight. One elephant, 'weighing '12,- 000 poubds, pulled 8,750 pounds, or 8,250 pounds lest than ha weight, Ihrty. aggregating alma 7,500 petards In weight, pulled 8,750 pounde, 03' hIStaz mach as the ablate. elephant But, litre the horses, they Pulled MOTS than their elm weight. One hull/teed meat pelted 12,000 pounds, elow Fear's Are Made, eat s,,•, a 11Se1 111 riming 111 51. . halal pearls; is 0 envery pigment ob. Miami from the eurtaeo of flak scales, In tile manutactmet a such pearls, the Meer wall ed the thin glass spheres is coatea with this esthete) awl 1,11e cavity filled web bard .wex, • Tearer hoot Early, . Tee willow is one of themeet itaapts, able Idants. A willoW }Mace merely i stuck in'wet stiltable ground Is almost eertaln to; take root, '* r-sss-srs "Pss.STISSSF. Ti1E-0R1(11114:A D abaillete tittettittg Oft a moil; Dut tlie sleep they teals wg , this 0 eye et lite dee, •maNilf(;'0F1)RFA • Drenthe fee nate itsteplY atudied. ea. NIS a, giallo to the treoienelle fat nereht ,.. diteetes, no, . • , HePpe area normal peoPle 00 ea METHOD OF MEASURING dream. Bee tat theolutelY uoranel aro In A li011t_ 0,1110 mittority, Meta ,ethee CAW 'A A COUNTRY T: 01? MANY CLIMATES 7-- • I• ' fo - • • b gree -atgartearGente y. Melageti Scianctista Have Led to Certain. Conclusions, On a the latest 8040ra/fie dlettever- • Me is a method of miaserlag aJeep Net the number a ,Infeee you 'bet how feet yet; are teflon). • • Supposing you ere so feet ftlilnela , thettaie noige eute,a by, a ball arm/Ping treat Itoight cif l.stat Inebes . not wthe you• Let us (tree the latervale front eight, ten, twelve inch, es., and so on, end we ean. teen get• some comparative standard 04 the "deepness" of sleep, , Meitner, Ivey ia to tonoll the eleeper with an eleeteiRed wire, nethig the In- tensity of the ourrent used, In suet; experimeetio, however, the mentearetti- tude of the subject always te 1113 taken into eenifideratlen. Thetas., any. one who is expecting to be awakened Wit/Miyake at the leait touch ok. sound. 'the, mother; foe Metanee, win ranee at the -slightest movement:6f ale bithet by her side becatistabefeen allovsing. to "fall 'asleep!' the has, ail it were, "set" her melee -nand , (whieh 31'o4 net sleet) at all), warning it to be ready to'call hoe Some people cati."aet." their under - minds to call them .at certain time as surety ae, an alarm clhelf. Safeguards Agaitiat Insomnia. e We havemo reliablerecord as to the length cat tirne a man can go 'without sleep at all. There are plenty 'of stales 0± centuries ago, when a favor - ate 'method of teatime vole to keep a prisoner -awake till he died, but it ts, of, course, imposSible to check any of the details: We do know, however, that con - Untied sleeplessness will bring oti .0, sort ot delirium, 011e experiment was made within the last few years. Some members a a univeesity stet were kept awake for ninety hours. One quite unexpected result was that when they were allowed to go to sleep, they made a perfect recovery after ouly a quarter of the sleep they keel lost. That is, supposing -that in an ordin- ary ninety-hqur period they would have taken thirty leours' sleep, at the end of the exceptiocal strain they only required the usual eight hours—foe all that they had lost—to bring them back to the normal. Quite probobly this ninetyliours was getting on to something like the limit of endurance of absolute sleeplessnese, for though we often soy -they have gone for niglas and nights 'without a single "wink," it isn't bete. ,They have slept, perhaps very badly, and only for a minute or two at a time, but they have slept. Probably th:e record for this- sort of sleeplessness was that of a woman who "didn't sleep" for two- vebele years. This Instance was a case well known in medical seienre. It is not meant that the unforturiate woman literally never slept, but that she only got a tew seconds at a time, As ,a matter of fact, she got arto such a, ter- rible state that all the time, dett and night, was sort of "awake sleep," A Battle in the Brain. One very cominen thing that starts insomnia is this: For mane quite good. saason—toothaohe 'or trouble or some- thing—you miss your night's sleep, Probably pen did sleep a little, but you tell yourself you did not "sleep a. minute." The next night you begin thinkine, how dreadful it would be if you distant siege that nigitt eitaer—beer yo31 wouldn't be able to do your work next day, and so forth. , .1f you eemind yourself that even though you are met actnally asleep, you aro getting as much good ota of just lying In bed resting, anti that it does not make a bit of (Deference whether you go to sleep or not --)'OU will go to sleet! Nearly' all of us -sleets too much. *any of my great nien—Dclison in our own time is an example —have man- aged with only foureer live hours' sleep. people ere= more or logo one are °urine ae, 50 13134 origin.and inteepre- Maims a Dolt drefune, • mbe origin a cinema is gonerella the gratifloation oe either or elletoonaeleue with, co. am sob' 0011834134145 vepreosioe a a paintul 01110 Doe, . In the het* of newt of, US there IS alueli thatwe are . emended- to foe - get And not - to Milt of, Dm lendeecy be, Ipgeeerly 71111711ye to 111117 the unplea,s, 81111end tho pahrful. • The °Meet of the dreern is to. keep one aeletsp, bra there ie 38 C071tE1et 'go. Ing OR between the 0011E111011S anti sub- conselositi Mee of the Mein... • Can Dreams be Phophetiof ,Cohaelousnees triesl to' interiene iMereseleue oS experiences.; thenehte, memories, d,osirest and '08113 specious 118611051 proeentsia, Sulmoneciouseese Mc:einem • 'deer torts' 'and alien these'. and 'genteelly euettitutise an eften ymboi- isni aetuality, The. isugeoneeleue facultsa for the intat part, acts as a beeellesent influence, tends; to gratify wishes-, aud trieteto 'settee things'. Dreams are never propaetio exeent by accident. To dream the winner of a hate -rate no more, Proves' the Pao . . pbetto 7031516 -7± yeer &ease thee the chande-, picking a e viennee'in youe weasieg colizeiousuees. preehil.' the Prh- pirate value of your conedieussthought, It is merely a coiacideace, • ' Nor is that horse's vietaa the or- • IgM of youe dream beforebturel. More likely the origin is a—possibly un- conecious—wleh that item -obtains; like that might tappet,. The meaning of a dream is- seldom what it &Paean, t* be oaa the surface; the obviates incterpretation isruot often the correet one, And for taat reeeon -the attempt to interpret d.reame by People other than those whe have qualliied by long and patient study on scientific lines iff likely to result in nothing but ignorant end tolnlly mis- lead/mg guesswork. A Hat Store. In his eagerness to see a wliale dar- ing the Image between Houolulu and tthe Wand of Haweii, Mr, Horaer Croy, who tells about hie, adveature In Tea - vel, leaned to far over the rail, and lost his, hat, After arriving at the island he climb- ed into a taxicab clad told the dritigr to take him to e that store, "Do you understand?' he asked. "A. hat store." "Yea, for .sure, all right," the Japan- ese cheuffeur answered. They went bum -ping up the street, ming wildly round - a comer, and Rnally at the ter side of the town drew up to the curbing, I11' the window a the stove was a bedstead on which hung the sign, "nit week ellen." "What do you mean by taking me 50 A furniture store?" Mr, Croy demand- ed. leis Hate, Store," replied the Japan- ese driver, and he painted to the name of the proprietor, "Km Hata." "I want a hat, eat a bed," Air. Croy said avith feeling. "I want iffor this," pointing to his bare head. "Yee, for sure, all right." ,With that the eab whirled down the street emit away to the other side of the town, while the taxi bill wits Ina- rily running um This time it stopped before a barber shop, "Ne, I don't want anything taken se R157 head. I want something put on it," deolitred Mr. Croy, who wasnow quite irritated. "Yes, for sure; 1 understami ell right," replied the chituffeur, with a grin. Tbey went clattering just 00 far to the other side of the town as tbey could, and drew up b,efore a store that Re 1111 afterthought apparently carried. a line a hate-. Mn Croy 'had to PAY twice tibe price of a hat on the way to buy it, but this did not eeene to, worry the driver, who', after the manner of eutomobile. drivers-, stood op under it bravely. Some people Mare mostly through stauly—others meetly through their mistakes, Facts -About Pins and Their Making While the emetttaeture of a pin is a and practical. The sheera cut inces- peocese less complicated than that of the making of a needle, the pin ee- quires many manipalations to 135 15 for market. Most of the pins used are ot yellow copper or et iron, but eons- merce • ales) demands pine made of steel. I3y the common method of manufacture the metal is oast into cylinders a little less than three feet loninand it little mere than a foot it breadth. The, cylinders are seized by EL wire drawing machine,' drawn 11110, andhammeeed or rolled lean lit foe upper part of the pin were drawing the bench, where they are reduced to bench is like a bowl. In it is a soaPY the desired diameter, water, the bath into which the =- That is the old process:in the latest elene and the material are run. Tbe improved method red copper and zinc. bath lubricatea the vales mid fee. it for 41:0 )111V into the erneible and the amen the work which follaws. After each gam obtained -by timing tbe two met. visit to the bench the wire is dippal als is' run into moalcis to form oval in a 10 per cent soluticn 01 eulpeurie plates, experiment haviog proved that , eeid nod wasbed in pure water, thee labor and expense ere saged by 1104; waehed In larnn water an5 dried, that form rather than the circular. Wbetber the Ivies is brass or iron The plates aro sheared and then cut it gees on the rollers to be menthe, into wiles. While being cut they are,: cally. angled, drawn and etraightenee, held feet b, meeeive teatime, ±1.4 (3110 :It presents ito extremity anti is in- delysieceb.isvIenifillaLvtIo1 11 153101011810110103 :Isstiavenstaritinuelte btytraeo 1 185thloartTasliiieatrpwthaicp101 plates by a simple true -knee machine that form its head. Tee eniat torteed ooneisting ot four groovea wheela anal pin wire, 'with its, heode, ie out into a chain ru18 over by a Palley' sections. As the see:theta are out While the plate is bold in positiom they fan on a grooved slide. The by. the nlppers or clamps its outer edge groove eateries the Isine by their leads rests egainet the tithgeht 0± tete eirem 1, and, with beads' canglit soul boalee lar shears mechanioallY turning in 0110 hanging, they are manipulated by a posite directioes, The machine starts I long, repidly emeolviag netted -or -item tang on a horizeotal axis, The pie is, then subjected to four am tione. It is teethed mesa' from ilte machine from behind, pushed to the ellaar Leeds The wire drawer draws' aids a the Bilde, drawn back and thee the plate along and the sheers force It forced forward, revolving as it moves to t11 1'11, •along. M the pin ativaaees-, eking the Wbflo the shears aro parlug it Into ettreen or 81014,0 bsdy Iles almost the required tempo the sixty eound wholly on tbe runflees ;Wawa it reeele valeta drags the traelt Wong, press- 05 thei 4311±1 ot theil.hangtakittedn „it hats irg 08 5117 shears,' 'rho 'work is strews inte a box set tit catotelt, mealy until the plate is pared to tht diameter et torty-five The Wire- given lay the equare sections goes t0 the wire clenvere, where the ends are pointed by file 01 117 hammer and passed oda to the drawing frame", The drawing frame for the wires 18- tende1 for the fin -est size of pine is formed by "black diamomds," carried by steel chaseis. The diamond is an important tete of the fifteen days' lab- or tor ite piercing and coots $80, The the theme wale and metal slate or wires receive their points laid are out into senora sections whieb aro 0010011 by workniert and hooked to ooe of tim WINTER IS ASSET RATH. ER' THAN LIAM. ITY. Rosett, Voitouver lama at Christmas While: Quebee En. - joys Curling Bonsoiel,' Winter time In Maeda hal joys advantages en owe, The peesdartiet does, not agree with the; statement. Me completes that -it' Is too oold, dis- agreeable foal unhealthy.; that it pro - daces. heavy coal and clothing. bills, iSte prevalence of merlons ilineseee and 0)118 atterruption of truffle and general )4181ueale 0;tnIs a'country not of one, bat et, many climates„ witli roses bloom- ing at Chiletniati tiine 011 Vaneoeva Mafia, while Winnipeg, Montreal and. Quebec are gettIng reacly ler their an - neat waling bonspiela As a matter of .fact, the climate of Canadn. constitute' one of Ito greateat advantages., Any - nee whit will take the trouble , to glance et a map of the world wili th- eme that Canada lies in tee same latitude' as the virile white motto of altietme, and there on be no question that Die climate a the northern, tem- perate 'latitude is more favorable to the develoement of healthy paths than aro the more eouthern climates: Vital' Matittie bear thia out. Nowhere in -the waled eri171 "ahealthier class .of elindren be Maid than in Canon% and. the :state of health a the ohildren is Perhatea the best indleatiOn of tho ad- vantthrte age:apeT10 e,00011asiotrexanll e. Catrat'ss den lower than that of England., Germany, Hungavy, Spai», Stveden, United States, Chili, etc, If it were 1l0t for Canatia's, climate, we would net be produeleg thp finest inaaeg wheat 1n, the world; the primest of bee( cattle; the growing mama of dither and fees and the tine, eigaroes 1:38e0 of young men and wo- men that so cheerfully demonstrate, in 5110 recent Armagedden its ability to endure a.nd accennelish. Long summer days, web ehort grow - bag seaeon, put the gnalllY 111 "No, 1 Northeree bracing cold weather puts bone and muscle, tat antibide ou horses and °Mae; snow eaves the lumberman's and fur traPPer's truths - son to be anticipated. men move into their wintee camps and portation problem, Ithile to tetreapipovei ot Outdoor sports, winter time is a sea- shores a Nova Scotia, the Rrst snow- fall ,ie bailed with delight. - Lumber - From the Canadian Rockies to the prepare to snake out legs; end hunters look tette stieugs of their snowthoes; sleds and toboggaos 5810 brought from their summer resting places and enthusieetisally overhaul- ed; s1d-ei's dream of record jumps as they father in winter with an initial run; and hockey players. get deem to training tor the strenuous psalm that put tbe Canadian "Falcone" into the premier place at the Antwerp Olym. pio thamplooship couteste of 1919. The rampartse-Dufterin Teerace— at old Quebec, take on a pictureeque appearance little' dreamed of in the ((eye of Wolfe and Mo•ntealin. Here, withift a radius of 150 yards of the fa- mous hostelry "Chateur. Fronteeac," skating, curling, ski-jumping, and to- bogganing hold sway. A kalehlaseoPic array a colom ana costem.es puts- the finislaug Mitch to an infectious at- moephere of the joy of living. Tbose who know it note -who annually go off sucicieleng to Florida, Callfornie or Bermuda, whose experience yet lacks a 5135 50 00 Canadian wintera, will eau - Dune to be amo.ng the erities, but once having tried it, they ims 31 good —and they come back, They realize, as have inhere before them, that Canadlen winters may well be deed to tho long list of this coun- try's natural resources, and that Cana- dian winters are undeubtedie assets —and in capital 'letters. Jokes on Nanxes of Famous Englishmen. Tile story goes that at a public meeting 111 London someone punned upoa the uame of the late air. W. S. Caine, M.P. He retorted, in las speeela that every possible pun of "Cain and Abel" and the like had been 10.38de upon his 11151110. 111 fact, he said he would give five shilangs to anyone 'Who could make a. new one. The late Sir Wilfrid Lawson, 11110 11749 011 7110 platform, immediately achieved the impaseible by crying teat "Don't you be in a burry, Caine!" Same famous jokes have taken the form of 51111)5 011 1171 111 08, Good Queen Bess, who liked to show' ber wit in this direction, once rallied her the a tier, Load Int:eagle about the Earl of Leicester, sayeng, "Yo be burly, nlY Lard of 13urieigh, but ye make less stir than my lord ot Leicester," Once when he saw Mrs. Grote, wife a the 11 IV.0117.1 11, enter the mom in a curiouely gorgeous bonnet, 8.741.1147 Smite, at one time Canon of St. Paul's, whispered to a friend, Now I know ghat grotesque moans." Christmas Evens, iho famous 'Welsh I preather, when ercasing over a moun- tain en a milliner day, met a. friend, Mr, Herring, who saluted lam by say. - Mg: "Whit wmad eave thought of NASAL DATA TII4Dttici,ellnyee,„rywOi,ersnioir, rtetraribti:strooterni.eue 15 ifi an inflammation of 5140 8118)00)30. membrane, eatieine it discharge, and 13 atocravated by colds 30(1 54101010» •rebangott of weetber,.bvt (lepezols On 4311 • wi11114.1 d 0141:0,1)115 oS 0(147 tlA'voiop 301±10, e°011118ellael mtPt;iunng ItYisste'es4'han infi dowr the tbe general health, • Begin treatment' with 'Hood.fr.s 01534/33:1113 at lance. This 3nediciye portfreii the blood, remeYeallie cause of the disceee, and gives permanent relief. 15 )1(15 been entirely satisfae. tory to three generations.. a cathartic is neecled taite Hood's Pillte—tbey enliven the liver, regulate the boWele. meeting ChristMes in the int:dale of mummer?" "And who woule have Olatight," replte0 Christmas Evelio,. genlifay, "to tunes met es Hereing ea She top of a mountain!" Thomas- Home the poet, 1785 the prince of Linglish punsters mal found hio own Dense 13 trattful subSeet of Ms wit, On being cchown a portrait of himself very uelike the Original, he. deolaree that the artist had perpe- tasted a fate Hood, Wthen near his - mid be said he was clyin.g out of' tharity te the Undertaker, 17/110 wished "to' ern a lively Med," One day at I3anbury Blame Wilber - fermi wee dipino in the cempany of some farmers. He was no5 hungry, and eeelaredetimselt "off his -toed." A. beetY feigner, belleW.ecida'Try erherley's food, nies. lord." The Bisliop immediate- ly replied, "That is- good for Oxen." "Oxon," of course 18 the signature of the Bisbope of Oxford. Victims of pane often resented thts, playing With their 1141110, 'ARM Joseph Snow, at one time clerk to the Liter- ary Fund, an& afterwards editor of a Weisb newspaper, often had name matte on his 1141114. To such he in- variably replied that he could not see the drift oe it. A lawyer lamed Little—a tall mare by the way—was once pressing the ease of his client in the 1101)100 ot litigation. The opPosing solicitor \WM, curiously enough, a man named Big- gar, wbo, becoming somewhat heatee, turned to the Court, and exclaimed: 'I may aot be taller:time Latta lea len Biggar." ' Interest in Forest Tree Handy Tommy. Two Hibernian ladies stopped to thut in the village street, and 0110 of them presently begau on the topie 81± her young son, • "Slitire, my Tommy's tbe ilne iroY, Mrs, Casey, and a great comfort to me, he's ilia handy about the house. Plavat d'ye Unit he did yielerday?" "I durum, Mae, Ryaurhwat dia 115 do?" "The Cuckomeloalt wits broke, and he fixed it" "Well, 110117, isne he the smart ladt And does it ;so now?" "it does that, Mrs. Casey Only A 'oo's' Wore it 'meets.' " Planting. ltems are constantly gang, the' rounds of the Canadian 1,14380 setting, teeth various plans for replanting the forests of thls 'continent. Some have. Sound a solation in letting the squir- rels and bluejays reforest cut -over tracts- by their habit of secreting nuts ancl tree seeds in the grqund, where, later on, if the animals or birds hale forgotten about them, they will begin to grow, A. more ambitions scheme ie the enrolment a twenty thousene boys in a isociety the members el which flre pledged to plant to many treee per year. • It is naively estate& Shat a boy eau plant and care for live acre.s of trees without inteeering either with his school work, or his de. Ing the ''chores." Maine these stherage ,thow a considerable lack of knowledge both of trees and boys, net to speak of squirrels., they are nevertheless. 1311- 1101:50.115 111 that they sem that the pub- lic is waking up to the need of doing =nettling to. reforest denuded areas, where the soil is not fit for agricultme. but is alined to growing trees. The. greatest power in securing reforesta- tion is 'public ophilon, and from tbo amok 0±. distussion now going on it is evident that that power is being en- listed in this work. --- 94% Don't lotitran too long, it will lead to chronic indigestion. In the tneanwhile you tuffer from miserable, sick la e ad a c e s, eer- vouenese, depres- sion and sallow complexionelusttry CHAMBERLAIN'S STOMACH&LIVER TABLETS. They re - rave fermentation, indigestion — gently hut enroll, cleanoe (ho oyatom and 108011tho btomach andlivorin perfect runtiingoraler, ,Ac sIl178003070,258„ 01 881 mil itort2 CharnheriAin Mcciibine Co„ Toronto ... , What those mon NW° do,tto, Y,Ou ca„elastry:irooTO:tip„ iviciCSeiccess _ r Read These hmazind 111 110101 )'o5 Can easily 7111I8Lar 1.110.ACCMG ot soling that malice Star Salomon. Mateyo, your exporlence 11'.3 been—whatevor Pa a rArd ST.H4 WOOPfr Stork,' a SLICOn to t on (nay be doing now—whothor 01 hot you t)5Ink you can ' .5I0107131007. (113:, apionl)on; Aso you m»bitiotis to oarn 3410,000 year? Then 501 15 tooth With rno at once! I will moo 10 108 without coot or obipration that. you 00 easily booms Star Salomon, I will allow you bow tbo Srileatiumship Training Ana rt. E,uploymattt Savieo of tit° N. :IT. A. will hOlp you to quick ituctess In Sank, a $10,000 A Year Selling Secrets 31801B00W2540,01,;:ttglabig iLlVette.1,1'40,‘!;14. fA.,314,!;,g oad moan pay of 14188.0110 jots that 100,1 00818,70, Igo mitior 88101;0011 e re rum 40180, 1100 5014 oi tolling onto i..0 410 ku1088. 031 th. We. O 811 or rm National Sateamsn's Trairar Ataociation C.stualina Nfo 116a.S62