HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1921-2-10, Page 5A sl
MOE 4 .."7=3711RMIlen
r---ea-ae.-weeateeeee-e-e-eeeeeteettereetteeateteereaeeteeratre
000'i try te gat too eloae to women
and, children, Who are liable to get rate
tied,
*
tt,
Cadlae Niv
es: —1Kitrolt Witold bar
from Its dance hells .all girls wearing
"too much mane" But what is to be
considered too much paint?
4$
eer• ei
*X
sills
litionaires
. on the Q let *f.
adatee-ateereeareeeetereerereeeeeeatieeterteaa';
45°. aIlDRE are some few very
wealthy mele-Lord Astor,
Reckefeller, the late Mr.
,Carne'gle, for example—
whose natnee are as household
words,
But thee are the exceptions. The
world knowa nettling of its wealth teet
men, simply because the majority ol
millionaires, contrary to general
opinion, are shy and secretive. They
don't advertise.
This assertion is capable of easy
,root. According to the latest Brit-
ish Board of Inland Revenue returns,
there are 540 people In Great Britain
who pay income' tax on $250,000, or
aver. Now, it may safely be assumed
that a person who is taxed on that
income is a millionaire.
Consequently Britain holds at
A WOMAN'S RIGHT
TO GOOD HEALTH
Most Tr0Obles, Afflicting Wthaen
Are Due to, Poor Blood
To every woman belongs the right
to enjoy a healthy, active life; yet
nine out of ten sailer from some
form of bloodlessness; That is why
one sees en every side pale, thin
cheeks, dull .eyes and drooping
figures—Sure sign of headeches,
we backs, aching limbs end uncer-
tain health. All weak women :should
Win the' right toabe well by refresh-
ing their weary bodies with the: new,•
rieb, redablood that promptly trans-
forms thein into healthy attractive
women. This new, red blood Is sip -
plied by Dr. Williams' • Pink Pills,
which reaches every Organ and every
nerve in the body. Through the use
of these pills thousands of women
have found benefit when suffering
from anaemia, indigestiota general
weakness and those ailments from
which women Alone suffer. Among
the many women whO tell of the
good Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have
done them is MrS, L. Hicks, Round
Hill, N, S., who says: "1 became very
much run down • in health; my blood
./
seemed weak and watery', my strene least 640 of them. And of this num-
gth failed, and' 1 was so easily tired ber it is doubtful if the majority or
the names of even the odd 'forty, if
that my work was a burd,en. I had heard, would convey anything to the
often read about Dr. Williams' Pink average man in the street. As for the
Pills and decided to try them, and I remaining five hundred, they are the
darkest of dark horses.
boxes 1 found myself gaining, arid pectedly. announced, shortly before
can truly say, that after using three When, for instance, it was unex.
the vier, that the Dnke of Bedford's
Covent Garden estate had been
bought for 23,000,000 by a Mr. Mal-
laby-Deeley, the question on every-
botlY's lips was, "Who is Mallaby-
Deeley?"
This particular millionaire has
since then achieved, even greater
Publicity, as a sort of super -tailor,
and he is now known, by name at
least, to nearly everybody. But at the
time of the Covent Garden deal only
his intimates in the financial world
had any knowledge of him.
Mr. Mallaby-Deeley inherited
wealth, but many millionaires have
risen from quite humble beginnings.
Lord •Inelicape, for instance, the
multi -millionaire chairman of the
P. & 0. Steamship Company, the Na-
tional Provincial Bank, and the Suez
Canal Company, started life as an
office -boy. In 1874 he went out to
India as a junior clerk. and he had
been there only a few months when
the firm who employed him cabled to
their London house: "Send us an-
other Ma.clasy." Mackay is .Lord Inch -
cape's family name.
Mr. J. C. Gould, M.P., another mil-
lionaire shipowner, also started In
life as an office -bay, and until he was
nearly nineteen his weekly wage
amounted to no more than fifteen
Sir 3esse Boot, Bart., founder oI
the greatest arm of chemists in Bri-
tain, owning six hundred shops,
large factories,* andlaboratories, and
if the signal is set for the opposite. employing more than ten thousand
workpeople, is the son of an agricul-
tural laborer.
At the age
under a. farther use of the pills all
my old-time energy and vitality was
restored. Out of my own experience
1 can strongly recommend this medi-
cine."
You can get Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills trough any dealer in medicine
or by mail it 50 cents a box or six
boxes for $2,50 from The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co,, Brockville, Ont.
GOOD SAFETY
RULES FOR OUR
MOTORISTS AND PUBLIC
When You Walk
Don't step off the curbing to cross
the street without glancing both ways.
Don't try to read your newspaper
crossing the street, or stop to argue
with a friend half -way over.
Don't walk behind a street car.
Don't try to run if caught between
two machines; stand still until the auto-
mobiles have passed.
Don't try to cross a crowed street
direction,
Don't cross in the middle of the
block.
When You Drive
Don't try to*alk to someone he
sounding
sounding your horn.
• Don't try to talk to someone in the
back seat when making a turn.
Don't cut corners. ,
Dou't get interested in something go-
ing on half a block behind you when
making a crossing.
Don't try to break speed records go-
ing around a cotner.
Don't try to dodge around the left
side of a street oar to get out of a
bloekadb,
1;
r
of thirteen Mr. J. L.
GIRLS! HAVE THICK,
SOFT, HEAVY HAIR
A Scent bottle of "Danderine wil
not only rid your Scalp of deitanetive
dandruff and stop falling hair, brit fm
mediately your hair seems twiee as
tindant and. so wondrous glossy. Let
nder ne" 9ae your hair. Have late
of long,‘ heavy hair, radiant with life
and beauty.
The NeTi, ra
"• •••4
i,.4444/4/4.4•4444^.1.*AL494.,.
7KES THE WHITESTAIGHT8
GUI r
„
i:eprogie, 11440 mem mug, WaS seeing,
newspapers in the street before and
after school hours; at anent he Was
an errand boy earning five shillings
a week; at thirty. he was general
manager over 21,000 men; and long
before he was forty he was a mil-
lionaire many times over,
The story of Sir Charles Macara,
the Lancashire cotton king, would
have delighted Mr, "Self -Help"
Smiles. Beginning as a clerk in a
factqry, he married the daughter of
the bead of the concern, and while
still n comparatively young man he
found himselthead of an amalgama-
tion of master spinners owning some
170,000 spindles aad nearly 800
looms.
Some of the millionaires above
mentioned, of course, are fairly well
knowa individuals; but not infre-
quently even multi -millionaires are
only revealed as such when they die
and their estates come to be valued
for probate.
Who; for instance, had ever heard,
peter to his death, of Mr. Charles
Morrison, of Coleman street, London,
who died in 1909, leaving behind him
a fortune of 211,000,000?
Mr. "Chicago" Smith, who pre-.
deceased Mr. Morrison by a few
years, after living hi London for the
better part ot his life, was even more
of a dark horse. He was, it is true,
something of a convivial soul; but
he was as secretive as an oyster, and
none of his many friends and,
acquaintances judged him to be oth-
er than just an ordinary well-to-do
individual. He left an estate worth
over $50,000,000.
Although familiarly ..known these
many years past to the frequenters
of Covent Garden as the "spud
king," ,very 'few people in England•.
had ever heard of Mr, J. W. Dennis,
until, early in 1917, he was,appoint-
ed to the post of Potato Controller.
Then it became known that he was
Probably the biggest grower of pota-
toes in the kingdom, owning a huge
'agglomeration of farms and market
gardens in Lincolnshire, with their
own system of light railways and pri-
vate telephone installation.
Then, again, there is Sir George
Sleight, the millionaire trawler own-
er, who began life as a cockle -gath-
erer at Cleethorpes, and to -day owns
nearly a hundred steam trawlers and
the biggest fish business in Britain.
Even more romantic was the rise
to fame and fortune of John Jones
Jenkins, who at the age of ' fifteen
could neither read nor write. He
was a tinplate worker, and his hours,
of work as a eltild—there were no.
Factory Acts in those days—were
from five in the morning till eight,
at night. •
Nevertheless, on his fifteenth birth-
day he started attending a night
school, and 'soon acquired the rudita
Intents of an education: Later.on he,
attended a technical school, where•he
learnt 'all that:was then known about
the tinplate .industry; arid at thaugee
of twenty-four he started. the Beau-
fort Tinplate Worhs, which, when,
the war broke out, gave eniPloY,ment.
to over thirty thousand. Men. Me:.
Jenkins was raised to the psattaffg
18 Lord I:44*We .in 19Q�, dads* a
amlej_if :yeaVs
Sport ArPlenty on Vancouver Island all the Time
•••••••••W
WK. FLeTc HER WITH
40 AND 45 La.
KING GALIMON
" ae
woe,
olvaL. ecuL.Leas OF THE, VANCOUVER RoWiNO CLUE,
' When Captain. Vancouver diseor-
Med Vancouver Island 128 years ago,
he deolayed that 1.1 required only to
be nourished by the industry Of man,
vritli MB:eget, mansions and cottagee
to be "the moat 'Moly country that
can be 'Imagined," Min has ably
Supplemented Nature since then, and
the traveller who has erossed the
Allaited States to California returne
east through Canada to enjoy the
amautiee of Victoria and Vancouver
and the Canadian Pacific Backlog,
Owing to its rot climate in win.
'ter, Vancouver Island Is al groat e
g fee "eve's: ef sport* ne It
le in enemy, E•
.'enetle arte atetr...lt irate for Om To
eriet, Walef C.Ori% or an.1.,n11.1 are
nopeler, and golf, tenals and sticker
have thousands of devoteles.
Victoria and Vancativer girls aro
clever with tho oars, particularly the
girl scullery of the Vancouver Rot, -
Mg Club who have won laurels even in
competition with crews of the eterner
sex. In the picture they are (beft to
right), Miss Elate Cooper, Miss 0.
Sbazan, Miss IL Matheson, Miss Flor-
ence Cooper and Miss Leonte La-
londe. .
Vano0uver Island is a great retiott
for fishermen who lure their finny
prizes from both fresh end re' I 94118r
tie of the rminasi ol there IA lbe tyee
819>on. to ,ilitrql by 1141' 11114,444114, the
' rielno mean mg I; me Platt Victoria
'MA timey rereet fishermen, among
teem W. R. Ile:cher, a emiduetor on
the Oceittlialt & Nallatine RailwaY,
4.4
aim recently caught two tyee galmon
weighing 40 and 48 poenila respec-
tively.
"When one of these boys hits the
spoon," says Fletcher, "he'll keep
you 'stopping some" tot a while, •
He'll tow yoh around, dive for tho
bottom of the zee, thee eome ep and
five foot hi tile Mr. a Some-
timee he'll fight for Meetly an hone
herbre YOU land hire in the boati"..„,
7.
v
•
Thursday, February otU,191f
BETTER BULL CAMPAIGN
Strong. Mat in Simplo.Worda tor'
- • Better Sires,
Lesson From the Case of the Keene
tateer,---How tt lloy Made Maple
Sugur—Garden Chit-Chnt,
(Contributed by Ontario Department of
Agrleulturn, Toronto.)
0 you' ever read the market
reports? ti you (ID you avIll
see ail ton frequently 0018
-
Mentz like the following:
Trade was slow and draggy: choice
offerings scarce; large number of in-
ferior cattle hard to move at rule
price,"
Have yeti ever personally inspected
the live steak at the Toronto Stock
Yards? •11 may eicern nlinost
sonable Lo say, but really the good
kind It all too hand (0 11011.
,The reason for poor live eloa la
very apparent to everyone Who 41S115
the couutry occattiOnally, and looks
over the average 'revile of cattle that
are being kept.
Small, "undersized cows are very
common, and, of coarse, 'there's the
light -weight bull of (usually) doubt-
ful parentage. Plainly speaking an
. -
absolute cull. .
'stuff sed." We don't have to go
much deeper into the subject to
understand where all the poor stock
comes from. ' . •
However, we will grant this, that
good feeding and care will do a great
deal, but you cae't get economical
returns from a poerly-bred steer, ne
matter what feed you put into him.
The Kopas steer Which was iso
ad-
mirecl at the Winter Fair at Guelph ,
recently was from a very ordinary
eaW, but sired by a real bull. I am •
sure Mr. Kopas would never hat: e
won the championship if he had used,
a grade bull.
Just remember this: The offspring
is not going to be any better Chau
the sire. If 'you use a. measly little
t'unlof a grade bull, that's narrow,
upstanding, and meat -hearted, don't
expect to top the market with his
steer calves. Use them 'for fertilizer
iv chicken scrap.
On the other hand, if you. use a
low -set, blocky, pure-bted. bull, one
wIth plenty of heart, good oring of
'rib and width of loin, full in the
twist and carrying a good router,
you ean expect calves et a similar
I:Yea.
It seems to 1110 that a. gamer
would take a great deal. ot pleasure
•
out of watching the improvement in
his live stock each year. The knowl-
edge tbat he, was being well, repaid
for lits feed and labor would be a
great source of satisruction.
Better bulls will have to be used
all oxen Onteiao if the farmer Ia. go-
ing to. lake lower prices and stilt
make a living.
The- crooner this Is understood the
better. Quality countswhen yon
come to. sell anything an,d it sue&
does calms in marketing live stock.
There never was a batten' time to
"scrap!" your grade bulland buy a
pure hued. The supply M fairly large
and prices are not high. enough to
hinder the average Emmert.
We all know that the, grade er
scrub, bull M "84411 0" Ile is, "sure"' eo
sire calves that will be "sure"- to. eat
more than their worth, "sure". to sell
for the lowest market eirdce, "sure'
to Lose the farmer money,. and 111 the
end "sure' 'to bankrupt the man.who
continues to use him. -0. P.. Mac-
Kenzie, Field Manager,. LineStack
Branch.. _
Zook% Cotton Root CompoonO;
•iss11
4 cafe, reliable reli3zaati.46
riptioose. Sold in Vitus. der 1 0
osenn'ordoinktk-,•No..1,•$X
Paid tovr d to. cir sont
Ns, 5, lib No446.per.hot.
l' t.4. 3siiiiiiirleti. -kilati,
li'' The coast vemecourao.,
reio,H0.01r. (u* ss)
' subtle, though no torsi intenae. The
4.4:011'48000800 le generally tat more'
chemical ChithgCS produced in Celle'
and glands by extrentee or heat and
eel& for Instance, are frequently. or
a Permanent nature itaa MU even ar'
Pict an entire generatieri, decreaeing
or Increasing fertility.
"Of course the temperatere is only
ego of the atmospherleal factors that
raore etetisties
111""" the badY' brut 11 40 been Tonight sure! Let a pietteant, harm
recorded 'Ioliger than any other and
other elements in the weather, ouch tars Oascaaert work while you sleep and
as rainfah, dryness, at,have a
cumulative effect of the temperature
equally great Influence.
()anew scientific methods 'toby
LI xlie °8111)1111'n':neneitIQ've 1f.14%25e4ThdorY5c0ataleeni:611:°:txla:
'It Is perfectly poesible by means
ars' illureinre' avail- hotaovienoaiovyho,u1rowiloolyeivte5r::::etivhco.,werdm.colveiern4
. 'regular by morning, No griping er in"
•
able for rethareb, But nun:It:sous
logically than average temperatures. running' ,,e. eetgar.
en the human organiern, Per such
purposes the temperatin'e iS register- etuAl,V,Zrolplit•ioUgn,y'isnsitestilli!gtina.iri,u‘:?itiY,
ed according to its extremes of heat his eiaskitnife to 580 tr, tho ii„1.,
or cold, these being more active blo-
t 01,111111i11111121111l1111112ild t mal for the locality studied, inoduces
teinperatute, as compared to the nor -
than twenty years show that a high
a high 'birth rate, a 101.V temperature
a low birth: rate. Fi'ona meteorologf-
Berlin and Vienna—the only
cal and vital statistics from Paris-,
eitieo ed where he could borrow a pen, But
augur dub. BM when he co:mailed
his. father ho found the (4,481110ot
er In Me school from whom he Moan -
w ail on not eanytatiloo,btahee,
it was, aml, he la cetti ..4.-
agrieultu rat t each -
"Researches conducted, for mora thusiastio about Jelaing Li stades
1 having adequate date for such in- he could; not g.eL any buckete." HOW -
A Dealers 50e. box, or from
vestigationsimit appears that a cold! some troughs out of basswood. He
ever, with hM father's help, he made
Tho.Pops Co., Toronto.
cut. down some arms, salted the,
trunks In sections about two feet
Long, split them in half, and then,
with a great deal ree work, hollowed
mut these pieces, thus making the'
troughs in. which to collect the sap.
The spouts were made of sumac •
branches about 16. Indies Long.
He began operations in a grove of .,
maple trees about the middle of
March and anish.eil the second' week
in April and in that time Intl: this
"The decrease in the bf•rtb rate is ture is rising, and the result will soon,
not due to immorality or lore of lux- be found in am increase In the palm- crude equipment made 6,0 pounds of
sugar nue 4.)a gallons 01 eyries The.
ury but to changes. in the weather," lation's fertility..
b
ing women or morals' lb. general tor oY's father bought part of Ms ere -
&acts giving hint a, Mg as payment,
"Instead off blaming men' er biam-•
and now thteugle the, ellteli week the
the lack of: ellirdren; legislators and
: asking young man baa. steadied int another
economists woad do well in
science 'to turn, Rs attentiOnt to the. hemmer of ageleulturate
climate for an.exattlanation of aiologi-
Sal phenomenati"
"Cascarets" if
Sick or Bilious
winter produces a decrease in the'
• birth rate,while if the cold' of the,
BLAME THE °DEVIATE.
winter months is counteracted by a..
particularly warm summer or by an
It Is Responsibie 8001, Eynerenne
unusuallY warm July or Artist, tee'
Birth Rate. birth rate is' hnproved'.
• That weather has a great influence "Aside from the toss of men due,
on the birth' nate is the astonishing to the war, tile birth rate Fa Frame
discovery =AV fa Paris lay Dr. A. to -day shows- the effects of the per--
Mageissen, a noted French' physician sistent coolhesei of recent years: Ste-
• d bi 1 e ' thetics now Indicate that the tempera -
explains Dr. Magelesen. "For the last
thirty years or war the tempeeature of
western Europe has been steadily
falling and one ot the eonsereteences
has been the diminution in births
which is troubling' both regtelatore
and moralists:
"While everything, must be done
tb provide better housing fitefftties,
better maternity' hospitele, eh:, to
encourage large families, scientists
must study tlie' relationship: between
atmospheric factors' and thekhortran
body, so as tee be' able to' draw con-
clusion's applicabik' to. social (rendi-
tions.
• "Variations' iiitemperature' may
have immediate effects — as in the
case of eolds. sunstrokes.' et" —but
Your Heart' DeeS it
ilyr Palpitate?
Making; 'MUM Talk..
Experiments made by twin young.
Danish engineers: promise to. revolu-
tionize wireless: telegraphy and tele-
phony.
They have dikeoveated' a new: force,
resembling ellectroemagnetism, by.
means of whibli; it will be possible to'
increase the capacity of a wireless
station to receive or despatch mes-
sages.
The two inventors picked' up wire --
less messages from different Euro-'
pean stations, and by a specially con-
structed apparatus were able to take
them down at the rate of six hun-
dred words a• minute. Mechanical
The component.. parts. oP Milburn's recording ofwireless messages has
Heart and Nerve. Pills are indicated to been attempted: already in France -
do away with palpitation and other and Germany,. but the highest rate
heart weaknesses and thus strengthen has been one hundred and, twenty
both the heart andnerves. words a minute.
Mrs. F. X. Gauthier; Tilbury„ Ont., The force by which thim is made
writes:—"During 25 years past 8 was possible is developed by sending an
greatly troubled with palpitation, or the electric current through certain sub -
heart, and sometimes so mush so that stances—for instance, lithographic
those arounll ine. thought 11 would die stone (a slaty; limestone).
at any moment, being so muckweakened • During an. experiment one of the,
by the sharpness. of the palpitation inventors went to a house eonaected.
which would last. sometimes matothree
hours. I had the, doctor wile kept me with the demonstration -room by wire
taking his medicine to oVereome the and played en a violin. This was.
distinctly heard by the gathering in
disease, but, tono. effect. There was the demonstration -room. In fact tho
no change at all for the better:.ound wasmagnified so much that
Two years.ago a friend advilsed me to listening became almost unbearable,
s:
use Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pine.
I began to use theal at thee, and at the The inventor then talked. into his vio-
second box I began to feel some relief, so lin, and another violin in the demon-
second
continued ta, use them according to stra.tion,them repeated his words.
directions, andinow I am perfectly well.
Before using the pills,. I never weighed 0
100 pounds, now I weigh It7,, and feel p 01i ttitcaswalwaitocuhrna---O
se ahead',
taanIka
.
as if I were young although. I anx‘over
66 years of age." bring the train in on time.
Milburn'sHeart and Nrve Pills
50c. a bozat all dealers, or mailed direct Pontiac Press: —Who is batter qual-
Heare
5,o,,,11,1„.„....„„reited.T2........„.....„,„,ronto. Ont, step, than Pussyfoot Johnsone
ified to teach the new dance, the cat- • . Is. oblodc7.27c.h.:c.
,
•
on receipt of price by The T. Milburn
and thin 50118 of the new growth.
am soon as they. are through trutting
Remember the fruit is borne on two
and three yeah old wood.
but don't depend much on them unlit
' Try a few new fillings each, year,
they have pinv,ed. their value.
am early as possible _ They delight in
cool moist weather.
hardens the tissue and makes the
ing in the garden. by reducing the
plant bettam able to: withstand the
othaeptrdeeotou:o're tew oid fashioned but
heat and water given there This.
Cut out the old manse 01 earmuffs
Sweet peas should be planted lust
Harden off alt plants befoue plant-
ica°sAlcia.tit'irs
Garden 01t11-Olurt.
plants that will suc-
ceed as well imam all soils of
oo onngocimoi iitoasperi dioiIaL%.
s
onion sets give more green
quart of seed and are just
as
the large bulbs sometimes
PulYerisell
need not plant more apple or
plum trees than you can use the fruit
from. But plant that many. Perhaps
it will be a dozen or two dozen, but
have some en the place.
The Things in life are
That Count wheeaaltlhtanha
happiness. Health first,
the others follow. Good
7 digestion is most important.
At the first sign of disorder take a dose of
11 IkP
On Snowshoes, Skis andSkates in Old Quebec
Ce40,Ad00onitieM.
!(;knard,are yo,u.positive,thie train
will stop at Lcndoin74 "gmft,* tk&91 a
dozen times .the• oid lady :had' asked
Oki question, and the xtrati1 Began
to lege patienee. "Look.'er., paa'ala,"
he eald, "this is•an express toon-
don ; and if 'we don't seep there,
ytiou'll' tie in thsbiggeit sinahh••:up
ever heard oft"
. •• MI "the Whmeist
The ,sportsrean's Baedeker, Runts
Racing Guide, was originated, and
compiled by a man who never made
That is tine 6f the most striking
facts,in cennection with a book which
has penetrated into every section of
• English eociety, from the Court at
Windsor to the courts at White.
'chapel.
Ruff ,was a sporting Journaliet. He
wan intended for the law, but for-
sook musty legal tomes for race
calendars, and, in a few years estab-
lished. a reputation as the brightest
and most reliable writer on matters
connected with the turf. '
He refused to bet; but he was
always' willing to guide and advise
those who wished • to risk their
motley. His knowledge was strictly
impartial and invariably .accurate.
He looked on, saw most of the game,
and finally decided to publish his
Guide, Which first appeared in 1 8 42.
Ruff died In 1 85 6, but his Guide
is still the British turf classic.
14
• These Beetles Idat Lead.
A sensation was caused some while
ago by the discovery of a beetle that
likeg eating lead.
Considerable damage was being
done to soiree lead -covered cables,
and it was found that the damage
was caused by a beetle which bored
into the, lead casing..
Spechnens or the beetle had been
found in lead -foil packets of tea, and
naturalists concluded that, the in-
sects were coming from India or
Oh Ina.
It is more probable, however, tb>at
the lead attrketed the beetles.
You aro not
experiment-
ing when
'‘,011 1100 Dr.
• •7 . Chase's 01>,t'•
inont tee goemnit, mei .811in Irri444-
4 boob, P rogoves at time Abe yradb-
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With the object of making Quebec
the leading winter sport city on this
continent, a very attractive and
varied programme of matches, races
and competitioes, some of interna-
tional character, has been arranged
for the season of 1021, and visitors
to this beautiful city will have a
wonderful opportunity of witnessing
or participating in a giddy round Of
ski.reees, hockey games, snowshoe
tramps. curling >nntches, skating
events, indoor Emd outdoor fIivi
ties and entertai ete ann e ihis-
toric setting without ' paraltei 11,
North Ametlea.
'rhe Chateau Pia,T.tenee which is
the traditional :metal centre of the
city has Qo-aperated heartily by the
contribution not only of a triple
toboggan slide, a sheltered skating
rink within the spacious courtyard
of the hotel, and A curling rink in
the Pant Ceurt, but also of a cup
for eontretition botweon 10101 Arne.
knlir ' city and of
metes for competition between the
ski -clubs and snowshoe ebbs. •
The whole city with its hilly
streets, its fine public rinks, its
beautiful park on the Plains of
Abraham, its peoximitY. to quaint old
French Canadian villages and nat.
ural scenery of spectacular beauty
such as Montmorency Falls, its
atmosphere of hospitality and gaiety
and charrn, offers to' those who love
to tramp on snowshoes or glide on
skis, or. hurtle down on toboggans
or drive, wrapred in furs, to the
jingle of sleigh -'boils a choke of out-
door winter recreation si.ch as would
ba diffieult to rival.
The population of Quebec revels
in its glorioth 'whiter, from the
cradle to the grave. Herdly can
the Quebec child toddle than it takes
to snowshoes mid very soon after
that you find it on skates Or on rt
tobeggan 0> on skis, As the years
pass he or she 3o101 u club endplays
hockey, and Many With the approach
of maturity learn to wield the broom
and the curling stone and "seep
her up." A dog sleigh Is a step on
tho ladder to a sleigh driven by a
fast trotter.
Winter Sport is thus native to
Quebec, and the guest at the
Chateau will quickly aind himself
infected by the spirit of the place,
The snowshoe clubs extend their in.
vitations to their outings and plan
to hold many of their outings on
Dufforin Terrace, just at the Cha.
teau doors. A big curling Bonspiol
is scheduled for this season, in which
teams from many points in both Can,.
oda and the United States will per.
tieipate. Within the hotel there will
bo indoor golf, billiards, music and
an excellent floor for dancing. The
convenience of having 'both A skat.
ing rink and a curling rink aetually,
within the Chateau walls need eel
be mentioned (Dabs appreciate d
while the toboggan elide on Du s
Lorin Terrace, Mid a ski -jump Ma
veitir last than two 114410110114 Veda
of t e door of thshot ....,.L.,.....*
844