HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1921-10-20, Page 4MC'tFOUR'
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The Clanton New Era
Tklursday, October nth,492
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* MEN AND EVENTS *
• * * * * * * * * * *
RETIRING CONSERVATIVE MEMBER
W, S. MIDDLEBRO, M. P., for North
Grey for the past tt yefrs, an-
nounces that he will not be a candi-
date at the coming election. He has
been the Ontario Whip for the Con-
servative Party.
T
R
For infants and Children
in Use For ®ver 3OYears
Always bears
the
Signature of
t__.
A NEW SONG
(Robert Norwood)
The world waits for a new song,
A glad song—a true song—
A song without the semblance of a tear;
Pull of hilltops and the heather
In a day of summer weather,
And a comrade who is infinitely near.
The world waits for a joy song,
A girl song, a boy song—
A song that arrows,upward like a lark,
the sky is torn asunder,
As With lightning after thunder,
.And a sword of sunrise drives away the
dark.
tO conte and sing a day song,
.A hill song, a way song -
4 wag to heal the halt and blind and
dumb,
Till they rise to follow 'alter
The wild music of our laughter,
And their glad feet make the murmur
of a drum.
Wo ' Cotton Root Cogifttostn
d safe, reUabl rnffF�ruilfare
medicine. • Sold in Marro. oto.
porno of ear •,+eth.-tqa
sacNo.
s 6
NO, a, N & Fes• lroa
Ppob onl ro r w!
.PeppompttatAddrosol
'ti'aBR.
COOK ar 5e$t55 CO.,
(1) In England, thousands of Shoreditch unemployed
marching from Hoxton to Guardians' Office to
demand increase of money grant, free coal and other
benefits while out of work.
(2) Launching of the latest and largest of Uncle
Sam's super -dreadnaughts the U.S.S. Washington,
at Cambden, N.J., September, 1921.
(3) Mrs. Arthur Hamilton, who failed in her second
attempt to swim the English Channel. She was the
first woman to swim the Solent.
(4) Anna Pavlowa, the celebrated dancer, who ar-
rived in Canada on the "Empress of France,'
October 13th, for a theatrical tour through Canada.
(5) Canadian teachers in England. The Mayor and
Nfayoress of Southampton, and Mr. Blakaway,
Chairman of the Education Committee, together with
some of the Canadian teachers, are here seen on
board the "Corsican," just prior to her departure
from Southampton.
(6) Remarkable welcome in 'London, 13n., for film
star. Scene when Charlie Chaplin arrived at the
Ritz Hotel.
(7) Albert de Conrville, known in Great Britain
as the "Ring of Revue," who will launch here "Hullo,
Canada!"
(8) Miss Shirley Kellogg the most popular revue
star in Great Britain, will make her first appear-
ance in Canada in "Hullo Canada!" with Albert de
Courviile,in association with Trans -Canada Theatres.
(9) A smiling snapshot of Charlie Chaplin in
England.
Goderich—Rev. Robert Cochrane, M
A., of College street Presbyterian
church Toronto, has been secured as
the special preacher for the anniver-
sary services in connection with Knox
church, Goderich, which will be held
some time in November, the exact date
to be announced later. This will be the
3ist anniversary of the establishment
of the Presbyterian church in Gode-
rich.
THE ROYAL AR.`'a y S
r(By Professor Percy E. Nobbs):
I While the feeling of Canalians
appears to be distinctly against
'titular honors, and while the in-
terest in personal coats of arms is
so slight that the whole machinery
'of registration is ignored alike by
the many unaffected and by the few
'entitled to bear arms, there has of
late been quite a healthy develop-
ment in the matter of place heraldry.
Many Canadian towns have adopted
coats of arms, and for the most part
they are feasible, heraldically speak -
and in some instances duly
riegtstered at the College of Heralds
in London. All the provinces, both
new and old, have beautiful coati
of arms, duly granted, and used to
the full by the al govern-
ments, both as decoratitme to puhlie
and as ft on
printing, The Fedexal authority less,
evileitarartUittaldedt ly, b
thahe
grovfncee tbfe. =1•,te, m,arshalled to-
gether on a quartered field, and
1aata but not lea*t, a mgrahalled coat
of the arms of all nine provtncna.
have all been used as a eymbol
sovereignty +in a nether iadiscrimin
ate fashion.
Just reoe;ttly, Hie Majesty the
Sing>—'�e Eaaprre'e ltfonntain of
honor,' to use the heraldic phrase,
has been gratiobeiy planned to ap-
prove
Royal Coat of Arms for
Cana
It is not generally understood that
AMTns. oaf Sover'elgnt r are not necos-
aewtq the Aresis of the eov-
eaeignf,aud In case of conquest Arras
coegjat' to1
rthitt n
9 r at
hass:been the W iyt if it in Himont,.
When the is innootianis Ham, and an sd, t
he
qatartiezi Arnie oesbur filet and
exid,the Sh and
Irish Axme' on the saoond and the
suppintere tbts liontrabsp.A. endq 1
r
many hanneis the St.
so th° i'>s «f
Sa
Ob lir tz tea d are Mann -
„,the he
11 ran-
theh, en
'rhatirtrds., /Owe the
'leIn by
W� �
e Coat of Aims, it
be as in the cane of Sim
won
hatband, Iva a eland ''Po avoid
RavelArnie of lig
the hemtdic porrtananteau phraeo-
ofo,y (which is the briefest and
most aoncise fawn of scientific .de-
ecriptive expression ever invented,
but a 1 not taught in the
schools) t�oeaign will be as toi-
lette:—
The shield will have four quarters,
and a base; on the right and left,
at the top we have the throe gold
°operds of England on a red back-
, and the red lion of Scot -
.and, with his blue claws .and tongue,
on a geld background, with a double,
lino of decorated framing round him.
Below the En lleh leopards, on 'a
blue background, we have the golden
harp of Ireland, with its silver
strings, and below the Scots lion we
have the three gold lilies of France
also on a blue background; and at
the bottom of the shield we have the
groin Canadian maple leaves on a
white of silver background. The
sunpnrters,aro a gold lion (without
aq•ctodan on his head as •ha the Royal
Iirma of England), but beating as
a baruntr the Hilton .Tach, and n all-
untoo= with gold trlannaings, in -
bin collar and his chain, and
F C
THERE IS ONLY ONE
® GENUINE ASPIRIN
Only Tablets with "Bayer Cross!'
are Aspirin—No otherst
if you don't see the "Bayer Cross"
bn the tablets, refuse them—they are
not Aspirin at all. '
Insist on genuine "Bayer Tablets of
Aspirin" plainly stamped with the safety
"Bayer Crese"—Aspirin proscribed by
physicians for nineteen years and proved
safe by millions for Headache, Tooth-
ache, .Earache, Rheumatism, Lumbago,
Calls, Neuritis, and Pain generally.
Randy tin boxes of 12 tablets—also
larger "Bayer" packages. ±fade in
Canada.
Aspirin is the trade mark (registered
in Canada), .of Bayer Manufacture of
6onoaeeticaeidester of Salicylieaeid.
While it is well known that Aspirin
means Bayer manufacture, to assiet the
bublio against irritations, the Tablets of
Bayer Company, Ltd., will be stamped
With their generaltrade mark, the
"Bayer °rose,';
eq a banner the ancient
Ams of Pru that is to say, a
pattean of gold. llea•on a blue field,
Abeam the obi d, the sovereignty
being royal, there is a royal gold
helmet, with the Imperial crown, and
on this crown there stands the crest
ponsisting of a ferocious little golden
lion taming a rut maple leaf In his
paw, and Namaing a crown on his
head. It in to be observed that the
crown and creat are attached to the
helmet by means of a r -ed and wblte
tit, and this may be drawn ae
twisting in and out of the
at even ase a rail and white
.round a emulsion on top of the
helmet, for if the rules of good
heraldry are very rigid in the mat-
ter of tho ahield, they are vary else -
ate .Nato intarprotation of the a -
maim
A d ea with the mantling. Tire
old Scottish custom of blue and
white will be followed, with this dif-
ference, that instead of white we
have ermine, and• as this goes well
with royal bins, the combination
:lakes^a far finer royal achievement
than if a gold and silver mandltng
is addod to .a Id helmet, a gold
crown and a gold crest.
There is no mottoed garter, or
chain and jewel of a knightly order,
surrounding the shield, and this is
urobably an intentional difference,
in consonance with the present peal -
,of affairs with reference to
Canadian titles.
The motto again is different from
that of the Royal Arms as used in
England, Scotland and Ireland, be-
ing "A marl usque ad mare.”
On the Royal Arms of England
there occurs at the bottom an orna-
ment --the three badge flowers com-
bined on One atom, symbolic of tho
Union. In the case of the Royal
Arms of Canada the badge flowers
will bo somewhat more numerous,
consisting of a rose flanked by a
thistle, a lily and shamrock, and leek
leaves, and terminating at each aide
in a twig of maple. This ornament
may, of course, be treated with con•
i5idorabie freedoim, and the coloring
be made as conventional or as na-
ttsraiistie as the taste of the artist
may require.
So, we have in the Royal Arms of
Canada an agglomeration of sym-
bols sanattried by origin, by time
raaesociatiorb--the leopards of
d the First, and lilies of
Ancient Fvance'and of the Bourbons'
empire, the red Scottish lion that
was old when Hobert the B.rnee re-
placed his private arms with the
arms tai rho So'v sraigaty • of Stet -
laud, and the snippoa'ttng unicorn,
with a crown about hie fit, which
French
Ear oleos mown of l tuevt'sadn and
though the � boo now the dila
tine**, crosses of the Scots crown,
the old chain is still appended there-
to The crest ie tha =at as it was
in the Black Princes time, trial the
addition of a crown an tTba llan'1t
head and a maple lard la his paw.
'Fir Union Jack en the banner is
itself a eombinatton of the aroma
off the patron sante---oak Petrie
Irma the earliest culture is the Brig
irh' lalaa, raid St Andrew's, near as
old, and St. George`s cause that vase
treed in land fighting since ever
Englisha Sen and Scotsmen fought
lot the adjustment of their ba$dora.
Brut its use at sea, accordin. to the
Genoese, was bought from drill for
because theirs was the only
reapteeted by 'Purim and Hift�,
English merchants had need- of
it in the Middle Sea. And there is
the story of the three badge flow-
ers, and their combinatlon on ono
is modern histintory.
to of the uaion, ,which
While we are considering this last
grant of Arms affecting the Do-
minion, it is interesting to hark
back to the first, which was probably
the heraldic device of the Baronets
of Nova Scotia, a ver beautiful de-
sign,albeit assoiwith a some-
whasordid tale of trafficking in
titles by James 1. and VT. a ,