HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1920-7-15, Page 3SUBSCRIPTION RATES IN CANADA
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THE CLINTON NEW ERA.
3. a
SUBSCRIPTIONS OV
. (Milano
Croat Britain , , , ,
United States , „ „
Plum
Thursday, July 15th, 1920,
r EXPORTS OF PUREBRED STOCK ----
I The breeding of purebred stock
theWest may be considered a com-
paratively new industry, for It 10 not
flong since the days when quantity
. was trite idea uppermoat in a ranch-
er's mind, and quality M his animals
received very little ooneideration.
This was in the epoch of the huge
'ranches, but with settlement and the
' introduction of other and more inten-
sive methods of agricultural Mock
raising, much attention has been paid
to the quality of the animal raised
rwithhe result that the stock of the
levenWrn proviimee le becoming
acnown wherever interest is taken in
the maintenance of herds of prime
quaiity. In the western provinces
breeders have always had the active
• coeseeration of the 'MAGUS govern -
mats who by an aggressive cam-
opaign of propaganda; the institution
and work of experimental Panne and
antelligeat dietributien of Matils-grane
'animals in We stock raising districts
aurae striven to elevate the quality or
Ithe animal bred and eliminate those
rev grade. ee,
• Tne, resulte, cif altis intellieeat no -
are becoming more evident
'.every day. Burebrod stock farms
:ore now as common'aatolarht the
• {Vest as were the 'ranches of the old
days, and the demand for their pro-
• duct"is increasing and covering a
large area. Each year many sal -
mals are purchased by American
-lfarmera at the annual sales through-
out the west and huge priced realis-
ed. *.tustraltans are enthusiestle
lover Canadian purebred cattle. Re-
mently a herd of Holsteins were ship'
ped to the Antipodes as an experi-
ment, and ao great was the demand
that they could have been sold seo-
(1) Some fine cattle graze on Albertan Prairies.
(2) The children help to, rear the stook on the Prairies.
the introduction, as the government
eral times over. The outlook for
expert in this.direotion Is so :aright
that a further herd of twenty-four
head hos been shipped from Vancpu-
ver, and it is confidently expected a
regular export business in Canadian
purebred stock will be maintained
with Australia.
Holstein stock was first introduced
into Canadaetrom Magian.% and now
it is found necessary to introduce
freak blood for the revival of British
stock. Canada, where the breed has
arrived at snob a high state of per-
fection, has been chosen for -this im-
portant re-oopply, ani aepecial die-
eeegusateetn Tone be granted to permit
ucatio
does not permit the entry of live cat-
tle into the country.
British Coluinbia has also supplied
the Hawaiian Island with its fliot
Purebred dock when, a short while
ago, a consignment of Holsteins and.
Jerseys went to the stockmen of
laahalue Island of Maul. A clear,
realization of the importance of hlgle
quality, have In face with intelligent
breeding andIthe active co-operatiori
of the Dominion and Provincial Gov -t
ernments, raised the Canadian pure-;
bred standard, until it has through
it own excellence created the gen-
eral demand which exist!) at tiredent.'
Hi -
Canada
Newspapermen for
• Presidency of U. S.
Both James M. Cox and W. G,
Harding are Newspapermen
• and Come from same State
The Presidential fight in the United
States next autumn will be between
two newspaper mess and between two
public men from the State of Ohioesitun
es M. Cox is Governor of Ohio, and
Warren G. Harding Is' a Senator font
that State. Harding owns a newspaper
in Marion, Ohlo; Iaox was a newspaper
proprietor in Dayton and Springfield
when elected to Congress io 1908,
The Democratic candidate is a native
son of Ohio, being born there*, in Jack-
sonburg, fifty years ago. At the age of
Inineteen he was a reporter and printer'(
"devil" on a Dayton paper and before
he was thirty he had bought The Dtton
Daily News. Later he bought a Spring-
field paper, and in 4919 he began the
first of his two terms in Congress, He
went in on the crest of the Detnocrat-
lc party's wave of success to the Govern
orship of Ohictin 1913, lost it two years
later, and "careeback" in 1917 repeat-
ing in 1919.
Under tho British North America
Aot of 1867 ehe right to legitilate on
matters respecting education in Can-
ada was reserved exclusively to the
provinciat legislatures. In general
throughout Canada there are two
fundamental systems of education,
one that o' the Protestant com-
munities free from the control of
religious bodies, and the other that
of Roman Catholic communities in
which education is united with the
reiigioue teaching of the church.
In all the provinces the cost of
°ducat/On is defrayed from the pub-
lic revenue, provincial or local, and
public and elementary education In
absolutely free. With the excerption
of Quebec all the provinces /man
laws of compulsory school attend-
ance, uniformity in the training of
teachers, text books and the goading
ot children. 'Upon application the
provincial goveramout givee im-
mediate financial assistance for the
erection of new schools where settle-
ment warraots this or Increased ate
tendance demands a large edifice.
klach year thousands of new schemer
are built throughout the length ot
the country especially in the ever
growing western provinces. As»
&Seitance in the payment of teachers
is given by a annoy of grants.
Nature study, roaDual instruction,
school gardens, domestic science
told technical education hare been
token up energetically, whilst sun
culture, whirls after all is the cause -
try's prime interest forms 'an
portent item in the currioulum of all
schools
In We cities and towns of the Do-
minion no expense th spared in the
mection of haedsome, spacious
school buildlngs, where health con-
ditions arc the prime consideration
and they farm no mean part in the
aggregate of Canada's floe public
stroeturce, Solicitude is exerted in
the health and the general welfare
of the pupils in the plans of eon-
' etruction, and medial officers and
Leolth nurses supervise the general
nvellaming velem they are in oper-
•41 i
in the rural districts naturally,
where In the first, settlement
terms nee ofton widely separated,
echolastie teellities do riot exist in
the some perfection, though every -
Ilene le done by the education de-
poriesente to Meet the more difficult
ce.nentione and the child of the farm-
• is need not tall tar behind his city
brolts&I l the mogress of learning.
maloritv of the sobools are un -
e -Med. (.het is revere' mall Manses
ere laneld by this test theeher, and
v distrlett are of each dimensions
zotss!balmUsa chool bootie rattily
Ible from the turehteet
ie -tined teaelsers are provided
peovinclea ruvenael schools;
rellereteuteIa conspnlosrl, tie in the
, att. .
Carburetor Uses Kerosene.
An automatic carburetor has been
developed in England for which aston-
ishing claims are inade. The details
of its construction are withheld, but
its performance is said on good au-
thority to be remarkable. During n
demonstration test it was used on a
twe-cylinder, six -horsepower motor-
cycle. The start was made with the
engine cold and the float chamber half
tilled with gaeoline, The change to
kerVseiTe, while under way, produced
no noticeable difference in the per-
ne_nemence of the eneetne, There was no
krades, no smoke, no
odor. The cylinders fired crisply, the
pickup wakquick, the firing regular at
all epeeds, and the power all that could
be desired. It is even claimed that,
with the new carburetor, a gallon of
kerosene will drive the motorcycle
and sidecar the unheard-of distance of
98 miles, but there is 20 official con-
firmation of this statemert.
Learning Deadly Alen.
The skill with which American gun-
ners frustrated the attacks of U-boats
was due, In a large measure, to the
use of an ingenions target for gun
Practice during the voyages. The de-
vice consisted of a fratnework, about
thirty feet long and , five feet wide,
:,built to be drawn through the water,
with an imitation conning tower and
periscope mounted on the upper side.
It was drawn behind the ship by
means of two cables attached one above
the other. By pulling on the upper one,
the upper side of the frame was made
to project forward, .rousing the 'target
to rise to" the surface, while by pulp
ing on the lower fettle the device
*would quickly submerge. Officers out
of sight of the gontiors manipulated
the apparatus, frequently changing
the range by paying mit or taking to
the cablee.
(1) Macdonald College, St'e. Anne de Bellevue, P.Q., where
many Canadian teachers are trained.
(2) At the Agricultural College, Olds, Alta.
(8) A Group of Pupils at a Rural School in Western Canada.
Every province possesses finely ized.
equipped agricultural colleges with There is virtually no limit to
up -to -data faculties of scientific educational facilities in the Domin-
farming experts where the most len and the child hoeing completed
progressives and modern methods of public and high school COUrS08 moo
agriculture are taught and where the go further and lane twenty-six men
degree of Bachelor of Scientific Agri- versttlee to theme from, ten in 0111
culture is conferred at graduation. tario, four web in Qtiebec mad Novst
As it la impossible for many of the Scotia'two each in New Brunswick
sons and daughters of farmers to ad Saskatchewan and one each in
attend all the year round nand emu- Alberta, British Coatimbia, Manitoba
paste the COUrGES, 'winter awash= and Prince Edward Wand, Thrtingli
aro hold in every province Where the Rhodes Scholarships these
ohoot condom are given linparting yawn Canadians have the OrePOrtUsti 4
th0r0110 trainieg to boys and nity of entry into the colleges oi
',iris over the public; seeiool one In Oxford and Cambridge fostering the
estelligoat farming ansi ,mientille Depot -MI onion and continuitsg teens
methods, domestic undines and other echolarehlp wkth students from evorn
I betee of form work, Therm otemene part of the globe. "*tni,r,.? tio, Ca,re
nave prev.*d. of Immense intereot and adieu unlyereitice, notably McGill ai
' value mai stro widely appreeistiod by Ritootreal and Toronto University
agricnItt,ral ootoratiolticas whibit the have von world-wide tepee, sic ..J
adoestauce Is yearly Irtorocusal AA the and foreteller! Eureposu Unlvereltee
'emote be be derived tram these with proemeora.
avert Wane are the more fuily real. .
Getting Rid of Marble Waste.
*The waste of a Vermont' marble
quarry is reduced by cruel/era- and
rolls to fragments of One-half inch or
loss, alio is then burned into quieklime.
The rotary kilns for this purpose is 8
feet In diameter. end 20'feet long, in-
clined 4 per cent from the horizontal.
It le driven by a belt Peons a 30-borse
power motor, and has a speed of 0.5 to
1.5 revolutions per second. Producer
nes introdueed at the lower end yields
a temperature ot 2,200 degrees F.
This converts the rock fragments into
quickiluee by driving off the carbonic
acid gas, and. We hot material drops
from the lower end of the kiln into a
rotating cooling cylinder. In this
cylinder the draft of air passing to
the burning gas cools the product for
tile Monate bins,
'LIFT OFF CORNS!
,
.•
Apply' foot drops 'then lift sore,
touchy corns off with
fingers
lee-re-7ln ,
AN,- • WI ,11)11
047*''''''''"7777ir 11111 ill
• GiLLETTS LYE
„HAT THE THING
• EATS DIRT
• .
FOP Pore Arm PANS
Latest Press Comment on Choice
SC
The sma
has been p
wing spree'
only 220 p
nines en
in the ct
real of pap
striking sat
can be rem
fac,e when
British e
of control'
paratus wit
an automol
far away as
To perm
row has lit
and down t
ontally on
ling medic
proves sue
extended b
of New Premier for the Dominion w 1AI bbaeu te q
sideways o:
0 n
.11110MiliMENI.M1116.01111110111•Minillim.
!Winnipeg au;y 91—(Oommena)
The Winnipeg Telegram says in part:
ilise Glernolt-General's 'summons
to Hon. Arthur Meighen to form min-
istry for Canada constitutes the great
est tribute that Canada can pay to that
very able western gentleman, based as
it is upon the admitted confidence of
the rank and file of the members who
have supported Sir Robert Bbrnen
through the trying period of war and
The Victoria, B. C. Times says—
'Itthe more trying period since.
is about time that Canada re- Hon. Arthur Meighen successor to Sir
cognized ability and merit alone and iRiaosbesrhtoBwonrdeeonnissiayeoruabngIndustriousand
!lenient and office but the rejuvenation
of the Unionist administration is beyond
his powers or the powers of anybody
for that matter. The horse he expects to
ride is not actually dead it is a comat-
ose condition bordering on the end."
—0—.
Unionists Satisfied'
The Moose Jaw Evening Times Ore's:
"The announcement instil- Ottawa
that lien. Arthur Meighen has been in-
vited and has accepted the call to form
a ministry will beyond all doubt, re-
ceived py the supporters of Union Gov-
ernment. The Premier -elect has bad a
'-brilliant political career and his as-
sumption of the premierskip is to him
the gaining of Die goal which has been
Isis inspiratimp and towards which he
Use past, justified his fitness for leader-
ship and in spite of a very difficult posit
ion he can be relied upon to carry on
the work of the government successful-
ly. As the first westerner to become pre
mier, Ise has conferred a new dignity
on western Canada."
No Future Ahead
governed itself accordingly, rather than
allowing political considerations borne
of the bias of self-interest to govern
its management, Mr, Meighen's choice
there is every reason to hope that tisat
lime has arrived.
—0—
A French View
Montreal Que July 0.—La Presse, the
most widely circulated, Preach paper
in, Canada says:
"Mr. Aleighen has consented to
undertake the difficult task of extract
ing from .tbe Uolooist chaos an ad-
ministration with a change to maintain
itself at the head of the' public affairs
of fisc Dominion. 'Will he succeed in ae-
complishing this tour de force?" Noth
ing'-Ts certain, it; spite of all the lat-
ent and cleverness which are recognized
in Sir Robert Borden's succe'sSor.. The 'has not feared to thrust hitnself upon
Canadian people will not forget that he every opportunity. The Ottawa linemen -
was the directng force of the party cement means the attempt of the Con -
which caused so much 111 to the conn- .servative to rejuvenate the old Tory
try. It will not forget that he was the • Party. Mr, Meighen is the logical sel-
ection as executioner for' the Hanan's
gallows policy. But of Comservative and
of Union and Nationalist Government
platforms and policies it has been. writ-
ten, "settle, mane, tekel, upbersin."
author of the fambus conscription law
and et the war elections act,"
Doem t hurt a bit!' Drop a little
Vreezone on an lathing cern, itstantli
that cern stops hurting, then you t
it right tost. Te, asugielq.
A tiny bottle of Fteesone costs but a
few cents at any drugstore brit is RUM.
dent to remove every httri.1 corn, nett
corn; or core between tho toes, nnd the
(onuses, will -met coreeeee dr irritation.
Vint -zone is the Zensati oral discovery
;1n Cincinnati, vides, It la wontlerful.
A Brilliant atmeessor
Quebec July 9.—Commenting upon
the non. Arthur Meighen's acceeston tos
the premiership of the Dominion L'Eve-
nment said editorially yesterday after The Regina Morning Leader says:
No Enthusiasm
nelons.
"Sir Rbbett Borden will have *Jr Ws
successor lie tender of (lie Canadian
Government the most brilliant mut the
best of his colleagues the Hon, Arthur
Meigian, who in spite of his eompare-
tete youth—being no nsore than 45
years of age has been a member lb; 12
years and a choice we believe will realize
the desires of the parliamentary niftier-
ity. It can be said with truth that he
bas been the right arm of his chief since
they have fought together in the arena
of the House of Commons.
.-0—
Alt Election Must Come
Windsor, Ont. July 9.—The Border
Cities Star (Independent) says:
'The retirement of Premier Bowden
brings nearer that fateful day upon
which tbe Government must appeal to
the people, The ordeal cannot be avoid-
ed. For the administration to continue
its power even if able to muster a work-
ing majority, would be nothing short
of a travesty on responsible govern-
ment, The administration is not repres-
tative, 0 has no mandate from the
people. It le even objected to by leading
The Calgary Morning Albertan says:
risen of the political party to which its
"Mr, Meighen is a Tory. That is the
dominant leaders belong or did beloug.
worst that can Ise said of him, but at a
The whole palace' situation is fearful -
time when there should be no place in
ly unsettled. There are no certainties;
public life for any but forward-looking
no safe predictions cats be made. Only
an election will clear the air satisfy the men with liberal ideas, it is a serious
people and restore Canada's feet to the blemish. lie is competent and hard work
paths of peace and contentment," ing but even though he is 5. Westener
______0_. _
No Camouflage now
"The elevathm of Hon. Arthur Meigh
es Will not occasion .ase great enthus-
iasm in Wasters) 'Canada and last of all
iu the most populous of the Prairie Pro-
vinces—Stisnittehewan, Mr, M'aighen is.
a western men by choice but be is al-
most totally lacking in appreciatene of '
"°.61
or SYntpathy with the western p'oint arrived
of eiew and economic fiscal and co-op- ,
ettative policies which hove come to be linutea I
regarded as esseotial to tile true true
development of this part of Canada," at very
A Tribute To The West
The Winnipeg Tribute Says: are ver
"Cabacta II EIS a new premier to -day than the
in the person of Hon Arthur Meighen. It
is a mark of notable tribute to Western
Canada that a son of premiership cal -
Mee has come from these prairies. It I Gun
means whatever happens that while the
west may not for some years have a do -
1
minating voice, to day we have a velinton
at least of equality,
oice W.
Ti
"Mr. Meighen is a man of splendid
ability; he 0 energetic and possessed
of an undoubted talent for public life "
"'ow=
Canno‘t Carry the Prairies
11
Dr. Chase'S
and afford I
dealers, or ,
Toronto. Si
vapor and es
Tests m
parency 0:
river disci(
fent mor
in warm NV
Harness
carry an U
itssd leave
belt 'and s.
rod up tis
Got
•.
Mr. H.
writes:—"
heart trot
me there I
better. I
doctors, la
a friend It
and Nervi
the time,
fake, but
I would 1
boxes, an,
first thing
.if I were
them, in
boxes I wi
Mercy
hearts, en
find a tor
make lb(
restore it
condition
Pills,
Price f
mailed di:
T. Millet:
BRo(
his selection as leader will set no heath
moon fire in this part of Western Can
Edmonton Alta., July 5,— (C,onins lultisi. Wil is Melghen as leader, the Gov-
ent)—The Edmonton Bulletin says in
eminent will not get a handful of
part.
"The election of lion Arthur Meigh- supporters from the Prairies in the next
en as premier dissipates the camouflage election."
declaration of principles by the alleged
new party organization. The party must
be as the leader is. A reactionary lead-
er of a progressive -party is an impos-
sibility. Having chosen a reactionary of
such record as that of Mr. Meighee,
with sucloabllity and persistence as he
possesses; Ilse Issue is clear no matter
what propaganda May be put forward
°Canada Nees definitely reactionary
policy under the new pi ender."
Justified Fitness
*Ilse Moose Jaw Daily News ss:.:
" Hon Arthur Meighen has, by his
aggressive and constructive polieles le,
hen
your mouth tastes like all the mean
things you( ever did—mixed together,
then you need
Ober toouth in a good
indication of the con.
(lido of the stomach
and bowela.
Woe* a Cvtnort 0 )3ox
Seld isicowhere is ,.'sstal.. la lion,
See
1
ne
sh
sip
kn
ed
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