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The Clinton News Record, 1929-07-11, Page 2
Clinton News -Record CLINTON, ONTARIO (Terms of subscription -42.00 per year in advance,, to Canadian addresses; 52,50 to the C.S. or ,other foreign Countries. ; No paper 'discontinued until all arrears are Paid '1111103a at the option of the publisher, The date to which every subscription 'ie paid is denoted on the label. 'Advertising ,Rates—Trunsiont adver- t. Using, 12e per count line for first insertion,. 1c' for each subsequent desertion. heading counts 2 lines. Smell advertisements, not to exceed . one- eeh, such as "Wanted,' "Loaf," "Streyed,'.etc., !melted. once• for 36c. each subsequent insertion 15e. Advertisements sent In without he structlons.as to the number of in- sertions wanted will run until order- ed out and will be charged accord- ingly. Rates for display advertising made fcnown ,on*application. 00m/fleet/one Intended tor pub- ficaflon must; 1s a guarantee of good falai, ^,,e accotnpanted by the name of the writer, 4..•,17. CLAIlla, H. : iit !?allroprtetor, M. fed ltor. . M. [L MCTA DART BANKER A.'genera;Bauiting Business transact - el, Notes Discounted. Drafts issued. interest AI:owed an . DepnEtts. Sale Notes Purchased. H. T. I ANCE Notary public, 'Conveyancer. Fit auc'lal, Neal Y'staee Fire and N re [tk surance Agent; Itepreseuting.14 Fire insurance Companies. Division Court Office, Clinton. W. BRMDONE. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public, etc, Office: SLOAN BLOCK CLINTON DR. J. C. GANDIER Oelce Hours: 1.30 to 3.30 p.m., 6.30 to d 00 p.m., Sundays, 12.30 to 1.30 p.m. Other nuns ay appoiutment only, Of flee and Residence Victoria ast, D.R. FRED G. THOIM-►PSON OMicb and Residence:' Ontario' Street -- Clinton, Ont. One door west of Afiglican. Church. Phone 172 Eyes examined and lasses fitted DR. PERCIVAL HEARN Office and Residence: Huron Street •- Clinton, Ont. Phone 39 ,(Lbi'tnerly . occupied ay the :ate Dr. c:. W, T:.,trtnson'. Eyes examined and glasses fitted DR. H. A. MCINTYRE DENTIS r 'Office flours: 0 to 12 A,M, and 1 to 6 P,01,, except Tuesdays and Wednas' days. ()Mee over Canadian National Pixpress,. Clinton, Ont. Phone 21., DR. F. A. AXON ostirtt`T Clinton, Ont. Graduate tC' U.C,D.$., Chicago, and 1t.O,D,S„ Toronto. Crown and Plate Work a Specialty. D. H. NMcINNES Chiropractor—Ma ltricai' Treatment. 02 %Vingliaw wlil be at the Bottom bury House, Gunton, on Monday, Wed- nesday and Friday foreuooge of each week. Diseases of ztl %Inds successfully handled. GEORGE ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer for the County ofHuron. Correspondence promptly answered, Immediate al•rangemeuts can be made for sales Date at Lbe 1llewsdlecord, Clinton, or by calling Phone 203, Charges Moderate and ..Satle:action. Ceara Mead. B. R.. HIGGINS t Clintoe, Ont: , .General Fire sod, Life' illsuraece .Agent Sor Hartford -Windstorm, Live "Stook, Automoblle and SicIrness and Aceidont Insurance. Huron and Dile and Cana- -da Trust Bonds; Ap,dointments made to meet parties at Bruce5eid, Varna and Hayfield. 'Phone 67,' IiT f . 111<ic TIME TABLE Trains will .arrive at and depart from Clinton as follows; Buffalo and Goderich Div.` Going East, depart 6.44 a.m., 2.50 p.m. Going West, ar: 11.50 a.m. ar. 6.08 dp, 6.43 pan. a " ar. 10.04 p.m. London,-Huron:&Bruce Div. Going South, ar. 7.40 dp. 740 a.m. Ccc cc 4.b8` pan. Going North, depart 6,42 p.m. " a ar. 11.40, dp. 11.58 a.m. THS: Mc KILLOP MUTUAL Eire `Insurance Company Office, Seaforth, Ont, . DlttltCTQpRY: President, James Evans Beachwood: Nice, ' Jamas Connolly, taoderioh; Seo: Mreastiter, D. F. 2floGregob, Seaforth. rplrectore: George, 14o0artney, Seaforth; James- Shoulder,. W lton Murray Gib- son, Bru$e:teld` Pt Icing. Searorth: Robertirerrie, tiarlo '-John Bennewelr,_ Biodhagen; Jas.CQP W, Goderich. 'Agents: Alex. Loett, Clinton; 1..W. Goderich• E Blnc U zoo d ll o 1 Y Seafor ' zX.n , h NFro ia' e➢gmondvlAo; 'R. G. 'Jar' Jar - moth, Brodhngon. -. Any money to be pals In .may bo -Paid to Moorish Clothing Co., Clinton, or tat Calvin Cutt's Grocery, Goderich. Parties desiring to effect insurance or trandaot otthherbusinod b eproom-Y Pkt. ittv aended to on adplionEtoa tofly above officers acdresaerto their e respec- tive post officer Losses inspected by the Director Who lives noareet the sane. S°y LADA, hat: the finest flavour its tike.4voritt and it costs o n'dy , Qf3'f°e®sp*arter ®f a- cent A cup (KEEN) Ary ' TEA ezaalibada nsl 693 CAPTAIN A.c.DIN0LE- ©1924 by BRENTANO'S INC 415 RIGHTS RESERVED RELIAS ED by N.E.A. SERVICE ,INC. • BEGIN HERD TODAY: Alden Talbot Drake is contemptuous Of the idle life he is.. leading in his luxurious home. The urge which took him to sea on leaving schol has never .left hint. One night he slips away from a party at his house and makes his• way to Sailortown, ancient rendez- vous -of men who follow the sea, where he meets up With litel'e'Joe Bunting, a sailor. They drink each other off their feet in. a barrooln, and Drake is car- ried upstairs, presumably to besliang, haied next morning aboard the Or- ontes. Drake hears himself detiounced by Captain Stevens of the Orontes' as being not even fit for shanghaiing'. Drake mutters: "This is to much of a good thing" and marches through the door of the room in wbich1he was thrown the night before. At the threah- hold he stops, however, upon hearing a woman's voice. • NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY, In the passage three people walked slowly by, two men; and a girl. "So it's as well you were delayed over the then," a deep,• puzzling un - strange voice was saying. "1 shouldn't have brought Mary into a den like his; but time is short, and you must sail today." • "Oh, please don't worry about me," answered the girl's voice. "It's"fun. I wanted to see— Oh, lookl" the voice dropped to a stage whisper, "There's a man in there!" Drake groaned silently. He wanted to take a square look at the owner of that voice. It was a rich, liquid, happy voice. It sent a queer ripple along itis throat. But he dared not take his arms from his face: 71e knew, by the next voice, that they had passed on. "All the men are aboard but one, Captain Manning." This was Stevens speaking, "I'Il have a man in half an hour. The crimp tried to send me a putty dude." The fellow laughed discordantly. Evidently playing to .the girl, thought Drake. "If you saw it, Miss Mary, you'd want it for a dolly, but you'd have to wask it first." "Are you speaking about a man?" came the girl's voice, cool and unap- preciative. Drake never could decide, oven years later, 'whether the girl meant that to be frosty, or was having Stevens, a brute, a manhandler who "set himself up a judge of:'a man's' value as a roan. "He says Pm not even worth Shang- haling! Caesar! I'd like to argue that 'with him!" But brow? Drake took steps to peep outside again. If he could ijust catch Mister' Stevens alone for a moment; with that girl out of the way; lie would see. , The big'blond .beast migglh�t'batter a clumsy customer•like;the crilbrp, slow moving, 'slow thinking, a creature' of one idea. 'But Drake had known the day 'when he could handle. himself above a bit. He had licked the half - deck bully on his firat voyage to sea. There was nothing like confidence. "So you'll get on board, Captain Stevens, and haul'out to the pierhead before your. crew jump," -the` old gentleman was sayirg. "Mary, my girl, take care of yourself. Have a good holiday with Jack, and he'll bring you borne •when he comes. I'll write yon at Cape Town." Drake. followed -stealthily. His hopes were dashed, -for the three left the place together and walked towards the Docks, He stood on the sun-bathed pavement, staring.after,them. t . Then he hurried down the quieter side street. .The'sight of three gilded bells over a grimy windovr full of knives, pistols, sextants, 'ship models, and curios from all the Seven Seas rounded out a resolve. which set his ptilse.boundiug again, He slipped in- side. "How much, Came?" he demanded, producing his gold fob watch. "Whore'd y' pinch it?" returned Uncle, a ,jeweler's glthis in one sharp eye alongside a battleship's ram of a beak. "Don't be funny!' How much?" • "It got a name in it. 'Tain't vort' much. Gif y' a arf quid fob an' all." "How much can I buy a suit of dun- garees and a shirt for?" "T'ree art crowns." Drake mentally elrlcuiated. He had to send a telegram, "Give me a good pair of stout shoes for these togs and pumps, and we'll make the deal," he said. "I want the "DON'T n.t �l! UNl'i'. HOW MUCH?" fun with '.Stevens too deep for his understanding. Now they were corn- ing past the door again, ,• aTried to dump the dude onto me, sir. I hammered him well." "Who, the; dude?" queried the girl, sharply. "Hush, child! Let Mister Stevens get through. Tine's short," cut in. Captain Manning. "The crimp," said Stevens "I would feel like a child beater if T hit that double left handed thing in silk strip- ed pants that—" r N. "Yes, yes," said the captain impa- tiently. "Never mind the dude. You get your ship warped out to the pier - head whether yoti- have a lull comple- ment or not. You'll lose the rest if you don't." The trio were right at the door.. rake simply had to peep. "I have done all that's needed in change of masters. You'll take the Orontes, out to atavia Take good care of Mary, and see. her safely to her.bro- ther's place. I'll get the business that's"keoping. me ashore all settled by the time you get -back. Then we'll talk about what's to be done." Drake's first peep showed • him the thick; gray bearded, copper -bronzed old gentleman of nautical aspect whose f- p��taisc horses he had startled with i1 'elangin ' gate, His next was more $ Mian a peep,for he 'raised his head, and looked' straight into the wide blue eyes of the girl who had handled those frightened horses, kle shuddered.' , He wanted,' as he load wanted no other thing in life, to show that clean, •self:possessed young lady that he be- longed of a clean race, too.. He wanted to tell her sbmething, He could still bear her voice. ''lie could hearthe deep rumbling: tones of her fd"ther, if Captain Manning were h5'r parent'; ]tear too the blatant confident t 'roar of Stevens. He hated Stevens more than ever. Stevens a darentl was tlr e p y s e sail -master of the Orontes clipper; with Mary Manning as pessehger, odd' half crown cash." Rearrayed in blue dungarees,.shod with wooden pegged shoes, still minus a cap. Drake almost ran' until he found a telegraph office. There he spent fifteen precious minutes coding a Mee - ?age to his lawyer. After which rte ran in good earnest' through the Dock gates, for he had seen the long jibboom with the snowy •furled jibs, slowly creep out of sight above the dock wall. The Orontes was moving out to the locks. "Drake mingled; with the gang shifting her lines as site warped along. He hauled wet, heavy bowlines' en- thusiastically. But Lord t1llow soft he had grown! How his arms ached. How his breath caught. Drake recalled all his earlier knowl- edge of a ship's arrangement. He had no fear about being seen for a brief while, where all men were strangers. He knew there was • only one ,man aboard who would be likely to know the 111etr he had shipped, and that man, recently the trate, was now wearing the poop, toaster. .A. whistle =tihrilled out aft. The mate ran to the fore- castle rail to answer; and Drake duck- ed. and ran into the forecastle itself. Some steel ships, he knew, had a steel' bowsprit .which entered the forecastle' through the bows, and was hollow' to the big wide heel. The Orontes had. He wriggle 'into the convenient cav- ity like an eel, and lay there palpitat- ing jubilantly, . Overhead• the dreary gang tramped the capstan around: e 'i o CIIAPTESL V.• l' M'AG's•rANCY BT,0103.' in h's narrow. to 1 shell, ,Crouched t n ws o sl, Drake thrilled 1 to the adventure he had hurled hiitbelf into; - Ho' inhaled a deep breath, -for the nl co i nes f i -" , Of his reef ho s Il grew stuffy, i; t _ g Dr " rad lead dpit Ir his throat t Y s tic ed s h oa e end nostrils. „pi s"..o�. Thanked o ne ed. harilted the stars there was n'obody to hear. `l'hen ,started to sneeze again and'fl tt T cion ,for voider sounded appallingly }ice near, At the forecastle door. "'Won't be fit for a ladyto look into once those hogs get settled lawn here," Captain Stevens was' saying, "1 am rather proud of this ship's forecastle: It's': the driest, roomiest, lightest fore- castle I ever saw Inc:sailing• ship. Wonder you never saw it before," • ''Oh, Daddy -never let me come ,for- ward!" laughed Mary Manning. "It is a nice big place, isn't it? . How many men live here?, 0 -oh!" (To be continued.) • Free Trade Within the Empire Toronto Star (Ind.) : Mr: Lapointe suggests that Canada's present ' -course should be not 'the mistaken one of .hoisting tatd'l?s in reprisal >ainst the Canted States, but greeting increased preferences in Canada to British goods and goods from other British'coun- tries and foreign nations that do not specially fence out Canadian products. Some go so' far ,as to say' that Hits policy should, and may, be put into the etleet to the extent of having'freo trade with the 'Empire and: a tariff' against the United States and foreign countries. That would be carrying the policy a long way.. But in selected lists -of goods at present Largely im- ported from the United States there could, be. brought about a 'large shift- ing trade into british'and into Empire channels. It cannot be denied that there is a. growing feeling in Canada that ..the deliberate and specifid at tempts.of the United States to'+,hut out Canadian goods notwithstanding our enormous buying, fn their.market, makes it necessary for Canada to look elsewitere for trade and not only took ant push and prefer andfacilitate trad- ing elsewhere, The British `Empire is a vast field on which trede preference utay operate. ' 1~.�aain®m COtr� fought despertstely to :stop the expios rune es an y li° a. "Smith" R. MacG Dawson. in the • Dalhousie Review (Halifax) : Alfred Smith was defeated in the presidential race.,. some fifty -five years ago; because ..his name was Smith . Glance at the successful presidential candidate of recent years:' Grover Cleveland, Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, Warren, Garaliel Harding, Calvin Coolidge, Herbert Hoover. None of these is quite normal, and,the majority are almost unique...,,.No one except Roosevelt could have lived down the obloquy of Theodore as a Christian name, but once he had done so, the pre- fix became a distinction The al - Moreton of Calvin Coolidge, Wood- row Wilson, and Herbert Hoover, while it seems at titres reminiscent of the vauderville stage, adds nevertheless a touch • of distinction, and gives the names of driving farce which they would not otherwise possess. A man: with the name of Smith never had a real chard . , . Those reflections indicate a future which is indeed alarming. Ambitious, parents, who hope' to see their child or children in the White House, will nolonger make .great sacrifices to train and to educate theme but will concentrate instead on the much more difficult and serious problem of giving then names with political potentialities, The Romantics Virtuous, witty proud and gay, She found her easy conquest mot -- Then flung her weapons all away To learn the rapture of defeat. But love, who longed to venture_all When it seemed all must prove in vain, Lamented, es he saw hor fall, The victory he need not gain. Colin B. D. Ellis in the London Observer Lord Passfield's Appointment Glasgow Herald (Cons.) : A quite unexpected appointment and one not likely to arouse enthusiasm is that of Mr. Sidney Webii to the Colonial and Dominions Office, a postwhich de- mands more youthful vigor and snore Imperial sympathy than Mr. Webb possesses. The consequences may be serious, unless the Under- Secretary, whose name is not yet known, is a man of exceptional energy and inthusiasm. But it is a curious trick of fate that. the convention' requires one of the principal Sceretary-ships of State to held'in the House of Lords should ap- parently haus decreed that Mr. Webb should end his singular career in that rarified atmosphere. Empire Trade Windsor Border City Star (Ittd.)` The people need no skill of oratory to impress on thein the value of keeping their money in the country, and keep- ing it within the Empire_is broaden- ing the'subect only slightly. ' First lady:- "I knew your first 7tue- band—apity be died so soon. Sec - and Same: "That's what my present husband says." Never tape a Scotsman to a variety show on Friday. It makes Itim lal�glt In church., Co If you cannot *horse laffA turn to Eagle Brand, the leading infant fool since 1857' ''Patz welfare"- ,Wile TIe CaCth &Jaen Co.,Lioilcd, Nowa, Depl.D 42.1 EAGLE •r A CON001'tSE19 MIL . ISSUE No. 28—'29 Better Than Blondes In Fact, Some -Blondes Can't Acquire a Coat of Tan • at All—a Sad Blow for;Many, Since a. Tanned Complexion Has Become So' Fashion able' That Drug -Stores Now Sell' it in Bottles. According to a special "holiday bul- letin" issued b the Canadian 'Soci 1 ,Y a Hygiene Council, in co-operation with the Departiitent of Public Health of Toronto, there are' a number of "don'ts" and "do's which the holiday- ing'bity or town -dweller should observe if his constitution is 'to stand the strain of the summer rest -period. Don',t scratch mosquito bites, don't pick poison ivy, Watch your milk and water supplies and get"plenty of suit, but not too much at once, are some of the admonitions. And hero is, an emergency medical kit that everyone is advised to pack in the suit -cases 3 ord bandages, 2 or 3 inches wide, Ye pound of sterilized gause,' 1 ounce of absorbent cotton, 1 or 2 ounces of tincture of iodine, 1 small' roll of adhesive: plaster about 1 inch wide, 1 ounce of boracic acid, for 2 ounces of bicarbonate of soda, A hot water' bottle, 2 ounces of aroma* spirits of am- monia. n3 "The last'item is important in the event• of a ,collapse,' the bulletin` ad- vises. "From one-haif'to a teaspoon- ful of aromatic spirits of ammonia in 'a wine -glass of water, acts more promptly than whiskey or brandy. It is one of the best stimulants we have." Cuts or bruises should be washed with soap and water and. carefully painted with tincture . of iodine.. Splinters should`be removed 'with -a needle steri- lized by being held for a few minutes in boiling water and the injured place treated with iodine. Poison ivy ir- r•ltatton should be treated with the juice of the jewel weed, a plant grow- ing two or four feet high, in marshy places, and possessing a juicy, semi- translucient stem, and with orange - colored flowers. with brown spots. Either strong laundry soap, or fresh lime -water is good substitute. Avoid being overly zealous in your efforts' to get sunburned. Half an hour at a time is quite as long as any part of the body,'not accustomed to ex- posure, x posure, should be subjected -to the strong rays of the sun, for the first few days; then it will be quite safe to increase the .time to an hour, and after a fairly good coat of tali baa been developed you are welt protected against the dangers of sunburn. If you do not take these precautions your holiday may be spoiled—painfully. Furthermore, recent revelations as regards the 'therapeutic value of the chemical rays of the ask -have been such as to make one feel that it would be difficult to over-estimate their im- portance. Therefore, we recommend for small children the sun suits which can be obtained -in any of our stores, These suits only protect the hips and upper part of the thighs and. leave the balance of the body exposed to the Smt'S laza. - - It is well to bear in mind that in order to get the therapeutic benefits itis not absolutely necessary that you be exposed to the direct rays of the sun—there is the sky shine, or reflect- ed rays from Elle sky and clouds. On a clear day you ntaylie or sit on the shady side of the house, with the glue dome above you, and get from one- third to one-half of the benefit of the rays of the sun that you would get by exposing yourself directly to them. iSor mosquitoes, three things should be `remembered— netting, liquid am- monia, and coal oil. The netting shuts them out, the lq- uid ammonia, applied properly to the bite, frequently neutralizes the poison and prevents subsequent Itching, and the coal oil, put inns very sinail quan- tities on top of water in rain -barrels, little ponds, etc., prevents the mosqui- toes larvae from developing into mos- quitoes. Furthermore, certain aro- matte preparations such as spirits of camphor, menthol and oil of citronel- la, may be applied to exposed parts of the body to keep these pests away. Insist that your food be protected from the filthy, disease -spreading house -fly. And do not Ise on the • go. all the time during your. holiday, Take some read- ing :tatter with you and -spend part of the day particularly in the middle of the day, in the shade of the trees, in your hammock, or Mean easy chair, or lying on a rug on the ground. Do not dance every night during your holiday and expect to come home rested and refreshed for the balance of the year. TWO -TI G CAKE. Follow these e direction's 'for a plain two -egg cake and make it your stand - .by. ,. Be sure your oven is lighted before you begin, if you' are using so gas range. Have oven' fairly hot if using a coal range. Grease pan with. lard (I use a square pan), shake well with flour and then ?shake oft' all surplus flour. Now begin-. Sift a quantity of flour on a large ,paper a gto save dishes. Measure 2rcups level taking care not to shake the cup.. To the flour add 1/2 teaspoon salt and 2 roundel teaspoons baking powder, shaking the can well before taking out any. Sift these dry ingredients together two or three tunes.While you are measuring the tIryi ' ngredients have ready' a good- sized piece of butter in a mixing bowl. During the winter set -it near the fire a while before using (makes less work of creaming) Sear the butter well until soft and keep adding a cup of sugar, 'a :little at a time, until sugar and butter aro well blended. `'Add the yolks of the 2:eggs. Agaitr niix well. Now measure a/a cup mils. Add a little of the dry ingredients to the first mixtures, then a little milk, etc., beating well after each addition until all the '.milk and flour mixture are used. Flavor with "a teaspoon vanilla or lemon. 'Equal,par•ts of lemon and vanilla will give almond flavor: Equal parts of lemon and almond extract will give pistachio. Beat the 2 whites well until you -can turn the bowl upside down without spilling the contents, Fold it gently. Don't beat, just tarn over and under with wooden spoon, Pour into greased pan and bake in a •moderate oven for about 40 minutes. Keep at it until you are satisfied with results. The cake should: be ,light and fine grained. Learn to know your, oven, too—when it's too hot, not hot enough, etc. Don't look at the cape' until' you begin to smell it cooking, and then open and close the door care- fully. BestBird Lover South Africa's, Problem London Daily Mail (Did. Con.): The handling of the native question is of the first importance for the world. It looks as though'in South Africa the vary situation which occueed seventy years ago in the Southern Confederacy of the United States tdere recurring. The dominating party, the Boers, with their 'Labour auxiliaries, believe sin- cerely in the bondage ofthe natives. South Africa statesmen of. larger Ix- perienao and wider outlook, such as General Smuts, realize that what the Boer extremists ceek is impossible, and that a native population which is growing much faster than the whites cannot indefinitely be held down or treated as superior cattle. ,This "iree- pressible conflict" is what loans' lar. gest on thehorizon. q The Indian Situation ' Loudon Observer (Ind;): After the there remained buttwontistaked which .the Swarajists cotild commit. They might cut themselves off from "the Indians who have accepted sea,td on Sir John Simon's'Joint Free Copt- ferende, and they might inita:gealzo the Indian Prineea. Birth'mistaltes have been con -united. In the long rum the. the . second will probably prone tie more deadly. ft ia, 'of course, opt of the question that the Princes will acs sept or that Indiansettientent will thema on to RC�CO Ositf ,permitr p of eoillplete euisaftrition tP an All - Vidian Government -at Delhi. f The Partridge as Gallant Courtier By" MARCUS WOODWARD ' Farmers.say the partridge is the best bird that RIes.'. Whether sports- men or knot, they like to .see the coveys aa their land, and they know the partridges lead biameieae lives in the matter of liarmiag their erops. In the first mild days et the. new Year Ole partridge Coveys breolc into pairs. Tired begins a long courtship of five 'months or more before they settle to neat. Naturally, there are quarrels and duels. Since the June before, the covey bas been an harmonious fam- ily, the birds acting as one, day and uigltt. As they begin to drift away Into pairs, there may be odd baette- lor birds, and they make trouble for all. Africa is renowned for its splendid election of native laltabitiants of Olb ougb shades of"brown , to suit alt tastee. There are Swazis, Zulus, Kat. Ars, Somalis, Hotteutot and many other varieties always in stock. Some of their stalwart warriors can throw alt assegai from a considerable distance and Perforate any part of lavar person you choose to Indicate. Tbeir skill with the axe is also re- markable; in fact, an expert would no doubt return your money to you it he failed to cleave you satisfactot'- fly at one blow. Having satisfied your thin:a at the Victoria Falls (a teetotal resort that rivals even Niagara) you should frolic for a while in the old-world country of Egypt. The substantial tombs of this sandy and sunburnt land c4am. more than compare with out own' massive early -Victorian vaults. eye' --•- The U.S. Tariff Wall Vancouver Province (Ind. Cons.) It may be said that there are no mar- kets to which we could transfer the trade the United States will exclude by this new, high, wall. But that is .nonsense, of course. We have not even begun to explore the possibilities of ear empire markets. It has been too easy, hitherto, to look to our South- ern neighbour. But if we find markets in the Empire fot our products, we shall be efipected to absorb Empire products in return, in place ea Ameri- can products, and that 'will mean an enlargement of preference. There is aplenty of room for that. At the ire xiteet, the United States is actually enjoying 1 a tarifa preference which proximity gives it, It is not entitled to that tariff preference. It will be even less entitled to it when the Smoot - Hawley Bill adds another caurse or. two of bricks to the already towering American protective Wall. f Ayouit bokhi. Tess iftew t assure stile ess., Wadein Canada ,No .Plume >E.t 1ZriIL.LFTT CO. I.Tt3ll , TOFlONTO CAN ter, rCtsT?fh!��''>tiia�.,l. some of our prominent politioiaua aresaid to have been very .dull as Schoolboys. Perhaps :they didn't re- ceive enough corporal punishment to make them smart. !{Dar tuntfiurTArition at they URAL crtm re Neat �HE World's Annual Expo, eition--a colossal achieve.. hleve went where products are ex.. hibited from the four corners of the ear"th; here, the greatest international sports program, featuring the FOUR'S ; WRIGLEY L ATIICIN SWUM in two events (Friday, August 23 for women, and Wednesday, August 28 for men and prize winners of women's race) for the world championship and $50,000 purse, The Goldman and other famed Bands will be heard; four concerts by I the 2,000 Voice Exhibition Chorus;` the first showing of 1930 Motor Cars in the new million -dollar Auto* motive Building; $125,000 Agricul• tural Prize -List; Trots and Paces featuring �Standard Bred Society Futurity: lavish unitary and naval grandstand pageant; "Britannia's Ivluster"; National Aircraft -�* Show and Sky Carnival; International Out- board Motor Boat Races, and two weeks of naver'to•be'forgotten enjoyment at the Bmpire Year celebration of the Canadian National Exhibition, Aug. 23 to Sept, 7. Sema for de,nrpdve &tonal y wwkkr:. , THOMAS BRADSHAW, President IL W. WATERS, Maw:gor erg EAT Just as the . cobbler waxes his thread to maize his stitches holdasionag as the shoe leather lasts, so Firestone saturates with pure liquid rubber, &,'ery fibre ; of every strand • thatgoes into the tire, to make the cords resist internal` heat, friction and strain as long as the tire lasts. This extra patented Fir e s t o n e process gives Firestone Tires the extra sts'. tl?i 'and stamina to give ”Most mita Per Dollar". ; • See your local Firestone Dealer.