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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1927-12-15, Page 4'E C: CLINTON, ONTARIO rtns ol•Subsoriptton-.00 per 7"ar •-inadranee, "t0 Sea- I:au addresses:' 2.5t1 to the 91 S. or other. foreign countries. No ,taper discontinued until alt arrea1 aro paid unless at. tho option of ,.the .uuhlioner. The, Bate to .which. every subscription is paid Is denoted on tt_'e label. Advertising ' ;Rates—Transient adver- tising, 12e per count lino for first iSsertion;..$c for each subsequent insertion, heading counts 2 lines. Small adver isementa. not to lexceed ono inch, sueli as '.'Wanted," "Lost," •'trlyed;, etc, .inserted, once for: a(50 each'_' subsequent' insertion .15c, A\dyerLlsorn'ents sent 'it without in. etrectious as to tho number of 1n• certlono wanted will ,r`un.untilorder• e2 out and will be charged accord• ingly, hates for d1SPlay advertising made lcrowu on application. Communications iutonded for;publi- cation must,• as a guaranteo of good faith, bo acconipanied'by the name of lbe writer. 11. E. IIALL, _,'16. 19, CLARK, -proprietor. Editor. D. illeTAGG BANKER..., A. general Dm -kiting - Business .transact-. ed. ;hetes Discounted. Drafts Issued. Interest. Allowed. on Deposits. Halo 2h'otes. Purchased. TC Ear 44451 Trinity Cldod. Pr#F; .-rens College '�ws � Brings 1lteresting Data Annual ceft Of Ike C'or orattari b E,.xa>t:ll;ill`i; fip tee Public Attentiort PLANNED -`R'Ti'klEl�. BIJIlJDIIG �D 'The Annual Meeting of the Coxa 1 has been strengthened: by;the addition , m the Department of French by Pro- poi'abion of Trinity College was' held lessor R. .K. Hicks, toxnierly of in November.. Queen's University, Kingston; a 1e in ' etsenil d u k number of students nUniversityf ^he num raduate of the o 1 g Cam - Trinity College in 1927 in all courses' bridge, and Dr. 'II. T. F. Fletcher, of eared with- 247. in 1926.` Birniin hani, ,England, who holde.. his is 296 as coral1; • d'''6G r'omen in -TY etorate frm the University` of and. he ten e m , y P residence. There are'240 etudents Nancy in France. The Reverend John pietelychanged by,injuries 'received in found in his'; coat. The poor'devll's Faculty of :Arts. Ofr 9O'0' lyi.A,,, who won a Rtiodes Schol-:the wi eel.' ted over on the. Hering ` Sea registered in the, a y.,, . •, , lying bur . 1e ' taking honour: Courses': ai'shr front the College in 1922 and NOW GO ON: WITH THE STORY. just about where they found the these 103 aro to lib Pside, 1 and 137 'ere enrolled in the Pass '01! secured a Double First at Oxford Uni- ' , body." 0(11(1 00 dim] ]ark lac 1 plenelid gti9tk ti the e (1ne" ed of nap y She had gone h k 4 i5in lwr��s"�ll;t� her{;1'a night ie e0g- ungle monarch Ohc'at, • into subdued:moern- -. inn; but still s4W a.`tew friezds 'Inti, visited i few of the neig boxing (� i� �u Iwlae5 antrilo v no another :Geori is sutnvc was at is. height ho gi1e yded•_ with for to ZO pack to the. gay colors BEGIN"a l2E ilE TO -DAY, ¶ up, :but she tya0. Loo .tat, rw -e 'for. its fete;• Newhall, Augusta Ge, `vrlio to help. , IIc'ca _many incn ;.1tdt kuvint?" '6,1g, -02.€s 'Ivan• Itihmin Rus's'ian 'violin- on the 3'vpiter whin sale n ,. t ret, iri a .quarrel during. a motorboat '(All aboard, as you know --six of ride,, threatens to throw Paul Saridhef, my mei , a stringer 90010 Nusba gak . "Ishnin'6 secretary, overboard for whose body was never 'recovered -his interfering, 1 -Ie • awakens from. a name turned out to he Larson -and' drunken ,stupor to. be told by Ishinin that chap that used to go ',%5 Peter Ne - he threw Sarlclref overboard during -,Mlle—We called him the Remittance the nrglit, eyicin'urgea hire to fico and he lived in a'•naiive village to Sotith America, Uut rinbalnrowri to Man,, t hos voile, Dorothy, he flees to Alaska, on the other side."ate that whe"re 101 is lcliown as the Remittance It soened beyond belief to P Man, these risen would not hoar they wild, ale joins Big. Larson, cauiiery druinlrl.e beat of his heart.. Did You web foreman, in response to a distress find mast if. the bodies'" he `issued, uiglial at sea anal aorces hie sea jacket .when: at last heL could twist himself to upon him. Thciix launch hits rho rocks• s colt. `' Dorothy Newl}all receives a telegram p„. "About all of both crews. The ,Re - hisher husband's body,' identified by Ab his 000'jacket,: has been br,ried near nrittance Mean, by the way, turned out Pirate Cove, Alaska. She permits” Ish to be quite; a follow do5;n south—as nrin :to,' call, ,feeling she can now re -II had always guessed. 1Iis real name c0ive his attentions. . was Newhall -something like that - 1 But Peter Newha.il had not drown- and,. he'd got' in a drunken brawl sand ed..' As sole survivor. he was ;rescued killed a mans -was up herd hiding, Ho cHow ship s ap3e ara the: same ryas almost cut to pieces"by'the`erags, call.' Hewever, his appearance is com- ihaL 1 e loved. Tie seemed to feel that when her old gaiety returned to her, when She again took her place in the Smart, southern society, his longcourt- ship would be crowned with success, But he did not at once win this point; and because' she did not fully under.; stand it herself, she was scarcely able'". toexplainto him the Onions way she .felt about , it. '11 can't be the girl I` was; Ivan.," 'she explained. "If that girl was the ire You loved, and you don't want her chatiged,•you'd better go away -and not come back. Sgme 'way, I don't feel that '1 could begin exactly where I left o. I don't feel' II: T. RA,NCE - --Notary`Public, Conveyancer. Financiai, Real Estate and Fire In. surnnce Agent. Representing 14 Fire Insurance: Companies: • Division_Court bftice, Clinton. W. BR'aI9)ONE Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Ptibllc, etc. OtOce: SLOAN BLOCK - CLINTON' DR. J. C. GANDIER °lice Hours: -1,30 to 3.30' p.m., 6.30 to 3.O0. -p.m,, Sundays, 12.30 to 1,30 p.m, Other hours by appointment only,. Office and Reside,.c.. -. Victoria St. DR. FRED G. THOMPSON Office and. Residence:, - OAet to Street - Clinton,` Ont. One door west of Anglican Church. Phone 172. Eyds- examined and glaeses ,fitted. DR. PERCIV L HEARN Office •and•:itesidence: • Baron -Street Ciliitoli; Ont. 'Phone 69 /Formerly occupiele 0 d, by the late Dr. C. W. Thompson). Eyes, Examined ;and Glasses Fitted: DR. H. A. :MCINTYRE • DENTIST Office hours 9 to 12 A.M. and 1 to 5 P.M., except` Tuesdays and Wednes- days. Ofiice over Canadian National .Express, Clinton, Ont. Phone •21. ' DR.- F.. A. AXON DENTIST o General Course. Thenumber of new, versify :has joined the Staff in Di- CHAPTER IV,--(Cont'd.) Pete's face was white, but he held students this Session. is 103.• • vinity.' • i College The Report of the'A sal Commit- Two days' ,sail from Unalaska a himself in- an iron grip. The truth Tuns at tieg of l Examinations g P pp broken forced the<' Dolly Bettis was plain enough now. He had "given oto the at the tg ofal rtoi' been added that a 'en of m ts, 0 had pertent in the Shuma- his coat, that -night to the. big Norse - Faculty the T7niverts of Toronto in the'Inen added to to strengthen' ' theedtt- into a little sand had man—Big Chris Larson, the men had was as follows: Inin it possible to strengthen` the edu- gin Islands; and when the drip :called him—and it was Larson's body Paeulty of Arts g fastened t tl d k f r repniis Pete courses 11 obtained First Class. bational work in many important res d Standing i acts and Standing; 27, Second Giese p1 was'fn Squaw Harbor, instantly.re- and 19 Third Class Standing. In the' ancee for Professors and Lecturers at q ` Pass or General,' Course, 4 obtained the age of "65. The appeal for; add;- membered' as the home' port of the . A, or First .Class Proficiency, 18 B,`tional subscriptions will be continued,' shpken with fear he Although his was or Second Class Proficiency, and 25 0,I throughout tee Province:. 1 corn_ stamping groan was on the otheidr or Third Class Proficiency. • The Chairman of the Build ng C In the Fourth Year E. 39. Reid in mittee, .Mr.` Gerald Larkin, read a re - Political Science, and Miss B. IL H..; port in which it was urged that a Carrigan in Modern Languages ob-' Chapel -and Dini1 g Hall shpuld be tained the highest standing „in the added to the present buildings as soon whole University. The sante record, as possible. The need of these addi- was secured in the Second Year by,Honebuildings is very greatly felt 11. T. Hallook in Orientals, C. F. Far -land the hope wee expressed that their even in Philosophy; and A. H. Sellers erection would be made possible in in Biological and Medical Sciences, the near future. ;lot house; one of them leis cap - and in, the first Year by Miss S. A. . Dr. Maurice Hutton was. nominated Pilot and the other Aleck was 1115 cap - Ill.. Brett in English and history. as Public Orator in the place of the tae: superintendent of the cadford, rd, In addition to the ; aware of the, late Professor Duckworth, and Mr. and -the -rant man on earth whom he Rhodes Scholarship to E. Mr Reid, the Elmes'`Henderson, .M.A., and •Colonel wanted to see now.,,•Bradfee ;had should University : W. L distinctions; dHenry.Brock, D;owing as Esquire Be- once offered hien the liospitality of the should receive mention: L._Sinithy dells, The following ,were named es little bachelor lodge he, had built at"Fr 1 1vT I „ e nominee' was: members of the Executive earueittee d built a ail ' 1e of go free, to, imprison thetr autontoio;les. A P n t College h d f t1 It'°s me i h be t d if little j rtw•rrded'-tare lVloss 'coat's tp c Conker:It/int...Mr,. o '�eivablo that latter passu of the could not be lard on err r. io rx•ova I for ret •i allow mainland o the oe . o - that la buried on the main d p found, to his to tion that he. y' Clinton' Ont. Graduate -of GCD.S., Chicago, and Toronto. Crown. and Plate work a specialty D. H. MclN IES Chiropractor—Electrical Treatment- 01 ttenghttm, will be at the Uoiuuier• -offal Ino, Clinton, 0.12 Moriday,,,Wedues- day and Friday forenoons of each seeelc. Diseases of all kiade successfully handled. , side of the Peninsula, the fame of the Remittance Man had carried down this" far; and likely there were men here who would recognize him as Peter Neville. His firstinstinctwas to duck below and remain in hiding., But already that chance was. gone. As lie turned, he ran squarely upon two men who had just encircled the and think exactly like I did—maybe4 I'm more like' the girl that Peter orifi tally \married—like a' schoolgirl' instead of a woman. I feel bewilder- ed—not ltnowin'g where to turn or how to go. I know I can't wear' mourning 9g''evor—n S a mad dream—going from morning; 'Then put it off. It's been ayeni till night, sacrificing her home hours. and a half., Take up the old happy (To' be continued.) life "There's the trouble. I don't feet Pecan go back to exactly the kind of ha iness- that you mean: of course Pp come round to it in'tune Just don't hu'iry me, IvanSomething is working in tie, and I don'; know what it is;' in the end I think it will be all right. You'know there is no other man. But when I try to think of you, soinany; times Z find myself thinking 'of Peter -dying on that storm -tossed- seacoast. Just don't hurry me, and I,, feel—I almost know', —that everything will come out right for you in time." She had, received, long since,: her husband's few belongings, gathered by the patient effort,of Captain Johan sen; and she could not go near them now without tears. With them ;she had received a letter—one.that no human eyes save her own had seen and some ,way it had revealed their marriage relation in a new light. It had not only shown Peter from a'dif- ferent angle, but' had also illumined her point of view in regard to herself. e Her thought had taken a new course since reading thin letter. Up: until then she had always thought upon her husband's disgrace and death as the consummation of his own deed;•heroic punishment,. surely, but for which he could blame no one blit himself. NOW "Man propooee and woman lm - A western new's'•paper suggests that it might be a good idea, while allow Ing violators of traffic ordivatwee to a rt 1 y yf t e edge o -'se sea. .. ee a• ' A f C r'o air n 161 C 51 Bn1dvn she gat.ewon er some. Such a scheme tivould';avoire 1'.`eral '' Sh l h � should h ncaree ut n, Beaumont, 2. .•Mt..-. +�: A elected l Sellers and M. T;' del c e la were i Mr. R, B,: t;1<• ibira without recogni ion. Peter s heart . `ti4 know I can't wear mourning Ivan's attentions, after those first, el'ec he Al WarMemorial df' larslrips' Joseph Beaumont; Mr, A. I1. Canlp., lea ed as the roan walked by without „ blissful months of her marriage, had by the Alumni Federationit of the Uni-1 bell,- 164.; Mrs. Grisham M. el. harl;, p forever. O A Harvard University investigator ersit of Toronto. S011ol:.rships in Mr. B• B. Cronyn; 111 . A. 119. 1lI. hark- a glance, been• flatter of the most engaging t y But he was not safe et. The cap- , ry poaito, it was Larsoirs'name 'instead kind. To"receive-it, to waken other.finds.that the cost of ectncation tw ton and Moral Philosophy were ttrick• Mr,Gerald Larkin • Mr.C S l it h' d 13 d ' 1 h had h high that net enough is obtained for Mental' " t ora r osop ty ever pa trick; Laidlaw; Mr. Kirwan Martin, I{:Q,; tam was immediate y e ?nra . of his own that' should -be inscribed on women'e Ica oust', she Bevan r im awarded to. R. S. Jaques and C. Iford, and he stopped Pete with soloist- therude headstone more dances than were his 'light, had what is spent. Apparently n i t is F�rwell of the Third and Second years, Mr. Craueurd Martin; Mr: Eric Ma stretched hand There had been few mem y g longed and unsuspected.. It was as if tentton to him. u e He could go to work here, timbal- devoted too much of her time and at- needed is more education in hew to e terrif in ' It had all been like spend more reap ,ctively, the latter also; winning' eheil; Mr. C. S, blaclnnes, 1{.0.; Dr P seconds in Pete's. life, he had died and grown up again; that He halted; breathless and deathly with his new appearance he must also pale under his brown wind tan and gain a mew personality—not that. of sunburn. The officers eyes were indeed ire seemed less a ori , Newhall, but that of simple Pete, a the John Macdonald Scholarship in ,J. H. McConnell;; Mi. F. Gordon Osler, Philosophy;, Thle Italian Prize in the 14Ir, W. Ii. Peoiree; Mr. Campbell; "'Fourth Year wee won by Miss 13. M., Reeves; Mr. G. 13. Strathy, M.A.; Mr.' H. Corrigan and the Edward Blake D. T. Symons, I{,C.; and Mr. T. •H.1 'Scholarship in Biological and Medical eiVood, M.A., together v:th the Provost; Sciences by A. II. Sellers, 1 and other member's of the Admnistta-' The. Teaching:' Staff of the College tivo Staff. 'Wilson Publishing' Company IRslles lo #:'. tit wLrely. GEORGE ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Correspondence promptl:Answered. itbmedlate arrangements can be made for Sales Date at The News -Record, Glintori,'or by' calling Phone 203, Charges Moderato and Satisfaction 'Guaranteed. • OSCAR KLOPP kroner Graduate Carey Jones' National School of Auctioneering,,Chicago. Spe- cial course taken ;In Pure 13red Live iSte le Real Estate, Merchandise and Farm Sales,. Rates in keeping with prevailing' mantel. Satisfaction OA. cured. Wrtte or Wirc, Zurich, Ont. Phony 13.133. B. R: HIGGINS . Clairton, Ont. General Fire and Life Insaranco,'Ageht ,... for Hartford' Windstorm, Live - Stock, Automobile and Sickness and Accident - Tnst ranee: Huron and Erie and Cana. da Trust Bonds. Appointments made, to meet parties 91- )3ruoefield, 'Varna and Bayfield,:;..;Phone 117. • TIME TABLE Trains will arrive at and depart from Clinton as follows: .Buffalo and G0601100 Div Going East, depart • 6.44 aim, notng West, ar.. , 11.50 a.m. '• ar. 6.08 dpi 6.53 p.m, • ar. 10.04 p.m. London, Huron &-Bruce Div. going South, ar. 7.66 ' dp. 7.56 aim. 4.10 p.m, Going North, depart 6.50 p.m. , 1, ar. 11,40 11,.51 /'he litleKillop Fire'Insurance Company Head Office, 'Sea'forth, Ont. DIRECTORY: President, Ja_aes Connolly,--Godorleh; Vice, James Evans, Beechwood; Sea Treasurer, Thos, E. Itays,•_Seafor•th, Directors: George MoCartney, Sere earth; D. F. McGregor, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, Walton; Wm. Ring; Seaforth; McEwen Clinton;Robert Ferries, Hariock; Joan benneweir, Brodliegen; ±as. Connolly, Goderich, Agents: Aloe. Leitch, eliuton; 3. W Tee, Goderich; Ed, Hinchray, Sea Orth; W. Cheseey, Fgmondville; 11. G. Jarmuth,'Broditagen. Any money, to be paid in may be paid to Moorish Clothing Co., Clinton, er at Cutt's' Grocery, Godoriclr. Parties desiring to affect Insurance er transact other bnsinoss will be promptlyy., ettendod to on appeeation to Sant of the above decent addreseed to their respective post office. Losses inspected by the Direotor who lipe,s oeareai the 00010;, se A: CHIC FROCK. New decidedly smart is the chic frock shown here, having flared;'see- tions at the front and back of the skirt, a convertible collet', and long d`ert4letejl sleeves. No. 1691 is for Misses and Small Women, and is in sizes 16, 18 arid 20 years. Size 18 (36' bust) requires 3•yards 89 -inch, or 21/4 yards 54 -inch material.- Price 20c the pattern. - The,• .garments illustrated in our new Fashion Book are advance Styles for the home dressmaker, and the woman or girl who desires to wear garments, dependable for taste, simplicity and economy will find her desires fulfilled in our pattents. Price •of the book 14 cents •the'copy. HOW TO ORDEle PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving numher' and, size' of such patteena as you want,. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin ,(coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for geeh' minter and address your order" to ,Patte Dent., Wilson Publishing Co., 73"West Ade- laide St., Tii _Toronto. Parte sent by return marl_ friendly; 1 f the wealthy son of chiv:pry, Peter 01000 companionable than ever before. ( plodder and a son of toil, a mail of "Cotte here, Aleck," he said easily to !the North. the men in . front. Bradford turned w ith no Inok other than friendly in- CHAPTER V. (crest. "Meet Pete—Limejuice Pete poltorliY's »SCISION. In the months since she had heard the first news of her husband's death Not Though Page ter`his friends. Pete; this is Mr. Brad ford, of ,the cannery."_ Bradford's — smile • antsy Handclasp 'were cordial. ere Tender - , i He ]toted that Alberta is a very Causes Fish Vender's run 'of Reds he over had in his life in home in the south. Ivan had .skied burning Alberta coal. n new: trap he }vas crafty enough to hard to mals_ her forget her loss, This, in brief, is a summing -;ill" of heavy buyer from Ontario today and Arrest and Experts • find, and he's -in Imo of some good ignoring the clamoring nubile to be the opinion expressed In an Inter- that it would seem reasonable to sup- ' SSa 1 b -- e going to get off up with her, heedful of her every wish, view. with one of Ontario's industrial pose that, if sun had more looney, she Declare Creatures D d sac for, a jab here with Mr Brad- tions. Meanwhile he wooed her with the Coal Committee of the Canadian ,Tltese goods would have Co be heeled that.tnodmpntnble finesse thatts the nfanuta.ctulers Association. est and t ' ,, I fords,' � had peculiar gift of the eastern peoples. "We have been' told that the ;rapes- I suppose that soma of the curs widish Alberta Coal and Ontario Users Was The Finding of the Railway Board in Accord:With Facts. R. L. Mchityre Says Not. What Does Go in Coal Cars Besides Coal? WE WAIT WHAT ALBERTA HAS There Is no satisfaotot'y reason share et it would he comieg east T d Hearted � 'Woman "P t Mr Bradford has the biggest lifo had -moved' gracefully in Dorothy's .why. Ontario people should not be again to buy Ontario,made gnodr.. �rt3 lmor,2Y hcrtt a w:?ss anyhgW—Why don't you showering her. With princely atter- leaders, R• •L, 14Iclntyre, Chairman of would purchase- still more wets. ea a •: v a 3 would .seem 'natural to Berlet,—:'. triattfor cruelty to a fish . Until this moment Pe Y neves u t the question whether fish realized how completely his appcer_ He never let her forget his suit, one eibility of securing a reasonable' had come east with coal wouid go brought up_ q playedher, freight rate was. the reason why Al- back west again with supplies width are only stunned 'by. a blow en the 51108 had been changed. Now, as moment to an hour. He to Br dford gazed straight at him with-- he brought her gifts, priceless but al- beide domestic fuel could not be this coal money had purchased. head, or=killed outright, so that their out even a hint of reco-sition, with,no ways in perfeet,teste; curios out of brought to Ontario," Mr. McIntyre I There is another very interesting subsequent movements are .mete re- sign that this bearded sailor even re- the east, rare works of art from his said. ;Item which may, perl±aps, seem intim- ilexes. called any one. he had met, the-9ugr _ own Itncestral castle in the Urals. Irl "Last session, it was evident to the portant to the average person who has Ifraulein Dorothy .Ilime. 70, who is five's self-confidence mounted like, a her warmer' moods he ,urged immedi- Government that there - was a very no acquaintance with railroading, • great reat lover of cats bought a' live flame. ''I'd be 'mighty glad to -work ate marriage, and when she was cool tisk for her pets and instructed the here," be said quietly, "if Mr: Brad- and unresponsive he begged for he fishnion or. C. Beriseli, t0 kill andord can use me" promise of future P p'surrender to him, prepare it for• cooking on the spot.. "I can use you, all right. I'll put when time had healed the wound of . After the vender .of sea food had -deft -You on the web-erery at the usual Peters loss. ly' delivered a smashing blow on the wages. I've never ,quite caught. up One night in the seceud year he head of the fish, he started to scrape with myself''smce I lost so many' of had brought her a marvelous blue of the scales, my best men hi ;the . Jupiter disaster. diamond—a priceless thing with a 'Whenshe saw the fish still s uirm- 'the way, Cap'n, you were standing, sinister history -and he .had wanted q; By ing in the man's hand, the old woman by when that happened'." her to take it as a symbol; of engage - e 1 mittecl 11 scream of horror, called him "Yes, We'd gone to help the Vig- anent;''rind that night she had been a �)rrnte rind subsequently ,had 'him ten—garlic as yourboat, I guess. Pete, strangely, deeply afraid of him. She a •i•aignidd in the Charlettenburg court here, was on the `Vigten—the _single had let the stone gather fire to' her "for wanton cruelty." vor survi• Of course; we- put" orit a hand, and when she had', taken it off The court, ,fincling itself incompet- ent to judge of the vitality of fishes, called in -two piscatorial experts, who testified - that after' a properly deliver- ed blow on the head a fish is as dead as a door nail and that its continuing motions are purely i•ebectory in char - ACCOUNTANTS AND AUDITORS W. MacMillan and Company 'Union :Bank Handing, Galt. Phone 668, Also Toronto ;i'nd Kitchener W. 14IACMILLAN, L.A, r-28 ,ISSUE No. 51—'27 atter.: boat and cruised around until there .and put it in Iris palm it was as if its was no hope• of finding any one Ilse cruel, hard, malevolently beautiful ton for this coal haulage, But any ince anything very much. alive—then went on- without` waiting light had passed . tp his thin face, rate: greater than $7 per ton , is tea I "But, ;1u figuring the cost, 11 brakes for the dead to drift ashore. We pick- I "Keep it a while, Ivan, she told him, high to allow a reasonable retail price , just this clieerenoe-it snakes the dif- ed "up Pete moreaor less alive on the i Sometime I woonld,be proud.` to wear for the coal in Ontario, i Terence between a freight rate low on- shore, and how. Ise get through those it -but not yet.—" }Si , a r- "Tho effect of the Railway Board uitgh to put Alberta coal on thee. Mar- deefs :was a miracle. We saw jest She had drawn Lack from m, 1 decision; then, . MrJ. Mermtyi0 001* ;tot in Ontario and freight' rare so drolly in the dawn, the Jupiter break palled in spite ot.,herself at what she armed. "as far as• the overage news,',}sigh that it keeps it out. strong public, opinion in favor of a } "The Railway Board's report sets the national fuel .policy and, to get down average load of each car of Alberta to particular things—in favor of see -,coal coming east at 33.4 tons. But tug that the Ontario consumer be en - the .Canadian National flgru'es show aided to scopic coal from Canadian that the average car -load of freight mines. . ion that road in 13125 was 36 toes and "So the Board of Railway Commis -1 the 'C.1?,12. average' was 33 tons. slonera. wee, instructed to carry On, an I "There seems to be no reason t0 - investigation and report, to the Gop , suppose � that the Athena coal. Axir'- eminent exactly what would be the loads aro going. to besmaller than :the coat of carrying Alberta . coal from ;average for all kinds of freight. the mines to Ontario. 1 "If eve take the C.N.R. figure which "The,ievestigation was duly carried is rho smaller of the two, we find that . on and the Board reported that tbe ft makes a .differenoe, of less than sum of 37.22 would be ,the cost per two tonin .pea' car, That does not .eosin Learning Fr oni Canada. limner reader ;vasconcerned was that { 'If the average carload o er a it WAS not possible to market Alberta coal can be 36 tons, --which it a1• coal in Ontario under present condi- most certainly would be—then rho tions. - • freight rate per ton will be 47 cents "That wai"sny impression, too -at less. That is, by checking rip this first glance. „Then, I looked into the one minor detail, we fid that the figures ,and "I was' convinced of some- rate, instead et $7.22,-,-ehoul:i have thing 'entirely different ,from the of- been $6,76;" ficial findings, Ivir. Molntyr'e Ldeclared that he "It is entirely feasible. co bring Al- could go on, indefinitely, with a dig berta coal to Otario. A freight rate cession of othe,• features of ,the Bail- out be made which will not only make `ray i3oard report. 'l'here were,: for it 'potable for the retail price of the instance, the various items relating t' coal here to be, at rite vety,leaat, as freight -car repo is. IoW as. teras of the Imported American I "')'be overcharges, as far 08 1-1115' product but this rate would not out pa,rtloular questien of `oar repairs fo down -the net revenues. of Canadian' concerned, added 31.30 to the rate which the Railway Board ,j+resentetl' as the correct one," he said. 1 "These two overcharges -47 cents and $1,80•-otalsod the rate from $5.4fi i,o $7:22, 0 railways by one dollar per year nor Would it require ono cent in the way of subsidy from :the Federal. Treas- ury," Mr. Mctntyre noted, for .instgnce, the fact that In this calculation : of the actual cost of gettimg,Alberta coal` to Ontario, ire Board had taken'' it for si'auted that every car' Wed in bring- td with the undertaking le concenik mg the, fuel, east would have • to. be cit= minor, operator, railways, coal. hauledback west again, ;empty, The coat' of doing this was taddedIn to dealer, ultimate consumer and tate make this $7,22 rate. a arious governments, f lVhat that meant Me McIntyre ex "But ih090 is only one method of plained, was that ilio railway Board bringing this thing- to -a head ane took it for granted, that, In spite or that le tlu'0ugh action on the part o, the t i the ease, that. millions' eery golrt> ao l.lo Federal Clovcrumairt, The ntatto>� w tlie.' Lliiiteii., Sta,toS coach year would is certainly coming tip at, the next seg. • r ioi of Moil of the Ottawa honeo'and n•o 3ropa, • the , t. Lawrence, stay in Canada and a large, ec t t. b ..experience,it iu the.great Glriol%c brfd,lo across 9t � iti .1.Ins• will` Mean Alberta coal i' �, Taking ;a leaf 01'e the vehe River of Rhoda in bis d g. ioh bridge,wltl ort.' 32Q -foot slrarzs taxis :money, would go to Alb -t tai kl at 1 i floated ha'l'e built over the Rhine, between Wesel .iT t) ;liter 41„. ,l i. - i Gcrru'in ors _, -- _ ,..._.,as: not i3OrT to calculate that �l"t,ARtHx14 ae.> v'inter'. .1 which were floated lute placer.,',... "it is ohvinilsl'' 118 concluded, "that Alberta coaleoselirn ln'1iught here. q; i ftlabiy, as far 0,8 e,terybody' Comte* A NEW `!WATCH ON THE RHINE” ° 1