HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1924-01-31, Page 2he
0 S an
flora) rianking Ou
Notes ,Dkiiounied s
ezt allowed on . Deposits. .•t3aie
• H. T. RANCE
iSetary Public,. conveyaneor.,
nelat, itSal 'iq3515te- and Fire In.
-e Agent. Representing
rituce. companies.
Dshn Goint Qffice„..Giint,on.
W. IIRYI)ONE
istor, acticaur, Notary pubno. 000.
' Office:
Ani E Lodi<
DR. 1 C. GANt.)1ER . •
to 3,30 pan.' 7.80
00 Pm. Sundays, 12.30 to 1.30 p.m.
her ,hours by' appolOement oiily
'0 and Reside:no t st.
-DR. WOODS
esurning practise at `his residence,
ie:/lours:--if to 10 a.m. and 1 to 2
.Sundays, 1 to 2 11m" "for con-
cition.
L.!{ S. BROWN L M.C.C.
(Dace Hours
to 3.30 p.m. 7.30 to 0.00 p.m.
Sundays 1.00 to 2.00 p.m.
Other hours by appointment.
Phisaes
se, 218W Residence, 2181
'PERCIVAL HEARN ,
Office and Residence:
.(,n ntreet ' Clinton, Ont.
- Phone 69
rmerly occupied by the late Dr.
C. W. Thompson).
es Examined and Glassea Fitted.
EDDIE GOES TRAPPPIG
Y MOgTa REINUAJVS IiAziDur
Qom Jones mother wondcred what
hid small son was about, so quiet he
vas. just his rumpled hair showing
above the back of the big chair. That
there also appeared the rages of his
fai0,1 magazine did not satis-
factotily eqcIun ide lack of noise • or
whendeeply interested in his reading,
Eddie invariably mumbled, swung his
feet and read the most exciting pas: -
sages aloud. Eddie's mother was not
to find ont for two days. Eddie would
not have told her for anything. But,
like all forms of mischief, it leaked
out, And then Eddie wished with all
his heart he had taken his mother into
his confidence. •
• Eddie was not reading A story this
chilly, autumn evening, but a remark-
able.advertisement which told of trap-
ping, of the money and sport derived
with one of the sure -catch traps pic-
tured on the back page. As it was in
the only magazine he considered
worth a boy's notice, Eddie felt posi-
tive it must be a very good thing, in-
deed. He wondered why Chris 113ent-
ley, his cousin who lived on a farm
near town, did not spend all his spai'e
time trapping in the woods down back
of the barns. It must be Chris was
Just a slow country boy and knew
nothing of his opportunities.
Eddie's mother, wondered :next
morning why her son left half an hour
earlier than usual for school. Like proceeded proudly on his way, head
most twelve -year-old boys, it was his up, great eyes scanning the bresh ens -
custom to wait till the last Ininute, piciously. He always went about with
a chip on his shoulder. Only yester-
day he had discovered a big white
hen on his side ef the fence. 'How
he'd made her flap her'wings and go
hurrying through the _bashes! 'She'd
run cackling hysterically all the viraY
back to the coops. He'd -show 'ern!
. A. Newton Brady Bayfield
ideate Dinslin Univeisity; Ireland.
e Extern Assistant Master,
de Hospital for Women and Chil-
,•Dublin.
ce at residence lately occupied.
Mrs. Parsons. ,
rs 9 to 10 a.m., 6 to -7 p.m.
days 1 to 2 p.m.
G. S. ATKINSON
D D,S„ laD S.
duets Royal College of Dents: Sur-
geons and Tonna° University
DENTAL SUP.GEON-
office hours et Bayileld in old
t Office Building, Monday, Wed.
lay, Friday and Saturday from 1
.30 p.M.
DR. W. R. NIA/IMO
- CHIROPRACTOR
Consulting Hours
to 12.00 a.m., 2.00 pan. to 5.30 p.m,
7.00 pan. to 9,00 p.m,
• Phone 613
mandle Block - Clinton, Ont.
CHARLES B. HALE
veyancer, Notary POP:, CommIo.
• stoner, ete.
IL :ESTATE AND INSURANCE
RON STREET - CLINTON
GEORGE ELLIOTT
need Auctioneer for the county
• of Huron. • .
rresponcleuce proniptfy answered..
ledlate arrangements can be made
Sales Date at The News -Record,
ton, or by calling Phone 203.
rgea Moderate and Satisfaction
%tar:Intend. •
4.11
B. R. HIGGINS
• Clinton, Ont
ral Fire aud Life Insurance. Agent
Hartford Windstorm, Live Stock,
mobile and Sickness and Accident
ranee. Huron end Brie and Cana-
ruSt Bonds. Appointments made
eet particle at Brucefield, Varna
'Phoue 67.
e Mcifilop Mutual
e Insurance Company
ad Office, Seafortit, Oct
DIRECTO Ryr
way; trappers often hunted and went:
on to the brook to awaiittlevelopments.
As soon as he legrd„ a snap -bang and -
a- squeak, he would, run hack and
gather in the furry Osfif„,„.'ffONV prod
he"dhe when,hool /Mailer!
in town and V4S0i5;TI: iing-1
ling the proceetlat'sb `th 11;10e, boys .
could;
Of the cruelty of ,trapping,tof the ;
animals going placidly ;bout their;
ways of life, then suddenly -hauled upt
by a steel trap, to drag frantically at
a leg 'unaccountably held fast, the
hours of anguishand suffering
through; a cold night; the -hideous men-
tal condition of 'animals, so held --the
advertisement in the Magazine had
not touched upon. Of this feature of
the Sport, 'Eddie unfortunately ItneW
.almost nothing. It had never 'occurred
to him to wonder,;who,had the greater
right to .the Warni, 'furry ,Pelt-abiln:-
selfwho had not actual, immediate
need Of it, or the. animal i,to„whom
-kind Mother N,a.ture gives it, that -its
very life may be .preservede: ,This
Matter had never been ;, discussed
either in his home oreat. school. Eddie
did not mean to be cruel; he Sin-ipay
did not realize the harm he was doing.
But Nature does' not 'take into ac-
count ext,entuating circumstances,
When the big bull decided he need-
ed .a drink, he wandered down the
path towards the brook. He noticed
the bot of steel lying in his path, gave
a careless sniff, stepped over it; and
then leg it with all speed. She never
could have guessed, though she was—
from much nerve-racking practice, ef-
ficient in arriving at what was likely
to be on Eddie's mind, that he bore in
his pocket all the savings from his
bank which had grudgingly given up
its.contents at dawn that very morn-
ing ' snorted. There had come the snap of
After school that day, which hap. a twig. He caught a movement be,
pened to be a Friday, Eddie stopped hind a bush across the break. With a
'at:the hardware Store for the pack- bellow of defiance, he plunged' for-
age which had been wrapped for him ward. Old Tige, lying on the sunny
in the morning. This he hid in the side of the straw -stack, heard .that
woodshed where it Was conveniently ominous roar—add understood. With
picked up next morning as,he started a bound, he was on his way to as -
for his uncle's farm to spend the day certain -the cause, wisely skirting the
with Chris and teach him the grand bull's fence. Then another fence and
a high,bank cut turn off. Hesitating
a sicond While he chose bdtween two
possible routes to where he knew -the
bull Must be, he Wag electrified into
actin by a scream of abject terror
from the boy.
Suddenly the 'big beast whirled and
Went. James Cougoily, Goderlch;
, Jarnes Evans, Beecl.wood; Sec,
surer, •,rhoe., ,a Hays, Seatorth.
ectors: George McCartney, See.
; D. F. McGregor, Seaforth; J. es
Walton: Wm, Ring, Seaforar;
leDwen, Clinton; Robert Ferries,
elc; John Beenewelr, Brodlitigene
Coderich.
nts: Alex, Leitch, Clinton; j. W.
Goderich; Ed. Illechray, sea.
W.• Chesney, Egmondvilla: R.
'rattuth, Brodhagen.
Money to be paicl in may be
Mobrish Clothing Co., Clinton.
attni Grocery, Goderlch.
fetes fiesiring to affect Insurance
rausact other leisMess will be
fitly attended to,on application
f the ,gbage officers addreese,d to
'respective, post office Lessee
.eted by the Director: who, lives
t thesecno•
- CLINTON
EWS-RECORD
new' game of trapping wild animals.
Why, he and Chris would soon have
more money than their fathers! Fars
Were high-priced these days, and, ac-
cording to the • advertisement„ ex7
tremely easy to 'obtain. The one
thought that annoyed Eddie was that.
•
Forgetting for the instant the boy's
he had not known of 'this lucrative
unkind refusal to have him along and
occupation before. He was sorry his
mother Could not be in on the big idea, that the bull's enclosure was taboo,
Tige filing himself at the planked
but she, unaGle to realize what a fine
investment a trap was, Would never
have consented to his emptying his
bank,•he felt sure.
Arriving at the farm, Eddie was
disappointed just at fh•st to find that
the family had glriv4n off it number of
miles to a farm anetion, and only the on Ins back and Was heeled short ---
Jibed girl mid Old Tige were there the most surprised dog in the county
to entertain him' Upon second at that nociment, Tige had never seen
thought, he decided this was well, R nor emelt a steel trap in all his life;
would give him aPportunity to do his they were not perMitted on the 'Bent-
ley -farm. Chris had never handled
one. Tige hadet time to examine this
one, for the screams from the brook
were becoming more terroe-strielten,
the bovine roans more enraged.
fence' gained the top, slid over and
• racedwith all his might towards the
brook—his canine instinct for protee-
tivity uppeemost in his faithful,
<leggy mind.
SNAP, Tige somersaulted, landed
CLINTON, ONTARIO
e of Sugsoription---4;2.00 per year,
advance, te Can“dian addresses;
50 to the 1.7.S. or other for
first day's trapping, alone. Though
he did not put it in wordsehe felt sure
neither the glory of his success nor
the ridh pelts would be too much for
a boy like himself to enjoy unaided.
He had some difficulty in, perched- The big she herd exerted all his
ing Old Tige to eliminate himself strength; but he bright new chain
from the expedition, Old Tige had held. The sharp teeth of the trap bit
been the few...looted overseer on the into the flesh of hie leg, into the very
Bentley farm for nine years, was still bine. Desperately, Tige catight the
hale and hearty, and very, very wise. chain in his teeth and shook it, then
He did' not propOse perinittg a city dropping it, wheeled and sprang hope -
boy to prowl over his premises with- fully tilting the 'Path, only to be jerked
out his watchful eye, Besides, the back again and again.
numerous times in the past year since
Eddie's folks lived near enough to
visit the farm, always Old Tige ac-
companied the two boys in their many
merry jaunth through the woods.,
Chris never dreamed of setting foot
ER 1 -
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4,t-1
of Bs
WOO VAL-)g 3 •
-- I
irDNIT.Y AREA
EXTENSIVE.yerwnod Des'
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��FSS 014'.-rie e-Cittli'414
PA0(4- DC!,
sosss -sisitei< nflocstr"A
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PolilAigN... Ott
SP'(
Z.Vt.Pectktbk6
‘aftfsou
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5044E lisI0140.
urot.1
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0. a, Ji.Sokiseona.
fOn.sAl." ntS'esnaPS.5
Recent Discoveries at Jerusalem
The .recen't discoveries of th0 British
explorer Professor R. G. Stewart Mac-
alister in Jerusalem and its vicinity
have added very materially to our
knowledge of that e,ncient city. The
early history of Jerusalem has long
been recognized as most obscure des-
pite its position in antiquity Roil the
prominence given to it in biblical and
secular hstory.' Professor Macalister's
discoveries in relies and pottery make
Jeruaalem an established city in 3,000
B.C., 600 years earlier than was gen-
erally believed, and help to explain
the reagens for ite location and its
centinued existence through wars and
changing rulers. ,
Professor Miscalliter's deductions
do not affect the biblical conception of
thebity's antiquity as gathered from
the story of Abraham. This,story is
the chief source ot the biblicat know-
ledge of ,the city ia earliest days and
students lia.ve concluded from various
allusions in the Bible and anciont his-
tory that Abraham was a contempor-
ary of the-BabylOnlan Xing Haransur-
abl. Ile thus lived about 2,000 13.C,
The earlier date, 2,500 B.C., conies
from the reeords of the Egyptians and.
of the early peoP10,of western Asia.
The sites af the original city at Jer-
usalem, the Jelmolte city and also the
Finally the loop slipped up over
the top.of the bush, and Tige was free.
With the chain thrashing about his
legs, tripping, whining piteously with
vexatkin and pain, he hurried to the
rescue, the heavy trap gouging and
Outside the door without Tige at hie tearing his leg into mangled flesh and
heels. As n Wee puppy, Tiie had come splintered bone. But it did net halt
to Chris on his fourth birthda'sa, The his kogress He rushed through the
two had been inseparable ever since. brook caul fastened his jaws to a hind
, But Eddie Was bbdurate, even viol- leg of the bull, With an indignant
ent, and Tige understanding. perfect,- snort, the roan ty-rned „po, him The,
ly,stalked ciff, his half-cocked ears it was a fight to the death—the death
waving backward in the breeze, an of Old Tige. • For with the ttap to
offended expression in his kind, brown his leg, impeding his rnovements and
eyes and deteumination in his stauneli causing him excruciating agony, the
old heart, ,Mb did eot wantSo go with chain looping and catching in the
Eddie, anyway but if the -boy thought bushes, Tige was no match for the
he'd not 'keep an eye on hirri, he was agile infuriated bull. With a mad -
very much mistaken! dened roar, the -great brute pinned
So, from afar, Old Tige knew pre- him to the ground, arid with his great,
cisely what the young intruder was curly head, crushed out his life.
up th. • The boy was proceeding Bht, Old Tige won, oven in decant.
queerly—prowling through the brush Par while he engaged the bull, the
where there were no paths. Tige W011-
hey,•who bad scrambled into a small.
sapling which could not have with -
dared was he hunting rabbits; Phen,
why not let him help? But with pa., stood the bull's inevitable eharge, had
tient tact, the old dog withdrew. to a just sense enough left to drop to the
point, where he could sense What the , . .
ground, g g,
boy was doing without actually, see-''
!clear the fence; and he did not, quit
ing him or being seen. 'Yet Tige was, Tan .114.
uneasy. He knew the boy had en-
tered retched tho wooded lot where Chris Sundown, and the BentleYe
driv-
navor went. It Was the '101 farthest ing 'up the lime—and 110 jeyeue Piga
from the:house, where the great roan to greet them. Surely soinething was
bull was lceptnenTige never went dread,f1111Y wreng1 Chile \V9'3'
there himself, as the big nye, had ne diateiy gripped with a great appro..
love for, either boys or dogs. Not hmlsiam Sliringing from tne wagon,
even pigs svere allowed to run there,' louclksi, lin set 'out to look for
Oiti many. years, Very natur-
That was why the underbrush grew. bis Pal
densed,"-and its density was what had' allY lie gi.divillatad to the bull's pen
attradted the amatenr trappetz to the, first of all, the moment saw
'forbidden gmund, the great ;Mad en:eared' with blood,
'Just now the big 'hull stood at the; chtle h"evii • Late', Mrs. J.olles
rack calmly chewilig 00 the wisps of Phoned out, Eddae e hem tbroken con-
untries, hay he pulled from between the slitts. 1 fession; am! Ihe scory,was urriltL,d at,
siLse arrears ese pa ; IiIe was a blooded bepst, sleek and 01 Tige's sragic death is shock
3 option or the reelisher. heavy and handsome. Ile yearned for 'which nEdthe'r Ellris 11°1'. Eddie can'
te to which every subscription is Vide 'lPaces with a vaat.herd to roant ever forget. - Chris is inconsolable,
id is denoted on the babel. '
rtising Rotes -:-Transient adve.r.
merits, 10 .cents per nonpareil
o for met' insertion. cad 5 couts
r,line tor each subsequent laser.
is. titutib advertisements net to
teed arm such
trayed," or "Stolen" etc., inserted
ea for 85 cents, and each mince -
tint insertion 210 ceuts,
ihmunicat.ons intended for poen- couiin was overly cautiou,., Beside, right -df I must forgive hire! But
clty of David, are ItQW vaharit laud.
The exact location of the jebusite city
is not knowu 0118 -11 is supposed to
have been on 0110 of the western hills.
David esteblisked his royal city, which
he surrounded by it wall, on one of the
eastern hills. The derusalern, of to -day
grant away from these sites long be-
fore the Onrifitian, era. The eriginal
looatiou of TeruSalent was undoubted-
ly, due to the fact that these hills of
Perrclanent inn,pre verirtent0,' Ala
in Safer Prodnetion and Bet-
Palestine were capable of being
strongly fortified and -that one of them
was the source of water referred to in
biblical history as the, Epring
The early rulers knew the value ot
this sprihg and they carried out an
aniasing feat of primitive engineering
In making lt Waters accesaible to the
entire city. This ancient system of
water supply was probably superior to
its present ystem. The archaeoligists
have discovered two elaborate ttuineY
canal systems, one of which passed
under the city and had its outlet at the,
Pebi et Siloam, frequently mentioned
Ix,, the New Testament Shafts and
tunnels were put down in different
parts on Jerusalem so that the people
could 'reac'h this underground supply.
Modern research seems to jestifythe
belief that David ,knew at this system
of water'supply aud bade use of the
tunnels and shafts in getting his men
into the city and thus effecting its cap -
-te tqnality of Coal,
Lees than 011S,ip,er' ctnt, cf -Candfla'r
total coal rerenfces' are fOund it her 33'ottrIny ,58
Easzern coal fields. in 5115 Provinces o E are the inort'amiable people la
Sb the1°s*tk1)146,44'
3ue FLs i5 "5
GentisrWLht,torry. -
innuga ooft;rewori 61e:1111(.1'0'15"i; Omf
, „
medicines-. Get oaiy Itt s.
77 -
Nova' Scotia and Nate Britnnwick • all the a.vorldit 'Mr. Frederik Peulsen, 1,ra.
of the rest bising. west Of Winnipeg. 'veler and writer thinks that that
Neverthetiess Ise eaileries Of Cape splendid distinction belongs, • to the
Breton werr,,, among the tirst wellfed, Italia -rte. In Travels and SketcherIse
•
on the ArneriCan eantnient, and dur- writes,:
ing 1022 the Eastern: holds- produced' -Unquestionably the Italians are the
39 Per c°111i, of the,ItOtal Canadian out- most amiable nation iis th,e
world, hos-
put Alining operritions dire known to ever ranch the tourists who have,
have been In progress since 1785 and been eheated by profesplonal scomia-
• jerusalem has not:beef's° preatable
a field for archaeological reseerch as
EgYnt oz' the Valley of Mesopotamia.
Palestine was a poor land in compari-
son with either of these, Cilniatie
Conditions top Were not so favorable
to the preservation of treasures of an
tiquity at Jerusalem as. in Babylon or
in the ancient chins of the Nile. Even
the locations of the tenth of David And.
the teraplea of the earlier and pros
peroue days of Settisalern are int
known. The results of research in
Jeresalem may be less spectacula
than those of researehes In 1VIesopo
tanda or Egypt, yet iftheythrownet
ligiot upon the obscure history of this
remarkable city they will always.. b
of interest to the world.
1. STORIES OF WELL- '
KNOWN PEOPLE
indeed many of t.he difficalties now-
eneountered in this, field are due to
ihe early attempts ;It mining, when
the main object was an immediate
output of fuel at'lowest possible cost,
and.little consideration' was given, to
the future possibilities of undersea
mining at long distances from shore
eligfts.
The. coal, which 11 bituminous in
character .and of yar,,rog quality, 18
mined in five areas, or fiehle, usually
referred to as the Syd,ney ,and laver-
nesa fields in Cape Breton, tho
Your million dollar temples are sj; vul-
gar as your Sunday papers. Your im-
migration policy is a cruel muddle,
"Still, you are tne best half-educated
PISOPle In the world."
Reilliniecent, this, of the youth who
applied for a job tie office bey, and said
on his return:
"He told me my -writing was raten,
and that my boots were dirty, and that
my miller was a disgrace, end that I
looked like a first-class liar, and me,
gaged me to start next Monday."
Our 'Unpolitical prince,
- I asked a friend ,recently wliat 1115
politics were. 1 -Ie looked perplexed,
and, replied: "rin either a ConserVa.
tive or 'a Liveral or ,a Labor Man."
gicirivheinchitWuapS, IA3 way et sayink he hall
Of 'course, looked superior and
passed •him by. There are few men
Who may own to no • palitieal....thind
without losing caste. One of them is
the Prince of FcraleS, •
"Tam not allowed to know' anything
about politics," he Said the other day.
"That is one ef the greatest privileges.
I possess."
"Perhapi thconly teal difference be-
tween the Prince and his pople is that
he pretends not to know auything-about
politica when he 'dcies; while 'iive pre-
tend to. knoW all .about politics when
we don't, .
In Cauder's 'Wake
•
'Benno Moiseiwitsch, the- famoits
Pianist, has no tremore regarding him-,
SO IIOW, iilf, 011C0 he was exceedingly
nervens. lie confesses that his most
-
trying exporienee occurred. before he
was duo to appar at a concert at
years ego, Harry Laud,er was the fMf11. I
Devonshire Park, Eastbourne,. somo 'And in the ,nignb.thyte
her cry
they could hear
before hire, and prime to the concert,
And moaa and whimper if 'the gale
the anxious pianist wit thiProsse4. bY was high. ,
the size of ,Lauderts name on the Cost- • .. . ,
Sr8-80 nisich bigger than Illa own. . They eay shiehad no cause to die, but
"I wanted to seo this man 15110 was 2.. '
refs mayemaintain the opposite. No.
wbere else Call you enter a crowded
rail -Way carriage in the middle of the
night among weary and dye:wily People
and find favor in the eyes of the o'c.
cupants. In !Italy' the sleepers get alp
to make room for the strange'r and his
luggago. Those who ars going to get
out at one of the following stations
probably pack their` things up by the
window and evaeuate their nieces. Not
a black or evil look and het a ques-
tion whether there really is not more
and Cumberland fields in Noya Scotia Let me tell a story- of what befell
proper, and the Minto field ,In Newttu room in another compartmentl
in
Brunswielc. The Sydney field is the waslthe x
aeailr8 d
yenrealiinghRome
oap
olo ste1517 070 -
most extensive and is credited with glasses, Which fell Into a crack be.
about 78 per cent. Of the total avail. tween the back cuabion and the seat.
'able coal In the two -Eastern provinces.'
The Cumberland a.nd P1Otou fields. pas -
sees a Ifitie less than 10 and 9 per cent.
easPectiVely of the total! the Inver -
fleas field,:about 23 per cent; and the
New -Brlinswiek field about 1% per
• The Wind.
The cabin sits aione fat up a hill
Where all the year the mournful wind
blows shrill.
She used, to telt him sometimes; "No
•• one knows .
How • hard 18 81 to listen, while it
• blOoms.'
He never triuched a plow again, they
Say,'
After he found.. her dead, but ,went'
• „ ;away.
5.111 tenants,wouldn't live upon the
place .
Beeeuffe, the neighbors said,. they saw
her face. -
Pregsod close' against the little win-
• dow-pane
Watching the twisting storm -clouds in
the rain; •
• Production hi 19,13 -
In 1913 the two provinees produced
a total of 8,050,000, short tone and in
1922 only 5,850,000 tons. The rela-
tive amounts produced from the sever -
When one of the Italians noticed my
vain endeavors to fish them out he ad-
vised me to draw out the seat, Im-
mediately two Itidies and an elderly., -
ecclesiaetic left the carriage to give
room to tWO. Itellane -and myself to
exert our strength. After inucli 'per-
spiration and pulling the seat came
out with a crack, and we tonna' the
ai flelds•last year were: Sydney field when we puit the- seat hack the dust
glasses in a deep Meer of ditst But
'70 per cent; Cumberland 11.8 per whirled upwards and filled the car-
..
cent.; pictiin 9.7 Per cent.;' Inverness 'liege - One of the Young men was
The ontput le used largely.fdr 1000MO- SW:fat,Tilell,hgicaltratsvulteenednedntoftlthistebpstermatToenr
tive,fuel and,ior bunkering ships was aniudged With &Mt. In vain did
3,1 per cent., and Minto 4.9 per cent.
is used by 'Industrial power plants in
. It his young wife try to brash him clean
fiMrattnliellcdoerwidotoers.
Easterh Canada 8,nd for the manufac- But I, wile from the
tute of 'coke to supply the iron. and ted against the -Moon.
steel furnaces. at Sydney. It .40 also t°
venience I was putting ,them to and
used, to a large extent as. a. domestic now -in my unfortenate. situation 'tried
fuel throughout the 1Vtarine. Provinces.. fiSCUSG myself, got only bright
For domestic use the output of portion- smiles. by' way -of- teply. . Elven in the
lar mines and selected seams is enn face of the , yeung* wife there was no
ployed, .but . even, at that many ewe sign -of bitterness.
tomers in the cities of Halifax and St. 7.4.,
John and at other Points prefer to pay • e• -g
a much higher price for Panneylvaeia
or Welsh ' anthracite. Much of . the
Nova Scotia coal is Vigh in, sulphur,
and fot the manufacture Of enetantir-
gloat coke and a careful selection. of
the coal is' 'necessary. The . coal so
used is further Washed, to reduce its
.ash andhulphur content: In 1914. over
2,800,000. tons of Novit Scotia , coal"
were marketed in the 'Province of
Quebec.' -'-'During the war this meiecet
+Nes almost entirely' lost, but by4922
bad been regained to the extent of
about 50 per cent
Production during the first six
months of 1923 showed.. a decided im-
'prevenient Over' the corresponding
period of 1922, with an increased pro -
&talon of over a million tons and with.
largely increased shipments to • the
Montreal market contracted for..
so big and titr boPlilar," SaV l'I°18(31. Viiin Wo• 51,1'0 bIONVing 011.
'-Gwendolen
witsch. "I was efraid far my playing,1111.,
I almost wished was not' playing at
all.
317
I'My friend -and 0 stool in the wings
to Nt-atch Harry Lauder's perilormanae.'
s I thought he , was wonciertu, but all
, the time I was afraid that, when, he
, had finished, the people would gosand
: that they woule take no notice of my
playing at all. , , ,
Il'Ansi euddetily, 'flourishing, his big
; stick, Tlarry Lauder turned to to and
shouted: •,
" 'Get away, :you. boys! Ino .you
hear? '
' -was only part of b s stz bust-
. neSs " 'concludes the pianist, Mtt I
thought he meant. us, and I was so
frightened -that-I turned and rim out
as fast es 5 could!" .
with and talte care of; it irritated
isim to be always alono in a five -eon
lot. Full a vigor and mischief. 'he
vented his spleen in ehasing: anything
that came within his enclosure. E'ven
tho cats hunted niicc there with ma 0101,110 110 Caffli slcate on our pond this
eye for the big roan. winter' 1101' 10 ti,,iiirrg with no next
But although Chris had told Eddie summer! Ect him play in town where
about the hall, Eddie thought in his there aren't 00 many animals to be
supexior, city -bred way, that hie. haled off IV In teellehness 1 Oh, all
When his mother suggested, he must
forgive Eddie Who has learned a great
lesson, he replied;
'Well,- he- didn't; 81516 to, learn his
oir' lesson on. my Tige 1, And that
51 0111155 70 a guarantee ef aeri
g he entered ,the lot the roan bullhe s:}M'n, not Plaii,,'ik'WIth 111,0 again', not
bo aegonalianied by Um imam al was )„,,,e_here .anywiris., Ser. ibila,i,enty' years. 211
iter.
oprietur., in the mid c p $
.
5, 101 big game. So he .set the trap bd moSt
<1 of i t A 50- 1, eh .e0 im iMSS M. 01(1 Tigel"
he Spoken VVotd.,
Ea..., you expresS an opinion of a
man's words yen really: ought to see
this face while ho utters .them, I have,
for Inatairee 'seen ci 'fat youth 'fill his
'1non.th. eagerly -with apple-pndding tonne
temarking: voiding's 0.7." And
I -.,vonSer What .expresoion. n1r, Israel
ZiUsgsill wore When he to, 1111
American ancRonne, ,
‚700 ‚70)1' Yorkers 'are laZy and in-
cofloquential. -Fon' aro" 1151
5011' million dollar drives Ly,nity airs
Strikes .Costly.
18 81 estimated that the strike dur-
ing July caused a loss in output Cif
alma 400,000 tons, It also resulted
in a km of some of the sales that had
been made in the' Monti:eat market.
Within two weeks of the resumptioa
of mining, however, the daily' output
again reached a high level. •
Practically every colliery is work-
ing at Maxima= output consistent
with the two:1101e label' for work at
actual mining, A perefstent shortage
in the number 0% Miners was Increased
through considerable imInbers joining1
the ranks of the harvesters going to
Western Canada. Yet,' despite these
drawbacks, the 1928 produCtion maY
exceed that of any of the past eix
years, . -
At the piesent time large expendi-
tures are being made en permanent
improvements that will contribute ma-
terially to a better and safer produc-
tion of coal. •
With labor conditions on a more sat
Isfactory basis and rates of tonapen-
1sation so 'adjusted as to attract. aucl
retain tho native Miner, our Eastern
coal fields will be plithed on a better
basis to take care of wider markets.
Tha extent. to which these wider mar-
-kets can be, obtained in central Can-
ada.willi depend on ability to, compete
in quality and price with the enor-
mous production capacity of 'United
States bituminous mines.
NO Such Person.
"Damn " srierlea the general "why
can't you be more careful? You
should have addressed this letter to
the Intelligence Officer and youese
gone. and addressed it th the
, gent °Meer. Don't you know there ie
no such ,,o0Ucer?"
What WIII They Do With It? ,
Minister — 'Remember, the meek
shall inherit the earth!"
One of the Flock—"What do you
think of their chances of managing it
When they get it?"
Of Course!
I Mime into this totvli, Sir, as a very'
man boy, without a shoe to ray feet
or a penny in my pocket, and now look,
at me!" "
"But I always thought you. were
born in the piece."
"so I was, Doesn't that proVe ,MY
Statement?"
If colds can be "caught," they also
can be imparted. Better spend a day
or two at home rather than scatter a
half dozen or more colds hi the schools
room or the office.
Yon should 'thieve keep a
bottle of Chamberlain'il
Stomach and Livor Tablet§
ott the °holt The littiefolk
appreciate Chanlberlain's
!mitred of Ilattaidini oile anti
sato cathartic and they" do
se otisn aced a mild and
reintnrea roc atom an h
treableetind tainctipation, give one liet bat=
going to bed. All drurralete 251,or gond to
CHANIDERLAIN MEDICINE CO TORONTO 1
trAi
Ai*
TIME ,TA13L..E.
Trains wilelliantt'roint,esattoainiodwastilpart frOto,
Duffato and Goder,lzh Ole.
Going East, depart 6.25 am.
Going West ar, 11.10 Aim,
2.62 p.m.
" " ar '0.05 sip. 6,81 parL
,G0;llgt aHta3:1,,,t; r:70.51.16,& Ei rude pe113140.4.10i546.,
51.10,
Going North depart 6.50 p.m.
" " 11.05 11,13 a.m.
l'hate Athnoind
Stories -of eftlic6im
oale o
ever,"
°ugh a t1t!
for tile marathon prize i1.10/1."
DO 1101i apply furniture pollsit to
zoided furniture, or it will never look
!fright, ViTring a 01001 out of' tvatin
soapy water, and wipe, the Ptirtetueo
, carer:1111y, NVheii quite dry, pOli.S11 as
. 1'151:Mt
lie 1,
In%
:!!"!,;;A„g4
so inea lave dein:, yeti, can de linyour into timo
on easily master the-inereta Of /telling t make
. Whatever your exi:extonce hag boon --whatever
tow..,,ohothet 'et ilot yoni think you ccoi son-,
St i don: Aire einbitioun to earn $10,(100 n
rair: Ilion get In touch With 1150 4t ante? .1^4V111 provo to 504
will-1mA cost or ebliatien tliSt" onn!etiiilSo licconie SitMi
I:My-the Training And
Free f:inploviient Sorviiiii of (ho N. S. A; 1,111 help yea 10 30711
01071 5 7411113.
$.(0 000 A Yea -4-), Ser, -6t
f,
4 kthr iltioeso 'N. 5,7,5
CoDannn), alltibal overeat o leafrp'1014110 tho
h0 100
olNpkii'91400:111Vir fuNtnko'.'44 0tir
tioeal Salgarst Trsinn.g Association 1
Canadian 581, iloo101 Toronto, cosines_
-