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The Clinton News Record, 1924-02-07, Page 2
el':b+tT:ui S, ► 6 genexral 13an 0000 Disc enrite d;:°TJr•atts Issr>~ei, Ilor<et1 or: Deposita purl_-. ansaet• ; Interest ,Notes 1'urob is T. RANCE otery Public, Conveyancer, glair • Real Dstate -'and Fire In( ._ace' Agent. Representing 14 F1ro_ atlranne' companies_." 0i a Cltn toio Division Court'Otflc , W. BRYDONE Barrister, Solicitor,' Notary Public, eta. Odleo: $LOAN ®LOCK CLINTON DR. 3. C. GANDIEI DiSlee 1 -lours; --1.30 to 3.30 -p,m,. 7.80 to 9.00 Atm. Suodays,;12.30 to 1.30 p.m, Other yours ,by appointment, only. Office and Residence--=. Victoria St. i3le. WOODS Is resuming prectise at his residence, Bayfield. . 1 tot Otflco Hours: --9 to 10. A.M. and. pan. Sundays, i` to 2 pm., for con' �.C. DR. H.'S:.�'VN, L.Ni.tw OfficeBRGHours 1.30 to 3.30 p,n. 1.30 to 9.00 p.m. Sundays 1.00 to' der pm; Other hours by appointment. Phc-es Office, 218W Residence, 2183 DR. 'PERCIV' L HEARN: Ofiiee and '..residence: Ruren street 'Clinton, Ont. Phone 69 (Formerly occupied by the late 0, W. Thompson). Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted. D 1' n e ettislr the son 1t 3 the Loy ivas taken xgl"rsoc11on1 ip surlier t the faintly,0Te'thouglit lappareer =at sea, but finally gave up t1 1ide land got- to Veldt 011 flu) soil near his Ihumblo holnc, on the 'edge of the Ilighlands. • He, early, showed tlstgno 'or 'bookish peas, andreveled iii the historical as- sociations ;Ind e-sociations';Ind tho legends of his birth - Mahe and of Scotland. 1lo read all the books to be found in the modest 'libraries •of Lossiemouth and Elgin. 201 -special passions sinceearly man; hood have been Cromwell, of'whom lib': iortraits': 'c 1 otion of hes a unique ,n le 1 ' ti etc., and ''-too eighteenth t sen u y, not- abl3- I3olinglroke, Pope, .Addison, Steele, Cihbon, Chesterfield, I-Iorace Walpole. Thomas 13rown has always a g( 111oi .fug .c.1 ty-seven title exli 3e01g vile airacgt},t Lbssiorien�t F, �ta farm ,hearth" Mite eve10 amtnatidoL covered, ho, jontmalisgl D 41% A. Newton Brady Bayfield tiraduhte. Dublin University, Ireland. Late Extern. Assistant Master; Ro- tunda Hospital for Women and Chil- dren, Dublin. Office at o-sidence lately occupied by Mrs. Parsons. Roars 9- to' 10 a.m., 6 to '7 p.m. Swndnys '1 -to 2 p.m. remained a favorite, . Hls magnificent library contains all. the standard works on British,. Conti- nental and American history. When he travels; whether it be .from Iiif. home by way of the underground tube to the Floiuoo of Commons, o1; to India or Africa, pipe and book are his In- variable -companions,: He once said at a dinner "party .'where Lord 'Balfour }vas `present that his university was "'Cassell% Popular: Educator and. Science for All, Gets Job in a„Box f=actory, He carie to London first -when 19, with a niincl slanted toward science and letters, ?ho germs -of socialism' had already found' a firm tooting: His first Job was that`.of an invoice cleric in a. box factory, but lie attended. even- G: S. ATKINSON L,D,S. Graduate. Royal College of Dental Stir - aeons and Toronto University • DENTAL SURGEON` .• Has office -'hours at Bayfield In old Post Office ' Building, Monday, Wed. nesday, Friday and Saturday, from 1 to 6.30 p.nt. DR. W. R. NIMMO CHIROPRACTOR Consulting Hours 9.30 to 12.00 "a.m,, 2.00 pan, to 5.30 pan, 7.09 p.m. to .9.00 pan, Phone 68 Normandie Block Clinton, Ont. • CHARLES B. WALE Conveyancer, Notary PabPC, Commis- aloner, etc, • 2BEAL ESTATE AND . INSURANCE HURON •STREET CLINTON GEORGE ELLIOTT Licensee Auctioneer for the' County of Huron, Correspondence promptly answered, Immediate arrangements can be made for Sales Date at The Nem -Record,. Clinton, or by calling Phone 203. • Charges Moderate and Satisfaction Guaranteed. B. R. HIGGINS Clinton,. Ont General hire and ,Life' Insurance. Agent for Hartford Windstorm, Live Stock, Automobile and Sickness and Accident insurance. Huron and Erle and Cana- da Trust Bonds. Appointments made to meet parties at _Brucefleid, 'Varna and Bayfield. 'Phone 57, MacDor}l 011ce \ 0S, ,:0 becane'af-�� h'1e$8Fe8a,7i,tL0ngh1l ^itic Fod and the • London ales..':,Ck )0 secretary of tho,Iiendon mani h e Sco till3oe Rile •Lea tiih.e , ei1 is ie '3e jo iedtheidelg dt en 1 Y t Labor tarty a •eai, a0telfitsihi tion in 1891. Ida rdie 'soov,'<desctili . MacDonald as the :party's'•gieatest in' tellectual asset." Y As secretor Labor 1 e1re- Iof the I b septation Committee (1835=1506), he -is said tohave done more to form the British .Labor party than any other t'. ybluo elieity , •HO tin al's niore..than earg©'has l SinglQt oil tVYa ltrip d - y a;tlrbig r une , i.n,9•i t,Tieie stfa:n ils 'briehcss Clfdr�l er,narty '4Y' 4bj ll Chess of kiss, for Snot need0 6 tie11cc1- ds, and her e;dliiir"ers In KIl - 'sa,nted'noinducement to -vote for tiff give lien the distinction of bo '4,1; Du 6'he1;.fa sit tit GY1$ G'o{n - have beef the Dukes oS Ai„iol{ _ 3.,�, that about 1136 -they i7iherit- ' f t an ed the •sovoreiguty o1 ,he Isle o 11I , vhiol they held' far tweriy-nine yoais before; selling- it and other, rigiits,,,,to • ho-:Sritlsii Govermnent:,for 9350,000. -Other. rights sold ht. 1825 realized(..„; .085,000 a vastianibutlt fn thoseMays, mw e : e n , of Static for i is on of �tlie e 1 in o n e Judgment. c o i 'epi g the t f 1 Stn In =E ES dIlIY9i-9.E& B RRELS. ?khctflm': ' able C11111.iE,yids a Mar. Bl:'ltaoar'd •3'1io Canadianpple'crop of 19,23 prof, raises to be of r' somewhat lighter• yield than that of 1522, though on the; Whole a '1uhstainlal' harvest, well ,1p' to the average las been gathered 4c cording to the last Government' esti-': plates the ,yea. , a5pie crop will; amount "to well over 300,000,000,'` peril de, or 3,373,0-0 barrels, Ontario 00 ' ai'rel -�have 7.060 o s is estimated to1 r , e sFSrtinS•' Cluei>ec 61,000 hitt 1 • New , 1-' wick 41,250 barrels; Nova Scotia e uea o 628,500 barrels, and British Columbla closeseigli'affiar",tflrere'isli0 e well l '•Ji ?Lice Talbot the new Englis.i .2,535 000 boxes; equivalent to '846,000. as Eoreig$--rel (leie is'hLtlo doubt . - ti,, i , man, In the Years 1911 to 1,9,1.1 -he wasBritish-sovereignrlas Pelt it to' e fudge appointed ell eseceet SSi Charles barrels. the b ,w , , , - clan and an The estimated conlluerefitl ,rocluc- deader of the'= Parliamentary Labor only.i• question of time before he I}alli110 a ,eazueil T p on the outbreak. cf Sof pan aatii;irity ii .ritual .and licensing saw. lion' of apples in Canada in 1922 was party, resigning would have to, ontliis c s1 u •a aiust<conscri;c7 a One :of :moles .is the 2-.2010(105 of 3,838,852 barrels, aniouuting In -value; way. His sta d g L 9, to corm a Labor Government, and in theAktestilintt.er, and lie himself has been to 919,508,211, compared- with 4,049, - war tine war,his opposition to consequence desired to know hinrbet- war and his efforts to bring about ter, Standing Ceensel to Oxford UnlverSity 813 barrels of a value of $29,898,649 ip': peace long before Germany collapsed 'Che tabor deader is'a u idau er. Ills and Charicello$ of; •the, Lineoin, MY, 1921. The Province: of Nova Scotia: 'oblivion. Lichfield, Southwark, -:rind .Winchester accounted .for 7,897.,852' barrels worth forced hiM into politicalwire was the daughter et.Prof. 3.'Hall Dioceses, $7,851,186; '-British' CdlnmUia for One.. of Best Speakers. in House. Though a convinced internationalist, -MacDonald is said. to havevery strong 'feeling' and respect for nationality. He is a Scot of Scots, and his speech un- mistakably shows it. His voiceis a Pleasant, well modulated one. 6le is undoubtedly one of the best speakers in the House of Commons; no ranter, even under the stress of great emotion, during Heated debate. Those who` have watched hts: facial expression when Gladstone, and his great, affection for her, was revealed in a memoir which he wrote. She devoted- a large part of;het` life to; ' social and .industrial -ac- tivities, especially thdse.affecting, svo- men. A monument to her standsin Lincoln's Inn Fields,, near where -'the MacDonalds once lived. -In this me- moir, to his wife hefrequentlymen- tions his mother, whole he adored and from whom he got his Presbyterian faith.` ' s The McK op Mutual Fire Insur �ilCe. �0i'! 1ll Head Office, S O DiRECTROCk6lt: Out, ',resident, Janice ilanuouy, Goderich; Vice., James Evans; 13oe0L;vood; See,. Treasurer, '!'hos. 117. Hays,„Seatorth, Directors: George McCartney,. Sea - forth; D. F. Alct3reger, SeaforLh;..,i,.. , (Grieve, Walton; Wait. Ring, Seatorth; M. McEwen, Clinton; Robert Ferries, llarlock;'John Benuewelr.Brodhagea; .las. Connolly, Goderich. Agents:' Alex. Leitch, Clinton; J. I, Teo, Goderich; 214, Hinchray, Sea. torth;. W. Chesney, lygulcudvllle; .,1L G, Jarmuth, i3rodhagen, Any money to be paid in may be paid to Moorish Clothing Co:, Clinton, pr at Cutt's Grocery, Goderich. • Parties desiring to affect; Insurance or transact' other ` business will be promptly attended.: to 011 application to any of the above officers addressed to their respective '-roost olIle..: Lessee inspected' by tile, .Director :.who lives nearest the. scene:`,:` .L TO BRITAIN'S SOCIALiST- PREMIERAND 1-II8 FAMILY ing a ;'Widower. Every holiday,. it is tingham in the recent o eat ons, said, he reads aloud to' his children, one or two of Scott's novels, In the above picture is shown on the left, his daughter Sheila, aged 18. Next charge of the prime minister's house - le ` the premier, who first and last is hold. Next `to- dee right le his eldest a companionable- father; next is Mal- soh, Abater,' an architect, and on the calm, his second son, a student dt right, his daughter, Joan; 15, who Iike Queen's College; Oxford, Labe, Candi- her sister, Sheila, is stilt at school.' date In -the Passettlaw division at Not Ono marked trait In. the life of. Ramsay MacDonald, Britain's' pre- mier, ie the•interest he takes in the everyday life of his children, two sons and three deug9rters. MacDonald has two houses—one at 9 Howell read, Hampstead, London, and the other in Loseiemonth. 'a1 the latter he gener- aily spends hie summers and Christ, nuts with hie children, the premier be - NEWS'RECORD CLINTON, ONTARIO ",terms 10 Subscription -'22,50 per year, in advance, 00 Canadian addresses; 32.50 to the 13.S, or other foreign eountries. No paper'. discontinued untilall arrears are paid unless at the option et the ,publisher. ,T160 date to which evert subscription 'lo paid is denoted ea the label. Advertising Bates --Transient 000, tisotilents, 10 genu pet nonpareil lino ;Cr' first insertion and 5 cents per lino for each subsequent fuser. tion. Small advertisements not to exceed ono inch, -shah as "Last," "Strayed," ar "S-tolen " errs., Snsertod once tor 35 cents, and each subse- o,uent insertion 15 cents. Cotnoutiutcations intended for plt1lf. eatlon must, es a gaarantee of good. faith, tie accompanied by the name of the ratter. fl, 16. IIAI i> & ropfiet4 t, r There are no °Short alts”- for those 000,000' barrels worth' 90,750,000; On-''' who sit in judgment; Mr."Jusiice Tal- tario for 809,500 barrels worth 94,007, bot fs-sixty-two, and brings with hitn a\ 025; Quebec for 112,500 barrels wort(a'.;; ripe store of experience; "$787,500; and New Brunswick ',for 25i-. Be tells a Story of the late Commis- 000'- barrels worth ,$112,500,, Taking. sinner Herr, who was toad by a prison- the entire DomlhIon:'crop, an average" or thathe had "6onud” a geld watch price of .0.08 per barrel was, recei ell : and chain on the pavement. 7vhe.judge the average 'price of 97.00 for Quebec', looked at the prisoner end then at the apples being -highest and that`of Jury. "Gentlemen of the jury,” he for Nova Scotia's prodnet the lowest.: said, "L, have walked 0001' the pave- Of the total -apple crop of 1922 of meats of London during the last' forty 3,858,852 barrels, 295,300 barrels, were 'years, and I've never found a gold early apples, 768,500 Were fall apples, Watelr and chain there yet:- Considers ,and 27.7,052 barrels winter , apples: British ColumbiaAs the foremost early apple province with 125,600 barrel$. is Ishbei, the oldest delight", aged 20, who has now become mistress of No. 10 Downing Street and who will be in MOVING AIR AIDS, HEALTH eY Most of the' good effects -of fresh air. are due to the- impact of air of low temperature on the shin, 'and' meat of the harmful effects of foul air are due to the depressing influence of still, warm air on the skin. 1 The old 110801 0 was that men new off poisons in the air they, exhaled, Perhaps they do, but, up to date, the 'finest -chemical and bacterialtests have failed to show that there is such a pedson1-.: The.next theory was that the harm- ful effects were: due to too little oxy- gen and too 1nuclt"carbonic acid gas in the air. The .airplane'knocked the last prop from the first part of that theory. The .record altitude -flying and the lab- oratory. --exnerimentbag done airoratory..experimenting',done in con- nection therewith have oho,wn what is the smallest proportion 'o3 oxygen necessary 111air for human use and the point at which the flyer must s0P1 ply oxygen to the air he breathes. This proportion is much less than that In anyliving robnr, store`or factory, Carbonic Acid. As to, the carbonic acid, it is Proved that the: human animal can stand far higher perecntages than aro ager found iu. basculesate "and elrbways, and that the reason for carbonic acid standards in ventilation ordinances' is that they may measure air;staguaton; and net to estimate harmltilnessidir- Moving Air. People need moving, cool au' if, they aro to keep healthy, especially during the winter months. The"demPeratgro needod.will depend epau the work. temperature indoors of ;Between 65 and 67 'is beat for ordinary indoor work, except grandfather's room and 00110 bathroom, wisoro a temperature of 70 is allowable, It the occupation is one entailing considerable ' muscular activity, the temperature met be well below 70;' Not only tuna the air be cool; it must be moving.' A reasonable num- ber of draughts, of moderate force and temperature, are 0 necessity, but draughts' need not cause illness, Authorities aro agreed now that an `unchanging temperature is hiuunful.. In order that a room may bo healthy, the temperature must rise and fall through several degrees.. Fresh Air and Exercise. Our fathers had an excellent plan and we would 110 well to follow 11. Every half hour, or hour, they would throw up the Windows and blow out the foul an" Incidentally, they would lower the temperature of the- froom and fxeslleti the ail•. Asa rule, during this period of air freshening, the oc- cupants of the room moved about. A President in the Barber's Chair. Unlike President Coolidge,... Theo- dore "Roosevelt ,duff not use a safety Lord Beatty's Gargle. Nova Scotia had thelargest crop 98 Good tales of the seucome naturally both fall and winter apples with 402,. 000 barrels'of theformer.and 1,397,852 and one of his• beset to Bari Beatty, bri•e1s of the latter. concerns a certain officer of heKi g's United Kingdom First Customer. navy who had for -many years watered from chronic sore throat. Atlast, while Of the 1922 crop, 1,460,056 hernia on leave in London, he determined to worth. $6,452,044 were exported. The see a specialist about it, 'and accord. United Kingdom was Canada's dust ingly paida visit to,tlarleoStreet. The customer for apples, taking 1,325,658 doctor he. consulted, being a great bee- barrels worth $5,842,200, or the greater Bever In simple remedies, asked •him part of .the,. erop. Canadian 46,991e9, 11 'lie' ii>i<d..ever tried salt -water gar- however, went also to,; the United gling, "We11," was the reply, I've been -States, Australia, Bermuda,' British torpedoed six times." South Africa, China, -Newfoundland, New Zealand, Norway and other noun- . Scents That Kill, tries. Apples in a dried state were ex- ported to the extent of 533,470_ pounds T114 tremendous craze for perfume worth $60,514, the first customer for at the'oresent time is, in a way, an these being also. the United. Kingdom .echo of the age of Icing Solomon; but and the second the Netherlands. it is well to remember that 'not all There has been a substantial Sa- scents are "aweetsmelling savours." crease in apple production in recent Foreign countries abound in sinister years which has been reflected in 'it scents et many and deadly kinds. corresponding development of export There are trees in some.of,them which trade. In the year 1901 all orchards breathe out poison, and woe betide the and small fruits in Nova Scotia were traveller who is ignorant enough to worth only 91,407,369 in production,.ia nest beneath their dshade!Ontario $7,809,084, in Quebec $2,564; On the hill slopes of Chili, for ex- 801, in New Brunswick $394,337 and In ample, is a tree which the natives look British Columbia $453,794, making o upon as being possessed of an evil' total value for the Dominion in the spirit. ..•Many ,cases. have • occurred year of, $12,629,385. By 1911 the value whore innocent.' -travellers have crept of orehar(t'fruits alone had risen 18 under its branches during the heat of NoVa Scotia to $1,548,855, in New the day, and pald.for its shade with 'Brunswick to $264,915, in Quebec' to their lives. :After -resting under one 91,189,926, in Ontario to 95,566,870, and hands and face of a traveller become in British Columbia to $1,082,481 mak swollen, as in a case of snalte-bite, and ing a total value iti the Doiltinlon of, the surface of the skin is covered with orchard ' fruits that year :$9,053,097. boils. ' Whilst all the Canadian provinces Many teuriste in the vicinity of Val- have exhibited a more or less gratify: paraisa have s9ccumbed to the In- ing progress in fruit production; the fluence of this. poisonous tree, greatly increased volume of the crop Tile trumpet flower, or datura, found .Is largely. due to the development of in Moat tropical countries, ' although apple cultura in British Columbia, not deadly in the open air, is highly which wasa negligible factor at the ,dangerous in a room. Innocent people, beglning of the century and now vies fascinated by its coloring and scent, with Nova Scotia for that place in an, take it Indoors, andsoon fall into a pie produotion, trance -like slumber,' developing into- a Rapid Growth of industry. deadly stupor, from'nhich they may The rapid growth -of 'the apple ex - possibly never awaken. port industry may be judged front the If tltistrutntpet flower were. brought fact that while in 1907, total exports into a sick -room and, left there for the of apples front Canada amounted to night it.would mead certain death for only 38,811 barrels; in 1915 exports had the patient. Recently,.in South Amer!,intlreased to 1,117,336 barrels. Cana - ch, an accusation f murder was da's apple market lies in the European brought against a •family who were continent, more especially the British said to crave profited financially by the Isles, to which practically the entire dettlt in their house, of a wealthy roe Canadian 'exportable crop Ands its lative, tipon investigation, it was way, Nova Scotia finds a ready maty found that some hrulhpet flowers had ket for all Mean produce, whilst this° got mixed with a bunch of others In a province also ships' some of .its pro- duct to the eastern United States market. There is a great apple• export trade developing on the Pacific Coast with Europe via -the Panama Canal, ,and last. year' 500,000 boxes of apples travelled^to England in this way from British Columbia orchards, More vias' cels on this coast are being equipped with refrigerator space to -engage in the trade,. whilst in the aggressive campaigning 'overseas' off', the pro- vince's publicists, the British Colum -1 vase, which was allowed to stay in the razor and tlid not shave in five' min- House ail .night,' and had actually toes. It 'Wig. his custom, say's the caused the death of the relation,' Springlleld Republican, to hare his Some oi'Cbids, with their strange negro barber •come to the executive and powerful perfume, are capable of , effucoa; and 131518 di. a small room ad- drugging the,senses and causing faint - joining his office, and in an ordinary /less, There are some people, tee, who arninitair Roosevelt usually had him- cannot stand the scent of roses, whilst !self shaved. others are prejudiced against the in, Ttocseve:t's shaving was an' "coca- nocont-looking violet. cion 1i although noot a soleinn one, If It is well to .make quite certain. that - ho ivas interested in talking with a any perfume ri'e us% or have in the - newspaper" _correspondent when the 'house, is suited to our ternporameet. barber arrived, he would ask the Or, If the least irritation -is caused by any respondent to' come in;!' and `continue scent it should -at once be -dispensed ' the interview during the shaving: Yon with, however beautiful' it may seem might suppose that the' Menace of the to others. 'There are few people who do not like the scent of clove; yet, not long ago, there wasa case in Zanzi- bar whore the scent .of clove wars rd; sponsible for an official's contracting an ulcerated throat, with consequent loss of 'voice.' hazards of LUe task and somehow -:^.r---- coniplishe'd"it witliowt n' gut, A Ready Answer, Frequently the operation would be I]voryone is malicious enoalgh- to en- interrupted, however,:when Secretary. joy the discomflture of a cross -exam- Loeb came in from the next room with initis layer by the witness he ls'bafi- a Presidential liroelaniation, a military goring. The American Legion Week- ecmmission'or a newly -enacted law for ly,reports,r,11ei a case; razor would keep the Presid'ont frorn saying niucli. Net -at all! With his a e co r c elt would go on 'causing with just' as 'much emphasis of teeth and facial muscles f c ve el with htiter Roosev - Winter Evening in the ac - Country'. as usual, and. the barber accepted the The The Winter sun sinks ilatho west. ,And lengthening shadows. slowly creep, And all the cares that day infest Fly fearful from the darkness deep; While -stars, their Silent watches the, President to sign. The barber - ".Toil the taunt exactly where you Would' suspend work, and the near- were on the twentieth day of said sighted President, with the lather re- month al five -thirty in, the afternoon," Outside while winds of Winter blow, And falls the curtain of the night, Om• Homely hearth with fire aglow - And hearts all warm with love 'and dight, ,_ Make Winter evenings glad and bright The meruory of these peaceful eves Will stir the heart inyears to be; And tylion, life's .hopes, Bike Autumn leaves,, 'Wither and clic, we still s1ta11 see These eventing joys, in reverie. •-Tieleu .13. Anderson, "Attetraliti will one clay be (ogle to stippol't a population cF 100,000,000," Janie- 1,Vignell, ;Gr 1',, -re. ccntly, - ccntly, - molted from one side: of. his face,'rvoull shirply demanded 112 lawyer of an op-, take the pen and sign at the spot flint posing' 'witness. the zeoretary;iiidIostod.. "i was on the corner of Setsund. and 1\11.1111 streets, asking a -loan a quos- tion,"- relilied tlio witness, 43-1 t• 1 uc you ci ew the ft) inaving appeared on rite no was exactlyilvathiity;? tine, board iof a church 110100 16din- "Ali -ha yonrsel1I'' said the witness: burgh "The question 1 hats asking him" was "8.54 q.in. Holy Commonfou: WI;aI. 'time it was." "11 lin "v nv tire' called;but.few Ali Seats Free," 3' howdo1 i 11 are chosen.' "6.30 pm. --'Tho 1ig1'y 01 A31 s rata' tree" i �.. .. . 1- ,rQ'he clay pbp12.t a1iori of the linea worth Building', New ,cork's-f01Is gialpt buildiirg, :s 14,000,. Three canals,' each wider than the Suez Canal, will carry the waters et" the Indus and bride into cultivation an area eight times :the size of hent, due to ;the erection of a dam sono s the great Indian river. This is the biggest dam in. the Wackier "No nxoi'e headache Don't just "smother" the 'mad= Talcs Chamberlain's Stomach and the headache but give you a buoys tone the livor. sweeten the 'stomach All Dte3rhto, 201c,, CHAMBERLAIN' MO Toronto, 0s Raet1'' tela hoist a or 0 of BOO* as �pa�3e s Cad'?! t1:6:-: h60 cc N 1t home , •Star $ale 1e , you mayi' nn s� juet na0Ws .year? 'rhea get. toithout coat rer Sslesman• 0 gOi oa rre0.E inllYte0ii euccess'i01 9olliag ^al9l0atP0 0l wp ,fid w Tho 90,110 of ,mom d tlo as brll a nav al it o the 'all 4 .40,r1:, National Ca„ndi: