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The Clinton News Record, 1924-04-24, Page 3
r 1 n 'vo ' 1" "F Co'tlte 'slii1 rn . r. a •t P q �} igen 1 P g'. tocb£Y d rpt rests, and rein dei ,taluable ax il' int e (xti to Leo to the moveinent'of t e 11 fruits, � s he • ahrp ve{,erjnbl s and . fish(hron6h , Vaneon, 1 di? at?iktng ;distailce`pf the znaa�l vex•, and a1s0 bo the paeans O' produc-t 73erd of seals. 'Captain` Kean, ofthe ing icy., which will b© sold to fish°'boats •ra Noviz, advises that no 10 steam- and the general public. ng into the white goats off White Bay, Dawson City, Y.T.-It to reported lid that thefloeis well covered, and that more than ,50 claim., h,xve been hat all the other six shihs, which are recorded following the recent strike Within '-a few' miles of him, will likely ofhigh Gradin oro in. Beaver district, encore paying' voyages, ea, too. M30 mutes north of Irene. Blany,outnts Halifax, N,S, The apple ino.ement are leaving for' the new camp and for this-scaaonis'pratetically over; -the eonsiderabl'developeneiit is looked for total 4 'oxport movement , via 13ali£ax in the near future over the Dominion Atlantic Railway,• to date, being 1,132,392 barrels. There 'S4r-t 'i,P to' Lk.. tYtificial - are still a ' few thotisand barrels to ltlj C97S1e niat .h C s1, °L'a-,4?-14.10111 MOve before the stocks in the various _ warehouses are cleaned up. scheme looking toward the flood - 'Fredericton. N.B.-There 1s a 'con-, ing of the whole inner area of London • claimable boom in the hardwood in- with artificial moonlight after `night= dust's of New Brttnswicic at the pros- fall will he. brought be'Eora .the Insti ent time, tniil:at Juniper' and Forester tute of Public Light :engineers, which being operated with both day and has,inst bean organized here. The plan night shifts. In addition to these calls for flood lighting of the efts, from mills, there are four other mills in the eight powerful constellations of elec- same ' Vicinity engaged in cutting trio lights, which would surmount 'hardwood. I steel towers 500 feet 'high, distributed Montreal, Cjue.—Immigration this over a wide area. year has started off' well, the arrivals Supportersof the scheme say the durin.11'ebruary haying been, 0,106,, present method of ligliting great cities an.increase of 86 per 'aent ,aver`atinit by thousands of small eleetrie. lamps Tor the aapremonth last, year. This involves an enormous. waste .of light; i grins the total• arrivals._ during the due', to the -rays hitting ,the sides. of eleven months; ending' -February 'to houses_:and' shops before "their full 135,128, an rinerease.•;of 104 percent. power is ex1(BstetL The arrival's during the period ending . 'Adoption'of the 'naw -scheme, it is February -have • beets divided as ; fol- said, •would. result in better lighting lows: British,' 67,023;' from the United and make London, practically shadow - States 19,429; from all other coup-• less, pa well as cutting the cosi of tries, 48,992, illuminating the city's 2,223 miles of • Fort William; Ont.—Plans are al- streets, which as at present'lighted by most completed for, the two million the system of individual lamps costs dollar paper' inill to be erected by the almost £1,000 nightly. Great' Lakes •Paper Co., according to a . statement `made by the . itesident of French Add New Ennlisl► .the eompany, J. H. Black:' It, is ex Words t0 Their Language pected that work will begin this sum- • mer. ' In view of the long -heralded' publi- Winnipeg,.'Man.-Sianitoba begins cation of the first, volume of the great the task of „replenishing -,its game re- .dictionary at which the Academie .sources next month,' when a covey of Francaise has been working such a Hungarian partridges, now en route long time, the savants spent a whole -to Winnipeg front Czecho-Slovaltin, we .recently examining a certain ;will -be released in a quiet district in umber of neologisms. which : are -the province. Local sportsmen arc sneaking into the language by the sponsoring this move and bear the back door of sports, says a :Paris 'de entire expense of bringing these birds spatch.' from Europe; They decided after long .debate to Saskatoon; Sask.-More than one, admit into—the dictionary the words 'hundred swine breeders have. taken bookmaker, boy spout,, bridge, camp- advantage of a special educational •ing+ club (referring to the ancient short course in bacon,aud.hog�produc- genie of golf)-, court (referring to' the tion conducted by the University of also ' ancient game of tennis) and champion. i. All of these words may instantly be recognized as being loss.French than' English. Por reasons which have not been disclosed the academicians reject- ed three words=canter, crack and ,crawl. Already 200 reservations ,lidve ,been Made at: the Palliser Hotel for: the per,• rod of the Calgary Stampede. next July. The Boston Tourist Co. has #pad .50.,resorVations and 185 visitors are coming from the Sioux'City, Iowa. One hundred and .fifty more .050 ex- pected frost Chicago and 100 from St. Paul, .C.M.?. Sergein frOtri: L61,401* wig Goal piotiugj` ]tis trip. o1 mai sands, of miles by, dog, tiaio,r So Hubert s"hol.s e, ' of the Iti reached Edmonton early this zsYpltr. bringing with hint the official repo of the hanging of the two Eelcinaos ati Herschel Island. Sergeant "Thorne carried north the confirmation of the death sentence. Both men were hanged in the ol. "bone 'louse" of the American who ex?s on Herschel Island, and by Specie Constable Gill, who was sent north 13' way of the 1MIackenzie last year fol; the e3zccution. Both' trot their fa with stoicism' of the Eskimo. • Both men had a long list oC killing to account for, and each was feared b' the 'other natives of Coronation Gulf 'and the country to thO-eact; neither o` - them will bo regretted, and for many nioons, - as the Eskimos discuss the topics of the day in their igloos by the light of the ,blubber oil lamps, .the 'story of the fate of Alikomiak and 74atamafana will be produced.` In spite of the fact that Sergeant Thorne was 'held up by mild weather last fall in the Yukon, he lived up to the expectations of the force that the Mounties are to be at the right place at the righttime; he rushed the last 300 miles of his flying trip .over the ice and snow, and trotted his dogs into the station at Herschel Island one day before the date set for the execution to find that; the condemned nen were to be -raaited a reprieve mitt] Febru- ary 1. In regard to his'' trip, when inter- viewed -at the barracks at Edmonton, Saskatchewan; recently. Lectures and practical demonstrations , on different phases of the. industry were .given. Judging competitions , in which hogs were judged before and after being Slaughtered was one of the features. Edmonton, Alta. -Moro than $2,- 000,000 worth of raw furs are receiv- •-ed in Edmonton annually, and a fur exchange will be established here. It is expected that this institution will give a useful impetus to tills import- ant Alberta industry. Vancouver,. B.C.-A recent • an- nouncement indicates that the Van. - cover Harbor Pear(' contemplates the• erection of a cold stdrage'plant. A close -tip yiew is shown of the British seaplane, which started round -the -world flight from near•'Southanipton reeently. WESTERN ISLES EOR, A:LAN_DiOF• PROMISE ' ' '• LEAVING THE'6A13REN T N .., . " are ero•sn own biddin • farewell to thei •..friends Suit as the C v:v.. 'liner The three hundred- Iiebrideans,.tivha arrivedOtt (St, Jahn, :N.B., )e..ent1Y, a h n g • �le-s ' island bydriving blizzards and the :closing of foreign fish market's., ,t_,> i their barren sl g Marnoch is Ousting off at:Lochhoiadalo, South Dist. Drrven.fron t "rd n settlers'ho e. te' find- life more congenial and profitable -in Aanada. •- :.,�... • au yP on a N"aturnl Resources l3ulltii. The Natural' Resources Intelligence Service of'::the Dbpartlnent of the Tise, terior at-Ottdwa says:— The success of many typical Can. radian indestries,-and the future of aiany projects now „under way or under consideration,' are vitally asso- ciated with cheap power facilities. This iipplies notably to the pulp and Much attention. 18 centrAd at the paper industry, the ..mining .:indtistry, Present time upon, 1,116 b"dtuminous the electro -chemical and. eiectrozmetal- sands of Northern Alberta. :Dr. G. A. lurgical industry, and thflour-milling Ings, formerly of Calgary, has tested iiidu6tr y. While the progress of Can- the process of William Georgeson of ','51183, industry' "as a whOIZ'-b..eh iu Calgary, for the extraction o'f oiI;fron great part due *to '.th tp13, available these • sands tied it is stated that if drb-pbwar, in arnplo quantities the; further c):perinlents are satisfactory (331ementioned industries hati0;'it'ain an bxte.risive ,develoonent' of these 'particular' cOntii3,u-.'sa?de n'i'l' result, It is. also .ntder-, (. in •Canada through: the attraction of vaix rci hydraulic e. , a, e exceptional power advantages. Among. such •products comme ally produced 'in Canada and tieing energy' in their manufactur are 'aluminum, phosphorus, carbide cart. otundt ni, cyanide, caustic' sod hlorfine, arti� ficial graphite, etc. - Eoi,.to tli�::wordd su 'rl of fl err. res. stood that Dr. Pritchard end Mi. lYJen- 7� ` largely s pl Y 'New York who, have l �ctive products lar el or Wholly. b dell Jackson, of N virtue l• y y' for many years experimented on. an, +,ri:tuc of -this advantageous fa�tot. The influence •of water -power re- other process for the:distillation :of national ,, t o be 10 .a sourees•uptrn" tiatlonal development isp only t these sands expect til • ositron to .test but the .value of its excoptionaliy"tvell illustrated "by `ilia 1• pulp paper er and a iudustrv Tn 18o0 application. It has been sat s actori y • Sergeant ;Thorne was found. to be un - The Roller Towel. Seven hundred Cecho-Slovaks ar-.icommunicative and dismissed the mat- in rived in Winnipeg :}scent's, the first ter by saying that "it was nothing out • uteli aTwainobj ted of a hotelsettlers expected from'Czecho- of the ordinary—just one of the usual which lie objected to "the manager of 8,000 sett P atrols but a little loner." 5lovalcia during the spring. They are P , g ll towel. regarding roller we . g immi ation "Yon are the fiftieth man who l}as., hero distributed by the Prairie used that towel;' answered the 'man- authorities throughout � Whether the pitcher strikes the ager,'"and the first to kick about it." Provmees;'all of them being anxious stone or the stone' the, pitcher, it is AFVICtrliig6g. to take up farmer bad for the pitcher. L-was'.a beggar once, but now I give. - Y.sat feriara beside the way .. And counted it a punishment to live, And at .each fair approaching day I would look up and ,show my scars and sigh, "0 day,"what can you give to such as IT; The days passed teldly by, nor • seemed to see My' timid liana held out for alms;, The sunshine that I once accounted free Was:' poarre8, I thought, for other • palms. While unclaimed treasures .glittered close around, ' 3 still turned mournful eyes upon the ground. • At length within some rouse of riches crept, And, weary ofthe beggar's part, I cried,'"I too will be a giveri" leapt, Stood en niy feet and bold of •heart Faced:. the new day that would have y`ix4 i4t 3 151081 ,4_-G paseed'inpride, It ' And handed 1$m a pra5ent;'Tevel-eyed. With utast of •the work finished, len glrtnd Is Preparing to open thoworide greatest exhibition, at Wembley this month, Photograph shows the Bunnell' Ali, then he smiled and, reaching for Mosque, which, is receiving ilnlehfng: touches. my hand, Laid in my open palma gifts British Columbia growers' will re- ceive from $19 to $19 a ton for to- matoes sold to the Dominion canners this summer. •This has been decided by a board of arbitration consisting of representatives of the;Provincial Dept. of Agriculture and associated boards of trade of British Columbia. Last year there was a Sat rate of $17 a ton. • The value of produccloa of nsneries of Prince Edward Island in 1928 was $1,754,866, an increase over .the pre- vious year of $142,,267. Lobstering,is the -,.chief activity of the :fisheries of the province and in 1923 accounted for $1,405,906 of the total value of .the catch, or eighty per cent The smelt fishery is. next in importance .to lob- stering. The net value of smelts in 1923 was .$121,288. • Blankets owe their name to Thomas Since then beside the way of life I Blanket, a Flemish weaver who lived in Bristol about 1340. He used a piece of rough unfinished cloth, -which. had been cast, aside, to wrap himself in one winter night. Siis discovery made him rich. Votes for fathers according to the atanu•: No longer mournful eyes 11ift, No more contest to beg, I daily malto' Some little gift, and as I give I take. —Eunice Mitchell Lehmer, in Youth's Companion, size of their families, two votes for Apple shipments from British Col - four children, four votes for six chil- umbia during 1928 to the Tinted King- dren, and so on, is a suggestion favor- dom and Scandinavian ports' amounted ed by the French Government, which tto' 781 cars. Only a small proportion is, however, strongly opposed to giv- of : B.C. apples went via the, Panama Mg soldiers the right to vote. ' 1 Canal. Nationalities in 1921 Canadian Census • English 2,645,496 Hebrew -126,196 French , ......2,462,782 Dutch ... 117,509 .' Scotch 1,118,824 Austrian • 107,671 Irish 1,107,817 'Ukranian ...,.... 106,721 German .... ,.... 294,686 Russian'- ......:..• 100,064 hU7EN�Cfa�F or -GEFMANV, MUSSOLINI P1 OF ITALY AAD 0o 3 e re"t:nat:on:0 he -•c rho rcnaisranee;',gf; a,&,es.>fve,ly restored as t nationalism which is,. the or:tni li'tg :Pcllowing . his ' `c a0rgeiice P1•tan the force in.thiropea.n politics to -de,,, the wit,te3Pash bathadminiate•ed: by the. dominating figures' are the th three-lead-lk.<ni l ct a•which was trying' him. ors sbeval above. On the .loft is Gen- los t`6f 0n 1tis 1cr,•ortcdthat he i9 oral thick von Ludendorff, fundic t;uco again cwt r)i1 0, en i n1r 151103 o Coven that d Canada exported $1 0 worth of pulp P General Nur lord Despite the acro 71, the ..� e 1 1,l t these sands hate definite ; premier Joni.° islur �. oil In 0.0 extraction Of and b 1,..c for the eYtraC V heat o valueQ 'al' 1 l7i V7.,1h k i il'C kinin paper; cth�reas the export •valuek. rz' vrhi�li Yt 1Cnd 1 P P c„tc� of those months ending November last amount- Poses. ed in value to nearly 41d0,000,000. The paramount. importance of cheap pow- POINGARG'OF FRA NCE' cr ' his = i atonal, endorsement, t; eou..t t- , oracles in a sweeping victory Fascist r at tilt polls. On the right 10 Raymond ^re irent.er of Prance, who, des- pite, 1 , pito; his unpopular domestic program Lass succeeded in obtaining practically trs 'support for itis reconsti- unani.ro 1 _ cabinet cn' the .atreng h of. his 'ureal Pr 1,r -handed' oreign- . . Der: Fredcrimarovemon� ckk 0. Ranting, of Toronto, hailed by eminent scientists as tit Peer of Pasteur for his great discovery of insulin to alleviate the suii`erin from° diabetes, is shown in New York, where-iio went as a guest of -the Su grave Institution, and also to raise funds to continue his research work a the Unive'bsity of Toronto. DEFECTIVE EYESIGHT IN RURAL SCHOOLS The : Canadian .National Institute assisted by their inspectors an for the Blind has for some time been carrying' on definite negotiations with various Provincial Government De- partments with a view to drawing at - 'tent= to cases of defective vision among rural school, children, as well as in ,tho large cities and towns. In the larger cities and towns, sight - saving classes can be established with :brit "slight'difficulty Owing to `Cbiiceii- tration of a large number of children and the comparatively short distance that mutt be traversed by pupils who; because of their: defective vision, must through school conventions and adv from attending. nurses; be acquaint with the degree of special attentio necessary for the individual case, defective sight in .their school poo The actual arrangements to be pr vided in the school room would b briefly as follows: That :ardesk shout be chosen:properly suited in size -t the child in question. That' this shoul !be placed in the best lighted portio of the room. That the -child should provided with: essential large type to books and be relieved as much attend a special class at some central possible from blackboard work. point. For rural schools, however, the : This scheme would accomplish lift sight' saving class will be difficult to to seventy-five per cent. of the rell> arrange, since owing to the individual that would be secured through a re cases being scattered over a fairly laxly established sight -saving cla large area, say -a county, it would be acid would possess the above noted a necessary to arrange for Concentra- `vantages of little expense and prae tion at the county town' and provide cally immediate application. bearding facilities, etc. There are 'children in our run The scheme at present under con- schools who are at present Calle sideration, as suggested by the Insti- dunces. A dull mind, however, is no tote,, is simple ,and possesses .manly the trouble in,many,eases.. Defectiv advantages. Chief;'aniong.these limn; sight is often responsible.;, This is first, aseisiance can'be rendered to tho serious ,matter and requires yaw 0 child in the school,it would regularly operation, It may be time that ther 'attend. Second, cost of various rap is only tine case in yotir school'bnt thi pTiances would be very small, and can. be no excuse for 'neglect.• `Orr whole : scheme could b :Childs sight, no matter where locate( third, the e , n wn man short,. ' ; is worth saving. .}V'e have 1,t o '• ''sdb e ct to rig' pier e nor n children ) less neglect, who have lost their sig r � irreparably. If you know of a case I your OW11 community' where a child are obviously weak or defoetiv eyes Y do not lose time, but write immediat l to this office stating particular Y handled with little,' delay. In h rt, the scheme la 'as follows: That Dept. • of 'Health nurses or • school `nurses such are available, should test where e the eyes of all school children, refer- ring those cases noe.ding treatment or r, to oroPer authorities. Next, glasses P s. at resent employ-: the school teacher present ,should time igh the medium of the ••—The Canadian Nations:' Institu. pious cornea er 4 t policy: etc and for road bul'k'ing cur- b i i } t " L the cttli c lc of con f tl e Blind Pearson Hall 7 groat made during the rout putsch last autumn, he was inimodlate mu'ism in Italy and has gust obtalncd • :. 1 mrm,am.a. �ers.r':-�nrm�. ......`......_ __.. ......�.__,..�.. . produuts for the twelve 15rodu • • or as a factor in this gi'owth may bo judged from the :fact that it takes,. practically 100 h.p. to make one ton of paper per day. " • Suniltiriy, though perhaps- in less striking fashion, water -power has ;,imulated ,'and supported p'ini'ng'• Cold, silver, ineko1, and other.' mineral- zzed, prcpertiel. have yielded very Substantial outputs and in many ca1ee large scale'' operations, which alone - make the difference between profit and loss, would have been impossibie with- out ample hydraulic energy' at vela- - Lively low cost. Many mines are so plated geographically that thecost of 411 haul on coal or untreated oro would be. prohibitive blit, with hy- draulic installations' at or agar the mines, they Can be worked and the product so'' concentrated, as ,to permit profitable operations. L+3xtsssive eleetrb-Chemical and elec fro -mete Ilur- giesl industries have been cstass'•,hoi-�, Bavar{au eer-t 1i a s t t _ 610012 ; VIOl NI,%G ,..eUS:10E l I Ay, So G1. -RD. To t5b.0. I 'RPtl3VAT Wt 0 15 hIOT A,0t.)MBt;•NMN 1? 1 I'VE 6EE,ia S1fAt-C'Nc- 14(3.1 'DECK FOR. PtN Home..„ 1.,\N?:r IN RABBITBOR l,,,i1 P1 s•'S `(1-1P1T LUMP 0il WICK' 5 ? a;•i f ' DON Li i NOv'i ‘, 1 GUESS A 1-'i-4QUGHT mosTA tiTiz?ck ilm-AF-TGR HE 1., -'Fr i- !