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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1924-05-01, Page 2e got 0AaT eTAGGART BROS. , •BANKER general Banking Been mina , NoteDieemintee, Deafts ISS110 , tereist Allowed 00 DeP021(5. 0am etee Purchaoed. „ H. T. RANCE eitary Public, Conveyancer. tianeiel, Ift'eae Eetete and Fire In. urance Agent. 'Representing 19, Fere .11181.13'11111£0 C01110a0195. Division Court Office, Clinton. W. BRYDONE Berrister, Solicitor, Notary Publio; etc. °ince; SLOAN eLockcLINToN L' DR J. C: GANDIER' . . , . Oface Hour ---1,80 to 3.30 p.m •7.5* ite 9,00 P.m.. Sunday, 12.30 .to 1.30 pm. ., Other Lauri byapPointment only. Cifece and , Residence --- Victoria St. DR. WOODS 5 PS80.131/0g peactiee at Ma residence. Bayiksid. <Mee Hours; -79 to 10 a.m. and 1 to 2 Suedaye, 1 to 2 prat., for con- sultation. DR. H. S. BROWN, LAX-C- O.111e° Hours 1.30 to 3.30 p.m. ' 7.30 to 9.00 p.m. Ehnidaye 1,00 to 2.00 pen. Other hours by appointmetit. Phezes ()Ince, 218W ' Ile.eldence, 2183 DR. PERCIVAL HEARN Office and Residence: etreet , Clinton, Ont. , Phone 69 ,(Forin er.3l occupied by the late Dr. C. W. Thompson). Eyes Examined arid Glasses Fitted. Dr. A. NeVirton.Drady Dayfielcl 64.1t dilate Dublin Uniitersity, IrelancL Late E,tern . Assistant Master, Ro- tunda 'Hospital lor Women and Chit- . .dren, Dublin. ' Office at residenCe lately ocCuPled by Mrs. Parsons. Hours 9 to 10 a.m., 6 to 7 P•Itl. -Sundays 1 to 2 p.m. DR. A. M. HEIST - Osteopatic .Physician Licentiate Iowa and Michigan State Boards of Medical Examiners. A.cute and chronic ellseasei treated,, Spinal • aetheitments given to remove the cause • of disease: At the Graham Ranee; Clinton, every Tueeddy afternoon.. ' 50-3MP. G. S. ATKINSON L.D.13, Graduate Royal College of, Deka: Sur. goons and Toronto University DENTAL -SU P.BEON Has °Mee- houre at Saylield in old Post ()Mho leuilding, Monday, Wed. nesday, Friday and Saturday from 1 to 5.30 DR. W. R. NIIVIIVIO . RopRA c To R ()LINTON— Tupdsy, Thursday and Saturday 10 to 12 stan., 2 to 6 pan„ 7 to 9 P.m. SEAPORTK—• • Monday, Wednesday and leridaY. 10 to 12 a.m., 2 to 5 pee., 7 to 9 pan. Phone 68 • Clinton, Ont. :CHARLES B. 17TALE coni•TYan'cor, Notary Public, Commits. siOnet, eto. BEAL ESTATE AND. INSURANCE MORON STREET - CLINTON M. T. CORLESS CLINTON, ONT. . District Agent . The Ontario and Eimitable Life and Accident Insurance Co. West Wawanosh Mutual Fire Insurance Co. Established 1878 I'resedent, John A. McKenzie, Kincer- diee; Vice -President, Pe 1,. Salkeid, GodorIch; Secretary, Thos. G. .Allen, Dungannon. Total ailment of Maur - come nearly 012,000,000. In ten Years number of policies have increased front 2,700 to 4,500. Flat rate of 02 per $1.000. Cash an band 021,000. el, L. Salkeld Goderlch, Ont. J. Turner, Clinton, Local Agent ' — GEORGE ELLIOTT Licensed Auetioneer l'er the County of Huron. Correspondence eromPBY answered, inunedlete arraegentents eau be Made for Sallie Date at 'be New8:Record, Clinton, or by calling Phone zda, Cherles Alodersto and Satisfaction Guaranteed. B. R. H/GGINS Clinton, Ont. General rue and L1fe Insurance. .Ageht for' Hartford Wiedstorm, Live Stock, Aut'omoblie and Sickness and,Actident Instrance. Huron and Thee and Cava - da Trust Beide. Appointreents onalle to Meet parties at liencefield, Varna and baylield. 'Phone 57. The illeKii9p Mutual— Fire Insurance Conipany I -lead Office. Seaforth Ont. OIRatToRY: President, ',Tames Connolly, Coderich; 'Vice, :lames Evans, Beechwoodl See.- Treasetrer, Thos. E. elays, Seeforth. .Direetor,se George elegartneY, Sea- ferth; D. F.'efeefregoe, ,Seaforthi.j. • OrieveWalton; Wm. Ring, Seafortb ; M. McEwen, Minton; Robert 'Perigee, Xelin teneoweir, Bredhagene Jas. Centrally, Godeetete eteente: Alex, Leitch, Clinton; W, Yeo, Goderialg, 100. Iiinchray, Sea- /ex:the W. Oheeney, 10gmeneville; It. Jaemuth, Brodhagen. Any Money to .be paid le lime lie paid to Moorfelt Clothing CO., Clinton, or at Gutee Grocery, Goderieb. P,a,rtiee &ceiling to afYeet, Insurance or transact °titer businese will b promptle Attended to on applicatioe to R;11; of the above „eta/et-et aderessed is) their reepective poid, office:, Lessee th inepeeteby e eheectoi w 003- itesroSi• theu. teene, 'ort an lir Gainlen 81I1S her gaeeden,-ill the hush 0 'gap kill henna. leletai Weetern.hill egt iuie , eyelet/5'e have Ought the Sleet, -aial far alWiEtY T ThOtIntaiti hatilAS the restleas winie Patine,' OBSERVE THE BIRDS. i IT you cermet heve a sink, gee a me large , Now is the tito: shallow box and line it with white 'oil- StialY migratio.This is the montl ` cloth; it ri will do juet RS well, the when birdin s come kreat numbers. It 'get , an extra table for the. opposite is also notable that the various see. 6'idleitefthtehey.,'irloidoon\ii,yaweditha iethiaigirhtelf•rta\ivtioe. - cies arrive almost on t.fie <ley that records show them to be due.• Of , built °E lath' or thin wund and cover. courae, 0 severe storm may delay the' ed wi1-.4 tar PaPe" I -ling° one side 01 edgeattee a day ee ewe. De not fail the frame to the window frameso that keep a migration, eeeeed. you can swing it open or close it at nsectteating birds. -.This shoals thege the frame, to shut out all light, and le Note that the early arrivals will. Lap the Paper over the edges great plan el Nature. Ae eeee ae the block up every crack or hole in the caves anneal', the birds are there to town so that 'when the d°° -'''s ami win - prof ort them t.am in'aeet peeta. dow shutter are closed (lVSVATLhillg "Wat,.ch the tree -tops. Warblers of side is as lehaek au tar mine species are now to.,ae found and If there is no running water in the dentified. is not easy by anymm, keep two or three baskets of 'eans. room, Put up bird -houses, if they are rga clearwater under the beach. Inte sink I already in .„po8ition., It is generally n000 net be Piped enteidee A drain- t Deal, to put them up in the fall or very pipe that,will carry the evaete water early -hi the -spring but it is still not into n' tub underneath will serve the too late. See that they are in places PaiTeee: , where cats,eaneot get to the birds. In The apparatus that you will need is m : . eoe places it is necessary tee put a Two trays, about five inches by seven tin guard around the tree; or if yoo inches, a Printing frame. a MIN, light, o, use that,a, put ..ti.uky fly...Raper '. a large Washing dish' (enameled 'dish fawned -it and it -will answer the same' Pan), a few 111306 of -clean blotting purpose, It takes a brave cat to climb Paper, ebeeseel°11, a Print trimmer' over this fly -paper. I clean bottles and settleo. Study the songs of the birds an& ' Good 'braYs ean be made bYllidating t watch how they court. -This is the .clean cardboard covers with several greet love -making month and affection coats ef paraffin, ineide and out. es 'usually:seem, be we,neee.eta e . t . .If yon have not a ruby• light make of sohge ' - - one by cutting it liole about thvee Watch the nest building, many spe , inches square -in the side of a starch cies begin to nest in May, but the box and fitting a iyiece of red glass great nesting season reaches its over the °Pening 07. Pasting a Piece 01 height in June. 71 31 well to keen a i red paper over it: The giaas and the census of the nests oe your place, 0 paper can be bought at any photo - Take bird walks. Do ereot forget' graphic supply house. Use.a candle your field -glasses, note -book, and or a small kerosene lamp for a light, camera. I but make a hole in the toP of the box Provide nesting material Shield the hole birds. This can . consist of cotton, foe the to ea/TY off the heat. from the front so that the light will pieces of string, lint, moss kind various not strike the .tray that contains your light ebjects that will help them in film. , Jf your house has electric lights their work. For swallows, have ready the best way is to use a four -candles O mud puddle where the birds can se -1 Pnwer lamp in the box, e cure:tbeii mud. .- I :For drying the prints, streteh the Make a bird sanctuary Out of your , cheesecloth over light wooden frames. farm. ' 1 After youhave washed the points lay , them face down on the cloth and place BY the g frame over a entle heat b b 11i . 'WAXING MONEY At•liOVIE DEVELOPING FILMS. •.iarThe professional finisher makes a ge pr4t o ecause b e uys s sup - Developing the films and' making plies at wholesale and --Makes his own prints.from them is an entirely feas-it developing, toning and fixing baths; ible way for a boy or a girl to earn -bat the amateur finisher cannot do money in vacation time, for there are that: - many arnatear photographers whol • The usnal charge for -developing is either do not know how to do the work from teneto twenty-fivements a tall of for themselves or are not willing to' film, according to the size, and from bother With it. !three to five cents apiece for the . - Take a spare room in the attic, 4, prints, • That will average about corner oa the cellae, or a peat qf tha, thifty-five cents for developing, and barn loft, and you will heve all the' malting six prints from each film you room you need to do ell the finishing, handle, and of that amount at least you ean get. The principal thing 30 to twenty cents shduld be .proht. Five have water at hancl. • 1 films a flay means a profit of six dol - Having chosen the site for the dark lars a week. roott, fit the room up. There must bel But do not expect business to come at least one window. Build a .benciri to you Unsought and by accident. Let along thii-ene side of the room or set' peeple knoW .what you eon 'do by die - an old table against the wall, to servel playing a sign -large enough to be read as a bench, If You can, put'a sink in easilee and by every other kind of ad - One corner near the end of the bench.1 vertising that you can afford. • 111ANY THRONES HAVE CRASHED IN DECADE DEMOCRACIES INCREASE FROM 3 TO 16. Fan of Kings and Rise of Re- publics Interesting Political Developments ii .Pgrope. The eXtraoadinary changes which have been wrought in the political fabric of Europe in the last ten years probably never have been so strik- ingly demonstrated as when an enter- prising newspaper Man recently com- menced tO .ciallect statistics en the fall of kings and the nee of governments, Says a Paris despatch. His results show that in 1914 there evere twenty,. three heads of European states, of which twenty were sovereigas and three Presidents of ,republics. Now, in the year 1924, thereeexist twenty-nine distinct • severeignties over the same amount of territory. Of this number there remain but thirteen mottarchies, beeeVolent or despotic, and 'the nember of republics, more ee less democratic, hes increased to six - tog. Such have been the results of the World War: Chenges in Italy mid Spain. . ' Hero is the status quo in which Europe found itself a decade back. Kings or their equivalent headed' the governmeets of Great Britain, Italy, Spain, Belgium, • IL:ablate- Deturatele, Sweden, Norway, Rumania, Bulgaria, Serbia, Monaco, Luxembourg, Greece, Montenegro, Albania. There were emperors in Germany, Austria, Ruse sic., and a Sultan in Turkey. Only France, Switzerland and Portugal could boat of presidents and re- publics. ' Here is the situation to -day, not taking. into accoant the • various changes which have come over the Political _regime in Italy and Spain, Theed still remain kings iri those countries and in Great Byitafti, Bel- gium, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Itumania, Bulgaria, a queen in Rol- land. and,,a grand duchess,. in lament- boarge Theee is a new lung, Alex- ander I., • ruler of the Serbs-Croats- Sloveno8. There the list ends. On the °thee hand, there is a most impressive list. of, repliblice or statee which call themselvee 3lep0hlic5 in one form or another, There is still Frame, eSwitzeeleed mid little Poein- gal. And there is now Germany, with Eleeet as -President; Soviet Rus- sia with tealleine tie chief; Avietria, with Hamosch; Hungary. ender Ad- Itortily; Polawith nd, at: Stan - isles Woichiechowslci; Czecho-Sle,.. valcia, with alasfieyk; eltinland, with M.' J. ie. Staelberg; Estbonie, with Coos1anbine Peels; I,eLoniti, meth M. J, eiNelnekete; Lithuania, with lee A. Stuteriskis; .Turkey, 'with 'Mustapha Kemal; Greece, at present with a re- gent, Admiral Cotidourietis, and the Trialt Free State, under Cosgrave. --The Foolishness. of ,Fear. Not long ago, Writes Miss Winfred Rhoades, 3. real a doctor's statenfeut about a Woman who bad- beeome se 'afraid of eating that she was p0010335 - Ing' a miserable and -sick existenee on nothiag except a few sips of sweetened water a day. Otherlive so math in feareof. germs that they will uot Jae, their hands upon a doorknob, and, if they are obliged to /less a coin to ear conductor, they handle it with impel'. One woman of whom I have lately heard makes her life a torture to herself and cuts it off frem the nor- mal,' helpful intereourse with other,s beeause She is posseseed with the fear of accidental eeeteet with certain forrns 08 diaeas.e or .of . et glafte partielee and such things. The habit of teeeirtg things out of their true proportion* is everia,etingly caffeine ' misery. We let oerselves brood on the hardships of our lot and underrate the Joys tedtelife also offere, .00 we fix Our detention on the dangers all round us and clieeegard the glery of livieg e life of usefelness and brave ad. venture fit the iihast orriele It is OS ciourse true -that at thriet disease 18 Sent 1)1'0E1(10(1k into31 comuumity by some_ ones. 15137ee10310e oe earelpesseeee, citatetheeeet iettelies us the neceseity of being honorably careful, But we know alse tbat ter the most part the -danger- . One Orme .that' get- into- the beer, ate fleitroyed by Minute feieedly organ - 'Thine that: are working tor health. Most people who touch .dooeknobs do not clie froni the contact. - Ancl th any eaee are not the helpful tasks of daily life Newel performing even in the face of some risk? -- The act is that life 18 a hamardoue beisirtess. That le the hied of discip. line to which God has subJected ye, Eat Geri calls ne to 1109 0)10 livez, ,not in fear and dread, but in trust and con- fidence and heneful ealmotation lethe, be always expecting the worst? We walk in the midst 'of rielts and clangers but happy are they who go forward day by day in strong confidence in the goodness of the uffiveese, who hold Met faithful lieing of the eife of love leatle to a happy iesue, • aud who ox - peen to' find that happy 1 -gene someway somewhetie in God's good 1110(1. • ' ^ ,A•nd tiaqtirn it Ought to Ee "Do you intcmi to hear the "Teen, p's when 100 In ea -need?" "No --11'1.1 he tiettliing but: rae,ttine, T111 er e walks Nteli _ _ flteleT eke A 1:4,Wiarp, quiet path of prayer, And paut*tictrearld then With tender eneile , To InOlieetfille hall/Its The lteseletia Winkle ret tn that grave pacing slow I know . eine leaves • leer World that has to much 0-fettage and pain le Ail through gates that close On all that grieves She- comes P93300 th 'some Untaeodden Returning, to the ways she knows so well, She ,seeene like one Who in a Secret -Plete,e Has heard a voiee: of love ineffable Speak words of healing and eternal grace! ---ArthUr Wallaee Peach,. tele INGSTOA1EWAS l';':e:iod.'-I'rveh:nrlgtihletsnReecIacttolaltt5htneraTiet,lo' NEGRO'S NOW A GARDENER ON KENT ESTATE Aged ,African Recalls How Noted Explorer 'Saved" Him • from Slave Traders. Art aged African Negro-, who ea a Yming boy- was yeemeed from 0 Feral- glieee leave -trading party, by David Livingstone, has been cliecoyeeed 111 the little village of Chisleherst, 00 Kent, He 18 luaown as Arab Mahe po, and he, is not certain, of his age. Ile only Imows tbagit was very many Y880$ ago andahat be IV52 a very small black boy when the party 15-1110h had raided his native village, and to whicle he W115 501(1 by an older brother, a'ae attaeked by. red -coated 13ritisli, soldiers attached to.the Ievingstone party inal he add his fellow elaveo, both men and women, -were rescued. The -capturea blacks were brought -before Liviegatonee and the great ex, plorer teek a fancy to the email Arab Makeppo and kept him for hie "bey!' The Englieh party kept mast of the men of the tarty with' them, sending the women back to then: native lages and then atter learning the na- tive language sent them throughout the country to announce to the native tribes that the Englishmen were friends of the Africaus and were bring- ing good -will with them. Thus'ewas the way prepared for unmolested -explerite tion in the farthest depths el the then little known continent, worships Memory of Exp orer. ' Malcolm° remained in the Living - stens party as the body-seevant to its leader until the great adventurer died, and was then , aerit, to England. tO school. Shortly after hie arrival here he eves christened George Watto by the English familY Which enaftged hlin as a. cook. He le .a devout Chrittian and looks Rot:yard' to agaen Joining his famous "Governor" `when he dies, . He remembers well the grille emcee- sion of himself and his pative tions and friends as captives of .the Portliguese. He says that the Melt were tied two by two to wooden col - ears, wIdch they yore even in their sleep; the \Voirten were chained at wrists and ankles, the gins,roped like herses while the little ones0 himself among thein, wave allOwed to rim free, but were kept iu the centre of the party. ' He worships the memory of the great explorer who was his' benefactor'. and says that when, as a streall- boy, his legs .would get tired, Livingstone would carry him on his Peek until lee was reetee. Malteppo has ,neen gailidenen in the saino family in Kent -for marc than thirtyYears. In spite of the many eeare he has- lived. in England he wears four coats in winter weather. How Much Salt in the Sea? ' -At first it et-rile/es one as strarige that, although the sea must originally have been formed of distilled water.— ; Piet is, congealed watery vaper—end though all the rivers thet flow into it, estimated to amount in the aggregate to 5,500 cubic miles of •NVEACT, every year, aro fed exchtsively by rainfall, whieli is also dietillea water, it should nevertheless be extreniely brackish, vent salt indeed in the Tropics, and less salt at the Poles. - Yet it is Chiefly the rivers that. ac- eouut for the seltness of the sea. It is estimated that they carry something like 100,000,000 tons of saline Matter Into the ocean every year, and, fnr. thee, -flat the ocean bolds in suspen- sion no less than 140 billion tons of alt, a cinantit'y sufficient, if extracted Cover the dry surface of the, eaeth to a depth of 400 feet. It le believed that 90,000,000 years have. been reeenired for the sea to at- tain its present saltness. • e • -' Not letrewn .to Political Hats "Well, the ladies liave the vote now --I suppose year •wife is noticing the hate IA the ring?" , "Not as much as she's noticing the hat5. in the show windove, Ten sorry • The French Government recently gave Pierre Lafargue a peasant farm- er, a medal beeausa hie fandly had continuously arined the sante piece Of eand for 1,151 years. , - There is to dull greed if ru take ISLE TO STUDY HABITS OF MIGRATORY PARD Clainin She Gave Secret of Camouflage to World Through Chance. An extaemely interesting t lough 1.01101y six: months ahoricL of an Ellg-1 lish woman naturalist, irliss 11, f.t.,1 Turner, who hat just, left London to take up her residence on' Scolt ilead Istenclenwo miles 011t from the wild and desolate cOast of Norfolk, ' Mi ee Turner Le marooning henself on tins elmost •utiknown and neyer vlsited isle.nd in- ceder te learn more about, bird habits. She has 'sPerrt Yeaee studying birde, but confesses she has gained little real knowledge about them. She is partiCalarly mud. oue to find eut something more about migratory 'birds', and on this island in 'the Noith Sep she will be able to keep watch of thee: arrival. Her Invisible Tent. - There ere no houses on Scott 1-Iead Island, and Miss Turner has, taken whehrichwItotensileth SIOVIrie weirdly del 71.1 curiosity danffmani; the seientisis who accompanied her a Dat as the coast. "The tent," explaitied Miss Turner, is the one from which I believe the British array took the idea of camou- flage. I used rt in the Fane Islands as -a hiding place while -watching birds there in the winter of Y.914. It P0001030 a dirty yellow and ceulcl be seen all over the island, so one day I got 501110 green paint for it. The day was windy. I clutched at the flapping canvas and dabbed paint on it as best I could. Than I wslked away from it, and, to my astonishment, it be- came invisible," , , Blown Sails. 'Phe clouds before the norther scud Across tb.e wintry sky, Like saile in ribbons blown away F1,001 all the ships gono. by— The ships -that labored in tlae wind And *allowed in the toani, ' And sometimes never saw again The'harbor lights of home. Rrown ealls of barks front tropic parts .Bolow The ,stermy capes, With eargees of, mahogany And parokets 'and ape's.--: - Gray sails of Schooners 0(101.'0118 OfAsh end briny% sea, White ills of elippers sweet with . see:Its Of eiLnanton and. tea. The eito1evy cloths that towereCaloft On frigates proud and tall, Patched. canvas last frone dingy sloops In hurricane or squall. Topgallants, royals, flying iib.s Ballooning in the blast,' Ripped from the stays and swept away To black abysses vast. Borne on the tempest's thrashIng wings . Between the sky and spume, They rode the elemental strife And vanished in the gloom— The clouds before the norther sr, Unquiet ghostkof sails Blown Tong ago from hapless ships That foundered in the gales. --e-Minna Irving. , ot 4ppeti1 That Tired FF -4 ph 'ousands Calm' riotat's Sarsap pine as tbein toe medicine for that ired, feeling, nervoue;tisaknessi pure blood, and testify that it Dashes. them feel 1Detter, 'eat and sleep better. Ifortd'a 8r ort has given tire satisfaction to three generlaierni ha the treatment of general debility. „ft, resttuns the rtppetite, relieve* that tired feeling, enablee ayst,tro resist infectious disoatfee, artt ffood's di aids, ' Celt and mal:eaLfood. taste good. ood cathartic is Ii0OSP/1 May frOteet Anywhere:, ,isolitatItieiedh? town of the world In the..most Tile answer 12 Mimeos, on ths Rio Negro, not far 100111 that mighty tri- butary's janciten with the Amazon.' It 15 the only, town of Amazenia, and if, situated a thousand milee from any other eiyilizatiOn• , Yet with,itil its ieolation it heits many up-to-date featurese-a haebour, elec- trie .lifts, a fine temeway. ityetem, 5113 electric 'power statioe which lights the town and cooks lie foods and cools ite rooms, -a pure water aupply, teeiteral newspapers, a fine theatre, a umseum of eeins—but rio railway Pte- ., From any, part of the 1.01vn Lke jnosglc 'Gan be reathed in a twenty minetem, walk. Alligators era the solo Inhabite anis of the oppoilee Intuit of the refer, ana jaguars have attacked pedestelane witala eiele ehot of the heon-lines . , The ,view front the cathedral tower 13 el enbrohen forest, Yet the town ebntsius a. hospitable English colony and an English club. • „ The river is called "Negro" becauee its watere are black, 'mad where it joins the Amason stearaer can have. its ,bows in inky water and its stere in the -brownish waters of the greateet river in the world. Why He Wept. The teacher had been telling the Maze about the way in which Alexande ee the Great had conquered the world, going on from one couatry to another, until at last there was nothing more for him to leek for -ward to. She re- lated how, after he had conquered In- dia, ingtead a giving a great feast tci celebeate 'his viotories, lee sat down. and wept bitterly, "Now, children," she asked, "whY do you thlulc Alexander wept?" 'Bobby was in thelmck row and up Wenthis hand, "Sees, Bobby?" Bahl the teacher, beaming. "Please, mist," came the eager, If in- correct reply, "because he didn't know the way back." . - CLINTON NEWS4ECORD CLINTON, ONTARIO ' Terms of Suscription—f2,00 per year, in adyance, to eanaditta addreeses: 8210 to' the U.S. er other- foreigu ettoeteles. •No paper discontinued until' all arrears are paid unlees at ;the %Wen of lite ettbItsber. The date to.witich, every subscription Is Paid is' denoted on the label. . AdvertIstnn Rators—Transtent Weer. tisoMeats, 1(/ cents per nonpareil line for first Insertion and 6 cents per lite for eae4 subsequent Inset, tion. Small advertisements not to exceed one inch, such as 'Lost," "Strayed," or "Stolen," etc., insetted once Or 85 ceuts, and each althea. anent insertion 15 cente, Communications intcenied for mielf. cation muse as a guarantee of good faith, be emanate -led ii1" the name ot pride in your grist. the miter. . The Innkeeper of the Rhine. Q. S. HALL, )I, al MARV. Amities the 'Rhine a company 01 PrKiri°t". away, Jack 'liner, Prelim Bird Proteeior French engineers were building a pan. toon bridge to Join their restored pre. From Hudson Bay to the thinly south there is probably no place so at- tractivie to the migrating birds as the home ef jack Miner, of Kingsville, Ontario. Jack Miner is Canada's fore - Most and famous biriatnan, elle land holdings, which aee about three nellee front the shore 07 Lake Erie, hese been Bet npart as a CrOWII Lands "Bird Sanctuary. the premier pyotector, teatirallet, lectueeet uod author of a rerentbeele eritetlerd "Jaclot Miner and the HirtIS.- • The Miner Dire sanctoarY has be- cOme only near-paradise.for the birds and waterf owl but also a. /n0Cda, far beaten visiteee who journey thitii- ee te get veeible preof of the vatetable 1• I , "Remember that it is the hunuta race that is wild, not the birds. 'Birds are wed heemiee they have to be, and We are wild because We prefer to be . . AlwnYs throw feed and kindiees at the birds, and watch re- sulte." 1Vo have it front jack Miner's e—e lips that he has fed' as much ue twenty- five huntiree bueltele' ate -grain ;to the bertie within .theee months, whieC eteepleil with' other Meetly me:sures of his, has clearly detnonetrated to Ids' iteighbere -and to ..setattsmen far and wide that bird protection pays annual dividends of at least 200 per cent, jack Mieer has created 61104 raver - able eon:IA:lore-teat Canada geese Nance elf Alsace With the G6rman htlact on the other side, whith Femme beide as a defensive bridgehead. One of tho pontoons gave a lurch, anti 1110 - Meat two Preneh. engineers were in the stream. Away the swift current swept them as if to certain death. • Just below them on the bank stood Max Flat, the itinIteeper of Kehl-on- Um:Rhine, opposite Strasbourg. The two men were enendes of his country, and he knew that seven Gmntabs had recently been condemned to dee.th for damaging French property and were even then in prison at Mayence. Never- theless, flinging- off eoat, he Plunged into" the river. A strong man and an expert swimmer, Ito caught the two Prenehmen as they were Passing hitt and brought them safe to the A, day or so later Max received a visit front the French- geneeal in eons. mend, General 14 ichtl. "Wheteyer yeu may wish feet will be regarded as served ana recommended to grateful France, who hae received two son.; back Dram the jawe of death," ,said tho geaneea7inromptly asked that as his only reutard the livee of his fellow eatintrY- Mea lying in prlsoil atMayence under eentetee of death might bo epafetl. The general replied that he would make the 'wish known in the proper quarter, and !that he 1111m:elf would give it his earnest support. hi the at- titude et these two 111011, the Frenth general and the German innkeeper, lies the geim of peace and understand - - 5'7'3351185B135335'30 '310' 110o ,3 -s7ao.1'3'00033553150505003a 0,0305103115121- -3)1 '3532 - Jack 'Miner', Cainada's tamons hital lover; eatuetilistethd ,)011301' 131 :mown feeding scme of lois pets. Asked 110337 95 got ehe birds so tame, hie 05013' was; "Throw a heedful Of corn instead of a thimbleful of sliot,e W oncler•wrough eby 13 rental:liable man in lose than a scol'e of years. I-Tereas a tract of scene two hundred acres transformed leto, a beentiful' voice:va- t:ion' by the ganting ot thousands al eyeegreen leads, native: shrubs, lilacC and eeses. Bird.houeee, "Ornate ., mut artistic, litre many kities at tho most detirahle temente, and the. artlacial -ponds et:trace ed many eteld (else: w here) (limits:, swans. sna geeze the!. the Iteinee heneeeteaa has Igen 'called the ''bub of the bird imieeree," Whet 10, 1110' 500001 Se' 109 Miner') ..succiese? 'It will be eeedily graimed by ,every reader et hie 5e011. Foe a. Clue, let us have e few 00, the todbov's own worde, entety 'strafing fIS well tee si5. come to his 3301015 -3)3' the theasande. Ile has stacilea them close up, and through his practiee of tagging and exacing aheill has aequieed 031001(11)1 oii interesting data in relation to their summer and whiter abedee elle the routes traversed 03 and fro. .11Pon his Lags ho has stamped a slime:Verso of Scripture, so' that the beerees ,thotcog become splratml moseengere te these into wbeee hande they face. . Beealee those great birds that tete- turesquely wing thoir cleager-frieeghl, wey 111 11371215 wedge, thra arc InavY others that <Tacit Minor nro.tects ,aucl befriends. Quail, .robies, martiee; ganichird said waterfowl, all ilnd. 1791. 000)10 011/11 31120 1ilt0P is the leileer Sancta:ley. eeere ieet TIME TABLE Trains will arrive at and door, ruin Clinton as follows: Buffalo and Goderteh Olv. Going East, depart 1.25 am. 5.02 Pah. Going West cr. 11,10 Am. " " ate 6.09 Ip. 6.81 p.m, air. 10.04 • London, Huron & Bruce env. Going South, ar, 7.06 tip '1.04 a.tM e‘ le tt 4.15 PM, Going North, depart 6,50 " 11.03,11.19 aan, pthtqleti.tran too long, a will lead to chronic indigestion. In the meanwhile you suffer from miserable, sick headache s, ner- vpusnesa, depres- sion and 13011001 coMplexion.Justtry CHAIVLBERLAIN'S STOMACH&LIVER TABLETS. They re- lieve fermentation, indigestion --- gently but surely elennee tl,e system and keep the stomach and fiver in perfect running ardoo /ttalI draggle& Olc.tor by mail from II Charnberinin Medicwo Co.. Turnato 6 zrecess -az? ero rtsgeo 33050 at ieyouet ellieiler1e02ee0fse114aa0015 • Stool... of SUCCCI., Sidemen. Whatever Your eXperience haa been—whatever . yoU rimy be dokng now, -whether or not yoo think you can aell— • e rn. 0 , jest limper this geese= Are you whhaloos to earn 810,000 a year? Tboasot touote with too at on ic I I will prove to You - m without toot or obligation that: yon e.,a easily become a Star Woman0wal eliow yon how the Ea manianship Training mid Free Employment Serviee 01 the N, S. A. will help 305 15 3111311 meccas in anking. $10,000 A 'fear Selling Secrets The 0.<11 of Star 8a35tha3chfp . Ouabt by Mall. a T. A. 201 knallIge 333o0r5177, 010ook ovollIghl,, to lay0 bthintl fey even the 10030.17 - 300 Wall »,,y bjj,,d.,,Boy lobo 11..3 1e1,3 170.rhero. NO mato, what 000 • 07< 000 dew, the fsld of 301130 Wen yeti 0 bly Same, CO the fa(los Natiorial Salesuien's Trainiag Associatiou Mgr. Uele'362, 'f'bronto, Ont. .4010*-