The Clinton News Record, 1924-05-29, Page 3--1.-geet es' :tee -
110 -.44!
co. Neese gei.eee-seesirteseeeeesiteneeinee'n
IANCLAIMS
NOW IN PROCESS.
0.9011ff*k$1
YdogopilititilVA .764:1e4,,
NV,
• • „,
VA20.6.74
dessiatehe from "-London Saarbitral tribitifalS
ertna.ny having resumed payment af As secur0 for payment of these- hat •
known 55 ei,em the Ganadian Govertinient
over $.10 000 000 worth of snquestrat-
considerable ImP8Tc'ss is being aadsed German Phoperty in. Canada,' and
with settling of claims by Canadians rely g 1L.can-•
,
against German Nationals, • which adian claimants against German Na- , • •
were delayed fora long time by Ger-•( tionals once their claims have been
Ruhr oniupatin. 10 Is -understood 01,900,000 paid ever years I Football bi o the Old Country what 'baseball Is to AmeriChy," The hrugeWeMble0 stadiuni ware called upon to accomModate a record
that German paynient are'at, the rate], thef the Canedian, rmy - 110,000 'persons In the recent cup tra1ch between Newcastle and Aston Villa, •
• • of less than 0200,000 yearly, while the of occupation IP Germany no repara • . - •
•
arrears amountto nearly 08,000,000, tions payments have' been. received by -
though these may be wiped out •im- Canada. The Reparations Coinmis,
reediately after the adoption of `the slim is Oaid 00 have about 015,000,000
DawerS, report. to its credit as a result of payments
'If the rate of actual payment is in kind and the Rulir occupation, bat
slow, however, more progress is being there is_. no "-immediate prospects of
inade -with the admission of these Canada • receiving :My Share of this;
libilttie by the German repre,senta- It appears more. and more likely that
fives, in the clearing, house set up to the $22,000,000, worth of sequestrated
adininislx;r these matters. A number German property will constitute Can -
of Canadian claims which have proVed adiVie most substantial rePhration
impossible to settle •are now before asset for years to come. , s
7 .7. .
Ship Followed by Floating
Islands off Borneo Coast
O.T.A. SUSTAINED BY
THE SUPREME COURT
Appeal in Case of Smith vs.
Ontario Attorne3r-General
is Dismissed.
A despatch from Ottawa says: -
The Supreme Court an Thursday
morning dismissed the appeal in the
Case of „Smith vs. the Ontario At-
torney -General.. The Ontario Temper-
ance Act is therefore uphdla by the
Coui•t.
The basis of the ,actioe taken by
the appellant Smith was that th,s On-
tario Temperance Act, before the pro-
visions of the Canada Tempeinnce
Act were applied to prohibit the im-
portation of liquor into Ontario, was
not an Act prohibiting the sale of
liquor for beverage purposes' as it
allowed the general sale of native
wines and the importation and expor-
eation of all liquors. Tbe Attorney -
General for Ontario argaed „that the
Act need not be an absolute Prohibi-
tion, but one prohibiting sale general-
ly would suffice.
Smith is a resident of Toronto. He
ordered a case of whiskey, some beer
and lager from a dealer in Montreal,
and the dealer declined to fill the
order on the ground that he, could not
elo so under the term,- of the Ontario
Temperance Act.
Smith brought action asking ,for a
judicial declaration whether part IV.
of the Canada Temperance Act had
the force of law th Ontario. To this
the Attorney-Geeeral for Ontario re-
plied that Smith had no interest en-
abling hint to bring a declaratory ac-
tion, but that he should be liable to
prosecution. The trial Judge, Mr.
justice Orde, dismissed the action on
the ground that the Attorney -General
for Ontario was not the proper de-
fendant-, at it should have been
against the Attorney -General for Can-
ada. The appellate division affirmed
the judgment as to parties but gave
no OpiniOn, On the merits.
Smith then appealed to the Su-
..
preme Court of Canada. •
Oxford University to
Send Arctie Expedition
---
A despatch from London pays : -A
British :Arctic expedition Under the
auspices of Oxferd University and
supported by the War and Air Officee,
will shortly sail from Newcastle under
the leadership of George Binney, who
headed last year's Oxford- expedition.
Ttvo ships' have been chartered, the
300 -ton NorAgian whaler, .Polar
Bjorn of Tronisii, and a small Nor-
wegian 3ealifig sloop; a seaplane spe-
cially designed for Arctic work has
also been constructed.
Tbe primary objective is to explore
North Eastland Island, 90 miles
square, which lies northeast of the
math Spitzbergen Island.' Two previ-
ous attempt have been made, the first
in 1873 by the Swedish exploiter Nord-
enskold, who was only partly success-
ful, and the second by the ill-fated
German expedition of 1912, which per-
ished in the attempt.
An attempt is to be made to co-
ordinate the work of three sledging
survey parties and the seaplane -the
seaplane to conduct an aerial survey,
and the sledging parties to fix points
for an aerial map,
•
. ......... .I
. , ik, ,. 4:U'•11,440,.?.
After thousands of dollare had ?sem spent and many lives risked in the
zearchefor him, Major Frederick L. Martin and Sergt. Alva L. Hariey, U.S.
, . Army 'flyers, reached Port Moller in safety following a seven-day trek through
. the lee and, onow of.Alaelta. -
Nittural Resources Bulletin. World Shortage of Wheat Pre-
----- dieted After Coaling Harvest
The Natural Resouvees Iretelligence
Sonde° of the Department of the lne
-teethe at Ottawa says;
Getting bait is one of the first es-
eenelale to a successful fishing trip.
. Coada, freo Cast to The ,Markets .
. .
Glace Bay,- CMisiderable, and in .each Case .the tendency is to- TORONTO.
aetiv-ity pm,vprevails at .Louisburg, Ward an increased 'tonnnge eon- Man.lwheat-:--No. 1 North., $1.12d;
much coal being shipped from that sequently, heavier production. No. 8 North., $1.05%.
port. Alt the collieries, with the ex-
ception of the Jubilee; at Sydney
Mines, are in operation. Two or three
new mines are being opened and it is
anticipated that production this year
will be considerably in excess of 1923.
Freeefileton, N.B.-Farming condi-
tions in Southern New Bronswicic-nre
reported to be considerably advanced
over the corresponding time in 1923.
The extreme flood conditions in many
sections held back farming.a year ege.
So far such extreme conditions have
not materialized this season: •
Quebec, Que.-Between August 11
and September 26, twenty-five 'agri-
cultural societies will hold 79 exhibi-
-"Thetions, including four districts. The
Dept. of Agriculture has prepared
list and the dates of these fairs,
which show that farmers in nearly
every county will be offered theaop-
poreunity of exhibiting.
Timmins, -Ont.---Gold. production
from, the mines of Northern Ontario
amounted to appraximately $2,100,000
during the month of April, according
to preliminary est7mates. The output
at this tate is on a uniform basis,
Nine mines contribute to the output
• Marking Time.
It does not do in any calling, indus-
trial or artistic, merely to go throirgh
the motions. To singer or player in
contact with an .audience personality
id• an invaluable asset. That person-
ality may become manifest by a de-
finite and caleulated exertion, howeVer
artfully the effort- may be concealed
beneath the guise of casual, unpre-
mediated naturalness. It always looks
easy to do the , hard things when a
real artist does them.
If a man is in bueiness, he must put
his mind on it and make sittifices of
ease and leisure for it, or he will be
outstripped by a competitor who does
not spare himself and keeps long
hours of strenuous labor. Re must
not let himself be *satisfied to satisfy
the time -clock or to establish the fact,
jo the eeth, of a Supervisor, that he is
not a slacker. When he has earned
the right to present himself at the
eashier's window and claim ,his pay
he has -merely 'fired vp to the nega-
tive requirement.
One .0 'W most successful risen on
this continent has said that the man
who wine is the man who does More
than be is paid to do. The young
man with his foot on the lowest rung
of the ladder that mounts suecessoraril
cannot afford to giVe to tie job less
than everything he has to give, re-
gardless of the pay, If be has estab-
lished himself as a valuable perform-
er, his price will else. '
Even a writer cannot afford to give
his ...readers the hnpression that he
grinds out his Iihes in the spthit of a
hireling', who drudges along in the
same routine day after day, content
to be safe, glorying in all that is
stend-pat, without searching his mind
now and then to see if lie is adding
to his stoek of new ideas.
• If he does his week without enthuse
thane the fact shows itself in the de-
terioration of quality. The reader
feels that he does not care, that he
is merely sawing off his ititollectual
lumber into lengths, perfunetorily, as
a soullesa machine does it -work. The
actor who plays one Part, year after'
year, is in similar danger of losing
the capacity to do anything else -like
Winnipeg, Man. -About 15 per
cent, more butter was produced in
Manitoba in 1920 than in the pre-
ceding year, according to an estimate
of the Provincial Dairy Commission-
er. The quality, lie states, is also dis-
tinctlY ahead of last year.
Regina; Sesk.---Creamery butter
production in Saskatchewan during
the first three months of this year
shows an increase of 409,458 pounds,
according to the Provincial Dairy
Commissioner. Total production for
the period amounted to 1, 683,764
pounds, compared with 1,274,306
pounds for the first quarter oi 1923.
e Edmonton Alta. -Nearly 100,000
acres will be planted in corn in South,
ern Alberta this year, according' to
official estimates made by the Proviii-
eial Dept. of Agriculture. Last year
the acreage in corn in the province
was estimated at 58,000. A large area
is also being sown to sweet clover.
•Vancouver, B.C.-In an effort to
develop fresh fruit carriage from the
Panama 'Canal to Western Canada,
the Furness (Pacific) Line has
brought a sample shipment of ban-
anas. The fruit arrived in good shape.
the Icily man of Tibet who line eat
crose-legged ih one place sit long that
ho minuet "rise.
Merely to mark time to go
through the motions without the ac -
The surprising prediction that there cme,e being fans far shore eektengeg
would be a world shortage of wheat the purpose for which we were put
after the comi 1
at the annual meeting of the Steam 110 attach rabeh consequence to their
lhose whose fishing experiences are here. There are pompous individUals
limited to ititerier lake$ and rivers Cultivation Development Assoc
con apprecitite the inaportance "oAndlue in' the community: .J-lut
at London. It was
• of 'a sufficient quantity of bait to the, stated that metely, te sthnd is nothing -et is eigli
• liebermen on the sea coast', when tts
the opinion evas strongly held in the time they event eiteeet
lack moans no The Can
adjrare corn Strad* that the value of evheat
Figlieries Dept. ophetee! et the A would in the neat eutere, be in the
At- ' 1 'II' • er
t,e-ey captairls sero owner8 ef flsh,. quarter. Sir William joynson elides, whether he is loved.
• ' forma- • ' . . .
w
.ing 'vessels are provided vvrith in
lantic coast a bait reporting service,
M P said he was startled ,to hear of There is but one way'io enter this
the poesibility of a shortage ofaeheat life; but the gates of death ns
'e
of fifty s n ings p The prospaous Irian does not know
e with-
researcinto the cateli at various
poiiitseri'leiig coasts of the Mari-
time Provinces and the Magdalen Is-
lands. This Intel:illation ,
graphed to the principal fthhing ports,
d ' is i';ory valuable.
'.'-',orne idea of the amount of bait Remover gets to, the tep who .ivaits
be ,,galaed from the -faet l'os' some one to pesh him epe
').`in,r) We're used; for that purpose in t bit
during -;the -coming- From a
purely agricultural Point of vie vi that
might be -desirable, but it would be
exceedingly ba'd for the other ti:ades
al the countrk.
4
Year 142'SSE.°)'1'''Iris °F her" With sozne- people unhappiri'ess is
. jus a •
casteiii Canada.
I\IEefeRette , fete.,
.1-1HT IN Te1E. Dile/ ENRS
ee/00..N Celen-
.0hildren'S play rooms depart=
Ment steres have proved to be worth
Much more than it dot's. to establish
and maintain them for where chil-
dren are welcomed and cared for the
parents fhad. it • convenient te. -trade.
FIotole are ndw adopting the sante
plan, at.d even aPaetment houses may
yet see the light. .
Hon. Chas. McCrea
Ontario's minister of mines, lute been
over iu the Old Country to get Biltish
capital interested in the province's
mineral resources. His efforts have
been meeting' with auccess.,
Prince Henry Draws $43.65
Per Year in Norfolk Town
Prince Henry, the third son of King
George haws, new job, BayS London
despatch. TO carries with it the an-
nual salary, at eureent, exchange
rates, of 543.65. His new office is
Lord High Steward of Kings Lynn, n
Norfolk town of 20,000 populationt In
the past this poet has been an honor-
ary one, but. when, as it ie expected
will occur shortly, Prince Henry be-
comes a Member of the peerage, he
will be regarded ue serni-offieial repre-
seritative of Kings Lynn le the House
of Lords. Incidentally, he will not
benefit front his 110 yearly, as he has
antounced__.this to charity,
Pure- red orses Shippell
• , to Princes Ranch
4 clespateh from London says: -A
number of Valuable pure-bned sires
and mares belonging to the Prince of
Wake have been shipped from Liver-
pool aboard the eteaneer Grbeia, en
route to the Prince's remelt in Canada
for breeding purpose.
The consignment was purchased by
the ranch manager on his recent visit
to England, and -COMPriSUI four
Clydesdales, including the throe -year-
old stallion 13aren Blackwood; seven
!minters, including' the welleknowe
steeplechaser 'Desk Frieze, and Os
Dartmoor pens% The pony is ao small
Um+ it was brought to the steamer
iu a wooden crate, •
Old Material,
:VtVve •kqVIL .for eossy
two years on paving arouna the public
square ill our progressive little city."
pridefully said the landlord it the Pe-
tunia tavern.
returned' a hypercritical
:iiiinolset..„ "With good intentions,. I Pro -
- - ' IN ItA.B131tBORO '
HoW op\ LIKE. art Tribvi--* A
,.
inetS oNE..., FIRIG/-11-1 rr
5arry <? . eieeSN'T A elle-
------7--C.
Man. oats -No. 3 CW., 43c; No, 1,
4Ieec.
Man. barley --Nominal.
All the above c.i.f., bay ,ports.
Ont. barley -55 to 70c.
Am, corn -No. 2 yellow,e95e.
Ont. Rye -74 to 75c.
Peas -No. 2, 51.40 to 51.45.
Millfeed--Del. Montreal freights,
bags included: Bran, per ton, 524;
shorts, per ton, $26; middlings, $32;
good .feed flour, $1.85.
• Ont. wheat -No. 2 white, $1.01 to
$1.05, (Aside.
Ontario No. 2 white oats -39 to 41e.
Ont. corn -Nominal.
Ont. flour -Ninety per cent., pat,
in jute bags, Montreal, prompt ship-
ment, 54.75; Toronto basis, 54.75;
bulk, seaboard, 54.40.
Man, flour -1st pats., in jute sacks,
$6.10 per bbl.; 2nd pats., 55,60.
gay -Extra No, 2 timothy, per ton,
track, Toronto, $16; No. 2, 516; Na.
3, 513 to 514; Tnixed, 511 to 511.50;
lower grades, 510 to 512.
Straw-Carlots, per ton $9.60 to
510.
Screening -Standard, recleaned, 0.
o.b., Bay ports, per ton, 517.
Cheese -New, large, 16% to 17c;
twin's, 17 to 18c; triplets, 18 to 19c;
Stiltons, 20c. Old, large, 22 to 23c;
twins, 23 to 24e.' triplets, -24 to 25c.
Butter-Finestcreamery prints, 34
to 36c.'No. 1 creamery, 33 to 84e;
No. 2, 30 to 32c; dairy, 28 to 30c.
Eggs --Extras, fresh, in cartons; 80
to 31c; extra loose, 29 to 30c; firsts,
2600 27c; seconds, 22 to 23e.
Live poultry -.Hens, over 5 lbs.,
260; do, 4 to 5 tbs., 24e; do, 3 -to 4
lbs., 15c; spring thickens, 2 lbs. and
over, 70c; roosters, 18c; ducklings,
over 5 lbs., 26c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 24c.
Dressed poultry -Rens, over 5 lbs.,
28c; do, 3 to 4 Ibs., 18c; spring chick-
ens, 2 lbs. and over, 80c; roosters,
22c.
Beans --Can., baud -picked, lb., 83e;
primes, 6c.
Maple 'products -.Syrup, per imp,
gal., 52.50; per 5 -gal. tin, 52.40 per
gal; maple sugar, Ib., 25 to 26c.
Honey -60-1b. tins, 11 to 11,5c per
M.; 10-1b. tins, 11 to 12c; 5 -Ib. tins,
11% to 12c; 204-1b, tins, 12% to 13e;
comb honey, per doz„ No, 1, 53.75 to
54; No. 2, $3.26 to 53.50.
Smoked meats--41ituns, med., 23 to
24e; cooked hams, 84 to 36c; smoked
rolls, 17 to 18e; cottage rolls, 1.8 to
20c; breakfast baeon, 21 to 260; spe-
cial brand breakfast bacon, 28 '00 80c;
backs, boneless, 28, 00 33c. •
Cured meats -Long. lear bacon, 50
to 70 lbs., 518.50; '70 to 90 lbs., 518;
90 lbs. and up, 517; lightweight rolls,
in barrels, $87; heavyweight rolls,
02: •
Lartl-Pure tierces, 14% to 15%e;
tubs, 15 to 15%c; pails, 16% to 16e;
prints, 18 to 183fse; shortening,
thirees, 14 to ivhc; tubs, 141,5 to 15c;
15 to 16%c; prints, 16% to 17e.
Export steers, choice, 58 to 58,25;
do, good $7.50 to 57.75; export heifers,
57.25 to $7.50; baby beeves, 58 to 50;
butcher steers, choice, 57 to 57.75;
do, good, 56.25 to 56.75; do, med.,
55.75 to $6; do, coin., $4,50 to 55;
butcher heifers, elloice, 57 'to 57.50;
do, med., $5 to $5.75; do, COM., 54.60
to' 54.75; butcher cows, choice, 55.25
to 56,25; do, med., 58.50 to 54.50;
butcher bulla, 54.50 to 55.50; bolognas,
$2.50 to $3.50; canners and cutters,
$1.25 to $L50; feeding steers, choice,
$6 to 56.75; do, fair, 54 to 55; rnilk-
ers, springers, choice, 575 to 590;
do, fair, 545.00 to $60.00; stock-
ers, st choice, 54.75 to , $5.25; do.
fair, 53.75 to 54.20; calves, choice, 51.0
to 510.60; do, med., 57 to 57.50; do,
com., $4 to 56.50; lambs, choice ewes,
$14 $15;do, bucks, $14 to 514,50; do,
culls, $8 to $9; aiming lambs, each,
$8 to 514; sheep, light ewes, $7 to
$8; do, culls, $4.50 to $5; hoget. fed.
and watered, 57.75; do, f.o.b., 5/.25,
do, country points, 57; do, off cars
(long haul) 58.15; do select, 58,50.
•Cs, Can. West. No. 2, 61. to 52s;
do,, -No. 3, 49 to COs; extra No. 1 feed,
4800 4See c ; No.2 local white, 44 to 46c.
Plour, Man. spring wheat pats., Isis,
$6.8Q; 2nds, • 55.80; strong bakers,
-55.60; winter pate., choiee, 55.75 to
55.85. Rolled oats, bag 90 lbs., 52.90.
Brae, 528.25. Shorts, 524.25, Mid..
dlings, 580.25. Ray, No. 2, per tore
oar lots, 516.
Cheese, fittest Westi., 15 to 15%e;
do, Bastes, 14 to 14ia Butter No. 1,
pasteurized, 82%e;' No. '1 creamery,
3141,e; 21u1s, 801/2e. Ego, fresh, ape -
001s, 35e; fresh, extras, 82e; fresh,
firsts, 28c, Potatoes, per bag, cox
lots, $1.40 to $1.„45.
Cote, dairy type COWS, e1.75 to 54;
fairly gime veal calves, 56 to 55.50;
do, med., 55.50; 'mixed quality bethher
hogs, 58.75; soles, $5.50.
• The idle steam shipping of tite4
world decreased Approximately 2,200,-
00 gross tons in 1923, in nearly equal
amounts during each half of the yeae.
Since chatter eatee were lower for
the year than for any other period
since the with began, it seems certain
that ocean -borne trade is slowly in-
creasing..
eaetereteeee.easergeemeeee--
Ir THE. ?
1 la/ore ' -T4H ONE-
ANs? WAY'
- ' •
,,f • .
A despatch from New York says
: -
Floating islande, including a seven -
acre body of land which followed the
Dollar Line steamship President
Adams like a pet whale off Borneo,
were enebuntered by that ship on its
1,011nd-the-world cruise, according to
Captain Jonas Pendelbury, who dock-
ed the President Adams on Thursday
morning et Pier 15, Staten Island.
It was Captain Pendelbury's, first
experience with floating islande, and
he has been seafaring for 36 years.
But floating islands ouch as he ri-Tort.
ed endountering off Borneo are not the
rarest things in the world, according
to members of the staff of the Amer-
ican Ceographieal Society. .
Captain Pendelbury enebentered
his biggest floating island first. EIe
said its „palm trees and cocoanut
palms rose higher than the spare of
his ship, ,and in the tops of those
towering paints were chattering Man -
keys at play. Birds were singing and
flowers Were abloom. Theough mar-
ine glasses the skipper said he picked
out a large number of cobras, dead-
liest of reptilea.
Ile strange experience of Captain
Peneltlbury occurred while his ship
was negotiating the Palawan Passage.
Only Taxpayer in Town
Appointed Tax Collector
The man who lives in Boscobel
House, in the little town of Boscobel,
has just been appointed to a real man-
sized job, says a London despatch.
The.Shifnal authoritiesdecided it was
time Boscobel had a tax overseer and
collector, so they appointed him to
look aftdi the parish •rates. Now
Boscobel has a population of seven-
teen, including children, and qut of
those only one is a ratepayer, He is
the man at Boscobel House.
Incidentally Boscobel is the place
in Shropshire where Charles II lax in
hiding after the battle of Worcester,
What is that which lives in winter,
dies in summer, and -grows with its
root upwards? .An icicle.
Ine-"e‘ete•...-e-e
FIVE LOSE LIVES IN
• WRECK ON'L. SUPERIOR
Captain and Hia Crew
Forfeit C einee af Escops
ID bfeboats.
A despatch from Sundt Ste. Mario,
Ont., eays: -Replete, with stirring
tales of tragedy and heroism, grim
exposure and near starvation, Is the
story unfolded by the survivors of tee
eteamer Orinoco, which was wrecked
with the loss of five lives, in a fierce
storm in Lake Superior last Sunday
night Seventeen survivere have ar-
rived at the Michigan Soo, and they
tell graphic stories 'of one of the most
eventful wrecks in the long list of
such occurrences on the Great Laker.
Seeing the already overburdened
condition of the lifeboats, which were
being lowered over the gide of the
sinking vessel; Captain Lawrence re-
fused to leave his post, and drowned
when his ship steemerged. Wheelman
Hugh Gordon and Chief Engineer
Wertz followed the lead of their cap -
tem, knowing 10. was unsafe to over-
crowd the undersized lifeboats also
stuck to theit posts and perished,
William • Ostrander and Clarence
Carlson died at the oars from ill thee
and exposure while helping to get the
survivors to the rocky shore, where
after ,being buffeted about by the
waves for nearly 24 hout.s the sure
vivors in the boats landed, Many of
its crew, •Which included one woman,
were severely frostbitten. William
Ostrander was fe married man with
:two children. Clarence Carlson was
also a married man with two children,
according to infoemation supplied by
the crew of -the Orinoco,
.,.1-lugh 'Yeomans, a deck - hand, frac-
flared his right arm when. he fell 20
-feet to the bottom of the vessel from
the deck when the boat severed. His
mates claimed it was a mystery how
he ever got out of the hold, for he
had to climb up a makeshift ladder
25 feet with one arra. .
On landing, one of the crew man-
aged to kill a porcupine, which fur-
nished it mouthful for the famishing
survivors, many of whom were in a
serious condition from frostbites,
when rescued by the searching vessel.
A.11 of the officers and members of the
crew were residents of the United
States, the majority of them belong-
ing to Bay City, Michigan.
All survivors are loud in their
praise of the treatment accorded
them by Captain D. A. Williams of
the tug Gargantua in effecting their
reseue and providing food.
"Front the time they took us aboard
they treated us like princes," said
William Scheinder; a member of the
Orinoco crew. "Hardly 15 minutes
elapsed after we were aboard before
the cook called us into the dining -
room, where we got a regular dinner
which tasted mighty good after being
without food since Sunday morning."
Unpreeedented iee jams in Lake Superior for the month of gtay have
been playing havoc with Great Lake freight trallio. A. serious tie-up off the
mouth of Duluth Lather is shown.
MODERNIZING AN HEIRLOOM.
A few days ago while ruinmaging
in tho attic I found a rusty old bullet
mold. Years ago my great-grand-
mother had rim out bullets with it
while the menfolks held off the red-
skins. Naturally a neelesS implement
these days. But Wee 000 I took it
downstairs and soalcee-it in kerosene.
Then I scrubbed of? the flaky rust and
lot I had a twentieth ceniairy Mite
cracker. -When friends drop in we
pass around the nut bowl and regale
them with sthries of the adventures
of -our ancient nuterecker.
• '
•
The rade marches folvalid on the
feet of little children. -O. 5.31.
We pass our -lives in doing -what
we ought not and leaving ,undone
what we should do. -
If it is tame that primitive or ab-
original peoples knew nothing of can,
'car, but that it appears among there
• after coming in contact with civilize. -
timer -evidently the cause of calmer lies
in some of -the conditions or habits
that characterize what we call civil-
iwation. Perhaps we pay too big a
price for our boasted progress.
• --
' -e-r----
WELL. 15 VoUVE. Ca011-
FIN1)tE.P \AA -n.1 iviiy:Hf\I-
P:Rtti-% l'-'5 'YOU'LL L.r-T ME.
i' 1
Yellow Snow.
of "yelloV-C1R," is reported.
Sons Nfigata,eon the north-west coast
of Sion. The inhabitatita consider
the phenomenon an emem et evil ire -
Dort.
Seienttsts believe that clouds. of the
yellow duet from the Gobi Desert,
which fresuently are driven over,
North China and are eapeolally weil
known in Peking, have been carried
across tile Sea or Japan in snow -
clouds.
Ohl inhabRants et the Niigata dis-
triet -recall that half a century ago
there was a fall of "red snow" in that
region. ••
• „Is he" third son of the leroperos
etesate-e
Tokamethe,
(japan, Ole is expected to visit Canada ,t,„ •
01 later in 1110.yent isa the course of. a
He wbo Attie ;the -worst cause feekiri,
the most iloise, •
Poole aftcl 'onstinitte men melee rich
etwyees. e