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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1924-09-04, Page 2D IncTACIGAI GAR -T, BROS BANKERS A general 13anning Business trai et- ch Notes Discounted, Drafts- Issued, Interest; Allowed mu 1-mposIts. Sale Notes -Porch:used.. • H. T. RANCE Notary Public Conveyancer. Financial,Real Estate' and Fire In- surance Agent. Representing 14 Fire Insurance Companies. ; Division Court Office, Clinton. W. BRYDONE arrister, Solicitor Notary Public, etc. SLOAN sLocK - CLINTON • DR. J. C. GANDIER ofnce }Sours: -1.30 to 3.31 On., 7.30 to 9,00 p.m. Sundays, 12.30 to 1.30 On. Other hours' by aPpointrnent only. Office and Residence Victoria St. DR. METCALF BAYFIELD, ONT. Office Hours -2 to 4, 7 to 8. Other hours by appointment. -DR. H. S. BROWN, L.M.C.C. . Office Hours 1.30 to 3,30 p.m. 7.30 to 9.00 p.m: • Sundays 1.00 to 2.00np.m. Other hours by appointment. Phones Office, 213W Residence; 2183 DR. E'ERCIVAL- HEARN • Office and Residence: • Huron Street Clinton, Ont. Phone 69 (Formerly occupied by the late Dr. C. W. -Thompsha). Eyes Examined and Glasses -Fitted: Dr. A Newton Brady, .Bayfield Graduate Dublin Vniversity, Ireland. Late Extern Assistant' Master, Re. tuncla Hospital or Women and Child- ren, BOHM Office at residence lately occupied by Mrs, Parsons., Hours: -9 to 19 a.m., 6 to 7 leni. Sundays -1 to 2 p.m. DR: A. M. HEIST Osteopathetic Physician. Licentiate Aiwa and Michigan State Boards of Medical Examiners. Acute and chronie diseases treated. Spinal adjustments given to remove tee cause Of disease. At the Graham House, plinton, every Tuesday forenoon. 50-3MP. DR. W. R. NIMIVIO CHIROPRACTIC SPECIALIST Clinton—Residential calls only. Seafortil—Monday, Wednesday, Fri- day apd Saturday. • Mitchell --Tuesday and Saturday after- . noons, Phone 49 Seaforth, Ont. DR. McINNES Chiropractor Of Wingham, willbe at the Batten - bury House, Clinton, on Monday and Thursday .forenoens from 9 to 12 each week. Diseases of all kinds successfully handled. . •' " 5-22-'24 C I N110°N EWS-RECORD e'L I NTON, ONTARIO' . • Tome of SubscrIntion--$2.00 Per 55,01' in,:advaneo, to Canadian addresses:. ' $2,60 to the U.S. dr. other foreign countries. No paper discontinued' until all arrears are paid unless:. at I , the option of .the publisher. The date to which every subscription in ' paid .t, denoten- On the' label. Advertising': Rates --Transient , adver- tisements, 10 ' cents per nonpareil line for .first insertion and 5 cents per 11n for eitade-vherstuisbesmegeunets4t niont5etro- 100. Imali exceed . one inch, such as "Lost, "Strayed," or ''Stolen," etc,, Inserted I once for, 35 cants, and each subse- quent: insertion 15 cente. • Communieations intended for Publi. cation must, as a guarantee sof good faith, be 'accompanied by the name of the writer. ' • . M. R. CLARK,. G. E. HALL, Proprietor. ,Editor. . CHARTRS B. HALE • Conveyancer, Notary Pubile, Commis- sioner, etc. s .REAL ESTATE AND INSTJRANCE U RON STREET - 041 NTO N M. T. CORLESS °LINTON, ONT, District Agent The Ontario and Equitable Life and Accident hisueance Co, West Wawanosh Mutual Fire Insurance Co., Eatabliehed 1878, President, John A. 'McKenzie, Kincar. dines Vice-Presidelit, H. L. Salkeld, Goderich; Secretary, Thos. G. Allen, Dungannon. Total amount of lime, Mice nearly ;12,000,000. In tee years 'number of Policlee 'have increased from 2,700 to 4,500,,. Plat rate of $2 per 51000.- Cash on hand 521.000. Hs L. Salkeld • - Goderich, Ont. , J. Turner, Clinton, Local Agent. GEORGE ELLIOTT • Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Raton. Correspeedence promptly slummed. Immediate arrangements can be made 'for Sales Date at The News -Record, Clinton, or by callihg Photo 203. Charges elederate and Satisfaction Gearatiteed. . B. R. HIGGINS Clinton, Ont. General Fire and Life Insurance. Agent for klartforcl Windstorm, Live Stock, 'Autoembile and Sickness and Accident , Insurance. Huron and Erieund Calle- d°. Trust Bones. Appointments made to ,fleet parties at •Brucelteld, Varna and Sayfield. 'Phone 67. The .iticKillop Mntual Firein$uraocCoomily Head Office Seaforth, DI RECTO RY President,. James Connolly, Gederich; Vice, James Evans, .Beechwood.; Sec.: TrettAnrer, Thos..13. Hays,.Seatorth. Directors: George McCartney'," • Sea - forth; D. le McGregor, Sestforthf 2. G. Grieve, Walton; WM Ring, Seaferthi el. MclIwen, „Clinton; Robert Ferries, Harlock; John Benneweir, trodhagen; Jas. Connolly, Goderiele . . ,Agents: Alex: Leitch,,Clinton; J. W. Yee, ' Geld Mich; Ed. ',Hinehiay, Sea - tabliiiiNitirldNALRAEd" • TIME TABLE Trains will arrive at and depart from Clinton as fctllows; Buffalo and Goderich Div. Going East, depart 6.25 am, 2:52 p.m. Going 'West, ar. 11.10 a.m. ars 6.08 sip. 6.61 p.m. " ar. 10.04 p.m. London, Huron & Bruce Div. G‘oitig South, ar. 7..56 dp. 7.56 a.m. 4.15 p.m. Going North, depart 6.50 p.M. " 11.05 11.13 a.m. • BRITISH ENTER - PLANES IN RACE FACTORIES WORK NIGHT AND DAY ON CRAFT: Four Nations to Compete for Schneider Cup at Baltimore in October. British aircraft- manufactnrers are working day 'and. night constructing two seablanes to dompete for the cov- eted Steneider Cup, which was lost to the tinned States at Cowes idet year, and for which four notions will con- test 'next October -in Baltimore. team of pilots and mechanics al- ready have been selected, and satis- faction. oVer the possibility a evil:ming the..oup. this year is expressed gen- erally throughout -the eurttry. At one time it appeared unlikelyethat -Great Britain would enter the contest. Ow' - Ing to the .poor financial coedition of the aiecraft eidustry,,there was little prospect of Sending aver. even a team, much less specially tanstrueted super- tspeed seaplanes. Arrangenients were completed at the:last moment, however, and 'work sin the planes -is being reshed.. One of the machines will '1e a ene-fleat sea. plane driven' by a 560 -horsepower N,atter Lion nestoreand is being built be the Gloutesterelaire Aires's:ft. Com- pany. She is a biplane—a develop - ;Mat of the. fsenom Bainel—ane de- signed specially for the cohtest by IL, 2', Folland. The Napier 'engine is one of three, elso built Especially for the race, It is generally believed 'the plane will do better than 270 rniles an hour. - ' Flying Goat of Great Speed. The other entrant is to be a. super - marine biplane 'flying boat, drieen by a 650 -horsepower Rolls-Royce Condor, . andle expected to attain almost un- believable speed. Lord Edward Gros- venor will have chaige of the teem When it sells for America next month. Larry parter, one of BritainIs fore- most air pilots*, will handle Usa Glom castor :boat. Henry lilted, who on the Schneider Cup in 1922 and 'vas the only British starter in last year's contest, will pilot tine super-mailne. Hubert Broad, rioted for MS eXperience With De Haniland plane% will accom- pany the team as relief pilot, Both Prance and Italy are reported to be devoting muck time and thought on plates. with Which they hope to,w1n the highly prized trophy. However, the conteesue of opinion .is that the centest will bo chiefly between Great Britain and the United States, ..With England having a shade in its favor. TIM predictions are based,en the re- port tliet the American =trent will be a Curtin. navy 'veer which as a land machine did 266 miles' an hour Met year. Converted into, s. seaplane, its Speed, excite:ding to the experts here, will be reemedeconelderably. LOW TIDE -,:jr,1;1'-r-is •kno-w what it is " said the oldest a at .low tide; Then 0en rld i ing for he a TI S . spread at Our feet, sweet and freshl- mother sealt" said little Den - from its recent bath. The stones are aid,.dt'sthrow4he baby the so clean; the sand is so smootir';. the water." „I • ,. se-weedIo%vth desifIesi ,p .1 'ye it 1 The 19,e ap, pushed it osititte a_ebv,o,sayhyso infeti.,(0F;aintibuttlli the backroou,,ict5.: c,oarynety: to follow the snail traolis; thel's lave -to hunt for star -fish; and they do love and over, it' came: hnok to its new to chase ,the tinnible crabs. friondsI ' rocWichtoat ofeln, , 00 Ofl ahnavdeoiilutthnepyitigg-0 f1;7troil I oStill -the n'e ngtibetlgr..abeedb forner- baby. The u Thy.,.. th f h t int i 'r d d- boys were puzzled to know what to do. boy again "it is the 'mother seal look- tliey are stopped only bY old ocean Thee Oslo eIrthe hOies. had an a ide' itself:- But even then their eyes keep knew what to dot!' said: 'small on going, as they watch the waves •Denekli. "enee Was loot eeme- ro mg in and the sea -gulls circling "ne bedught me Couldn't around, and' the ships go sailing by get' a boat and take it home to its poor bound for distant lands, y0,1P Edward, 1,5050e, pa,” One day when . I' wasdown on the , Avetti up the beach four pairs of beach. with my four boys, they were feet .nne an, st . _ w, soon 'dowse the beach happily seampermg about when I four pairs of hands dragged alongi a heard one of them shout: "Mother, 'phi smalliseat, It Wei hard work, but,the mother, come quick, 'We've_ found a 00111,finielly_ babyseal!reached the , water. T.,hen Artificial Silk 'Stockings. Silkworms live on a particular sort of Mulberry leaves, from whieh they extract a tribetanee known as mettle lose, digest it, and afterwards spin it butenteethreads of silk. . • Scieuee, , however, lies4scoverecl that' the cellulose ean be dlgearted by chemical means without the aid of the worm. Furthermore, there fire eubstances otiter than intilberry leaves Which contain this Pinewood, for instance, contains it, the extract.:beIng. treated in one of several Metitods, all resulting in much the same way, the artineially "digest- ed" cellulose being` converted into' a trencleslike liquid capable of being ditawn out into threads forth:* W. Chesney, Remus:idyllic', It, .. These, threads are then' hardened aarinnAt Eisodhagent. 4 and set, aftetaverds being spun into Any. nfon.eyntoslie ,paid 10 may' be ...I - WO sang" Whiths either...alone or n MI& te`efeetish ,blething 'Co; :91111t9P, or at Cutt'- Greeery, G Panties dbstring to affeet'Insuranee: or transact other" besiness. will be promptly attended to onapplication to any at the above °Slicers addreseed to their respective Post' Wilde. 'Losses inepeeted by the Director who lives nearest 'the scene: Nature's Wonders. ,elerlel, visiting the country on a May day, name to a pond Who's° shal- lows.,Were- fall of tadnoles—:thotisande of them 4'F:inning -about in an inch of "Oh,"--ehe Cried, "sea 'these ted- eolese. ,Ancl just ;tothink that some day every one nf the horrid wriggling Creatures will hatch into a beeutitul butterfly!" combination with •'other' -material, pales antificial sine stOokings. •• "Slr-r-r•r," Said the .Cashler. • A customer who had just finished hie dinner at a restaurant deferential- ly approached the pretty -cashier and ingu i red : . Are the waiters here attentive to "Sir -e -r -r!" exclaimed the young ‚ro- man 10'nm-offended tone. "Oh, no offense, 1 assure yen," re - Plied the marg "I was only carrying out tho instru'ctions printed on the bill, of faro, which say: 'Please report tiny inattention ef waiters 10 cashier.' And I thought if they -Were ins.ttenttee to you 2 would report them, thetie ' " I i they emeeully lifted the seal en boiird w useif:oee see, n6u30 nugh, they. end, and great anAds4.tahweedseelthre r9‘is et'esIsseeb4daWdaarte'doe.neee out taoefe was their excitement, all tFelking at lovely brown eyes and its queer long eight the boys gee once about its sleek glossY coat, its; ' they .had last seen. her, sired dropp.in.ig they were making the httle fellow overboard they quick- ly rowed back. - friends witeethe baby seal and plan- ning to keep it for a pet, as he seemed to enjoy their caresses and accepted food from their hands. We waited and.watched, and sud- denly. up popped the head of the moth- er , seal then near her appeared a , Suddenly the oldest boy exclaimed: smaller head! "What is that far out in the water?" "Oh," shouted Donald in big,h glee, "Why, it looks like a post bobbing "the mother and baby are together up and down," said one of the others. again. Pisa so glad. THE BLUE SHOP IN A LITTLE TOWN By Rene Bonnefoy Translated by William L. McPherson "Have I many viaual memories? I certainly have. It is not ler nothing that I traveled fifteen years into every nook and corner of our beaetiful coun- try; my kneeSsack on my' bade my color -box and my emel in my* hand, and -that I have studied the world with my painter's eyes: These eyea are filled with images—images contem- plated with love anti therefore graven on my' memory. Sometimes I like to throw them on Die screen Of my brain. easisure yon that it is better,. than an American film. "Visual' memories! 'rieey are the best. They leave the lettet'regret and .weariness and are the meet agreeable to evoke. There la one ps.rtecularly which grips my heart. It is a blue shop -front. Yes, a blue shop -front hi a little town, in a far-off province; ghee -front en which you can read 'Notions' in white lettere. 2 Bee it again is if I were there. Does that as- tonish you? But Mis Visual ;flowery has a story attached 'to , it. .A. love story—you have guessed it, Is 'it sad? No. But it is not a frivolous story, either. • "i was making my tour of Frame. I was twenty -live. My feet were sound, my heir Sva.s straight, my teeth Were good, had an insatiable epee- tRe and a Items desire to see every- thing. 5 had traveled through France three times end was on my feurth trip when I fell in love. It Is unnecee- sary to say where. It is enough- for You to know that it was in one of those innurnereble small teems which smell at Once sot mustiness and fresh air, • which have the odor of bernyards ad the edor of the woods, and where the goseips sit every evening before their ilooes and exchange notes.' "On one of the .squares, near a foun- tain wheels seemed to have been there from all eternity, and facing an an- cient cafe with a terrace where it leg so delightful to sit Of a etiorning, was a notioe shop with e. blue front. 13e - hind the window one, could see the bleeds proprletressLebionde and rose- colored, with a profile such as the an- gels never had. 2 do not lie. In the Meese of my travels 1 have seen Bot- ticellis, DaVincis and Velasquezes, bet I have never seen anything as fine, as delicione, as ethereal and ItS dlvinely beautiful the profile of my' little notfons. merchant in:the Prosaic set- ting of her blue shop -front. "That deyeI bitterly regretted that I Was only a landscape artist aed had not the genius .of the old masters, so that I could fix on a 'canvas tho fea- tures of the womae with whom I was atIres.dy desperately in love, Yes,my friends, desperetely. 11 W99 love at first eight, The first 'morning I went to buy thread and needleS. She, waited on me -with indifference 'ithei•never looked at me. I was hot and Cold by turns and my tongue was an dry in my mouth that I could ,hardly say 'Thank you, mademoiselle.' I was upset, be- witched as if I had drunk some Magic The neXt day l'had no idea of leav- ing the town. I sat for hours on the terrace of the little Cafe. The skn curved above the deserted square. The facades of the old houses th dove- cto at the-efide, the ro,oftiles;•• the murmuring fountain, the sidewalks in SwiteSe'nhinks,the grass grew, were all illuminated. There 'was'.a debauch of light and colore in this . tranquil ettle spot At any other tithe I should have been ,carried 'away with the desire to dip my brushes in the sanliight and paint and paint. i3ut I was a captive. dreamed of her.' I dreamed of her had to see,her. I had to talk to her. Each .day I entered the shop and made sinsOpurchaSee. My bag was soon full of ribbons, laees and a hun- dred other trifles with Which 2 didn't know whatnto do. 2 could not present them to her to prove my love. More- over, she- continued to serve tne With- out Melting at me and without interest- . ing bens:elf in o .way in the strange 'customer, whice was all I was to her. I was madly in love with 'ser, More madly than ever. . " 'You must be bored here,' I mid one day to my pretty notions dealer. ." 'I am never bored,' she answered in 'a .sweet, low voice vrhicb lacked warmth. . The days passed. I had been a month in the town and was no further ahead than on the day of my arrival, but more in love tha never before. I said to myself: 'My dear fellow, you love her; you love her passionately. Your „Pest plan is to toll her se.' "That day I beught something, a handkerehief ready to embroider, I be- lieve. And while she was wrapping it isp I spoke to her gently: " 'Mademoiselle. Marie' --- "She lifted her eyes—her eyes as blue as the skies of paradise ought to be. " 'IVIademoissalle Marie, I love you"--- " 'kW' she said. - "I took her little had, which he let drop into mine absentmindedly. "lerademoieelle Marie, will you be my wife?' • • "See Melted at me. Did she really look at me? And she answered me in the same sad, colorless voice: " 'You are not the one whom I am waiting. for,' "My heart throbbed in my breast I said again: '“lidlademoisella.Marie, listen to me. I love you as you will 'never be loved by any one else.. I am 0 good and honest fellow. I have: my profession, which is as good is my other, if you wisrt it, we shall .be happy'—:-- " 'You are not the one. whom I dm waiting fere sh,e epewered once more. "le despair, I left her. For whom was she -waiting?: Vlir a fiance?' No one knew anything ' ef him.. e ' "The next morning I took up my sack and set out again on the high- ways, earrying in My eyes the 'linage of a blue ehomfreat and M my neart the face of a Httle Jelonde notioh.cleal. er who was put ea this earth by mis- take." Major-deinerai Sir Lee.Stack gayer: nor -general of the Sudan and 'Birder of .the Egyptian army, htuishad a difficult situation to, handle the paet few' weeks, bat the Iron' hand of authority has won out. Fifteen Fires An Hour. According to statistics Just publifsh- ecl in the United:States no fewer than 355 American leetieels catch fire In each twenty-four home.otber words, a new fire starts 0, ery four minutes day and night. year in and year out.' Although, of 'course, many of thcse fires are promptly extinguished, oet the fire lasses in pie I.Tnited States Dan to 515 a seconde$9.00 45 Minute, or, in round figures, soinething like eve hun- dred nitilions a Year. • America is a emmtry of wooden biases., and also, of forest fires on a huge Scale, and with the possible ex. caption et Russia fire doge more dam. age there than anywhere else. The direct loss' by fire in Great Bel. Min is five raillien a mehtle, er 566,000,- 000 yearly. This' is the direct loss only; it does not inclede the cost of fire brigades, and tile, Imetyy lridirent losses of one•kind 'and another. Take all the,se into' consideration, and the fire bill is more than doubled, in Lofidtan alene the yearlydamage by fire Varies between 52,000,000 and $3,500,000, ' Nearly a hundred, lives are lost in Loedon each year through fires, and in the two countries of len'gland and Wales the deaths from fire total nearly two thoesend yearly. The greet inwOrity of victims are children, of whom 1,200 are burned to death in a year.. In the, United' States the death: roll, already eirorniemly is 0073', is: -increas- ing. Twenty nrrs ago it Was 10,000 O year; in 1022 e deatbe Dom flt e amennted to n earlY 15,100—that 11, ono person - was burned te ,deittit every thirty-five thinute•Ss • hodoe es causesl by fen es fila? ate almost incalculable, fniSdlne province of Ontario ` &et: $2,000,000 Iwdrth of t1ither:1s "destroyed esethesumraer, The forest fire hill for the whole ot Cana- da Is more lhainteinmillions yearly. It is, feckoned that in- the world at large' fire, destresys nearly, 110,000,000 worth Of ProneStY -daily; aimest all Of which Wouldtbe Saved if due' caution werenolIserved. Second Sight. Small Nephew -'"Did you ever fall in love with a girl at first sight, Untie. Bachelor Ilnele—"Yee, my boy, I did once, but I went backthe next morning and took a ffetoncl leek, at her." "Storm -Proof." Friendship's are not things we wish to test. To test.a friendship Conscious- ly would be unkind, if not almost See- picable. But there are some tests, not of our own seeking, which, if we are observant, are interesting. - The expression "fair-weather friend" is not, note meant In a. literal sense, yet I should not be surprised if its or- iginator Med it quite literally. Think oe all your friend, mid count up those whom you would like to meet on a wet day. Go further, and count those with whom yon'would spend your 'wet day if you had to ge-trusigleg about hi the .There are' some people whose en- thusiasms are very goon damped. Pew of our friends are all weather friends. Arrange a, dayes outing with any one of them, and side what ha.ppets if it rains or if any of We carefully laid Plains go awry. Possibly you or your friend get irritable, and the outing as an outing is a failure. • . I can remember holidays which have become purgatories for one and my holiday companion. The amen:mode- tton has not been, all that we would desire, the weether has not been kind to us, and other things have gone Wrong. The atmosphere of the holi- day tart ' been lost, and two people, neither of. them very much in sym- _patty with the other, have let it go without making any attempt to regain it. • I can remember rainy days- on the river, some of them miserable, but (Alters as eappy as the sunny daya. If you are with the right peoele it 15 fun to put up your eunehade and brave the elements; or to dodge the drops under the trees. ' IS you are with the right people it doesn't matter when you leave half the lunch behind. or the cream turns sour and the butter melte': But these thin e. are all odious when you are with the wrong people. I tan remember country tramps In the rain with positive Joy; but I Cals remember 'others Which were, to say the least, not e success. ANL looking back, the key to every situation has been in the hands of my comes.nions. With "real" friendI am happy in all cfrcunistances and on all occasions, The "faireveatlier.friends" are, to me, negligible' que.ntIties. That's why 'when we are together and things go wrong wecannot make the best of a bad job. . Companions .or the storm are rare and precious friends, for they will not only face the elements with you, but the vagaries of fortune and the atones of life as well. But just one last' word before yon apply this test to'yoer "friends. What showleg wottld YOU make if they al/ - plied it to you? - ndfurTieimd,e'sgtey Spee •a wings sMered Millentinms loitered on their way, A While Nature without haste or stay Peopled the nascent world. Till monsters waddled on the land. Or wallowed In' the sea, And pterodactyls aeroplan'cl IVE S DISPLA‘ Ne,c1 Mete o be strong wellseqn41 Mande of Innate, society, of110' It is a feet pyoven by n§itnds grateful letters that ood•V'Salso- parilla is remarkably benefiCial to young et older women. The snost common ailments of Women drain and weaken the system and sOnletimes resnit in anemin, ner- vous weakness, general break -down. Hood' S ,Sareaparilia gives,the blood more 'vitality and better color, makes stronger nerves, and contributes to the length and enjoyment of life. EXHIBITION IN LONDON REVEALS CLEVER DEVICES. Human Race Seeks to Ease die Burden of Labor—Exhibit • Well Patronized. England is attempting to prove, through the medium of a unique or- ganization and exhibition, that an M. Ventor 10 not without honor eveh in Isis own country. No longer must the dreamer, the theo;to ve . taheeslcoopheindg-at ieenateoynsetsimogr- Koitatare swaddled in sinn t and dow, giln heralded by a star some nractical utility or to impnove They swathed my limbs in a sackcloth'r standard appliances, pursue a lonely course, fearful Of' having his revoln- tionaey invention stolen before he has secTuhraeta"hnie8cesp astietnytia the mother of in- vention" is axiomatic, And conse- quently, persons spend montlis, and even years, developing sometime welch they believe -will make the world a better place in which to live, and, from the materialistic standpoint, assure them incremed wealth. - Several years ago the Institute of Pantentees was incorporated in Eng- land, aitd since then has been develop- ing into an baventor's Utopia, where be can go for.advice ane tor assistance in developing and marketing patent. And now, to ;waist him further, an inventor's exhibition threatens to be- come in integral part of his cosmos, tor .t itch an exhibition is now beleg held here, and at it hundred e of ex- amples of ina.n's and woman's ingenui- ty are oft view. While one is prone to wonder dur- On ennui vans lazily. The heavy -gaited tortoise Wept ' A thoesand winters through, And giant efts by inches crept Bach hour a mile or two. By tedious steps through cycles slo i From ape adeanced to man, The cavern dweller with his bow Our wondrous race began. , The calm Greek In 1119 1019ared Itonte I Wrought works the geds might claim And wise unburrying royal Rome 1: DM rieeds -beyond en fame:, ' Bat now our dream is speed, and , speed; • With trutht the mocker sings That Whirl 13 lord aed king indeed IAnd ousts all godlike things. "Faster and faster" still we cry, No matter what the goal: Wo hurry, burry until we die, Nor once possess our soul. • R. Haines, I . Motor to Church • A' rural churth in Ohio has- addated - -a .; plan' t ,is said'Ao have led monm .persons to attend ita services': nit has inapPed out routes that peas.-- the houses of its present and. 'prospective members and has asked owners of autonrobileS to ge the rounds every Sunday and pick up anyone whe -wish- es toride to ehuteh. For many per- sans—especially the old and the in- firm—the knowledge that an automei bile will Call for them makes it easier to decide to go. Saturd4y'S Child., Some are teethe.d en a silver spoon, . -With the stars strung fon a rattle; I cut my teeth as the blasik raccoon, For Implements of battle. AleWool and a Yard Wide. ' The value of an artfele Is not in ilia article itself. It is in the cuiitomer's conception of the article If he doeSn't see value, it isn't there, so fee as the sale la concerned. On a night.that was black as tar, ror some Km -miller and goddeme The opulent fairies be; Dante Poverty gave me my name, And Pahl godfathered me. For I was horn on Saturday, "Bad time for planting a seed," Was all my father' had to say, And, "One mouthmore to feed," Death cut the strings than, gave me life, And handed me to Sorrow, The only kind, of middle wife My folks could beg or borrow.' --Countee P. Cullen. Longest in the Empire. 11 is just OVer a year since Mr. Mas- sey, Prime Miniater of New Zealand, opened at Otira tho longest tunnel in. Ing an impaction 01 the exhibition the British.Thnpire. exectly what prompted the inventor _ _ Tee Sonatheen Alps, which run from to spend countless home of thought North to South of the South 'eland, for and effort over an appliance, a device, many years formed an insurmosintable barrier to railway travel. Rallwa.ys had been constructed to tha. eastern and western slopes of these mounteins but the heights themselves had to be crossed by a dangerous, coaching -road over Arthur's Pass. Then, for a long time, engineers be- longing to the British kleetrie Com- pany were herd at work boring a Ma- ne' through this pass, where the moun- an wrucle, which, to the unimagina- tive, seem to have no practical value, one is assured that the Institute per - Mita nothing to be displayed Weigh has DO Utilitarian place in the echerne of things. . ' Articlea of Every Description. There are articles of every descrip- tion, ranging from a new design in nipple ,5h1e1dS to an improved hygenic kettle; from "au appliance to facilitate tains rise to a height of 3,00 feet. the opening of tins of boot polis -h and The Odra. Tunnel is nearly /Ire end' the like," to a "luminous star cilia dairbeacit mcilnoesnelootning,galnindkformbestwteheenott for use. in the dark." Improvements are witheut number. east and west coasts of Seuth Island. An improved toy balloon rubs ehould- it le now possible to travel from Christ- ers -with an "improved instrument for church in the east of Gresenouth on testing electric polarity." A detach- the west coast without any change at able piton looks disdainfullly at a, all.. "new device for indicating and goy- I Constructed entirely by British erning the speedo, of the clutch shaft, Workmen, using only British materials, laindit,,e, th.propellor sh..o aft f a motor ve- °tire Tunnel is one mn ile longer tha ie I the Severn Tunnel and is the seventh. One woman inventor, no doubt be- longest M the Worldl. come weary of rising at the break of The Simplon Tunnel, on the main dawn to release her chickens, exhibits Paris -Rome railway, is cut through the a ewe which releases poultry automee heart of the SWISS Alpe Or a distance. ticially by the action of an alarm clock, tionfalci2eiethirnalulegsh, t S I I° t a G ohttlh volutionary, "tor transmitting photo- in length. etnd e.b Po refs::: set over night. There is a new method, reported re- also in Switzerland, is nearly ten in lea grapbs, mes,sages, views, moving kinTdke;ngrtehaeteautniateeldifesvteantzte: ti :11,5 ttirs &cones and like devices by wire or wireless telegraphy." and three-quarter eni'n itienel through Horses are renietebeeed by averse the Hamm Matinee -is ilt elassaolut- eneeedw dbeasgiog‘n,gsulanr:nemsdannodt atno eimhalibleoVoeied seTttsh.e nye Inne "fro tuino iin th Canadien Rocklin at Necking Honso nose." Babies come in for considera- tion by inventions of new games, della, BIOS is a marvellous. piece of engin- toys, and even ti perambule tor, Thoes etIrIng. is a "natty'I reversible ovorccri. "ler • the man who would be ws'l ima." A Shawl Weird.' $2 500 The absent-minded are temmtled that • ' they can dery ' �.i Infallible , 'Through Wedding Ring, vice for "se libly imlinating whether One 06 the most _wonderful exhibits alt elecerltenght I sr. ^Inn' in the Indian Pavilion at the leritiehi eenii•se 15 Zeres Empire Exhibition 15 0. shawl made Ga- lt might 000ncriali.4 is expected that tirely of birds' down, such an exhibit'An would be ignored , is 71/4 virile lozig, 4rid 53 inches In the rush of Ieemota life. But such! wide. and -yet it c.sn be rolled up and is not the ease. Hundreds of people pasted through an ordinary wedding visit tne exhibit daily and devote rjn. Valued at 4500, it took three hours to concentrated study of eveey- . years to make, the leathers being col - thing displayed. lected when the birds imoultl and this Many are business men, hopeful of takes place during only two months of discovering something of practical Value to them, an ofecial of the insti-ethe year. i tute asserted, The majority are of the In the Patialtr State Court is a inventors' fraternity, studying the de- stuffed wild bear which was killed by vices and appliances of others with_a the Prince of Wales, and also the view to improvement. speer Med. It has been decided to I present. him with these trophies. At any event the exhibition is 511present. popular idea that the Indian unqualified succees, and there are Pavilion is a replica of thaTej Mahal plans to hold it annually. at Agra Is incorrect. It merely repre- Don't be content with taking things tents Moslem nrchiteeture of et as they come; go after them. medieval period. Many women with disfigured complexions never seem to think that they need an oceasional cleansing inside as well as outside. Yet neglect of this internal hathing„shows itself in spotty, and sallow complexions—as well as m dreadful -headaches ancl biliousness. It's because the liver becomes sluggish, and waste matter accumulates Which Nature cannot remove without assistance. The best --•••••• remedy is Chamberlain's Stomach andLiver Tablets, which stimulate the 11Ver to healthy activity, remove fermentation, gently cleanse the stomach arid bowels and tone the whole digestive system. Sure, safe and reliable. Take one at night and you feel bright and minty in the morning. Get Charriberlarn's today—druggists 25c., or by mail from Chamberlain Medicine, Company, Toronto 15 ulfelE grArdo What thosa niChh�Vo done, Yolican do! 'In your spare time Read -These Amazing et hone you can potty master the•aecreta,of selling that malt° Stories of Sueco.o Star Salesmen. 1N5otover your eaperience has beenawhaterer W." you may be doing npw,—whether or not you think you tan ,alt—. jut answer this oration: Are you umbitiotta to earn 510,000,, yoarl 311o9 get In touch with me at once! 5 will prove to 'you without coot or obligation thee you con' ettelly becoren n Star $ale9ntan, I will 8lititV you how the Salesmanship Training mul Free Employment service of nw N. 5.11".. A. will nolo you to quick BUCCO813 Is , 4,1,4,14 at Yvon," 71VOScir..:' $10;000 A Year SellIng ,Secros TT":M=otod1151;',sggl,l%le0,. re 95 . A, Mt ci;t,Va.1,,t=iity..5tthatse evertot SOd timaiy ot 6..1,1 ot 001.0 rito10No matter Neot 105 lotIC how dll, tho 001 0 l0ng01100 YOu a „Mt404 Ca f.tt, Call to ' ' National Salesine'rait......21q.latfLiaf.r...„....i , , Can,,,d1on Mgr. Uoit 360 oronto, 0 t.