The Clinton News Record, 1924-10-02, Page 2teremereefiaraf/Wraa
,
G. D. He'PAGGART
Marrs) GGART
AGGAI1T 'ERp
BANKERS'
A general IlanicingBlisiness transact-
flid: Notes Discounted. Drafts Issued:
. „
Interest Acwct on Deposits., Salo
Notes Pnrchased,
1'. IZANCE
Notary Public Conveyancer.
Financial,' Real 'Estate and Fire In-
surance Agent,' Representing 14 Piro
Insurance Companies.
Division Court Office, Clinton. N
W. 13RYDONE
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public, etc.
Office:
SLOAN BLOCK CLINTON
DR. J. C. GANDIER
Oflice TIours::---1.60 to 3.30 p.m., 7.30
to 13.00 p.m.; Sundays, 12.30 to 1.30 p.m.
Other hours- bY appointment only,
Office and Residence — Victoria St.
-DR. METCALF.
BA Y Fl ELM, i0NT.
Office Hours -2 to 4, 7 to 8.
Othh
erours appointment,
DR: H. S. BROWN, L.M.C.C.
Office Hours
1.30 to 3.30,p.m. ' 7.30 to 9.00 p.na.
Sundays 1.00 to 2.00 p.m.
, Other hourt
Phones appointmen
Ciflice, 218W- sftesidence, 213J
.DR. PERCIVAL HEARN'
Office and Residence: -
Huron Street Clinton, Ont.
Phone 09
' (.FormerlY occupied by the late Dr.
' C. W. Thompson). .
'Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted.
Dr. A Newton 13ratly, Bayfiel4
Graduate Dublin University, Ireland,
Late Exteen Assietant Master, Ro-
tumid Hospital' for Women and Chlid-
r.en, .
°Bice residencerlately,occupied by
Mrs. Parsoos.
Hours: -9 to .10 -am., 6 to 7 'p.m.
Sundays, --1 to 2 p.m. .
. .
DII. A. M. HEIST:
Osteepathetat Physician.
Licentiate Iowa and Michigan State
Boards of Medical Eiaminers, Acute
and chronic diseases treated. Spinal
adjustments given to rerciove the cause
of disease. At the 'Graham House,
Clinton, every Tueoday.torenoon,
' '50-3MP.
. DR. W. R. NIMMO -
CHIROPRACTIC SPSCIALIST
, Clinton—Residential cane only.
Seaforth---Morsday, Wednesdall
Fri-
day road Saterday. ,
Baltehell—Tuesday and Saturday atter-
- Phone 49, Seaforth, Ont.
DR. MCINNES
Chiropractor -
Of Wingbane Will ae at the ',fatten -
bury I-Xouse, Cantle, on Monday 'and
" Ttursday ferenoons'from 9 to 12 each
week,
Diseases 00 an kinds -,suceeasfully
handled, • ' 0-22"'24"
CHARLES B. HALE.
Conveyancer, Notary Publle, Commis-
iboner efc.
REAL ESTATE AND, INSURANCE
HURON STRBST • CLINTON!
CORLESS
CLINTON, ONT.
District Agent
The Ontario and illimitable Life
and Aecident Insure.nce Co.
GL.,NTON;' 0NtAill0
:forms of Subscription--$2.00,-.Per
advatee, to Canadian addresses;
- $2.50 to tie 'ELS, si 0/.1101. ,l'orefga.
. countries. No paper disbontinued
until' all arrears are paid unless at
Atte option. of the publisher. The
- date to which every subscription is
',Paid is denoted on the label.
Advertising Rates—Transient adver-
tisements, 10 cents per nonpareil
line for first insertion and 5 cents
per line .tor each .subsequent Meer
-
tion. Small advertisements not to'
exceed one Inch, eueli as
"Strayed," of "Stolen," etc., inserted,
.once for 35. c ts, and each . sense-
</tient ince
sertion 15. nts.
Communications. intended for Pnbli-
catien /mist, as guarantee of good
faith; be accdrupanied by4he name -of
the writer,
. ,
G. E. HALL, M. R. 'CLARK,
PrOprietor. • Editor,
Wes Wawanosh Mutual Fire
Insurance Co.
Established 1373.
President, John A. Illortenzle, Kincar-
dine; ViceaPresident, n. L. Salkeld,
Goderieh; Secretary, Thos. G. Allen,
Dungaintoe. Total amount of insur-
ance nearly 412,000,000. In ten years
. number of policies have bacreased
from 2.700 to 4,500. Plat rate of aa
bee $1000. Cash on band $20,000,
fi, L. Salkeld Goderich, Ont
.Weanatevens, Clinton, Local -Agent.-
GEORGE ,ELLIOTT
Licensed Auctioneer for the County
of, Huron.
.correspondenee.promptly answered.
Immediate arrangements can be merle
for babes Date -at The News -Record,
Clinton, in by calling Phone 203.
'Charges Moderate and Satisfaction
Guakanteed.,
13. R.-HIGGINS
Clinton, Ont. ,
General Pire and Life insurance..Agent
for Hartford Windstorm, Live Stock,
Automobile and Sickness and Accident
instrance. Huron and Erie and Cana-
da 'artist Bonds. Appointments made
to meet beetle -a at Bruceileld, Palma
end. Hayfield. 'Phone 5/. '
- The McKillop Mutual
Fire Insurance Companv
Irlead Office, ,Seaferth, 0.nt.
'Of ilEeTCiaY: • -
President, jemes. 'Connolly, Goderich;
Vice, James Evans! Beechwood; Sec: -
Treasurer, Thos. E. Hare Seafeeth.
Diem:aces: George McCartney, Sea -
faith; 0.57. MeGregor„.Seatortli; 3. G.
grieve, Walton; Wm.' Ring, flettforth;
M. , elawen, 'Clinton; :Robert Perries,
alerloek; John Benneweir, Broclhagen;
.Sas. Connolly, Goderich, '
.. -Agents Alex. -Teel tele. ; J. W.
yea,' Godericla ' Ed.' Ilinchray, Sea -
forth; W. Chesney, Egmentiville; 11)
Jarmuth, Brodh5gen4,'
. Any money to, be pale In. may be
paid to Moorish Clothing, Co., Clinton,
or at Cutt's Grocery; Goderiele
Parties- desitieg te affe,ct Insurance
ex, trinettot other eausiness will be
rOMptly. attended to ou' application t�
ny.ot the eneye, efileere etlareeped te
a,"--thelaeadeetatiii jaOSE -Office. LoaeS
inspected by the Dieeetor who lives
neateet the,scene.
_
Four Mountains of troa,.,
CANADIAN 4lIDNAL4AiLWAYS
TIME TABLE
Trains will arrive at and depart trona'
. Clintomas follows:
Buffalo and GoderIch Div.
Going 16t1St, depart . 0.25. ELM:
2.52 „p.m
Gettig' Wetit, ar. 11.10 a.m.
e.03 dp., 6.51 a.m.
" ar. 10.04 p.m.
London; Huron Bruce- Div.
Going South, ar. 7.56 - dp. 7.56 a.m.
sae
4.15 p.m.
Going Mirth, eepart 6.50 p.m.
e 11,05 11.13 a.m.
MORE PRECIOUS
THAN PEARLS
By Luck Williams.,
Witha singlizameacese °bearing the
labels of several Contiaental hotels on
the rack,- Philip Hyde set in a corner
seat of the corridor train, waiting for
it te'stare He eapeered no more in-
teresting than the average coranaercial
' drummer."
Yet about body was secreted a
little ehettfois leatime bag containing
Peal% worth £20,000. •
elle smoked, with a complacent, al-
most bored, air. Certainly he had reae
son to feel plea.sed with himself. He
tad brotight the pearls across the Con-
tinent without the slightest mie.ha'p,
and in an hour or so he would be in
London.
As a courier of a flainial magnate,
he had been employed with others
keepine avatcatul eye on bullion that
was being transported, and then this
special little task of bringing pearls to
England bad beee ehtrusted to hini.
It was a job that had healthy out-
or t
s an
begun toretraap Ins .stops., No sooner
:.;[.4Vho', got ihr(qi 41?.#/er.it'!9,an
WATCH YOUR 1)0(15 ara to r•
'• 50
. The maxi-, time yokl, dos4„ attempts to SOVei.3% utaa. ,,
r
hie, dis-,
Ide,na
joint
impart some important pi0ce. at news '
;to- yeti, 'don't. take any ierece of the of an
ear-sprit,ting yaps 'hat emi's m st of the hnine'
of, the time. Tffey are merely eeteen It.would aPPear that all tlia ants in
ea..peaaa, eenanee' perhaPs to 'distract' nne'nest erleelni 'odor bY'''''Yhich
your attention from his . tail wlitCh` th6f are rnengnizd 'nine h''''ann*7''
Ahreatans to jerk itself, off his fiody and that this power of: recognitiOn hes
'ofin the second: joint of the zintennae,
in the extreme throtis q tl his 'excite- If e firat two joints are removed the
meiit;; ant'is no longer able to recognize t
A dog's tail is nis talking organ, :relations, and will fall upon and is
and the surest index ti:;' his frame of desperateili with its own kroth&rs.
mind. Thn aritnal4'nj'ies and w,tigt' tt Nose number three has the proeeete
under. the th'Pre'98inli °/' ulYire Of scenting -out the frail. We nail AI
it when afflicted, and trails it between scenting for want of- a better Svord,
Jus lege when frightendi but foe ell,w-e know at may
rnagietiCsenAe sihe a sort
Amongse cattle and beasts :Of bur-
' tuilar to that
den, the tail' is a weapon of defence which enables 'one species of termitei
against flien,and other insects. In the to eatabileh..theit nests -se that the
early struggle for existence among
two -ends lies in a line with the Mag -
cattle and horses the question of the
8urv1ya1 of thp fittest was Purelya
question of 'which had 'the strongest
tail.,This has resulted in the devel-
opmet of the'tail muscles of a cow
or a horao to a remarkable degree.
netic Poles,.
The fourth axed fifth Joints are used
to recognize the eggs' and larvae Of
the nest, but the function of the re-
.
mnining noses or joints still remain a
mystery.
When a'horse is struck on the back
with a whip, it switches the spot with Tho ant's antennae make up to it
for 'its lack of eyes and ears. With
ail its immense strength •and untiring
industry, the ant is deaf and blind.
So far as we know it is also dumb.
But although the ant has no eyes, it
is extremely seheitive to light. Ex-
periments have been made by placing
glasses of various colors above an
ant's, nest, with curious results. The
eciltis chosen were red, violet and
The ants loathed
the nervous, energetic one which the- thevidlet light,
its tail. The horse knows it ',vasa,
whip and not an insect, but the 're-
flexive muscles of its tail are so highly
developed that R instinctively switch-
es before the horse has time to tele:
graph the true state of affairs to his
A cow finds it less 'fatiguing to.
keerf up a -Perpetual ttp:and-down
side-to-side mothee with its tail' than e reea ,
horse employs only when there is
actual occasion. • , e
THE ANT'S SECRET SIGNS.
It may seem. ,absurd ,to speak of an
insect's "unknowa" senses, and then
proceed to write about them. Yet that
ants possess senses ,entirely different
fram our nein is a known fact. How
the work we Cannot say, so from the
point of view they are unknown. We perceive vibrations. Put ants on a
I
can, however, see their results. d tap the surface lightly with
' An ant has two horns or ante . ' table annnae, the fingef.. Every ant gives a quick
projecting one on each 'side of its stare So sensitive are they that the
head. These horns are jointed, %he dropping of a tiny bird shot from a
height of only si?c inches on to the
surface of the :table was seen to make
every one of scores of ants give a eon:
vulsive perk. - -
Ants never sleep. They work from
birth to death in a land of darkness
and silenee: Their strength is pro-
digious; and their powers of vitality
are (squally amazing, for in spite of
their good appetites ants have been
lonown to live and work for /ran fifty
to one hundred clays without food,
and after a time 890 ants were count-
ed under the red and green glasses,
but only five under The,violet. The re-
sult of these and other experiments
made by Lord Averbury proved that
ants, in spite of their lack of eyes,
are acutely sensible t' ultra -violet,
rays, which to mar 'eyes are quite in-
visible. taa
And if they have no ears, ants can
number or joints Varying in diferent
species frone four to ehirteenn"
- Each of these joines is "a nose, but
their senses of smell are quite differ-
ent from the feeble organs of. ecent
whickente possess. They are far more
developed than - the nosea of any
warin-blooded animal, for even the
feate of e Well-trained bloodhound or
Of tae wild hunting dog are not to be
compared with those of the ant.
Each of the ant's nos,es 'has a see,:
look, It wauld brine him in personal
tonell with the, ge6a linerlatea -hlailaelt. houses Ma one. side and watste land on
ING INDUSTP
up it tute'-'
" net;
I -1)r DR/\ INSTALLA-
w eated.'into the
I414°,0II,e.IIP:Age..9/IffdcW, The Crowd
below ug it .s ght Some
,where .ff.i.' the 'distance he thought he
AP,F„'AX..khelit,jn.118'111iF;
but it: might
110-#114nOn'his,iinagination. Putting the
baelt into Its, improvised &sill°
, n, le returned to the
window. '
The -people below understood what
he 'wanted, and a forest of. eager arms
was raised, Gentlyd bae-
ket out, and the precious 'burden WE41
caught beforeit -cOuld. toueli the
ground.
The baby was eater but could he get
the pearis?
'Once mare he tried to make his way
along the.emridor, but, spluttering and
coughing, he Was.driveri back into the
He.could do no .rnore., The
jangling hail he had heard had bean
real enough. A fire -escape was rising
to the Windew'at which Ite,stood.
iSe.aerambled - out, and- a fireman,
meeting him halfWay, helped him to
the ground. The crowd cheered, but'
he did not tioace. .He turned and
looked at the building. The part
which contained ' his ,pearls, to the
value of £25,000 -Wk12 ablaze and im-
possible of access. 'A great bitterneati
came to his heart., ,
He wOuld have 'laid tiine to save the
pearls if it had not been for that baby.
N -
Now they were lost.
- For the first time in his career he
had failed. He was responsible for
the pearls. There:was no excuae, I1.
he had remained at thp' lintel the
pearls would have -been in no danger.
He would be diszniesed—disgraeed.
Pushing his' way out of the Crowd,
he wandered aimlessly down a quiet
street near 'by,. His. heart was heaVY,
I -Ie felt someone catch his ann. It
was the yhung-Mother.
• ,"-rott° aved, My baby," she said,
most. cringing ebtaeore ills look. ,"1",
I bad just left the hoteltowire some
one," .
"Yes, •1 saved your baby, but what
about mine?" he returned, bitterly.
He wasenot thinking what he tinS say.
ing. It seemed to hint at thatanoment
that all the world knew of the loss'et
the pearls. "I could have saved the
pearls if It hadn't been for your babe.
Now *I reckon untie will nava to
starve."
ane that, 10 he continued to prove him- tise'
edit. truptwoetity and resourceful,
shouldlead to 'bigger things. Suth
chance add not otnete his way before.
He Chuckled to Ifineself as he thought
c& the. big thinge that one aay he
might be able 10 0* for his pretty wile
an& baby,- '
A perter aisturbed' his reverieby
entering and banging .sotne bag. On
the' rack, The Y belonged to a young
womass with a baby, who seated herself
In the corner opposite to Philip. ,
"Tais is the tent train for Victoria,
ain't it" she esked, nervously, as they
began to pull out. •
Philip assured. her Anvers. and, /V
license of being a father, _engem to
make interesting nbisesat the baby.
"He's Very tired," tfaid the young
mother. "We've been ,travelling all
day and we've sot to go oia to Bead -
ford:"
"Bradford!" 'Whistled Philip. "You,
wen't catch a decent train now. The
one worth taking will have left Lon-
don before We get them"
"Are yea sure?" she asked, uneasily.
"I loamy," said Philip. "I happen to
be goieg to Bradford myrsele, end I've
studied the thne-tables. len staying
-in Londeh to -night and pushing on
first thing in the morning."
"Ch, dear!" She was biting her lip.
"Ansi I thought I should be able to get
to Bradford aeon after midnight."
"I'm afraid you'll have a very long
end tiresome journey if you go ou,"
sea , Plaine; sympathetically. .
"I don't know what to do," zhe ven-
eered. etay .in London, only I
don't know auything about it and how
to go aboirt things. And theee'e the
baby mid the luggage to look atter,"
Philip noticed that she looked tired
anti anxious.
"Lthialc I'd better not go on—for the
's sake," she decided. "'Can you
recohneend any place where 1 could'
put up?" '
"There - is. Ain/116 Hotel," Philip re-
plied. "It'irthe only one I know per-
sonally, but Ws, quite a good plaee."
She made up her mind to go there,
and he gave hei minute directions.
When the traie drew up at Vietoria
he helped her with her luggage' a.nd
the baby. '
She stood on the platform, looking
-helplees and bewildered at the bustle
around her.
011, dear!" he heard her whisper.
Philip's conecience pricked hint. Af-
texeall it was only common decency, to
see the young mother and her belay
safely housed for thee eight. •
"311 look after you," ne said, sud-
denly. "I'm putting up at Khan's my-
self, and we'll share a taxi.,,
Her eyes shone withgatitrle.
Soon they,, were ht the sznall hotel,
where he had the satisfaction •of see-
ing her conducted to a room, while he
went to his own. ,
A telegram was awaiting aim.
"dmile to See me at once," it read.
'Very ireportant.-13aldwin. '
Why did Baldwin want to see hins so
soon? .How did he itnoW he had re:
turned? The necessities of his calling
The world contains at least four- made • him .anspicious., It might be a
Inountlius of solid roe. ore, One le trap, but, on the otlfer hand, Baldwin'
The Iron mountain of Missouri, another might .have. scene urgent attelacase It
Mexico, another .in India and a was 'leo late to wire, and the other was
0001111 in elle interior, of Ateeca.
An Electric Tractor.
In Sweden experimental use is he -
e made of an electric (fractal* for
not on the telephOne.
The only thing to do was to go, awl
be eet out almost immediately.
went part of the -way by Tube,
but the remainder Ile had to wallteilis
route lay through a quiet road, with
•
As he left the hotel two men ehad-
owed hiin. When he got into this lonte
ly road he Maard the soune of footsteps
behind him., 'Gradually his followers
calight him up.
Then,' just before they were abreast
of him, seratething whirled in ilia air
and descended up,oe. Philip's heed with
a terrible thud. -
Ile dropped to the Pavement with-
out a sound, .
When, he came te himself he was
aware of agonieing pains In the head.
Examining himself, he 'tound that his
clothes had been torn .opiaa, -Ile knew
why he had been sandbagged and for
what they had beeh seatching. And
he .congratulated himself upoe having
lett the little bag of pearls Secreted in
aebox Of cigars that was in his sait-
case 'at the hotel '
Lookleg '
'at his- watch he found that
he bed been uticonselous only a. few
minutes.
Be did not trouble to go on to Eel&
win's, He kaew now that it had been
it trap. ,Painfullly though' his head
throbbed, he hurried hack in the al -
rection from which he had come. Hail-
ing' a passing taxi, he instructe the
driver to take him tea Kinies Hotel as
quickly as possible. .
.The episode had shaken him out of
his feeling of security. There was
little doubt, that the pearls were eate
enough at the hotel, but he meant 'to
waste no more time before looking af-
ter them personally..
Tile taxi Inada excellent time. It
stopped with iteerk, and Philip sprang
out.
.The, streetwasmisty with drifting
said the driver, tincoacernedly.
Th street was misty with denting
smoke that p'oured out of the whitlows
and entrance to ailan's Hotel, and be-
fore it, looking, o,p helplessly, was
small geowd of men ana women, and
distracted eervants,
One thought sprang supreme to
Philip's mind. The pearls were in the
hotel.and he must saVe them. Run-
ning forward, he -began '10,1)1101 his
way through the excited crowd.
, .1.1eWas about to rush intuthe smoke
filled-entme whee raameatte,
lila intention, pulled hie -aback, •
"Come Meek, ya51 fool!" steeped the
name "WS ablaze inside. at Leapt lln
In a few seeonds. It *as all'eve could
do to get sefely outsitle after the first
alaem went." ' •
pkilip, stared at him deZetIty. He
wits respons_lble for 'the' Pearls. Be
ought Lot to have left thane nista ,he
must get them at any coat. 'At that
moment appeared it laanlan With White
face caul bluetit% eyes.
"My -baby!". rillO pried, frantically.
"It's in there. Save my baby!"
Then with a.,soream el anguish elle
Tell to the erouna,
EhillY.Pailip emit it was the yozing
Mother whozil he had ;met in the train
"and brought to, the hotel. But the
aafety of the pearls was uppermost in
lila Mind,
Swiftly lie shot forward, recoiling
momentarily a,t a blast Of world szioke
that Met bim.
"The fools.!" he itutteree. "The
' filactale only filled wlth sinoke. They
annzat have been caught in a panic."
The atmosphere was dense, -but
holdieg hi handkerchief to his month
he ran up the stairs. The turmoil
trom the crowd oettide reached him
' "
Thee he heard agaba the wild screern
of the terronracked mother; "My
Baby! MY babY "
It is doubtful if he thought abeut 01
or made any deciskin." .
I The young inother's room lay to the
lett—he had heard the number of it
at the desk:—while his own Ives on the
covridor to the right. He turned _to the
left.. '
First he 'Would get the baby, Then
he would,go baeleno'his own room for
tee pearls. -Coughing atia gespiag- his
way through the emolte that filled the
whole place, he tumbled- his way from
door to door. He Imagined he Could
hear 5 fierce era -eking sound some-
! where,
Room 17 at lase No -event
There, in a small wickerwork bas-
ket, really- the cover of a rush travel-
, ling case which the , mother had JO)-
; ised as a cradle, lay the baby—asleep,
I Seatchieg the child 111, hi arms, he
frkoe't
toT IA PAW lk,4"r°
4,FAC-€. AP'
St-\
40-.S M.i\hifl',E5
M\I F...to,F.S 1'00.1
,
'
,
'1 04:4
She was staring it him with wide
pitiful eyee.
"Listen!" he heard her 1557 111 a low,
frenzied voice. "I—PM not What you
think I km. It was an a sioheme. They
—don't ask me who ehey' are—they
knew about tne pearls and sent that
telegrani to see if you had them on
your 'person, Meanwhile I—I search-
ed your room in your absence."
She stopped, She was trembling
like one bitten with the °W.
"It was my part to get into the hetel
with you," she continued, tptiolfiy.
"TbeY—they made um ,bring the bafY
so that you would not suanect me.
When I had got the pearls from your
room I hid them in the cradle under
the baby. 'Vlten you .saved any b'aby
you flayed the pearls as well." •
Re was Oaring at her in amazement,
Was she mad? •
"nnetter do it now," she whispered,
distressfully, "I am some things, but
that is ray.baby, and even to Me
there are SOree things more precious
than pearls." '
She thrust ifito his hands it little
leather bag that held eontents 10 th, e
value of 425,000, and before he could
collect his scattered senses sbe. had
vanished into the night.
Starting at Four.
So—the Southdown beat tias 'were
smoothed end brushed,
And the feathery, geese and Jersey
Then. the clock was wound; the house
And'wlosi:hlifeBlilledtol your dream.s. you
knezy not hOW.
For tomorrow open.ed the county fair,
How you shiveiel said thrilledd at
'joys in store-- ,
At the hamper packed told waiting
- there
And thb magical word-,-,PWe'll start
az four."
There wore silver maples tilong the
•
TION OVER 277,600
HORSE POWER.
. •
Ontarioand.per.
Quebec,ow'.Lacking
Native Coal D'eposiis, Lead
h:jWater
The recent revival of activity In the
mining industry of. Canada has stress- ,
ed tile necessity of,ample supplies of
power available at a cost that will'
permit of the production and treat-
ment of, large quantities of raw ma-
terials 10 the districts in which: the
tnines.,occur. The extent to which;
this need has been met by the develop-
ment of Canada's advantageously lo-
cated water powers' has' been made
the subject of special study by the Do-
minion Water Power Branch.
-The theory is often advanced that
Canada 18 likely to become. the lead-
ing mineral -producing -country of the
world, and considerable gronnti for
this assumption is found in the fact
that the Dominion contains 16. Per
cent. of the, world's „known coal re-
sources, ,bas greater .asbestos,
and cobalt .deposits than 'any other
country, -and ranks third in the pro-
duction of old, whilst the diversity of
her mineral endolvaient is indidated
by the 'fact that the three inain. divi-
sions,. metallic, non-naetailla; and
structural and eiay products, include
some 60 Menefee' items, 17 of which
had, in 1923, a .productIon, value of.
$1,000,000 or over. . •
Average Annual -Five-Year Value.
•
algaree of total peoduction fell -to
eonvey the proper hunressicin of the
magnitude of the industay ob. accopen
Of the diversity of product and 31.1114
111VOI,Ved, whilst' the varying prices at-
' -eilant upeertietuating Market email-
MELICO eoreputatione of vele d'ff
cult. 'Probable,- the fairest -Conception
of the value of. tele °input may be Ar-
rived at by 'setting that the loweat
value since 1910 was that for 1911;
viz, e10321,900,. the highest that for
1920 when a Value ofa$227;86000.0 was
rea.clied, ;while the average annual
value during the last aye -year period
. .
amounted to 24.94,e67,0_00. As cora-.
modity prices, reached a peak in 1920,
and haie since, teitheed, eroduction
computed, in terne of yalue is not a'
Pali basis for'conmarison. A weighted
index shelving the Volume of *glue.
Mee would untIonateely mark 1923. as
banner year in Canada's enueral
industry; new output records being es-
tablise te„that year fee coal, lead,
zinc, aebeetos, and for the -vallue of
cobalt. „
T.he prineipal uses- of levier in mill-
ing are for tenenressina air for drill-
ing; driving 'radars or engines for
%Mating; haulage of ore above and. be-
low ground; driving one crushers and
conveyers; putiming for water supply -
and for the eemoval of ground water;
lighting; heating; ventilating; signal-
ling; machine; blecicemitla ana fram-
ing, shops; and for various electeittal
metallurgical processes. Even in the
comparatively simple mining proeess-
es Involved In the recovery of coal, as
Much as 10 per tent. of the product
may be consumed in generating the
power required
p, '
Total installation for' Mining
urp6,09
Prom, estimates made by the DO,
littttrali 'Water Power Branch His cons-
putee that" at January lst, 1924, the
hydraulic isastallation for mining pur-
poses' inaCanada had reachad
ea a to
of 277,600 lime of. which e33,000.11,p, is
pure/lased front central electrie sta-
tions, An conservative estimate of the
capital inveetment necessary to de.
velop this power is $74,009,000.
From the point of view et minerals
ltail the development of mining, Cana-
da may be divided into five main
melee, - the Maritime Provinces, Que-
bec, Ontario, the Prairie Provinces,
and British Columbia and the Yukon.
Each of these areas. pessesses bergs
w
resources of water poer developed Or
available, for developrnent far mining.
With the'ereeptiott of some of tbe coal
fields of the Central Plain there is tio
mineralized area for which ample
power cannot be made a.vallable, This
Is Particularly this ease in Ontario and
Ouebee, which, being situated in the
acute fuel area ah .Canada, would be
almost ehtiredepexideat upott coal
Ate they etiaght'ait the moon antl
held the Moon' a
'While a mocking bird took shine for
day
And was trilling it,s morning song
top soon:
There liad,beon a: fog like a lain that
night;
With the wlieela Of the spiders'
rnist.gray lace;
And the road thd under boughs dreech-
eed .
While they Icily sprayed each up-
turned face.
'With a tinkle-tink on a Shadowed ridge
There were cattle a -grazing down
the -,dawn;
And wheele yang out on a ghostly
And a whispering creek was past
and gone.
,
01) tlse stm 05109.1513 on an unknown
land, '
F'roin a tapering hill you did not
There were smell neat farms om. either'
Ahda shimmoring haze hung far
'There wei'.'o :dreway croonings like
broken thries;
And the wheels tie, they -turned
seemed' drowsy ice.— r
, Then you 'woke from•-ereams Of fairy
IhIIOON
' Lot,. 111errY-g0;r0lina' Wee -.Calling
• ,
-,-Goz.truile West, in,--Zonth'A.- coppan.
051
1'),'ench acientist 'says there are
1,000 .poisonoup gesea, that ere- avail,:
, „
ith1.0 foe wee, otakes a thousand.
Moreamasons .wiry there should be no
,
Of
, apafee et
15 thelia days.
- 510 Otber,46j64leirie 0058 von get
t"ble. muclisaht relIu .444n,hitcgtnlayi ecilocteoeteast d
trTr
te()i
nzgtrreilaeite21ts
°f7PVerlarel'YttainUd4'hiwb 111%eleCiBfij1
cillina°,
The aerie ie sratill, only steaspoonful
Roost's Slilaaparilla /8 a woliderful
toni medicine foe the blood, storas
aoh, liver and kidneys, prompt- M
giving relief. It is pleaeamt, to take,
agreeable to) the Stomach, gives a
' thrill of new life. Why not try ?
itnp-orted "from the 'Crane! ,P'tatee8 wet's'
It not for hydraul p
Available and Developed Power,
The department's lafeet table et
available and developed -Water power
in Canada, corrected to Pelireerry lat,
shows a total available 24-hour power,
at 80 per cent, efficiency, of 10,22e,315
hep. at ordinary ralninium Bow, anti
32,075,998 lipat ordinary six months'
flow, and a total tuebine installation im
Canada ot 3,225,414 hp. Reference to -
the table; shoWs the fortunate distri-
bution of water power throughout Can-
ada. The two provinces without rm.-
tive-eoal,. Ontario and Quebec, lead in
the possession and dtil4zation of Water
wpohwereer, ofn011y10.Wit:dni-teelOcgoealS'i ibriyfaMuantidl..terbsa,
.
far as information is available, there
Is no .prespective-mineral area: in the
Demittion, with the exception of some
of the coal fields of the middle plains,
where hydraulic energy cannot 130'
111500, n'tirbille/arloleilo.us Py-jamas.
It is dangerous to wear Tinian* hr -
_ .
In that. Balkan city the inmates of
the lunatic asylum wear palamso at ail
times, and modern night attire has ac- ,
cordingla - become 'aseociated with in- ' . '
saeity. , •-•,- '
This gave rise to an amusing mieun- ,
derstanding recently. :-.A. young man , I
had "rendered. out: of, his garden- in
PYSarnas One sultry night. Hearing the
distant strains ot an orchestra he
wallred,a: little way` down the road in.
the directien-ot the -sound. A. police-
man saw bite' concluded he was an es-
caped lunatic, and arrested him. '
Next morning, e -hen he was to be
taken to the police -enure he asked for
soteething to coveaahis head. The
police, anxious le humor the 'aunatic,'
gave him a wastepaper basket. No,
-wonder people turned to stare as his—. -
escort maiened nina through the street_
in pyjamas arid basket. .
Still Worse Wee the plight of the
-
householder who friend, a burg/Ate .M.
his' house and chased. him -till the
met a policeman; The householder
Wee 111.PYjn-Inef4, and tough he tried to
give the burglar le. charge, the astute.
law -breaker turned the tablos. by de -
mending Toone. from a madman, Se
theamiglar wei allewed to go free,,,
Whila--the. other man spent the night .
in the male. - . '
The P,erilousp..0;ag.an. of Other
There was znention a little while ago,
In a provincial paper of the discovery
of an tele "church barrel mon," said
to have been in the poseession of one
family for over a hundred years. 30 11.
is a genuine specimen of the mechani-
cal organ which In far -oft days did
duty in village churches, we have rea-
son to believe that the congregations
of those ceurchea were in considerable
danger of nitzsical confusion, ,Por we
note that while this &arta barrel -or-
gan was perfectly in. order by reason
of three hymn -tunes, it also could give
nt "Jim Cirow," anti "Penny Jones,'"
not to speak of "Scots wire hae," and
'Home, Sweet Horne." What haeilea-
ed In those moments when the organ-
ist's attention strayed presuming
that the aforetime organists were B115.,
ceptible to a wealtneso, not entirely un.
known to organists of now—can be
ipullaaegeluteolsinAg ca"hgyrrnagna,ttildrteizatniag let st
the organ the strains of "Jenny :tones,"
might reasonably be excused for un-
churehlike Marne, while the excite-
ment of the organist cam easily be
imagined. Clearly, to be in command.
of such an instruntat had its trials.
Then, as now, to press the wrong but-
te/I-Meant disaster for the organist,
Tit for Tat.
'Visiting Spineter—"What a charm-
ing little chef)! Ho* old are you,
deCaril"rming Little Chap -:"Six in No-
vember. How old are you,"
,rv,c41AgscrsYki
esalatealeteerratiantatte
MC,i
46, c..,— .e
.,.
There isn't a member of the family need suirer from indigestion, sick
headaches, bilionsness, fermented etortutch, etc., if he or she will take
Chamberlain's Stomach and Litter Tablets. They demise the stomach ,
and bowels and stimulate the liver to healthy activity and tone up the
whole system. Take one at night and you're RIOHT in tbe morning.
atogeg,,250, or bfloall from Charnil-rialn 'Medicine Coinpany, Toronto, 16
le'r4r7V
.71,14,64,,Esole
s,oreretteelaegeoaltet44t.a.,,el..
'
rut
„ 141A .11, 1i
soeitea-o
•
amd . ei azint)". , at Adak 7.5`.: earl vela Incatte e,ccercei of holing t fit wok.
Storm ..4 0 ',41,4 ' -Stat. $iklearam4 leneover yo5r. experionte, hns beos-mbstever
t., 0 ,* ,,„.:7:,.1. 1,,, , 44..1ts dairtif nov-,-wbottier or 14 ylt, think Yfn, 151/ ten-- '
Itioff,ttrin40 bat 4103'0,Br 4110 /Itirialli AS /Or, #,177131tIONB to am *10,000 a
**,,* ., owe mos cot in °Itch wit int, it *tool "I v91 V.07Q 'C''' 50"
3, do ono .0 'without .E001. Y.' 5histia,95 t, t Yurti 44113 ths115, bcootho o, Star
r°..'
oft
ia . SaThsmvUl• ll -,414how 5,00 tww i'ho sateeneite ip Training ahd
/Ergo a4114053toot Sorylte of 1170.1i 8, T. A. Win bOlt Yttl to quilt
0510 0 tOcerks ta aell15. --
1 'v$1 1)1' 000 A Year Selling; See<retc.
4. ,,,..V.....i.6,744."410*On.7.17.0. '47i'7‘ -'•ea:- '. 7.
, i °II e :loofa. of 047 Sacomanollfp 00 to050t 05 Olt K. 5, 1 A too
',:gri141511';Or6's,111g11;s1'1'etVIt11 5:71vo? 1_1"PAtin,2d,t5;1°87.51,,,`,"r°,,,,,,,arl'ds7ioY
-tee now iloloo filo 501%! a tailor olfaro to:. PK...2,', 0.." '.2."'"
44,
National Salr-rrer.'s Training Association "'