HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1925-01-15, Page 2o4Traft
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esued.. until t.11 aeatsare paid nnless at
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Paid: 4ftiOtfqd on the label.
T. RANCE '
Public conveyancer,
Real TEstate and Fire
eurOnle Agent., RePresenting 1.4
ea -manes Companies. ,
orOISion Court Office, Clinton.
n.
re
W. BRYDOI"E-
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public, e
SLOAN BLOCK ., CLINTON
. DR. J. C. OANDIER
Oflice Hours —1.30 to 3.30 pan., 7,30
to 9.00,p,on. SundaYs, 12.30 to 1.30 P•md
, Other hours by appointrneM onlY.
Office and Residence viotoria $t,
DR. METCALF
DAYFIELD, ONT.
Office Hours -2 to 4, 7 to 8.
Other hours by appointment.
ItR. II S. BROWN, L.Ni.C.C,
Office Hours
1.30 to 3.30 pm. 7.30 to 9.00 P.m
' Sundays 1.00 to 2.00 p.m.
Other hours by,appointment.
Office, '218W Residence, 218.
DR. PERCIVAL. FIEARN.
• office and Residence: '
Huron Street Clinton, Ont.
Phone 69
(Formerly occupied by the late' Dr.
C, W. Thompson).
Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted.
'Dr. A Ne•tlikall Eradv.BavfeU
i.n.litiate Dublin University, Ireland.
Late Extern Assistant Master, 'Rot.
tluida Ileiabiten for Women and Child-
ren, Dublin.'
0.111u' at residence lately onnuPlea by
Mrs. Parsons.
Hours: -9 to 10am'
, 6. to 7 p.m,
Sundays, ---1, to 2 p.m.
• DR. A. M. HEIST
OstoopethetIc Physician.
Licentiate Iowa and Michigan State
Boards of hIedical Elouthiers. Acute
and ehronic diseases treated, Spinal
adjuetmente given to retrieve the cause
of disease. At the Graham 'House,
Clinton, -every. Tuesday foreuoOn.
DR. IVItINNEg
Chiropractor
Of"Winghare, Will,he at the Commerc-
ial Inn, •Cliaten, On Monday and
Thursday forenoons each wee/c.
Mimeses of MI Itinda successfully
' handled,
CHARLES 13., HALE
' Conveyancer, Notary Palette; Commte.
. skater, ate. .
REAL ESTATE 'Algp INSIIRANCE
HURON STREET - CLINTON
" . ,1111. T. CORI ASS
CLINTON„ ONT.
_ District Agent
The Ontari0 and Equitable Life
and Accident Insurance Co.
West WaWriosh NitItuA Fire
Inslitr.thICe" Co.
Established 1878, ,
President, John A. 1110,kenzie, Khmer -
dine;• VIce-Preeident, H. D. Salkeld,
Gbderich; Seceetary, 'rhoe.' G.. Allem,
Dungannon. Total amount of Molar-
iirecettearly $12,000,000, In ten years
, number of policies have inerearied
from 2.700 to 4,500, Plat rate of $2
per $1000. Case on hand $28,000,
H. LmSalkold - ' Goderich, Ont.,
Wes. Stevens, Clinton, Local Autrot,'"
* GEORGE ELLIOTT
Licensed Auctioneer for the County
, of Huron. `
, Correspondence proteptly. answered.
Iminediete arrangements can be made
for Sales Date at The News -Record,
Melee, or by calling.Phone 203.
charges Moderate and Satisfaction
Guarahteed.
B. R. HIGGINS
Clinton, Ont.
General Fire and Tete Insurance - Agent
fer Hertford ,Witilstorm, 'Live Stook,
Automobile and Sickness and Aooident
'Insurance, Huron and trio and Cana-
da Trust Bends. Appointments made
to raeet parties at 13rucelle3d, Varna
and aYfielel. 'Phone 47.
'The. MeKillop Mutual
Fite' Insurance Company
•' Head Office, Seaforth, Ont.'
DIRECTORY: ,
President, Janoes Connolly, CoderIch;
Vice, James Evens, 'Beethwood; Sec. -
Treasurer, Thos, E. Hays, Seo.forth,
Directors:. George McCartneY, Sea -
forth; D. 3'. McGregor, SeafOrth; S. G.
Grieve, Walton; 'Win. Ring, Seaforth;
M. mstwen, Ointon; Robert Ferries,
Elarlock; John ,I3enneWeir, Brodhagen;
Sae, Connolly, .GoderIciii.
, 'Agents: Alex. Leitch, Clinton; J. W.
veo„ coderich; -8388. Hinchray, Sea.,
lort11; W. ,G110811eY; Egmondville; R.
,.„..13".-irarinuth,13rodhasen• '
Any money, to be paid in May be
paid to Moorish Clothing P50,, Clinton,
or at Cutt's Grocery, Gdilerieh.
Parties desiring to affect Insurance
'iv transact other bhsinee wJJl. be
'promptly attended.to•oti application to
any of tha above b'filcers addresSed to,
their ,resnective Pest office.. .Losites
inSpeeted by the. 'Director Who liv.cs
nes,reSP,the, scone, -
CANADIAN, Anti
tRAILWAYS'
, TIME TABLE
Trains Will arrive at and depart front
Clinton as follows:
Suffato and Goderich Div.
• -• -Grung East, depart •e,25
t, 2.52 P.m,
GOing West, ar. 11.10 a.m.
r. 6.00 dp. 6,51 'p.m.
10.04 p.m.
Loudon, Huron el. Liritce Dly,
Going South, ar. 7.56 dp. 7.56 a.m,
Golng Noo'th,depart 0.150 pan:
" 11,05 11.13 a,m,
•
Ft/eternity losuranee.
.1.11.11g.oria.bas it„ oysterof la', , tornity
'
u,sarshiec, g1vIrt4' 'the woman ,insured
saes, during childbirth -and a caSh
benefit for three IlolIthO after th'e
iiirth 08 sc 011114, '
Advertl" d'ollatie--Tratisiont adver•
liserti,„0:4I,K.:=10 centsPer, nonPareil
ttet Insertion and 5 ,cents
„ Per ,'/irtegor. each subsequent Wier-
011.,..adverttseinents: not to
`kiltich, snob as
tStolen," etc., inserted
„ , 'Cents, and each 1ubse•
"ttOh. 15 cotits •
CoinmeniChtions intended for
cationmo it, as a. guarantee of, good
faith, be accoinpanier.1 by the name of
the writer. •
a. F. HALL, I. 81.:CLARK',
Proprieor. Editor.
. „ .
'.I MUSIC IN THE HOME I
Speaking before the Delphic Study
Club in Montreal recently, upon the
need for music in everyday life, Mrs.
Sautes McDougall broached a most
useful, • entertaining and upto-date
topic of service to alt, and especially
germane to our own day and genera-
.
tion.,' That music is one of the oldest
arid finest or arts, nobody in these
days will deny. The. lowest savages
have some, Instruments from which
,
they coax sounds which to them mean
harmony, and the highest of civilfau
nations have • brought the 'musical
score to a woederful PReh 00 Perfee-
ton, There' is ,scarcely any inert ma-
terial oat of which musical strains
cannot be developed—metals and
Weed and bone a.nd leather and glass
and paper and stone—a11 10 turri•be-.
come interpretative agents of the sub-
lime art, whilstia mere glance at the
difference between, say a KaillrzY10.
phone and a modern church organ will
suffice to tell us how the musical
talent of the human race has in the
course of tho ages developed. Music
is no longer an extra er a luxury of
life. it stands as the language et fine
emotion the world over. In. the Pur-
euit of musical study and endeavOr
we have simply improved upon ' the
hint of the winds.and the waters, and
followed.the lead of nature as well as
the native impulee of the luttnan
heart. '
There are few persons but .have
some ear for xnusic, and, the' airerage
individual although, no "profee.sional"
can manage to troll forth a hearth-
and.home ditty or in aelsembly help 10
"turn a tune." And et all inueic, that
oft he voice Is the sweetest, the most
affectIng,, and t•he heat. To say noth.
log of the Choral trganizatiens or the
efforte at "cominunal. 'singing" which
have fortunately beconle Popular, „the
ordinary vele° ean be trained so as
to. .render home Songs In a pleasing
manner, „and, „eonsidered merely as a
'recreation this 'exercise is enthunitly
worth while,.. Geed senge are .cheap
enough, It le es foolfeh to'negleet the
cifiture of the voice because wecan-
not sing Eke Caeutio or Melba se it
would be to despise our native speech
because we eatinot "orate" Iike De-
moethenes. Tile trite tsection of so8sg.
is tot to ranch Money or so ,muclt ap-
Plallae per bar. 11 18 to express good
feeling and cultivate good friendship,
to adtl aleerful element to social, life,
and to lift lip the soul la retiolchige-
the Beene Med of ininulSe as persuades
us to seek companionship with sun.
'Shine and. with, ovrera. ,Indeeti, what is.
color if not latent eong? And—by the
:way—it isnoticeable that the greatest
of singers (Moose thesonga that by the
average amatettr are deemed "infra
dig" or too hackneyed for Use. This
Is a huge mistake, For the expendi-
ture of a dollar or thereabout a "folio"
of ivorld-famous aortga tan be bought
whieli there le enough practice for
a lifetinte, 'and a ccillection of favor-
ites. whose inspiring strains 'will neyer
die to leag a8 there is a human voice
to give them sympathetic utterance,
If there is not too Much isstrument-
el music, there is too little of the voCal
kind which can be got by personal
study and the effort to warble. 'We buy
our music second-hand:We pay ethers
to chant tor use 'The graphaphofte and
the radio senora does the Work for us.
ThIS is rather a pity, because the pro-
per effect of such aids iehetild he to
stirnulate and increase the volume of
theledy we ourselves have conquered,
or at last. made our very own. It
takes seven years to fetch a. violin in.
to excellence of tone, Cannot we de-
Vot as much to .cultivate 'the tones of
the huinan. voice.? It means amuse-
ment, recreation, health; a, cure for
jaded nerves and a' delight with
shade of stirrow,
"Is there a heart that music cannot
stir?" So'aslce. the poet, neattte, and
In the self-gaine spirit we may endorse
all that Mrs: MC'Dougall so aptly urgod.
The mei° music in the home the bet-
ter. •
,
Electricity from thite
The idea of atiliiilng the electrileity
in the atmosphere for indnstrial, and
other purposehas always been a .f.a.s.
cloleting 000,; , . ,
Mr. BlfattachalTY:a= P5001 ,Ben-
gal,' has ex.perimAted, with large
paper and .linen kites. .These Were.
wound with anetwork of copper wires,
and it proved deslrahlo later to resi
place the eopPer wire by ,sliver, owThg
to the rapid,.„oxiclation of the
surfaes. ,
The kites „rese to .eight or nine hun-
dred feet, when it, Was iound. that,
sparks doold be drawn at sho 'inter-
vals from a ilisilla6t1 .ted atisiellochl:0;„
the, lower hatchet' the metal hite-string.
The inte'rmitiont ,sparin were made:
mean, of
to yield t1a/t“Ytt01,11P,ting'
vice.
Experimell o v lieing i
wireriluini ill ons• 'filled . lit,
, ,
hydrogen; ,g
,
_
,One ,Outpet ef'
Thd; Bin -isms rnoniler Mine tn. Sonill
Africa' llaa Produced nearly 0100,000-
1000, -ttortli.. Of dial/lends, • '
"Bras,just think of it yourani riend ..,g
"Can't it? Has tiny one
It can't be done, ul”
.,thed11.3-a.a7cliens'gt
Eric ---fon,' , hundred i-c•Ws of Plie‘liPlii_e,
with a' stormy sea helow, 'and 'the" .still to eom0.
chance ofi 51 vin,, to ,iladas two 'Os' "i' ,tif the fishermen
at once, eaoh big an`di" strong •enough lrgliiv ey 'letting Bins down to
to kill a man :with one stroke. You're ,the noot with n rope over the brow of '
a brave follow, I know, 'Put Nirhai's the 'prechoise, Holl fast."now, Eric, '
the good orthrowing away your life if you ever did in youi• life." • 1'
50
04,
in hxYint; a thing that's impossible?" It was, indeed,'"a 'terrible venture.
"Weill, I mean to tirY it, anyhow." The Eolitary figure, swinging in the
i So spohte Eric Ejornson, a tall, ac- empty air at that fearful beigln, look- . ,.
tive, blue-eyed young Norseman from cal no larger than a spider, dangliog sons 011
ilammerfest, to whom the stormy on its thread. For lielMv hire i'lie, Noe, Scotia.
waves and terrible rocks of the north- waves were ,thundering against the
eln seas werO like old playmates. "As vast, black cliffs in great spouts of
brave as Eric" was already a proverb
throtigbout the whole distriet; and
had you seen hini clinging half -way up
a tremendous precipice; hundreds' of
feet above the roaring sea, or.fighting
Isis way egair.st a March gale with Down he came--edown, down, town
tile waves raging around him so -nearer and nearer to the nest, when
mightily that at times his' litt,le boat, suddenly a sharp cry of dismay broke
was quite hidden from sight, you from one of theanen
would .certainly have thought he did "The eagle1 the eagle!"1 exclaimed
not know what fear Meant. 13 ut the Ite, as a huge; black shade et. soared
work that he had in hand now was up from the ledge on which the nest
one from which even; et. brave man stood. "There she goes eight at Min!"
might well ehrunk. . It was true. The mother eagle had
Two er three days before, a smart come raging foreh to defend her itest,
steam -yacht had anchored off one of As 'she swooped at Erie, he strimilt 'at
the little Norwegian villages, with a her with his long sheath -knife. She
rich Englishman on. board, wilco had fallback, circled around him, and then
gone all over the world hunting for pounced again. , • .
rare eggs, of which he was making a "I'll try whether nay duck -gun won't
collection, reach her," grovrled one of the watch -
Having learned from the piloters below, etooping to -take up the
who
earlY .deys,
cannots' r c
shown at BatIolty I
tea
• 'Illy little oriel.. Slip calls me he
foam,,,while the howling wind; which
was fast rising to,a -storm:dashed.. the
41aling climber 'aghne and again liPert
She cruel rock's that jutied • out '00
brought" him in that two eagles of trusty weapon,
very rare breed had, built their nest But before .he could seize it the
upon a small,rocky islet, a few miles crisis came. Eric struck at the eagle,
distant, upon which no man had ever Missed it, and instantly the cruel
yet been able to find footing, he had claws fastened on his shoulder. But
instantly offereel—for is single egg a before the terrible beak could strike,
sum of tummy which seemed to the one fierce, upward thrust buried the
simple fiehermee of the Lofeoder4 hide broad blade hilt -deep in the bird's
a perfect fortune in itself; but the re-, breast, arid thee great, black body
ward seemed likely to wait some time plunged headlong down the awful;
before any one claimed it, for the nest depth below. ,
On EU& Islet was, to all appee.rarice, In another moment Eric's foot was
as far beyond their reach as if it had upon the ledge, and the precious egg
been in. the moon. • safe in his nevelt. Poor fellowl he did
When it got abroad, however, that not see the black Spot tar away in the
"Eric Fear -nothing," as they called sky, growing heoacler and 'blacker
him, meant to ,attempt the feat, his every instant, as the other eagle came
comrades shook their heads. rushing to its vengeance; bet he saw
"He's a lose man," said a weather- something else that made even his
beaten fowler, Who knew what crag- brave blood run cold.
climbing was, "for the thing can't be The knife-strolce that missed the
done, and he'llsnever be "content withS4eag1e had hit. the rope' that sustained
out doing em. righti for being' such
a .him, alit fdeweutsLt.p.srolansewarLye Terfotut othatar
fool," growled a crabbed old pilet, bis Weight. IIVI* a moment he felt sick
with a fate like the corner of an iron mid giddy -from sheer horror. Then he
fender. "All the ,money in Norway blew his whistle ehrilly, and his com-
can't bring a rnan to life.again when rades above, recognizing the, eignal of
he's once broken his neck." danger, Began to haul him ,up might.
Two days later, however, some men,, and main. .
who Were coming back' from their
Rthat dreadfal ascentlaste
fishing early in the morning—if one ed, Eric Could never have told. As he
ovv. long,
Might call "morning" in a region; saw, the oheeteeet ,reloe ee which :hie
where the sun never sets for eight
weeks together—started and., rubbed. life depended sgraping against ledge
after ledge of sharp above hi
their eyes in amazement as they PISS-, he seernad
; rock m
ed under the tremendous • cliffs of to die a thousand deaths it;
one. -And now the male eagle,,,evith
Eagle Ialet, which Tose giesr up out wings outspread and head stooped
of the gee like a mighty wall, black viciously forward, darted at the faint -
and grim against the clear. Summer, ing man vim an even, erein a vow. 11
sky; for there, en the highest point
i
of that terrible precipice, 'where no , - • ,, , , th
Bet iust then tterg came a flash
initnan foot bed ever rested' before, ana a. bang zr m ph, low, ana e. sav-
etOod the figure of a man. . . e.
Inge b1r1 dropped into the eea, like a
' "Thab meat; be Eric Year -nothing., deem, whale Erte,"cozzy, helpless, and
"; seareel able to Move, was dr „ga ged
for no one elee. could have done itri f l Y -to ' the to of the eliff by his
Muttered one of the fishermen. sa ' e Y. ' 13
shouting companions.
"Yes," said another; "he's dohe his '
'Work, A bold fello'w', indeed!" i "Well, fri°1da,'' said he, when he
But thaY were mistaken. so far had recovered sufficiently to raise him-
fromAtiving done his weritiErie was Self from the ground with the help of
only jUst begiening it. Heluid wage. his aarnraaea, "I'l never so, again
ed around the island till he satisfied that I Want to know What fear is like.
himself that the only place wheretit I know now and I; shall not readily
could be scaled WAS on the opposite forget ite" ' .
side from the nest. 1 And Eric never djel forget it as long
Thither he had gale, with three of aa he lived.—Ey David Ker.
THE PROTECTOR OF
THE HOUSEHOLD
By Georges Pourcel
Tranelated by
William L. McPherson *
When -she entered the office, roaa-
slvo, vigorous, solidly planted on her
feet, Irene l'ertnis cast a glance at
her niasculine colleagues which seem-
ed to take possession,of the entire as.
setablage. She announced iinmediate-
ly that sho wile still unmarried, in
spite of her fixed propensity to make
great sacrifice.
That declaration iMpressed her near-
est desk neighbor, Arthur earlier, as
pale as a gleam of MOOnlight, a poor
little widower whom his wife had al-
ways hanpeeked:
.
"In toy opiniom" Irene alaserted.,'"a
wife ought not to trespass on the per-
senality of her'husband," ,
"011 that proposition," Arthur tuts-
wered,, 'I think we shall finn virselves,
of 000
They did, and. themselves of ono
rind, arid very ,mtickly. . A •month, af-
ter • Ir6ne'n, .arrival they announced
tlieir marriage.
,owhat: t ,especially alduLi her,"
Arthur, explained, "is' her breatitir..of
snirit. She understands „Perfectly , the
lsnoband'4 role which la' (me of•aoth-
,t mid prOtection."
' said, this' in a mild Nome, wial
eaadlai...,.eyes -of :a email, boy ,who
Inc. be Bo stibjectione leene,
itor ,:o,rnlie7„dirl net
godeoverfibWed with teedernese, and'0084i
P4gtloi.
y:
l.tilIefnlehig of
In till 011-
totWould bet -
31n dgt11](1s*0 'Olilirtlie" the yea'
master , 'xporionce
fclicitY„.
After a 'two veal abseuce 1 mat on
the street, his ar'mo filled' with pack- '
ages, Iny old comrade, Arthur Carlier,
hie face rosy and bie step elastic,
"It was my wife," he said, 'who ac.
complished the metainorphosia, What
a Wonderful wife! She makes ,me
prodigiously happy. Above all he
respects iny personality, on that es-
sential point, you know, I would aever
have yielded. But you nntst come and
see us. Take luncheon with us if you
want to Ireow what eoulugal Ilanni.
ness is."
• 1 •ecruid not refuse such an opportuni-
ty .To see a proelgiously happy couple
18 net eo common a spectacle
Mmo, Irene had lost note of her au
-
thorny 1 fotind linr exactly as I had
known her before—with an imperious
lip and a voice short and deelsive
even in, the smallest matters I
Arthur,wearing a white 03800,
little one. Then She hisses me; you
Will ,see at dessert. • Ah! The other, '
the first one, would never have done
that, She had no respect ftlr MY Per'
s on ality !" •• ,
'"Are you taking roastdrd again? '
You know very well that it doesn't '
agree with you any lenger,, Don't eat
so much Meat. .You, 51011 have IndSt
gestion"
,
• She watched over him; Minionlenea
him, suppressed him He obeyed with
the -docility of it child, In the division
which She had made once for all of .
their 'respectiveattributions, she had
reserved for herself all political ideas I
and literary opinions. She expressed ;
these with great force and impressive-;
nese., She judged, dissected, analyzed
and did ,wonders generally. Ide never
contradicted, accepting everything she
said with enthasisem
,"Wheia are you goihg to take me to
the' theatre?" o
"One eif these days, if you are good,
I will tithe you to the Pratateis to see:
Horace or Cinna." '
Corneille's plays," she explained to •
me, "are excellent for him. They aro
a tonic. They are a saw° of heroism
and greatness of soul They,strengthen
hie will, which is a little flabby He
adores, them, and also the cape and
sword plays. I am afraid that. he will
end up by being a Don quixote."
I gave a start, fer at that moinent
the musketeer was .engaged in a
lent alt reset t Olt ' 110
A Girl s .Ambition.
• Dr, Margaret YR:Kellar, the mission-
ary*, came to Canada from the iligh-
land,, of Scotland as a very small
child. Her Lather was a, sea captain,
who' lid been going back and forth to,
pulls.; when ho 03.010 to Canada he
plied his Vassel, on the Great Lakes. , •
Before Margaret was twelve years
old her mother died. At' or that • ‚.50
spent much time on her father's boat
and consequently was' out of, schohl
much of the year, When she was four-,
teen years old, and in one of the :owl
grades she left school altogether. I
Six Years later' When she yrs
ployed" in a millinery shell she 'heard!
George Leelle Maelmy, the Missionary,
tell of his. experience „In, Formosa.'
Hearing of the beautiful Island and
the marvelous changes tluit the Gos-
pel had wrought isa the lives of the na-
tiVes made her long to become a nals,
siondry. "But I cannot; I 'haveno
education," site thought: So she con-
tributed money,to the work.. • • .,
Then she- lis tened to Dr. Robertrion
of the .New .Hebrides, and again she
heard the call.to enter the service; but
As said to herself, ,Surely.God would
never ask Inc. for •I .have .no educa-
tion." ,And again, she serve. money.
The .Was go Insistent, heweVer,'
that she .fittally offered .herself; But
owing toher lack of education, the
missionary board. kindlf declined her
There Margaret decidied ,she would
a
ite
41
'Male
atIsy., 05
eitopl y 'wonderful "
dUyour whOle body,
lot -pleasant end
W, and embodies ft
-tirtediand io eti-true lertut-,lit.
get an emulation. A leacher gave her
a list at boolre proper to et her b91' the
.f„rarnmar , 1011001, but she 'could not
study suecessfuity 'by herself; :10 she
weilo ri 1,' sebool with .small boys
She 7iib then twentyttwo
ti nit1 30010 that
„iflheer.,ttelyns gIoir yieritls, s yr:11.11cl .)tat tiecia unglea, taait
oirlatioe Thee one happy day she
entered Queen's Univereity, Kingston,
as tiesineclical. student and later took is
postgraduate .course in 'London. when
she offered herself again .as ri mission-
ary In 1830, she wee accepted and sent
At first the natives called her 'Otore
eign devil" and threatened her, but now
they worship her 11.0 a queen. Di the
citY. 08 Neemuch Margaret has eared
for thesick nmi, the olognoTtriolreo,
She has alwais lifted the soul 'as she
-healed the body, Now,' tbough she is
old she is still at worle.
Wonien 'of Sasleateliewen recently
sent Imr re small atutoniohile. In her
lettee of thaeks see said that now.she
min covet' -much more geomel and go
to many more villagea in a 'day
She has been feted and honored by
iriegs and potentates. Ono of the hon-
ors of which she is justly proud is a
medal that the `King and' Queen of
England presented to her .at the Dun-
bar in pelld 14'1911 for 'distingaisited
•
I once heard her say that the einety-
first Psalm was litenallY„ fulfilled In
her life., .,Site has trodden on 0510 1100
and the adder. Thousands have fdllen
at her gide with tholera, ',yet GddIine
given her, long life. ' ' '
bad brolcen a glass. He thundered and
hurled hnprecations at her:
Preseatly his wife quieted him Y TRAMPS WON T. WORK
down. 'Item turning to me, she said:
"You can't imagine.hoWharsli he is
with the -cook., I am :constantly 015-
ilged to intervene in their .disputes.
Except, for me he would tyrannize over
the poor girl" . -
Recently, passing by the. ministry,
I entered to -shake hands with my old
assoelates. t asked, Mine, Irene, about
her husband She burst Out:
"What? Don't'you •Meow? He has
left tne. ' The wretch, He ran away
with the 'cool. Who' would have ex-
pected it? A. matt whom. I was mak-
ing so happy, Can, you .understa,nd?
And he left me a ietter-ean imbecile
letter, in which ho said: "1 gin going
away with Caroline Site is a sweet,
feeble, unhappy, martyrized creature.
She has /wither will nor eersonality.
It is niy duty as a man te protect het,'
You hear that. 'It IS iny duty as, a
man,' " •
. ,
Johnnie. was gazing atenie ette-day-
old brother, who l'ay' squeafing 3 and
yelfingiti his cot, "
"Did he come from Meaven?" in-
quired Jphunie, "
"Tot, dear".
"No,wontier they, pat hint ou
showed his lace for a -moment at the
kitchen door:
"Excuse me, old man, 1 am looking
after the sheolder,of lamb with the
cook Talk to my wife mitil we serve
Mine' Irene' expla'ned to -me:
, "I have put hinif in "charge of the
kitchen and the, houseltee'plug I ,saw
fit once 1111 510 was uot'the, arid or man
le live nbesI. 51. the Mince,ell
lire ()lifers 050 13111 lye 5 rainpl ed over
515113 '1 filmic 'him, leSign:' and. r alone
,
„
ilea -mins at ihe 11155138513'. ,lIe Ifireies
littrisel • liousdbold matters—the
Inarlceting,.errands, Wiring earn .
litun dry, in ending add" shoPp g. Ex-
dellent to .olpoy, Ito whtliel -not Irneev
haw .507 600linand , "It is geed ,that
everYheay, ehoele a 1 Ins plotter place,
Moreover, be y3., an :happy Ls a fish in
wat.
er 1051 5011 0881' 540 hlm'Iook bet
ter?"
"Be seated'. ; Ile seated!"
cried joYougly.
'Ho' was "the veep image of 11.-S51plue88
min, ruddy face, the
11310 .,of a geeraitantel, coeversatiou.N11.
of tinetion. Everything 'about Isbn
testified „to- e'xieaordinany, ceettent-
Mont' WitUi quid his surround-'
1 complimented iiint ou. the 100 'of
mittton vine' a 1,
ward 'big Wi
'Not ha
550 bccasflo effusive
1013'1itt40 ollo?''
• Pallycroy.
I will leave. dark Mallarahny, where
the heath grows to a man's
height. '
And north, by sheltered sea,loughs,
travel on,
Where the hills come down to meet
me end retreating seem to lure
Dengorm, Ceralleve, far -oft Laght
Daughybaura—
To Ballycroy. -
, •
There the begland stretchee ,seaward
like a sea of brown and purple,
And the very pulse of quiet stems
at rest, ,
There the shadows brood. or traverse,
as .the clouds Move on above
tboufl
To their' home in the 'Atlantic, roll -
Of Ballycrey.
'1'1ere are eagleiln the inountains,'and
the wild geeee call around me,
in the Owonduff the homirlg sahnon
I can hear the wild duck passing,
can see, them light and settle
Where the moon breaks ove' water
" through a haze '
In 'Hallycroy.
Can WW1/ be pleasant turf reek, hear
the kindly seeech of men folic,
See the gossorns and" the colleens
Feel the, peace of heaven falling, 'as
'the eterS shine down the valleys
"Vvbilst I sit end dream alone, a thou-
• sand miles .
From pagyeroYi
Gr n.
tfits
31
te.
15
zittecie2
A' Collate:in- Cav,eleed.
"OhicOr SidnocluTi-i'What,'g ail fihis
riot' stealer? • ..t. -
Sitin))ants--"Dhose. guys •lrave en-
tered the eoritost..for.ihe,p1dr;e for the
hest plan 5101(3mpfhinotion., of peace."
„ - Discovered,
Teaahar--.-"Nolv .5010 liare.in from of
yhild tho north, oneyerar right the east,
31,1111. on l'Oul"lett the WaSt, "Maat have
4o51'llohind you?'
Small Bey-e".A:'.11.8.4lt.'oalit..,111.Y Pants'
1. feed mother
The Pengniniateindtite,
The wings of ;Ole penguin, useless.
r flying purposos, serve as efficient
pailes in svrimining,
"Anything but work!" From thne
immemorial that has beea the' MOO
of the triemp: Most people' believe
that their &Version Jo lebor in -any
shape or form is. the result of sheer
laziness, but the fact is, according to
scientific investigators, they are all,
or most of them, abnormal in so .far as
they are suffering- from a peculiar. diet-.
eeise to which, science appliee the
narne—"clenetrophobia."'
in other words, they cannot tolerate
crowds and closed ,spaces—they must
be out in, the open',. and combined
with this they exPerienCe an uncoil-
trollable rerestlessness,
When one of .thefie attacks et this
combination of "claustrophobia" and
restlesiness comes on, the tramp has I
no alternative inti to go, and keep on
going, There la no particular place to
which hewants to go, nothing he de -
Sires particularly, to ace. Ali he Wish-
es to do 10' to get away from where he
is—and as fast at he ,han.
You seldom find a married tramp,
Why? During a recent investigation
at a workhouse a large number of
tramps, 100702.fil1still why they fild not
marry, anul. a. sheilat response was
forthcoming in dash ease—they were
afraid that, the Urge to get away would
Pc stronger than their desire to re-
main with a family. ,
One tramp confessed that he had
proposed marriage beeause he hoped
that the responsibility „of a fatuity
would be strong enough. to keep him
at home whenthe attack •of 'wander-
lu,st came on—but he could not ever.
.Oome Inc attack a few days before the
date set for the wedding, with the re-
sult that his bride-to-be was lef0 to
bewail the. Iota; of her fleece.,
trate') 'was sincerely sorry, but the
urge to get away had been too great
'for him to resist. Tramtis have been
known to risk ,death by exposure 'and
starvation rather than rernain in the
workhouse when the, wanderlust fever
has gripped them, • ' .
Contrary. to the general idea, tramps
seldoni form friendships, They may
meet Companions, travel a shortdls-
-
fence together, but cute May atop for
51 monient to' take' it pebble out of his
shoe,and. 0116 tether, will' go '.alotagas
though oblivious of Ilia companion's.
existence.. And the one who, stopped
will ,not hurry tti catch up with the
otlier!
Two knights of the road, walking in
the middle of the react near a fork In
the road, were separated by a passing
vehicle. One went to one side and the
'Other to the other side. .:_They walked
on without a word to each other, and
•when they reaehed the Pork the. eina.
continued en the, right Pork,. the other
continued on the left fork, although
neither kriew.where the two branches
led. to!
.Tramps haye not the slightest de,
sirefor companionship. Friendship
Implies permanency, and this is the
One thingthey cannot tolerate. .
Nor It is a care -tree, healthful exiah
once they lead. Getting out and tatt-
ing a wane is many a, doctor's advice
to a patient, But the tramp takes his
walks too often and he goes too tar.
After about two years on the road
-begill.e to get varicase veins bos the
hegs,.The veins lose their elastioity,
. they' beeonie stretched, and the clrClii
lation in them becomes much lower
than in the arteries. Atter standing
or. Walking a slacirt.time-the velhe be-
come' filled with bleed, the legs feel
P0013!, and. the sufferer must sit down.
That 16 why tramps cannot keen a job
reqUiring much standing or walking.
They don't kaow why • they', become
tired so'. Soon, and..the public doesn't „
know that they havetv disease which
makes them tired after s, little work..
At a anecial examination in one "
,workhoutie it was 'found that one-third
• of all the lodgershad foot orleg cle,
fecte, about ten times as may as would
.
; he found in the'sanie number of men
taken at random. Most, tramps have
bad teeth and this, with improper
food, causes 'chronic' indigestion. In
Short, the "Wears' Willies" of the road
deserve; according, to .scientific inves-
tigators, not Our -derisive gibes, but
our deepest eYinpattiy; .
=if you feel billoae„ headachy'i and irritable—
for that's a sigtryour liver s out, of order. Your
food is not digeating-it staya in the stomach a sour,
fermented mass, poisoning the system. Just take a
doseeof Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets—
theY,make the liver do its work—they cleanse and
sweeten the atinnactissnd tone the whole dinidstiste systeia, You'll
feel iftio in the morning". At all thuguiste,21e., ox' by sooll from
Chamberlain Me,dicine Company., Toronto 14
) 111K,
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