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The Clinton News Record, 1925-02-05, Page 2G. a ROTAQGAIIT M. D. eleTAGGART :13ROS; Banking Beelliess transact- ed. NotelleDiscPuntede Drafteelesued. InterestiAllowed on Depesits, Sale Notes l'U'reha • cl R. T. RANCE Notary Public Conveyaneer. nancial, Real Estate and Fire enranuc Agent. Representing 14 Fire s ranee Compeuies. ivislon Court Office, Clinton. W. BRYDONE elarrieter, Solicitor, Notary Public, etc. Office: 0 . CORD Term s of .Subscrletiont-4g-90 per year iMadvance, to C. adieu' addreSses 02.00 te the U. oreother foreign. ' COuntree. No paper diocontHe0 until all arrears .^.re paid tiniest. at the option ot the peblisher. The dateto which every su,bscriptirie e paid Is denoted pu the label.,, • Advertising Piates—Traneient adver- tisemerts 10 eel to per nonpareil line for first inertisn ana 5 cents p,er IlinI. for.•each subsequent loser - don. Small advertisements, not to exceed one inch, - emit' its tiLost' "Strayed," or "Stolen, etc., insertedonce tsr- 35 - , and eaca.. fluent insertioe 15 'cents. Cornimmicetiens Intended for Pelee' cation•must as a guarantee of geed faith, be aecompanied by tee name of I. R. CLARK, - . DR. J. C.• GANDIER Proprietor. itor, omee 1-leueel-1.30 to .3 30 p.m. 7:30 to e.00 p.m. Sundays, 12.30 10.1.30 p.m. ' J Other hours by appointment only, Office and Residence — Victoria St • DR: METCALF BAYFIELD, ONT. Office Hours -2 to 1, 7 to 8. Other hours by appointment. DR. 11: S. BROWN, 1...IVI.C.C. ... Office Hours • 1.30 to 130 p.m. 7.30 to 9.00 ,P.m. • Sunday a 1.00 to 2,00 p.m. Other hours by appointment. Phones , Oilice. 218W Residence, 2183 D. PERCIVAL HEARN Office ansl Residence: . Huren Street Clinton, Ont. Phone 99 (Formerly' ocetipied bythe late Dr. C. W. Thompson). Eyes Exam hied_ and „Glasses Fitted. Dr. A.Newton Brady. Bavfield Graduate Dublin University, Ireland, Late Extern Assistant Master, Ro- tunda Hospital for WoMen and Child- ren, Dublin, • Office, at 'residence lately oceupied by Mrs. Parsons. ' Hours: -9 to 10 a.M., 6 to 7 P.m' Sundays -1 to 2 p.m. DR. A. M. HEIST onteepathetle ,phyeician. Licentiate Iowa and Michigan State Boards of Medical Examiners. Acute and chronic diseases ,treated. ' Spinal adjuidnients_ given to remoVe,the cause • of &Sense. At life, Grisham House, Clinton, every Tuesday forenoon. ' 50-311,1P. DR. McINNES Chi roriractor ' nrr winghatn, will be at the Commerc- ial Inn, Clinton, on Monday and Thursday forenoens each Week. Diseases Of all kinds successfully 'handled. ' "CHARLES' B. HALE.: Conveyancer, Notary Public, COrnmis. stoner etc.' ' REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE HURON STREET CLINTON,. M. T. CORLESS CLINTON, ONT. District Aont The Ontario and'Ilquitable Life and Accident Insurance Co, , • West Wawariosh Mutual Fire , •Insurance Co. Established 1878. ' Ilresident, -Tehn A. McKenzie, Rincar, dine; Vice -President, 'It L. Salkeld, Goderich; Secretary, Thos, G. Allen, Dungannon, Total amount of insur- ance neatly s12,000,000. In ten years nuniber of policies have increased finial 2.700 to .4,500. Flat rate of $2 •per $1000. Cash -on hand $26,000. H. L. Balked - Goderich, Ont. Wee. Steven/3, Clinton, Local Agent. GEORGE FHjOTT Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Correspondence promptly answered. Immediate arrangements can be made for Beteg Date. at The- News -Record. Clinton, or by calling Phone 208, Charges Moderate and Satisfaction Guaranteed. , B. R. HIGGINS Clinton; Ont. General Fire and Life Insurance. Agent for Hartford Windfitterm, Live Stock, ,Alitteratibile end Sickness attd Accident eelnirence. -Huron and' Illriseend Cana. da Trust Donde.' "Appointments _made to meet parties at Brucefield, Varna and Elayfielcl., 'Phone 57, Donn let it run, too long, it will lead to chronic indigestion, the. Meanwhile you suffer from miserable, 13iek" headaehes, vousness, depres; sion and sallow compIexion.Justtry CHAMBERLAIN'S STOMACH&LIVER TABLETS. They re- lieve • fermentation,. indigestion' -- gently • but surely cleano tho system and keep tbe `stomach and llyorin perfect runalrigorder. ,At all druggists, 25n, or by rusilfresa . 11 Chamberlain Meaicine Co., Toronto DOES 'EXPERIENCE TEACH YOU? • s ' Dieu fishing ,th.,,ItheOtreame- ..uurtiiwAlvvq.p*aapicIns spent,Aot charge trite the -,./yep.c In the MOLT, on hie W.0.t.,ilsisoOtteins the Loth. .., east of the ,North' Cape, 1 have, had a Men' Gulf,wonidellardly recogeize it , - ' good deal of intercourse; with the Lap', under the altered Conditions. Every lassxies's 1 imee traversetlemaey hues' house is crantmed with Lapps visiting dreds or miles ill their swift cameos,' ,theser- teiends, arranging for the - Ole- aod times Witheut number in•the.belef.,,;;_P '4,19n of 'articles they wiStt to leave. ' northern en1.11111OT 1 MtVes;uaipped and buying stores for the 511111- , , in the inland, wficis ot -Nevelt Finmr,,months; VaS1 quantities of eofeee ken Wit these hardy norna d .re• eenennee. mut meteli laughter and . one sjay7in Septerotber of the Oast taili are eonlbilted,with,husiness,' 'year, too whenelleciting willow gronse ,The Teilt30110 are sesieral whiele :ten, on the Swedish reouptaine near thn. :dee it desirable .thet, he built of the I reindeer shoilld psetere. Pia the coast ' Norwegian treritior, I same . acrOs C a .summet, Instead.91 merely moving Lams tamily, accompanied- by their herd of reindeer camped eat. on the '4EToeirlaittatillolsitt eIllait.tethtoo ,ipoirancleeientiozesneg the shores .of .rneorlana loch.. I had had the a very hard tramp,_and was very near- 'alllinals otaInrelieO feone• the mll ly tired out, as was also my Nerweg- lions of mo-squitoeS'WhiCh; 'during the hin attendant who carried the game. moa the anth aeefJulye ii alia ndA '1idti.,tgi-t.iasett,tsrioafltNeolrisfke 'rho Lapps gave us a drink of the rich aur Flume:1ton, of Finland, and of Swed - reindeer aea r wag fortunately able to give them e supply of tobacco:, len Lapinark; • they get. ti coinplete- their dogs and my setters had ,q, free .change of climate and food, and enjoy fight, of which the latter,. though moro than twice the size of their'temporary foes, had decidedly the worst, arid al- together We fraternized very consider- ably. The next day I had my tent removed to the, vicinity of their eamp, and we I spent a week together in friendly. and mutually advantageous converse. In- timate from their childhood with these moorland -Solitudes, the .wanderers ,were 'able to tell ine on what tractsof field the bird' -were mostly to be found at that time of the year, and I was en- abled to keep both of the little camps very fully supplied with genie, as didi the Lapps with trout netted in the loch hard by.; Lappish Is not an easy language to learn; its dialects., more- over, are .numerous, and differ so much from one another that the in- habitants of one valley frequently have difficulty in understanding those of the next; but on the various then- sions referred to, I managed to pick up a good many odds and ends of in- formation; .and with regard to their reindeer inh the annual migrations of these singular people, I would now say a few words. "Experience .never taught a man how to do anything. . . ," - It is Douglas Fairbanks speaking I am sitting with him in the library of his home --out in Beverly Hills, in California. (write Arthur Zenner, In "Success"). "PO you mean," I ask, "that no man ever learned from experience?" He 10 eyeing me quizzically for a •moment—his smile breaks as Ire turns with aeedden alertnees. ' "No, I don't mean' that at all!" he counters. "What I" mean i that 137f- perience never teaches a man how-to do anything." "Then what does it teach him?" I ' "It teaches hios how not todo it!" He has an •enthuslasm that is posi- tively dynamic for the things that In- terest.hina, and his intiMates will tell You that at the other extren0- he Is Jost as lathadaisical,where-he is un- interested. - "I'll admit that' a man learns from experience," he 'is explaining to me, "but what "I contend is, that- he ,cannot learn; what to do. The most that he can glean' from either past triumphs or failures is the danger of -doing ,eer. tain things; thui.ekperience teaches what not to do, The McKillop Mutual Fire Insurance Company Head Office, Seaforth, Ont. DIRECTORY: Presideut, Jaralleg. Connolly, Oodeeteh; IVice, James Evans, Beachwood; Sec. - Treasurer, Thos. E. Hays, Settforth, Directors: George McCartney, Sea - forth; D. F. McGregor, Seaforth; J. 0, GrieVe, Walton; Win. Ring, Seaforth; M. MeEwen, Clinton; Robert Ferries, Ilarlock; JohnBenneweir, Brodhagen; • 3315. Connolly, Goderich. • • Agents: Alex. Leitch, Clinton; 3,-W. Yeo,, Goderich; ' Ed. Hinchray, Sea - /mop, W,' Chesney, Egrnondville; R. C. Jai:Muth, Firodhagens " y.500110y to be paid in may be paid to Moorish Clothing Co., Clinton; • or at-Cett's Grocery, Goderich. Parties desiring to affect Insurance or transact other business will be promptlY attended to 011 application to any of the above officers- addreesed, to • their resimetive "post office. - LOSSOS itspected by the director sell° lives nearest the seenee , TIME' TABLE a will arriVe, at and depart from Clinton - Buffalo -and Gode'lt9 Glv.- GoingEsit, depart, , .6,25 .aal, ', 2.52 p.M. Going -West, ar, 11,10 faun ". s ar, 6,08 du 6.51 pm 1904.,p.rn iden';',,Iiiiiron & Enuee dp. 7.50 a.ei " 4.15 pee leg:-0eiet14 deleert 9.50 PM , 11.05 11.13 am ' The Right Woman. • "Law is based on experlence—look at the few laws that make you do de- finite things," I declare. "You are right!" he admits. "Law is based on experience, but laws are made .to forbid eertain ,things. Ex- perience has shown eocietyamany.pit- falls—and laws -prevent ,your falling' into thein. Ifixperience does -not pre - vide any deiendable :bade for auling that certaleathings must lie done; but only that certain thing's meet not be done. 'Jt is a negative rtiathei than a positive force. "I was talking svitn a man last week," he goes on, 'who has made' three unsuccessful Marriages aid is. contemplating a foitrtit. Yoia perhaas think his .experienee has tatight him that he should remain singie, but I doia't think so. , 'He haa,perhaps learned what sort of wife not to marry -a -but no amount of experience could teach' him what ,sOrt of wife he must „Marry. • , "Nor could experience tench him that he should remain single—for as a matter of fact lie is very unhappy alone. "If you are a parent your first thought is to yearn your child against the Mistakes yesu eihaye made—to Wa.tch, teat he does; .not do certain things—hut how. car You teaoh him, with any assurance what -le perfectly safe for hita .to do? No experience can project itself into the unknown and stand as a foundation for the un. expected circumstances that .arise." A man who gives considerable *thought to abstract things could hard- ly bo so earnests regarding a theory that stope at its own implicate:is. This thought prompts mY next question. "Even conceding- that you are quite right, do you feel that your theory has any value inspirationally? Does 'it lead anywhere?". Learning From Failure's. "Nothing could be more important or lead ffirtheeet he assures me, "It makes us 'leek to our faults rather than to our supposed virtues—to our mistakes rather than to our succeeses. , "Why become exelted over a site- ce.ss when the same rules that you aps -plied to les, accomplishment will in no wise aesure a repetition? Why not look rather to the failures for ciur les- sons?' For there, we win find the thinge that we roust ,not do, and this after all is the sum of all experiences, "Show me a man with. ordinary Cam- b t North.. fartiriosSnorth pollee Station In the weeld Is on Herschel Irileadoon the iotip °Coen, a post 'of the Royal etisweet Idountea Pollee, To the Scandinavian field -I (moan-. taln) Lapp, his reindeer repreeent capital, clothing, food, existence It- realf;oVer them he watches inceasently from year's end to year'e end, mad to meet their , requirements bie „wanders over the land. ThroughOut the long Arctic winter, ' the vast _upland pla- teaux of Finland and or Sweden, whence flow towards the coast of Nor- way the, great riVers Tana and .Alten, are resorted to by the owners of many thousands of 'reindeer and their herds, 'Underneath the snow, among The birth wood, and by the frozen watercourses, there is, abundance of the rich mesa to which animals. are so partial; and tittle they get at by means of their sharp forefeet—not,, as is 'eminnonly supposted, with the broW-autlers. Rein- deer are euritius animals to deal with —as tile Stranger; who attempts to -drive the in, a Sleigh Is never long in finding oat—and none but their nomad owners understand their proper man- agement, • While en the snowy wastes that con- titer, the °there being taken to sundry stitute their winter pastures they aee !salads in the neighborhood. On their easily kept together by the °salter and arrival they have' to be conveyed across the intervening channels in boats', but when starting on the return, journey their recovered, strength en- ables them to Intim theswith ettae. Owing to their frequent coiltiquitY, a practieul immunity -from the at- taelte of their enenties the Wolves and bears. .Their owners, too, are able to take things, more easily, de the' deer are allowed to roam .-pretly. Much' as they- please, and 'very close w-atch- ing- is unneces-sary-,-Indeed, 'if they are kept much together, and in a re- stricted tract of country, disease will, beeak but; they areetherefore, allowed to use their own inetinct In regard to a • .. Reindeer Moss, reareiover, is of very slow growth, taking eight to tea years to.recover, after having been eaten. eft or rooted up; in 'Summer it 'beconies so dry. that the deer ,will not eat it, but .being. unprotected by the' winter covering of, snow, inuele Cif it M. trod- den under foot and destroyed. Never- theless, the Russian. Lapps in the neighborhood ' of the great Imandra Lake pasture their deer in sliest:Mir Q11 th .ShOTEls of that magnificent sheet of ,water, 'and on the many wooded is- lands that 'stud its surfede; while cer- tain Swedish and Norwegian I,S.PP8 maintain their herds en the mountain tracts betweea..Karaijok,. on the al). per Tana, and the Pereanger Fiord, on the northern coat of ,Netrway, and, at the headwaters of the 'Maalsely, which enters a fjord on the west- coast near Tromso.. In. these districts.there are, Of course, Some mountain -tops where, the anew remains throughout the sum- mer, and upon whose cool slopes, the termented anirnale obtain some relief from the of. venomous little insects; but they undoubtedly suffer much, -and do not acquire the seine etreagth anda condition ..aa ,do their fashionable brethre)a who are ."taken to the seaside." Night and day fires are kept smoldering, and in the 'dense' Volumes of smoke .Which they 'roll forth the poor aniniale ,fbad en un- pleasant but welootrie refuge. • • The great peninsula. Of Alnas Mar- go, situated on the Wet coast of Nor- way, about, midway between Tromso and Hanimerfest, faverite"T•esert of the ScandinaVieri laPpresand biter the 'neck of land WhiCh :connects it with the maialand Many thousands Of -deer pass twice a, year There a largo proportion remain thrpughout.the suni- - F,sitinme' are showe'retureing to Kittigaznit,'oIn the Arctic coast of.Can- ada,' from white Whale fishing. This photograph was taken byea member of ' the TopagraphlearSurvey ,of Canada, • market -place in Archangel throughout the whole winter -and.on into i3prelg," 'writes another traveler, "is filledewith quantities of herring'in numerous long POWS, and it may safely be asserted that from the mouth . of ',the Divien alone ,at leest half a.million pood are taketi." When in the month Of July the..herring pour in from the Arctic tO the White Sea, they are packed so 'closely as to form a huge solid lease. Followed .by other' fish, they push on into- the bays, inlets and inouths of rivers, and are thrown up on the land lit -such quantities that they cover the shores for long distances , rn June,soine of the ashermen leave. the coast, others, remain on until Selt- teinber,. while others again do not re turn to their distant -homes until the beginning of another winter, his dogs. But sheeld they be attacke ed by wolves they' eompletely lose their heads, either allowing 'them- sielves to be torn to pleeese or rushing blindly over the nountu. for - miles, carrying confusion among anyeather herds that may chalice to be la the the ,deer belonging'to many different. neighborhood, Many a Laplander has individuals, get clansiderablY mixed up, a d 1 norder to Septirate them a great been ruined in a single night by a: ' gathering called "Rathkern" is held in 'ioray af these ravenota brutes, hia enring or autunna - Shouldathe ice be deer are killed; maimed; or scattered strong emiugh, the animals, number - far and wide over the mountains; atid. ing, of course many thousands, are col - at is to obviate such a catastrophe • lected upon the frozen surface of a that, howeVer severe the weather, the • ,herds are watched night and day, large lake, and the ownership of each s determined by the earmarks which while, at the alarming. cry of eGunipe . all eossess. . loe blithuin!" (the wolves are afoot!) When the frosts of autumn are' every man, woman, and .dog in the lit- „., ,,,,.., e,geing with brilliant hues the leaves tl ti tits I ead to turn' out Epidemic. . Patter was once a'business malt who , went to hie*ork &eel], claaa .And mother kept house, as a house- wife should, in a highly effleient And Hill was a clerk in a wholesale house whoae motto was Work and "Ann; STORIES ABOUT WELL-KNOWN PEOPLE telough Saki. Among the humorous anecdotes that Mr. Josephus Daniels telle of Wood -1 row Wilson in his recent life of the President is this: • He had a strong sense of humor and I ' I used to tell ifs.freinds at college fun- ny stories, often about his worthy: father, who was a distinguished Pres- byterian minister, but who like all • ministers was not o-Yerpaid. One day I his father met -a parishioner; Dr. Wil- I son was then preaching in a North Caaolina church. "Hew coine, -Preacher Wilson, you have each a, sleek hors.e and you're so skieny•yourself?" the pa.rishioner saide •, "Well," said Dr. ;Stalls/in, "you see, I feed the horse, but the congregatien„ feeds me!" • Conquering Her Afflictions. "The most remarkable pialaist in the And Sue was a thoroughly good Stenog world," is the description applied by and gosh, how the cash .rolled the world-famous, PadereWski to Selse • in! , . Helen Martin, an English girl, who But father le home, mad nary a dish can neither see nor hear. has mother washed for a week, The girl- was born both blind ti.nd And Billy and Sue have quit their jobs deaf. She has never heard a note of —and the future is looking Music,. but she reads, writes, sews„a.nd PlaYe the piano. . • • For the family pllTS0 IS perfectlyllat ."What amuses rim- most le the att.!, ' and doesn't contain a dime, tude of people • when they first nieet And nobody (loot a stroke of work, for me," She told one of my Correspond - n bed ha th time, ants. "They Steam to think that be- Wakil Stify' it' resIces t teand ekee better. gteen rde.lenerations . in. he reatincrit. It reetbreS the ttlea4ite4944yea /het, tired feeling, sinable,Sote5efttem 15 resist, infectious flisettet*Iss'al, iloodo Sersiteatilleealdis digestion and, meltes food tette gbod. geoil ceiteseitle 1100d5 11115. ego that I heard her tele 80010 amuta the stories. The best of the lot con- cerne an occasion ween as an actress, she wee on tour, and had her initiate "M. R” painted on lier travelleig Airived at her destination the port- er askied, "Is this yours 1,00, MiSf3 7" indicating the careiages and truelm of the train, which boro the 'Same letters, '"Yes;" she replied "and if you will bring up the one at ,the end with the, tarpaulin cover, WhiCh'is my jewel -case, you'll get an' extra three- pence." • • A Barber's Memories, Five kings.and three .CabinetsMinis- tors bays sat in the barber's chair of Mr. W. IS. Moon, who keeps a hair- dressing and tobacco shoji in Cowes, England. ' Mr. Moon, who is now in his eighty- first year, combined his berber's busie neas -with the duties of church organ- , let and chairmaster. He is a cons- , poaer of. nauaic. To mark the completion of fifty-two years as organist and choirmaster of St. Marfa Church, Cowes, Mr. Mama has been presented with 110 addre,ss and clock. „ Recognized Her Hat. o s e . ,• 'cause I can't see them with my dyes We're doing the Croas-word puzzles, and hear them talk with my own ears We're doing 'em day' and night, meet be uneducated, unietelligent, And wbat do 'we care if the ciipboard's and uncouth." bare, When a child she made up her Mind So long as we get 'em right? to become, a musician,. How marvel- - lously she hats succeeded! "What is a sixteen lettered word • whose meaning is 'agitate'?" "Whit is a Latin synonym for using a frog,as bait?" , "Here's a word 'beginning With 19 'I' and ending with E E14 Look in the dictionary, Sill, and see • What it ought to epell!" That'fl all We heal' in our happy home, d w thl tib out, Mrs. Mack was not content to get her own back when she was angry. She infticted little stabs in her neigh- bors, through sheer Inability to sup- _ mese her feelings. "How delightful it la to see you. aghin, Mrs. Mack," said an elderly - aequaintanae, meeting her one day. "Why, it must be ten years since we ' met. And it's nice to think that you remembered me atter all this time. You knew me at once. begin to think I can't have changed very much." "Oh," said Mr's. Mack, with a sweet smile and an acid tone, "I recognized your hat!" an athate nit ou , While nights and days INour various wants -we're working the puzzles ."Satan finds work for idle hands"— ' this -new acroetie rage , Is keeping all hands the aamily, 'at werk on the plizzle page! We're doing the crossqvord puizies, • We're 'doing 'em hard and fast, And we'll never quit, that's the worst of it, . As long as the puzzles last! . --Berton Braley. : • Licenses: • • Practically everything a man does any more depends upon th'eamount of- perfnisalon he has obtained from some- 'n ee ,and faee the common foe, on their of the mountaln-berry eisats, arid bedy in authority. , - long snow shoes the men pursue the when the willow ,grouse and the ptar- Ho must haVe a license to get mar - marauders for miles; and -should the of , ried, :malt to be buriet1 old a birth migan are beginning to show signs ground and the state of the snow be changing their ' 'Plumage, the Lapps I, certificate for his Children, His car favorable they sometimes' are able to and their deer are leeking their way beam a license Plate_in'front and rear run alongside, when with a dlagele2bItise, hack across the fickle, and by October and in several states he mast have a from a stout elldgel the wolffis late' all are mum more on the wester pass liceuSe of his own, telling his qualiii- snarling and helpless at their feet, tures by the great inland lakes and catiens as ft driver. Ile cannot Mini But this is a feat which requires skin rivers. ' without a permit If he wiehes to , • strength end exceptional endurance, At another period bf the .year sec- . Ond migration of the Lapps and other end is hot often .performea single - northern raCee I akea place' aligo to- handml, practice medicine, dentistry or some other prefession it is necessary for heneto display ti. diploms or a liceneo, The Lapp dogs are -httedy, faithful • ; or both. creature,s and will tackle a preclater object.. Sood atthe Citristmas •. the Scheel -teachers must be licensed. • ; • s hardy fishermen "of' central 'leering 'and 50 11111Sfi plumbers: inspectors are , Y needed to iespeet the licenses and see appearance they are' not meet° a small set forth on their way to Lofttlen Is - edition of the latter aniinel, and their tit they are in dee form. If the thing lands, wliere in the month of Mareh ,the Enara and Kantokeino 'own ed; gather- keeps on. the newspaper sieries of the future may read something like this; the great harvest of -codfish is hair is long and very thick.' Some et' then oey proceed in persuit of a 'breed of dogs that are, born without tlse,r calling, to - 01)30 h Mr and Mrs. Israel Plunk (marriage their little tails; these are looked upon as es. ken, and tialeft.cetansvialiv•clasrafoali-orlliguntcillreetei8ortesft license No 887:654) and Pecially valeable, tbe wolv• esmet hay- miles to daughter, Rosobelle I(birth certificate ing that'inember to lay. hoia Tiii, of mission Lapland. -From North Fin. No, 46e,79 8) , were maiming between -Squeedunk fuel Far HornerS, yesterday peculiarity, it would seem, is not e nas land, from the etbesphable shores of ,.tural one, but erisee from tbe fact the White Sea, from Karelia and porn, afternoon when their - oar (state that tor generations, their ancestors aria; on foot or ili reindeer slecigee I license No 766; driefiets license No. went through the docking proaess, a • a'inn, Russiane, Lapps and Norweg-18922) shIddell in froshe gravel that had ,coremony which nature now renders been apPlied by Zach White (contract- ians travel in mid:winter tor weeks to - unnecessary. - . ' . seater, in, order to Mite part in the 01' license No. 06e,7771 gravel. Inspect - During themonths of October, Nor. great fisheries of. the Arcile coast, cd by lerepecteriNo. 3-A-231). • .. I ember and December tile reindeer are ,Although inferior ' 10 these, 01 Le_ • The CAI' turucte tur(le (acrobatic II- ' il the eel 9 heri s 1. '11 es1 n cionse No, 41144) ana the occupants in the:height of condition,' being then ete. s e u p, fresh from the sinnmer pastures and 'Lapland are very valuable, Mid may 1.1rowil into tbe ditch Pui asie • • silotint (farmer's license No, 80, •who not yet exhausted from diggir,ig for be said, te' extend tror'sn LIM Norwegian The Prompt Reply. Few women, I venture' to say, '0011 -make a_reallyNsuecteasSul .speech at a public dinner, but Mrs, Hilton Millie - son, M.P., who, of courae; was forMer- ly Mabel Russell, tbe actress, is one of them. It was at a dinner a few .evenings Locating the Break. Old Isosceles—"WhY so Sad, Young fellow? " Did your girl break her en- gagement with you last night?" Young Rouraler—"No—brOke me." • Add a little gasoline to the water when scrubbing floors, and grease spots will quickly- disappear. MARVELS OF LOST WORLDS Exploring the Untrodden Places of the Earth. „ The eminent archaeolegist, Dr. whose warners are of extraordinary Thomas Gann, cliseoveaer of the fa- beauty. mous .I.ost City of Maya, „in : British I. In the Tathnius of Panama, beyond Honduras, whe'salled recently, in the the Darien Mountain, Mr. Mitchell' Manazaren" to eamplete his survey of 'Fledged found' a- mysterious , race of . the ruins, hopes to find. in elm of the Indians witb. purelMongolian feature% , great burial chambers Which ha've I liiing among prehistoric animals. In been unearthed some of the codices I the saute region was found b., rade of buried with every lalaya high airieat,!whitelndlans Beetled among'the ruins which 'iney give the stor'y of these of a. great city whith,ficeirlehed 5,000 Strange peeple and their - xnasterioue years' ago. I On. the Fly River, in New Guinea, wanderIngi '. . He is one of many explorers who eCeptain Frank Hurley tound.a race of are, penetrating - the still: untroaden t isamaiked' Hebrew featuree • identite threete-coloredeannilsals whose Strong - places of the earth in *search of the secrets' of cities ancl' civilizations 1 them with one of the.Lost Tribes of which will throw light on the history ' Igra.,11' ' of °the; earth, ' e,,,,a ... I A' race of white- savages has been . . . e, ', etetrad in the Unyanrwezi country, in . The '' discove:rY by Captain Anges it Buchanan,. the leader of tae Lord I tohe heart of Africa, svhile in. the bills ' t the north of the Mekhong Valley, Rothschild expedition, 'of a ,city built in InclfeChina, is a anent' tribe *hi& Cf. salt in the heart Of the Sahara has, has no deity, worships 131) idols, and ,for histanee, omi. ik YLP,, imwse 1° 'has alangualae Which consists only of the inve,stigation of the vast unchart- five•s.frnvie sammiii * ered areas of Western and Central ,.. hi the Panama jungle teavellers Asia, oi Arabia; Tibet, China and In- , golehlr'9, " Nen- alline,nt, a.fid 01 Arri" IMattv'neunymulef 3 gIF e'i r1D--t+Idfleoedtel 1 1 preservea adsaRIC1 011, . ' feet bore claws like those Of some , There are ,etill in the Antarctic five -weird bird. These and other relics million square miles of untraversed Point to the 'existence le that region land; the Kola:- l'eninsula, in Arctic in past ttees of a race of human tees. Lapland, awaits the pioneer, and there dwellers, and Mr. John Giffen Cede- ,azIo•otreivoon tItvliililliceheinslatTa;rieteia mulespiicoolfos7duisth Foreign Trade . council, found in the e bertson of the United ,States, National , : , coveries5 s' - - east or Ecuador a tribe who worship In the heart fl"f China there has been their women, and kill without 'parley Sound a, race of blOnde women with any man who is disrespectful to a wo- curly yellow hair, des,cenclants of 5. man ' , people whose very name has been, Thie record 'embraces only a 'few of lest; while in the tecker-Nihon Is- I the discoveries of recent years; but lands. of the Hawaiian 'group, among , while such rewards ' await the trevels the ruins of an unknown city built in I ler, who can wonder that in the.so stalely terraces, there hae been found l prosaic days' the harm of exp,leration a colony w,hose inen are Applies, and still maintains its hold? •i. their teed in the 5110W, Wili.01.1- 115,5 not frontier to the;"Hole cape," at the en_ came along st the time, was powe.rleses become' very; deep. An exception:Ally 'trance to • 'At thee, "ader °:0 Ire has no lice•ns.e' to herds and many -animals. die tram tee Aectic coast from the Noith. Cape weakness caused by inehilitY to reach , eastwards, nerves away towards No - the moss beneath. In:Miring, ton the -eerie Zemblya, and beyond its in- snOw. Melte partially during the day fluence- cod are not found. Whales, aid freezes again' at night; the surface toe, abound op ,coast, as do Green - formed is netsstrong ' enough to hear , land sharks and codfish, but a mere important inhabitant, of these , north - _the weight of the deerand lameness ernewaters is the hUrrillg. 'According moil sense who has learbed what not an. si '9°48-e ' to a Russian writers, there is no euch Towards the end'of April the Lap - binders collect their "rein," and, •in coast in wet .or lose tS are inet with, he says, "from anticipation of' the break-up of the icei'They on the arivers and lakes, conunence the Kola Ejord to Archangel, e 415 - their (unmet, Etpripg Migration to -the tance ot mere thell sa hundred and eemmer pasturee by the' 0011gt or thirty /a -West' theY ateitakett In the bey anecing the mountains;',.but-previous to ci NanaalaIrs and along the coast, of their ,departure they ,assemble" to.' Petschora, the diseetice between theSe gother, ef. the little eettlements which points beteg little Less than a thousoceur here- and there tenons" Lae M. 1111d 1111ION; ana theY are. also found j 1 • , still farther to the east by the months to do in a situation anti will show you a MOD) Wi_t11 more than a fair chalice ot success, On the other hand. show me a man Whe does not duly consider the things experience, lute taught 'lien not le de, bat banks upset the t,hilags he thiuks contributed te his successes, a,nd 5hOW yott relean who Is ,riding for a fall!" • • Abner Jinks offered assistdace but was arrested by State Policeman No, 42, Jinks only had a carpenter's li- cense and was doing, work 'unauthor- ized by the code. Plunk. and his family eventually Were i'emoved when nolIee took them into custody on eliargefs of obstructing a public drain without having a license perniitting thein to remain Pi the ditch.. A Standing Threat: 'Alfred,' Said his; meting; in a low, tense voice, '011 you disobey me, will spank yeti right here 00 the street." The little fellow tooled up. "eletie Telephone operators in Bombay an 5 , • • _ er," Ise inquired with inteeast, "where MWit he able to speak pix languages, The traveler; who, iii summer passes or the Obi and Joliette/ rivers.", "The would yeti Zit?" . . s'llond These Amazing ,",..,SLoy,rrita of Sucteas rurrral 1611 In Two {4,7°Z 7*50 r tiotbe DA, cesse ovias,Ao wlsSt tbose /ten lin+ e 'done; you eandol /5 Your apare'time at home you gan. seise master thodiecrtts of aelling that make Star Salethamin, Whatever yotir experience line boon-ssoluitovor you mg be doing now.c-mhether or not you think you Can Bell-- junt answer thin question: Are you ambitious to tarn $10,000 year? Then get Th toilet, with me at once! 1 will prove to you without coat or obligation CI54 you eau easily betorno a Star Saloom.. I wilbshow you how the Salesmanship Training and rree ErnploymentflelWice 01 the N. 9, T. A. will help you to quick fleetest in Seilleg. n371 n $10 000 A Year Selling Secrets , To Sect* of Star Salignmohliip ea taught by 0150, e A. has enebled thoevande alinort overnight, to lon,o heland 01 1000 the &fidgety Ped amen pay a 100n000eY 1,0, (1.0 lona 0e051000. N. fi,ott.n ‘`,., 701 tiro 0010 dalog, the field Of ecillen ofdere you a hig futate. 111 1,0 fitate, .• National Sakasnon's ,Trainiag Asacciation't Canadian latear. 0olS6,63' i• j 5100 00011115 • heavy ansiesfall is inioricals to the Pc the' Gulf trearn, which washes rieP1 '349i/bleu Pass eillier fr,>111