HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1925-02-26, Page 2lIeTAGGART
1 MeTAGGAR.
MeTAGGAitT BROS.
EANkERS ,
neral. Banking Business transact-
, Notes Discounted. Drafts teased.
erest .AIlowed on Deposits.. Sale
otee Purchased.
1
H. T. kANCE
Notary Public Conveyarieer,
Inanciai Real Estate and Fire
uraneo Agent. ItepreSenting 1.4 F
suranee C0111 DalliCS,,
Division Ccu,rt Office, Clinton.
.0
• W. BRYDONE ,
0r)'0ter, Solicitor, Notary Oa110, etc.
Office:
•LOAN BLOCK - :CLINTON
, DR. J. C GANDIER,
Mee Hours --1,80 to 3.30 Pam, 7.30
o 2.00 p,m. Sundays, 12.30' to 1.30 p.m.
Other hours by appoirttment onlY.
'Rice and Residence e•-• Victoria 80.
DR. METCALF
BAYFIELD,,ONT.
0111a H4urs-2 to 4, 7 to S.
• Other hours by appointment,
,
R. H. S. BROWN, L.M.C.C.
Office I-Iours
•Od. to 3:30- pan. . '7,30 to 8,60
1.00 to 2.06' pan.
Other hours hY,appoirtimOnt.
. Phones "
•Mee, 218W , Residence, 2181
DR PERCIVAL HEARN
• Office and
Ilion Street ; " Clinton,' Ont.
• '. Phone 69
(Formally occupied by the late Dr.
C. W. Thompson).
Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted.
• Allewton Bradv..Bavfield
Gradnato .Dablin Umtversity; Ireland.
ate Extern Assistant eMaster, Ro-
tunda hosnital for 'Women and Child -
reit, Dublin. • '
Office at, residence latelyoncupied by
Mrt. Parsena.ie
Hours: -9 to 10 a.m., 6 to 7 P•ult
Sunday0-1 to 2 Pan. -
DR.. A. M. HEIST
Gateepathetic Physician.
Licentiate ToVra and Michigan State'
Boards .61` Medical Extiminers, Acute
and chronic diseates treated, Epinal
adjustments given to remove the cause
of disease. At theGraham House.
Clinton, every Tuessliy.forenoon.
, 50.3141P.
IVICINN,ES
crirroninat'or
Of Wingham, mill be 'et the Commere,
tat Inn, Clinton,' .on 'Monday and
Thursday .foronoons. each Week,'
.Diseases of all kinds successfully
handled,
CHARLFS B. HALE
Conveyancer:, Notary 'Public, COMMIS,
aroner, eto.
REAL ESTATE AND' INSURANCE'
HURON STREET - CLINTON
M T. CORLESS
"CLINTON, ONT.'
District Agent '
The Ontario and Dquitabie Life
and Accident Ineuranee co.
West Wawanosb 'Mutual Fire'
,
•
Insurance Co.
.• Established 1873.
Preeident, Sohn A. McKenzie, Kincart
dine; -Vice-President, al, L, Saikeld,
Goderich; Secretary, Thee, G. Allen,
Dung -am -Ion. Total amount of insUr.
anee pearly $12,000,000. ju ten yeara
number of policies • have increased
trom' 2700 to '4,500. Flat, rate of $2
per $1000. Oath on hand $26,000,
H. L. Salkeld - Bode/eel, Ont,
We. Stevens,' Clinton,. Local Agent,
GEORGE Jon.
Llogsed Auctioneer for the County ,
- „of Huron. .
porrespondence premptly anewered,
Intiarediate arrangement; coughs made
for Sales Date at The News -Record,
Clinton,. ot by calling Phone 203.
Charges 'Moderate and Satisfaction
Ottaranteed,
R. R. HIGGINS
-
General Fire end Life'Insurance, Agent
Lor Hertford Windstorm, Live Stook;
Autoroobile and Sjokiess aud Accident
Insurance: Huron arid Erie and Cana-
da Trust Bonds. Appointments made
to meet parties at Brueefield, Varna
and Hayfield. tPhone'57:" .
The flieKillop Mutual
Fire Insurance Company
Head Office, Seaford), Ont.
• DIRECTORY:
President, Jamee Connolly,' -Goderich:
• Vice, James tivans, Beechwooda Sec..
Treasurer, Thos. E. Hays, Seafortis,
Directore: George McOartneY, Sea-
-"forth; D. F. McGregor, Seaforth; J,
Grieve, Walton; WOL Ring, Heaforth;
IVIoEwen, Clinton; Robert Ferrfes,
HarlOolt; John Benneweir, Hrodhagen;
Jas. Connolly, Goderich,
Agents:, Alex. Leitch, Clinton; W.
Yeo. Goderich; Iliachray, Sea.
forth; W. Chesney, Egmondville; IL
CI. Zarmuth, Brodhagen.
Any money to be paid in may be
paid to Moorish Clothing Co., Chaton,„
or at CuteGrocery, Godarich,
Parties desiring to affect Insurance
or transact other business- wig ae.
promptly attendod to on application to
any of the above officers addresse4. to
their respective post office. • Losses
. inspected by the 'Director who live
nearest, the sego.
TIME TASLE
Trains will arrive at and depart from
Clinton' is' follows:
.Buffalo and Goderich Div.
-Going East, depart , , 6.25 am
2.52 p.m.
Going ",Vest, ar, 11.10 a.m.
ar. 6.08 ' dp. 6.51 p.m,
ar. 10.04 p.m.
London, 1-1i.'iron a Bruce Div,
Going South, ar. 7.56 dp. 7,56 fl.M.
' " 4.1.5
Going North, depart 6.50 p.m.
• " 11.05 11.13 a.ni.
Eighteen thousand workers aro ern-
ployed"in one distriet in China making
Irish" lace, In another ,district 25,-
000 110111011 are working in factoriee
producing lace of Belgian'ancl French
patterns.
CLINTON
NEWS RECORD-
,TeirnMoftitbscriPtionee$40 Per
'in advanee,'.to, Canadian addresses;
2.5(), to the DS. or 'othertdreign
'countries. No paper .discrintinnett
until all ,arrears ere. paid unless By Ametia.'Deav
/.asSedChoice Annua1
,
the option of the pubesiter. 9.'he
date to which every subscription is
50 1)1 10 del1O00d 011 the labsl.
Advertising Rates---Transtent adver-
tisements, 10 cents per nonpareil
line tole flest insertion and 5 -conte
per lino for each subsequent Inser-
tion. Small ndvertieements not 00
exceed one inch, 6uch as "Lost,
"Stialyed," or "Stolen," etc., inserted
0115110 ,
Communications intended for publi-
cation must, as a guarantee of, good
faith, be accompanied by the namo of
the writer.
G. E. HALL, M. R. ChARIT,
Proprietor. Editor.
1 Yon ehould'aifiaye ifiSp e .
bottle. af'- ChautbeYlciaii"
Stomach, and Liver Tablets'
on the itself. ,The ltttIbfojk
so often need a mild` tend .
, cafe, cathartic atuLthey do -t
appreciate Chamberlain'a
,thatead of nauseous oils and
tatixture FoR torase h
troubletian4it0n0ti54t1imfaiVennenteileto5o
attiOff te bad- Alt drugAints, 250.00.eend to
sHAMEERLAIN,111801CINE 0047E189970' ib
, ,
One of the beauties of the liret-year
aide —or of any gdeil, fo,, the it at -
ter or that --3 s that ils Plemeures can
be begun, long before the, tar.1-ying
frosts permit, the nrst actual- earring
Sof the .earth' by P etc 05 s IoN el. Pot a
sueely as thought moist precede ac-
tion/ Defere anY actual work Can be
done a plan -must be made 'end the
'Indeed, what bolter enteeteilinnene
for winter evenings, what better
Mod lee thought m 1'0 M0111011t0 eon
be cleVised than the working out of a
scheme; ,planning the location Ot-the
beds and vishalizing the floweTs which
well with the coming 00 511 50)1101' endow
them with the greateet charm?
For in beginning. the garden a de-
finite Plan is the first essential, How
many yards we see which are dotted
haphazard with tiny ;beds, „far more
laborious to make than several_ long
Ones- would have been, and which, in
return ,for their exorbitant clenmeds,
present a far interior appearance?
'VTetty`theugh it Majr sound td, sun-
a'relind. the base ,of each tree with bins.
onis, the result 58 actually decidedly
spotty in effect, to say 'nothing of the
.dilliculty, from the practieal, point of
view, of getting tetifileierit 01111 C/1' iloptli
of earth, in such. a place. .
,..Real Beauty.
Alaiti, the star, the crescent and.
,other fancifully, shaped' beds -which
epee dotted oar grass plots have now,
luelcily, been relegated to the past; for
as more persons have gone do love
the garden, more generai.has become
the realization that ite beauty 10 the'
resulg,of bloom Ethcl 'bloom alone, and
that any would-be decoration super-
imposed :upon that print; quality does
not Inorease buedetracts from it,
Apart from its inadequacy, the star-
shaped. bed shares..the detects of the
overornate jar; which deetroys the ef-
Sect of the delicate itowere it con-
e us. ,
In -placing the garden several things
must be borne in mind. One of them
is, of course, that 'the location must
afford sun, good drainage and good
soil, "Atiunny sheltered Position 'WM
result 'in flowers a little earlier in the
Spring and a little later in the fall.
The earth, if,poor, can always be en-
riched, If MOSS 111/01.1111d0, 1,11i8 1:8 a
sign 'of sour soil, and slaked lime
should be generously "sprInkled over
the surface . and spaded, in. When
slaked lime is not available, ordinary
lithe may readily be slaked by pc:taring.
Water upon • The beds tilemseivest
should be dug to a depth of three feet
and 0111'IChed Witii old manure. That
is -better than. chenaidal Sertilizer. Tait
verized sheen manure and bone meal
ars also eXcellent the former especial.
ly being invaluable. Of court° such
extensive labor will not be required
every iear; but in beginning a garden
it will be found that ease in the mak-
PRINCESS*TO OCCUPY -
FAMED IRISH CASTLE
CLANRICARDE ERECTED
IN 1588, BURNED IN 182.
Castle to be Rebuilt .,for Vis -
Count ,Lascelles as asPart-
lrfar Residence.
According to recent `oispatchep-foom
London Vin,pount Lascelles and Prin-
cess Mary. are planning an Irish resi-
dence, It ts said that las.scelles has
been contemplating the move for some
UM° mid that Princess Mary'iseven
more eager than he to live among the
People of Ireland for a few months
each year. So now the old. Clanri-
earde castle,' which came to Laacelles
onathe death of his eccentric ohruncle,
the Marquis of Clantioarde, and which
has been in the Clanritards family- for
centuries, ia soon tO be rebuilt and
will be used by the Lagellei family
for a country home. , o .
Ireland at well as England is great-
ly excited over the newt, for, onlike
his unele, T.giseellea IS a general favor-
ite with all the people surrounding his
estate. Aalor, Princess Marl, site has
long been 1oec1t bY tne Trish temple,
and on all occasions, has tried to favor
Ireland.. -Even ,when her troasseau
was being made she tent to it athat
great part ot It wee Made by the wo-
men and girls of the land for which
she has alWays hard such a tender te-
Castle Burned in 1826.-
-The ancient -castle, tvItich. came to
Lascelles on the death of his uncle,
'MIS erected in 1588 by the Dari of
Clanricarcle at a tremendous costa In
1828 it was doetrOyed by fire and,
Bing; nothing has been done totvard
rebuildieg the etructure. The outer
'mile Were not mu& affected by the
fire, for they still stand 'straight and
tall, a niajeatic pile of state fronting
on tile stIVery 'watere of Lough Hera.
The castle, set in the green' acres of
park by which Itis surrounded, will,
.when it is rebuilt, be a fitting home
tor a twinges. Acres and acres of
;emerald meadows strettls awa.7 front
dts enclosure and' to the ffistance can
be seen the winding alveo tranquilly
making its way through the peacetil
eountry. The little toms of Portuna-
nia, where the -castle is situated, 1i%
verar ancient and historic one. It lies
on the Galway tide ot the Shannen
and was °nee the chief pass and
meant of notnniunication between the
provinees of Connaught and Itlunstert
Many times the lamas bridge- re-
sounded to 'tile tramping sat feet on
theta waY to snortal conflict ancrinany
valiaiat Insights rode over it in daYS
thatare long vast,
aMoet of. the Clariricarde estate,
which was formerly the largest la area
and extent in Ireland, has now pasted
to the ownership of the tenantry. For
many years a bitter fight Was waged
over this, estate, Lascelles's much-
liatnit 'alloy having -been one of, .the
last of the absentee holders of vast"
tracts of land to consent' Lo restore' the
estaterto its rightful owners.
Historic Associations. "
Like all the large -estates in Ireland,
Claniicarde castle hae many historie
as,sociations. -PoeLe have sung itd
beauties and the,strength end courage
that its great line of chieftains pos-
sessed, For, until it canie into the
hands of the tate marquis, its owners
were loolted up to by the people of Ire-
land. as Po'iseesing" all the attributes
that make Teal men, And Laseelles'is
credited- with inhetiting some of ,the
tralte'of his forbears,' for he; too, has
peeved- himself: record during
the World -War was a splendid one.
During the great, condi ctlie•servedmi th
distinction 'and was wounded three
"th.tfes; on- g oTnk
biek 00 the trenches—a warrior that
was ,worthy to be, a.. descendant ct .a
fighting,' rag.
.It bellei;ed that the ebming of the'
Lascelles family will 'do antich'to pro;
mote 0111010 friemlly ettitude rronethe
people of ,the northern' countries to-
ward' their southern neighbors, in
fact, it Ishoped that it May .help to,
ward the settlemeet of tho
boundary question tor, when the form,
ex gloay of che obi c,usile 15 restereai-
what, 1110,11' or 1301111511 of the North.
-
would refuse Le COMO nod participate
In" the big affairs that'lvill surely take
place. fld as North and South visit
With each other under the friendly
democratic rOof or the Easeelles sure:
ly bettor understanding at each
other and of each other's -problems
will 100 the 'result.
ing will e.linainatemiuch work In later
500)0,Jong beck .OrtiEiNto: "with, a grabs
walk between -4.110111'j' will form Ft very
desirable sstartsng point fo'r the firet-'
jut), aide 1, IlioseSan be undertaken
if desieed, bat it le better to prepare
a few beds LI;oroughly titan to make
inOus less carofully. If others are to
bedue however we inuet be quite
suTe not to put them in haphazard '
Perhaps the best plan of 1311 1-3 that
of .• two intersecting doWer-bordered
walks,' ann (Mout these as a nucleus,
other beds can" be always delightfully
arranged, whereas the point ,of inter-
section may serve for the placing of a
bird bath, sun dIalr, for a grouping
of a garden table .atiti a few hairs,
perhaps with,- a ga„Y 'umbrella over
them., wherd a rest may be enjnYed
amid the flowers,'
Lasting Joy.
Though we are etp,ocially 'Consider-
ing the twat -year garden, it is almost
eertain that this, ,will endear, itself to
103 owners and bdeotne a secon4. and
O third year sole -as -well; growing with.
each succes.slye year; so,il3V011' if you
010 not anticipate', thie miracie, do not
leave the poesibility °fate taking place
out of your calculations -a ea° er.
the domain be not increased no harm
ivfll cerne of it; bat to need mere
space and not to have it is a calamity
indeed. .
Perhaps the chief difficulty in start-
ing Ulla garden is that this must be
done Just -when the crops are being
planted and all hands dre busy with
work which Is absolutely essential,
One dear old lady Persuaded her hos-
bent to' take sonte mffineats, in the
busy season to plow a few furrows he.
twee!" the road and the stone wall op.
Positethe house. Thie, the work of a
few minutes,' when spaded up, formed
her, garden—a garden whieh grew un-
til it otreased the road into her front
yard,-"anci which delighted every ob-
server. • • • '
Even a simpler plan is to add a law
feet to the corner of the vegetable gar-
den, either 'as, a permanent lower gar -
.den or as a makeshift,
In any case let the -permanent flow-
er gardeit be as near the house as pee -
Now for the conteats of the garden,
Send to reliable seeds -men for as
many oatalogues as- you can, „and,
study them. .
The new garden, of course, must
justify itself thie year 'and the setae -
tion must for the most,part be 'made
from annuals.
Of course perennials, may be bought
In the form of small plants, which will
btoont in the coraing summer, and" of
these some, like the phlox, which are
almost never grown from seed, may be
bought and tet out.
Favorite Annuals.
Among the annuals, however,' there
'POInt.
are two h espeejally deserve no-
tice. , ,
The 'fret of these obltgin13 -blossoms
iS the petunia in a variety' Of shades
of Mak and roee, which is delightfully
gay and pretty and as free flowering
SS- it is perelstent. •
,
Second Gully to the petunia' ni lux-
urtanee and persistence is the; nico-
tiana'The white variety is
more hardy, effective ad in eyorY WaY
better than the -pink.; -
As the inicetia.na groWs 'seine throe
'fleet 0011, 30 will be neValuable. addition -
as a backgi'ound to your bed, as will
the baby's breatheegypsephila—and
the. pink and white cosmos, It will
he found best to sow the seed over a
space a foot or eighteen -inches wide
rather than in 0 Single' row.
.Against this background of pink and
whiteness, which etvill bloom 'until
'frost.) set flowerof a mederate.height
—zinitiad; ping, bine or white baehel.
or'sehuttone; tall African marigolds:.
aha asters. . ,
'Before these.again set 'mourning
hrides—scabiosa--which can be had
in pale pastel eliade,s as well as in the
quaint 'characteristic black; the pussy
foet--agerutum—in, soft 'velvet; the
gay little nasturtium; the balsams the'
snow -on -the -mountain which, should
novo been mentioned with the petunia
and the nicotianaeso p055150000 18 it;
and the princets feather, another self,
sower. ' .
For the ltordor there Is oanclytuft in
pink and white, the less striking but
far more floriferous alyeSinn, the slew -
sprouting Verbena, and the portuiaca.
Also theacockseombs.
Asnong the son-sewhat taller flowera
the calendula ennears ,itself by ,its !tot
difference to the draught; the low -
growing annual larkspur 'in Mak and
mauve makes a 'very delicate' apPear•
once; whereas,strawilowere are bright
in red and yeliew. „
Four-o'olocks Make an, attractive
edging for' the pati.- summer
hyacinth—H. candieans-with -all its
tall spikes of snow, and the many
lovely tints of .the gladiolus, are not
tote torgolten.
,Care, ofacourse, necessary in ar-
ranging the dowers. It le surprising
how colors which would; in roan -made
Materials, clash intolerably, harmon-
ize. In the tower world. .
Textureof the flowers is also a mat-
ter 'of pritnesimpOrtan,ce. A bed of
silky or feathery annual poppies is a
lovely eight, but. put them in close
proximity to the gorgeous
which is so great a trealure 00 the
fall, or the overpowertng, though valu-
able stinflower, and yonr, poppies will.
shrink' into insigniticance. -
After =sting Your background, by
the way, .be pure to mass your smaller
plants before,it. In this way you will
obtain, a riol• of color, far Preferable,
I1S lig been pointed out to a single
line of bittern. ,
For
oys and Girls
A COASTING LESSON.
"May, I am 'going downstaiis to
make a pudding far dinner, and I
want you to take' care of' Nan until I
come back," said Errs. Sayford, as She
left the room, closing the door behind
her. . "
Now, May had just been thinking
that as soon, as she had ,her French
doll, Tita, undressed -and asleep, she
tvould go over to Otto's and get the
boys to take her coosting. .
Fred and George had been off With
their aleda *half an hour ago, tend
though she loved baby Nan dearly, she
did not Like to have _the care of her,
and Otto's wite the best place in the
whole town to have a. good throe. .
• In the first place, their gram& were
very 'large, and then Mrs. „Otto let
themsmalte just as much noike as they
pleated, and sometimes they Made a
great' deal.
In summer, a; 10011 103 Lhe grass 'VS
green, Mr. 'Otto would have a greet
load- of clean sand dumped right on
the grass -plot, and they conld shovel
dia about and bury oneattoother, -and
make pies- alI day if they -wanted, to;
and in' winter, he had the side of the
'grounds, just back of the house, 'where
there was a gentle slope, covered troth
boards, told. When_ the snow came, and
the 'cold- nights, there would be water
thrown on t,in the' evenieg, And then
all the ehildren the Ottos knew were
welcome to the splendid coasting in
the morning.
- Sometimes when there tvas moon-
light, Mrs. Otto would give coasting
parties' for grown folks, aid t -they
would have sledti long enough to hold
five, people, made on purpote, With a
kind of, radder to guide thena
Now, Nan Sayford was a cunning
child and everybody loved her. She
had short curls all took her head, and
a mouth that made moitIollts want to
kiss her; but she did not want to kiss
everybody, and sometimes she would
turn her ' cheek just 'when people
thought she was going to be Obliging.
She was three years old and May
was eight, and May thought it was
too mbad.she should have to stay in the
house because Nan could not be left
alone. So after a, while site found
Ittan's hood and her little white fur
ooat and put them on her, and then
elle got hetht own', and taking 'Nan's
hand, led her quietly down the front
stews, and shat the front door without
O bit -of ,noffie.
Nan seemed to know' it 'Was not
'quite right, -for, though she Was a
great chatterbox, she never said a
word until Aey were on the -sidewalk,
and then she only said:
::OWnhltreroevearretoY0Puttag'°s1.,11)to?'1'ook through
423266/asinf
the fence and see if Mamie Beeber and
Bert and Maud Otto are coasting with
the boys," said May. "We will only
be out a little while'
Anil it Was not until she saw Nan's
little red hands holding on to the cold
-iron railings that she nemembered
that she ought to have put on her
mittens.
They had not been there, long, when
Will Beeber espied them and mune
over to the fence, dragging his new
sled "Fleet -wing" after him..
He kissed Nan through the railingh,
which made her ,langh, and then:staid:
"Come round through the gate, May,
and I'll take you down the hill ors
Eleetwing, She goes like the wind,'
tell you. Here, Ntui, I'll lift you over."
So Nan climbed up, andtWill drag-
ged her over the fence and set her on
his sled, and pulied her to the foot of
the hill where 'there was is wooden
seat, off which let brushed, the snoW
with his cap and set. Nan on it, telling
heir to 'wait and he would gene for
her by -an -by.
And then he followed May, who had
gone around the side. of,. the hill and
reached the top, where she found her
friend, Mamie Becher, and the six
Otto childtein and her 'brothers Fred
and. George, all getting- ready for a
start down the hill. So she called to
Will to hurry, that they might all
start together.
•
Now, the wtorst part of coasting is
the tiaosome „walk up the hill, and it
was quite a while before Will joined
them—long enough for Nan, who
'never sat still anywhere, to' -slip down
off the seat and try to reach them by
walking up the icy boards.
Of coutse, she alipped and fell, and
rolled down and 'began to cry, and
then she wiped her tears on her poor
little frozen hands. Then she got up
and tried to again, but this time she
atruck her nose and made it bleed.
. Then she just turned over on her
back and kicked and cried: "May!
Mayl take me home!" as loud as she
Hitt May was too far off to hear,
.and was only thinking how nice tt
,was to e seated behind Willa on
"Fleetwing," arid of the fine rueh
dow-ii the bill.
Down1 :they came shing outsand
laughing. One aled caught 111 11 STIOW-
bsnk,' and 'tumbled Vred and Maud
and Bert off, and down they rolled
Pell-mell to this -toot, while the othors
ran far out in the grounds, almost to
thc'"Tti'1,3,5 tolemild 17 eeid
Na"w I must 0111'0 Nan home
BUt when thoy eamo 00 tbe warden
seal Nan woe nut Ileum, awl whoa
they cAlls.,.1 and. 411010 1551 witiwor,
and all they could 13)18 50)100 l'od
dropo tm the snow that, hiolt0t1 lllto
blood,. May thought of ited.
Hood, and wondered 34 a \vols.
have eaten her up, imt will latent(
at that and said there wore 00 Vi0100,0
town. '
15 )10 0, Code ed, i -Year-old bey 11 '11)1 ihe nonin :
slAli 000 at The' Pa-, Ns, 13 lobe 1500weelte ago,-ls to drive he, dey,9 in thi; Ma'Y' ‘va "Vi" 5V 11'45 tIn14' 003)1
,her band and helped her
120-g le Intel eatienal dog itiam derby al Quebec. took
climb the Mil and then thee t
111
the other children, and' thri they all
rap to the house to tell Mrs. Otto,
They found her sitting by the fire,
d who do you think was en her lop
with a piece of raisin calc9
71d1Atdat:35iti.N:ctakniltnigiSt-ia:;:h:torevd:l :r, 'Otto -hap-
pened --when he came to (linnet—to
come through the back gate just in
!time to save Nanisdife, for, if one of
those sleds full o'f children had struck
I her, she would -have been killed.
I May was very much frightened
wheit she heard what a narrow eseape
her little sister had, and cried bitterly
her, and yhaenifd' :14::htlyegrPhrte'llemi :31°snbeeedsdsine. enveeer' again vto°
Her mother, seeing she was heariily
disobey her good, kind parents, and
she never did, •
'Boys and girls who are told by their
parents to stay in the house and min
their little brothers and sisters should
not go out without permission, and if
they do so, and anything happens to
the little brothers and sisters, they
will he sorry for it all their lives. '
once knew a lady wielt had a crip-
pled sister, to whom she was very
much attached, and on whom she
, doted. ' • ;
' One day, when asked Why she was
a ways so uneasy abouter is r, shc
said;' • .,
,•"When Lwas a little girl and my sis-
ter' a baby, I was left in charge of her
one day and .went to• play. The baby
crawled to the head of thd stairs and
fell, down, reeeiving injuries from
which she has never recovered, and
will be a cripple all her life. It was
all my fault, and I shall never cease
to regret it," '
Do you wonder she was kind to her
e'rHPPeiledaitr
•storsyes'-
h?ou'Idbe a 1.;M,Tn.'ing to
all- boys and girls not to do as naughty
May did—slip away when left in
oharge'of their baby sisters; but they
should stay withthem in the house
and take good Ore of them until their
mothers return, and when they wish
to ' go out coasting, or to play,. ask
permission to. do so.. •
Two Sons:
ha -51 two sons, Wife--: •
Two tind Yet•the same; '1
One his wild Way -"yttissf'Wife,
Bringing.u.s;to shame. .-
The one ict hoarded, isunburnt, grim,
- and fights aortas& the sea; ,
'rhe other Is a little child tito sits Up-
on yent:.knee.
One is fierce and bold. Wife, ,
As the wayward &telt;
Rim no arms could hold, wife,
Him ,no breast could keep.
Ile has tried our hearts for naany a
Year, not broken thein; for he
Is -still the tiniest little' one that sits
t upon your knee,
, .
One may fall 00 fight, Wife—
Is he not our son?
Pray with all your, might, wife,
For the wayward one;
Pray for the dark; rough soldier who
fights across the sea, -
Because you love the little shade who
=lies upon yang knee.
One across the foam, Wife,
As I speak may fell;
But this trote.at home, Wife,
Cannot die at all.
They both are only on, and how thank
ful sheuld be:
We cannot lose the darling eon vsho
site upon your kneel
---Lord tuchanan.
;
Worry.
But human bodies are file fools
For a' their colleges and schools,
That when nae Teal ilis perplex them,
They make enow themselves to vex
them. --Burns.
You Aro
Too Tire
Hood's Sareepaillin
knes'n Al,s600 01 di -
0110 says-84raijP
"food fastogpp113
three 1)0ttle0'li4 ea, • a
a day, weilisiliavd(ntlii, 000pstveiL-
1, ktmtialn/ '10010011. &: ito" f
earnestly recommend all woman
vlio wish to be made new, 0 h
, 11 0
are troubled with that tired feeling
1,o take Hood's Sareepardle
wonderful,y relieved Me Otsons'
le&ornach, distress and belehing.i'
Get Hood's, and only llood'J.
Qttebic ideal for VI
SpOrte.
C31 581n eiiiee seem obviously code
for evenbs or Indy:Ai-lee with Jehleh
they have become associated,
005, instance, is ideal fel' earnivalS,
New Yerls for parades, Los Angelese
for the movies. Now 101005 Quebec
ae the ideal place ter Winter S'01-fsi
At Qua ec all nniter por13 ean be
had, under perfect conditione. One, of
the finest hotels oil the continont,".the
Chateau Frontenac forms the centre
front which these are carried oe. The
oriuntd1;se1,0'1j
1;elm'her8t)eirt.n17S
Vided fbr, 'with instruetbre, a ncw aaa
peamaaent ski -jump built strictly upon
the lige laid down by the -rules of
the Oryinpic games ski-ing excursiona
over open c0011041-5,j
Then thereare bob-sleighfng 11110
tobogganing:- On Dufferiu Tetrace ;is
O triple -chute toboggan -slide, one-third
of a mile in length, which the tobog-
gans cover at thb breath -taking aPeerl
of a. mile a minute,
Hockey and curling occupy 0 very
considerable portion, of 'the Quebec
Winter sporte programme. Snow -
attesting, too, is one et the more easily
acquired winter's pastimes'
There are two fine skating rinks at
the eChateau, one, for expert figure.
altaters and the other for the lese am-
bitious variety.
„The Eastern Internatioual Dog-slea
Derby, hetiannually over, a 120onile
course between entries of' woffiting
teams driven by hardy American and
Canadianmashers- for a flno 'cup and
'other .prizes, is , an attraction which
drais visitors from all parte of. the
United States and Canada. -
Wisdom Frokn Araby.
May Heaven bless hith who pdys
short visits.. -
God tides' not pay weekly; but he
pays ail the end.
Death's first challenge to 01 Woman
is a gray hair.
I -Taste comes of Satan; wise slow-
ness comet of God.
You have great riches tf you ab-
stain' from desires.
At th,e narrow passage there 18 no
brother and no friend.
When you are but an anvil, be pa-
tient; when you are a hammer, strike.
At life's; roasted Meat men cry:
"Take, take--." but at the 'vinegar:
"My teeth ache,"
A., man demanded as a favor from
•Goa the swifter rising of morna and
at tIie? dawn he becarae
Alt Lit Up.
Match Box ---"Well, it there /met k
Candle all lit upla
Stories About Wennown People
. The Real Socialism.
Everybody needs everybody else,"
said an M.P. the other day, and I ant
sure 'the apirit of Lord Leverhulme ap-
plauded the sentiment, for he is a,
groat believer in unity.
Once ha was asked, at a, meeting:
" "Which do you contider the most
important "factor in industry—labor,
capital,- or brains?"
Leverhuhue replied with smiling
Promptness: -
"Which is the most important 05 .11
threedegged. stool?"
One of Churchilre.
Here is one of Mr. Winston Church-
ill's latest, stories. Mr, Churchill was
warning his audience never to jump
to conclutions and mentioned a lec-
tures' who was holding forth 011 the
subject of Pear.
"Only those tvho have been roused
'from their sleep on board ship by the
terrible cry of 'Man overboard!' can
fully - realize its. Meaning," said the lee-
turer,
OThat's not right!" interposed a lit-
tle man in the audience. "I heard it
once, when' I was not aboard a ship,
and I realized it more than anybody."
"You couldn't!" objected the lac-
turer, "You might think you could,
but you couldn't!"
..^.
"Oh yes I could!" Waisted the little
man. "I was the man who was over-
board!'
. Conan Doyle's Bookshop.
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, creator of
'Sherlock Holmee, 15 opening a book
-shop In London, Effigland, but lavers
of the famous detective's exploits will
not have the oppertunity et purchan-
ing bound valuing of stories front the
author. Situated- in the shadow, of
Westminster Abbey, the LIM bOok-
ighop will handle nothing but, Waldo
and splritualittia workt but the butt -
'noes win be personalty supervised by
Str Arthur,
Burnt His Nay,
Though Lord Darling, famous Bra
tiah judge, is well known as a humor-
ist and teller of funny stories, he has
never told a funnier one than that c010 -
earning a play he once wrote.
"It was performed twice only," he
laid, "and on both 'occasions the
young mau and young 'woman toll°
took the -parts of the hero and heroine
1Ver0 inarried- soon afterwarda.
"This set me thinking—fnsiously, lis
the end I decided that for me to allow
that. play to go on being 'acted meant
ahoulclering a too. heavy resPoneibiliiY.
So I burnt It." t
teivcSveressean e FAR. Or
What theea men have done,Yoti can ilet y6- eCerothlte
01 homa•rpn ean easiliunaster the.seeyetu of selling' {het make
.Stur SMesmen. Whatever your experience ban been -,..whatever
• You null' he doing now—whether o,r not you think you am coil—
Pat answer this quotient /)10 505 ittabitious to earn 510,000 a
yeer? Then getln touch With me n1 ante! 1)5)11 prove to you
without rcost or obasation that,you Son easily become a Star
Sideman. I will allow you how the Salesmanship Training 13511
Free Employment Service of the N. S. 'LA. will help you to 511101
eueehus in Selling. ,
$10 000 A.Year Selling Secrets
-the Seer(ta ot Star Salesninnoldg an taught by 0,,N. n T. A, tee
onat)od [Iloilo/n.13, Midis! overnight, to /cart 0e/iIn4 1)00 0000 tho
and small pay bth
linollny Mth
id at lead nostiliero. 14' matter *lint 55,
mu now doing, rile geld ,st selling intern goo a'Wfuture. 011 tini foot,
flood Them Ataceinit
Sten,o, Of Sacco*,
totowl f$11 ill Two 11,ArAw
i!ve4111“
tine A D.,
Wool!
National Salasraerea Tro'n'ats Assoolation,
Cnhadihn Bo, 162 ,Foranto.