The Seaforth News, 1934-05-31, Page 7THURSDAY, MAY31, 1934;
THE SEAFORTH NEWS
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THOMAS 'HARDY.
Going out iu a southerly direction
-;;tont [Inc .ancient town of Dorchester,
lei Dorsetah'ire,-one travels on, au. old,
road and passes, near the boundaries
sae lh'e town, the huge escarp,nen'ts of
Itairdcn Oastle, or M'ai-dint,the most
elaborate earthwork in '.Euglan'd, made
by an unknown pe'op'le.
0A nii'6e from 'Dorchester one ;comes
to a. snail house on the left of the
toad, 'Stand'ing back from it perhaps
- a hundred feet, nc oily, hidden by a
eoreen of fast -'grow ittg trees. dere
Lived '[or almost biail:f a cemituoy the
'elan whose 'name will forever be a
synonynat for tine whole di'sibr•i'ctround
about, the Bran 'wilto teras its .finest pro -I.
filet and spokesman,.—Thomas Han.:
4y.The blouse is 'like hint:` Boniest, un-,
.pretentious, simple, yet.. com'pac't OE,
quiet 'dignity. Int is the hfouse . of a
coun'try'manwho, although lee raised.
himself to a'higher rank of society—)
or rather above all ranks'--ne'ver'wish-
ed to forget 'hors origins. •
- 'One dloes not sir£ at ta'bll'e witni the
•oaost faitn'ous Allan Of letters kn. .the
:gggfis'h-speakingw'o'rlid without' a
aertaea duiele slhanpeuing Of' abteti'bion
'huoh iisies. and-.tretoo't0dIS. ev,ory w'ar'd
that such a man speaks, every gesture
and every facial expression. But
Thomas Hardy wawa ratan one would
remember even if he had had no
fame. What surprised me m000, 1.1"11 011
he fast stepped into the parlor where
the table was set for 'tea, was to find
him short in stature and slight in
build. The virile power of his work
itt almost all its phases, the sugges-
tion of breadth a,'d range in his more
characteristic imaginings, as well ai
Me portraits of him that I had seen,
had suggested to me 0 ratan of unusual
sticture. In the man before me there
was an almost birdlike delicacy and
refinement of 'limb, of hand, of fea-
ture. Allowing for the fact that he
was eighty years of age, he had the
nunbleuess of a bird, and his first
words after he had greeted me were
a sort of cheerful chirping. But then,
after we had sat in talk for a few
minutes, I began to see that this
would be the authentic master who
wrote Tess and Jude, and the august
Dynasts, after all; for above his dim-
inutive 'frame there towered such a
tome -of brow, so finely- s'culptured
and beautifully worn by thought, es
no mere shallowly cheerful person
has ever carried. if Thomas Hardy re-
sembled :any bird, then it was one of
the aquiline kind. There was a con-
trolled anergy, a mastered fire evid-
ent in his face that:seemed to render
all that he said somehow trifling and
'by the way. And yet this _ judgment
would not be entirely fair, for it
would suggest some failure in court-
esy of which the man was quite in-
capable. One might better nay 'tlha'
there were two distinct 'Wren in
Hardy—'the artist and thinker, of
course,' but also th'e lo'ca'l -country-
‘5011 AI
•country-
5001,'q';f a stone mason, who had
grown' up in a tiny cottage not four
niiiles from where we sat. The an:an
I heard from on ehlat first visit was
the second of these. He was a man
lvho knew about clops, about tree
plantiatg, about harvest -hone festivi-
ties and sheep: shear ings, He had all
the folk -lore of the district and all ' its
'atnaicnt-superstitions by heart, and he
delighted 'hugely in them all, He de-
plored tine swift pissing, under the
lntfluenee of local schools, of the 'rich
and eanthy collaqu'ia'lisnis in' 'w'h'ich.
'Inc friend, William Barnes, used to
write, 11'1 0 ifew decad'e's, Inc'said, the
people of Dorset 'venial be stalking at -
•most exactly'4iiee 'line people Of Lon-
don, or Liverpo'dl, and he did not
like the praspeot,
a 'remember tailing him 1licit, on the
night 'before My nda'ti,11 hal s'pen't 's:ev
en3!l 'hours rein 'Pijaitubarraw—'titre ibealc-
ioii 'hill that ;figurers so largely in The.
ONTARIO
ntario Elections. -1934
CE
TO VOTERS
THE VOTERS' LISTS for the Provincial Elections to be held on
June 19th have now been posted in your electoral district.
Examine this List and make -sure that your name is included.
If your name is not on the Voters' List, find out the date on which
the Revising Officer will sit in your locality.
Public Notice will be given locally of the date and place of the
Revising Officer's sittings.
If name left off, or correction needed, attend sittings in person or
obtain notice of complaint form and file two days before sittings.
You enjoy the franchise. Exercise it. You should co-operate in order
to see that your name is on the Voters' List.
The responsibility is yours. Do not delay. Don't put it off until
Election Day and then blame someone because your naive is not on
the Voters' List.
Issued under the direction of
L A. HUMPHRIES, I.C.,
Chief Election Officer for Ontario
The above notice applies to alt municipalities except cities and
separated towns having a population of 10,000 or more, and town-
ships bordering on a city having a population of 100,000 or more.
Dynasts and The Return of the Nat-
ive --looking out over ,Egdou Heath,
and that •L had been soincw-ha't shock-
ed to 'fin¢! 'agriculture making ,deep in-
roads upon if, in spite off his frequent
assertions that the heath was un-
tamable. "Oh, yes," 'he said with de-
cided n intation; "411 the heath necrls
is a little more lime in the soil to
make it bloo-m like the rose!"
There spoke the countryman, who
had always wondered whether that
great stretch of land near his 'h:mle
could he put to any use; and he
spoke in a cheerful defiance -of the
;artist 'who had written, thirty years
before, one of the'Most impressive
chap tors in 'En'glish fiction concern-
ing the indomitable 'heath which no
human skill 'could. ever master.
CHICAGO STOCK YARDS
DESTROYED BY FIRE
Livestock poured into the Chicago
stock yards this w•eelc despite Satur-
day's disastrous fire, which injured
some '1,500 persons and caused pro..
party damage es-titt sated 'fram eight
to ten, million dollars. 'Workmen have
set to work to rebuild the charred
ruins. The cause of the blaze which:
leveled scores of priva'te homes, sev-
eral 'flat. buildings and more,than al
dozen niajior structures, ittchtding the
Intea•n'aitonal am,p'hithea'te, the 'home
of the -international ,Sitocic 'Shows,
was undetermined. An army of '2,4'0
lite en fougih the 'flaines. The pro-
longed dry weather added to the
handicap of the firefighters.
'Although the 'fire was the largest
since' the great fire of 1871, witicit
virtually w,i,pecl Chicago off the map,
101 a single life w•,as lost as a direct
•ecoid`.
Unless worsts are expelled froth
the system, no ch'i'd can be healthy,
//other Graves' Wurnt Exterminator:
is an excellent medicine to destroy
worms.
1
•
W'an't and Fqr ISlale Ads, 3 titre's, Ole
A QUEEN AND A LADY
'Royalty is a Favored present state,
but it is not every .queen who is so
well arid earnestly praised afterward
au Marie Antoinette is by Mine. Vigee
Lebrun., In, this artist's "Souvenirs,"
so gay and witty and ,sincere, she
says of the unfortunate queen:
"As for her demeanor, it would be
diIficttlt to describe its 'affability incl
charm. I do not believe that Marie
Antoinette ever allowed an occasion
to pass without saying an agreeable
tMug •to those who had the honor of
approaching her, and the kindness
which she always showed me is one of
my most delightful recollections. One
clay it so happened that I failed to ap-
pear at the time appointed for my
sitting, being suddenly taken ails and
S Itastenecl the .next clay tq Versailles
to' make my excuses. The queen 'had
not expected roe, and was going for a
drive in 'her carriage, which wan the
first thing I perceived on .entering
the courtyard of the chateau. All the
sante. I went up anti spoke to the
gentlemen in waiting. One of them,
_Monsieur 'Campari, received me very
stiffly, and said, angrily, in his sten-
torian voice:
"I't was y'esterd'ay, madame, that
'her majesty expected you! She is go-
ing driving, and orf course will not
give you a sitting.'
"'Oat sty saying that I carne merely
to take : her majesty's orders for an-
other .clay, Ire went to find the queen,
who immediately sent for axe to conic
into her 'ca'bi'n'et. 'S'he w 's. finishing
'her toilet, and held a 'book .from which
isle ,was t'each'ing 'Iter dnug'lntor, the
youat.g madame, MT 'heart beat fast,
'for I Pelt nervous, !mowing that I
"had !been int tate wrong. The ',queen
•tuadned, and said, 'kindly: " 'I waited
'for you 'ail yesterday morning. What
Ihalppened to you?'
1'Alas,
madame,' I replied, ''I was
so 411 That I was unable to attend your
tmaijeaty's connanraanc(s, - 1 • 'come toad'ay
to reeeive them. and will leave di -
rectly:'
"'No, 1101 c, ct leave, she rejoin-
ed. 'I will not let you have your
journey- for nothing,' and she'cotutter-
manded her carriage to give me a
sitting.
"The queen never neglected an op-
portunity Of teaching her children
these gracious and affable manners. I
have seen her making madame, then
six years olcl, dine with a little peas-
ant -girl w'hont she protected, serving
her first, and saying•to her clauel'er,
'You must do her the 'honors.'
ARCHBISHOP McNEIL PASSES.
Toronto—Ar'chbis'hop Neil McNeil,
head. of the !Roman 'Catholic 'C'hurch
inthe archdiocese Of Toronto, died on
\lay '36 in St. '.Michael's Hospital ati-
ter a two weeks 'fight for life. '1 he
iftmena1 was held 'Wednesday morning
in St. \-.icltae'I's Cathedral. Born 82
years ago in •Hillsborough, 'Inverness,
Nova Scotia, one of it family of 111,
Archbishop MciNeil was claimed by
pneumonia that fo'll'owed an operation.
Son of 'Malcolm McNeil, descendant
of the \i:dNeils of .Barra, an ,island in
'the 'IIebr'ides, Archbishop 1IdNriil's
rise in the d:.ainan Catholic Church
was rapid. Ile tool: a groat intcres•t in
education, .on Which is wrote several
•boolclets. lW'hen a young boy he left
the blacksmith's 'gorge to study, and
then 'become a priest, who -alt the was
for more than u10 years, 'I-Fis 15 years
as IBis'Inop orf Niopo'lis anti 'VicarsAp-
o'stolic of St. George's in 'Neiv'fountd
land found (tint making 'weary journ-
eys in .rowboat .and sailboat trip the
rugged sttonnt-swept coast to 'viisit .his
flock. IHe also jaurueyed aver the
rough trails roof the Canadian 'Rockies
when 'he was iB'is'hop df Vancouver,
a 'po'st -he 'held'for two years, during
wh'iclln he 'built schools :and increased
the .educational ,fav lines, A'rchrbishop
McNeil left Vancouver for Toronto
Arcchdriocese in 119'113 and his 211 years
11 the Ontario e•apital 'Iouii'd 'him sti11/
active and although the years took
, their toll Ile worked diligently to
erect 30 new churches, a number of
schools and other institutions.
BLYTH.
Cronyn - Carbert. St, Joseph's
Church, 'Clinton, was the scene of a
quiet but :pretty wedding on \fay- 212,
at nine o'clock, when Aileen \1.,
daughter of the Mite 1i:r. and \Irs.
Polus
Ca-rbert,became the bride of gr,
Leo j. Cronyn, son of Mr. and \lrs,
Ariltu'• Cronyn, Myth. Rev. Father
\I. 'X. Sullivan, ['11l., performed the
ceremony and sang the nuptial 1Iigh
11110, which was served by Master
I'sarl Reynolds. The wadding Music ,
was played by Mrs. 'Frank: Dever-
eaux of Seaforth and at the offertory
a beautiful Ros.-wig "Ave Maria"
was sung hn 110x. Leo -Fortune. The
chancel and altar were beautifully
decorated with the season's blossoms
and ferns. 'rhe bridesmaid was Miss
Agnes Carbert, cousin of the bride.
The bridegroom was supported by
Mr, 'George Carbcrt..As• the bridal
party left the church the organist
played ktendelssghn's wedding march.
The hridc"lroont's gift to the grooms- ..
man was a 'cigarette case and lighter
combined and th'e brid'e's gift to the
bridesmaid was a sterling silver brace-
let. T'he happy couple 'lift atter break-
fast amid showers of eo'nfefti and
gaocf wishes, and on their -return will
reside near tBlyith.
Persian '13'alm—tile ideal toilet re-
gatis1te for every dis'cenn.ing woman.
Perfect In results. 'Creates comlple--
itons of ,rase beautyaand charm. De-
lightfully .cool and refreshing. Never
leaves a 'vestige of stickiness, A ve!1-
vety smooth lotion toning and s'tiuttt-
lacing the skin, j1efakiug it truly roase-
leaf in texture. All 'dainty women in
•vari'ably choose 'Persian ,Balm. It im-
parts that subtle diatia'etion so 66..
acteristic of the- etc. -gut woman.