HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Star, 1926-02-11, Page 2Pal" TWO
s
Youn Tender Leaves
muted ttrs 1$411 i*
GREEN TEA
ire sealed in.i1r-ti rat aluminum toil.
Their trash flavor its liner than any
japan or Gunpowder. Tri' SALADAe
'The l'garaey Stone Agin
Blarney Castle, and the famous
Stamey! Stone have changed° hands
eines the death of the owner, Sir
Gorge Coltburat, .and now descend
to a aeon of the same flEne. None of
eta efileley has been lost in the treas.
far, however.
Art for Arts' Sake
All the expectations have been
outstripped in the attendance at the
new building of the Toronto Art Gal-
lery,' where the finest exhitrition of
works of the old masters ever erten
in Cassis, is being held. During
the . aeeond week, the daily Attend -
4.1 snce climbed to fourteen thousand,•
and the crowds are almost too great
to allow of a proper viewing of the
picture.. •
for Premier MacKenzie King at the
eleventh hour for nominations in the
riding of Prince Albert where he is
running in a by-election 'o secure *
not in the. Canadian Common...
Just about the time nomination!
were to be pronounced closed a fine
looking, youthful, soldier -settler in
the• biaeDowell district stepped up
*rad presented hirasolf as . a
candidate for political boners. Capt.
David L: Burgess, M. C., is running
u an independent.
. The Booth Tradition
The third generation of Booths of
the. Salvation Army tie represented
by Brigadier • Bernard Booth, the. Na.
tional Young People's ,secretary for
the Army in the British Isles, who is
on a tour of Canada, He is the son
I of General Booth and a grandson of
i General. John° Booth, the founder of
I the movement.
—riff lid
are ywss, le the eeedkilo..t * '�•- --""- -r•:
a.wspri.t z.aantstetarer nice
nettaeed the ertabeiehssent within the
next tam ter Or* )sate er la,p.rtaw
aniitional paper mills in teat diet-
riet. In five years a thintaand me -
will be eatpioy.d In ,<,e mina tine
three thousand in the wood.' supply'
iter the raw tnaterieti for the fa-t-
ortea, and 30,000 horsepower of dec.
trio energy will be required.
The Awakening in the U. S.
The IJ ited . States is beginning to
understazid the seriousness of the
position in which thelahava placed
themselves by "extortionate and in-
tolerable" customs duties,' for those
are . the terms applied to them by
some of the Senators who are move
ing for the reform of the tariff laws
of that country. This' group ,rte op
-
• posed, to• tutting • down the income
•
Sir Fame Howard:
British .Ambassador to Washing-
ton,, and a„ pioneer i n the rubber
,growing,, :business thirty yearn ago,
with disastrous fln*neial results to
himself. In the rubber contrpversy
Sir Barre pointed oua:uaat but for
the efforts of the grubber planters at
that time, prices Might ,low be four
or tee dollars a pound, instead of
the average of thirtyetwo . cents it
tax on incomes over $100,600 chart-
ing* that the• authorities . were com-
bining to protect large fortunes "ac-
cumulated by legalized 'robbery un-
der high tariff legislation." There
are . those. iii' the United States who
are beginning faintly to realize the --
Position
toposition into which the United States
has entrapped itself by forfeiting, the
good . will •ef friendly nations 'and
malting it almost impossible for
'them to o0' -set their financial obliga-
tions by the usual trade methods.
Some good Americans dislike .the pic-
ture of
ie-tureof their country surrounded by
a : high tariff wall and ornamented
• over the .entrance with three balls.
Freer trade and better relations with
their. neighbors is the demand of: a
growing group of men with interne-
tional vision. • •
Soldier -Farmer -Politician
it political surprise was in store
Three Gmieritttemr of ldukidea -
Louis Henan, of Kitchener, aged
twenty-six, took his own life with it
Shotgun a few days ago, end the fact
was revealed that he is the third,
generation to commit the tragic set, -
both his father and his grandfather _
having been suicides.
The Robber Heroes
Sir Ea Hawaii', 'knish *vibes. -
seder to tbi'theed States is a$ .to
make some heartfelt remarks an the.
position of the British rubber pro
docer- in the �preseiit--inveetigetion
Thirty years ago he was financially
interested in the inrant industry of
cultivating domestic rubber with die-
astrous etiecta to his pocket beak.
Now he points out that if it had not
been for the sacrifices and losses of
the rubber pioneers in that day, Un-
ited States robber manufacturers
would be paying four or five dollars
a pound for rubber from South Am.
eries instead of an average of 32
cents as they paid last year.
' Cood Old John Bull
One American at least is willing to
give unstinted approval to John Bull
for his share in the rubber business.-
He writes to a Canadian , per from
Binghampton, N. Y. and 'after re-
ferring to the traditional Attitude of
amused pity en the part of a great
many Americans- he concluded:
"With others, I have held the naive -
hope that the tires on ray tolls -Royce
(of Detroit vintage)' ° might become
immortal, or at least; aehieve a ven-
erable old age; but now Choy nuay
"bust" with more than the faun' fre-
quency, 0 it will help John in his
rubber business.•
"So here's •lo. old John Bull, may
he squeeze the 'very last dollar out of
_ rubber, : oil, platinum, or anything
else he'rein lay hit renerable bands
upon. ,:,
"He not only needs money in the
billions, but deserves.it; the only one
amongtrt the nations that fought, en-
dured, suffered, spent, lent, gave, and
after all paid.
ohn Smith�
.Copy-,�Li.e 1925 by
The tuba r •. • ,tux* Service)
•
-?4e, 1 The A 11 C of Senorita ed the tubes. I expisined the con-
Iiavi connected again tine re- sections were so arranged that when
ekarged storage battery +a the set, he plugged in the loud -speaker wires
Staub came sport the logical r•.oment the circuit to the ctsbes for the light-
te get a Hae on the batteries in gen- ing filamenta was satoenat wily cloe-
eral. Why batteries at all? Why ed. Since this was the that aperat-
re there three different kipds for ion in preparing to tun* in he agreed
his set? Why could * .crystal net it was logical to name the current,
operate without any? source for thief circuit the "A" bat-
Queetions which bad been whirling ter).
around in his bead sa he toned in sed. Smith brightened at the simplicity
deity crystalised intim one big query. of it all and followed closely through
It was feet his craving .:or learning the explan*tton?.f the difference be-,
Ike A B C of them. tween dry cell sfor A battery tnr•-
"I 'bus never seen 'so many differ» rent and storage battery. The ferm-
ent ways of hooking up batteries in or, I told him required smaller tubes
allaray-lifei" coateased- this -average.. which_ need _lois Current. this Ma
man who remembered batteries only. angement being pref"eeretT'`Gy"thoKs -
by the comparatively Simple way who desire portability. The latter
they are used for furnishing current obviated the frequent replacement of
for automobile headlights or for the cells and, together with st charger,
front doorbell "It seems'to me- that provided for a small power pleat,
M radio they hook positive wires to which center be kept u» to top crit••
negative, or vice versa, and get away; ciency et all times.
with it." "Now for the 'B' bet taro,'' I went
"Yor.'ie confused beesusti you are on. "This provides for the .current
still putting the Cart before the on the plates of the tabes: For a
horse," I told nim. 'tin your crystal muititube set like this. it is necessary
set. if you remember, the detector to have a current of 90 vent for this
does the work of rectifying the me- purpose. This ran be supplied either
tremely high rune frequency current by four 221a volt or two i5 -volt dry
but it does spot amplify It will not cella connected in aeries --negative.
,operate, at,loud-speaker, and because terminal of one. wired to the positive
there ie no means of :amplifying the of the other—or by means of a trans -
incoming, radia frequencies, it will farmer connected' with the house
operate only for nearby stations. lighting circuit; generally
known as
"In order to ick up distant stat. a B battery eliminator,
ions under adverse cgnditiotis, to aim- "Just as you control the W cur-
lew;
aerials and to hear programs rent' to the filaments of .the tubes by
over the loud -speaker, it. la neoeatary meant; cif a rheostat or a potentio-
to use electric power, which, .at pee. meter, so you +;entrol the }3• current
sent, ie•.generaliy supplied by storage to. the Plato of the detector tube.
batteries or dry cells.. Using current But there is one more current•control
for amplification, a . crystal can Ire which in most advanced sets is hon -
used. in connection with va eon tubes .dled automatically. Here is where
the C battery figures. When a tube
but In maiarity of manufactured seta' is being usecless.an amplifier is is
the detecting detecting is done by means of toe' Portant to keep the piste positive and
tube, electric current.being .required' the grid negative. so that the attrac
to operate it. tion of negaive electrons, to the plate
"You remember hour, in Picturing can be maintained. • The 'C` battery,
the...activity •jnaide a detector .tube, a small one of from 11/e to tl volts, is
You observed the way in which the, connected. into the circuit so -as to ac -
faint incoming current from the tier- cmmplish this, Its use, is- comeliest-•
ia1 is made to control the strong cur- ed, I'll admit, but slayer need to re-
rent supplied • by the batteries.. Now member • is that it .should. be renewed
all yea need taahlle* ;s the Part each occasionally when its voltage falls:
stype of battery plays and why.'" Title prevents distortion."
Here Sniltb interrupted .to stgest "And does •that complete the bat-
that we pull the table holding the set:tertes?" Smith,assked:
away froxlt,the wall so that the colt- "No. There are some hook-upsns-
sections might be visibly: • Ile be- ing a `D.' batters --but You'll be dater.
leaved in. mixing theory with nrnctical se/pinto stick to the A B .0 jnet now."
and Hua
1
a io
THURSDAY, FEB. llth. Itid.
rsoething to CROWAb0uE
Not the BLACK CROW
But BLACK'S llaudTailored
CLOTHING
•6.
Thirty-five years ago a friend of
the Canadain artist, E'aul Peel, pur-
chased two of: his pain::nga for fifty
dollars' each. They clung In his home
-for some fifteen years, but when his
son moved the household eireets to
New York, • the "two meatuses were
- among, those "discart:ed . frcim the
walla and they were s..qredd
away un-
til, dpring a 'recent ..sit of their
owner, George S. Birrell, of London,
he discovered that Paul Peel's works
were now considered masterpieces.
Ile unearthed the two old pictures
and they have been valued at $5,000
each. One of them is a companion
picture to "After the Baba and por-
trays . the . same children in a scene
called "Before the Bath.” '
Welcome Horne_A Weapon of Befenie. '
The improvement lit . the Canadian • he League of 1v'ations •nay ,decide
mental attitude toward better timet#' to use the British ti ayy to . settle
is having a' practical result in an int- world dieputes. is the 'Ault given by
proved business tone throughout the ,
application, For instunce, following
the leads from the storage battery .he ge
found they were connected .to the set
in such a :v.'ay that.the current 'light
a. - .--. - -•
I
Next Week, No. 15: Reaching .Re -
'Aeration: - •• -
(Copyright 1925 'by .The. Ullman
Feature Serrice)
Twent .P.ivie Years Ago. Morgan ..cones as W icor! d
�' gW e
. Horne from the South African War at. Goderich
Wand Dungannon dy; D. of C., a. Ttchbourne; lecturer,
Our "Mad 'to -Measure' Samples for Spring
are here. °
Our stock of Men's Furnishings ia.always alp:
to.the.rninute.
' CHAS BLACK
"The Men's and Boys' Store Worth While"
Phone 219
(From The Goderich Star of Dec. '
•
21st, 1900)
The Winter Fleet Twents-Five Years
Ago
Navigation has dolled after a pret-
ty
long season and the following ves-
sels have taken up their winter quar-
ters in Goderich harbor; Steamers.
Myles and Jones; schooners Kash -
din, Todman and Renege; dredge
.Arnold; •: tug Huron' and attendant
scows; fishing • tugs. Foote, Evelyn,
Sea King, 4:luces, Stebold, Sea Queen
and Sea Gull.
Lodge Officers A Quarter 'of a
• Century Ago a
Royal Arch "Chapter: ?, A. Law-
son; H., F. J. T. Naftel; J., James
Robinson; Scribe E., Wm, Tye: Scribe
N. A. Egener; P. S., I•f. A. Moores;
treasurer, A. • Saunders; janitor, J.
Tancott,
• Maple Leaf Lodge, A, 0. 'U. W.:
1'. 14„ J. Horton; M. W.,;D. Ferguson
F.,: A. Egener; 0., J. Story; G., E. R,
Smith; J. W.,. P. Wylie; O. W.,' J.
Hawkins; representative to 'Grand
I:od e . Edward : Graham; alternate, 3 -SPECIALS -3
g ,
c. O. F. C. Jas. Tait;. V.C.R.-. for _This Week
John Curren; fin. sec.,, Alex. Saaun-
'ders; tee. sec., Thos. Burrows; cliap-,
lain,,. John Newell; treasurer, Wni..
I Lune; S. W., John McDonald; J. W.,.
B. H. Evans; S. B., Chas,' Blackstone;
• h ice n Dr.
. elides
in a
John •Cl a
J. B. a y
� it's P
l Taylor; ;C. D. Mayor Wilson;. true--
; tees, -Jas. Stewart and' Win. Me -
Creat]*° . ,
L. 0. L. No. 182: W. M.,' $falcolm
McDonald; D, M., Robert Sharman ;,
clutplairt,� George McMullen; rec.'sec.;
• William; •Nevins; treas.,. Outs. Twee.
North Sial Sgaare
( From Thi+ Goderich Stur of Dec, 28,
• 1900)
• P.retentation to Knitting Factor, •
Manager
On Friday evening the employees
of the Knitting factory, waited, on
Manager Lewitt' and presented hint
with an address, testifying their
esteem for , him as their, manger.
The • address was accompanied • with
very.pretty ebony tofet-set, $:very.
nice 'Chrtstmes present and'' •a testi -
moray' to the kindly relations between`
the manager and the large staff en-
• der -him at the factory..
Assistant G, C. I. ',leacher Got $ OO .
Twenty -%live Years Ago
In an account of .the meetings of
the G. C. I. Board we read that it
was moved by Judge Masson, seeou-
ded by Mr. John Acheson; that j* .
Grant Cooper be engaged as tasetet-
ant teacher at a eatery of a000 per
year.* Carried.
Major 'Beck. trustee for three 'years,
W A McKim
}A. M, Todd; committee, Jas.. Crazgle,
Jas. Wells, John. Kilpatrick, *as: Mil -
LIN i lOX AND HOWARD RODERTSON.G.'C. I. CHAMPION'S Ilan, .. c• martin.
Inverness Camp S. 0.. S.: Chief,
M, C. • Cameron; chieftain, W. W,
•
The Winter Fleet a. Quarter of a detttury A3,o, Lod 'e l4saevicar; chaplains Ree 1 A. And=
Officers for 1901. g arson, fin. sec., A. D.; McLean; rec.
sec, James Mitchell;" treasurer, A.
h h Hon W C Bridgennan to London.
• P McLean• M Bert Wylie; S. ,
hp ro l• A•
the concentration of ideas and as the most effective instrument in the with torches. Pings _acct!.)- , , ,
soon as all u*orld for the maintenance of peace 7th, 1900) : ••where and banners with tate Italics of S.• G:• Gordon Coutts; J. G., 'Alex.
good Canadians get to- J South African bi h • Johnston, physician, Dr. A. C. Hun
arhea hoping and behaving that we an, Welcomed Home Jones ter• auditors, John Galt and H. J.
are catching up with Dame Prosper- Deaf,'Dumb. and Insane participated were hung aver ateetWan; trutitees, Alija W. Young;
ity, we will begin to feel the tonic ef. A Brantford deaf-mute, who had. The opportunity to welcome one 14.11tef,.Iztain street. The. Agricultural A. Straiton and James Stewart.
facts of optimism. In the month of worriedrover the health. of her three; the South African veterans. in the hall. was handsomely decorated. with , .
December eight thousand Canadians months-bli} baby suddenly •became.. person of Morgan L. Jones, the first evergreen festoons, flags,. banners and Huron Lodged No: e62, a Or O. 1'
who had made their homes in the Un- insane, and. threw the child into the one of the Huron• contingent to 'bunting, and,,o#. course, it pas craved N. G., W. MaeViear, V. G„ Jas. Reid;
furnace. After the 'tragedy. she re- turn, was enthusiastically -observed ,ed ;to the, doors with ; :an audience R. S., M. J. Proudfoot; F. S., Dr:
retStates for six months or longer characteristic of the loyal and an- Clark; tress,; C. A. Nairn.
returned to their home land to take !eleven the scarred and lifeless body by both Goderich and Dungannon,. Maitland Lodge. No,' 3S A., F'. ds
up their permanent residence; This of the infant from its fiery resting the county town greeting him on Fri., thusiastie village. The uroceedinge A Ma, W. Ledge. Geo: ' 33, ; S. W,
is nearly three thousand above the P1aCc. :. day, evening and the northew:n village began sharp at 8 o'clock, Dr. Case „'. Clark; , .,. �, *Winston; __.
best month in two years.. , ' . '• -•---..a, on Monday evening.. Although it Performing the duties of. ohairinan.
The Federal government is cnnsid- Mayor Wilson could get definite in- the presentation of a gold watch and Tancatt
Tito League considers t y
country. 'Thera is untold value in (Froin The Goderich Star rf Dec.emns with t 1 Pi' hent; Isbister• •piper it, 'S Craigia
_ Morgan ones. r cau etc.- the g engagements in which Sergt'.
1 •
,, .
To Muszle Dogs
was not till Friday afternoon that The least mark of appreciation wag 'lain, D. Green;tress., Sheriff Roy-.
.
• sold
a; sec., H. W. Ball; tyler, John
Congratitlattons l
Sarnia is congratulating its .little ening ordering the nuzzling of all
old magistrate, henry Gorman. who dogs in certain district,+ of Quebec
is now eighty-seven years old and. and Ontario in an effort to wipe out
• .cerebrated his birthday by briskly an epidemic of rabies which is threat-
disposing ot<;llis usual doiaket at the ened to spread.
police court,
•- Prolonging the Span of Life
The AmbitiouteCities - • In the 'sixteenth century, so ro-
Fort William, -Port Arthur and mantic rand picturesque as- it npkara
Nipiaon . *ill `reinstitute. the greatest in literature and history, the average
e • newteliint centre In the world Within' span of human life was twenty-one
•
.Yeartd; In thetwentieth century the
• average human life goea well over
the ' half century mark, and it is pre-
- dieted that' iii the twentyrflrst ern-
ttry the span will be more than a
century,- so rapid are the advance:
being made in • the science et pre -
M winest+r
P • irierOtilitell
a1I'i.r tinT&LUNGS
There is no Mew safegturrd
agnirier reit, c#1Ms. gti} • atx•e
dm*** * asd t.ttd cough* rhea their
eih•er•wr,l+pei Prom trbirt+d. .
Tekine?tpa rerindicaW) during
Kyitrg a $curly weather itriw the
sod pewee*
aitaloot berm to tem.* end tungs.
(**alai t'piw et -ere Pepe tattier ace
powerful medicinal flame* which
the
Nnxe and trots+mI.,nthe men *awn
huno.
Dr. Gordon Mani!% and tither
eminent out:tnr*to,* erknow
Peps inveha*tenetreusesantloW. -
weer ea.... me ,
•r, . :y zeli ..• . -
.3
serving human life. The public
health movement started in England
a century ago, improved scientific
application , of • methods affecting
sanitation; water aupplira, infectious crowd insisted on at least a sight of
diseases and preventive medicine the Huron boy, and when his seal -
and the growing knowledge of food wart figure was planted on the may-
•
9
'formation as towhen the hero would
reach here, the preparations were all
completed in an hour and when. the
7:40 train arrived, the mayor and
council, the G C. I. cadets, marine
corps and No. 1 Company, with the
marine band and at least 2,000 peo-
ple of all ages and classes were et
the station to welcome the lad in
khaki_ And how they . cheeredand
cheered. The official,- handshaking
over, the guest was escorted to a car—
riage, and the immense proecsston
reached the town hall. Sergt. Jones
was escorted by the mayor and mem-
bers
bers of the council, Liettt,-Col. Var-
coe, Majors Young, Beck and Holmes
and .several citizens. and 'when the
cheering had sv.l.beided for a bit; May-
or. Wileon read an address. At the
request of the hero, who wee natur-
ally at a loss for words, Col. Vareoe
briefly returned thanks, but the
.slues promises to extend the icere ors desk, where *11- could see him,
of mortal existenee in an amazing the dilating—wee semethinr to re -
degree. It is a, wonderful age in member font long time. Then quiet -
which we live, and, scientific know- - ly, modestly and with unmistakable
ledge seems to be ,unrolling before gratitude Sergt. Jones repressed his
our bewildered eyes et a faseinate thanks for the welcome and gave a
ingly inereasing speed. ' few notes .of his experience in the
'campaign, At Dungannon the wet.
,4 const was inaugurated with a parade
of they boys et No. 9 comuasy, headed.
bythe Auburn brass bend, and ac-
companied by.a large number of eiti-
,IOU PRINTING AT THE STAR
rasa-- aaaaaarataarraaa
PUT CREAM IN NOSE
MID STOP CATARRH
Tells Heir T. ei Ctegrett Nam I
tesla sad i
kited -Cele.
chain and a purse of $80, +he address
being read, by Mr. Thos. E. bur=' ' '
Ind the presentation made by Mr.
Temple Clark_ . .
(From The Goderich Star of Dec,
14th, 1900)
Lin .Knox and Howard Robertson
Were, G. C. L Champions
• The annual commence/"tiit of the
Goderich Collegiate Institute was
Celebrated in . the auditorium c:f the
institute by the usual Literary So- ,
clay program, the. presents ion oP
prizes won• by the pupils (class
work and athletic games and the de-
livery -of the certificates awarded the
pupils by 'the Education Department
as a result,dt'1(tne midsummer exam-
inations.. Paineipal Strang; who pre-
sided, opened the proceedings by cal-
ling on Miss Grace Dyke, who gave n
piano sole in excellent style. Miss
Robertson read the 0. G. I. Journal,
which contained a splendid account
of the football match at Seaforth,
when our boys won the Hough tree
phy, and an education letter from
Frank R. Munro, now in attendance
at the University A (alarmingpian:'
duet by Miss Connally and Irene Ach-
eson, and then Mr. Matheson intro -1
duced the last•issue of the' Model
School Journal. for 1900. Meyers.
Adair and John Carrie sang. "Ship en
Ahoy" so well as to win an core.
Miss Olive Turner gave a eke reei- 41
tatten, and then the chairman cont-
mcnced the distribution of prizes and w
You feel tine in a few motneats. Veer
cold is hestl for rattail' will he gone. _
Your ,Minted n„strila will emit. Ike
air pihneges c•f tour ites,l will eke. sad
ran ta* t.resnthe freq.:. an more doll.
ne',, I.eauls••he; no baxi.ing, s*tu*iag,
*Wang di'iheirrr' ,,r sirinewt , no atrug. .
,ghr;r torr tit talk rt night.
Crit :1 Am. thereat ea. %Int it min =.
nettle .•f' rir'e f ic.ein lithe. Apply. a -
loih, of One hseetnt, entleeptie rnam
In
$'l' *....trite• lot it emirate Arms t
rtrrr air pileolugrof the brad; aoa be sad
Fret ihr .t(.,ll.n. inflamed innentte !mar-
t t.r,•re. and »firf 01111111.11 itustaattr.
r it le Iests ails* ?Fen read taiw4..g
aDuet total
cert cites. During the evening the
chairman railed the science master to
Present the championship medals won
at the ' annual athllic ' aures. The
medale are very handsome Ones and
the winners --Lin Knox, ;senior cham-
pion, and Howard Reberteon, jrnior,
will be proud of their b*dtee. Rev.'
Jaener Wilso* preseated hie pt ire
'hooks to the winner, ('tiar.Newton.
Rev, Jas. A. Anderson and Inepecto:
Jan. E. Tent oleo sddreseed the an -'R
aetrtbly, and Mr.ftrang bore strong ,
test ao nv to the ability of the teach- !
ince staff and to the good work of
Mhos Charles, It. A.. during her ten
Veers' connection wfth the Inetitet.. x
The urogram closed with a piano ,oln
by *Ise Mee 1 res, and the meeting
ended with God Aare the Queen.
e
-AT'—
R..�. ROBINS
M C�BI�
$ Doz. Men's•Khaki
Flannelette - Work
Shirts, sizes 14
to 17 for ,
79ca .
•
3 Doz. Men's Pigskin
Lined Work Cloves :
•
50c Men's Wadi Sow
while they last,
3pairs for $1
for MIS . WEEK
ONLY :
ROBINS =
tar
S11
day
Stand
National.
•