HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1904-05-12, Page 6troll intent. at lite eXpetit.e 'of 1 he ;Or
who had made. up her mina to else
13.1!).1.1vee
ji-ItinhCieltyl:Ity%1111e(:ttghtehretfitet.didisni to weeks.oind
t he 'weeks into Months,. mid the mill
girl persisted in her resolve, lilvenings
and holidays wet•e golden opportluil-
1074 •for 6( 0(1 Y") bleb she .most eta!,
fy born (wed; .To arithmetic she added
other braieches, and ;results soon
11007 tee It MIR Vela. :C01);(4S of the exam-
inat•lorai held in the public sehoola of
file city were secured,. and she forind
that to PliEle them was iit tie More tban
pastime. . • . .
A .h.all wee to be held 'by the employ-
ees ut the mill ; there were few of the
girls who would snot. attend. Prepe re -
dims bad been• t,oing for' weeks ;
1t1811y (47 the girls. •visho were working
for almost etat•vation iveges had
11178»-
nged to set aside • a little s
11
(r
11
fe
•te
.0)
10
777
:One •Way to dodge the divorce coart
is to stay single.
We cati't pronounce the Russian de-
✓ linition for wee, butit1s synonymous
. • with Sherninn's definition,
Our idea of a mon is one who spends -
„ two.thirds of his time in getting mon-
ey and the other one-third in ketpitig
. .
t.
uninali•
and illailatt
The leading car-
riage makers.
All work
manufac-
. tured on
•
st case of love'e labor lasts when the. • premises
a woman is compelled to take in wash- .
ing in order• to eupport a worthies.,
inieband, and • . guarantee
World's Fair
at St Louis, Ma.
. .. • •
. From April • esth to.Dee. 1st inch). -
sive; the Wabash Will 5111 round trip
tikt'1 to the tl-reat lirid s otr; st.
Louis, at 1.11;.‘• loweSt oni Way tit'st
Class fare, p,t.cd :or Lite: n days, fare
and. t. Iutird. 'good Mr. thirty days,
• geod either via. Wa.bash eirect ljr.e .cir
via Chicago; with stop over Privilegea.-
Cana.diaris gong to this greaeol. of a'.1
expcsitions, rementher'the great •
Waleish line is the i.hortest, geickest
anCi hestrooLe, The .cnly line thst
owris and 'eoetrols (writ rails direct
to' the World's Fair gates. For time
tables ano dekeri pHs e World's Fair •
Iders, address any
tic17 awaitor
A.121,1mrcison, Dis:trkt l'assenger
gent.
...,- •
,
•
ti
a
a.
Alla
wt
.tir7Zt7MrTs '2.M7i—s7I-T—r--,,wisovould. not •
•
..foug,ht, in the little. retire .61' oui. of the
overwelmilig Olive that. either the
aunties (11'the new,cfress must -wait.
It was a•gi 1.1's bat! lo the t WAS. tri he.
translate.. It came to her With almost , •
............,... .71=
,
cororatien hotnies.;lasti.nggle, het weer,
ommoomm.,,a • ',I", '
p
a girl's longingfor.pleaStire and a de- ass
Aro to Seathe ambition of her life .-in • .
reel i ty. • It Was A gi yrs •hattle,. Marked
• • . •
• liV 8 girl's teare.bet it.wits 'sound 'sense
was rivers site 11.t1;'‘710 longer agirt hut RatteribtiryStreetWorks
thAt won; and wbeii nt lest the vonfliet..
a•Woriniii. ' ., • ' ' •
a he bail ratite (.1?, 117111 Sulla :dill
'at tend ..btit • the prohletmi 1(0(1 • Liitiii
. i ra-nSla tions- were S il CC.,('S'Arl ill y -0.1RPO4ed.
6
TKE CANADIAN SEA,
W. P. Aleeloait. ea iliserionte Sere
asolloves is to Po the itrdogt Poor Og
ConAdo, Ancl. It Inttalt Ifs severe;
13efore the Canadian Club recently
Mr. W. V. Maclean, XX., renewed
his agitation for the changing of
the name of litalson"0 Bay to the
Canadian Sea. In the eouree of ilia
vernarks he said:
Probably the greatest basin In the
world waa that of the MiSn'anIPPi
River for the extent and variety of
its products—cotton, Corn. Wheivt)
animals of all kid, coal, iron and
all other minerals. Then there was
the basin of the St. Lawrence, do-
minated for its greater part at least
by Can Oa. But there was another
he believed, greater than either
these. littdsort'e 130,Y, which drained
Ungava, a large part of Ontario and
Quebec, Manitoba., tho Territory oi
Keewatin, Saskatehewan, -Athabas-
ca and Alberta, all regions of great
wheat fields and all absolutely under
, Canadian control. There was every
reason why they should keep it and
keep the entranee to It. Hudson's
, Day was the front door and the cen-
tral door of Canada, and they would
put a knocker on it Bo that those
Who came would havo. to wipe their
feet on a Canadian door ntat if they
wanted to receive a vvarrn welcome.
Hudson's • Day fisheries wore, he
had been informed, the ritheSt irt
the world. The surroundiegcountry
was one fitted f or adventure and for
exploration that would • provide
enough to occupy Canadians for a
hundred years. It was rich in 'min-
erals, andwas, as he had said, the
central gateway to Canada. Not
CLOSET DOORS.
* Mt
T.7 May De Made ino hneesetasse
• restarts In Molise Deisoretion,
Cloriet doors now form a feature in
home decorationror a harmonizing
. effect a cludale eau he hung In ally
room where there is a closet, witb
rich velours, a jute, a pretty cretonne
or a shade of blue deuitu. These hang*
tugs should match the color scheme, or,
Jt desired, a complententary tint can be
utilised to the purpose. Deaneries of
this or should run easily and he
poled in ash, walnut, mahogany or the
white painted wood ornamented witb
gilt.
A pretty idea tor a Closet In a break-
fast room where the everyday chine Is
kept is to take oft tho door and hang
from the second shelf a drapery in a
showy design of cretonne, a madras Of
rich colered effeets or an artistic pat-
tern ot Jute. The upper shelf eau then
In decorated with Jugs, a teapot or
any otner bit of faience suitable tor
the purpose.'
As a novel treatment a society wom-
an had the panels ot her company
room closets furnislaed with looking
glasses beveled on all sides and set in
a Molding of gilt, The rest of the wood-
work was Painted in an ivory white.
The handle which opened the door was
of cut glass in a. rich colonist' pattern,
finished with nickel plated silver, At
the top of the woodwork of the door
was the motto, "East or West. IIMne's
the Best," composed of large wooden
letters slightly picked out In gilt. A.
smaller one opposite was bang with an
upholstery of the same stuff and de-
sign of the room curtalus.—New York
Mull and Express. ,
only would it open up the vast dis-
HOME WORKTABLE.
tricts he had mentioned, but, it
, would, he believed, tap the upper
portion of the vast •Mississippi Des-
, in. It was necessary to send expedi-
tions to open up that territory. 'The
shore of Hudson's Bay was .only 400
utiles from Toronto and only 200
miles from some .of the. stations on
C.P.R.
• •
Perhaps it would not. be necessary,
in tha first piece to build a railway
line the whole way, .as the Ottawa
River might be used for a timefor
transportation purposes. Only' a
short portage Avas needed- to 'carry
them into the basin of. the Macken-
zie River, and from there to the
Peace River. -Then, Hudson's Bay.
provided the nearest roUte te.
Europe. Tf Canadians wished to pea -
tit hy their country they - Meet open
up . this waste' region—they must be
up and doing. The .T.Inited 'States
had a Monroe Doctrine,- and here we
must have 4 'Canadian Monroe sloe -
trine, and live up to it.
'Hudson's Bay would, he deciaren„
become the finest . summer- resort • in.
America. • Toronto .peopla who -now
'want to the Stetes would hayeth:ear
summer. cottage there. . • ' . ..„
Hudson's Day had been statedto
offer the best seal breedings gronnd,
in the world, and the Gevereptent.
should 1 a k, ep that etiestiott. It of -
Awed the shortest route. to 'Europe,:
and it opened up great P.os.sihilitiee
for . the • eastern trade. .Canadians
should take an examplefrom the
,Japanese and {that they haddone
during the last. quarter of :a, century,
The thne would . come when :they
would hue to • face this question ..of
Canadian supretitacy,. •for if -Ulnae
Sam once got his foot .in he would
soon have his whole body. • There
must be h defensive and conunercial
union with the Motherland' and this
did not mean an abet-a-Moment:of; a
protectionist policy: "It was pessible•
for catch partof the 'Empire to de-
velop its awn resources and tO
connect itself commercially with the
Empire as to Stand one, With the
other and build up the whole. a.h9'
inother !country Mita respect • CaM•
ada's view • and not interfete..W.Ith
,her .aspirations, Canada • must:'• ccin-
trot Hudson's Day absolutely.—it.was
the front and central' door;.: anda
knocker must • be put on .it. .Can-'
ada must be . made So strong 'that it
will remain a nation- while the
floret .last, and they must .all take.
their share in maintaining the Canas
(Ilan Monroe Doctrine and developing
Hudson's Bay. ; •
. •
•
Our Japanese Agent, : •
• A. Handy.
rom Light Hotels. • HUH Wirral* lteno11-1111X/LIPS.
The Clinton NewsoRecord
MISS MARCH-PHILL•IPS,
A I'Isilstuthroolet Who nes Done
Geed Work Ds London.
Men and women who give of their
fortune and time to remedy disease
and root out ignoranee are philauthro-
pists whose work cannot be too highly
commented. The founding of free
hospitals, sehools and libraries bas
f' proved a great boon to the world, but
tomy mind the highest philanthropy
is that which espouses the cause of the
lowest grade of proletarians and of
the wanderers and forsaken ones in
great cities,
iroremost in this latter branch a
benevolence in London is AliSti March -
Phillips, a clever artist and writer and
an exceptionally happy spinster.
Through ber agitation in the press elle
The illustration shown here presents
a very bandy told Useful -device which
May eattilY be made at home. It con-
eists of a. housewite's -s work . table...
.Take three light 'wooden boxes, suds
as can. be procured' at nay groodry
.store,"all being the scone length and
, width. The boxes 'cen be subdivided,
and attached to, lega to .form a 'stand;
'as shown in .the Illustration. The 'up-
..iight posts can be made as ...fandy as
•
jIr
•
•
111.0!1-111'.-
. • .
. •
. , •
. •ItANDI wolt
•
'deetred and the •whole covered. with
• :some kind Of eloth. deepeat box
•
• at thelop is hinged with cover. This
•
canbe used 'to hold pleceS et
, goods , needed in the: regular • weekly
'Mending and earl. be lined with' suite- •
•
material; pockets made oe
each side to hold materiels:tor fancy
work, needles and .sniall...pincushion:
. :The second box shoUld be .sUlaliVided •
. into suitabie 'compartinente for 'Resole,
. scissors, 'paps* of. needles; pins; kit '
ting 'peetiles, etoehet:.hookS;. etc. The .
loiver ,one may be ..used, for snob Ma-
• ..terhils as are Oeetled .in stodking inend-
:' lag. 'This converileuecetati be made tie..
ornamental is One desires,"St..Loratt
• Republics ; • ' " .
7 .
,. • I'll,. .Servitnt ProbIein.
The Increasing treqUeecy. of edvers
tisemerits Noir. York papers .calling
.for "mat • to do general' .houseWerk",„
'draws attention la the fact that' many
families are displacing Women. *her-
-.ever. possible M;bousewOrk -and giving
the, jobs to ' Men; "writes, e,.IN'etv. • York'
• rres 'Onderit. There is a certain elites •
cp p .
'Prenchinen, Italians eisitt Gertnans.,
whe..teke .readily: to •heuseWerlt, and
they have .beert found to be Very. eetii-
faCtory.' Householda Which .maintain.
Mils.' a Malted number of servants have
found the plan to work sichnirsibly In
addition to other duttes the men•cheer-
fully wash the windews; p�IFsli the
metals, •clean • the Walks, g� on .errands
• at night and do a hundred' other littlo.
things:which women dad awkward tied
.
often japanese heya ere;
very popular. • ' . • • •
•
. , .
•. *A Iseetiier Lemur: „ • . •
• :
• Ella leheeler Wileok,, the 'peaces,
has recently been lhaving an. adven- '
ture , with a • too-amorpas sawaer.
First, she -received a tentsram • with
an expression Of love, dated'at Mona
tree. 'Then came another from a .
:molter ,polot. Then sbe.lotnad a, *lett"
from FAmedee Cyntiot," left at her
apartments • at the fIotel Everett,
Neat York,,•'during her absence. Filar
ally, there 'appeared the 'amorous
, Almelo° in 'person., It was :men deter-
mined, however, that he wee not
' quite sane,„ and all • officer was. sent
for. To the police ledge next morn-
ing. Anledea said that he didn't
know why he :had sent the message
qt love to Mrs. Wlleox. At the re-
quest, of the peetese, and upon his
promise- to send no More love -letters
and to hie him . hack Montretil,
he was released.
Cantu,* I101ing
'Fhe OsWego Times has been glanc-
ing over Cianada's progress, mid has • .
' come to the conclnalon that Canada
is not glow, as mettle uniformed Van-
' lows have hetet Wraitt to belleVe. It
er.lits the following table of per-
tages sr • inereaSe in tile two
colintrie$ in the period since 1801: .
Canada. 1.I.S.
Bank deposits,,..,,,.. 188.3 124/.2
Itublic 4.0" 14.8 78.8
51,8 "52.0
("oilier .6i. •601i1X.• 206,2 112,5
(Iced .0..2480.0 144.5
Railway mileage41.5 20.0
Railway passengers.,.. 57.3 0.7 ,
Exports,..„, „,””, 151.2 50,0
PITirtffin . 96.6 21-6
in a I. o 0.1 10.6
tele. mensagess.a. 26.5 82,0
- • •
• notntertii laiteeterien. I
1
,
Mr. Alexander MacLean of Otta-
wa, who has just been 'appointed
Commercial Agent. for Canada eo
Japan, was in his • earlier • days a.
pi•ominent newspaper men. Ile, 'es-
tablished The Mitchell 'Reformer in
1861, published The Cornwall .Free-
holder froni 1865t9 1$72„ was Ote
tawa correspondent The. Globe
from 1872 to 1874, was proprietor .
and publisher of The Ottawa Timers.,
i7374-1875, mid was ,reanaging di;
rector of The Alontreal ile:atid, 1894-
1895. With Mr. J.' C. Roger he ob.;
tained in 1874 the contract for t he
Par' amentery and • departmental: .
printing at Ottawa, and heldsit un-•
til the Printing Bureau wee estab-
lished in 1888. In the' meantime be •
had turned his attention to manu-
facturing, and in 1885 established
-
the Canadian Granite Conmeny, and
the ee years later the Ottawa grotto-
lithic Paving Company, of ,both .01
which he was president. Ile • took
considerable interest in municipal
matters, and was an alderman. for
several terms. In politics he is a
Liberal, and was for a 'term presi-
dent of the Ottawa Morin Associa-
tion. 1-16 has also been president of
i the $t. Andrew's • Society, of the
Ottawa Art School and of the Cues
• tral Canada Exhibition • Astiociation.
•
Lord Donde:sold** Inriatten. •'
During the recent visit to .the
coast by Lord Dundonald, eontinaris
der of the military torees in Canis,
da, he exhibited to Chief Engineer .
Grant, of the Quadra,' a little poc-
ktt-warming device of his own invens
tion, which he said he had found
very useful in campaigns where the.
weather was sevet•e. It is a white.
ture stove, burning earbon as fuel,
and is comforting and henefiCial len
one is afflicted with Various alight"
bodily pains. Mr. Grant eepresatid 4
desire td become possessed of One,
and Lord Dundortal gave a promise
he would forward ono fron3 Ottatva,
It arrived Yesterday, and it is higlis,
ly prized 'by Mr. GrantsseVictoria
Colonist.
The tO Date SlerCeili.
• A unique fourfold screen hae for IN
top section golf pietures painted on
gray penels. The dietirietive feature
of the semen is that, instead of being
dressed in scarlet for Scottleh Welds,
in harmeny With the vOgee on the
links, the playera are represented in
the costtime of a century or two ego,
and they appear Very droll. Som '01
these screens have ledges tor teacups,
This is good idea tor the dining room
In Which space Ringed. Others have
paper reeks attached in order to titillkt
VW to adVatitage.
•
• attain Bernier will have a Gov-
• erhment ship in which to sail the
Arctic Sea—but, °My to patrol Ow.
Canadian toast and put down smug-
gling. The eapta in will let under a
terrible temptation to break away
67111 make a dash for the
itittoiltort 'retold,
has enlisted the aid of innuential an
(1'. and keep cool. -
wealthy Brit:ins who here contribute
generously' to the founding of cpmfor
able lodging houses for the greet hord
'Of the virtuallY homeleaa, shifting pop
ulation in the east end. Since - he
work began it hag been noticed tha
there is an annual decrease in the ar
rests and imprisonments of the grea
metropolis. For nearly every indigen
man or woman lo London:Miss
lips, has now ' provided cchufertnbl
• lodging and none need starve.
. Mkt Evelyn March -Phillips is one 0
thoee wonderful modern 'women wh
seeneable to do "many: thinga in man
lands. and do them very well." She 1
a fine artist, as those who have visite
, her .yearly .exhibition in Bond stree
have reason to knoW, partieularl
charming being ner Water color; o
Roman. and -Italian scenery. She ha
written many delightful articles in th
anagasiees, including a really lestrned
peper in the Monthly Review concern
ing the most famous of Thimart villas
and she published, with 'Mr. Murray,
the best of the smaller, goidos to the
• -
The sad news of the death of Joseph
'Vosper. snn of Mr. George Vosper,
who recently *tuned to South „Park -
dale film, bet e, came OR a shock to the
many friends of the family Ott TtleS•
I I ay of last Week, The young man
liati been, I1 of pneumonia foe about
nine weeks and soffered severly during
I bat time. Ha Watt considerably rediv
ced bath in flesh and strength an.1 11
eyere at,tnek of inflammation of the
rain setting in about, a week ago,
oti de hit* case a hopeless one, and des -
pi' e all that 'medical skill could do he
.• ...sod. away, in the 18th year of his
age.
Dr. Thinisay Met with an accident
oti Setnredity whieh might easily have
etsulted mom) sevionsly. Fle wee en-
goged 11 deliorn eattie for Mr. John
('7150, - soti Rondor th, end,
when about to throw a steer, the beast
Kicked him .in the face inflicting a
lengthy gash under the left eye that
reqired.forteen stit el I0. to close it.
Mr. Thos Jones sold his fine Ilona-
reti acre farm in the township Os-
borne, being lot 11, con 2, to Pi P Aral
11,' COUrdY Of the same township. The
price paid was $7.800.
i. •
It s with regret 7118t a uumber of
our renders will learn that E. A. Tenet
mint, V. S,, has sold his .practice and
intends leaving Exeter. His siweessor
is Art hire Rameay, V. S,. who has heen
practising at Staffa, for -some time.
We understand •Dr. Tennant will go
out west to prectice his profession. Dr
Banisa.y is tin old Exeter boy and we
bespeak fOr him a liberal share of what.
is goir.o.
On .Setorrlity Mr, Wm: Hawkshav
and family vacatf d the Oormnerciel
• Rouse and took on their residenee,on
Williern street. The new moprietor
of the Cominet•eial, Mr, Henbane 18
now in possession, 'he arid his fondly
having moved here lest. week.
A GIRL'S BATTLE
•
JULIA VINneNa• with employed in One
of the greet eotton Millo of Lawrence.
She hail been there since she was a
mere child of a dozen Fears, and at I le •
the diseoureging feet stared her
in the five), even as it did hundstAIS
ottlem mit it tvati itoobsioto to mon
more than a dollar a day In busy tillie4
to say nothing. of the,weeke when I be
'Pal Was prw
ate ally et a. starul-till.
A shoptnate relieved the' monotony
of svork by reading from a novi 1,
which she cont.; iviel to keep open
before her as she wor the spindle.
The teought, °emit veil to Jolla llett si e
. cool(' falOrove her whet while at
by stielying from ati open book athe
• ktiew it would do her iio• intent and it
• wee possil,le thet the open boil wont(
pi ove the door to 4 tii01.)" 41.111
tietter paid position. The mill girl di
• tertuined to gintke the effort.
She knew little or nothing, of tle
bramehes taught in the grattimat
, schools., and it watt at the bottom
the twitter that she began hey selr-edn-
catioo, siit arithmetic was the firs
book thnt she purchased, and homed-
ly she began to dig orit the shiml
problems, difficult enough for het- .
The foreman smiled as be pessedoe
itig the open boojc before her.
you keep teae k of yuu7.8uIpluawehLttil,
he asked. • .
May12th 1904
At the 111111110 one Wa5 More pleased ,... •
than the fotetnan who had encouraged. 4.;so31.J Months
bee lit the start i and 4•01 elm parted
with the mill operatives with whom
she had worked, there were those who
heartily wished they had followed her
example. Some called it luck ; they
said that Julia wee always lucky.
They didn't eall hetlinty when she
had remained away from the hall four
rears previous ; they veiled 1101' mean
in those dem 'Well, if she was lucky,
many ot tho whii
•envkl Ilir h,t.
might have been lucky, hoo ; it was
merely a question of 80f -denial mid
. perseverance.
A year passed, and the young school,
mietress tilled her position swisatisfar.
tority that abetter position WWI Ottsrefl
1/Pr the sanie township. The know -
Of her ability as a teacher, hliw.
ever,was not confined to thet towitsl.le
1. • her eareer hail beep watched ik,ite
interest by the•faculty of the Normal
sehool A choice position wits awaiting
the right person in one of the large
• „eityasehoolstJolia Vineent's MUM. %al •
mentioned. The recominen•littion most
f sufficient, and the plate was aseured.
Such in the story of the. Lawrence
t factory girl. Sound sense aud verse-
. verenee were the factors whielt
0 wrought such changes in her life quil1.
ities which will turn failure intn vie-
. tory as surely as the rising sun brings
t day] t.—Wellspritig.
'
•
.4nd .Ttute will be the trest 1714:11-
ths to visit, the W4.t/4 ti Fairs fit.
Lotto, ols-at lliouday, Apra 3oth, tiok-
ots • t.r.: sele at raeliwt'd rates). All tht
- world is thsre the 1 ett achieve -
:merits f astuldu 1, be
greatest espositim. £J. 1.114. world's
Justory. Stop :slier will be allowed, ate
any intermediate Canadian etatione,..
also Detroit .atel Chicago. See that
:your tickets are via the pcpular
. route, Grand Trunk Railway. Vol:
tieitets raid furthsr luiseniation, apple
to V. R. 'slotigeue, IJUfl agatt ;
l'attisca, de.,;ot. ; .1. D.
Maedclnitlll DeitriVt P1133t1,1:r0r
Tcroato. • '
. • ••• NMI. • •
. "I havn't been able to diseoseen nr
pins yet," the eh I 'replied, looking lip
"1 thought that, perlutpm the arithrite
tic wieild show me where to look . to
"So it will," said the foremar.,pIII
inv. Si iek to yoor books nie1 they. wit
show you the way to it irettor position.'
It was' only it peasingWol d.yet sone
how it teleintreged t he girl wteiderfiilly
and he ilia Hot forget it, though year,
• • pessed.
The glils at the mill lomul youth
•
. Pointed Paragraphs.
• FLOM the ChiengtT•News.
b'ew tneo can argue ebont religioo
t- . A man is never satisfied un [file
at-
e • is ruts his owri funeral.' •• • • ,
. A. spoiled. child is alamst as bad as
✓ one that is toe fresh: .
,t • After hiving experience ft Mairsel-
dom -boasts of his bargain.
t . You can easily make tt martliot.by
ubbing hint. the wrong way. .
t Death is one thing that never fails
s . to come to the net!) that Waits.. '• •
e The man who 'squanders $2 for a
nierriage lic,ense la looking for trouble.
f . Too many people are anxious to fur.'
o nigi .cense regardless to the effect;
No trim 'Kentnekian will bike his
Ys • hoo,rdn,leg rye; in the forin of 'breakfast,
d There's! enmething.redically wrong
t bout a, W0.111all Nvho isn?1) fond of 'dress.
7. parade..
f • 'Many A Mail. who marries an ,heiress
lives to regret , monkeying with a get-
.
rich -quick game. • .
e
. •
;
Sistine phapels She 'divides' ber 111
•lietweeu. Englithd and: Italysc.,`incin
natl.' Enquirer. •
. Ilave Tea a “.round”: In Year IleaSe
'
Everai mother .with n flock' of littl
Ones (:). care for ktiOws'what diftieul
• matter to get the'cltildrea to keep
their belongings in .• order, but() wben
once. the habit of oeatneep.is ineuleat
ed ltIs ef inestimabWvalue hi. the boy
or girl for future
• , An ingenious Mother thought out. an
excelleetplan. She thede it an unalter
able rule that there shouldbe a •place
for everything and everthing kept in
Its place. ' WheoseVer any' of the family
foetid •anYthing belonging • to 'apotinat
rutardier • of it out place .116' was at
:liberty' to pit it In ."stire.poned."...The
pound was a ..romn kept locked and
'presided Over • the :mother, Every
articie Mitering 'there called for a cent
.to effect its release, .- • •
At first:caps, slates, peneils, .slipPers,
;came teeming in, and follmeing them
:the, pennies. for release,: -end these
.fOrmed a .fund for purchesing
some-
tldng ,to. promote • tidiness, . such• as
'Waste:paper baskets, paper riicks -and
so on. Soonshy.:11rinlY adIttiring by the
rule of. demanding the rename Money
, , • • • . , •
tbe artieleti,,,coming: to the -pound .de-
creased In number, and the lesSon 'whe
. thoroughlYlanght to the '
• Outsidethe pound dear hung a slate,
With a Pencil titteched, and When any
..erticle was cenfiecated the ;date. was
noted. . A Pertain tithe. flied .foe their
deteritiOe was: a Wise foreththight, for
•If the little 'articles or toyS ustrat re-
main In the Pound three or four days
.
ora Week their little Owners Will think
.psore of being, deprived' of. their treas-
ures than even ef payikig the necessary'
penny. to release them, and the toy
comes Mit' again with. a certain fresh;
'nese that MalteS It detibly tittractiVe.
•., „ . • . •
'A. moons iree Stove .Ittinge. •
lilVery Wentan have st• hood
t� . bang over her kitchen strife te ber-
ry. *MOM:lake and unplettaant odors, • A
tit-titer:may be instructed to make. an
inexpensive one after these directions:
Iklake a tin box 24 by 22 incites deep
,and without top or bottom, Eight
inches..from the bottom trim the cor-
ners and. bend them into tho shape. of
sqUare:pyramid. Itend the tin back
lit the top, sleaving an' opening eight
;Andrei; Aroand title hole
rivet a, four inch tin pipe twelve or
.fourtemi inches long, • Rivet a four
inch pipe font inches long at 'right an
gles into a' joint of the !stovepipe ,or
into the elbow if the stovepipe enters
the chimney in the kitchen. .Fit the
other end of this pipe with a stoliper
or cap. Which can be taken oft In one
side of the box make a door four
inches high and eight inches wide to
serve as a 'flap to raise .while turnthg
peneakee on the stove, .and with a
Small elbow and a piece of tin 'pipeto
mined it With the stovepipe MIS. use.
ful article is cdraniete,•—liouseireener. •
: Dunning" 'a Sheepeishis reuse
Elere is an etisy and effective way to
clean 1. sheepskin rugt First shake.taid
beat the rag free from dust and mend
any broken or ripped Mimes. Choose a
Mild, drying day. Tack the nig, wool
Bide out, secorely on the side of a bar-
rel. Maas% pitekage of washing
peWder In a •pall ot warm Water and
With 'stiff sertibbing brush go over
the rug thoroughly. After We pour
on three or four pailfuls of warm wtt*
ter, using the brush till the wool la
thoroughly .rinsed, tiy using. a dean
chrtycomb on the Wool while drying
it is made fluffy, 'Coen the skin side,
dry. That is why the barrel is used,
its convet titillate shedding the Water.
PACIFIC' SLOPE PIONEERS.
. •
O 4emlat8peases or 1.14 leer Trailing .051)1.4
leotout of Ja.ates Tea
• I7p a lelood Orf hula.
• Memories of Canada's heroic .age,
I of old air trading days 01 theHn
e orable. Hudson's Bey Company, pow
t sfast fading from Abe Minds Of even
• our rtiost aged men, ere..recalled
•
the death in Vieteria., pi Mrs J aines'
. Ted, While .2,1r. Tod was a notable
pioneer of British' Colunibia,- His was
even more ,disstieguisheil as the son
:of his .illusteioue father, Jelin Tod,
one of the; greateSt traders ite • the'
- employ' Of the Hudson's Bay Coat- •
; pany on the Pacific Slope. 01 'the
eon, ma;y be said that he was P;
worthy son of :his' greet sire. .11e
wa,s spne of these huge...5esttislr.,
Canadians; Stich an Ralph %tutor
delights in, a man standing senile
. inches More thaa•six feet' in. height, .
and; as The. Vietoria Colonist says,
fsbulit in proPortiore" We. cart w:•11
I understand that "his bodily strength
was amazing, that lie never 'kiiew
_what fatigeo was, and • was:never •
sick a day lir iife." In. itti
tuarY 'notice of Mr. Toa, 'COlo-
nist .gees 'On "t53 remark, ;.With.signl
ficant • emphasis; .•• that "he was.
, Mao who minded big Swn business.".
Therefore he prostiered and made' Of
bis ferm; Cedar' Bill, one ,Of .the fin
-
• eat :demesnes in the whole country-
' side. One ean imagine the olds slam
of se Winter's night, 's getheeing his
' ehildren round the bagle hook and
. telling them strange,: awoSeine. talea
. of their grandfather and 'his com-
panions,. the first white. Settlers. in
13ritish Columbia; of the, daya when,
. .as a boy,. he looked Upon the beau-
tiful 'City 'of Victoria and beheld it
a. Hudson's Bay fort, armed for do'
fetiee against the indntna._
Curly Mal' Japaa.
If a IttPariese •lady hits the misfor-
tune to posaess curly hair she devotes
as much time and trotible Make it.
sr000th as. do Eurepean, ladles, with
curling tongs and PIPS, to make theirti
euriv. ' .
:- Education lifts many good resnits, but
. none that ben:tore sure then the sense
of ,power and sell relianea with which
' it invests Its possessor. • - • ' -
• - • • ... .. , .
" Xorllotakturo. 1n Ityltitia Cifouololii: ;. - *
., .
..
Ore Of the most beautiful .loca-
' lions In thee interior of British Co-
.lembla is Princeton. .Advantageous-
. ly situated at the confluence of tho
Tularneen 'and Sinalkaaneen Rivers,
. riticilialitlheit. eve:rt.-0v, ., 001„i ajoiloaoir•gmei•sd, ist,ii,lhect,
country. around .is gent:MUT' open
With rolling hipe, covered with tux.
, uriant arid most -nutritious... bunch'
sigrasses, well supplied with lakessand
streams and .eontaiting cOnsiderable
i agricultural, land. The hillsides are
Itapanle of cultivation to an extent
that, will ultimately greatly increase
i the area, of arable lands; Spring
. tvheat grows remarkably Well oh
much of' the bench lands withoilt ir-
rigation, Properly cultivated and
irrigated; wheat, 'oats, barley
rye do well. . '14.otatoes grow 70 a
prodigiotts .siae, average yield, front
eight to ten tons per acre, fn tho
immediate vicinity of Princetori three
pounds of potatoea „ prodtteed • one
htiedred and ninety' pounds. Cab-
bages weigh from twenty to twenty-
iive pounds, cauliflowers four to
eight pounds. All kinds of vege-
tables do well, also small haute.
Apples treee planted in 1001 bore
- fruit in 1008,
llotwithstanding that this diStriet
Is partieularly adapted to :dairying
.outsido pointe make regular ship -
merits of butter to supply our do.
taands. Few good dairy butter It
local •rnarket is afforded, and in:
view of the constantly increasing de-
mand the' priee iS likely to remain as
high au at. present. Porty cents a
pound fir "ranth" butter - was the
lowest price paid In' Princeton dur-
ing the feet four years, kevidently
there is an opening tor several dair.
o. .• •"*.
MALE AND 0/UNITE
irti(1 though smile of the) girls sneer-.
. •
"
• •
ecl,' she wale con tent. • . .
... Six years 01(ssec14. mid the., girl '.v ho
had clotneto her lroOks ihrOugh thiels
:and thin, %V 1)81 /'('S dy to 114entpt Nort»al
Qchool eXH,,11011.11.1,i0l1F. •. Wages "at the
inill'had not inrreaSed doriog that time',
titul thedreee that slie vvore wee an uld
•
71-111 ling andof cheap smiterial, but
ha I:, did net, aerie, 'sly. annoy lier..Sev-
,erail Oe the Yeurig ladies '5,011(7 weiss:seat;•.
• bear heeeerled the lip Mid,
and.the laugh- -..-went;'rottncli bat that
wits titer.ely ptl.S.Si t tifft% The 17)111
eirre tinie to '4 04-1t11e later • in t he
da y. .thringb she did not (Lynn berSelf
'nf it. . • • . . .
' • An 'hour tiatised, ned..'nothing wets
heard ssve the sere telling of pef.is.. $ot
•a few who had relined nt Bret began to
look worried; they looked at, the ox -
Amine thin . papers; and then at each
other.. It was ,..aPpea,rent that they
• llOt t.;1 ' .
NI011117101777 the mill -hen was
timely tit work, Tame aft er page being
filled,purietuated by every few penses.
Those yeers Find not, been' spent in vain
there wits it fend of Itriew,lecige :tit, her
diSpOsiol width • waS timele, end long
hetOre the alh.tted Little had' expired,
hey impel was handed in, Other ex-.
ruin ti 10118 f 0110Weil..111(../ er, and .weee
411('CE, rtlji y passed: .. lao one .now
heti Lot* rental kirig tile. Ida dreSs
many would gladly hove exthanged
places' tvithlter, could tliey have felt
ns sectrire to the frame, :
One mot niOg .recei veil a letter
rrord he,. principal of the. Normel
echools, Mee ming her 1 lint there wits
ebsition 1,7 MI,' titaposaititi,:;
schnol Arnitrig the Verinont or.
an hour the setting wriman, who lsed ,
denied sliereelf evei•y 'wary
;het elle might win. held the letter
tightly ire hee thenilaing hAritisa-the
happiest hoer h) her lifte; it was then
that. she realized that the imolai lied
led the -Way te at. snore • deshalile sioot.'
Hoe.
Most Dreadful
of Skill Diseases
chronic case of ItelOmn, of 30 years'. stand-
loF cured,Py Pr. MAW. Ointsnont.
That Dr. Chase's Ointment is a thorough
cure for the most aggravated forms of itching
skin disease is proven in hundreds of cases
similar to the (me described in the following
letter, ,
UR, G. II. MCCONsett; engineer in
Fleury's Foundry, Aurora, Ont., states :—"I
believe that Dr. Chase's Ointment is worth its
weight in gold. For about thirty years I was
troubled with etzeina, and could not obtain
any cure.. X was so unfortunate as to have
blood poison, and this developed into eczema,
the mosteireadful of skin diseases.
"I was so bad that r would get up at night
and scratch myself until flesh was rave and
flaming. The torture I endured is almost
beyond description, and now 1 cannot say
anything tea good for Dr. Chase's Ointment.
It has cured me, tied 1 recommend it because
I know there is nothing so good for itching
skin,"
Dr. Chase's Ointment, der 'arta a box, at
all dealers, or Ednianson, Dates and Co.,
'1‘)ronto. To protect you against imitations
the portrait and Signature of Dr. A. W.
Chase, the famous receipt holt author. ',fa on
every box,
•
Direct importers. Workman-
-binved Material guaranteed.
. . For tickets and information a.pply to '
J,SELE iScCo, 5. 0 .
P. R. Itodgens, Town. Agent.
Pattison, Station Agts
'
Repairing prostiptly attended to.
RUMBALL and McMATH,
Huron St., Clinton..
eitiATP46.0.11#
A At A
WORLD'S -FAIR,. ST,. LOVIS .
• AFRIL 39 TO'DF,C.rr, 190.4. •
'. OE WAY EXCURSION FARES, ' •
. . .
•
•' •From Clinton • .; •
,To Billings, Mont. 1;33 30 •.•
. • •
IFolorado Springs, Denver, '
• :
Butte, Ogdtn Salt ',eke City $40 :40
:
' Roselaud, B. C., Spolt-•
enc, Wash. • 43, ho
Pertland; ()et!, , s cattle, WaSli.,_ '
. 'Vancouver; Victoria; 13. C. 4: 70
Stan .11rC181eo and .Los An•relex
. Cal iPe,ritia. . • . • .1343:7.5
orLioattilv low rates, tc, other '
P01016. • " • :
Tiekete on sate daily .March 1st un- ••• ' •
til April soth„.• 1994. • ' •••
SPIcCIATi SET.'sl'IsliatS' TRAINS TO,
Canailian Nortli-West with ColOrtist ,
Sleeping Car will leaye, Totonto every. • '
.Ttesday: during Blerch ited April • .
Passengers without live stoelt Ain't .
-tah6 the Pacific
a.t .T .45 ix. m.
'rickets, reservations and, full afar-
niation, from agents. . , • '
•:••:44::•:••,:••:••,:••,:••:••:••,:••:•••:44•4!••,:•+:44:4•:••:••:••:•
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" We would ask our correspon-
A
dents to send in their budgets •*.f
X *
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4$4 or big. We are looking t th 4.;1.
g t g tothe 117
terests of our subscribers in their
+
particula,rfaocality and want the ".
:I: news whether it is little or much,
• Sometimes you may not have
•ji much news to send, but don't
keep that little until you have
more. When news is scarce that
$14j:• is the time your two or three it-
ems, or even one, are especially
1: it: appreciated by the 'reader in
*• 'your section, Send a big budget
2 every week if you can, ifnot, the
es, 4
4 small one will be welcomed.
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