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The Wingham Advance, 1921-03-03, Page 9M I � 1. ­ - _- 1_-'_-___,___- � 11, . ­­­ �1_11­1_ I - 1. 11, I I.,1 -- I I . .. 1. . I . ,�,, 0 " , I .,- - . - - I ­ - —.---. . . - _. ­ , I � I . . I , ____ — . ____ - — _­-_____­ - ­ - I I I Advertism's Chirtese Bargains. � I A British Columbia frIvad tells u,8 I how the bargain salel crAzo bits the Clihieve quarter in Valle-ou'ver. The local Ulliame district, lie writes, has launched forth into a "plitee-cut- ting" orgy t1vit lv1:3 ro precodeat in Chinatown's history. 13a,17'alix E -ales range froinglaseng to jad% and frem chop suey to herb -9. i C11111"Itawn has ty,�Q newspapers. Oro i Is published fit Victoria and is t1w Notes. of his precious collection of stamps. nXiouthplece of prDgre:is-Ive or New ' The next morning it Was still rain- � China, Sometimes called 'Young China. I thought I heard, as I �Qz' a Illy I ing, St.inley, Watching 'At tile Will- 1 Tile other Chinese publication Is pub. prayers, i , � Uilled in Vallcouyw,% it hag tl,,,e pre. Sweet sounds that crept up Qvor the , dow, saw the carrier wave a lettcr at, , Two L ference of the Cor.­erv' at; i bini as lie came up the, Walk. - �Ve element. � stairs; . minutes later the letter -%vas -brought Each paper carries display adver- A beautiful tune she played that al 7 in on Stanley's 1)rcakfast tray. Up t1soxxxont'a by Clllr�Qse- ocoas'oll' 1 night, I read: there Is a familiar "ad" culled f rain the When I lay in bed with eyes shut provincial papers uud tranelated iritio tight. Dear Neighbore-1 am as lonesome Chinese, Thesse, however, are infre- The door of my car was open wide, as you are, and so your letter was veliy I . And the welcome. Whooping cough is not I quer, roa tentative, pretty round notes came roll- much fun; I remember when I had it. But Chinatown it-tus another form of ing inside, The doctor won't let me go out publicity that I-, Infin'tely mare popu. Lilco wonderful marbles of every much but We can -write letters any- fi cti,tis nothing to read. hue- i The bricic warellz ,at Clilliatou'll abound way, I'm glad you collect Stamps, for I 'Gold and emerald, rose and blue, I do, too, Here are three from J , with cryptic characters telling of I'cannot tell what the others were, "parl � ellings fnt�l-qstfng to tile Celestial ,Rolling into a rainbow blur. and two from South America. Have i reader. . They rolled -and rolled-arld rolled you any of this kind from Berriluda? Inscrib'e-d In Chinese characters of i again, And I like butterflies and biigs. _ multi -colored lines and gigantic pro. To the little far corners of my brain; Yours most sincerely, vortionG, Pre Feiitexioe,3 that, draw Mattlic-o; Black. � Rolling Over a velvet floor, I crowds and comment train the faithful Till I could notfollQw them any more-, It kept on raining and raining for, readers. But into a dark and sleepy crack a week, but Stanley forgot that liel Occa,sionally an enterprising Chinese � They rolled away, and never rolled had over, been lonesome. Every day 1 merchant breaks into pidgin English 1 the mail brought him a letter or .a I with scmEtllI.g like back. package from his new -neighbor. Once age: . V this In'the raeoz- The Letter Friends. he received a knife; another time, a Very Cheap for Bargain Price - picture puzzle. Then came all excit- Stanley-, folded the letter he bad ing new book, ind oil the fifth day, Please Buy Some. I been writing and slipped it into an to Stanley's wild delight, ,it whole But it 1-S not all illiterate or labored exivelope. Then he addressed the en- stamp ,collection to look at. English that one finds. Here and there velope. It was a hard task, for the Ztanley returned tlie. courtesies. Ile are seen "adc" written In the polished IIneL would not keep straight; when mailed Mattliew Black his own collec- English ,of tLa Chlnese-Englisb schol- Ile had finished the words looked as tion of stamps, a box of paints and a ar. There is Oue--It tells at tea-4,11at if ,they were tumbling pell-mell down top that sang a queer tune wl�,ii it contains this -flower at lofty speech: - a Steep hill. I spun. - Every Drop a Vision of the Perfect The -address read: To the Boy in At last the long rain stopped, and Tea, That Only China Growsl the Big Gray Stone House on Coluill- the doctor announced that Stanley .A-na this -one about somebady,6 Bill-,. bia Street, City. was well enough to go out for a little The Sill, With a Shimmer That is Stanley had been living in Brook- while. The second time he went out More Than Huninn-Rare Indeed, ville only a month, and for much of the postman brought him an invita- for Value. that time he -had been shut up in one tion to dinner with Matthew Black. Chinatown's poultry section is rich room with Whooping cough. -So lie Stanley accepted promptly. with gerns of quaint advertiaing. did not know much about his neigh- Wher. he rcached the gray Stolle Tacked upon tile crates of Imprisoned , bors. But for two weeks he had been house he was ushered into a big room fowls ill am,e Cele3ttal hellatery is a Watching the second -storey bay win- where ,in old gentleman sat before sign that tells the beholder: . dow of the gray stone house that the fire. He was a very thin, small stoodon a carrier some distance -�t�vay. old gentleman, not much larger than Good Hens Very Fat With Much Ile felt certain there was a boy in Stanley himself. . Eatings. that -house, for often he saw a figure "How do you do?" said the old 0 at the ,second -storey window. He was gentleman. Curious Crimp Cities. I sure, too, that the boy, like himself, "Almost well again, thank you, Sir " B . lany a murderer has been tracked was obliged to stay at home, for be Stanley replied. He looked round for by the camera. saw the figure at all hours of the day; his friend, but there was no one elseL The first act of the mode?n crime moreover, the doctorls'ear of -ten stood in the room, "I have come to see your ,datector is to record every detail of at the gray stone gate. little -boy," he explained politely. the scene of the crime and every foot "I will vvrite him a letter," Stanley "But I haven't any little boy." of the locality by means of a metric said one afternoon. "I'll tell him that "Ohl" said -Stanley. "Well, I nlean camera. This camera rules off the I'm a stranger here, and that I am the little -boy who lives hore-xatt�ew space under observation into sma,U very lonely shut up in one room with i Black, you know." squarea, nothing to do and no one to talk to. I -tin Mattliew Black," ,said the old Tile camera detective is the blood- Ilaybe he isn't too sick to write mel 11 gentlernan. "I am not a boy, to be bound Lot tile- laboratoxy force. Ile re - a letter in'answer." I sare, but I like boys very well. When cords firger-prin,ts, Impressions on the Then Stanley got pen and ink and. your letter came I took it for myself, ground, u-nusual marks - anything paper and set to Work. He signed:'since there -was no boy .here to take, which lie thinks might have a bearing his own name, but he -wondered what it." on the crinie. I he should do about addressing the let- Sbinley was so astonished that he Crilaxinals, have often. been caught by as did not know what to say. But lie I anxi;lysis of the dust elinging to their ter, since the name of the street w. I all he knew. Finally he decided- to liked the twifflcle in the old gentle- I clotheis; by dirt under their finger - describe the place on the envelope .�anls eyes, and presently his own rlaPs and all, the soles of their shoes; and let it go at that. twinkle(I back in answer. t)y the scratches that cold clifsel.s have "There's no other big gray stone Mattliew Black took Stanley's top left, and by Iii-andreds of other clues house on this street," lie Said to him- from Ills pocket, . which hitherto have existed only in self, "and no other boy in the house." "This Is a finc-lookin',, top of the mind of the writer of detective The morning after the day he mail. sours," he said. "But I -give. you my stories. ed his letter Stanley drew a ichair to' word I can't find out the -way to spin The nails of a suspect, previously an to watch tile I It.,, much neglected,in. orilitinal irrvestiga, gray stone house. At ten o'clock he I "He!" said Stanley. "Let lite show tion, 'have become very important to Saw the letter carrier turn in and I you. And just listen. to it when it the .laboratory experts. Criminals, as leave the mail; then a few mhlutes does spin", a clase, are not patrons of the mani� later he saw the figureappear at the They had it good time With the curist'a-art, aud the diit that has'col- bay window and stand thex�e a While. top, arid then they looked at some lected. under their iiall.53 often forms a "He"s looking," the 'boy thought. beautiful stereopticon pictures. After Perfect means of accusation. The nails "Maybe he's coming; it won!t hurt to dinner the old gentleman showed of a murderer guard for a long time get ready f or hira, anywav .. I do hope Stanley a Wonderful book on butter- s-13ecks of dried blood, while bits of tie likes to collect stamps and things." flies, arid a still more wonderful col- hair arid minute threads torn ti,orn a But the morning Passed -a long, lection of shells arid mfnerale. VIctin0i clothing are sometimes found. rahry morning -and nothing happen- - Wlien it was time to go Stan -ley Not long ago a burgaar was identified od. . Stanley went back to the fire gave Matthew Black his hand and through Particles of grease Scraped and tried to read again -a-book that looked him straight in the eye. I like fr0la a cable altong Which, he, had slid he had just finished but soon,put it you the best of all my boy friends," in an attempt to reach a goldsmlt�ls down with a sigh. He iva� he said. window. . that story; he was tired of t I The old gentleman chuckled. "Same In rarother case a murderer left his arid of the rain. He was eveli- tired"to you," he replied� vast in the room in which ]its victiul ,� . — .. -1. was discovered. The expert picked it . Worlds Richest Islands. was Interested in guano. and know a up, arid in the laboratory placed it in L little about phosphate rock. He chip -a paper bag. The dust Collected after Nauru and Ocea,ft rslauds,, In, the, Pa" pod a piece off tile Jump and tested it- beating the bag proved, under a micro. cific, axe in themselvez the ricillest, 1.11. Then he Nieut baek to the office axx� s -cope, to be full of mirluto particles of the world. I wood. Obviously, the murdered was asked where they hud got their door - Their soll consists for the most part stopper from. either a carpener or a cabinetmaker. of phosphate of lime, the most valu- It had been brought by a trader Particle$ of glue were also found, able of food-platits and a fertilizer from Ocean Island, who thought "it which went to prove that the man be - that makes- twO 91MIns of earxi grow Was! a funny specimen; of stone, and longed to ' the latter trade, and from where one grew before. The British,' inight make marbles for little boys. to tlxosle� deductiolis he was traced, Australian, and New Zealand Gavern- play ,%,It4,,, ---e— me'Uts recently proposed to buy out But the man. who knew went off to Remarkable Dream Wamings the company that has hitherto worked, Ocean island. by the first trading the islavds, at a price of $17,5oo,000, schooner. In a, few -moxiths he -return- In 1912 a confession. that a dream How the treasures of these islands- ed, and announced that the piece of prevented him from sailing In the TI. ' ca,lue to be discovered Is. one, of tile, rack used to keep, open the ofllce�doar tamic was I Made by the Ron. J. C. r0lUarioe3 of industry. was the key to a troasura island con- Middleton, vice-president of the Akron. About twellity years ago a N.ow Zea- taluft Million's of tons of high-grado Canton Railway Of ObAo, US.A. land concern had a ttuv office in a, phosphate of lime. He took Ills know- "I booked my cabin on Alarch 23rd, back, streot fit Sydney. A dooT.Stopper, ledge to ceftain finariolem , In London, he stated. "I felt unaccountably de - a buff-coloveld, Irregular-shaped piece and thusp was born, a company which, pressed at the time, and on April 3rd of rock, kspt the, front door open, On& after mat"aam, PrOs,rterous working, I dreamt that I saw the Titanic cal�- day it caught the eye of a maxi wh,D Is now valued at $17,500,000 size in mid-atean. (I I I I '=­_­ - --==-- !- --___._�..7_r___. ! An Ingen" ' . I ious. Fool I We read much .of 9ydnoy grilf,thos. wit, but tow Pers'0110 have ever read � ,- though theleader was "a large, laving alrolabort, With tamins written on hie Of lite Inventive fa6utty. Lugftufty of � fwo,sp Tits liwiAo had a farloru, appear. an 0"ceftrtrie, and b0WOM3171119 BOTt I$, aUe, *outbwed *1t1J,ji:,b6tLb;dJe�y , ap", 6'4" to have inark0d I14 6Vv%r)xU7- [Ito. Even here Ito *no a humaxisto Real- Vetite, andt bad earned the, cheerful name of Coftmity. 146 was sluggish donce fit th.o, Aame dilausei with him of d1laDWItioili, arld, hio master oonse- must have 1*011; POIPetunl sUrprleci, for ho bout 41maU to et&(%& 63"- quenfly fnV0nj,.,6& What 11,6 ,balted his "Datout TvAtalus," MWItO WM VlfactfOd mftm arid WUO, a snuiij sieve of gix%& slusi)Wd4il on & somiroircular bar At fto. time 1110 UMa a mrlds of of Iroa aW, rutened to the Oxids, of the testm 41P to tha boot food for taboftra, sbAftd Just beyond the horjWa no,", and Vft* "tO t(w b'*0 Od the vlt- As Calar"4,1ty trotted the. grain rat. *690 b6n0fittod Uvoeabn for its WA 'Ithem bito&ft to tho Itx�otorr ta all a,- tied, and bo forged #.beAd with &JI 00odf to Ovierlake, the �Vr#Prfut* M*WAAW c0l1dittan and 1004 thft vith brvOh rfoo atA voir. siove. He did I mOt* Work undier thli� obut of the IM10111atlOn thmn Alt th& high f6edirtig ix'ftO 0 WMiMm WhIOU WOuht most 09&da*W1U7 "P130ka hubgen Whi0k h*d gone, before had. been able I kmimUwat ()* his A= *6r* his 'WW804 to extoft f rom, ,him, . AIOUfqr �tiamzjxlg 111,vontlon of Syd. ooroAcIters," vrh1oh h,4 thus . 1110�? 81111th, was dovow to hi,% Own uge 1,46AU001 "' a"m OR for clWall "Mur"Y31 "Ou Ond 00,113titutei what hN callod, his rl"OU111440 4rul0r. Whou file diseaslo J*1 4114014110- XOW, 4U Ahimalsi have u �VAA%lft f6r ",r0elilx* theIr bulo anvNo,a hill, Illy put 1;to lq,t3 In two I bfm,es, "xt,y bre*k down your katos, 1t4Vr0W bask6ta, fittol, a b,0110, ti W a codIsr about It% throAt, pet In t large & ftd Imlitts-oi to ofte ct th%� Lookl -Tai'm Is my, Itiftivers" somellar, a tin rawotado, shaped TIM it slioulder of 14titton ever well Alr. 'or 4cf-the wreck and related Ills exporl. ft "*red 14 �ifta W16h SOWN A 'a h0l.10W tin &%4 1*Vr P09, ad0tect 0 6vwy liftlif ., from * hm* t* & UML YOU UTO Mww. �A&J_"­­ ­­ 11_1__...._- bWme. All th,pat, a I" were filled rt* *41h k04 VrAf*r*xd ­_­­__ 1-h(.1 kV­*WM. I I ­ I �1 � -Ir ­ � r I - �:� I I - ­ ­_ MINE RESTORATION RAPIDLY PRESSED TWENTY YEARS' WORK BEF ORE COMPLETION. Loan of 500,000,000 Francs to Replace Machinery hi Pas -de -Calais and Nord. The work ot re�toratliaxx In tile rain - Ing districts of Pas-de-Calals and Nord Is vroceedia.- satt'ifa,etarl,lY, but the eflort will be a loarg one and for at lea'A twenty years it will be impos- F-Ible to obtain thie ecal tannage. reach- ed in the. ye�ar immediately preceding the outbreak of war, accordIng to mill- irg engineers who have Just returned from a survey of the ruitted mine areas, says a Paris des -patch. Soiii,6, Idea of the real extent of the damage done by the Gorman invaders may be had by a comparison of the mine output figurea for 1914 ond 1.919. In the first seven months of 1914 the tannage rbache(l more that 1,600,009 tons in tho area of Anzin, With more than 1,200,000 from the filines, of Ailiche, the chief pits of the Depart- ment of Nord. Ill 1919 the total out- put of all t1lie mines in the two areas did not reach 750,000 to-ris-, and It is. ' doubtful whether a rillillian, tons will be Obtained this, year. Germans $tole Mine Supports. Yet the mineis of Nord were not aa - badly ruined as those ,of Pas-de-Calalos where .some of the richest holdirm.s were comple�telly flooded and support, Ing timbeTo stolen In order to make shelters far the enemy troo,ps. Exii ports are now preparing for the relayr Ing of nearly fifty, miles, of mils fit th,e Anzin. and Aritche regions, the Ger- mails having vot only destroyed all onnal and river bridges, but dynamited the extensive tra,ekage, system coal ixecting the mi-xies. to, the great traus- part axterleisi of tile north of I ratuce. When this is done, work will pro- ceed more rapidly on the reparat-lem of min4lig machinery, much of Which has already been ordered but which is too heavy to he hauled by hanse teams. over the hilly regiDiL 0stimates as to the cost at replacing damaged appar- atur, and illetavII-Ing mom modern Sys- tems- of washing and extra,etton vary, but It -is understood thait a group of mine owners -are endeavoring to ne- gOdute, a loan of 500,000,000 fr&iwa,for thIS PTWPOse, dkieflY from Paris and New York bankers . Ap . A Subway Bakery at Verdun. An underground bakeriy, says the Journal of Hanle Econmains, furnish- es all the bread used by -the refugee populatlon in thhe rulnect city of Ver- dun. No other VUUdlUg Was Sufficient- ly weatherproof to holim a broad-bak- Ing establishment for the rehiraing e aabhorities were forced to requisition the gteat ,ovens underground In ,order to turn out tile Pilinclital to -ad of the to,lere Several times each day the. brea,d is brought to theL mouth of tile black oavern beneath the great walls where llixer., at people await theltr rations. 'Me bakeshop is a part. of the fam- ous, undergwound city of Vex -dun, built , a,ftex the War of 1871 and de7odgued to house, thirty thoueand persons, during an a,titack. During the Great War thousands, of Soldiers, and a few re- fugees lived in this aubtarra abD(1'0 while. the city was ituder "fir e far four ye -am. The bakery was In opemt,lou all the While. . ________4_ 1 * Perfume of Wood. Title North-western. Indians nearly 1111waYs made their totem poles oat of Westerh red cedar, but this choice Was, probably due more to the raet that -the wood is easy to work 4gil extreme- -ly durable rather th-au to Its, fmg- rance. It may be, tailcon, as a very go-od 901iaml rule that woods that are woented, ane TeAstant. At) ae,cay aild. In- sect attiack, and have gatoid cabinet qualfflea.. With the woods of the world to, dhooise. from one, eau easily arrauge a whole scale of Scouts from the sweet- ast and most delicate of per,funies at 011-0 extreme to raAnk &ad Overpower - Ing ,OdiOrS at the Oth-eir The stoxes of h p will not yield a gii6aiter variety than one cati. find In Woods, 40. '� Jumping at Con40lU$iors often lands you in troolyle. The grunting of hagi§ is an ancos- tx�al habit. Their feeding grounds were thick woods Where they could not see each other, and sound was necessary to ketp, them together. I . � _ — - ­. ­�­­­ Tolerance. 'Va,il said untio, Him, Teacher, we . I Saw one casting out demons. In thy name. And we forbad him I b -W be, followed not us. And JosuToadvd unto Win, forbid -him trot, for there is 110 ono that can do a rulghty work In my behalf =d be -able to Speak lightly of me." Much 10�tclry is the history of into.'erance. But that Is not of cbri�,�t- Ile ,vaia we are ,to love God with our four -fold powers—niftil, body, spirit and �soul, and our nolghbo,r as ourself, That attituda, is not past, but wo hape It lo'olowly flyptig, that It *111, Kka the monsters of the ice ,age, be. I come an exthict vpecles, There Is I much talk ,Of the organized forces of I ClixiLftlan.1ty getting together. In fact, they are already together in ways, not i Commonly -supposed. But they must � in time come closer, and there will be ! one Lord arid one, faith, according to , the 131ble, ideal. But tolerance, ought i naver to nioan thia want of strong be- � Itef in what is. right and wrong. it is I poseible to belleve, everything, afid R -o i bell -eve nothing. A mall said to lite ! once, "I don't care what a mati'a re - I �. ligion fs, So long as- lie lives It 1, lie I might as, Well Irave Said, "I flou;t care I what a, maril-s POPIDUOS are, SO IlDrig as lie lives, them." 13olsh-evism is . one I kind of polittles,. Iffould he Ilkef to, have :his neighbors, become Bolaheyl,sts, ' and I I appropriate ble farm end his home? IArtwelly is, one form of politics, Would lie like to &to his house in flamee, same night? It does nlatter raightily what a ma,u belleTes, wheth- & it be, IR religion or pallt1m, To bolerate. Others? opinions, is good, but 'there, are, iscome, thlugs we must not to,lerate. Intoileranice. becomes a vir. tu-e, boyond a certain point, and I am nott certain but we need an inocula. tion of Intolemace to-fty, And good - Will Is. alwaysi intol,orant, yet always tallemmL Christ wau the most tolerant of leaderz� yeit ag&Inst wrong, Injus. U00 Spiritual b1flidnese claLsa hato, he - was a flame of lxxtoi;ili��ce. It Is all a matter of belligtoloraut at the right Place. 4.1— Noses Made Frain Ribs. Some wouderful results have been achieved by surgeons in restotring the teaturev of isoldiers; who received dis. figuring fa,ce; wounds during tWe war. By plastic surgery, which consists In replacing last partz in the, cheeks, IMPS, =00, Jaws, and other places by skin, tat, muscles, cartiIaige, arid bone talcert from other parts. of the body, the most terrible disfigurements can be restored to, an almost natura,l condt. tion. 1 "It Is now possible," Says Major H, D. CAllies, In "Plastic Surgery of the Face," "to give a man a new nose that lacks like a nose, has a good color a r d airway.fl The,pug-nose, In which the nostrila open forward, and even, upward-, can be remedied by implanting cartilage (gristle) taken from the Vatien,va own ribs. * "The best-lookIng nose is made from skin. tukeu front. the forehead, which Is MaIllar In color and of the greasy ilature Of Cho natural nose.1, But it ca, -Ii- also be Te -made from SkIn. from thO firm, olleek, or Itack, . As an Illustration of the cheerful re, signation of soldiers. suffering from face wounda, MaJor Gillies toils of a Private ,of tile Royal Munster r"I� hers who had a. large portion of tile left cheek, the corner of the mouth, and the upper Up bI*Wn a,wUy by a shell. The, eoldior'was, found one morning looking Into a mirror arid 8111111lig with the rmaindrig sfd�,e of his Iface. Asked why he wa-s amu.8e,d, he replied: "Sure, I was thinking phWat an MY tDime the barber will have In, future," I . . 4— W . hy We Blush. Any Shuck or emotion WW -011 makes the heart Dump an extra suppily of b-Tiood into the arterfes and veiw which su-PPIY the face will give rise to blush - I n, g. . The emotion, of course, must be, one Of tile varletY-WhIch causefs, the heart to, beat fa,ster tlraa usual, fteltement, emb,arrla,sisamexxt, or anger will cause this, while fear, which retards the ae. Ion of the heart, will produce a paie white look, Became the -shdck or emotion must be one to which we are not accus. tomed, some persons blush far mo -re readily than others. A person who Is, not In the, habit of listening to certain language will blush train embarrasis- ment when he hears It the first few times, but If the experfence Is con - tinned he will become harideried and lose the .ability to blush—which Is the reason that blushing is eansf.doped to be onio of the attributes of innocence. — —1— The new London Directory contains 17��- oolunnis of Smiths engaged in busixiess in London. . _____ The follo;wIng night I had a -similar dream. The next d,ay I told my wife and - it 1) Grand Old Men - of Great Britain . Several of my friends, and evemttially London Z(>D. A!s, you read the r ,1tory Or ,009d; Lie elephant caught a obMt, but recovered of ter voine, ltig I dooldod to cancel my pasgage,­ . thet man, who had charge of tile ana- Readers will remember how the T1. The British EmPfro hU and Is prond will be 81 this Year. and Robert tanfe struck an 106bergon her mald-en ,of Many moil Wha, Cali Smile at tire Bridges, the Poot Laureate, Is 77 years .tripi and _91lik With enormous loz.a of 1�salmlst, with his thre,b, scote YeAft OU ,Ldrd, V�yerhuhlte, almost as well lite. and ten. Perhapo the firlst in Inter- known ,on this 6ontinent as in grig. It fr- Ab6lxt sixteen Years ago that national fame tll,kt coilift to mind fg land, will toon bo 71� I 1 the Br1xlxftm fishing smack Lyra was Arthur Balfour, whe, Wa& bar In 19 I 'n 8 T. P. O'Connor Is still figilting as ritin down off tile Devonshire ,coast , - arid is still going strong, os th ' brew . r Zorld str6bg for 1i%l0(U4,6.t 72 aa he has Wen With the loss of five m6n oil tile Sull� est diplomatic heads of the V431 for the last five dieeadesu,Ad the Uouse day night previous to the disaster one weil-I ltvdiw. He attributes Ills 16ngeyl 'I of Commoll,a etill rings, every time tile Of tile men, itante4 Furneaux, dreamt t-0 11mird work, a c4omfortable plillo - ) - Irish question comes up with tile volee 4cf-the wreck and related Ills exporl. ophy and good golf. . . of Its 'Thther." And-, to be perfectly 0,11CO tO his wife. "I Would not go to Lord 11alabury, a veteran Loi ' fair oil the Irish question, Sir Edward ' sea," tie said, "it I could get someone I - Chancellor, Is. 9S years Old arid is no Cars on is ottly four yeAts Younger than to bftka Illy place." Of course that -.v,u I engaged daily on the' tryif�g work o ... Ilay Pay." Asquith i -is otill 4 11oung. Impossible, and -he went to li!s gr,,vve, COMCYI115 tile lcws of th". Prititq.th P I "ll septliagetvirl- _�__%S.­r;.__ pire. Lora Stortidalb, who is, 76, -I "" aus, but h,e� will be ellgiblis for Mom. I Paper Bowl3. I talked of as tho, Guenazor to LDr ber6hill in their class- next year, and laftiii. Chlot AnUce Reading. The, Duko o .. 11,6rd, Prolich, young Oxiongh to side - A naw Idea fit finger-bou-13 ha�; boen Collnitight Is on 41lothell 1111110111al tout step Sinn P-ofix arnhuallos, 18 drily a patented, by Simon Bergman, cf Ncw � at 70, SIP Cland, Chaml)iOrL de Ctes, few m0riths �touilger thaux. A,squith. York, It is raqd,� of p9pbr, ar,�J c*.l tile plgIny, a rom4title ,figure it Englisb Sir Olt -vier Lodge has gone far Ili I�W,Id-o lot It's, bottoni is lmrtal all ad. Uto, ree6ittly challenged lifs: cousin to th-0 SPirituallstto World, but in June yc!!1'j�;Mll^�tlt 1.1 1xlV1,.,'b!0 Ink. When I Illeet lifin in mortal combat, In witlel- lie will have, &11,a 70 years IM thJ3 otift, watoi, Is poured Into the re,4ept.-jelo, tile pation ok which he trained on the all. Sir Hall calitio, Is 68 :r�,Ir ota".. �,* printhri, Appears, CO-tral. arllls� arrtl ,�W& 116 was Just al I (1141710q ("a1116"I1, the f��,Jjjnoj A. Irl3l, , ,#, T113 Itivoxxtor'_;�s (Irkaf, dl�, plilifflug -gaoil , at To as, ho 'W"'o fifty yoars ago. I D11ySielaIr, bag turnod go. Major Gen. should ben"ril'a V ,bl"% w,th a el"aw fip. Dr. Itmidall Dadldjoii, AnhWho# of , J no (m d �, , g mtl al 3 ' I or Stev�krt wa botil vedopillent, E") th�t et p,%*,,,,va 112.!ng the Canterbury, Is the sam6 nge'o,.) Mr. 1IG tn'1840, and Ccirditial *,qiebael Logne Allgor-bowl will llat[C15 - e 6tr,jual ap. Balfolir. I .1 -,-,. OYO? SO. V14100111lt Btyeo, forinor P09'rIttiv Of tho ftdvot�'11',,,111109_01t, Att'a Sir Thomari Barlow anq fair j,1111W MUB-h Atubl2gador IU Washingtoll, is � thmrnby I)Avob,ls attent'on d1repted to ""r Cant!le, twa not4ed plly3lej _ju,4, are 76 S3 y 46 e,(,�, fd . It, , I 11,114 70 reOWtIve'17. H!r J,ohn 1.,� ftg#_k, J And 'in support Ot 66 04 r,DmItI119 I ­�_ I A_M*1­11�111­ M_ 4r, hk APR1W_ta.LI ..Y__AbL9._Ptq ._ -� n"&g'_�O�.qr , _11 I _ "A'doill'. "Yollf-11,will bi� d"u,11.11 � - ,,,lot I ­ ­­­­------- ���101111111111111111ilil� . , 0 'I Vi . IRonder th-oroforry unto Qtesvr the love aml, to- bul�r one another, and ty(lix I -p th'at arie, Caesar's- and unt,>! citizexrslli� whic,fi, i'13 time. hp always GQd , the things that ,Pwel' Go4?s_,St. 1 looking, fbr. Und striving after the I Matt. 22: 21. i c0l"111011 good'. ll'unything, ik needed We Must remember t1tat'when, our. for the health or pleasure of'tho com. Lord Speaks of public duty 'Ind of t munItY the- good citizen favors It and I social respartsibility He always speaks i tries to brlilg it, If any bad thing In the light, of true religion. In otlie� throatone the common welfare bi� words, we can find in Christ's teach- i seeks to drive It away. But how can Ing not a system of government nor he surely icnorvy that this need Is actu- a code of social laws, but a strong dp_ ally for the coltimorigood or that this claration of the necessity of loving evil is harmful? Experience 18 all and obeying God and of loving and right L30 far as it goes,* 'but, unfor- serving one another. The error of t4nately, exPorJence. often comes too some writers who try to find in the late and the evil has rooted itself or Gospels a system of economic or so. the good has lost an opportunity. cial reform is that they leave out two Rendering to God the things that are Most important truths -first, that We God's means, amongst many other are, all God's children and His will things, caring for the happiness and is the only guide in righteous living, welfare of His children, He is the and second, that Christ Jesus came gulao, 4or He knows,better than men into this world to save sinners and can knowt where and'bovv lasting h,ap. He shed His iblood that we inight be piness is gained. So we find, a4 his. made clean and pure, It is a grave tory teaches, that it IS Christianity question whether a man who, is. not a that builds hospitilla and schools arid Christian can be a goo(L citizen, And orphanages, that urges -pure water it is � also ,a grave question whether for peoPIQ to drink and clean, streets any man who is rrat a Christian can for people W'travel, and fresh air Tor have a clear and true judgment re. people to, breathe. And the same garding. human relationships 'between Christianity has always fought 4U& man and man, The reason 1.5 quite, always Will fight agaiii.st ba& amuse� clear, God made the world "and. He nients, and, 4 broken day of rest for made man, and He alone can sl%ow all, arid cruelty t6 childreil and to, men, how to live. And He came to, animals. Yes, and the same iChristlarl- earth in the person of Jesus Christ itY calls upon every Christian ta. do, his Part in upholding the g od and to teach us ,by His example of holy driving out t 9 living, and to die for our eternal re- he bad, and unless lie domPtfon. To talk about good. citizen- obeys he is a poor and unprofitable ship or about social reform without citizen, making it barder for people to, regard to Jesus Christ is -about as live healthily and happily, and More foolish as it would ibe for a Student difficult for good Christians to do to study any branch. of science with- their duty. ' out a knowledge of or a belief in the Justice for Every Citizen. attraction of gravitation. Good citizenship frowns upon the So when ,Christ answered the Phari� few wbodisregard. the profit and wel- sees' question about taxes He referred fare of the many, because God has them at once to God: "Render unto established the right of every man to God the things that 'are Goals!) rn have this -share of lite an,& happiness. other words, He taught that to at- Selfishness and greed are the enemies tempt to render to Caesar the things of human progress and goodness. that were Caesarlp, would be futile Hence the true citizen quickly de - and foolish unless they also rendered mands justice for all, since God is � to God the things that were God's. just. Many of our modern laws are Arid He made the lesson still. -plainer the result -a rather tardy result -of arid stronger when He Said to the this very rule of Christ, and we are lawyer who -asked Him which was the learning that any kind of Prosperity great commandment In the law: "Thou or pleasure that oppresses any one 8halt love the Lord thy God, and than must be dealt with. It is rather a shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." difficult problem because we are so He so linked- love for God and love ;for Ignorant and foolish ,and because the men together that they can never be blind, Selfishness of the strong has separated. Hie that loves God must held down the weak. It has taken -us love his brother, and -,he that ,loves 1900 years to understand the golden his brother' must also love God. rule arid even yet ill some cases our Brotherhood without God is weak arid understanding is darkened. It Is not without character. Love -for God easy to deal justly one with another, without brotherhood is an emotion, for we are apt to look ,.,a one unreal and bound to fail, side of a question and ignore the i1rst Duty. A Citizen's r other side. The rich nian, unthinl-,- ingly perhaps, takes advantage of the Good cltIZenShiP must recognize, poor inall; and, then the tide turris and first of all, the will q G 0 d. It Is a the poor man hates the rich man and saying, niany times repeated yet tries to defraud him, We mus -t be scarcely accepted, that God's will is patlent.one with another as we are the only Measure of righteousness, seeking U Just solution of problems. and Without righteousness there can "Caesar's things" are pretty big be Ito knowledge or desire amongst things sometimes, ,and they need the men to serve on -e another. God has wisdom of Salomon, the patients, ,of placed us in families and communi_ Job, and above all else, the grace of ties. Animals are gregarious -that God. But we Must insist upon that Is, living in. flocks or comparlies-l>e- love which Gad alone can bestow and cause of fear. They -would, protect which bids us not only worship but each other. But men live together to serve. -Rev. IF. W. Toinkins, 11, . !=!� - -_ Did Noah Have All This helved itself to, Some af the rarer Little Bother? birds, before dt was caught. A gibbon Went do— to +I,,- - There' WM trouble enough for every- F,�t. room allu burued Ito. tojot on a, b,at pla,ts, 0110 on, board whein, a coa,lection. of wild a-Wmals, wa� shipped. ftm India to the OUthO Way to Marzeilles the weath- b8caln,s London Z(>D. A!s, you read the r ,1tory Or ,009d; Lie elephant caught a obMt, but recovered of ter voine, ltig in The Times, based On' the diary of dose% at quitihi.e. and the appl,icatioar thet man, who had charge of tile ana- of btankets. M%1% YOU 'MUnat holp wondering WhLethor Noah suffered Ulm MaU011% Between Marselffes and London the e%Phan11t Plulig0d her trailk for half a During the. early part of the voyage tbD beat was Intense. The two tigers Yard into a pot of Nylidto patil,t. She Peraiftbstd heir ke(pprer to, clean some of Were Prostrabed and -had tio, be revived by 0, buelcotful of water, dashod fixto it off w0th an, oily, rag, bilt would not lot, him- touch ther end 0-1 heir trunk, t1l'sir faces; and a P*tafled monke,y, Aeocn,dltgay, .the keeper oiled ber front a tragopan alld two flycafthers, died of legs, aind she dlealleid, thb tip of her beat Al)0PI0:Qr. The third, dhy nt sea trunk by rubbdog It agodust t.h,e, oily the OftVAIni had a OaUVaV Shad erected Surface. During the rest of the voy. On the UIPDeT bridge for the small WJI(13, for they sugered� f1rom the calm. age she be,haved well, except for tear- Lug into r1b,boal, tv,ro of liar blankets During the night tile elephant man. Rad tho a-wnlarg that sheltexad her. kiged tO 90t at a bag that contained . her suPPaY Of Mg -W 6 ad looted It, M �1.6 On the second da,y orlit from 00�i.Oxxx_ Approximately 600,000 workers In bo the zea began to be rouvh, and mll tare involved in the, crisis in tile both t1gers refused food. The ele. British spirtatng industry. phFmt ate very little, refused to lie down and suffeired from a 011111Y trunk, The mileage of Canada's ehi,of rail - 'ways During the stormy weather, whi,ell-all- is as follows-: Canadian Nation. al and Grand Trunk 6ystems, Und,or tinned for throe days, tile mge, that 001031116d a civet oat broke, tile cat Government control, 19,000 miles. Canadian Pacific Railway, 22,000) esicaped, Irid by day and at, night miles. All OnAleAt IT Amcilull"It W vae HUMAor . - Although the Chinese may' seentl A Judgo­ia like a tigor, never move$ serlolus,, like the Irish, he is not with- but he does Game, in-JUrY. ourt a genuine sonse of humor. H18 What It Is Better Not to Know. lkwatura I�hlghly aeusioned wIth wit- A fiddler,had better not Imow muWc. . t1tis'la-3 and humorous EatuatiOns. Un- orli6 WIN be thromi out of wark. i fortunabetly, brevity, which is. essen- A waman had better not know pa,Bt. tially the r1oul of wit of ,his proverbs, ry, or ahe will lose, her reputation. I Is Impaired !a the translation into L)lg- A Servant had better not know his , lish. Also there fe much. of Chinese lobt6m, or her will get into troubft. humor,,&ven. that founid ill the booksi of A Scholar bad boter'not Imow arty. the MCnA farlious WrIbbem, that Is,to.a. thinq about handicrafts, or he will be broad for a literal translation. held in eoutempt. . Nevertheless human natano Is, and vatcatfoil .- has for a thousand years, been tunda- Sitting idlown to, a fejult aud fo&14ng luebtftliy the SOM4. Thl's Is sihown by t,h,,'Y 111bortiri0h. ach3. the fo.'Jow,'h-g epfgyranis. tq:,_4n from Finding th-o bottle empty ift tht the Work of a wr,'ter, LI Shaag yLit, mid.cit of a jollly night. -who, lived 1,200 years Pgo in the Flow. Nort being able to got rid at onola ery 1(41�:d,c-iii. The tronAntlen from poarr relaticW. tllv� Chivc,iO wa� ilidde, by NV. F. The Extreme of Unpleasantrie9g. Mayers. Bland's.-Ing uporc ritabt,ma Whicil OLM The. lx��-.tl:r­ -.0 ,.,_, C,,,, -,�:-.r% ,111,,1,- ­ I ­ tab�co, in a fdood's hovao. ce'S OV1111; a crolltor when o4re 6an't 11)al�%M,1419 06nditionz C:A1 of P;w�o. y oxxo'a debts.. -.1-loan'tig drankea babble after onoa. A pn�­ Pz,.­2-.. ., has bcoome, sobow. I A ii,' Ick ph Y -'C'-. r. I Tribulations, A fat bed,�. A ie�ad­r ,v­io doe,4 1,-,,, kno�x his To Invite a distlitsublied gnevat, who I fIlls to cattle to dinner. I iette,T3. To have a &'iga,Trecablo folVvr conio A graybE.ird glv�,a U!) flirting. ra ll!i-1 own Invitation. What Onle Doac; Not DeoploO. 17o bk, butbollholod by a 4ninkoA I - *V'*11 one 1% l.�,,n.,,-ry- e,31rso vIct. laftiii. uats. Ta have no thort-W Whekti thiligs are I When 'etila 1.3 C,11. the jr T. '11110--ITIT �0 ' c1le'.11). V,ut irsig to, ride. Iro be "*'�^_'e,l OPX)6g,tt� the msal vott , I When ona I� thir�,,�y-,-,)Ilj rice batz3. ' W"Iter. T1101 Growing Foll;69 of the Aga. Compari3ofts. Envy, b-afted I'Vil nisli". I A .(,(,,,,r.e.i - 1-4 lika punipl--' : , Y,�,z!�.h ' rAir-oking the go-ts vrbm on, I 1A c. -ow bo-, t, in the da,rk. . - - -, � . .draLk... ­ .1, ... I'll, ­ ­­.­ ­ I r � . ­ 7 - !�!,!=771:�,�� in=", G � Off OR W, FMA �� "ALWAYS' LE&P UM HEREt"-SAYSMANAGM N --A---& Pood Will at thef Ficirm 6 8-1---- � ULV 0011as a Day" Yet 91t4s Seen -ii Alivays Hungry. It W&I plumo�plckhiv day at the. o(s, tr1oh farm, A curlous, orawa stood, out. oldry the railings qTtd watched. a, young , Man oa'PtUro tho hilge blrd% Ile 04 It by qutold3r graspin'87 % bird and beUd,. tll@r Its nWk with, Quo, hand while with I the ot&!P)r -h& olapDact a black ho -W over Its helad. When the, birds, had. tli,uo been blind'ald, tie, easily pushod thelA into, a ismall, -Pon, Wixom other men cut th,D "I'll* PIUMM" train their bodies, Tlila Viftinest r -re, picked ever,v 111rki& mouthe at the farm, where, two hug,- dred 4Il4';a111vt"l% birds are, carralod, An. oetrtoh, is first picked wher� leaIll than a Year old, and then every alao MiDublIV th"Ourbout Us, Rfe,, Th,a oldti It Is the botbor tho foathers., etaxil many of itho birds, II've, to be sv4volity Cc saventy-five, Years. old. The inuat 'valuable plumes co" from the wirigs, which ylead twenty. four fewtheris otueb, 4ometatinau t-,reaty. seven. lucheA long, Tht,.� tadl yields about sevonty-fiva smaller taixbher& All (Me allow-w1bite, Plumes; comeo from the blackest birdis arid alwaya fronj tile Male& On -the mrticiblax farm ot W4110h. Wei spmk, which Is the largest and oldest of Itki kind In th�q unit" Statea, thore are mtrlchei at two dki.. dact varieties,,, the South African ov. trich. which ha,3 blubh-blacic flo-9h, ama the Nubham a8trich, -vthloh b.:ts pi,ak f1wh. The birds have remarivablo stronoth, a tremendous etrld.,i NnA sP00a, and, VaOugh flOnlat'linli o3iwdr(b they often fight eaah oth,:3r ff%­!.)-,�v-�Jy. KickIng forward, they strilci 1!,.AIr a*. Pone'at in the chest WUIL a il'l-�J,d tlla.t soxilldl� I'A'a a shot In a harra�. Of cOur2ile tha fighting birds inuat bo,9,a,1Xt­ rated at once, 'but aij Ito, keeper dures rialk lits llfe�a,mong- th8ni at flio�,�� xu%j. mailrerrta, come, one rol!3 a (1,)ze,1& OPA119ER Into the, en,clo��,ure, Tim eit.. .tire flocl� fly at the fruit. an'l t'tl(3 qJ1Rr_ reil is quickly fargotten. 1,,*­,�,,.., 01, �-. - ,Cur only In tha courting pen, for at lu other tlme�., the birdo dwoll In fhe,jr separate euialt enciosure.j. Can't Teach ostriches sense. "It isalways Imp year at our pj,a,,io,­ said the manager, "for it is tli,� feinato that dow the choasinL,. Thp-q ar- It -0 domost'l-C difflcultie,,3 for tlic_,;�, .,itaf,Ay stepping creUilree. Th -ay ia-tloi for life. Oxxl�- once in tile lx!&,ory of thim farm has there be,exx a tragedy. I'Alftfor McKililey—aregalfellow! kleiceakid, niate to douth because she, woill(i not' sit On their eggs In the d.aytimo, ' though he sat upon th�,aa dutiflitly ix I night. Day after day ll,-,� w,Ag- rgea*l reationstrating wiLh her, driLvii),g heir toward the nest in the'e-ontne of tllokr IDL Fina,11y he 11teral-ly Irle3c�?1, her to death, despite our be.it ,Pffjits to earb her. Soon afterwards, Nyb9a lie Nvem Put agaln Into the cvurtliig pali, nat- ather one proniptiV cbozia hijkl; ana 1 U -I'll �Xxs-- NO. 2 h� hao b6an llivoq.,; , liapp. �' ever after.' They fire rimlw birdo, but they fieldom �,Ixow a gmin ol sem.ia and we canao.t ,,e,,ted �'hje.xyl any- thlrig." YOU wG111CL &Xpelct a luivi, raucous voice from a creature, whose hed,j Id all mouth and -�tajoxx,g eyets; b(It W10 onr�y no1se, all ostrIch can make r,oun4s like a in.,in, clearintz h,�s throat, or like the dull Cough cr an exhaust p1pe. ft"'I pair b glvau its, o-wn ;Algor, fen--o'd lot, GlIffickutlY largo for thftx to cxercis,3 in; and fr. the, contre ths male bird df&3 a Tioaa in thq gma.1, f0l"a 1100b, ThOrOl'XI th13 biaro dirt the 0993 DTO 19VId. Each egg v,,oJLqt,,3 fj�ro POU)Ide-111,0116 than three dcfm I�axlo 099is weigh. It Is. the fatiler,s duty to IV02ID the aleat d&ar of all tralsh aft4) to S-13' 11DOU it �OVUY nUht; but ae r,00x- w the chIT,IU are ha%bied the, papa%t bL-.dl3 Walk R,WaY Ill utter unwnenm firdeed, no oar& 14 necessary. T110 baby bird, which 11 -as, 11-rger 0,9 a SnAR; hen, eato� nothttiq for tiji%e o,r t,Dov dwia, th,,,a avaUoiwo a qaantit�- or VW bias aad lo, oaoxx ready for i,bg (INt taste Of altillfa or gr -Mn. Tile, food TAI& at the f-11*111 f0 OlxtY (1011 -Ars a dtly. yet tile OAIICIVW� so,Nft Vtways huogry, I— — 4+__ . Sxuo6, Candle Vapor Deadly. 011,6 of the maxiY -ingentoris couttly. anoesdoveloped during the l,e-o,,)it wW .)Va'3 the "smoba "Itiffie'.1., Suell candlaw, we'Te, 11'ato eylludrizal boxe�3 oontasw Dag ontok'e-pi"c'aucing ch,3=,cahl, VdIft oout,d be Iglifted at a monleilit1.,1, n,3tIOq by a 4,ort of friction diev!ea, Tttofl , pI were wsbd to ciallecal the nt,)veMI6nt*- ofstuall ".L ap% of moll, Wholl. touchea 11 Off thV We0Lk,sdMpb1 plaCed on. tks ground, to make a smok-E, Screw. I The Arnoi4oaaa thought it wehulid bo a good W494% 0, two smoice, cand-i(Xii tb#* Would give off a paitpo4ow. oxx,," I These ditigmyed,olinifts, d44 not cot" Into uea durIng the War, but irftft �, thon, the chonitals, of tha U.S. WOW Eiw, partar,tyat have 1)819000d thom. Tf4 polton Stuff twd ta a O"'t-teur produot Whtoh, A stollaid, at 'WdluaLry 4te'rupow turies, v%*n1len da thei heat of th* buitaling dactidta. Thoi vavo(r witil vvna� bMt,6 WoA gag, movks, The mh%nwjr , authw0los th'Ink Oat such polme sniolevo W14 11,19dvery extewlve� uso (a faturei "irrairo. I The obwoko, 0Z a smoko-clmtlo is USIXIIIA-Y'Ohitek. To be, offectiv6 for con-#' , 0eUI=ftt# Lt must, of 001twe, be, 0* I opaquo as pov�z�blo; OA(t It must also I be fleetvy. to oo to bawi'. 6isray, bta�ww, , av�Wltyatightbr6fto. vandkithati D1104111100 4 S411*0 �2 Mac chtorldo meiat 1 thim'.1 roquIrollitalla ad,IlLh�xvlsr, but tho I 041.,t�t� ".;x), of "(I',"Plljlntyl4l,l,l�r,��Ji�ito', filakes thism PO4�4,110w- as well, 1� _._4____ A i Lonq�O,Wanca 641. . T1l10Maj'_.t6W1aZ9' Wa�a &lt6fJJg doVrJJ to brlaklaiat. Olie niorxAne, whoit, Ito w&4 1 ftbonndm to flete In tl% �Vapor fm ta. 110"ItOiWneilt of his de%th. go mgl it'D fvw Tt6WAii!_'1l!i`if,I1 at or", ," 1111611o, Smith!i' W JZXTAII&�,�-Y,611 46ft th* AftbDt1ft04#%1* Of My d**ft k th* mvierl"