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The Clinton News Record, 1924-04-24, Page 2NKERS• 8 0,raSa 14g-' EatalSeq. Notes Dtheounted, prette faseeti. Interest Allowed en Deposits. salt, Notee Purebaned Res DOAltIttlit f 'Notary, Public, unnoeYancl't F100110139 Real ecietat,e and Fere' le - tattoo Agent. Itepreeeettrig 14 F11-0 li-.e-,ll 11rance eoPa-se• e Olvettoil Court ()race, Ctinten. A GlIlL 13ABY NOT WANTED..., the, niother had' spoken, Pile p191070 +4A1.:valiz .UnTottunato, matt that el, g'ret'ad- her' ga."' hal. se`it'.° inn ont'the tteeh-' 111. T, RANCE amt. In what way have 1 offentleitthe ,Iller9tila-). gods, Almt Tor 0, fourth iime .no 'er toev,thom She had given her baby. 3 W BRYLIONE Otcr, i3Ucltor, 160tP bll Oillee: OAN VeaCK .et.IN'ren; , DR, J, C. G./1'201ER Office :-1.30 to 3,80 pate 7,30 to 9.00:p.m. Sundayre 12.80 to 1.30 ift•th• Othe-r boars let -appointment oaly. Office end Reeldenee 'Vleterlat 13L DR WOODS resuming practiee at hie res1deeee, office }lours: --e te 10 n•Ine and 00' 2 P.m. Sundays, i to 2 p.m., for con. 'R. H. S. BII.oWN, °face' I{ ours , 0 to 3.70 p.m. 7.30'to 8.00 P.m. • Sundays 1,00 ,to 2.00 p.m. Otbor hours by sepoluttnent _ Offiee, 218W Residence, 2183 DR. PERCIVAL HEARN °nice and Residence: Huron ltreet Clinton, Oat, - Phone 69 (Fortrierly• occupied by the ;ate Dr, C. W. Thompson). Eyen, Exemlned end Gleesee Fitted, • • Dr. A. lieWton Brady Bayfield Gradtkete Univek-sity Ireland. Late •EXterte" Assistant Master, Ro- tun4a,-11Wspital for Wainen end\Chil. droll, .Dirbliee, • , Office -at resident:it lately occupied by Mrs, Paesons. . Tiottii,- 0 to, 10 a.ne, 3 to '7 part, Sklntiaya 1 to 2 p.tn, Osteenatic Physician Litentlate lewar, and Michigan State Boartra..Of :Medical Beateinere., Acute and throule diseesee treated.. Spinal adiesentent,s -given to iemo ea the cause of diseaSe. 'At tile Ge/kham 'House., ereete'ruerday atternbonke, 50-11KP. - 'G. S. A'1•KINSON , ,. Gradeateelloyel College of Dental Sur. gear:3 end' Tomato tellversitY DENTAL 'eliRCEON' : ' lias office houri at. Baytteld in old Post,016m Bundles, Menday, Wed. nesday,, Friday tend Saturday feom 1 , to 5.30.-P,M. • DR. W. R. NIMIVIO . CHIRDPRA'C'Tok ••••• CLINTON— • „ "raestlaY, Thureday and Saturday 10 to 32 a.m., 2 to 5 pen„ 7 to 9 p.m. SEAFORTH-- Men:day, Wfidnesday and PridaY. = 10 to 12 ELM:It, 2 to6 p.m., 7 to 9 p.m. Phone 68'7 - Clinton,,Ont. CHARLES B. HALE Conveyaneere Notary Publ'e, CoMmla- • stoner, etc, REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE friLIRON STREET , ,CLINTON - M. T. CORLESS CLINTON, ONT, District Agent The Ontario and Equitable Life • and Aecident /nsurance Co. • West WawanOsh IVIUttlial *Fire Insurance Co. • Established 1878 President, John A. MoKenale, Kinome dine; Vice -President, H. L. Saikeld, Secretary, Thos. G 4.11en, Dungannon. Total amount of imam - mice 'nearly 912,000,000 In ten years uumber ef policies have inereased from 2,700 M 4,500, Plat rate Of 92 Per 91000. Oaeb on hand 921,000. H. L. Salkeld - Goderleh, Ont. J. Turner, Clinton, Local Agent GEORGE ELLIOTI° Licensed Auctioheer for tho .Ceuety of Huron. • Correspondence:promptly answered, .inamediete ariagenaerits;,carebe made tor Sales pate at The News -Record, Clinton, or by calllegePhone 203. Charges., Moderate Red' Setisfacelon Guaran teed. B. R. ,I-IIGGINS C1ento:1, Ont. , c orellrire and Lite Insurance. Agent .-for Hartford Wiedstertm lelve' Stock, Automobile and Sicknesiecand Accident Insurance. Huron and Erie and Cana. da Trust Bonds.. Appointnients made eo meet parties •.at Brucefielde Varna ond taylleld. 'Phone 57. The 'McKillop fintual" Fire Iniuraice Company , Head Office, Seaforth Ont 01 RECTORY.1 • Preeldeet, ,Tarties Connolly, G'oderieb VICO, Janies Evans, Beeeltweoci; Sec, lCrelecorer, Thos. E. Hays, Seafortle - .Pireetore; George illeCartn ey, Seas theta; D, le. McGregor, Reaforth; J. G. Grieve, Wa,llon; Wm. 31.lng Seaf.arth; 111063<', 211, Clinton; Robert, Terries, Ifuldoelt; :John t3emieweir, 111:odbispien; Jas. Connolly, Goderich. " : 21pr. t,eitch, Cliuton; 3. W. Yee, 0f:c0<ric:1k; 'Sea. feral; kee Chesney, Egitteedeille; (A. J01, rd. u tb , B roclhagen. :Ntly money to be paid" in may be .alti to Moorish Clothing' Ge., 9519etote or at 091170 Grocery, Clotterich, Partieo ctosirib,g la ..ttirrgre, 11 tramptof other 1155417000 will be. erecePtie at.i.encied to oe ii57b90791c1, , to any of; 1117. 0,151)30 .o faeces' acideessed to the ir 7101110t105 post Qin cc, Loss es 10'.779l 3d by the Direetor 01110 11783 08230, "You would do well," said he, lo hove to my wife?" ,Talltleg thus to himself, Kim Chong Went oufaide "'ad the .chilel there. MY mathe,*-in- hie little . .1 mw, took nay baby' ttiod I babeen ve e' an< °8rthere onee th Bee her, ", Many children down with his .'L 1•P ' live- nt the school, and al ale g io-s• As he smoked, Jilo thollg"'lv,as, There are Chinese, gals "Ire "Whet Shall I' do With her?" In the ig o t ae I and vh 'read and speak 99.3 MiddlcKliogdom (Chula, I -stoked languoge of; the white people. .38 yoU easily settled. A pail of water, are willing -I will go with Elder Sister Ittle gurgle, and all ivoulei be'over. and take the chile to the "But this this disteict be'leng,3 ..1'1'7;, "I ant tvilling; ask tily bebend if he white pee/51e and, accerding!tca their toe, willing.o • - law, a intim may not:destroy-his nOWly- 'Elder Sister went 'out and told Elm' berri baby gi). „ Cheng tnelr plan ice,' ebe, Not °.;1Sut"h1acl'lldislt9'Y)';16;se'"he reriiec.She bo' tefar1er lulotgo tred:p(ld, notaer1310 to the government, oefice 'meld Inform chong's. answer. , 'the clerk; who 'writes in, a 1,0019 and "en' ie• well," said the mothef; "Take giVeS the failler PaPar infarnang the child to the. teacher," ' him that, within a eertein time, the instructed by the motherElder child =Jet be brought for the planting sister °perked' a box4'9«109.7<9. she of the smalleox (vadeinatien). Molt a 'gm:silent and wrapped it'well ,dStraege indeed, , are -tile .waYs 01 around the child. Then she beckoned the white.peoplei But they are.w se, to the mothev's '•frieed, and together too. Ceetainly it is better to have a they, left the house'. mark On one's arm than to have one's „ ,As they passed Kim Chang, Elegy, face covered with pock marke.' •Slater said eW0. g7 to take -the child •'"If the gode will' give me a son 1 itd.ftte teacher.. will send when old enough, to the e is well," said lie. "And tell the white people's school to leern their ekbeehet to report to the government werds and`wisdom. I hope the women (register' the child's birth). Let her •wal ilnd a way to dispose of the child. bear all the treuble." Inside the house, two women. were sitting' on a bench mid a third was Thus fr.orn Cheng's home went - the little daughter he had not eeen and did not wish to see. As the wotnen event on among "the palms and across the rice fields, Kim Chong rose and began to prepare the face] for his pigs, feeling relieved that tirioLib e:ellieildtohwas of an' t 'JUMPING RACID. The, players are divided into equal groups, which stand in single- file be- hind a starting line drawn at one end of the playground. Twenty feet from thie line a finishing line is' drawn parallel to it; and on this line, oppo- site to each file of players, two balls, clubs or other objects are placed, .A.t a esignel the leaders in each file, who have been toeihg, the starting line, fume. forward -with both feet to the finish line, when they stoop, pick up one of the balls and run back to the -sterting-Iine. Each player, on running to the starting -line, hands the hall to the next player in his file, who ahould be toeing the line ready,to start, while he himself goes in the reat of the file, The secend player, having received the ball, jumps to the finish line, puts down the ball, picks up the other one, and returns to his file, where.he hands the ball to the third player. • The file wins Whose last player first brtneeeg with. her the fiend of whom gets back to the starting line. et I 0,001. ,0.00 lying on a plank bed. They were dis- cussing what to do with the baby. Said 0110, "7 have heaga, Hider Sis- tor, that there are rich merchants in the -town whose wives give a good price for a baby girl." "Yes, 1 know, Younger Sister ;'but think of the trouble to find the one who will buy the child' and then, have to wait Until she can go to the temple to 'inquire Of the gods if it -will be a profitable -undertaking. `And did 3'01.1 not hear Kiel Cheng say that the child is to be disposed of" at mice'?" • "Listen to nte;" sitid the mother. "I have 4 plaz.• .A. frieild,of mine, who lives in the bonnie by the vice shop, gave.ber baby -girl to a white woman teacher living at a girls' school in the town: I ,shoultL like my baby th go there; She` will be,evell cared for and educated. =I do -dot want her sold to rich. people; her futhre 'would be un- certain. Go thou, Elder Sister, and call rey feiend here 'that we mey in- euire whore the -teacher „ The subject of the W0111011'111 discus- sion and of Kim Cheng'e thoughts was peacefelly eleePing, weapped in a cot - tree garMent of leer mother's. `IsTo tiny Baby clothes ,had been given to the evcimen in • whieh to dress this um, welcoine babe. . tee. • Elder Sistet presently , teturned, TTITES WERE OPEAN KINSHIP TO CELTS AND TEUTONS CONFIRMED. Lanitiage Found to. Bear a Striking Resemblance to 'Every Day English: A eohilrmatitin of the belief Of some scholars that the ancient Hittithewere Indo-Eurapeana andblood cousins to theeTbutons, the Celts, the enceetore ef the Greeks antt.Latitia, is made itt the translation of some 200 of their laws dating frone the fourteenth tem tury B.C. by Dr, George A. Barton, P.rofessoe ot 'Semitits at the Debtor- sity of Pennsylvania 'and ef New Tes- tament Language and Literature at the DivinityeSehool. • Te the 'Work of translation .338. Bar- tOn had to employ German, 'French, Latin, Greek, Semltic and Celtic philology, since the Scientific world' Pessessee oney a redimenta,ty Hittite vocabulary. The translations will be Included in a fertheeflaing'velume on "Archaeology ead the Bible" vrIticli he ts preparing. Boglias,-Ketti, near modern Armenia, In The Hittite. ompfee had its seatwaist gatitialiefaell,te"Ieothalintilat,e,y;)4tamtgy'mitna000, 11-50.et piny there that Winckler tome years ago l'eadPerialli*nl:Yrte.;"011'Pli'MagB7neer,WchtYat tilthee the fourteenth eentury 13.C: ft uncovered what was once the litttite clenlet4.yeat.t'atmiloptir st,latclt'eue:;t'asznraoutfollil haltyld Royal Library and' tieverai hundrede of their clay „tablets. Most of' tbee bacon,on the'sa•ICV:.112g Petient. It goes Their, eihciretandius,, te.weyer, tench, 01,6)1,wpien 10)1011030) and tableth ; are :now in Constantinople, with4.14' •tha.'t, .Sentleness of long time" was a "closed -heek" to nes, llkbwlao enecesSerY; are a archaeologists because the Assyrilui gre.at ae.a.etT1.6 a (latar 10 galOing the cunieform WEIS used 'to write' their, tefrahritio-f,°iFt;tbitear Peattte:oent)tInt,s, out that all language, Which only lately has been I The Aserteh ,enentorrgaih-0del-lioepaeir:atinodnef--ntarinetalteeeornitae1;11<iye.vthele. Idviise3.osveenrieidi:i etc} A:ryan. T •Common Ancestry. 1rn ent 0,ope by le immeese progiees of .111 011- • ,gerY---IleCeZSitate8 a high de - a Beiternian scholar, begtee of manual dexterity, But, as 000 "ilrem9y, e experieticed-in both arts, he says that done most' of the 'work in, translating meat diffloult,ancl conaplieated the leittite,rent,aine,0 Dr. Bartou said even the tu.day, „but mueb or 10 ,ttat 11e9,e4,t5., operative measnres in surgery do n'ot rectuire anything likeethe mailetel skill faet,MY. However, he werked out that is'requirecl ef piauist who pMys • . terttetive grammer and the begienings 19 b buluoy a difficult work correctly and intent- showeIt, is, he thinks, fortimate, that d mixture of Indo-European geallY--• and. mungtiituu roots. ,. such ia the ease, for otherwise it 700181(1. be a bad look -out for the vast , "There Was a ' remarkable resent- blance, T feund, in •many of the. words "tither 06 120730119 wh°'1'00401' 01' Iator dome under the 'attrgeOn's k11163; to ordinary words Nve.11ave in Eeglidle general surgery therees in arena castle Jo Melly of then 0050302 to ikave 5,00m - a, margin for error, but 10 eye-sargery mon cemetery, Hittite Word for • .A.1,e;.„,i13 poi, .whia 12 tha.,,,m, as 'oar ,and ether fleeciaL eperations, little er 11aY",' The wOrd ' for 'Take' ie 11011.0-,-j11.54, ee there ie lump Ow the whieli corresponds to the Greek inasiaian in tn6 6017e0l,' ,,tutatut, suit the Latin ,11,0, 'tot, ,give..• of the work, T.herefOie 1.97e0 bud - Verb `03m1', w1)1.;11 \ye Itnow din1111,Itteciiieanteiteaeta cllliTcp9tehseibliie'oeision eabee etmost exactly the same as ai,the 33 ,tbo'Satth,crit, which is, of ccurSo, ludo. . 'European. " "The , for '":11olstoro' is Littie E1-10,0re, ege(.1 nine; 3111) bee needare wbieh 15 roadily seen to bear teeentlY tnoved••21,e0111 m'Aistaitt, etty, 9. Mose' eelatien to our word 'wo,ter'.” .600:.0.8700120 "frequentlye;Wieh Mary, ler. Barton sate the Hittite laws in vho was her Motiellt, (Mani," A.Zew days no. "way affected ' or were affec.lett by ado, tlinora reoelvod il-Mt;thr from lbo 1101i2ew 1eg9.1,ti37 "A1712119 them, Mary which 5084, however, R00 sonie that hears. striking "Tell rife wlisO you r birthday reSeMblance't•lse. said, einees; ter I Want tO •"01.1. a pre Tile cede is evidently' r, 1'811Si011 of sent. .21Y b:rthday 1<noiri, Tuesday." ae earlier one, -and in .almost every case the penalty is lighter, thus. Jinn,. eating a oontinually enlightened civ- ilization. • Music Helps in Delicate Operations. Considerable interest and astonish- ment has been calmed in both the pee- feeeions of meths and medicine by a tecent lettev in the Britieh 'Medical journal from the pen of a doctor in Gloucester, adVocating the practice of instrumental music as au aid te aur- eola awn. He arguers that ter the development of manual eleeterity, ea in the case, for Mateo, of eye 1)05'- 10r7, and indeed all operations of a delicate eharacter, there is nil bettor training for the liana and wrist than learning to play the organ or.piatto-- preferably the latter. Such a train- ing, betsays, gives precision and ambi- dexterity, independence and flexibility of fingers and wrist,, delioaey aed lightness, or tonoh'M manipulation in a• degree difficelt to overestitnatet" Dr. Dyke+) Bower, the author of, the article in etteetion, recalls 'en owe- sion, many peers ago, when he wile go- ing the round of a 400113.1 'with .ft YerY eminent British =mean. Tito letter aelteclotie of the students who accem pania. hint to porcine the cheat of one of the publio patient. After the stu- dent 'lied completed the operatien un- der the eye of the great man the latter 'fhb c )15,e 3,1,3a . 3 ith,d13a . ... .. y 1(10 won,)1,, ,y,30 ,..-1 ,.,,,,.h, &Corp..- ctons for a man rOom. Technical cnowlodgo otthe varyfng lama •Nyhtch iro renown', on the wheeeie not necos, ary, but a few mornents conpldera- low et them will ' 0411e one, edellie heir different ,qualities. Velion colors et studied ars itrolatod'oritirrii4o cam,' arisbn hetwo'en several ois not 'twee iblo. The color wheel on which they .70 illrollPod'emphasizes the different . .. nnuenceeach one mterts•on, our con-' . , _ , lousness. Red, 'ter instance, etenee out Prominently wherever It is used. ot ,Whon We sea blue placed next te t'on the .color ',Ivhdel wo realize more hair ever red's dominating character:. We halle reiterated many tiMes thtit an impression or es much epace ai 13 'm0931818 should he given_ferth" by. the' Ismail 000111. 'llie women who tied-. or'a. 65 the sniull roVna ATM bsetore, 0t,u4 ‘. hot' color who(, 609. 0hoo5c:1 the .colora Which aro ,he least 'on- !neut. at Stet gittnco. ' When, like red,' a color .attracte, our irmitediate , tention, it seems, nearer to ue than do, thosO of whteii we ars. not 'Made sal tutoltly conscious. If" thou the email roonk has brinieet cokes uned ha', wells and Mite Window- hanging, bothl wallo and windle*ts will be made to appear nearer to the ceriter of the' • roorn than theyTtire- and 'thus the 3120 of tlie Int -Ortiz .133 apparofitly reetrictede' Blue, green, gray and all neutral tones fade more into the eackground than' de brilliant come and so aeoinfurther, away.. They are the' colors ,to ,uee• on; the largel'areas of a; small ioom, buti lest your room become monotonous . arid drabintroduce into touchelzi of , color through small ,objects Snell as ettehions and ormeneeta. First Flight Around the World , An, air -race, round. 'the . world, In whioh the inneediate'startere, 011 Eng - Reitman, SquadromLeader Stuert Mac- laren, ,•axle 'his rivale of the United. Steetis :Army .Ait,Service,--will be 117 - leg in opPosite directione, is likely to prove lie -.greatest sensatiOn' in the history of , The Americans are starting froin Los Angeles, flying we,stevard to Janata by, way of the Aleutian Islastlel, thence along ,the Chinese eoegt to In- dia, Egypt, and ttreins.- 70r0.1311 Eng- land they will net attempt to take the Atlantic at a single bound as Squad- ron -Leader Maelaren intends to- do, but .vvill By northward td Iceland and "Greenland, returning' to the United States ' by Way, of Canada, " • When Maclaren, flying over muck the flame routeereaches Newfoundland; he will try to fly direct 10 the British Isle% landing probably in Ireland. a1 - tor a flight of abont 100 miles,. eigle- . teen 911110e the distance from Leaden to Birmingham'01' ten einaes the dis- taaoe from Lontion to Leeds, . Por this purpose he will take on board about 840 gallons- of petrol, in two- gallon tine. Ainld. Aretic 'Snows. Apart from. Gibe big.' Jimite the cone petitors need never fly eictee 'than about 500 Miles at a etretelnet matter of some eight houlee ill the air. The Americans, lt'Y saVing thent• seivee a twenty-four hours' flight, will have the -disadvantage of having to fly In barren Arctio regions, which are ice -bound exoept tor a, few weeks in summer, and where facilitiee, tor lend. lug are few and fter hetweeu. Maclaren 'will be. aceompanied 87 Plying•ORicer W. N, PlenderIelth, who will ttavigate the maclifite In Much the same Way as a ,ship i5 navigateml at sea, and Sergeaat Andrews, who will act as rigger end mechanic. , Their machine will be provided with floats and 'wheeled ,undercarriage which the pilot can raise .07 lower auto - =deafly front his 'seat. lb will have two engines of. 360 lee each. _ 'The ground organiecition for aero - 'planes Wading at aerecfronieS in Bur - `elle 1< fairbr good, end the 817105<0-8 70111 have the advantage of the' Royal Air Force Organization 078174,000 miles of their route froin TegYpt, to Calcutta. After that, however, they will Lave to make their own, arangements for de- pots for refuelling- and the replacing of • neceeeary 'spare parts, until they reach the Canadian zone, when the Cs.nedian Government -Will help them on their Way: . Bully Beef and Biscuits. - But, however, spectachlar the .flight may prove to onlookers,' it will be any- thing hut a joy -ride for the partici. pailte; Apart 'from the teemendoue nervous strata of Wiz to eight .hours a day Id the ale it means anything from three to six hours hard _manual, labor on the groprul fer the entire crow, for It is no light task •to fill two 860 h.p. .ensitiee with petrol, oil, and water, all of which must be carefully strained. be examined and readJustMents made examined aud readjustments made where anything -has worked looso. Maclaren and his companions ore takieg the preciattioa of carrying fishing lines and rifles, hi addltion to their Iron ratiene et bully beef and blecuits,, in case they are strtinded. No mention of age flight woltid be complete withoat a triletite to the late Captehe Sir lloas Smith, who, 'with his brothee, Sit Slelth, flew from Eaglanfi to Australia, a diethace of 1,400 milee, in twenty-eight days. He had almost cOmpleted-' his preparations, to ns, round thti worle when he met akls death In the +cause of aviation, ' To him is dee credit for the pioneer work car- ried oat ever the route. LIFE IN 20,000 B.C. Nothieg is more wonderfulthan the wide and varlons knorlecige of preiti:s. torte man which modern erehtteelogY has givee us in the last few Years. Tim idemputa made ltY hi121 have been found dating back over 20,000, years, Is certain gravely of 'the Somme. . 111 "Everyday Life in the Stone Age," bY Marjorie and C. E. lee (lust - nen, the reader 15,21d very clearly aSOl timply hoW 0)110(11704 in the agen- befere history began', and bow be en- j°Y• irieti'Sill.011118seeNlif.arY fa' ' r,4f, daysEngland was connected to Europe by a water- shed of dry land where the Straits of Dover nee now. There wee an 111119 1)01-080 tkreoes the Mediterranean at Gib- raltar, anti anOther sOutli of Sicily, Thie explains the hippopotantus hav- ing been. le, England; 90 012 eat have to swim here, but Jest walkcel. paintinge are of wild animals, bulls. bison; deer, and borses, Many of them lifo size. They eaunot be seal' with- out a light, and a light must also have been used when they Nemo executed, Climete Curiosities. The appearance of such anituals05 the nitieloox and the Arctic hare In thiS ancient Mottle gallery thews that the' climate, in those days, must have been much &older then it is to -day. This is explained by scientists_in the fellbwieg manner:— No are told that IL only waete a fall ot ebont flee degrees centigrade (nine . • degrees rehrenheit) below the mean annual temperature of EtiremetO have all the hardships a the glacial petted back ',again ,or that a riee of, four or flee degrees would cause ebl. the glac- iers'tth Switzorlaud to cliseppear. Tho FirOt Englishman. , • The first lmown Engliehmen . 5708 180 Piltdeevu man, so called from part of, 011111911 fountl Viitdown, Sussex,L' Is those days man cannot have had at Very easy existence. rine et bis ' enemies must have been the sabre- tpothee tiger, a 'very fierce animal, whose bones hay° been found in vari- ous parte' oe this eountret A eortreit of the ,Biltdown man eas been reconetradted frour the fragment of .skull that was fonml, "The brain capacity is about equal to the sinaller Inman braid of to -day. 'Phe eke]] is eXtraordinarily Glick. The Biltdown man could', and probably 'did-, butt a rival away. WaS peobaklY ht-liande . "To dig a. pit would not balm been beyond the wit of prehistoric male end' stakes for it could levee been' shareened and Um points haecleeed by tire, • ,Sueh tk, pie would 'lave „been eliel begieetng in 'a lolig battle .,eettsmen brain awl. mere 111.1111 701110 "W011.1d been ono way in which prohietoric 11130; Obtained the meat that ho needed for his feed. wee, of coulee, as carsiv- orbits ae lip feethe tiger," A little 'While 'ago the world was startled bY the' discovery of some won- derful, colored drawings i11 a 1)1470 01) Altaleira, in Spain. Theo ere sup - nosed to have been done 22,000 :kale - Tiee Shows that prehistoric nete hae deeciopea an art, The drawings and Are ).;.on ,-empeenbeeingc ,e1Ways 'that there' le magic in Your 111:1111- 111111 1' Every day you ars helping to create thee world yon 'live in by the thinking you. do: Your -own it108 10 be:ne changed by Pie thoughts that lilt through your misffi If your thinking is, beim- tsful ,the.re is a beaety in your • feee that has been created. by that thinking. Think for a moment about men end women you know whe haye • been blessed with one ateadfaet ermine Has 11) 1<09. left its mark upon their faces? Have not the Nees theyeeetereeinededay. after (MY • manifested themselves in aetton oe In ineterial form? 88 aa eon belie:red ie ftiries'yoki seated have no 'trouble in believing Mew in the beetteiftd magle 09 geed thought!. . Do you. ,werry?' Are you male ' Ing Tourselg unhonoy 77 , eiug back"? ' Here is ail' uplifthig, thenge 1. !Torn Unterson ' whr, • melte themzeivek 'Imeappy , ,werrying evertfitet ease--; "Finish every, d117 and,he done; with it.'. 'Yon --have you could ; ennee h1<154ors end absurdities 11ee00841,,e'eek:d.,11 forget them as .edei as-Yett- dan. , 9900101'1:11w be 0- nott;.' dayp 3'0.1.1 shell begin it welleded sereeelte - and with too Mali a spirit id be 'cambered with yOur 'old non, sesse,- . 'Ph e total'volnback Of Can ed lam trade In the calendar year 1923:amounte1 to '$1.,918,264,789p as ',against 91;64(1.771,- 892 In the ,yeago 1922, an inereacio 'of 9271,492,897 for the twelve 'months, or over, 16,6 per cent. ` importn in 9.0 rear, tecrectscti.,from .9762,409,299 to '41993,530,515, or by ,91.,41,121,206e,07 by• over, 18 Per cent. Experts incrsaSed' front 9894,362,599 to 91,014,734,274, or bY .913071;651,, or over 14 per cent. Tliero Is a tayerteble trade balance of 111.1,203,759 in the your ,19:2,3 comyared, wRit'a favorablii trade bulance'of $121,- 966,974 10 1922 if foreign experts 'are' • tueludee the favorable trade 'PaltMce for 1923 is 91.24,788,808, . The total rre in inapeets, was• duo to the inerees'e in imports of agri- cultural a.nd vegetable producth.of 923,- 588,876; 8l-b-r4S ancl tsxtile prOdUctee of e.18,807,4e4";", wood eoa paper producia ef 94,799,955; Iron ancl its proencte 947,262,243; nonferrous Metal -ere' , ducts 97,478,80e; Men -metallic mirteral precincts, of $87,679,588; chemicel and allied products :of 8181505; and nuts- ceilaneous" -Commodities of ,92,587,253, There:Wes, a:decrease Mlle impOrts of animals' Mid' their produeets -of •$1,233-..,- • With reference to the increase in 1710- 7 poets:, ate, increesetin all. of the main groups te'noicBdated.. AgrIcUltural, and vegetable product sleety an increase a 08,835,163; aninialic and their pro- , duets. of 4,4-13,819. trines and, textile preclude 91,442,900. weed; Wood Pro- ducts and paper 964,408,581r-ir00 and .its Product's 926;234,996; nen-fere-ma metal preclude. 617,264,569; non-mete:- ilemineral Products 65,364,923; el/erne. eels and' allied producte 53,234,406; mispellaneoue Commodities 93,122,988: Catiadaes,199st Customer. In 1e23 the, 'United States -was Cam ado's drat custemee, purehasing geode to' the eitent 68 $422,041,789 from. the Dominion and selLteg her goodeto the vallie of .9610,374,805. The trade bal- ance In this ease WAS hi favor of the United States to the extent of 9188,- 333,016.. Canada's- second customer wae the .United Kingdom, the Domin- ion's exports to that eountry being $360,829,63.8 and her impoets =froth, e164,492,420. Canada tu this. 08.80 had a favorable trade balaace or 9200,327,- 098. Exports fa -Australia and Japan were appreximately equal, being $21,238,620 in the case ef thelormer Find 921,094,- 653 for the latter, • Canada's import trade -with the.se cOuntriee being re- spectively 91,121,646 and 86,687,788, giving Japan the gteater volume of trade and petting this country third on the Doinhlion'e trade list, Exports to France totalled e1.7,849,151 and lin-. Ports from that cOuntry 914,659,871. • Canads.'s total trade With the come. trice 01 the British E.mpire emulated In 1928 to 9833,568,682, or 33 per ent. of the, total trade parried on. This re - Presented an increase hi:trade of' 110,851. 5< in compaeleon avIth the year 1922. Of this yearly trade 6486,127,926 le accounted for by exports and e197,- 440,756 .by imports. Comparing 1023 flguree with theta of 1922, there is an inerease in export trade with eouutries of the British Empire emountiug to 56,789,130 end of impart teade_ 925,- 521,718. External 'Trade Exp(ndIng. CanadaYs external tracts in the cal- endar ye0r-1923 is eonelderee Ike- high- ly satisfactory; reileCting as it does a eevlyea of industry' throughout the DW minion. The outetanding feature has been the continuation ef 'that eteede growth in both value' and volume o( exeorts "Witic4' began in 1921, ene Which Mut Steadily wiped, out the un- favorable trade balance which: eXlstecl 'at the close of 1920. Whileteln btith •import, acid eeport timee the figure,s ef value in 1923'60re sinellet than 115 tho peak year -1920, a very large'part of the difference is due to general de- ellee In prioee which hes 'oecurred dur- ing the last three years.. It is reason- ably -certain that if the same pricee had 'travailed in 1923 as ruled iu 1920, the total value of Canada's, external trade Woadhave been greater in the Year just closed than it .was three Year Canada's total trade per capita of population amounted in the year under revIew to '5218 per capita of popula- tion. Export, trade ,aceounted for 9110 per head ;Ind import trade for 9103. This will be fauna ta oompare faire ,tbityhew4Itihobtehe gvreatest!rading ms itten ril lertew the ..ielace, • A young britle-eleet • WaS . Ordering liir0 'trousseau:1u London before going to New Zealand tto be mareled. - The di'O2Oi1ilak61' 011igeted meet verkY witeni teething, 311)7 ‚<59.011 the demurred, es- eertiug that the climate wee beauti- fully' nrile, she was inunedlatelY In- formed: "0 assure yme, Madam, you are mistairem New Zealand is vthere thak. (Tone meat comee -from." Prog rest Ina. "Has that young man who is callieg on you &yen you any encouragemeet, Emily?" asked the father. "Oh, yes.- Last night he aoked 010 i0 -you 'and mother were pleaeant to 'live with." P Y 0 r4T the lot4nr - Abe. and 'theme diffieult it will ,be fee , you, to get bet* "normitleY.,' Not enlyboiltelfinapiee, exuptioes. but hesdeehee, nervous opelle, t"' all= tpne." feellege, indigestion and loss epeetite are reedity traced „to int- -pule blood. Thoileands dree getting on the right toed to heeith from' the day they began taking 1-loodte Seise- eaellia. Why Lob tly 7? ern the Princes'e I3eatriee ward of the LiontIon Hospital. a tablet to the Mem- ory of Mendombi, teenier chief of Ni- geria, bee recently' been unveiled. Tile story is 3 rem'arkable inetence of self. .saerifice in the interest of humanity by a Member of the so-called backward rileeEL 'About thirty years ago rManciontitt became a Cheistian. Shortly after- wards he was emitten with the ter- rible scourge ef trceleal "'countries, sleeping sickness. • Itealtaing that he could net recover, 90, conceivedethe idea or ederiflicing the rest ef bier life by offering his body .for experiment. He made his 'desire kaawn to the mis- sionary who had 'conYerted lithe and was brought to' England and placed in the London Hoepital under ,the care of the late Sir Stephen 1Viackenz1e. . ,Bveryfour hears for two 'menthe the hone° plieSiciail examined the bleed of the patient', and' the research eostrile; nted to. the •eventlial disco -very of the chief cause of the- disease. Manclomei died, • but his thOughtful sacrifice helped to save mIllione of lives. When it was proposed to erect .the eernimeent tribute. to the ,black valor no one coukt find any eecere of his name in the booke of the hospital. Sir Stephen lVfackettzie, it was leareede had taken away all the ata of the case for use in preparing a lecture. For- tunatelyeeme of the other doctors who bad atteeded the case was able to tome to the noseital and point tc) the very bed in which Mandombi had lain --look- ing southward to bis native land. The story of the chief'r28tnixi4s as once niore that the way of progress is ever the' way 'of sacrifice. . A Valuable Mother. • it fond mother, to whom lier Y000g- est son was indeed a Joseph, asked lihn one day why 'ho associated with "those low persens who live under the hill by the railroad tracks"? He re- plied by introducing his mother to Mrse Timothy Bryne, ,whose claim to fno rested in her parenthood of Timmy, Zr„. the .leader of the "gang." am, mother, is lelre. Byrne, an' she's teeehlu" TineulY to be a policeman, an' if he gets, Belted in it fight 884 -1101(3' him. Timmy ain't been licked In more'n a Molith now. • 111Other, she's a grancl woman, .1111' n great help to TheinY," CLINTON NEWS -RECORD CLINTON, ONTARIO TeiramasdovfaiS2cueb,actoripctalourt4-41221.0a0dpcierreseTtteeri 12.50 to the 70.8. cn, other toreiga countries. No paper discontinued until all arrears aro paid uni• esa at the option of the publisher. The date to wbich ever/ subscription b paid is denoted on the label. Advertishig Rates—Tratisiont adver- 'tisetureotritst.781t0 nese:ALI, p eand drno;pcaeitt 1Ine per line tor each sabserstent laser. • tioti, • Small .advertisements not to exceed ono incb, such es ',Strayed," or "Stolen," etc., inserted 'once for 85 cent.s, and each subsee quent ineertion 15 cents. Communications intended for publi. catiott Must, as a guarailtee of 800 fa1t14-be.00c010panied bY the _name lit Proprietor. ath.emw.rylititei.r,:74 orstatLalitar. TIME TABLE Trains will arrive at and depart tram Clinton as follows: Suffahr and Godeeleh Div. Going East, depart 6.25 a.m. " " 2.62 p.m. C00< g West ar, 11.10 .am. " ar. e.os dp. 6.51 pan. *11 41., 10.04 pan. London, Huron a, orate Div. Gelug South, 411', 7,56 dp 7.56 axe 41 4.15 p.m. Cobalt 1%7orth, depart 6.50 pan, , " " • 11.05. 11.18 a.ra, 06150 7011 e 1105 ripkung,tonringhea4nchea met -met Dteorderell atm- tOol TA1ho rhultti.thiao, ens6rCarti.th.1132i:'-;;Vii:18.a;111 11'88li :r:el bev;eilTtsldhaRoelbsii Chamberlaie .0/114400e Co., Toronto 'Aran,:tms.t 1540, '2Sucet r .ti tt tett a, Yotrite, o w.0 these men hasio spa roa gArl I:101 in youttnato time nt home ,YM0311 ennilY mahler tianneelots ef Silllag mat ta4lo Star Salesmen. whatkner vier tetoorlente 9108 'Men -Whatever 7011 2,103' bo new-Avhnther or net 1,00 thee< you tan 0011-- ' <051 0002.0' thia question: A.h5 you tontAttona to earn 518,000 a year? .'fben ea le teeth wee et, 40 eneal 0,0111110000 Osyoa with03E 0052 or obtlitatiOn, that; you eau easily breorno a Star Salotrunt, Will Wow <'05 11017 (11) 86nntnns1,i5 Trnining nut! l'mo 1151(10121701 Servlea thy N. S, will holp'you to (Niels $10 000 A Year Selling Secrets 5‘K,0011 111 $01,11ng. 716 SCOW, sce 1A1etnni50a232,66 ,666Ati.b01,E5N 6361616,1 thonts.,016, 6inttot tdoxnwhk,•60 tear bon or 'Ivor e ,Trt pod 56,6I/ pfir ,of la360-6)16,vtjgbe thstt,lcorl Awhoe, No tnntter Ny1,61 /0, nye Iwo 86166,,,,0,5 1)) 1 6ellingohm yEra 5 130 Mate, Cot Oa :6,1, i4O0iore1 Seleeiceen's' Training Assodation' ' !Art-, 3c..z,362' 71-46i6mto. Chit.