The Clinton News Record, 1924-05-29, Page 20, D. IstfeTAalaititatta . •
Dv4t- osr,, NEWS R., CORD
..,
,
TAGGART
seate,e1TON. ONTARIO a -
- Terme at faubscrIption,-12.09 aer year '
BA.NKEHRS in advance, to aatatetee,eeereatas:
$2.50 to the 1.1.81,or other foreign
,
••=7:":9",
,
ettSgat,aantaataaa/a
:
a 'A general BankIng Bo 1o$ tram -tact -
ed. Notes. Discounteeta .Grafts %poet!.
Interest Allowed ou Depoits._ Sate
Notes Purchaeel
ea. •
I T. RANCE
' Notary Public, stonveyancee,
Financial; Real Estate and Ora In -
'Sureties Agent. 'Repreeenting 14 Flre
insuranee companies.
Division Coma Office, Cunt"'
W 'BRYDONE
eiarrister, soacitar. Notary Pubtle, tea.
61.0Ale. BLOCK - • CLINTON
DR. J. C. GAMIER
Office Hours: -1:30 to 3.30 'pen., 7.30
,10 9.00 p.m. Sundays, 12.30 to 1.30 p.m.
Other hours by appointment oelY.
'Office and Residence — yictorla St.
.DR. WOODS • •
rosonitni ,practlie at his residence,
teMce Hours: -9 to 10 a.m. and 1 to 2
Pan. Sundays, 2. to 2 pane for cone
suitation.
DR. H. S. BROWN, L.M.C.c.
Ofilce Hours
1.30 to 8.30 p.m. 7.80 to 9.00 Po• n-
Sandays 1.00 to 2.0051.511.
- Other hours by appointment.
Phcaee
Office, 218W ',Residence, 2181
DR. PERCIVAL HEARN
'Office end Reeldencee
Huron atreet Clinton, Ont.
Phone 69
(Formerly occupied by the• late Dr.
0, W. Thompson).
Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted.
coaattion. No Paaar ahasontemeed
anal all arrears ere Paid
the aPtion of. the ,:Publiehera Tho
date to which staere, eabscriletton.i.
Paid PI '4enotad. on .tho
Beteta="Translent &yea.
tisemente, 10 eciets per -Montle -reit
lino.for first insertioa 8nd.6 cots
Per Ilne for each eubsequant Inset,
Small advertisements not to
exceed ope inch„ tech as eleetam
'strayed," or "Stolen,!' etc.. 'escorted
once 'for 85 cente, aed oars Mabee.
fluent ineertion 15 centg.
• Comionications intended for publa
cation 1:01.1fit, as a guarantee of good
eaith, be accompanied, by the manse ee
025 V
G. 86. HALL, at, Oleatialre
Proprietor. • Mater,
-TIME; TABLE
"Trains atilt arrive at and depart from
Clinton as follows:
'
Buffalo and Goderieh Div.
Going East, deparb 6.25 a.m.
" " . 2.62 p.m.
Going Meet er. 11.10 AID.
ar. 6.08 dp. 6.51 pan.
t4 ea. 10.94 p.m.
London, Huron & Bruce Div,
Going South, ar, 7.66 dp 7.56 a.m.
o s an
JUST PICR. YOURSELF UP I
This
orninAvNyBouCiOh UN. d aiod on
11
- your way,
So eager were you. -to get out,o your
play,
Net seeing the stone that lay right
in yoUi: path
Till down you fell, plump, while you
sputtered in \mat .
But did you he there till the play
hour was gone?
Not you. You just aicked yourself
,up and went on.
In life as in play, you will find it
the same
As you hurry along to take part in
.the game.
You will stumble and fall wheee some
hidden stone lies
And rest there a bit, ill indignant
surprise. -
But will you stay down till the players
are gone? '
No, „indeed. You' must pick yourself
' up and go on.
—By F. Jones Iladly.
HOLE BALL IS A GAME RUSSIAN
BOYS PLAY.
This is a good game to play in
Dr. A. PieWtthi Brady Bayfie.ld
Graduate Dublin University," Ireland.
Late Extern Assistant' Master, Ro-
tunda Hospital for Women and Chil-
dren, Dublin.
Office at residence lately occulaba
by Mrs. Parsons.
Hours 9 to 10 a.m., 6 to '1 p.m.
,Sundays 1 to 2 p.m.
• DR. A. M. HEIST
Osteopathic Physician
Licentiate Iowa and Michigan State
Bard of Medical Examiners. Acute
and chronic diseases, treated. Spinal
adjustments given to remove the cause
of disease, At the Graham House,
Clinton, every Tuesday forenoon.
60-3MP.
44 4/ 4 10,pi
COIng North, depart. 6.50 .pm.
." " 1L05, " 11.13 fain.
. -
DR. - MdNNES"
• Chfrop rector
Of Wingliam, will be at the Rotten -
burs; Eomse, Clinten, ou Monday and
Thursday ferenoone from 9 to 12 each
week. •
. Diseases of all kinds successfallY
handled. . • 5-211-'24
meadow or backyard, if a alteep,olf the
grase. warning does not Prevent the
diggino.'nj hol El inthe ground There
should be 119 man holes as theie are
layers each hole having a number.
"irnitieo 1w2ohleichis obigto.neeniesu,ggholtfo, foarrnlbaasaicoafl
may be thrown.'
ef."•••••••.
1.. •
WORLD'S GREATEST
LIBRARY
G. S. ATKINSON
D.D.S., L.D.S.
Graduate Royal College et Dote: Sur.
aeons and Tothato Unlvereity
DENTAL 'SURGEON
Bas oMce hours at Bayfield In old
Post Ofnee Building, Monday., Wed•
uesday, Friday and Saturday trom 1
to 5.30 P.m.
Bachplayer should drnw a number.
The players throw from a straight
line drawn ten feet from the first
hole, Count out to see who s
ha1l bo
the first thrower. The bole tnto which
the ball goes counts as many points
for the player asthe number of the
hole indieates.
Suppose the ball goes into hole five
—that meant that the player receives
five points. It means also_ that
the player holding number five
must play next. If this player's
ball lands in hole two, hie score for
the play is two, and the player hold-
ing the two number is next to cast
the ball. -
When a player 'faila to •score, the
next one to play is decided by count-
ing out. Continue playing until some-
one reaches the 'grand score which
a may be either twenty-five or fifty:
LONDON IN AERIAL AGE SEEN
AS CITY, OF ROOFED STREETS
The British Museum Library is the
first library of the modern world.
Like inteny other Brittsh institutions
It Owes match of its greatness to a for-
eigner, Anthony Point a renegade
Rattail. Born at IViodena in 1797, Pan-
ful became a student at Penne, and
then joined a revolutionary movement
In his native dollY. •
The revolution failed and Panizzi
fled; first to SwRzarriand ancl then
acmes Europe, arriving in a clestitute
condition in Dondon. Ile became a
teacher of Italian, received eh ap-
pointmeat at the'library, and came in-
to'pewer as its keeper in the first you
of Queen Victoria's reign.
What Panizzi Did.
At that time the library, -which haa
been founded in 1753, was languishing
for want oe intelligent supervision. It
contained it valuable cellection of
some 250,000' books, but the Catalogu-
ing and arrangements for reterente
were bail.• .
When Pasant left its service, some
thirty years later, it contained 650,000
velum* housed under aesingle dome.
Thie dome, which ie seeond only in,
size to- that of St: Peter's, Rome,
was one of the „many Meyer ideas of
Panizzi, 'who was altogether a remark-
able characters. He was , knighted
seine time before hiadea,th in 1879.
The difficulties of eatolegning a libr-
ary are not generally recognized. Be-
fore the corning of Pahlzzi there had
been many unsu.ccessful attempts to
eVolVe a ratisfactory way of classify-
ing the collection, but it was not until
1889 that it system, called the "Ninety-
one Rules," Was devised.
The first attempt to make a cata-
logue on this uew system was unsuc-
cessful, and led to an eruaite squab -
tile. In 1848 the catalogue consieted.
of forty- eight volumes, all -printed.
This, -however, wets still far frena at-
taining petfectiom ad the "slip" sys-
tem was thtally, evolved .by two offi-
ciate of the Museum. All entries were
printed on small slips, which could
easily be transferred.
This "slip" Idea was really the eore-
runer of the modem card index eye.
tem. The general eatalogue of to -day
conalsts of rather more than a thous -
mad voluraes, and there is an excellent
subject index. . •
Treasures of the Ages.
03
Prof. A. M. Low, the distinguished the heart of 'London. He is frustrated
London eativersity philosopher, who at every point by "spires, pinnacles
besides posase.seing•greatelearning has and domes, by roofs of ridiculously
the vision which permits aim to make small size, all of tvhich make it itnpos-
application of eeientific Principles to
the needs of everyday life, has been
specueating on the ehanges to be
wrought in London's life as the air-
plane becomes more popular.
DR. W. R. NIMMO
CHI ROPRACTOR
• CLINTON—
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday
10 to 12 am., 2 to 5 p.m., 7 to 0 pae.
SEAFORTH—
Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
1010 12 a.m., 2 to 5 p.M.,, 7 to 9 pen.
Phohe 68 • - Clinton, Ont.
CFIARLES B. HALE
Conveyancer, `Notary Public, CoMmts.
'loner, atm
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
HURON STREET - CLINTON
M. T. CORLESS
CLINTON,. ONT.
District 'Agent
,
. Tee Ontario and Equitable Life
and Aeeident Insurance 00.
sible for him even to attempt a land-
ing. But sinless it is possible to -land
in the ceatre of -the metropolis, half
the value of the, airplane as a swift
method of transit, over small dis-
•
Deprived of aoth crown and kingdom, the formertEmpress Zita of Aue-
tria.finds herself a widow at 30, with eight children to look after. At the
bit is the 11 -year-old Archduke Eranzabseph Otto, -
Here are the high spots in his vision -trances as well as laygo. is gone.
of London. in the -new air age: s"Waere their are we to build our
Safe, Swift airplanes in the _near eanding places? The parka will be tae
future at a cost not exceeding $300. first to v. There will'ae an out -
Airplanes capable of lording In a ery, no doubt, against- sugh a proposal.
We shall be told we are choking the
lungs of London and secehdly that we
are destroying beautiful places. The
answer the first is that if ave made a
landing ground of Hyde Park its value
all principal streets to afford tweeting as an open breathing space would be
'facilities in no way diminished. The answer to
specs' not rattail larger than their oven
dimensions.
• Abolishment of London's parks in
order to supply landing lields.
' Roofs ultimately ta be placed over
HOW FAST DO YOU
GROW?
The average baby ale -nineteen alul
a half inches in length at birth, and
during its first year of life grows nine
inches. If he—or She—kept up this
rate of growth for seventy year,s, the
result -would be giant sixty-four feet
In height. e.
As a matter ot fact, the rate of
growth slows down amazingly after
the_ first year. Between the ages of
one and two a child grows only t ree
8,nd a half inches, and. during its' third
year two and a half inches. After that
the rate comes dowa to an average of
one anda half inches for the next thir-
teen years.
Traffic regulations to prevent over-
crowding of maehines in the air.
Wireless control of airplanes.
Intimate establishment et cables so
that alrplanes and motorbars tan
travel along without gasoline, draw"
Ing their power electrically from
obles.
West Wawanosh Mutual Fire
Insurance Co.
Established 1878 •
a-Piaesidett, Sohn A. Moltenzie, Kinc.ar-
disae; Vice -President, H. L. Salkeld,
Goderich;' Secretary, ,Thee, G. .Allen;
Dungannon. Total ameunt 3ef insur-
ance nearly 512,000,000. In ten rears
nunibet of policies have increased
from 2,70(3 to 4,500. Mat rate of e2
per $1000. Cash on hand 521,000.
H. L. Salkeld Goderlch, Ont.
J. Turner, Clinton, Local Agent
GEORGE ELLIOTT
Licerised Auctioneer for the County
• of Huron.
Correspondence astomptly answered,
ftnneediate`arrangements mut be made
for Sales Date at, The Neves -Record,
Clinton, or by tailing Phone 203.
• Charges Moderate and Satisfaction
Guaranteed.
Question ef, improvements.'
"We are not far,", old Prof. Lbw,
"from the day when we 'shall be able
toebuy a safe, swift airplane for some-
thing like, 460 (0300). It is simply a
question of certain obirichis improve-
ments, contained with maes produc-
tion. • .
"Such a maclaine would be of egad
horeepower (whicli will actually'
give as Much as 27 h.p.) It would
have a. slam of wings of perhaps forty
feet. It would be comparatively cheap speculate, The conditIone I have Oa-
th run, for there would be few upkeep I gested Ivill probably be all that: we
the second is that even if Hyde Park
had eny claims to beauty, which it
has not, there is an even more beauti-
eul thing than layde Park and that Is
progrees—the mrogresa of the human
brain. . • ,
"Hyde Park and its kindrea%Pacea,
however, will some be exhaustea and
we 'Mall have to turn elsewhere. It
will then be apparent that a Vest ua-
touched field is waiting for us above
the ,great unroofed 'maces of Regent
Street. Throw a roof across Regent
Street anta you -would havetone of the
finest 1,andIng Pleeeg in the world, In
the very centre of.the British Empire.
"Whether the eveole Of London will
one day hove to 'be uniformly roofed,
whether there may be one vast eoofing
covering the city, 11 15 not for me to
Years of Greatest Growth.
Trona sixteen yeareaonwards the
rate of growth continues to diminish
During his seiente,enth 'year a bo
grows one and a quarter inches; dur
ing his eighteenth, -one inc .
nineteenth sees him grow three -nor
ters of an Inca, and the twentieth hal
an inch, '
at,
Tile average Young man does no
attain his full height until he is twen
Waive years- of age; but the rote of in
crease durieg the five preceding yeaa
enly one-fifth of an inch a year,
The height of a full-grown and web
proportioned man should be six an
three-quarter times the length of 11
feet; that of a woman, six.and• a qua
ter the length of hoe feet.
Different puts of the body grow
different retes. The lege double
length by the ' mid of the third yea
and triple by the end of tiie twelft
When growth ceases, they are II
times ao long as at birth. Before t
ago of ten the foot is shoiter than t
'length -Of the head; at .ten they a
equal; after ten the foot is -longer th
the head,
ehalivea
'�.bl1x1d ila Resets
ap,oal
, gaeeteserIlla Mandrake
Yellow Dock 'Dandelion
Blue Flats Piesissewa
GUaiRG Juniper Berriee,
Canaan WiId Cherry
nald other excellent tonics, thus malt-,
big one of the most suceessful ot ell
'eriedicines; 4Get only Hoed's.
A third game le the •, Pregreasiye
Hike. The loader lays out course
that includes several stations froth oho
• quarter to three quarters of a mile
apaitt--stores or rosideuCCB Of ac-
quaintances. On a, preliminary' trip
theleader leaves „at, eac10 station oral
wifften instructions -where the
linters are next to proceed. As a rule
the torelteeperi or householders are
quite willing to relay the instructions.
It lends interest to have waiting at
onie 'stations ores eats aka .8, bag ' of
des -sal -mute or a boa of cookies.
• Experience has proved teat suck
plane acideehougli. zest Lo make hiking
realgame, though otherwise it often
has so little attraction that many boye
and girls miss the physical benefits
that it confers.
Music .a Precious Asset.
IVIaking a- Game of Walking.
A man who was about to ,start -on
ten -mile walk with one of his ye -pig "How much even a little musical as -
sone first prepared spine twenty white complislanent means to young men
balls about tee eize of baseballe, made was effectivelY demonstrated during
of excelsior wrapped in white paper, the war," says o. writer in Canadian.
and numbered them consecutively in. Home Journal.' "The boys in a regi -
plain black eguaest He also bought- ment who were definitely eure of pope -
several small gifts, none wortb more earity Were thoets Who could play seine
than fifteen cents, and, numbered them instrument or ether, or sing a song. • _
in the same way, - It was found that a great many had .
. , Then before he began the walk he Um gift Of playing the piano by ear; '
rode over the route of it in a motor car but thelad who .could really splay am-
end threw the belle out at different familiar compogitions ,atid could vary
places,. but all on one side iye the .the -usualfare by something 'high-
. class' once it a while, was, honoree.
Before he started on the hike with "Nor did the soldiers always insist
I his son,' lee told the boy that he had on something lively; I have heard of .
'scattered the. balls- and that finding one young Canadian officer, awarded
\
any at them would brit% a reward. Oe. the V.C. posthumously .. tor suberb ,
reaching home the boy would be .en. bravery during the_great advance of
titled to take the gifts that bore the the summer of 1918, who had a most
same numbers as the balls he succeed. remarkable gift far playing on that
ed inailuding. The boy succeeded In haunting, instrument; the ukulele.. FIe
. finding fifteen of the balfs, and what •had (it was afterwards known), a real
i
otherwise might have been to him a conviction that he was never tO see
Y somewhat tedious walk became eci In- Canada again, and the soft, 'mato-
tereeting tliat he reached the end al- choly strains he lased...to evoke from
his instrument were an expreasion of ,
his e premonition. He . undoubtedly
gave solace to himself and mucli plea -
sere to his comrades by his music,
sad though it was. -
"In the trenehes there wae no scoff-
ing at music as a girl's accomplish -
meet; It was eegarded as a precious
asset; and so the growingtboyts whose
ideas ofethe war are vague must be
taught to regard it."
'
expenses, and a eunning capacity of
not less than 100 miles to the gallon,
aThe airplanea of the future will be
able to land in a space little larger
than its own dimensiohs, either by the
use of electric air brakes, or by land-
ing ou highly mageetic "ground!"
"Moat important of all for the gen-
eral pu.blice it will be Bata 'Many ac-
cidents of the present day are due to
fires. That is haraly surprising, since
the aviation spirit generally employed
is more inflammable than ordinary
gasoline. The airplane of the future,
however, will not only contain engines
of far greater horsepower than at
present, but may be run on Mame a
mixture of alcohol or heavy oil, with
tiny engines -completely inclosed-,
"Such it development Is bond to
imply 8.-valst cliallge, not only in the
machines thernselyee, but in the archi-
tecture of
Landing in London impossible.
••,0
B. R. HIGGINS
Clieton, aria
General Fire and Life assurance. Agent
for, Hartford Windstorm, Liao Stools,
Automobile and Sickness and Accident
Insurance, Huron ar'd Lime and Cana-
da Trust Bonds, Appoitaments made
to meet parties at Brucefield, Varna
and Bayileltl. ,!Phone 57.
Strange, indeed, 11 15 to sit at one of
the desks, with their curious contra,-
anees for the supporting of books, sled
know that aroune and einem you are
prieeless literary treasureb that only
atintit a written commanaao be brought
before you. The sum of human anew -
ledge condensed into five million vol-
umes! -
On some Cif the thirty-seven miles
of bookshelves are wanderful ex-
amples of fifteentlacentury 13ibles
front Mainz and Mabarin; MSS. In the
hands of Eremite, Luther, Montaigne,
and Durer; books -in Sinhalese and
Syriac, Sanskrit and Icelandic.
To read these Imoks come people
Sons the four corners of the earth:
There are many cosmopolitan centres
' London. but none so varied ansi
strange as the reading -room of the 13r1•
•The McKillop Mutual
Fire Insurance Company
Headi Office,,Seaforth, Ont.
Ft Edte N -Y
'Presi,dent, Samos Conriolly„ Getteriela.
Vice, Sainea Dimas, 'Briechyro4d; Seo-
. Treasurer, Thos. R. HayS, Seafoith.
thrusters.: ,Gcbrgo McCartney, Sea-
' forth; Seaforth; J. G.
, Grieve, Walton; Wm. Ring, Seafortlit'
Mor,'"AP'elt, Clinton; Robert Forriee,
1-larloeice John Bennetaalr, 1.1redhagen;
jets. Connolly, Goderich.
Agents: Alex. Leitch, Clinton; S. W.
Tho, Gotlerich; Hilichray, Sea.
emits; W. tameney, Egmontivilie; R.
G. Jatneuth, Broclhagen.
Any money to be paid in may be
paid to leiciorish Clothieg eica, Clinton,
er Cutt's Grocery, Goderich,
. Parties aosiring to affect Insurances
er trateact other boa -less will be
erentpay attended to on application to,
HOY Of the above °inmate acidreseal to
time' vespoetitre post office. Losses
eimpeotea by the Director who lives
neeeest the scene,
Shall 11Y6 800. ,
"Another comalicatien peesents it-
self—that ler ovdrerowaing in the air
and collisions. • -
"That, hotvever, is a problem which
could easily be bealt tvith by wirelese
contrdi. Already innall electric powers
can be transmittea over air gaps: It
Is not unreasonable to suppose that
those Powers can be greatly lacreased,
We' may therefore look forward to the
thee when airplanes and Motors can
travel along without petrol, drawing
their power electrically from cables
under the earth 00 5051 and measaring
the power they nse by meter.
,"Such a cable would itself form a
definite airway. Airplanee could
travel over it In fixed airways. at a;
fixed 'might. Night flying would lose
half its terrors tome foga would be of
no account since the pilot would be
automatically guided to his destine,
1most before he realized it. •
1 This game the man and his son
[named the Recover. They' discovered
t afterwards that it is well adapted to
emus a group of boys if the members
take turns in hunting for the balls.
e They also tried other similar games,
one of whicii they called the Hide and
a Seek Hike. Tbe leader taltat a large-
scale map of the surrounding terri-
tory an 1 lays out a walk of as many
is
„ milds as the group tvish fo take. He
a' then places the aumbered balls at dif-
t ferent points and indicates their situa-
111„" tion'on the map. If he finds it hara
exactly to indicate the enema= on the
neap, he usee helpful symbols, such as
for "dosto road," T, "near a tree," asked Paddy.,
or 14, "directly in line with house." If
"A ehilling far the wire and nine.
e
gaoagoratotpiont
is tohnoixotaetiigo
o aletittle.11lltea,telasbai
It Ial pence for deliveey outside the rallies,"
anowered the clerk.
for each member, BO that, althOugh all
"That li51 hanged!" retorted Paddy;
search for the balls„ there is . no "Ye send the telegrapa an' I'll write an'
scramble at any point. . leak lay friend to call fof It."
NOT MIN'S NAMES WRITTEN s
h.
ve
he
he
TO
an
Whore Qlrls Beet 'toys.
Boys and girle groev differently. The
year of ,greatest groWth in boys is us-
ually tile sixteenth or saventhenth.
',That 18 to say, the woight increasee
mobt during that Year. In girls the
caiet increase is in the fourteenth
year '
"At present no airmail can land hi tion.
MUSIC AND THE
TOIVIBS "OlF KINGS
•
From the Valley, of the Kings in In
per Egypt, while exploration of the
recently 'discovered tomb of Tutank
Immo ho been yielding 110AV revele.
teens of the culture es -well as the
power of the Pharaohs, may yet coin°
some momunental alsalosure for tbe
naueical historian. Press clispatelles
from Luxor, describing 'daily the ob-
jects removed. from elle tomb, and
brought to the light of day after four
theusand years, have had a few ve-
ferences to musical instruments, fifes,
harps, and' cimbals, as among the ob.
jects this unc,overed. "Evidently,"
ran 0110 Ii110 comraent, "the king
was musical."
far as research hes been able to es -
1
.1
tablish, masical notation wag un-
known ad melodies were paesed on
from indiviatialto individual, and from -
memory .to memory. This is difficult
'Girls usually reach their full height
at or about sixteen, mid their full
weight at, twenty; boys, as hare
seen, are Mower deaelopment.
Boys are etronger than girls ftom,
birth to the age of eleven; them girls
become Superior ethysioally up to
Sevesiteeileafter which age the tables
are turnedaagain.
Front November to April children
gain little, either in height or weight;
from Ain't to Stay they gain in lietglet,
but not in. weight; white front July' to
Nevember they put on vteighe but de
not grow much in height.
' 'Eaelashes Doh't Last.
Hair grewe at the tate. of .018 inch
a day, but the life of each individual
heir is on aif average only Mx years,
Then it falls out. If hair never fell
out and always went .011 growing, a
womast seveaty years old would. have
tresses ttearly thirty-eight feet , 01
81•37,w,
steadily, lait are not
loneeliveci„ They last only four to fivo
monteS, 'then fall out, Their growth
is alma': a one -twentieth of an inch
Irish Logic.
An Irishman wanted to sod it tele-
gram to a friend. The clerk told ben
the tharge would be ls. 9d.
'An' heat do ye make that out?"
That Egypt was the musical school-
master of the ancient world is con- e,
tbouglait may be neglected
ceded by all who have traced the art I, itr.0";.Y.,a`aa6:tteatiett centurieg. It is
back thrmigla the centuries. The, Jews I
feet ef the musicians of the Nilo, and ''abc' 'maws its- loguage goes to it for
brought tO flowering in the .time of Even withaat a not° writton
IN BRITISH SOLDIERS' ALBUM
The Dritisla Legion Album, Just pub-
lished, ie a book of amique interest,
says a London deapateli. No such
volume has eVer been peoducea be -
fere, and the Moceeds of the sale will
be demoted to the behelit of British
ex -service men Of all ranks,
'It contains a aollectiOn, which, has
never been Paralleled, of autographs
and passageg written in their own
hand by the most famous people 01 1110
day end by -representative leaderlit
every department oia human aetivity.
Numerous Illestratione, cartoon's and
eariartures, many of them in colors,
add to the lure of the book. •
There is it foreword by Fielcl Mar-
shal Earl Haig, of 13emersycle, remind -
Mg all that by "readinees to help liv-
ing ex -service men, the depth mid sat -
Orley of our rasped and gratitude to-
ward the dead; toward fallen com-
rades of ours, who, dying, left homes
Ansi dear (mos destitute; towead those
gallant hale 'who fell on, the theeshold
to reconcile with the advanoement and of life can beet be manifested."
the high intelligenee or the Egyptians. I amaltata All the greatest admirals arid 1150-
10
and art experts at the tonlb Nails grow MOTO rapidly than le gen- I naturee. Lord Ypres "alllettahls auto-
erale, British and allied, who fought
in the war, have coetributed their sig -
orally supposea. The finger -nails rea
'graph nil the 'battlefield of the Marne
mon tlie. •
the celebratiou ot the, Marne vietore. leargonulater of Brussels.
in September, 1922, on the occasion of
new themselves M a little over four
The brain weighs nine to ten oueces .,
at birth When a man is fell grown
At those same celebrations he obtain-
ed the autoarapha of M. a'oincare anti
General rilaunotary, 'Who, opened the
Math) with the Sixth French arnlY 'and
began the great etrolat the German
flank.' Marshal Foch and Marghal jot -
flee sign iu closely similar hands.
Among the quotationg or original
theualite are the Words of Prof. Git-
bertatlurvare touching appeal: "Thege
are, they which came out -of great tri-
bulation; =Teta they shalt not hunger
any
Lloyd George writes: "Never in any
aeneration have 50 many young men
faced the, tormetts of Mutilation and
the terrors of death for their couttry's
honor and for the redemption of man-
kind."
, Before he dial the venerable Fred-
erick Harrison feamed a last message
to English. melt and womeu eutreating
Glom; "To help atll service meu to en.
Joy a fittleg life at hornet'
Among the famous actrefsses is Miss
Ellett 'rerry with her large, legible
cript. The VIcteetans make it deep
impreseion. Thomas Hardy's &Isma-
ili:re ter ae firmly weittea as any atoung •
Mae's. In the page ot Belgian names '
Is that`of Cardinal Mercier, alto signs
with his title hi Englitila "Archbp, of
Matinee," and of M. Max, the honoree
of Tutanklatmeu have been" partleulaN
ly impressed by the eitilitea as wen as
tee beauty,of objects unearthed there
recently, end have become convinced
that, algyptiae eivilization reached ite
zenith much earlier than he $ been re.
them -lazed,
0110 written Mirage of Egyptian music a ""-----4.------:"--- '
and ten eunees, .
If, in the course of farther ' 1 '
me "a ng„ .
aan bo found, and deeiphered, the die- __ The inf,,g,"...t ..rla"er'
canoe ,anci woeld profit than the un- small boy aee. pan the youngese
acivery will Be one of far more signal- A
cevering ,of another mummy of an- of a large family accompanied- Ida
other king, the probability now exeit- mother to 'me his married sister's new
Gall never be restmed to a Imam/11y,
aye 1.1t,aaal.7. After .barely glancing at the
morn; soon he beatine a,beorbea in the
crowdine, the hotels at Luxor. Life baby he waiidered Mat ronnd the
ing -the touritits who, it ie said,
bat mimic ()nee written. down never ecmtents ef the baby's baelcet. .
Atter turning over the VariOILB
dainty trIfiett that it cola:Mined I: e
pickea up a powder puff, Turning 16
eis eister, he saia in shoelcea tones:
"Isn't ebo rather yoring for that sort
of thinga"
Adjusted Compensation,
his beain weighs about three pounds easeateat
anal one ounce; n woman's, two pounds esteet
there, to '31101111 agtan, whenever one
in their period of bondagm 'sat at the
learned much of what was later 111'1' ntes'1n30' el
Sante of. Ttl6rd DO, ."Noeboubt,
, .
Geographa.. Tetteliere-NOW;' 'Wil ie,
we've seen tlaatetlie cold, ,caraehtS at
at' eame :from the polar tregioes—
where do the hat air etneents.
Willie—"Tia-e- in Washingleheatelon't
, .
they, ma'am?"
Seam -ion arid ihe Temple, when 4,000
eausiciara participated In ritualistic
"serviceslt 15 known that there was
a pour:Bar as , a sacerdotal
muffle among the Nile steeple; indeed,
it. iS to be Dreamed teat- there, as
. "Well" replied Nava with a rather
bong been known; not 01117Y from 3311'The carrion crow, like many of • 000T parte
,30t earvines, hut front examination wild birds, is loyal to his mate as long,
,The swan mates for life. auez Canal yields an 3251320111l
,
of the insirunients thernaclveS. as lite lives.
1)on't 1.+1111i3f .eateersity; profit
by it. at.
music froni ancient .Egypt. known to
.
Mary and her big brother Heavy had
ee exietence, .the poestbastY ,:re' a feW ,,,,,,,vgea Words, In liett anger she
amita°'" caiginatahida has 00100e -aai'in brothersaw the performance:
,
malne.that M. the store o,f tneledy , of kicieed the cat, afoluint h'et. tn:vorite,
to the 1VeStern World. through the "Mary, that eat ain't all Harry's e
,Teeee, there remains sonic !fragment m
t it is part ate," he exclalined rearoa-
elsewheremusic began with the ptp. thattwo, nhe have been as an sac' song. inaty
pie rather than with the priests. me to King Tutankhamen ,
, ,.,
character of the instrurlicOts uSed has' • . Selamaistled air,. "I albite"' ' alarrY'e
"No more headache for you ---take these"
met Ina "smother" the headache without"romottIng the} canoe.
Stake Chatuborlain'a Stomach and Liver Tablets. Thar not only cure
tho headache Mit glee you a buoyant, licaltlaftil „feeling bounties. theY
tono the Ittter, *Wooten the stomach and cleanse tke bowel.. Try them.
• All Dye:mists, 25e., or be mall
CHAIM:Mgt:AIN MEDICINE Co.
Tomas, Oth , ,1.5
,,,.: PK. ' ,',',VArtlg
il ' I • y5'.t. 4"„ , - - '. ' 1'
.: :4.' . ,. .
,
, c-14.10 ' •ig rap r ..,,,,,,
'As to 'the 113111110 al lbe music 05101)-01 MO of the pair dies the balmy neves.. profit og „e0,75e,000, ,
mid pleyed 131 to dawning Of IiiSeory
there, oad be only conjecture; guislelI
soinetaltat by the traditional tiirs bf
the Jewsanti scene other 12111.530 120-
1101313:1 he of the ancient East. SO
remates. A tp-retty 'resaectable social
lefe exists among birds.
They don't say most who talk mot.
Noe do they de most.
. One who lirls climbed the laddee
shelled mat pullet op or kick it clown,
-
he Should °steed a kindly hared to the
iellow. below. -
are •:atee ,:seseeaataitaitetaiatvalf, aaate
Rona Thom
Start01
tor.
no
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'till!) ON AeYeZair
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""''d 3rile0,1 1115103101
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se • " ramiag
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cessran
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thek: aleil lave wee, yolie-an tiol 553002 tore tirtto, "
at home you Lan Malty master thasiocroto of scans that males
Star entegment WI:ate:Mr your expetioneo bee lieon-whatOVAY s 1
you maY ba Canty nom-, whether or not you think you can salt- r
j•ust anewer thlq question: Aro yes am-Mt:ono to earn 010,000 t
t I will peon° to yo
sii.ssis.,...ssicystemeteetme•Irre*