The Clinton News Record, 1924-06-05, Page 2L11
CiGA
Craft
IC
McIAGGART BROS.
'BANKERS'
A giiieral Banitiogf13tioineeso,,t1 ansact-
e4. Notes Discounted. DraftS Isaued.,
Interest Allowed on DopeSits. Sale
Otos l'itrediased,
- H. T. kANCE
Notary Public Conveyancer.
Financial, Real Estate and Fire IN-
sitra,nce Agent.- Representing 14 Fire
CornpanieS. ,
Division Court'Office. Clinton.
. .
'0.: W..- BRIIDONir..--
urrister,' Solicitor, Notary Public, etc.
SLOAN .bLOG"k(iffic°:., CLINTON
DR. J. . C. GANDER
Office Etoursi-1,30 to 3,50 p.m., 4.e0
to -900 im. Suaditys,12.20 .to 1.30.p.niC
, Other 110130 by, tip,coitnitribut
Office and Residence - Victor's Gt.
Di -Z. WOODS "
res -ming pra.cti..,;e at his residence,
°nice -- 9 to 10 aan. and 1 t'itt 2
p.m. Sundays, 1 to 2 pan., for e'en-
sultation.
DR. H. S.. PROVVN, L.M.C.C.
office Hours •
1.30 to 3.30 pan 7.30" to 9.00 Pma.
Sundays 1.00 to 2.00 p.n. .
Other hours by appointment,
Phones
9111ce, 218W ' Residence, 211J
etaNTON,'ONT
Teems of Subscription-Ui
in" advance, to Canadian. fuldreSSe
12.10 to 1he.17.S. or other foreign
501111tiqest 1\11/' 'pap er discontinued I
until tdi artdaes are paid unless at,
the option of the publisher. The;
date to which everY subscription is'
puldbift dennted'on the label.'
AdvertIsInn flaten---Transient, advere
tisemouts, 10 cents per nonpareil
liuo foe 'first insertion. arid 5 aant5
per line for ouch subsequent inser-
tion. Small advertisements, not to
exceea one • Inch, mach,. as Lost,
"Strayed," or "Stole/ea ole,, inserted
once for 35- coats, and, each subse:
quntinsertion 14 cents. ,
Oensininications intended for publi-
!cation mast; as a guarantee of good.-
fatth, ne accompanied by thename or
G. E. HALL, id 10 CLARK,
Editor.
ala
TiMS -
ns will arrive at and depart from
Clinton as follows:
Buffalo and Goderich Div.
Going East, depart 6,250110.
2.52 pin.
Going -West, an 11.10 a.m.
ar. 6,08 dp. 6.5e
" ar, 10.01 p,m.
Loodon, Huron ec. Bruce Div. ,
Going South, al% 7.56 411. 7.51 a.m.
4.15 p.m.
Going North, ,deparl, 6.50 p.ta.
" 11.05 -11.13 a.m.
DR, PERCIVAL, HEARN-
Office and Residence:
Huron Street ' Clinton, Ont.
. Phone 69
l'ecemerly occupied- by the late Dr,
C. 'W. Thompeon). ,
Eyes Examined'ancl Glasses Fitted.
Dr. A Newton Brady, Bayfield -
Graduate Dublin University, Ireland.
LatePletern A.ssistant 'Mester,
tunact: 1-loepital for Women and Child-
ren, Dublin, • -
°face at residence lately occupied bY
,
Mrs. Persians.
to 10 a.m., 6 to 7 P.M.
. Sundays -1 to 2 pm. a
DR. A. M. HEIST
Osteopathetic Physician.
Licentiate Iowa and Michigan State
Hoards of Meclieg Examiners. Acute
and - chronic diseases taeated. Spinal
adjugments elven to remove the cense
of disease. At the Graham -House,
Clinton, every Tue,stkly forenoon. '
50-3MP.
• G. S. ATKINSON
. D.D.S., L.D.S.
Graduate Royal College of Dental Sur-
geons atid Toronto Univereity. ,
DENTAL SURGEON
Has office hours at'Bityfield in old
Post Office Building, Monday, Wed-
nesday, Friday and Saturday from 1
to 5:30
DR. W. R. NININIO
CHIROPRACTOR
CLINTON- •
Tuesday, Tiaireday and Saturday.
10 to 12 a.m., 2 t 5 p.m., 7 to 9 p.m.
SEAFORT1-1-
Monday, WednesdaY and FrIday,
10 to 12 axe, 2 to 5 pm., 7 to 9 p.m.
Phone 68 - Clinton, Ont.
DR. MCINNES
Chleopractor
•
Of Winghine will be at the Raften.
bury Houle, Clinton, on Monday and
Tharsaity rorencons from"9 to 12..each
week. '
Diseases of gl kinds succeeefullY
handled., 5.2'2-'24
CHARLES B. HALE
Conveyancer, Notelet Public, Cemmls-
• goner, etc. ,
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
HURON STREET - CLINTON
M. T. CORLESS
. CLINTON, ONT,
,
. District Agent
Thu Oetario and Equitable Life
and .A.ocident Insurance Co,
- West Wawanosh Mutual fire
Insurance Co.
Established 1878,
Presklent, John. A. 1V1cicenZte, Itinear-
cline; Vice-Presideet, II. L. Salkeld,
Goderich; Secietary, Thos. G. Allen,
Dungannon. Total amount of ineur-
• enee nearly $12,000,00(3. In ten years
number of policies have incaeased
efrom 2,70010 4,500. Plat rate of $2-
' per $1000. Caeh on hand 021.000-
14. L. Salkeld Ooderich, ont.
J. 'Turner, OlInton, Local Agent.
,GEORGE ELLIOTT
Licensed Aectioneer tor 'the County
• of Huron.,
Correspontlence pronmtly answered,
Immediate arrangements., can be made
for Salee Date at The News -Record,
Clinton, or by calling Phone 203.
Chargee Moderate and Satisfaction;
- Guaranteed.
-B, R. HIGGINS
Clinton, Ont.
Ceneral Fire and Life Insurance. Agent
for Hartford Windstorm, Live Stock,
Automobile and Sickness una Aceideitt
Ineurance. Huron and Erie and ,Cana-
da Trust Bonds. Appoietinents made
to meet Parties at Brucefleld, Varna
Ind Hayfield. 'Phone 67.
The :McKillop Mutual
Fire:Insurance Coluljanjf
Head Office,Seatorth, Ont.
_ _
-DIRECTORY:
. President, Jamee Connolly, Godericli;
Vice, .7a1nes, 4eeplrwoocl;'
TreEl..513 seafeetle,
Directors:.-0George.'aioCertney eft:
fortit; ID. P. -AleGregor, Seaforthe e. G.
, Grieve, walton; Wm. Jung, Seatorth;
,
M. Melewen, Clinton; Rebeet "Ferries,
I -fetlock; euen.13eimetwelt, Droilleagen:
;Jas. Connolly; Gocterich.
Agente a Alex. Leitch, Clinton; W.
Yeo, Gaderich; Ed, I.tinchray, Sea.
forth; „W. Chesney; Egmonclville; 11,
G. :fermate Brodhagen. •
- Any money to be paid in may be
paid, ta, eaborish Clothing Co., Clinton,
" or at Cut's Grocery, Code/ice,
Paettea desiring to' affect Instranee
or transact other business will be
promptlyattenaed to on application to
any of the above officers addressed to
their respective post offlco, Losfles
5lisPeeted by 1110. Direetor who lives
1"eareirt the scene, -
MONTREAL PORT
1924 SEASON
'Montreal port. opens in 1924 -with a •
• ndications pointing to it experienc
Ing a eeoord and rnost favorablesea
son in every respect. Prom every pre
inehiary sign Montreal will receive a le
the 'tra.filc it is capable oe handRng,
which will,be consicierablY greater
than last,' year; as aceontreedetion is
'contteugly being expanded. Every
available foot of docking 'slmee in the
harbor bes been leaeed fee the season, -
'and applications have beet -Made for
several more seeds ehan the commis-
'ilotyposeesies.Predictions are made:
that in its tonnage handled in .192.4
Montreal will not be 'exceeded by any
port on the.American centinent,
''Montreal's standing on the basis of
its 1923 traffic is a splendid and very
enviable One-. In its eight months'
Beeson 'its total that/lege handled was
exceeded by only one of the American
alayear porees-New, York, an,P. altoe
'gether by five World porte, Liverpool,
London, New York, Hamburg and Ant.
Werp. For three successive. years
Montrealaime led all ports of the North
American continent in the' quantity of
grain haedled, and in,1923, witli 120,-,
013,938 bushele handled, wee the
woeid's teat grain exporting port,
Apart from the grain tetiffte and the
great bulk of general merehandise
handled., a Volume which fie subetantiaa
ly growing .,eaelleyear,,both of. which
combine to bring the' va-lite of the
perae imparts and exportsto hear the
0200,000,000 mark each, there are
other. factors, Which will .substantiallY
swell the amount Of bughees done ,at
Montreal this year. There Is the grow-
ing favor of .the St. limp:woe route
with linerlean travellers 'to and from
Europe, which appears to be more,
Marked than ever, Thele is the inove
ment of a vaetly greater valuate of im-
migrants from the DrItielt Islas- and
Europe, and thete is theegreat Move-
ment towards Znglatui ,to attend the
British Empire 10xhibition.
Pantilertty of St. Lawrence Route. '
Indicationa'already point to the fact
that the outstending feature eat the
seasoMes ocean travel will bd the In -
created numb -era of Alteriaans using
the St, Lawrence route, and prelim-
inara bookings are gated to be very
heavy. The'Oweliing figures Of im-
migration in, the early 'Months , of. the
yeae and' the assdrance of groups et
itnntigra.nts from' varioue' countries
leave he doubt but that the.boatswlll
be eglially full on their return trip up
the St. aea.wrettee. „
Parenthetically it may be toted that
.Cala gerlatal ysill beeefit to a
considerable extent from theteeffic to
the Braila Empire Exhibition in ade
ditien to ,the 'Volume of travel which
will leave.Mentrealetrom the interior
of .the Do-Minionand front the 'United
Statee. -Canada_ is to he .the leading
-highway t� the Exhibitlee for travel -
1,011 from the 'Antipodes,. Auetralia,
New Zealana, Straits Settlements,
China'and Japan through tailings 'froth'
these points' to .Vancouver,", , Whilst all
tvilletravel thfeugh to Magma' many
have already indicated , a deelre ' to
break, their, jourbey et polute in the
Realties andeother scenie resorts bar a
few Oars. ,
,Supplementing the utmost activity
on 'the part of -steamship companies
vatich hate used the port for three
years . several, new services are -an-
rim/need between the St. Lawrence
pottaand the 'European -continent, ren-
dered ,neceseary by the increasing vol-
ume, of immigration and trade..Trans-'
Atlantic paesengers handled at Mont-
real in -1.923 numbered 31,028, 1,081
v.essele unloaded 'there, and a .totai
busimees appeoximating a billion dole
late was deeme , It. is 'confidently 'pee
pectecl talit these. lignres will be auli
13 ehind in 1924, , •
Mph Fry-f6r4ational'Oarks, ,
The Departmeaitef. yfarine 'and Fish-
eries annotinces" the geeCen-sful'eistr12
bution in- excellent, conditten of Over
ono million Aalmen ;and, trout fingee;
liege from thee3auff hatchery' during
the past eeeeone The troet inelaclea
such species as 'Cutthroat, rainbow,
steelhead aim salmon typet; end a eon-
federal/le eortionaof :them 'Were flaat
two to three 'months old when', they'.
were distributed, Tee „filet/el/Jai=
area included eta Wt1tera of the '13,anif
national petite' 'Jasper park, aVaterione
.Laltes park ana 'eateries trout Steehte
of tho foothills between 'Ealinlenteiaa
ancl Macleod
A Ponce lasts theee„ years,. a dog
three fences, a horse three dogs anti
0 menthree horse,
oho-
xi-
thelp
any broad
lisxltt tepee n.14t.,.
a p.• iduetry oeigMagna in
and'. e, antieely eiremetteet'ed by
the efarticaeombining. thiehInest ad-
peet CeziatAif &Miele/eat
"'Mame aliment:as the only
Can
nIa-
t.1.1;e enel -'
6 6, 4,
Ten ereal ;gee 1lie itowtf--'wlib,
ef St'-' .'25ew'Jrunwlc1s aol
15,an'artist ofz-faoine'abilliy., training,
and vislon;•ga,ve motif Up",to the p0
motiop of this novel , eon-lid/laden at
art and Lndastry by rtvlving;the tra-
ditional incluetries ef the elatabees of.
Weaving, 'rug maeleg, ante embreidery.
her' object 10 so detug was manifold,
end In itself a. combination of the ea''-
)tiette tine .aractical. ,ehe visioned
thrmigb the encouragement ef artiste
expression, and the ,prornotion of an
intensive industry in coneenction with
the agrieultural life, the development
of a sense of beauty in eumediato sur -
Poundings and the intithate things of
everaclayelfe, and through this a greet-
er conteat and satisfaction in' farm
life. She tiTho visualized the mateefal
profits to be derived fremthe more ex-
teneive and 'diversified 'utilization of
home 'proaucts.
.Artistic Expression of Farm Life.
It the growth of the -work -no phabe
• .
of it has ever extended beyona the
immediate ephere Of the agricultural
workeie Nothing is utilied but what
Is found In the pecivinee, in ;act, item,
or in the yMinity.of the homes of the
workers. Those engaged- are trained
to finel.ehe source of their expression,
01 the beautiful in the beaute which'
eh/gem:Ms them, in the engaging land -
00a° of New Brunswick, in the..ta-
miller scenes and objects of the daily
life upon the farm, The work has
from the euteet been the -natural artie-
tic expression of Neve Brunswick farm
life,,based on the fundamental belief
that the greatest tradition -and inher-
Mat leve Is a. love of the land. .
domthenceruent was made 'with
ug malting, aol hr-ough thc develeo,
nen t .of the artigtie 6911Se_ n hlgh de-
otte of bounty eriniliiir'ed with utility in
, he Pa'iftluoil of tile sf)aretinie hours of
the farm. Later' tire went of native
sheep
was spun on the laud, and
usod in embroidery, tilo eense l'ellaF"
coineteation and design, lu0t-114
salting: in the 'pl.oduction :o
beautiful and .itevel, work:,
had boon made there...for Year -Wee a
deeeloement of he new tread ivas Ilo
nir of Itoicio.smin. bagS, ,ina it :was
1.7hat this. 4r1i,c1,e, vhlh hits. lo -
0000 SO pulir ovc' Ibe eelitincto. tv
iginated. , -;• .
liles Mowat herself the only art
director or, .1/ere, farm folic: and her
teaching co nSis ts, mainly in ,tnerely.
recting thoir attention to the, natural
beauty, in tlseir lifo. Sne goes round
the farmino districts tributary to' St.
Andrews the sphere of her activities
beieg of about fovty nilleS radius and
tenoliee bee pupilis hidividually. Where
one ShoWs inarticular aptitude; 'or
reaceee en Unusual degree of hrofi-th-
bf
�i
he. sniallt,0*
PIO
Peeelhata PinIhfi Rea,Y Sat,
'5;k10 LS hitt wise the only marketmg
ci )01
"
krOlitiPeu•for JIG Lunn N,01,ite s.
d.1ActS wore 141 on. her own
knri and 1.00 -ter a holt* Lor the purpose
IS
which.
litco°1ifin'e*a;gttfunrt'Utc1166t,'1 (€1.'11111'11 oderat6rla1
S'Ill1r-01.0)04A „4!,4,il';',A.ndrovvii,
are received finin all parts of the
AmeaicauL„cem
ntent, and are inelef-
ing as these artistic, farm products aro
becoming more v file.y known, !
13runswl,cit pottery clay in the same
T 41. •
hasAtakeneceu tiitalyni3eileants st jazsebut:111.‘lvTe113:,
satisfactory maneS. An ,expert was
secured from England 6 a
ceramic, industry, and last year 'this
ad a tuindvar of ,00 . in
this phase of native industry are
trained alond the same artistic lines.
In Miss Mowat'S opthion this work'
has only aoanmenced, and she plans
111 51011,3
ork
CANADIAN WOO
! elaborate expansiou in this combina-
- tion of native industry withartistic ex-
pression. FamilSi weaving is planned
for the' farm hiouSes, woeda carving,
makiim jewellery from pebbles, and
various forins of woodWOrk Where-
, . ,
e -ver native' materiaie are found close
at hand -the dwellers on the farnaCwill
.be trained ln , their- economic utillza-
.
tion, mehIng their leisure //tore Profit-
able,,developing an -appreciation of the
'Here erthe Mother of a song that
has Won its way Deo a million hearts,
"Perfeet Day." She is Careie Jacobs
13ond of Hollywood, Calif.
beautiful it Ivlaritime associations,
and bringing about a contentment end
satisfaction in rural Ma '
'the at the Empire Exhibi-
tion, consists of an assortment of pot -
try, woollen and worsted peoducts of
an artistic nature, all decorated With
scene from New Brunswick life. In
addition there are also tags and -em-
broidered pictuies depicting the same
lif e, the work of Mise tvlewatai papas.
Suggesting' the origin of these pre-
ductis 'a model of a New Brunswick
farm scene' showing ,the coentryside
early in Sun° with the lilacs and ap-
ple ,trees in blossom. Altogether it
is a very adequate representation Of
a -trek novel and unique Canadian In-
dustry, and one whichAt is to be sin-
cerely hoped will experieuce conelder-
able expansion as having a very im-
portant place in Dominion lire.
THAT IMPORTANT
FUNNY -BONE!
Of course, go ozie wants the soup to
„be iteasoned with eugar instead of ogee
.but the mistress who can get a laugh
Instead ot a headache out of the mis-
takes of her maid eavee her Own face
and that of the girl, whom she later
trains into being a good eervant.
Whether a woman makee a success
or failure of matrimony -depends alto-
gether on whether she lute a sense a
humor Ir not. It he Can see her hus-
band as one of the utast mirth -provok-
ing, 'side-splitting, -nproarions Inungn
jokes that Nature ever perpetrated she
will bo happy. Het ff elle seers him as
an Awful PrOleit, or a, subject for re.
formation, neithet one of them will
ever know a haapy hour.
Thee women who wreck marriages
are the ones whq talce their husbands
-seriously, -and WO ,,get n;agic everY
time theirItuhands. look at another
woman, ar fail to colne hems at the
appcaeted heur, and wh10. weep when
their husbaleds torgot an anniversary
or fall in some little attention they
eonsider their due.
The .women who keep their husbands
enslaved from the altar to the grave
ere the women who 1liigh oVer their
little faults and peculiarities. They
make a joke of their husband's weak-
ness for. a pretty, face; they have a
dozen funny stories, to tell about how
they helped their husbands out of
scrape; and, instead Of feeling M-
used whet their husbands forget their
birthdays, they go out and buy them -
:revels a parttcniarly nice present,
which he pays for without a murmur
because he knows that a wife, with a
sense of hunter is worth anything she
costa e
A. sense or huntor is Just the sense
orpropartion that -enables us to see
things, in their tette relation to life.
It is the thing that age% us from mak-
ing mountains oat of molehills, and
that.giVee us the COLIrage to Iinalle te-
ars ecreamingly funny incidents that etetta of cry,
they pay money to see imitated in the --•—•c.
theatres, • NO Sunshine but hath some shadow,
.
A naan told me (writes Dorothy Dia)
O utt he did not marry -until he was
forty -lire years old because he was de
termined not to inarrYe any woman
who did. not haVe a sense of bumor
Med it took him that time to find one,
A wise manl. It is a Million times
more important for a women to have
well-developed funny.bono than it.tis
fee her to pave a Grecian profile, yet
when men decide to marry they pick
out 11, girl fora Wife because slie has
soulful blue eyes, without observing
weetime they lookant thei fueny side ef
lite or take a dark, pessimistic view of
It, Which is one reason why doraestie
lite Is no merry Jeg to the average
hueband.
It is abeolutely eseential for 0 wo-
man to have a, sense et lezmor if she
is to be an agreeable pertner, becalm
EL women's existence is made up of lit-
tle, tagging things at which be must
either laugh or cry. IT elle cannot
laugh them off, they get 031 heaanervei
and elee goes, to pieces.
Women 'Who Wreck Marriages. •
Neurotic, haggard women, who can-
not eee a joke, fill asylum and sana-
toria and divorce courts. The women
who wear the mile flea woll't come
off get to be rah.; fat, and forty, and
You couldn't gat their liuStegids AWS.73,
from them.
It is the iaca of -a sense of humor
that causes women to make tragedies
instead or comedies oet of trifles. Take
the seri/alit tretible, for inslance.
men worry themselves over the mis.
takes a an inexperienced maid, end It
never occurs to them teat the blendere
ARE YOU A TYRANT AT HOME?
Dorothy Dix on Domestic Unhappiness That is Unnecessary
xi:41)211g ..speaks of 'the unnecessarylleteeests, sa eager in. the pursuit of
1101.15" ;that- we make for others, and I pleasure, that they forget the fathers
thel; ethers melte 000 .011, A great I and in:others-who. Imam toiled and eac-
phease, that. The untecessary hells rileced for ahem, and Who can lie re-
in which we alt writ4e. ...The needless inatil in no othee coin' than love aol
tettra tee shed. Tee needles burelonsa gratitude. .
v,.a bear.Nee eis there, they heaelarealt more
Alostly our' unneeeesary belle arn cetterto endure .than 'that which comes
made for us by our own. -families. 4 othappy and prosperous children jusit
is the people who love us' best who forgetting -the perpetual Iodating for
torture us most. the letter that a busy man does not
Parents make unnecessary hells for take the time -to write, the longed -for
their chilareri by their petty tYran- visit that the daughter keeps putting
eies. „They are determined to make oft ' .
their children copies af,themseives, no Wives make- tinnee-eseary belle tor
niatter how differently Nathre. has (their hesbande by their eolfleliness. 0.
createdthem, and so they force, the woman will ina.try a man knowing
'youngsters Into their Own mould,, oven that ho is poor, ana ilinteaci of mak-
'ae the cost !of crushing, initiative andlug the best of her lot sae whines and
wrecking lives. frets and eon/Mains- because she has
- rat evorethina that a rich woman has.
. Mena ,a woutart Is top lazy to keep
With average fiallor.and niolliter house; .too iediffeeent, to her,husbantl'e
the staldard :of' right anaeweong is ecintert te, nee' -that ae, has "docent
what -they Alice, to do' one wieet they meals; tee Orlitleso to spend wisely
did:when 'Dray- -vein'young, Every 1 the 01011e301,15 Mtihns, Mat*, a, woman
time their ,childree' went, to elo What 'level,. says one of alalreciatiOn
they enjoy eloing, ana What young peo- to bee hesbante'ee gives him one Men
ple ar,e, don/gnaw,' Mat !the price of atae she loOksefillon hint ae anything
steamy 'eceeee and 'illother's tears and but a' slaVe botind to supply her
father's 'auger. ' Wants,' e
'euetr' a', little personal liberty; j115 1. 14:1111 make ;unnecessary leelle tor
lietne•-syropiiehe with the, craving of teeir wives 'bie their silence; by their
yeeith4-.'sfot pleasUre; juat a' little evi- grumpiness ;' IYA.their, tempers. Many
elerie,e, that tether ancl mother are a woman lives en terror of her hus-
e lent w.el ae eat ente, who want hand. Many,a, w"cman.pinies for .a WOrfi
to 'help. then/ oh to a good tline, Would Of affebtiou 'Many a evoman'e whele
Malta tioree et heaven for many a boy merteedlife ie,e cold, miserable, 10/10-.
aed girt; evheee, parents are now makly jommey, full disappointment, or
in to'
5 it a )1F1 a ° ch. they dreariness oli'vain regrets andtong-
'aye etni ggling to Oeeeee. inge, ijust'.-beeause her husband witle
Ckildren , make 11111165essalv hells holds all teraderil(?:16 and itirderstand-
'foi:•.their 5areni3; by their coldness and.mg from her, ..eust because of a few
neglect. They are 50 1.111e110 on their words be deco not lako tho ieouble, to
'own lives so 0e0111134 With their CI1V0 615'. .
. Taking Title.
To make this house my very owe
Coital not be done by law alone;
Though covenant and deed convey
Absolute fee, Is lawyers say,
There are donitatia rites beside
By which this hong/ is eanctified.
By Icitaled lire upon the hearth,
13y planted panges in the. garth,
13y food and by the quiet rest '
Of those brown eyesthat I loee beet,
And lay friendahip's gift dtyine
I dedicate this houie of mine.
When all bet I are soft abed
I trail about iny'queet stead
A wreath of blue tobacco smoke
(A. charm that evil never broke),
And beteg my riteal to an. ena
By eving. shelter to a 'friend.
These done, 0 dwelling, you be'come
Not jug ahouse, but truly Home!,
--Christopher Morley.
About "Grass Widows."
In the, elevettli century he England
It. tvata a law 00 the oeurch that
widow nntet "remain under God's' pro-
tection and gisce"-not merry -tor a
Year after the, doth Of her husband.
Such women were called "Grace Wid-
-owe," which often went into the Pariah
regieters 48 "grasse meddles." This
was the first use eathe term.
Of More eeeent bright, however, ie
its recent Inelegant adaptatiorte indi-
cate a divorcee,
10 the days of the Forty-niners in
California it was net Uncommon for
men to "board out" their wivee while
they went off to dig for gold% Seeing
anutor in the ,situationa one of them
uniquely teferred to thehseparatiot as
routing his widerse out ti grass" -with
reference, of course, to the pasturing
011,0,alitetltee.Tin -
evidently struck what bas
beet ealled. the Ameriean efflictioe of
ate funny bone.' Peer applied to the
rapidly increasing 'number of divor-
cees, "gratis widow soon inerenched it-
self in our gang liec1oon.-1Ceetsas
City.Star; • -
. And Americans Are _Motorists, You
'Know.
"Do you think Americans believe in
'Omit niettoe'in Goa We Trust?! "
"Don'tthe motorists drive as if
they doe" '
Stem: Preduotion 111 Cagada. ' .
During 1922; the produe-tion of eteno
from quarries in Canada had a total
value of $5,974,593. The wertes of tee
chief kinds of alone quarried were:
limestone 54 178 941• granite 81 486.
250; 'marble, 5231,894; and sa-ndstrute,
510,908. The output of the principal
meduoing provinces ,was valued as fol.
lowe: Ontario, 52,969,996; Quebec, $2,-
4342,816; Deetieh Cohnnbla, ,.$524,551;,
Neva -Scotia, $119,492; Manitoba, $106,-
683; New Brunswick, 5104,730; Al-
bert,e, $7,300. -
e,.
Huge Crystal of Alum,
What le believed in be laleeet
erYstal of alum M existence will be
exhibited at the' coining Britieh
ISin-
piro' Exhibition in London. 1 It weifebe
nearly 400 pounde, 0114 took foie: years
50 • ' -
*ea-
_ -
The molt reuccessful- operation be.
gins with "Co-". Read this all over
again.
•
Seem of the beet trained dogs are
those which have never been touched
by a whip.
. •The th5 ly0101tRIncluotion th Canada
from 5.755;373 sheep alla lambs In 1521
placee et 15,529 410 pounds: ,r). thl
industry Ontariois the leaMing p
vinne),\tith .a productiou, of 5,024,239
voneds, , followed eluselY by 010509..
with 4,602,602 pounds. 14,OVF, Scotia
eccuae8 the third place with in 'no
auction of -1,465515 pounds, ,Aliterta
being, ..11 SIGOe rival -with an 01101)010 01!
1,357,257 pounds. Following in ertiet
come New Brunswick with 893,555
pounds, ,saskatcheavan. with 751,409
pounds, -Manitoba 525,075 pounds!
P9i1Ce VC1W'Lrd Viand 476,075 pounds
and 13ritisit Columbia 298,-0il1 pounds.
-On Indian Itescrycs a total of 7,99?
P01110411 ,,Vtle PrOdllee.CL.,
The ou Landing feature of, this
situation as the Imre 111tllortant place
sheep are coming to occupy on the
farms of Western. Canada. Last year
west of the Great -Lakes, there ware
622,192 sheep and lambs clipped which
accounted for a wool production of 2,
999,268 pounds, 01' Nearly twenty pm
cent. of the total 'clip. This lsoon
crete evidence of the greater atten
tion being paia to the sheep industry
in the Western Provinces, and the
benefits which are following in the
wake of ilea impertations et high grade
stock whiah many of the provinces
have undertaken.
With an average price per pound .of
wool ot 23 (mute to the growers, the
total value of the 1923 clip is provi.
sioually estimated at $3,574,000, which
is e325,e00 higher than the value In
1922, and the highest aggregate re-
corded since ' the year 1919. Tee pro-
daction of,wool 10 lower than 1922, but
the Decreased value accounted for by
the higher prime prevailing in. 1923,
the 23. cents obtainable in 1923 dom-
e/ging with 17.5 °eats In 1922 and 13
cenM in 1921, the lowest in the post -
wee period.
Industry on Sounder Footing.
It is interesting to note in recent
years the increase in the number of
sheep kept and- the annual output of
wool, and whilst the value of the year-
ly crop does not ehow the same incre-
ment, this is due entirely to thelluc-
tuation of prices which has bhaiacter-
lzed the years since tlie war. The In-
dustry 15, as a matter et fact, on a
eauch soender footing end exhibited 41,
certain gratifying development. This
Is exhibited in the progress of the In-
dustry Iiince the war in epite of the
various vicissitudes it has sustained.
Itt 1915 the wool caret Canada at
an average -price of 28 cents it Pound -
WAS worth 03,360,900. In 1913 and
1919, with the extraordinary price of
60 cents a pound ptevailing, it reach-
ed a value of $12,000,0011., Since that
time the progress has been towards
tdianaley. The olip Of 1920 was valued
at $5,280,000, at an average prioe or 2
cents, The 1021 'clip ' Was valued at
$075,000; that of 1922 'at, $3,149,000;
tied 1923 at $3,574,000.
Canadian wool products for 1924 are
colesidered satisfactory There are 84,-
500,000 less sheep in the world to -clay
than there were in 1-913." The present
production is at least, 250,000,000
pbunds of pre-war production as com-
pared 'With an average rate of con-
sanotion equal to the pro -war .rate or
coneuniption. Thia le considered to
be .00 great benefit to the Canadian
woo,1 producer, who, exceeding to the
Canadian Co-operative Wool Growers,
has done better theanciallY with las
sheeje than any other phase of his
farm operation,
Importations High Grade Stock.
. In the past few years a great deal
et progress has been made in the
sheep industry of 'Western Canada,
where tho real development of the fu.
ture is to be expected. A. greet deal
of attention is being* paid to sheep
rearing there., The' establishineet of
the 'Prince' of Wales' raitch; and the
subsequent importation of high grade
stook, has, had its effect upon the Indus-
try. The gOvernments have exerted
themselves. in, providing the farmer
with e. higher grade Of ritook for breed.
Ing purposes, Throughout the area
more attention is being paid to this
phase of animal husbandry than for
some time.
An Innovation in the Western indite -
try which promises to ha-ve important
developments in the future is that of
the Movement of Western Canadian
sheep to tile head of "the Lakes ter
feeding during the winter menthe 011
the grain scr'eenitigs ef the elevators
th-ere. klevSoxltliern Alberta, ranch-
ers, who have so far followed' this
preetice, eatteeing thoueands of sheep
in the wined'', and having them Avail-
T x
You earl tell 1,-,y the wrik You'fe
lou neod Iluod's
matte Your bit ad rich, f,(ci and pure, .
tinglit.gwith health for (-ion, orgar..„
You need it gal aol tiled day
n and, day out, if your appetite
poor, sloop unro'freehing, fo'r
hutimase boils, eruptions, serofula,
Alarm:tact:in, leaflet:lies, nervous
Proetrgione letaie simply wonderful
to aiVeepier.4eatteto'yoar whole body,
l'O,agreeeble; 'pleesant and CODI-
veniento td i‘c, and , embodies a
longettied ancl iouridetnio formula.
able for spring markets, have found it
very sueeessful. „.
Tu general the 51100 and -A,Ooi Indus-
try of Canada may be conSidered to be
in a sound way, ivith More ,anci Intelli-
. -
gent attention' 'being paid td'fbe indus-
try than ever imiore. The Work of tile
•
Canadian .Co-operative 17loOd ,Grovvere.
has resulted in 0 uniform gradieg. of
the Preduct, which makos it of favor.
able entry to every, 'market, and en-
surc',.i a bettor price to the Camatiian
producer. ,The ...establishment of the
Dominion Oo nbing Mills at, Trenton,
Ontario, assists the domestic utiliza-
tion 'to S01110 extent of the Canadian
product, and is a pleasing
On the wholo, the Canadian farmer Is
realizing there is a future: to the rals-
ing of seeee in. the Dominion, and a
profitable market for his proiluct.,
rir
. Lessons in, "Cuirtsies" for
Presentation at Cottrt
A visitor to oue of. London'e, fashion- .
able . schools of darteing might be ex-
cused 'if he eame, avegy With the ine.
presslon that deneing had gone out
and calisthenice taken Ito place smote
the debutantes, for practically' any-
time Or day those who care to lo.olc will
see little Mee but long lineof attrac-
tively gowned Young woman going
through extraordinary (to the un-
initiated) exercisee. In fact, clanging
zetstreeses here are finding it exceed-
inglY. profitable to inelude "curtsey
lessons" in their curriculum _
To many aebutantes the firg obeis-
ance before the Ring and Oleen is the
most terrifying moment of the whole
besinese ot.being presented, .for there
Is gwaYs the fear of overbalancing, or
malting an ungraceful and'consequent-
ly yery ugly curtsey. Naturally, weary
"deb" wants to look her best let her
first court appearance, which explains
the curtsey lessons.
- Curtseying really Is much more 11111-
eult than oue would think, and re- ,
quiree a lot of selaposseseloa to per-
form creditably, particularly witb the
copecioustess that many hundred eyes
are watChing. The secret of the geace.
Tut • curtsey, lies, like a good golf
stance, -in the position of the feet. Be•
fore begining the weight of the bedY
Must be fixed firmly on the eront foot,
end on "coming up" the weight shoeld
be evenly etransterred to the otlier
root:, When in the middle of the curt-
sey is the right time' to bow the head,
the debutante is toed: the head must
never be bowed at the beginning, as
this upsets one's balance and doee not
e
Peer Artist.
Landlord-aI've come to collect the
rett."
Artist--"Stiok around -et miracle nr
something might happen."
The'Slimer's Progress.
A boy'was haled before a magistrate
by a farmer for killing one of his
ducks with a gone. Witnesses were
called to prov0 how bad he was.
In eelemn accents, the magistrate
addressed him: "Hey, Yon have beard
the evidence against you, and you see
row OM thing leads to another. You
began by eureing and swearing and
blaspheming, gel you have ended by '
throwing a stone at a duck.'
Cilution on Wet Streets,
When driving •on wet 811'000 the
clutch, ehould never ba released ex.
eciet at the lastleoment to prevent the
cegine from stalling. AlWaye apply
brakes .gradually,
if you feel bdios, -headachy' and irritable -
for that'o,a sign yeti' liver is out of order. Your
food is not digesting -it stays in the stmeach a soar,
fermented masa poisoning the system. Juet take a
dose of Chamberlainal Stemach and Liver Tablets -
they make tlaialiver de its work -they cleanse and
sweeten the atoms& and tont the whole digestive system, You'll
feel Ana In the morninz. 0.0 all.drurfests, 240., or hg mail from
Chamberlain Medicine Company, Toronto 34
geceaCa
What tluise mon 3itire 3101‘41, you caWdoi In yA;.;,tipiiirothno
at home you can easily Master thuscoreis of Selling that make .
Star &dolmen. Whatever your cm)erience hoc been-ivhatever
von nay an Mac llort-whethor or not yea think you con
Just ansWor this euestion: Are roil ambitious to torn 510,050 a
goat? Then got in tench With me at Oncol I will 5000 10 000
11'111/013t cot or obligation that, you earr.rasily become a Star
solcmnan, 1 oo5l Wow gee how the Salasthanaltip Training Mai
F1,.<TTin5
lP1.6S0'mnle.nrIg-,
tSorviee of tho willholp3:01 to goo,
E,,,
'Rad Those Amazing,
' Stories of Sicced:43 '
0”ned 0211.
ae
At$
11
Jart
•
$10
"AM
60
$10 000 A Year SelUng Secrets
06 511 01 031,, flt::,,,ta.,,,u0IrAt101.11,,tvIL. 5601
1,30
3 00,5
aro now dolor, tho rep 41 tellinu OP4. yoU a Or futuro, 0,1 1511 fatta,
sod P711,1) paY b)lna-ney 3olo 0,31105 no1hoet., No nmttor whot you
Natio/al Saiesmenhe Trainti? Association
Carow.aiort M,r. 13ox 362 , orehte. Out;
i;