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The Clinton News Record, 1925-09-10, Page 8<r; rom Coast to Coast • ear's ,tae§ dl>"ad iPoet . trade. from ,•eceiving reports tater niaiket which thnands,for:New Brun- awlek`'stgclt will be greatly increased this year. With a heavier demand and a shorter 'l crop this season the farmers of the province Will be placed in an excenent position "to dispose of heir potatoes at profitable prices. Quebec, Que.—Through • the recent - decision of the Noranda Mines,'Ltd., to establish a smelter in Rouyn, The prediction is made here that within the next few years a city of some size will spring- up. Over 2,000 men will be needed for the, smelting plant op-, orations chile Moro than that num- bar will be required for regular inin- irg operations. Timmins; Ont.—An aggregate. net profit of.about•; 1 250000 is being p� , realized every thirty days from the geld and silver runes ,cl Northern Ontario. This is the best record" so far attained in the history, of mining in this prof*ince.. Tho gold mines alone are realizing net profits 'atthe tato of ever $1,000,000 a mnontl.' Winnipeg, Man.—The 50th anniver- ' sary, of the arrival of the first Ice landic sett:ere in Western. Canada' was .x celebrated at Giulia -411e "Mother of Icelandic settlements in the West4— an August 22 'When the pioneer • lc, landic homes; were estali.ished ;in the fall of ,1875. Regina, S. ask .—Saskatchewan is now tacking of a better than average wheat crop, despite reports eircui ,ted regarding alleged serious damage from .rust, saw 1Iy and drought,. Edmonton, Alta.—On - a hunting trip for grizzly hears that will take them, into country never visited be- fore 'except by an old trapper two Ohio lawyers, 5. C. Kerr. and John C. Sharon, have left for the headwaters of the Sikanni and Nelson Rivers. They have hunted big ,gains tit ,cera* pada for the last twelve years. "f - , New Westminster; merit of 15;000 cases; o1 cande"nsed. milk: from the new utility plant' of the Fraser :'Valley IYIi;k Prod Assodiation,':.near• Sardis, has ` bucers' been made to England, and two, carloads of powdered milt Have, been. sent to Mexico. There is a surplus :of milk the market t. conm 1 in 'its' fluid s_ at dairymen of the valley are converting it into by-productsat_th new plant: a fiX,� i L� (help to handle Ibis year's' western` crop. The'. elevator a Owen Sound, whiclrwill p New millionbnshel grain ggovernment is s ending $100,000 on harbor improvements so that the largest lake freighters may doelc-, .�®� CANADIAN LOSES LIFE` , IN CAUSE OF SCIENCE o ist ' of h/Ia�ait®iia Uni- Geologist versify Leal Expedition to East Africa. 1 er T avels .3 3 000 eer`J�eala d r , RNS " ;o . ; Tt n I.•I.E �' I-I�➢I�EI�d�(� n _. O Miles' to Tell Story :Of'Mairder RCO�ER'5Q,00®,�� W. 0. Clark, of Dunedin, New Zen - Property Pro ert Confiscated at Re- 'land, arrived in London rdcently'after volution Retsarned'Iry Order traveling 13;000 'miles to tell the ate* IMMIGRANTS MOSTLY. OF THE FARM CLASS While Totals Are Disappoint- ing Statistics Show 65 Per Cent. Agriculturists. A despatch from Ottawa„ says;—A steady increase in the proportion of agricialiral classes to the 'total im- migration is sive of the important re- sults of the efforts . of the D Immigration rind Colonization the -last three years and ••l behov.*n ept. of ud sduring:' will in the complete figures for the; first quarter of the present fiscal year' April,; May and June -to ba issued' shortly Immigrants in the agricultural and _ domestee " servant-' ,classes- ' during, Edward Scrymgeour, British. M.P.Apr+i1, lii'ayiand June in the year 19231 of the'.who.e'immi- Who has been nick -named "England's were 46 per cent gration; in 1924 they were G3 per} Voletead, on account of his prohibi t ' d 1 th me three tiionths • tion activities. of the present year 63 per cent. oft: thetotal immigration, whi:,s of the Turkey Decrees That Police total iimiiigration '" through oeeakl Shall Shave and Don Uniform ports,: and excluding incoming farm- : err foom,.the United States, the per A despatch from Constantinople centa-e..of a ricu:tutal: and' domestic - p g ,g says.—Innovation .after innovation servaii.t 'classes iii 'April•, 'May and follows the trend of the tines in new .rune of.1923 was 46 per cent,;' 54 per Turkey. I3y order of the Prefect the cent. in,1,924,-•and 65 per cent. in the y picturesque night watchmen of Con- same period this year:, In the whale stantirio '-e must shave off their flow - year, of 1913 the last full year ba- idg;,bearpds and crop their - long hair', ,fore tile war, .t s percentage was only Also"they] must, replace their' yari- 30 per cent. of the total: colored turbans andscarfs' and baggy In' ,numbers the immigration •frith trousers• with a uniform' resemblin Canada in the first 'three months of , d l g the.' resent ;fiscal year is disappoint- drN • of the regular; ke, FNo longer are the wakeful inhabi- ing; the total being' about 33,000, as teats. of the city to hear the ^eassue- compared with' 47,813 in the same ing beat of their long iron -tipped period Past yeas. sticks on the cobblestones or thieves Asfor immigration from the Brit- make their escape, thanks. to the ish.,Ieles,..every'possible encourage- Warning.tap-tap-tap.: The sticks of anent has been given, and sInce inspec- the: watchmen have, been confiscated tion was undertaken eserious'.y the and the policeman's' billy, less attrac-, 'regulations .have never been easier ,fivebut of more pra'c'tical ye:'ne, is to be carried instead. Heretofore the watchmen or "bikd- jie," as they are called, have collected gratuities. from householders on their beats instead of receiving regular wages.Now the 'municipal govern- ment will exact from each family, in. proportion to its financial capeoity,.a sum to be paid thein as 'a regular wage. His Majesty Becomes One of Best Shots in Britain A despatch from London says:— King George, Who is now taking his annual holiday in Scotland -the only. real' vacation from his job that lie ever gets—bas blossomed forth asone of the„ best shots in hie kingdom. His bag of grouse ,on the great royal estates in the region of Balmoral Castle has been better this summer than those -of siost of Ms guests or of the old --time sportsmen Who spend, the year round in that vicinity. .Not only ba the ).Zing acquired the reputation of being'a Sure shot, but his companions have noticed that he always takes the most difficult birds and rarely misses,' and that he seldom merely' wings his game, but usually registers 'a deadly bit. The King does hot believe in the easy, shooting in vogue in some die-: trie'ta, and the .system used ois his estates is;,calculated':to give the birds for people" to come' to Canada from the Mother .Country. The conditions imposed upon ahem are: Geed bea:th, good character, no passport, ntiguar- antee of employment; no stated money requirement, but sufficient to enable them to join their friends here or find a job. Linked up with the 'higher cost of transportation, the reason, given ,for the drop in immigration from Great Britain under the Empire scheme' is that the families otherwise qualified have not the'requisite money. For an average family, about $500 is neves • sary to get out here and settle on the land, but the number able to spend that amount is - small, For a family of five, the $500 would be used up in transportation ; costs .alone. Fighting Craft Reviered by King Victor of Italy A despatch from Syracuse, Sicily, says:—An imposing'; array of 300 fighting ships of all types and ton- nages, comprising the entire ;naval force of Italy, steamed majestically through the glistening azure waters of the Ionianseat at Cape Lurrodi Poroc,' passing in review before King Vieter Emmanuel,`'. Crown Prince Humbert .and Admiral Acton, chief of staff of the Italian Navy, who:look- ed on from 'the deckof the Royal Yacht Savoie. the best chance. Soon after, dawn all the ships' which . had ppartici ated in the manoeuvres'. : G of the last weal. in Sardinian and Si September Heat Record cilian_ waters ` wei•_e .drawn; up ,Off Broken _iei Western Cana de Syracuse.. Then for two_ hours an _ impressive, double line of war craft, A des etch from Winnie � sa s:- passed before .the King, with the p p g y at dreadnaughts Conti di; Cavour,' Dante All records for SeptemberSept.2, were broken:.in Winnipeg on pt• 2, when Alighieri, "Andrea Doria and. Giulio thermometers stood at 92. The pre - Cesare heading the procession. ` vious high' record made was Sept. 1, Flanking these giants came a light- 1923, when the mercury rose to 87. er division of cruisers,.,followed by Reports were that theheat wave was dozens of destroyers and vessels of general over the.. Prairie' Provinces. other` types.' A flock of fast motor ,Farther' wast the 'mercury hovered boats preceeded the submarines, which around the 90 mark, With Foremost, steamed low in the water with officers near Lethbridge,Alta. scoring the in their turrets. Mine sweepers highest at 93. brought up the rear. Body of Joseph Tarnatore Cobden in Lake A despatch from Pembroke, Ont., p . says:—While trawling' on. „Cobden Lake on Tuesday morning Mr, Robert Parr discovered the body of .Joseph Tarnatore, who lost his life 'while swimming in. the lake . on : Sunday, ust.23rd.' The holly,. whish._was Aug floating on the,top of the wator, was found almost 'immedia,tr y across the lake from where the iiaccident- occur- red, being' ccurred,bcing roar the 'foot'of Sturgeon' Mountain, Mr Fred Tarnatore, of Syracuse, N.Y., who vas a brother of the accident victim, had arrived .in Cobden previous to the discovery anal arranged .for the funeral, which was hold al that place. 4 Could 13oWorse. "Dick invariably drives off -tato the rough" "00, well, to doesn't 011hd,-'Irea a !jointly student anyway." of the `.State. of the murder of a comrade, which he witnesrt,,il' in Cologne in 1919. • A d `?gyp etch from Berlins says:- "The New Zealand Government," he Property 'valued by some -experts .2t told a "Daily Mail" reporter, "has seat $50,00.0,000' veal be turned over to the me to give evidence about the death former ' Kaiser mid various members of Private Cromer, of the Otago Regi - of his family hy the Prussian State Menta New Zealand, whom I saw shot as a result of an agreement .reported 'dead an, February 7, 1919. I expect to -rave been .rdache$ between the to go tp:Cologne in a few days'' time." state and the. Hohenzollern family.. At the beginning of the Allied oc- The reported agreement followed, cupation on the Rhine a hand of .Geri numerous legal actions brought by the man youths swore to cut off the hair Hohenzollerns, in all of which :the of all girls who fraternized with mem' courts- declared in favor of the im- perial family, hard prolonged negotia- tions between state officials and. the ex -Kaiser's representatives. ,The property includes large landed estates, fopeot domains, castles, pal- aces and mansions, and valuable art coaectione, all of which were confis- cated by the Prussian Government at the outbreak of the revolution. The state issaid to, have been compeied to reach a, compromise with the Ho- henzollerns: in order to avoid addi- tional heavy expenses fighting the almost hopeless court •actioiis''brought by the Hohenzollern. The courts are controlled almost entirely by. the 'monarchists, and al- most invariably have shown them- selves to be on the side of the ex- IKaiser and his family. Any agree- ment,between the abate and the. Ho- henzollerns will have to be ratified by the Prussian Diet. ' Find,Agrippa's Wall. Bart of the Wan enclosing Jerusalem bliilt by Agrippa, one of the last Jew- ish ewish kings., anddestroyed. by Titus,has. been unearthed recently. Itis abort 60 yards in length and four yaeds• in thickness. •Elderly Artist. Bose Bohheur• was seventy when she painted her famous picture, '"Horses' Tramping Out Wheat." ' A despatch from London' sayd:— W. E. Cutler, Weeder of the British Museum expedition in' -fast Africa, -died from inaalaria;,according to re- ports just received here. The Cutler party, since May, 1924, heti been• excavating on an extensive scale dinosaurian remains at . Tenda- guru, about forty miles from Lindi, in the district of Tanganyika. The British- Museum in the last few months _has received o; large quantity hers of the,a,riny of occupation. On of'specinnens from Mr. Cutler, whose the day lie met his death Private Cro- last letter announced that possibly mar talked with a girl who was sitting on the sanio bench in a park French Peasants Gather. Blooms -Which -Cover -Alps A despatch from Paris says:— The flowers that furnish the perfumes for which France is famous grow mostly around Cannes, where a field of roses is as common a sight as is a field of corn or wheat in the Can- adian Northwest. But lavender, which, although con- sidered old-fashioned, is' still in great demand, comes from the higher parts of thedepartment called Maritime Allis,' where many of the mountain tops are literally covered with the scientists a few years before the war." aromatic plant. When Prof. Cutler arrived in Tan - The work of gathering the blooms ganyika he found the skeleton' to be is now at its height. The distillers in of _colossal dimensions—the Largest late August pay only one .and one- 'ever discovered in the history of mod - quarter francs per 'kilogram, meaning ern science. - .a that the gatherer must pick nearly In a report which he sent to Mu - ,forty pounds toearn a dollar, but seam authorities, he estimated it to even et this low rate of pay a good be twice the length of :the "Doplodu- picker can make .50 much as f00 cus" now in. the Reptile Room of the francs, or nearly $5 daily. historic British institution. e n he would be sending twenty-six cases, in -addition to what he," had already sent. The Tetter stated that, besides -the expected., twenty-six cases, the Cutler expedition had unearthed enough- specimens of -dinosaurian re- mains to fill another seventy or eighty boxes. A despatch from Winnipeg says:— Professor Cutler, assistant in the De pertinent of. Geology of the U'nivex- sity of Manitoba, left Winnipeg Jan. 30,"1924, to head the Brit h Museum's party of explorers to Africa. The ,primary object of the ,project was to obtain the bones of a"'dine- saurian reptile of stupendous -size -which was discovered: by Legman In the Rockall depression, Gone 100 miles northwest of Ireland and Scot- •land, the Atlantic is about 8,000 feet deep, or a little ever 1% miles, whilst in the; North Pacific Ocean there is the Great Ocean Chasm, .which is six miles deep. CROSS -WORD PUZZLE ©fie iNTeSkAsioNAi. evN®ICSATe.. SUOGESTIONS.FO,R SOLVING Ci2O,SS-WORD PUZZLES Start' out by filling in the: words of whic t you feel reasonably . sure, These, will give you a clue to other words crossing khem, and they in turn to still others. A letter belongs:in each wlilf0, 'space, words starting, at the numbered egitares and running either horizontally or vertically or both. HORIZONTAL VERTICAL 1—A necktie 5—To nip 9 -An obstruction p•1j —To demand payment 13 -To fortify. 15 -Obliterating Implements 17—To bo under obligation .19—A dandy 20 -Penetrate 21—An oath .. 22—Informed •24 --Measures, • 26—$Imple 26--1-1 c rsc 28 Romaie sheep - 29 -,Underground, worker. m t • 30—To make insipid d - , 02—Mldda . V 84--M1nuto orgnlam • 35—Twisted a .,6 To filter' rou t h 9 �y. i! 38—F3tEfot plum 80-1R,uns away ' 42• -Ono leeetli-of 0 -course 44 --Long, narrow plc . 48—To tsErr '49—To drive oaum Intoan s • 51 -7 -Mentally a cued 52-FInlsh 53-013 steamship; -. 54—To, refrlge.rs•i 56 --Eroded S6—Like milk •58—To. weaken S9 -•-To imitate GO ---Negative , 61—Quarrcle 50-1ncli,nod 2—Speclinen' 3—Foam 4—Allowanea lnwelgttt•(pI.). 6—Utters lbW•nilirmuring'sounds. • 6—Inspector (abbr.) , 7—Divided • 5- Floathrg, structures" 10 -Shelf 11—To make more profound dict id -Basic 16—To cookie liquid 18—Carrlgd is bodily 8ovcrIng 25—Oid-tim anco 1 27 r Vcritures 29--Philappina, neeivcs a1' --P otecte'd old r c 83—Nl9ht bird b, 37—.A flsh 33— I1' tem er p 39—Something alinormai 40—Reious 19 period period 41—Totnaice beioticd 43Relatva 45—Dried grape`.. 46—Anclent Peruvian,rulcr i. 47—Looks•slylry 49—Sudden, sh;}rp noibe(pl.) 54—Airtcan cattle-pen- 56—To place attypen56—To,place • 57- Alkaline eolutloi3 + Good Cheer. People soonfire of being uplifted, as they grow weary of standing on tiptoe. When a man is left contemplating the drab routine of life once more after a vision on the 'mountain' top he must niako the inspiration he receives in one crowded, glorious' hour serve, 111,111for many working days. He cannot seen expect the electrification and the excitement to return. Bat the plain and homely virtue of good' chdpr will companion every day if we permit, and if it doe not lift us to dizzy and exhilarating ,heights, neither does it let ue sag way .clown to the very nadir of depression after we have soard to.the zenith of delight. Good, cheer is a simple thing. It le not a costly program ofentertainment and it rune up no big bills in a play- house or a ballroom. It is a game Service of the Department of the .In - which any one can play, needing no terior '4vili gladly forward to teachers expensive outfit, " Itcan talte place' reaps and literature on Canada that within the•confines'of a sickroom; :it will materially help them in promot- can even go on in one's ooh mind. The ing a 'true Canadian spiritamong best thing about the' game is the bone- their classes. 0 E WEEK'S REE TORONTO:. Man wheat, -.-!:No, 1. North; $1.49% No. a North.; $i.•471/a;,as 3 North., $145M; No. 4 wieset not -quoted, Ilan. oats --No. 2 CW, 53c; No, 3 'lW., •47e No,' 1 ,feed, 45c, -01� the above in store Pt, Wbliam Ain. cern tr'acic, Toronto—Ido. 2 yellow .1Li6, Millfeed -Det, Montreal• freights, bags` included, .Bran, per ton, $28; shorts, pet ton, $30; niddlinga,r$36; good feed flour, ler bag, $2.30,. ' Ont. oats --36 to 40c,-f.o.b. shipping pointe, Ont good milling wheat --91,25 to 'f,o,b• shipping points, accord- ing to freights, Barley, Malting, 71c. Buckwheat—No. 3, nominal. Rya—No,p 2, nominal.. ifan, ' flour, first pat„ $9.80, To- ronto; do, second pat,, $8.80, Toronto. Pastry, flour, begs, $6.30. - Ont. • flour—Toronto, 90 per cent, pats. per. barrel, in car;,ots, Toronto, $6.16; seaboard, in bulk, $6.10. Straw:-.-Caelots, per. ton, $8 to $8.50., Screenings—Standard; recleaned, f. cab. bay ports, per ton, $18 to $20. Ha. —No. '2 per tont , 15 ; No, 3, per' ton,' $11 to $12; mixed, per ton, $9' tb $11;, lower' graded, $6 to '$9. Cheese -4 -New, large, 24 to.24,hc; twins, 241 to 25c; triplets, 26 to 25%c; Stiltons, 26 to 27c. Old, large, 30e; twins,,80%c; triplets, 310. Butter ; Pinest creamery ,prints, 41%c; No: 1. creamery, 401,tc; No. 2; 88 to 3014,6 Dairy prints, 285/s to 302c. Eggs=Fre h extras, -in carters, 41 to 42c; loose, 39 to 40c; fresh firsts,, 36 to. 376; sec nds,-324 to 93c. Dressed pou�try—Chickens, spring,. ib.,.80.to 35c; hens, over 4 to 5 lbs24 to 28e; do,`3 to 4 lbs., 22c; roosters, 18c; ducklings, 5 lbs. and up, 27 to 30c. Beans—Can., handpicked, Ib., 6'7iic; primes; 6c: Maple produce—Syrup, per imp. gai.�' $2.40',;, per 5 -gal. tin, $2.80 per gal.; maple s.igar, Ib., 25 to 26c. , Honey -60 -lb. tins, ,131% per Ib.; 10 -Ib. tins; 131/ac; 5-1b. tins, 14c; 2% - lb. tins, 15'4 to Ole. , Smoked meats—Hams, med., 82 to- 33c;'cooked hams, 47 to 50c;rsinoked rolls, 22c; cottage, 23 to 25c; break fast bacon,' 32 to 86c; special hran+t breakfast bacon, 38 to 39c; backs,, boneless, 86 to 42e, Cuffed meats tong clear bacon, 50 to 70 lbs,, $22 70 to 90 lbs, 420.50; 20 lbs. and up, -$19.50; lightweight rolls in beerela, 243.50; heavyweight rolls, 139.50 :per 'barrel, Lard—Pure ti roes, 18 to 181,ac; tubs, 18,A to 19c; -pail 19 to 1.9%c; prints, a0 to 20%c; shortening, tierces, 140; tubs, 144c; pails, 15c; blocks, 16c, Ileavy st.er,t, choice 18 "to •`48.45; do, good, $7.50 to $7.75; 'butcher steers, choice; $7.25 to 48; do, good, $6.25 to 47'; do, med..,$5.25 to $6; do, coin.. 44;50 to $5.25; butcher heif- ers, eir ors, choice,. 46.75 to $7.25; do, good, $5.75 to 46.25; do; med., $5 to $5.50; do, corn., $3' to $5; butcher cows, choice $4.50 to :$5.25; do, fair to good, $4•to $4:50 • canners and cutters, $L50 to $8; butcher bulls, ` good, 44.50 to $5.25; do, fair, $3.75 to $4; bologna, $3+' to $3.50; ` feeding steers, -good, $6 to $6.25; do, fair, $4.50 to ,$5.25; calves, choice, $11.59' to $l2; -do, med., , $9.50 to $10; do, come, $4.50 to $0r.60 • milcli cows; choice $70 to $$0; ,,. do, fair, $40 to $.5p0, springers, ors1 choice; , 68,0 to good light sheep, $7 .to $8; heavies and bucks, $5 to $0; good lambs13 to, 13.25;° do, fired., 12.75 ' to $13; do, bucks, ,$11.o $11.25; do, culls, $10 to $11;'h.gs, thick smooth fed and 'watered,' 413,60;• do, f.o.b.',,, : $13; do, country' points, $12,7.6; do, off carer 414; select premium, $2.66. MONTREAL. Oats, Noe 2 CW, . 640; No. 3 CW, fi0c exifra- No. 1 feed, 59c," Flour;„ 1Yis ap?;�ing wheat pats., firsts $9; strong halters', $8.30; seE�tis;' $8.60; st ng s , winter pats.,. choice, $6.70 to $6,90a •Rolled eats;. bag, 00. lbs„ $3,65 to $8.75. • ]3ran; 428.26. Shorts, ` $30.25. Middlings, 486.25. Hay, No. 2, per• ton, oar +lots, $14: Cheese, finest westerns, 2245 .to' ` 221%; finest easterns, 22 to 221/ac. Butter, No. 1 pasteurized, 39 to 39Msi, c No. 1'ereaniery, 38 to '38%e; secdnds,, 37'to.871/ac. Eggs, fresh extras, 41e; fresh firsts, 38c. Calves, $8,60; veals,•-good grassers, $5; hogs, ' mixed lots, $14.25; good Iambs, $12.25. Natural Resources Bulletin. The Natural Resources Intelligence Service of the Department of the In- terior at Ottawa Nays:- With the opening of the autumn term of the schools the pupils are again settled down to study. What this study shall be and its effect upon i the'.after-lives. of those coming' Can I adian men and women will depend ; largely upon the teachers. A set•cur- •riculum is established by the pro- vincial educational authorities which must, be followed, but these reguia-. tions cannot and are not intended to eliminate individuality entirely. We can all look back upon our school courses, whether ' primary or secon- dary, and 'pick out the. particularly bright spots, where some of our teach - Sir Henry Maybury, English traffic expert, who has come to this continent to study traffic contrdl. era inade their personality felt, in the teaching of a subject. Thera is no more popular subject, or one in which more 'attitude is possible, than that of Canada. Canadian history,e Can- adian geography, Canadian natural resources and their development are intensely interesting to the teacher who Is one hundred per sent. Can- adian, and such a teacher can impress his or her pupils with tiro- inaptitude of the wonderful heritage that is theirs as young Canadians: Canada needs to be better known, at home as well as abroad, and our own people can do much to place her advantages and opportunities" before the world. The teacher, reaching the home through the pupils, especially in the newly seteed.areas, can have a yery great influence foe good. Can- ada has, need for patriotic teachers, in order that the rising generation, will appreciate the benefits and advantages that await them when they are ready to take their .pace in the world.. The Natural- Resources Intelligence -7-- lit to the spectators, So manysports are good, for the player and none be- sides. But this -ono helps and' lifts all within a striking radius of ;the genial. disposition. " - .Fortunately, -good cheer le"incurable+ Itd germs find lodgment and are scat- tered like motes of ,the sunbeam's morning gold. Laughter Is a „liid for I laughter; ,delight is , even. more con= tagious than sorroiv: How the world rewards' its fun makers! To borrow the old naine ,of the'singers who brought good cheer;• • they might be called • the gleefnen. Mankind has need of all the mirth a Mark Twain or Stephen Leacock, a Chaplin or a Harold L:oy'd - cah bestoW. There Are Others. If tunes are "hard, and you feel blue, Think, of the others, 'worrying; too; Just because your.trials:ars many; De'n't think the teak of i:.s haven't any. Life :is made up of smiles, and tears, ,, Joy and sorrows, nixed with fears, And though torus.itseoms one-sided, Trouble• is pretty web divided. If'wo could look in every heart We'd find that each one has its ,part, And those wino travel Fortune's road Sosnstirncd carry the.biggost load. Answer to,'lasb week's puzzle: Knockers do not kin me--tl e till Y business. They are the- terse is wine tiff; s: nd into the gear boxes of.pro- gress. ✓ English Royalty Take Up Needlework of 18th Century A despatch from :London' says:— Princess Maly, daughter of King George and Queen - Mary, is respons- ible fol- a new needlework „fashion, which consists of working' seats 'of chairs . in designs of .flowers " and leabes. The art was practiced daring the 'eighteenth century,, and cali'ed "petit'4oint't Designs from -the Wil= Liam and Mary or,Queen Anne periods ero.worked out on point paper, coler- ed at the Royal School of .Aft Needle= work and afterward copie on canvas by society women. Princess 'Beatrice already has fin= ished''several cushions and a screen; Princeps Victoria, 'the King's sister, is -.busy on several patterns,' while Lady Patricia Ramsay designs and works +her own patterns. -. British Teachers; Deplore Effect of U.S. Films. A despatch from 'Toronto says:-- Teachers. ays:—Teachers. in Great Britain .hro trying to keep their pupr-41.from;attending motion picture shows, where American films, are shown, as this ."form of!Am erican,propagenda is having its effect on English.,;boys and girls, Mrs. d arshall secretary E lizabeth Ord -Marshall' y of th:. League';of '-the Empire, said hero rlfiie:le.mcMhemnr'lstehl.ytO„u rsodtfi- MyaatnhrsahEaml;lpdoaurlvdonw c"adutepe hdorsdittaialsbh l British deals" 'and cement the empire }novo strongly' together. - She is in charge of a party of fpglish teachers touring Can ad1 : Fruit Crop Fails in Erbi. Ireland'iz'Fruit 'Crop a Failure. The fruit crop this year has proved almost `a complete- failure, the Free State .Department of Agriculture re MAKE ESCAPE THROUGH HOLE CUT IN WALL Two Captives Aided by Friends. Elude Guards at Carleton Jail. A despatch from Ottawa says:— Assisted bye friends from the outside, who cut a hole in the two -foot wall of the Carleton County Jail yard, two prisoners, Fred Zavelitch, aged 17, of Eastview, Ont., and Ernest Dupuis, aged 32, of Hull, Que,,, made a suc- cessful getaway from the jail in broad daylight. N6 trace of them has yet been fbund. ' Jail Governor A. Dawson, in a . statement, intimates that in his opinion the men who made their eseape were not the men for whom elaborate preparations had been made. Zaveliteh and Dupuis were only serving short sentences for minor crimes; while a number of prisoners, some of international re- pute, are awaiting trial on more ser- ious charges. The hole cut in the wall was partly concealed by the stone pile and had apparently been made by someone from the outside' with experience in masonry. A small@ stick was later found; protruding from the top of the wall, apparently, indicating to the prisoners; the polition 'of the hole. The outside„of tlje;wall faces a de - 'sorted alleywayk'add tracks -Qi is motor car indicate that the men were 'whisk- ed away immediately they made their break for liberty'. by a waiting car. The noise of the . prisoners on the stone pile drowned out a51 noises made' by the rescuc party, The getaway was not noticed until the guard on duty in the court -yard, superintending 'the stone breaking, made his .usual •'count. . of prisoners at 3:30. Finding twoOprisoners missing, he immediately herded the remainder inside the jail building and reported the escape, • The police are scouringthe coun- tryside, for the .tiro men'. and their friends. • British Air' IVlinistry Encourages es F'l ing by Women ,S Fly mg :,as a profession has been recognized by the British government as being well within the capabilities. of women and a club already .has been formed to carry out the Air Ministry's, 1i air lane or ani% - soh m�� for a light ea 0 g g p tion for ,London with members of the fair sex. ,In connection with the open- ing reemitly of the Stag Latere Air- drome at Edgware, ,near London, by the London Aei•o Club, of which six flying members' ars women, a move has been 'Made with the object of training ovomee,pilots for ,possible en- rollment nro -meet in inn air force for protecting , the capital from enemy raiders in the event.of tear with nearby •powers. The . Air Ministry has, agreed to provide the club with 22,000 worth of equipment .and ,a grant of £1,000 for upkeep, and has piomisedmore money -' as it is needed: It also will give 610 ports. That, yield_ is the smallest in many years. says a Dub -in despatch for every certified "woman pXlot t rainy ;..ed by the,:club. MI i;� l®®LEd® .®1.'B:at :n Bi�im.®. ,w���t{� /� iul� .. -! .,>, k` RIB x�s ,o :. ®a ;,t ;. FF. es' d +` ` o' FIEBiliMO yailita El@WIA ®©®$ cul:. -;� G lawco®®h1®'`;A OVUM -ell 'MOW .:111 English Royalty Take Up Needlework of 18th Century A despatch from :London' says:— Princess Maly, daughter of King George and Queen - Mary, is respons- ible fol- a new needlework „fashion, which consists of working' seats 'of chairs . in designs of .flowers " and leabes. The art was practiced daring the 'eighteenth century,, and cali'ed "petit'4oint't Designs from -the Wil= Liam and Mary or,Queen Anne periods ero.worked out on point paper, coler- ed at the Royal School of .Aft Needle= work and afterward copie on canvas by society women. Princess 'Beatrice already has fin= ished''several cushions and a screen; Princeps Victoria, 'the King's sister, is -.busy on several patterns,' while Lady Patricia Ramsay designs and works +her own patterns. -. British Teachers; Deplore Effect of U.S. Films. A despatch from 'Toronto says:-- Teachers. ays:—Teachers. in Great Britain .hro trying to keep their pupr-41.from;attending motion picture shows, where American films, are shown, as this ."form of!Am erican,propagenda is having its effect on English.,;boys and girls, Mrs. d arshall secretary E lizabeth Ord -Marshall' y of th:. League';of '-the Empire, said hero rlfiie:le.mcMhemnr'lstehl.ytO„u rsodtfi- MyaatnhrsahEaml;lpdoaurlvdonw c"adutepe hdorsdittaialsbh l British deals" 'and cement the empire }novo strongly' together. - She is in charge of a party of fpglish teachers touring Can ad1 : Fruit Crop Fails in Erbi. Ireland'iz'Fruit 'Crop a Failure. The fruit crop this year has proved almost `a complete- failure, the Free State .Department of Agriculture re MAKE ESCAPE THROUGH HOLE CUT IN WALL Two Captives Aided by Friends. Elude Guards at Carleton Jail. A despatch from Ottawa says:— Assisted bye friends from the outside, who cut a hole in the two -foot wall of the Carleton County Jail yard, two prisoners, Fred Zavelitch, aged 17, of Eastview, Ont., and Ernest Dupuis, aged 32, of Hull, Que,,, made a suc- cessful getaway from the jail in broad daylight. N6 trace of them has yet been fbund. ' Jail Governor A. Dawson, in a . statement, intimates that in his opinion the men who made their eseape were not the men for whom elaborate preparations had been made. Zaveliteh and Dupuis were only serving short sentences for minor crimes; while a number of prisoners, some of international re- pute, are awaiting trial on more ser- ious charges. The hole cut in the wall was partly concealed by the stone pile and had apparently been made by someone from the outside' with experience in masonry. A small@ stick was later found; protruding from the top of the wall, apparently, indicating to the prisoners; the polition 'of the hole. The outside„of tlje;wall faces a de - 'sorted alleywayk'add tracks -Qi is motor car indicate that the men were 'whisk- ed away immediately they made their break for liberty'. by a waiting car. The noise of the . prisoners on the stone pile drowned out a51 noises made' by the rescuc party, The getaway was not noticed until the guard on duty in the court -yard, superintending 'the stone breaking, made his .usual •'count. . of prisoners at 3:30. Finding twoOprisoners missing, he immediately herded the remainder inside the jail building and reported the escape, • The police are scouringthe coun- tryside, for the .tiro men'. and their friends. • British Air' IVlinistry Encourages es F'l ing by Women ,S Fly mg :,as a profession has been recognized by the British government as being well within the capabilities. of women and a club already .has been formed to carry out the Air Ministry's, 1i air lane or ani% - soh m�� for a light ea 0 g g p tion for ,London with members of the fair sex. ,In connection with the open- ing reemitly of the Stag Latere Air- drome at Edgware, ,near London, by the London Aei•o Club, of which six flying members' ars women, a move has been 'Made with the object of training ovomee,pilots for ,possible en- rollment nro -meet in inn air force for protecting , the capital from enemy raiders in the event.of tear with nearby •powers. The . Air Ministry has, agreed to provide the club with 22,000 worth of equipment .and ,a grant of £1,000 for upkeep, and has piomisedmore money -' as it is needed: It also will give 610 ports. That, yield_ is the smallest in many years. says a Dub -in despatch for every certified "woman pXlot t rainy ;..ed by the,:club.