The Goderich Star, 1926-06-17, Page 2/-
ra�cia two
It Will Delight You
IP I if
Om.
BtrA
1P
T31
Perfectly balanced—superb irA flavour.
IN REVIEW
9491Arild3ain
a
•
THE GOD CR STAR
1,•••.••••••••••••. .1
Canada. whicI hes been depressed when cut and is absolutely flawteas. the dream is realised. Incidently -it •t.......,..,
since the budget was made public, has and the color of a ruby is sail that mineral field: worth 800,-
come in the form of a remission of "Kee" Geld Q00,004 will 1* opened up by the new
the flee per cent. excise #a:: on cars Communism seems to have an in- raihvay.
ytvcrth $1,200 and under, a„d wine.t
Ae forty per cent. of Canadian man -
unite merit' fes thal:ir.>f n2°xtakes, 'dew Cmernor-C,esterat
; ufatture. This will be made to read Th ir."ie'.art of the. Z:navief( letter. it has been otfktially announced t
which st:opt. the Labe. government that Viscount WWingdon, of Battelle
fifty per cent. of Canadian manntae• cut ('f ,, ile. a in Britei:t, :z*n been du- has accepted the appointnner, as sue-'
tore after April fleet. The mono• plicated in :he vii nelal aurport giv- I ee'aor to Lord By ng of Vim/ as Gov -
1 facturers are much relieved at theen the striking miners by the Rus- eminent General of Canada. Lord
change. which win also pace the of-� "ingovcyr imnt. Russian unions tE illiiigdon has a distinguished re-
fect of encouraging the manufacture
cf parts in. Canada.. As a result, are a: liberty to aid the millers, but cord as a statesman and was fernier -
there is serious objection to a sup- ly Goternor of Bombay and Madras
posedly friendly Government svp.
*ounce- a policy of "full stsioa porting a group t e British citizens in
ahead" and some will put expansion a° public quarrel. Fancy the effect
schemes Jewintes
Trek
t operation. if, for instance, the French Govern-
ment Palestine sent funds to support the mine
Nearly fifty thousand Jewish int- owners in resisting Premier Baldwin:
migrants have entered Palestine. "Thank God for Russia," said "Em
since the armistice, as a result of the
Zionist =velment, representing an
most every nation. The Hebrews
have established 120 school: of their
own, from kindergartens to teacher''
training schools, as wellas a univer-
sity, a school of music, and an opera
company.
Spain Stirs in Her Siete , tor, flew from Spain to Brazil. He
The most significant event of the was sent home on a warsltlp and
week in' the theatre of world affairs greeted by a national. demonstration.
, is the withdrawal of Brazil trent the Rivera and Icing Alfonso were: at the
Council of the League of Nations, docks to congratulate hint. ' Colum -
and the report that Spain and Argen- buse who was born in Italy, was sent
tine are likely to follow suit. Ae- aerass the Atlantic at the expense of
cording to the constitution of the a Spanish queen, who pawned her
League, two years. must elapse be- Jewels to buy him ships. Recently
fore the withdrawal is complete. The the heir to the Columbus ho I urs, the
quarrel arose lash March over the Duke of V"ers.gua' (the discoverer's
allotment of permanent seats on the grandson having accepted the title in` .
Supreme' Councilc where Brazil was, lieu of financial benefits promised to
ambitious to sit, ifoweeer, behindColumbus),° with a magnificent gest-
the dissatisfaction of these three t ure refused half a million dollars
countries may be a 'neve- school of i from Harvard University for a box
thought. - All three aro Spanish, Bra -1 of documents belonging to Columbus,
zit and Argentine by language and' and sold them to' his government for
tradition. Spain discovered the New I $104,000, raised by public subscript-
ion. Next. year Alfonso is to visit .
subscript -
World and .Spaniards, mad, with the
lust, for gold, so plentiful in South South America to cement the friend- BITTER AGAINST o.B.U.
America, established themselves' ship of the -Spanish powers. Are
there. But while devoting themselves Spanish -ambitione quiekening
ng Mayor R. Ii, Webb, of ,,Winnipeg,
to gold in South America,.le. lost Spain is a country of magnificent whosayssome means must be found
then}gripon their European posses. traditions, but has•been.0neerac1oudto dislodged e theOnoe
Big Union,'
,.
cions. and -declined to the place of a for three centuries, Is there devel- which he charged with "undermining
ireeond-rate ower. There has been oping a racial consciousness which the progress and•development of the
a significant change in. Spanish eeeke .expansion` in a league of its city:": This organization has its
•thaut,bt within -the last few :years. own' The situation scentsto pro- headquarters in Winaipeg.
Spain has a d''etator. Primo de Riv. vide 'a first-class thence,, for an at- . Miners and Owners "Stand Tat"
tempt at breaking up the nations At,
bra, who it the supporta seint The strike of Britisli coal miners
et Alfonso, the man who was born the world :into groups . founded on a is, Jest •where it was on the first of
Xing, The threads of friendship be- community -of :racial interests, h1aY, while the union's . funds are
two Spaniards in Europe and Spall- Alberta Coal' for C.N.R. gradually dwindling, in spite a con-
• iadin South A m a.na havebeen
CanaStan National Railways. will
tribution5. from iiussia,.;and British
woven mare closely of late.. A few nee 1,300,000 tons of .Alberta coal trade has slowed up everywhere be,
moat ago ranco,the Spanish avis, . during the coming year on its 'lines' cause of the lack of; fuel. Not,only
#n Western Canada. It is estimated the miners are sufferers in the striate,
tillstkathit' A Uri Sign that 16 per cent. of the world's coall'trt the industrial hardship is extend-
the province, of which
• � widow +�$,���� stpply i� in pr , tag ti, thousands of other workers
, more than billion tons are semi -an- whose trades are :affected. The mine
tlts,l Rut
tb till tie back thracite or high carbon bituminous.. owners are just as stubborn 'as the
lives oat, •-Hut the bark is not to
- tem ache tomes from the kid. Norsemen; to Celebrate miners, so that both sides seem to be
Norsemen from all parts of Can. well matched. Baldwin's ambition, as
Ada and' the ;United States are to hold ' announced in a recent speech, is to
a - big celebration at Camrose, -Al-'' free British- labor of foreign heresy,
berta, :from July , 3rd to 6th. The and. he is apparently clearing the
celebration is to be held under the ground,and making his position clear
auspices of the Norse .Society of Can.- before enforcing his coal policy, as he
ads-. has long threatened to de. A coal
fall' Waage which cause the trouble... l Canal ;C'owptete ;n Three Years dictator, .with power to lay do`wtt the
Less than three years will see they law to both owners and-miners,'seems
con;pletian of the Welland Canal, for.
which' the Commons recently voted
$14;000,000. Construction on the
present canal; was begun in 1913,
When completed it.will have a length 1 Big Mackerel Catch
•of 25 miles and: will join Lake Erie More than 200,000 mackerel, worth
ewe tee kidneys themselves, is buys and LakeOtntario, overcoming the over $6,000, were secured of Ariehat,
are a apeelel remedy forthe kidseysr,, fall of 325 feet of the Niagara •River. Canso, Guysboro Bay, and adjacent
• ante the kidney' o ,ly. They banish all ` It will provide a quicker and cheaper' fishing villages of Eastern Nova Sco-
• - - the pains and -aches by malting the . route for the grain and freight boats tia, in one day. -
Idelarys falter out all the poisons from plying between the Great Lakes and A Red .Diamond
the system Montredl, on the River .St. Lawrence. •
A rare red diamond bas been
rn etantler sells theta
►des e
Toter. druggist
1.
vat up only by The T. 3iilbura Coy Auto Makers Rejoice found in the eleimberley mine; S.
Tiapitsd, Toronto, Ant. Retlet-for•t a automobile trade inAfrica. It will be about six carats
•
Steel Gates for Border '
Steel gates on every road leading'
from the United States into Canada
have been suggested as a means of
putting an end to smuggling. Un-
married guards.."who can be moved
about front station to station at the
peror" Cook. the miner's leader. discretion of the Chiee Preventive Of-
tin!:
f-
ti pl public relations
n is demo Rling that' fleet, would be mounted at the gates -
diplomatic relations with Russia be from sunset to sunrise, if the pro -
broken off, and a severe note I�as poral is adopted:
already been dispatched to Moscow. -
unessis reportedheotbel admittedly Tile j� A. Sic Club
uneasy over the probable results . ci' J,�/,�
its unfriendly act, • It Is said at least .
;2,000,000 went from Russia to the •• •. by 1-1. C. HAMILTON
0rtenist North -St. United Church
To Stop Opium Trade
The export eV opium from India, A GOOD VOICE AND THE
except for medicinal purposes, is to Mt1SIC.AL EAR
end in ten years. As immediate pre
mnners.
hibition of the trade would have Of. C. Hamilton)
serious economic results, the export Far tbe following 1 am indebted to
is to be reduced ten per cent. every Woods Hutchinson, M.D,, of the Unit -
year, and In the meantime the Indian ed States, who gives his views on the
Government .v411 have complete con- subject of singing. He says: -
trol of the sales of the drug, which - "One of the most consoling and -in -
will be made- only direct to other noeent private deluaiona that most of
governments. us cherish . is the 'belief that we can
Ex*Kaiser Sues in . Cape Colony • sing. That it is a delusion, as far as
Ex -1 aiser Wilhelm is making use eight -tenths of our 'friends are con -
of the High Court at Cape Colony, corned each 'of . us will cheerfully tes-
South Afrtda, to attempt restoration tit-. • - •
-of nil' estates its Southwest .Africa, ; "Of course, in a sense, we .can all
formerly German territory, The sing, and sing ao as to give pleasure
Kaiser is net - averse to amassing a to the largest and most important
fortune,: and has the common aversion share of our audience ---indeed, the on-
to paying tastes. The Toronto Globe ly audience that many of us ever get
remarks, "Wilhelm refuses to pay his —ourselves; . The thing that singing
taxes in Germany. Just note the is really for, ter many, it to set up a
Etind of company that tax dodgers gentle soothing vibration in our in
are getting into." • terior,'whch thr:ilis us frohemadour1vldiaost-
etrs^to iMfillions ---- phragnt-taithe top of cps .
" 'to them-
e .
At least three •Canadians : are to keep this farm of ofo Y
meat
altars in the distribution of a..flfty $elves, and go. no further• than hum=
million dollars estate which has been ming, but sometimes, when an at -
accumulating in the British courts for tempt is made to pass on tbe pleasure
to others, trouble begins. Almost
62 years, since the cath of dames
;i anyone can manage to strike a key
Dixon, - who discovered the electro- that. will. harmonize with his 'own
plating process. Two grandsons who diaphragnn, but when it comes to hit -
had emigrated to . this 'country could Ping: the key of somebody else's-•-
not be located and the estate stood well Scarcely one individual in ten
settled
undivided, One of the grandsons has the power to make the connect
near Carleton Place, Ontario. hits
between •his soul and another's,
Copies of the original . will- were the• medium of song, and not
brought to Canada two months ago awe' in a -hundred make a positive
and since then the • settlement has
success'at it. Of coarse; almost any"
achieved. 'Diss. Jahn, ` Ouelette one can join he congregational sing. -
and Angus Dixon,' ,Windsor, are two ilea but mane in .the congregation
of the heirs. will be. perfectly+ unable ,to .carry a
- `Wheat Acreage Increases tune through alone.
Acreage under wheat in Western to official returns, about
Canada has increased nine per cent. one person in two hundred and fifty
this year and is •now 21,452,000 in, has the degreeof. musical talent
Manitoba; Alberta. and Saskatchewan.
- Can't Hear in ComMons
It may be net;essary .to •spend fifty
thousand dollars on- :the Canadian
House of Commonsto make the great:
hall satisfactory so far as acoustic
to be the only solution as seven properties are concerned. Members
weeks of attempts at- conciliation fail complain that from some parts of
to make an impression on the situa- the chamber it is almost impossible
tion. to follow .the debates.
New Federal Offices
suoya
he under lass sint*ll of thebeds
Thereto'*, dull polio in the back, or
nibstp,tut* twinges,,are:waraings of
sick it—windage of 'kidney
Pieotora sad lia6eeatla will de the
bons•rto good, for they cannot eeack
THURSDAY, JUNE 1",th, 1926
7t .
• Don't Forget
Father's Day
Next Sunday, June 20th
Get Father a new Tic. We have all the latest. in-
cluding the' season's latest hit, the Ensemble Bow -Ker-
chief and . Ensemble Four -in -Hand -Kerchief; -Crepes,
Failies, Spots, Rayon Silk, etc.
HOT WEATHER WEAR
We -are featuring the Straw Hat with Balloon Edge,
fancy band and easjr-tiftir:;g sweat band:.
Our stock of Hot Weather Apparel is complete
and up-to-date.
-Looking, W FiUing, Enduring Clothing
is. the kind our mechanic! turn out.. Also spec�l
That
order.
• CHAS. BLACK -
"The Men's and.Boye Store 'Worth We,*
Phone 219 - .. North Side Square
when they are still quite young-- 4 nor do I msintain that it is the most
When impres. .ons aro easily made helpful- way. Everyone who desires
that are lasting. - to sing should be rumen:raged, but not
I would add, too. in concluding, flattered, or en the other hand, rtdi
that when' one has a really good voice 1 cubed. Singing le an attractive and
he s'Itould spend, considerable time in' �r`ttural method of self-expression,
.ear -training, and acquiring as firatr; and even in at2 imperfect form can
class musicianship as possible.—that give much pleasure.
the singing will not be with the voice' (To be continued)
only, but with clear and intelligent
understanding of the music ` itself; i Blau?age is not a lottery. .H you
and the composer's meaning. ,That,draw a blank . in a lottery•you just
in addition
creates �more ofl tha bond be- r drop it.
tI, f
.tween singer and audience titan- al D=4- gal'
most• arefull trained vocal organ, if 4Qr
..y
that bond is lacking. 4
Li
s n#.
just r�c_rve ' a �t rxie
s
d
li on ,
ns
Dr. utc t P
H
too, le J
I feel,o
i
views, 'While' containing a great dee) i ' - . of
that cannot be refuted. yet do not:, -
'hand out any great encouragement ,
to those making honest end praise -1 Fine and. Work
worthy efforts to improve. Wo alt
need rather to••be encouraged than be -14
little-, even if far ' front .perfect, as el
the most of us will readily. admit. I 1 '
do not .quote his. views to coincide
mea s.•.
r n
all ex a se b any with s d
13
, Y
Bear Hunting In Rockies Beit In Spring•
•
In the ' t:.„ Bend district of the
tipper'Co.umb:a Ricer its Brit-
ish (`.o:u:a :a Les . tn, :tug et tiat•t
of grimly bear hutting terr tory
in the Dara:nior. 'On the two hun-
dred mils. stretch between Beaver-
saoot>. and Revelstoke, bots on the
sitsin lin. of .the Canadian I'ae'.fie.
Ifailway, there art epproxiasately
; t hart3y mate sense„ liaree enmesh to
'be elatssr4 as rivers. (If these at
.ksst twelve are knee to be the
habitat et the grim:y' ae matt of -
them bare net 'hea d i,. s sound of
a rifle la years.
TIM alma► a rratemat;c effrrt
Was road. be place the hunting poo.. -
,elbiiltiee et tkia great district with-
in She of prospective visite?*
iyt search, of W► thrill whirls only
'dew astatine* whit Ursa Herriirilts -
eta pee leas. Threes% the el**** Lora- - i , t
Masi of all lite beat knew* Biter- -
•
'tnea ea ties Upper CCFseabfso. trips trsiter`--A envie of kxsstoiir with sew of their outwit. tower 1011
ase be lamb int moron. moo aaa —011 the rear path. Lotter right ---leaser Coope*, mar lstrreraretttit,
fish are plentiful mid the steetery N. C. 1
fa euffieimet to satisfy the iisaire Aa far as ie known, no party of Aeeording to 3. 1T. ***re, ei:
of ate man nwetl*g mountaineer. nen•re•idents hart ever made seep a Revelstoke. B.C.. the bears in this
A5 1 rater sorb as •aleft up to trip. The last pair of local bstttets, distri t are on the amu from April
Arlisin She and et flay it Is pomrbte who *peat twenty-one days en rano, 110. While there are mere to be
ite le safer�r sects well knew* - irattgttt in tt bait of low fifteen had later en. thre earlier the ife*r to
r Dstrttrfre, t tier- bearss, iadwUnr ,sterid large killed tbo better eeaditiea kis claws
tit
rim sal tiestb�td.. AI 2risetiett and three live g osis. and pelt are in. Arnold Derma.
'a fee -false- Cortye* sf tb Titin bappeud seems' dears asa Me off tke beet kneent Dwtff geMs.
is. f. Thio trip appeale when the present bag limit of tbree also adtista that April and l as lea, as the actual blurt- s per sr.:tames was sot lit ef- are the beet steat to foe hatters
0 -- seeliiftg beams i! f►r Ilea.
The Government has in -mind the
erection .of a newerederai building in
Ottawa to house departmental offices; if. you have ''a son, he is more likely
which are now scattered. .The build- to become :a 'president or premier
ing would consttst of three units, each than to become a great operatic ten
unit to t'cst. three million dollars. ' or. -
which enables him or her to be en-
rolled as a professional singer. To
take another estimate, anyone who.
hes had the experience of conducting
a church choir will testify that it is a
matter of the utmost difficulty to
.secure proper material, for, say, five
quartettes in a town . of less - than
5000 population. This would' give
about one individual in two hundred
and fifty, of . all ages, musical enough
to do a little special chair work. We
hardly realize •how extraordinarily
rare a really great voice is. Indeed
Big Crop Coming -
,Canadian crops never looked bet -
tee, is the report of Charles Murphy,
manager of the'western C.N.R. - lines.
Farmers and business men are in-
creasingly optimistic and there are
prospects' of a prosperous year for,
Western Canada. .
X226,000,000 for a'New Port
Twenty-six million dollars ,will give.
Canada n new port on Hudson's .Bay
closer to L 'den than is New York.
according to estimates in the House
of Commons submitted by the new
minister of railways, Icon, G. A. Dun- ed parts --an ear, and a vocal organ.
Hing. h?nnself a western farmer. Al- The possession, or lack, of n 'musical
ready 332 miles of this railway have ear,' a 'musical sense,' an 'ear for
bee....nbuilt...fron, Le Pas,_ Ins .the._ . •.harteouy,'_is- fareand away --the. rarer .. _.
txeme west ef Manitoba close to the gift of the two. and the one that does -
Saskatehewan harder, *and Kettle - meet to make the difference between
Rapids, and most of the, remaining one . who. can sing, and one who ean-
02 miles to Port Nelson} has been ,not. -Savage races have Attie, if any
graded. ,The Minister of Railways sense of harmony, or of music. as. eve -
requires three million's to restore- the - commonly understand it, though they
existing lines to good •c..nditjon, 8 have a keen and accurate sense of •
similar amount will be required to rhythm.
build the other 02 miles and twenty
million will be needed for docks and
elevators in the northern port.
Those who regard a Hudson's Bay
port as impractical should recall that
n Y ailwnv _across. Western •C'anade was
also once considered impractical and
its critics . said that the season for si
'tratiscontinentel railway . ;would be
from May to Sept., snow and cold
preventing its operation for' the rest
of tbe year. Montreal is also only a
summer port. For forty years the
port en Hudson's Bay has been moot-
ed and in that time Canada has push-
ed its grain belt fare to the north,
first by means of Marquis wheat and
now another hundred miles of empire
"Again, it is an unusually, good col-
lege Mee tfiousand students that can -
furnish a- double quartette .capable of
attracting any attention: on the. rage;
save from alumni or doting relatives,
"How many of the boys or girls of
our school, of the teen in aur club, of
the women in o r social circle, of the
pew -holders whb sit about 'us" in
church, can carry a. tune alone, with-
out assistance from instrument, lead-
er :or: choir?
"The fired thing to get clearly in
mind is that a `good volee' consists
of two different,' and utterly unrelat-
d
n -r
e.
oes .. '.
A MEDICINE THAT Clearing at Speclil,l Prices
ALL MOTHERS PRMSE -45 •
,
. t n
sine .Shoes $
Iasis, Bibw
n
Baby's Own Tablets Banish BabY g! andLight aoutsin,.atOxfords
hood and Childhood Ailments
Mrs. IL Oakes,Sarnia, Ont.,' says;
'I have used Baby's • Own Tablets in
my home for the past fifteen years •
and I believe the good health my chit-. -
dre11, enjoy is 'due '.entirely to this
medicine. Tile Tablets are helpful el. s
at teething time; relieve colds and•
are always beneficialit the minor ail- ,Working $hvee<
meats of - little ones. I have recom-
mended Baby's Own Tablets to other
mothers whose experience .'with them; jn .Black and Brown, with, or
has been as satisfactory as; my own."
Baby's Own Tablets do one thing without Toe Cepa; at
only,but they do it .well,• 'They act
as a gentle laxatiee`which thoroughly . c -
regulates the bowels and sweeten the X2.95 .and $3,45
stoinaeh, thus banishing constipation sixes. 6 to 12
and- -indigestion; . ,colds and smnle o
fevers and -turn the crests. sickly
b into a :vete a it
ba y . i el . happy, bat ghing
f; Q
child.
Baby's Own .Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers or direct by mail at
25 cents a box from The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., .Brocltviile, Ont. •sect
$2.95, 50 and
$.
$4.75.
sizes- S ;ten 11
M. ROBINS
hits come under the sway of Emperor -
wheat through the discovery of
Garnet. wheat. Canada's crops have
swelled to such proportions that there
will be plenty to keep not only the
eastern ports and the Pacific ports
bung, bat 'td provide cargoes for
ocean vessels at Port Nelson when
"How large a part the ear plays in
the making of a voice is graphically
shown by the fact that. The dumb aro
speechless, as a rule, simply because _.
they cannot hear, and not on account
of any_deft_in._th€ir •vocal organ.
"-It is n matter of great Ilene' �2iid
intportat, •e to raise, even to a limited
or modersrae degree, the ntusieal sense
and musical standards of the' mass
of the community. Not only does it
add to their ownenjoyment and cult-
ure, but it, also ensures that the sing-
ers and composers who receive the
greatest meed of. popular appreiral
shall be the truly great ones.
"That individuals mays exist with a
phenomenal voice -organ, but no mus- ..
nal ear, is propable, also the other
kind• -those with an accurate and
delicate ear, and yet little or no pow-
er of vocal expression. Such, in fact
have been some of ,our great comlxka-
ers. -
"Under the age of ten, few child.
ren'n voices are capable of producing
good tone. We have heard a great -
deal about the `music of children's -
voices.' As a matter of fact, it fre-
fluently sounds best at a distance, en
acrownt of the shrillness and frequent
inaccuracies, when they 'sing by
Mr:"
Thews remarks, from Dr. Hutehin*
set's point of Clew, should be inter -
eating. We all realise that good voi-
ces are not plentiful, yet we are glad
to obtain the services cf the singer
tat perhaps a Casae, or an :dward
Jebnsen, bat one who given the best
he rias, and is willing to give that.
Alto, while children's voices are not
always beeatifrlly modulated. yet the
time to gain their interest and teach
them the correct way is undoubtedly
•
0=0-
0-
•
Jou pima, upMe,a
.'
dWINNT'I ..y,.�,�,.ww.»».10,45 ii.m. Secont' Der
re
CALGARY... w............. 9.25 aim. Third Day
at,�i'ANCIOUVEii~...-...... $.(}9 i., "Ottt h.U+a>Ii;
(S t inuie ; lfYftu
$aves`a business day to Winnipeg
4' t Western Points
7, Diaor
> ag
Pant robe*
Y T. M. KID
m1nt.0FtuE
•
i •'