West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 26 Oct 1922, p. 3

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end me ay jhe 40 ut hat rld Ds F4 3t gold 1 of acâ€" e IL fAt o# at Leeuet AAOVE MVCTMROENC NOC CCC CV COT CC FraviAt, sew practically all this trade £o Whilst the embargo, which has ;,, England Whereas in 1901 there existed since 1892, ostensibly for the were five and a halft million cattle in protection of prized British herds from ; the country and seven millions in 1907, dieseaso, was in effect against cattle there were in 1921 nearly ten and a shipped from all outside points to ED&â€" quarter million cattle on the smaller land, it had no real effect except @s farms with their intensive screages against Canada and the United States, which have in the main supplanted the as it had been proven impracticable to | big ranches. * ship such animals alive from Australia | Will Benefit Ail Canadian Provinces er South America owing to the long| The total number of animals killed voyages and the extreme heat in crossâ€" and marketed in Canada in 1§71 was Ing the torrid zone, and the United 507,72%5; in 1881, 657,681; in 1891. 957,â€" States using all the boeef it produces |737; and in 1901. 1,110,209. Canada‘s The agitation for the removal of the ‘ total oattle exports in 1910 amounted embargo reached a higher pitch when in value to $9,604,562; and in 1905 to the Fordney tariff bill came into efâ€" | $11.360,969. Total exports of live catâ€" fect, virtually banning Canadian clt-'ao in 10914 amounted to 218,929, worth tie from the United States markets.| $7,016,794, of which 9,778 worth $697, A more strenuous assault was mado‘ 807 wont to the United Kingdom and upon British parliamentary authoriâ€" | 206,446 worth $7,043,086 to the United ties. Canadian cattle were sent to| States. In 1917 the total exports were. Wngland by governments and farmers‘ | 166,182 worth $7,884,§42%, none going to organizations to argue by their 89100-5 the United Kingdom in that year acâ€". did qualities for unrestricted entry. cording to trade returns and 164,115 This campaign was successful in havâ€" | worth $7,748.907 to the United States. | ing a Royal Commission appoinied to | In the fiscal year 1921 total cattle shipâ€" | investigate the question, the finding of | ments amounted to 296,5il animals | which was that Canadian cattle were | worth $20,463,891, practically the enâ€"| bealthier than cither English or Irish !:im year‘s shipments going to the | eattle, and their addition to British | United States with small quantities to herds for breeding, dairying, or beef| the United Kingdom, Belgium. France, e purposes calculated to promote theirlNewlouudlaud, St. Pierre and ;\liqzmâ€"i restoration and be of wholesale beneâ€"| lon. and other countries. t fit to the British publc. As a direct ‘ Tho removal of the embargo will unâ€" | result of this, when the caitle indusizy dou loedily give the Canadian cattle toâ€" land, it had no real effect except as against Canada and the United States, as it had been proven impracticable to ship such animals alive from Australia er South America owing to the long voyages and the extreme heat in crossâ€" Ing the torrid zone, and the United States using all the beef it produces Whilst the embargo, which has existed since 1892, ostensibly for the protection of prized British herds from dieseaso, was in effect against cattle shipped from all outside points to Engâ€" turists The British Mouse. without division, passed a resolution in favor of the reâ€" moval of the Canadian cattle embargo to permit the introduction into Engâ€" land of store cattle, to be pastured and fattened there, whereas up to the preâ€" sent it has been necessary to slaughtâ€" er animals at the port of entry within ten days of arrival The removal of the embargo for which Canadians have strenuously fought since 1892 is caleuâ€" lated to have a beneficial effect upon the livestock industry throughout Canâ€" ada, cspecially in the Prairie Proâ€" vinces, and should bring back Canaâ€" dian livestock figures to the important place they occupied previous to 1890. aga to | ful and Prairies Will be the Principal | Gainer but Eastern Provinces ’ Will Also Benefit. | FIGHT FOR REMOVAL BE GAN IN 1892. CANADIAN CATTLE | EMBARCO DOOR AJAR witrout trouble, secure the limit â€"of kame birds the law permits him, whilst, with the threshing complelei and the summer‘s work off his hands, | bhe regards it as both a holiday and a | wise provision for the winter to ssâ€",! cure a mooee in his province‘s north»i en woods. The latter is evident from | of 3,820 square miles of 2,448, of land. The game of the prairies is . fold value to the provinces meniing the larder of the farr attracting a certain traffic sportsmen. Any farmer can it prot prair viftodatalitie d css db o4 4 ness of the open seasons, the rigorous enforcement of the law, and the fact that the farmers, realizing their value, afford them what protection they can. Wise Protective Legislation. Wise legislation has been enacted in the establishment of provincial game preserves, large areas of land set aside for the purpose of propagating â€" and perpetuating beneficial birds and aniâ€" mals. Each preserve is In charge of a kame guardian whose duty It is to sea that the laws are enforced, forbidding, out of season, the hunting, shoting , | trapping or molestation of these birds , and animals. A large number of pfl-f vate preserves are also betng conductâ€"" ed under Hcense, and are meeting with COnsittermiblo SHCCCEE â€" wmius L..ou. TT man y dwin Mmoose, ¢ dense a; southern The Prairte tural home of partridge, wil COOLs. blaetk.bs in the West, and the P are filled with wild duc} little to the Prairie Pro further report that m animals are on the ine furnish better hunting further encouraging, for birds and animals the vinces . possess a most source which, under is and expert provision aga is maintained in this st 10 YGAt: â€" The annaunas. The fact that this yea; grouse or prairie chicken W _ __ & CeuonCIal Dirds and aniâ€" Each preserve is in charge of a guardian whose duty It is to sea he laws are enforced, forbidding, ( season,. the hunting, shoting , ug or molestation of these birds nimals. A large number of priâ€" reserves are also betng conductâ€" ler Hcense, and are meeting with erable success, geese, ducks, > chickens and partridge as well r multiplying rapidly under such tion. In the province of Sasâ€" us game birds th farms and do lle in numbers. d ision thirty years of effort al on the part of Canadian it« and Dominion agriculâ€" an alone, there . game presoryves °_ CCC *rovInces are the naâ€" ome of the prairie chicken, the ge, wild geese and ducks, rails, blackâ€"broasteq and golden plovâ€" Ison and Jackanipe as well as cariboo and deed. Despite the agricultural settlement of the Te HICRE AF Â¥hi Hrovanton es ies i n Game on the Canadian Prairies "Tai seitiement of the i of the provinces, the birds thrive among the farmer can in sea secure the lmit it this year ithe ruffed l4e es Is ol a twoâ€" vinces, suppleâ€" e farmers and traific among not appreciably ue to the shortâ€" ire nine govâ€" with a total 448,000 acras & p [r emb in season are n{ ing of the United States market through the removal of its embargo in 1897 diverted this trade to more adâ€" vantageous channels. ‘The removal of the English embargo, which ordinariâ€" ly might have caused a division of the trade botween the two countries, will, with the effect of the United States tariif, see practicaily all this trade go to England. Whereas in 1901 there were five and a half million cattle in In the period when the Wetern Canadian provinces were given over largely to giant ranches, the export trade in cattle ov~rseas was one of Canada‘s basic industries. The openâ€" ing of the United States market | It is hoped and conuficently expected that the new situation will work conâ€" Isiderably to the advartage of both | countries and result in an increased !luterchange of trade so much :o be deâ€" | sired at the presont time. Canadian livestock breeders will now be in A 1 position to market their animais 2t the pitk of condition on the English marâ€" ket, which was their one outlet with the United States bars raised against cattle from the Dominion. A further result will undoubtedly be an inâ€" creased importation on Canada‘s part / of pureâ€"bred stock from England and| Scotland to raise the Dominion‘s beef | exports to the high »st possib] staud-i ard. in Canada was at & low ebb, the emâ€" bargo is about to be removed, giving Canadian cattle unrestricted and unâ€" qualified entry into England, always provided all animals &re in a healthy condition. ’ The Prairte Provinces have created for themselves such a renown agriâ€" culturally that they are frequently overlooked in respect to their many other valuable assets. Game there is a real resource. It provides at once sport and a valuable source of supply to the settler and established farmer, It brings to it sportsmen and hunters who would come for no other reason, but who in search of sport must see, and carry away with them the knowâ€" ledgo of its varied attraction and opâ€" wambasers .. portunity â€"| stated that it is necesary for a farmâ€" y | ar to take out a license to shoot in his ,l’ovn district. _ Big game hunters in |the province killed 1,018 moose, . 68 | cariboo, 10 mountain sheep, 47 mounâ€" “;’taln goat, and 1,120 deetr. In the proâ€" vince of Saskatchewan, 25,000 licenses | were issued to duck hunters and there ?are usually about 3,000 big game hunt-l |ing licenses taken out. In an average . !yoar in Saskatchewan 1,280 moose | were killed, 890 deer and $0 cariboo. | ‘ Half a imillion dollare is spent annual-;’ |ly in the province in big game huntâ€"| | ing. Manitoba reached a new recordi | last year when it issued 10,550 game | bird licenses, whilst its big game‘ |licenses usually average about 5,000. | i In Alberta the open season for | moose and deer is from November 1st to December 14th; for prairie chi(:ken|‘l and partridge, October 15th to Octoberl;' Sist; for ducks and geese, September | Ist to December 15th. In Saskatcheâ€" | wan, open season for moose and deer.i November 15th to December 14th; | prairie chicken and partridge, October | ; ist to October 31st; ducks and geese, | | September 15th to December 3ist. In Manitoba, moose and deer, Decemberj‘ Ist to December 10th; prairie chicken ; and partridge, October 15th to October | 22nd; ducks and geese, Soptember 15| 1 to November 30th. | Advantages to Both Canada and England. ‘ The West, too, has its sportsmen who come each year from the United States and other countries to take toll of prairie game. They are not as numerous as in certain other sections of Canada, but would doubtless be greater were more hunters apprised of the excellent sport the prairies offer. Even in the more settled agricultural districts there is excellent grouse and duck shooting. The northern lakes o(~‘ fer unequalied opportunities for duck shooting, whilst the possibilities of moose, once the bunter has left thel prairie behind for the park and timber lands, are equal to any other section. Thousands of Licensed Hunters. Last year in the province of Alberta | there were 5,209 licensed duck hunt-’ ers, and in this regard it must be | the fact that last year seventyâ€"fAve per cent. of moose licenses in the province of Saskatchewan were taken out by farmers. «s and geese, September ber 15th. In Saskatcheâ€" ison for moose and deer, oth to December 14th ; n and partridge, October and partridge, October| Liverpool, Newcastle and other places 31st; ducks and geese,| it is a miscellaneous concert of songs, to December 3ist. In| Violin pieces, piano pieces and works e and deer, December | for string quartette. Occasionally, as °* 10th; prairie chicken ; 2t the Scottish towns of Glasgow and ctober 15th to October | Edinburgh, â€" the concert has been a 1 geese, Soptember 15 Performance of short choral composiâ€" i. | tions, from madrigals and Bach moâ€" rovinces have created | t*ts up to modern representative part such a renown agri. 80088. _ These concerts are usually‘ they are f,.equem]y: st}ccu_sfu-l. The children are interestâ€" "Wasn‘t he?" roared Sergeant Cokeâ€" Iy. "Then cross it out and put him in the guardhouse for deceiving me." ‘"‘But he wasn‘t talking," protested corporal who was near. |_ In every town a musician has been | present at the concert to speak to the { children about each work immediately | before it is played. Sometimes the | concert takes the form of a deflnite‘ | instruction in some intellectual aspect | of mustc, such as form, melody and | harmony or instrumentation. The ocâ€"| fcasion is then not so much a concert as a clase, though it is as thoroughly enjoyed. In the Birmingham concerts the speaker confines himself to a few | simple remarks designed first to tell| | the children what instruments will be | | most noiiceably apparent in the cam-é ‘Ing piece, and secondly to quicken { {the!r minds to its poetical aubject.; ! Thus the Birmingham concerts for | ‘ children differ from ordinary ennrarte | "‘Tension!" he cried to his squad. "Quick march! Left wheel! Halt! Take Callahan‘s name for talking in the ranks." Maintainin; Discipline. It is evident that there are some persons who regard discipline as an end and not as a means. Not even the seed of insubordination has a chance under the eye of Sergeant Cokely. only in respect that they are to direct the minds of the chil to quickly profitable paths by of a personal exposition. «â€"â€"and the worst is yet to come ed and very well behaved. They atâ€" tend in large numbers; at the Birâ€" mingham â€" concert averaging about ; 2,200 for every concert. | | dustry that encouragement and stimuâ€" Ilus which it has needed since the ban against Canadian cattle was put into force by the United States. Whilst the Prairies will perhaps be the princiâ€" pal gainer, it is also expected to aid | the growth of the industry in Ontario, | which in the years previous to 1890 engaged in a considerable cattle exâ€" port trade. Quebec and the Maritime Provinces must also inevitably benefit to a large extent through the now meo.-{ sure. wioucester and Iikley, the concert is an organ recital. Sometimes at Birâ€" mingham it is a fullâ€"fledged orchestral concert. Often, as at Manchester, aso ie ies 1 Concerts for Children Popular in Britain. In England for the past fifteen years concerts have been given to children in several towns. Sometimes, as at Gloucester and I!kley, the concert is an organ recital Somatimae st Ni. A recent picture of the daughter, Miss Megan Llova mcture of the wife of the British Premier and his youngest Megan Lloyd George. 4 they are plauned of the children inâ€" ordinary concerts means for| Chill His wig blew off, and was czapuu'ed' and returned by a nice young lady, to whom the gentleman acknowledged | his obligation with: _ "A thousand; thanks, my dear. You are by far the: most successful hair restorer I ever , tried." | Delay their feet, by weak presump tion shod ; Phat gleaming track mcrose the skyâ€" line‘s rim Forever be by foot of man untrod! "or who will dare to mock the cheruâ€" bim, And share, unasked, the very throne of God? Long ages gone, a sentinel of snow Kept futile ward at each mysterious pole; The seven seas intrepid sailors know ; The desert vainly took its vengeful toll; No limit seems where man may never go ; God‘s throne itself he makes the fAnal goal. Leave this one citadel inviolate, Whereon the feet of man may never tread ; Its lofty line to be the last estate, Where majesty may hids its aplenâ€" dor dread, While at its feet the vanquished man must wait, As at some Sinai, with humbled head. Bo, at this moment, men bebold her braced â€" The hopeâ€"foriorn of bleeding Christâ€" endoin, Oh, ready, too, again that cup to taste Which at Gailipol! was mixed with tears â€". . * Let voices in reproach a while be dumb, ‘ Or say, The Virtue of her faults ln-J heres! England, let them accuse you as they willâ€" . Charge that your helm Expediency steers, _ To make you come off best, through all the years. And aye your sails with winds Favoniâ€" an fill. But, when all this is said, record it g#UI: On danger‘s bound, with front defyâ€" ing fears, ] England is there! And with or withâ€" out peers, l She stands, the red blood from her: veins to spill! I l o 22 Cc e _2 winds and unrelenting glaciers grim England at the Mount Everest. Prettiest, Too i It is difficult to estimate the extent t of man untrod: |O9f the new '«sla})li-lx.xxent upon | the o mock the chary.| Woolen textile industry of Canada, | which is already an important one. d, the very throne ; There are in all 94 plants engaged in | the manufacture of woolen goods, Mabel J. nm,rqmn';woolen yarns and woolen felts in Canada, 66 being devoted to the first. paae |16 to the second and 12 to the third , Too. | The capital invested in woolen goods® and was captured establishments _ is $22,783,128; â€" in ice young lady, to those of woolen yarus, $6,428,991; and an acknowledged in wool felts, $3,573,100. _ A total of Â¥ "A thousand;BOO persors receiving over a million ou are by far the dollars in wages and salaries are enâ€" r restorer 1 ever,gaged. in the various branches. The | production of the woolen goods plants oâ€"*trunmamcmmes is in excess of $28,000,000 a year: that‘ to come of wooalen yarns, $9,000,000; and of | wool felts, $3,500,000. I o / Britain Will Assist in Financing _ | The woolen trade in Great Britain| is keenly alive to the importance of‘ ces the Canadian industry as indicated by E== | the fact that the Trades Facility Comâ€" 5 ! mission, a branch of the British Treas 3 ury formed for the purpose of assistâ€" |ing in finencing industries that will ‘promote trade within the British â€"â€"â€"4 â€" Empire, has offered to assist in financ :/':-â€"‘â€"= | ing the Dominion Combing Mills to the i _ _z extent of a loan of the cost of the ~esâ€"â€"=~=â€"| | machinery, for 10 years, if purchased ‘ | in England. The opportunitiee for the =â€"Fn‘." @ | expansion of the Canadian woolen texâ€" f â€"â€"Edith M. Thomas TORONTO would~ indirectly ; it uit . 5 *L4 houses which handie the Carcasses a There are limitioss possibilitics to the berefits the now industry can ;;'u; is Its wate â€" Undar the comnulâ€" x~y=& â€"ar=ss â€"mws se S'll)fi": s their product in a !(_-:'e!gn markot, many Caradian â€" farmers found it unprofitable to raise sleop. An adequate Rome market fer wool should stimulate th: grow‘3s of the tile industry are apparent when trade figures show that whilst Canada exâ€" ports in excess of $11,000,000 worth of wool and wool products, she imports more than $120,000,000 worth 1t is likewise learnt to the advantage of the Canadian combing plant and the texâ€" tile manufacturing | industry â€" that should Canadian farmers be unable to supply the former plant with ali the raw material it should require, Ausâ€" tralian wool can be handled cheaper at Trentorn by 4& to 14 a cent per pound than if landed at London, Engâ€" land. Last year Canada produced over ’82,500.000 pounds of raw wool. A ® large percentage of this was such that ’ it had to be combed before it could be used in the worsted induétry and . 'theretom had to be exported. During the same pertod Canada imported from R Australia, England and foreign counâ€" triee over 7,000,000 pounds of tops, f noills, etc., for the use of Canadian apinning mills, The new Canadian industry will produce the tope that are ‘ now being imported and the Dominion | Combing Mills, Ltd.. will have the ’houor of operating the first plant to put the wool through the highly necâ€" ,‘auary process for manufacture. ‘The | necessity for the home â€" manufacture | of their wool has been brought home to Canadian farmers a« never before | !w'hon through the new United States ’mrltl they find themselives deprived of a market that heretofore bought combing wools because the United | States had the plants when Canada had | not; consequently, both farmers and fmunurm-(urvrs high!y endorse â€" the enterprise. 1 oo uy C Meom Smmiey Odmne nnton Paiint t P rrtuiiiiredisecess iss onik is c : put has been lacking and the raw maâ€"‘ Originally, and because of the ap.| when she talks to her "dearest cree | terial has had to be exported at low | PAreNtly unlimited extent of the forâ€"| tut." Betsey Prig, and of "the torters | rates instead of being prepared for| O8t*, paper mills were located with !Uf the Imposition;" but Lady Wentr | the finishing process at home. It was i less reference to the forest than to Worth also customarily addrasses hor ,not possible to sell the produce to the &AYMl@ble waterpower, transportation, ®On the earl as her "dearest creatur‘ ‘textile factories at home because it 40G€ Merket. Not until the forests were flll‘d tells that her dying lap dog "never 'lackfid treatment in an important pro_;pulhod back, until it beramog necesâ€" "“}'Y"‘d to snap at anybody in its horâ€" cess and manufacturers could not use} 88"Y t0 bring wood considerable dis. "d torter." ’" without being processed. â€" The reâ€"| !4"°®s by railway or by water, did the Mrs, Gamp says "valy" for vaelue ; sult has been that home textile factor., Mil!s hegin to consider the importance 12dy Wentworth usually spells the ies had to import their finished raw Of th0‘" relation to a permanent «upply . word correctly, but not always; ard material\ from abroad instead of getâ€" of wood. The construction and operaâ€" her slip reveals her pronunciation. in ting it from the Canadian farmers, or. 4o# of a mill involves large capital 4 Careless moment, spelling the word! those to whom they depute the task| OUt@®. 1t is figured roughly that it &8 the commonly spoke it, she wrote of handling their output. costs approximately $50,000 per daily @bout "a preious jewell, sartainly tas ton of production to construct a modâ€" Seloman ses) hard to be found, but Produced 22 Million Pounds in 1922 ) ern paper mill. This large investment | bighly to be vallyed when found." Last year Canada produced over;"‘ plant is making it increasingly nee Again, Professor Waeewle, asie, £2,500,000 pounds of raw wool. A| ©8®2Y to insure for the mill a satisfac. "Who wrote the following: "As lovly large percentage of this was such that tory supply of raw material. When & boy as ever was soen and of an un it had to be combed before it could be, pulpwood costs from fourteen to eight. danted sperritt He is the very plctur used in the worsted induetry and #®" dCllare a cord. it becomes a ser. 0f your poor brother WHI, he has such therefore had to be exported. During 1048 matter for the manufecturer to 4 W%lt‘fid}in! Ingagin way with him .‘ * the same pertod Canada imported from |"4Y® (© @0d from four to ten dollers a Well, it might have been Mrs Gamp, Australia, England and foreign counâ€" cord for freight. These very â€" difficult "lfI a&s a matter of fact it was Lad y triese over 7,000,000 pounds of tops, | probleims making up the question of a Wentworth Like Mrs. Gamp, sha noils, etc., for the use of Canadian | PO"D@venrt supply of raw materials for ®P®@AK® of her "lodgins," while her apinning mills, The new mmun?p&per inills are causing many paper: daughterindaw Countess â€" Strafford Industry will produce the tope that ‘”; manufacturers to turn to the practice Observes that the Archbishop of York now being imported and the Dominion Of forestry as the only solution of is miserly in the maiter of his ‘Kitch Combing Mills, Ltd.. wikl have the | their problem of raw material ing" fire i amarke * â€" M pored mb siy | colole has made it possible to erect a plant for the combing of the Canadian wool crop, and the Dominion Combing Mills, Ltd., at Trenton, Ontario, are nearly ready to comence cperations. The company is capitalized at $2,500,000, ‘and the construction of the plant was only commenced after the architects had spent three weeks in going over many long established factories in Bradford, the English centre of the inâ€" dustry. All the machinery has been Introduced from the same district. In the past the wool raising industry of Canada has been largely handicapâ€" ped through the absence of this link in its chain. Millions of doillars have | been lost to Dominion farmers beâ€"| cause the one process necessary to the | satisfactory marketing of their outâ€"| A move of great national importance, fraught with great significance to the future prosperity of the woo! and texâ€" tile industries of Canada, of marked consideration not only to agriculturâ€" ists but the Canadian people at large, is the forging of what tos long been a missipg link in the chain of Canada‘s wool industries. Private enterprise ‘ESTABLISH WOSL _ | COMBING INDUSTRY Manufacture Finished Article at Home Instead cf Exportâ€" ing the Raw Product. FILLS LONGâ€"FELT WANT IN CANADA. and Take the irk out of work and it beâ€" ccomes a pleasure.â€"Anon. cha "One of ‘em old .l.’n's.‘rrog.-' ful way my | di cuts the bread, didn‘t look like | ‘"What were your thoughts while you were flying through the air on the wings of the tornado?" clhants, fifty big vessels were directed to Hamburg. As the Germans are not able to obtain warghips, they have acâ€" quired old packet boats and freighters of a tonnage varying from 2,000 to 11,000, bought at the price of old iron, for which they have paid with gold. Not content with buying largely oils, grains, fats and glycerine, the Gerâ€" mans lately bhave endeavored to purâ€" chase old metais in England, and they have bought from the British admirâ€" alty several war vessels, And without the protestation of the English merâ€" ing broker in London declares» that the Germans have been the best custom ers for some time. "They pay in gold and this gold they obtain from us by selling us their own products. ‘This is one reason why they laugh 2t the rate of exchange and continue to plead poverty." 17 mp ommE In the last three months, ac« ording the base of to "The Daily Mail" of London, the mation of t Germans bave sent Gaily to the Lonâ€" of the uppe don market £25,000 worth of wool, co0rd. Agal and it is estimated that since May 10 with chroni« about £100,000 worth of woo!l has of the thro been forwarded to Germany. A leadâ€" sinuses may ing broker in London declare» that the beginning o Germans have been the best customâ€" come from ors for some time. "They pay in gold nant growi} and this gold they obtain from us by warty grow selling us their own products. This is throat and German Trade With England. |__In the first place, their hate are too hard and heavy; in the second, they _cut their hair too short; and, thirdly. (they eat more meat than is good for ‘them Wearing a heavy or hard hat obâ€" viously exerts too much pre«sure, and is decidedly barmful. Cutting â€" the hair short leaves the rots at the mercy of any varlations of temperature and atmospheric conditions. Too much heat, says Dr. Guelpha, increases the acids in the biood, and consequently in the perspiration. This is still more harmfual to the hair, for it quickens the supply of sebum, which thickens round the roots and clogs them. This is the reasopn why fat men are more addicted to baldness than those who are thin. Dr. Guelpha deciares that if men would only wear light felt hats instead of bowlers there would be lass baldâ€" ness. Bome interesting views on the causes of baldness have been put forâ€" ward by Dr. Gueipha, of Paris. He concluders that there are three rea sons for its effect on men. the taneries which handle the hides. Inevitably it must tend to enhanced business, domestic and expnort, and bring in its train all the advantages which manufacturing a finished article at home has over exporting the raw product to be imported back in a manufactured state. One Reason Paper is Dear. THAT CHILLY FEELING The Prince of Wales‘ cute orang» outang at the zoo in London finds it cool these autumn days and mournfully consoles himseli with a heavy blanket. Her Chief Sensation. my daughterinâ€"law always Causes of Raldness. read, and the fact that it like I‘d never have another ell her about it." velimin i0 the Nalr, for e supply of sebum, which nd the roots and clogs s the reason why fat men » ] h " rep led esc onomical ut the wasteâ€" 4°°° svave Vidi lolerates q; ‘ol any law breeds defiance of amine the vocal cords with the larynâ€" goscope to see whether they are conâ€" gested, or whether there is a tumor , 0n Ike or on both of them, or whethar either is thickened or is completely or partly paralyzed. If he finds nothâ€" ing except congestion, he will perhaps ,in?nlro into the patient‘s habits and | will examine the nose, the tonsile, the i teeth and neighboring parts. By exâ€" | cluding one thing after another, he will usually find out what is wrong; ;tllen be can make a vigorons attack T Tlrseâ€"amnongâ€" 10 "Ad mixt The (dis covery so early that it is possible to remove the cause. The sufferer from hoarseness should not wait ton long before consulting his doctor. i intili d s d id ols and sap cure tb patiept Th E al thin to m# ‘A!:‘f a* m AAWame mss 22 is & t ( t . come from tuberculo«is. from mallg nant growths, from lugers‘ nodes, warty growths clergyman‘s KOra throat, and so forth Un the other hand hoarseness may be owing simply to persisten: laryngitis or to bronchit 8 that is of catarrhal or gouty origin, or that immoderate cigareite s inok lag or with certain persons even moderate smokingâ€"or indulgence in strong alâ€" cobholic beverages has caused , In searching for the cause of hourseâ€" ness, the physician will naturaliy exâ€" sls ds â€" 8 action that nery m hes Case only m time w and "sarve you right tongue or pen. W less familiar with in rustic communi two kindred nhrae Well, it might have been but as a matter of fact it Wentworth . Like Mrs. C speaks of her "lodgin«." daughterâ€"inâ€"daw, Countess observes that the Archbish is miserly in the matter of ing" fire. "Sarvis," "sart "sarment" sound oddly eno ears; but they were not m gant on Lady Wantwnrt at interferc rves that «t wrseness. / ‘r of things Mrs, Guamp says "valy" for velus Lady Wentworth usually spells th word correctly, but not always; ar her slip reveals her pronunciattion. 1 a careless moment, spelling the wor as she commonly spoke it, she wrot about "a preious jewell, sartainly 1(2 Solloman ses) hard to be found, by bighly to be rallyed when found." Again, Professor Weewley â€" aske "Who wrote the following : "As lov? a boy as ever was somn and of an un danted sperritt He is the very plcto Of YDUF DDDY Ininthaw Stnaee a c 2l o A Lady word her & a Cat the 1 , O 3. _\ 7,6°°°° verrined with rich and delightful mistakes and misprpoâ€" nunciations, some of which survive in the conversation of their successore, w‘hereas some have passed entirely from common speech to be succeaded by other forms. But after allâ€" were 'thelr comic @erprors really errors? For i their day, yes; but in an enlightening and amusing erticle entitled Mre, lmmp and the King‘s English Prof Ernest Weekley has recently pointed ,out that most of them showed simply the persistence among common folk, unaccustomed to books and to the written word, of the speech of an earâ€" lier day. He draws a Startling paralie! between the language of Mra. Gamp at her "gamplest" and that of a lady of quality, Lady Wentworth, who lived between the years 1700 and 1750. "The very last case as ever I acted in; which it was but a yourg person," says the garrulous Sairey, chatting about ber patients, and her language certainly strikes us as being far from elegant. But "Mr. Afundell is an extreem kynda husband as ever 1 see," wrote the fina lady in a farmily letter; and agaiu she mentions "a back gate; which I for get the street‘s name it goes into." Mrs. Gamp sets us to chuekling wien she talks to her "dearest cree _ When an English writer of our time introduces â€" the uneducated cockney character into a novel or tale he makes him say "Ace" for face, "lidy" for lady and *biby" for baby. _ But when Dickens created his two cockney immortals, Sam Weller and Bairey Gamp, cockneyisms of that particular sori were unknown. Sam and Sairey spoke an English diversified with rich and delightful mistakes and misproâ€" nunciations, some of which survive in the conversation of their successore, wiereas some have nassed antiral.. state that tolerates ui 1811c communities, that kindred phrases, "kind such as 19 pe Mrs. Gamp and Lady h Hozsrseness. ~mw, Countess Siralf lat the Archbishop of â€" in the maiter of his "k "Barvis," "sartenly" sounad oddly enough in hey were not at all i Lady Wentworth‘s mo 1 ti from +1 n‘t of the in Yankeeland are them to«lay, even when found." Weewley â€" aske, )wing : "As lovly en and of an un of M au law, 102 him. * Mrs. Gamp, was Lady ramp, . she while her with the 0° mnaryks" De EOPA® other in our | incleâ€" modish l.on inal ithy part Lo ng w h a t 4t the 18. the tin al w1 it

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