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Show I' v ' PLEASANT GROVE Rpviitw rT-x trT . i. : . fe. w ' ' va-AACTG CO V mme.uweetujome IZ- ( r? 0 tfome " : -frT" fir ifr-' i 1 ' :Wx,w""l".vl'"'vw y- 3 ' l..uiif li l""T Hit, 1 9 , V - N VILLAGE HAS HAD ITS DAY OF GLORY Old Tadoussac Now Quiet Summer Resort Umvton,.l Jfousi which. .. erATT WATSON .ttww ovw 1 ' kg Just one hundred years ago l,L. ho man who had toado the plraM "Home, Sweet Home" Immortal Im-mortal came back to his homeland. For it wag on July ?5. 1832, that Join Howard Payne returned from Ui Mlf-lmposed exile la Europe. There the splendor of success Had tnly "dazzled In vain' for there, despite his triumphs, he had also hmwn eitreme noverty and lm- 'fw debt So his homecoming was Seter because he came back to his to receive the acclaim of his fel. &who honored the penniless com-it com-it festivals In New York and In t day a century ago the fame of Id Payne has spread to all corners t (or the song which he wrote, per- ta any other ever written, has a It has been translated Into jap and sung In every country un- of melodv and homely of m It may be, some of the greatest ill time have been proud to Include repertoires, for it Is the one sons: je to reach the heart of mankind, no what color of skin that heart pyne's fame rests so securely, upon M Americans are likely to forget ej Mow, at all that he had other Sstoction, any one of which would to I place In the list of American 1 the age of twenty he was darling fork stage, a young actor who had tame overnight But the fame of SCtOF. WAR Tin trratttan than fV fama t Intimate friend of such literary munmgton Irving; Sir-Walter Scott, f M Thomas Moore and of such f Henry Clay, Daniel Webster and jtocy. . - I lave been remembered as one of 1 1 no less than five operas, nine chances are his name would have 'Won had It not been for a song fotefor on6 of hla'perasThat song i Swtet Bnmo - pxne, who was dividing his residence aa Paris and traveling all wrote a play which be later s1 tl Put." opera called "Clart, or the The music was written by -r, vuiupuser auu oirecior OI Theater Rnvni in t k u save cisnop the Idea for the P Urst svig by Anna Maria Tree r?? "d" at Covent garden In n BUU8 was ou iu- More ttan 100,000 copies r tS DUbllshpra In T ..w after it was first nn; thir f aa t profit of more than half And yet th unthnr f th a i mTI mere Pittance from this !iB wu uot piace ms name ;XBOr W en send him a J Copy of M, . vl,.v -A tamortalt But this was not an bk.ii! for tte composer, . Tor linn- a wries of successes and fiate!y 0n f a,rlQence ana hjjomat 33 Pearl street In New Li. . rthe toh cHlffTWilllam -JOltMnVi- ... ' U1S mother was-the Lj"""0 Iam"y. named Isaacs, who StT, Iong Islanl- " was this W - immunity which wme to- Pavne dririnp. hi'a HTl t. - M9U3 W 1UUJ ! in pTr.v.u j icni : -J"- muujna nucu AX v.. ntf A. & -AVI. was P &X o matter of fact this H I hh? by P86'" &ther but Mle he was principal of ! i751 to u Kot KewTorlt dty, fcam. rarne wa still wery The oldest whlt settlement tn America, and once the center of the American fur trade, the quaint little urencn Canadian village of Tadoussac, Tadous-sac, on the lower St Lawrence river, riv-er, is today a quiet Canadian 'summer 'sum-mer resort. Nestling among the foothills of the blue-canned Laurentian mountains at the junction of the St Lawrence and Saguena rivers, the village Itself is still llvluir In the oast the nat ural beauty of its surroundings and the aualntness of Its people attract ing each summer a large number of holldayers who are seeking to leave behind the rash and bustle lof modern mod-ern life. Woven around Tadoussac Is a long and romantic history. Here Jacques Cartler, the first explorer of New France, landed In the summer of 1535, and there arle numerous tales of visits by those fierce, sea rovers, the Vikings, at a much earlier date. Tadoussac, with Its natural protected harhpr, was long used as a whaling station by the Basques and Bretons, who were the first to form a settle ment there, and It was In 1599 that the .first house In Canada was built At the opening of the century, Tadoussac became the center of the fur trading Industry, which extended is far as Labrador and Hudson bay. I The first tradlntr Dost of the Hudson Bay company, that great company of gentlemen adventurers, was erect ed on the site where the modern motel mo-tel Tadoussac now stands. In 1003. Champlaln landed at Ta-1 doussac and made his disastrous-treatv disastrous-treatv with the Aleonauins. thus currlng the enmity of the warL. Iroquois, and In the same year the oldest church la America, the Ta: doussac Indian chapeL wasj erected. On the site of the first church a tiny chapel still stands and the bell, which three centuries ago called the converted Indians to mass, still rings out from" the chapel belfry. In 1001, the Iroquois sacked the village, leaving standing only the church, which their superstition prompted them to leave unmolested and for a tin Tadoussac was a de serted village. In thft-jneahtlme. explorers had pressed onward and In the search for new worlds this beauty spot on the lower river was neglected. Great cities sprang np throughout the Do-mininn Do-mininn and Tadoussac remained a tiny vltfage Important today only for it historical Interest and Its sum mer resort fame. Oboe the scene of great historical events, peaceful and warlike, Tadoussac today submits each summer to a peaceful Invasion as visitors arrive by steamer and by car to rest and play In this oldest settlement on the continent Woman's Chief Charms Not '.a Be Purchased 1'" i. - A a photograph of the :- Someone has said that - responsible for the disposition dispo-sition are born with, but we are fusible for the one that we dU -.ith. It is the same with the month. The sweetness and klssableness and dearnesa of a baby'a mouth are not dependent on the shape or size. . Baby's mouth Is sweet because his soul is sweet No brand of lipstick. nor any artist In lta use, can camouflage camou-flage a sour mouth and make even a casual observer believe It Is sweet Then there Is the eye. which the contents of the vanity case cannot change. 'The eye Is the window ef the soul" . You can buy something that will lengthen the fringe on the curtains to your soul-windows, you can change the cut of the, lambrequins lambre-quins above but yoa can't keep people peo-ple from looking In sometimes, on- less you pull the shades down alto gether and put yourself In darkness. No vanity case, not even a whol drug store or beauty shop, can make attractive the windows out of which looks a quarrelsome, envlcus soul KeeD sweet within, u you want to get full value from your vanity case. Nellie S. Bussell in the Farm Journal, SMiTvear nJfome,C$weet Dfome" Species of Hawks That Are Friends of Farmer The saying, "the only good hawk s a dead hawk," nas Deen proveu 'alse bv modern biological studies. Some hawks, of course, prey at.tlmes n noultrv and valuable game Dims. Many, however, live mainly on ro- lents, insects, and other destructive 'orms of wild life. " Tt U not easv to distinguish be- wppn the harmful and harmless spe cies of hawks, that In Itself being good reason for erring; if at all, on (71 .uf .IZmiiMMI 1H j uyit.fi J o"Dv'"j:" r. V Ta OafiTfiff&meter-y, W(ufon$ton,d.e. win teacher of III cusiuu mn ciua "j - elocution and the son Inherited and learned all that the elder Payne could offer, in ms w.., .i. t atmtoA nn amateur playhouse, assisted by a friend, and they went in heavily for private theatricals, .r.-i -r, -nt. of Aid Eneland and then in vogue for hi? Interpretations of stage char acters,-became Paynes iqoi. tion-one day to win even greater acclaim and the parents viewed this growing m stage with alarm. It must be stoppej and so at thirteen, Payne was packed off to ew Yort to work in.a counting house where his uncle, u vi- ti. lipid a desk. uuui mm uwui, - ... Such- an occupation held lltue intent - --mainins at work, he de- rayne. reriuutwuv . , voted his spare moments to .Jj cret aaknown as we " " As the name Indicates, tt"25 Daceive Tbemaelvat lilariy people who think they are hard boiled only have thick skulls. Exchange. ; . . the side of protection.- In general, sav biologists of the United States Department of Agriculture, harmless hawks have broad wings and wide, fan-shnned tails, and the harmful ones have relatively long tails and rounded wlmrs. Study of the ap- and habits of the hawks In any section should enable farmers and sportsmen to tell which are line-w line-w to visit the chicken yard and whtrh will confine themselves largely to feeding on Injurious animals, and thus be useful Unbellevart ChallaafaJ It Is said that a woman's voice can - be heard .by a man In a balloon at a heleht of two miles, while he can not hear a male voice above one mile. Care to test It! London Tlt-Blts. Governor Sterling's Joke Gov. Ross Sterling tells this one with a chuckle: "I had been visiting the Imperial prison farm, near Houston. They furnished me with a car and aa efficient driver to return to Houston..; If It will not make you too late, I wish you would drive me on to tha Bay,' (Sterling's summer home), I Bald." - - .i "Certainly, sir." "You will have enough timet" -"Oh, yes, sir. I have seven jreara.' As the name inuu.-m.co, . trtl and the bright and ctever rM to be found Jn It caugnt ui " n,ne . nin,on editor of the Evening I one era. wunniu tj.ctip's ne- Post, investigated the. Journal, and Paynes se cret was out -. . mmntoA those wnO nau wuuuv- - Z TCI '-min Mirror's editor. Literary cu- mo r . fnr one BO Uonlzed and so mucn - - young naturauy Degau w - - -Lterested friends decided that . must : m m nniniii tv more. scnooung, - v -e.tit. finance him at Union conege, -";"-'n Up the Hudson C'y "rl Doctor Nott. and enthuslasu - paper, known as u"2Zor Nott con-mediate con-mediate success. But poor Doctor . fessed himself a dlsappred for pupa properly. .W.JS Puly. He days at a time an - recog. was handsome; " gtage ca- nlzed. and he was eager to begin Wa atag reer. . 0f his This opportunity mo financial diffl-mother, diffl-mother, when Us father feu into t0 apayMcoUege and J New York, seeking a role ta the U. at the age of eighteen, .s fam0TJg t Tkontrina." one 01 rolesTand .Sieved astounding poP i m i (iin ni-fess UUl oeayitc the young him to give np the stage and tn , ted accctdfd I" the eldefs wisne - Ra3Im to louna a . t0 the stage, failure, again Payne turned t icUng In Shakespearean ui--- tccoinpan-Sewhere: tccoinpan-Sewhere: Finally lSeJS Sk to led by his brofter. nnexpected wek a atage career there. But a .vent delayed his theater . payne land, and America were then ai , t0 prisoa them Washington Irving, were able to secure his freedom from his British Jajlers. snnn r tprwurds Pavne was Introduced to Sir John Kemble, the great English actor, who Id turn Introduced him to a Mr. Whiteneaa, cnair- mn nf tho hnnrd of .managers of Lrury t-ane uau v . vuw w theater, As a result Payne made his nrst Btage appearance In London In "Uougias" on June m isia nd scored a triumph similar to the one he had scored in the .same role in Amer ica. He also acted In other English clues ana Is said to have established a record by performing perform-ing for 100 consecutive nights, taking the party nt 2ft characters. ' " Early In 1814 the new manager of the Drury t . .v,.t oont Piivnp to Paris to write Eng- a. i.M.txf Frprirh nlavs and this 11SU ITHUBiailuiia , marked the beginning of his career as a play ti. rr.u. .t nloc ha WTOtfl WRS "ACCUSa wneuu iiw - . " 6 . CiipaafnlW tion" a melodrama in. wire -'- - - produced, It had a long run, out w - a i - in Annnrini difficulties and the up- WaS all cauj m - . " .I.. to nnf nnlv failed to receive snot was uii - owi a penny for his work but actually lost $2,000 which he had invested m uie yiwu , thifl ATnerleiice Payne ar ranged with the Covent garden to write and act in "Adelglrtha" at Katn. ouuu wrote -Brutus" for Edmund Kean, a popular English actor who was then beginning to de- ... n-o n rpmnrk- cline In public lavor. m i" - - nino. for fi3 nlchts and paying rprXS nds of pound, but Payne received only w pouuuw - to Paris by the Drury Lane theater under the management paries j E-imhaiL It was men tnai us KlmbalUr ii waa alread been rteT ga to worm hi. Immortal song. Se tte fame which" this song brought him, Despite uio , .,fflllri- nd a Puma was soon m uuauuoi Eons venture a, producer aj . manage landed him In debtor's prison. He paid his way finally returned to America u. nlless. ... v kin. - For -once the jaying aDout y"" t or oi. n -onntrf was nroved For mk turned out to honor him untrue. For xvew . with a benefit ceieorauou i .7 i rer where he had scored his first Wumphta ter wuei norfnrmance. with Ed- 21 X B Fannl. Kemble also in re cast brougnt , ; - - 7n tor Payne, wh6 wa. truly back In ent cities for W w d not ntan "Home. Sweet Home. But he to- JSS. was in behalf of the Chero-InaXwlorne Chero-InaXwlorne desired to v, from op- pression. . bronaUt Th. Cherokee inm.- - - mnch rtJe1BJ2Cci in evidence iihi flfllds. and. he was nm" I"""-" . t rontriDOiea to ui Emerson buu Tpnt,01I at this naslved by an sppoi.tment an his froblem was 1T '-lB 1842, tn-rr,f tn-rr,f Rtates consul at Tann, '" as uu"-" recalled in uya aer President Ty en H was jecan but sent back in ww, , two years later, In 18o3. as umtea ww - K? .lJ -n. T d.ed there less than wo years later hafl M m. hwiv of the man " . , . 0This krLmz neath a siao sem -g - of Payne was not Balefl. w states and Uawffln waawoug - ,t Wash. to V1' of WllUam H. Cor, ington, througn we - coran. x. and two otb- A monument was ere one ta th, tf-mnnnmenm w ""T., fB the ther4 .haoe of a gateway Rut the real I , bronze bast In 7. coantrymQ U lament In the hearts of au P9tth.mntnn. DOuse 5 Long Island, where the Dro wlo TOm, door tells the tnous- u .nom to this memorial y Sweet Homer c .0' r Which tire will you buy at the same low price? Why do you suppose that Goodyear Most of the best things on to ; nrSled aU other, in public prefer- naturally cost more than the second-, ence by better than two to one? raters. , Why do you suppose that more But here's the amazing fact about aoeople ride on Goodyear Tires than tires: . .. on any other kind and have for 17 You can get the safety, the quality, Tearsf the extra life and trouble-free mile- These tires must be first-choice age of the world's greatest tire at n because they're better. extra cost. . Thev must outsell all other tires in Think that over when someone trie the world because they outrun them to high-pressure you into buying an on the road. unknown or doubtful bargain. ; On a straight quality basis, then, it Just ask him this simple question x certainly look? like common sense tq4vhy should I pay good money for buy first-choice tires. any tecond-chokt tire when first- Which brings up the question, "how choice costs no more?'; ;. ; about price?" - 1 ' aa M W. I Sal II I I ii a Till PS ak m. ai m n a w - ins - - ... 3 TUNC JN ea tha Goodyear Protram avary Wednedy mfrt over N.B.C Ra4 Network, V HAT ana aihw |