The Lucknow Sentinel, 1922-03-30, Page 7r7-7
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01,11( ar- ung01111111011
MANITOBA OF THE PRESENT
. .
rreatien of two* new provincial Olinda, valued, at $857,020; The bulk
parks. hY the Bnitish•Colutubia, Govern of this butter wee sine *1 to Mont-
real, Toronto. and the'Britieh'markets,
a *few .cars ...going to 'New York and
Chicago.. • '' • .
During 1e21 tree grant heilaesteaue
to the number Of 870 Were entered .for,
at the, Dominfen land. °Mee, for the
Wineipeg, land' divisten. Thiz wropreL
smite approximately .139,200 acres.
largeflambee oftsoldier grants were
alsio. entered -for in this. divieion: The
remaining' free -grant lend in the Win:.
nipeg district Is ,chlefly north And eat
of the eity, .
• The eheep export market offers. big
oPuoltunittes fee• Ontario sheep ,farm-
ers„, according. tq Prof. Wade *ToqIe,.
of the Ontario 'Agricultural College,
He said the Ontario! and Pedeal Dee,
pertnients of Agriculture proposedto
aid thebreeiers by paying the freight'
eharges on an Ontario 'exhibit to one
of. the hire iiiternatimml shows. • .
fOeee 400 officer § ande840‘airnien
celved trailing' at Camp Borden due,
Mg the year ending Ootober lst, 1921,
• al 'fifty for the, use ef the Hudson's according te the annual report of the
• Bay. Company- on the -northern lakes.' DoMinion Ale Board. The total flying.
• Under the terms of a Highway Bill time for the year wad 3,158 hours or
that is to be introduced' into •the Al- the equivalent in •dIstanee, covered of
• berta :Legislature at the present ses-'• approximately 250,000 miles.
,,or. don, a good Toads board will be form- The first kraft pulp mill on • the
r ed eonsieting of a highways conitnia- American continent was established in
• siener, the dePutY -minister. �f public Canada in 1909! with 'a, capacity of 60
• works and three other members to he ton.- daily, according to thel'inancial
'appointed by the ,governnient. • It will Service. . In 1922 the olio rated ca-
t*, the duty. of this board to see tbet, pacitY of Canadian and American
. road banding is standardized accord. mills. is 2,025 tong daily. At the pre -
!rig to the best modern methods and
' that the_ construction is properly
,superVised. The roads are to be
• . claesed a$' mainliighwaye, market
-reatTioaes and colonizatien
• inent was announced recently by Hon.
P. D. Pattulfe, Minister of Lands. One
• , of these parka ht the Mount Alifilili-
bWfle Park; >near Daufl,•and the -other,
the Koltenet) Park, at tliti'liettod of the
Kootenay end Moque Liikee. • •
•' nowaid the end Of 1921 three -thous-
and poiinds of tree treed were shipped
from 'the Uornlniop Forestry. Braneh
, extracting plant at New Weetminster
"toe the Poreettr Ceinniission of Great'
Britain.. This shipment was about
equally divided between I/bugles. fir
and Sttka spruce. •The Seed will be
used In the great replanting • scheme,
,• now underway in the British Isles. .•
e• Sixty-eight canoes; including all
m. els frorn. the light graft tq' the
,41ayg vessele of the freight ...and
cruiser type left recently from the
Alleeeta -Motor. Boat Werke,' Ndinon-
• tote' ter the trading posts of. the far
• :nort A eotaaignment "of twenty -on
.is deitined in the spring for the Mac-
. kenite RiVer•eoutitry, and an addition -
•
Abbot one hundred thmisarel head of
sent titne•the United 'States: has built
Or has under constenetion 25 inflis
making .1,199 tons daily, while Cana; I
da's eleven mills can make•826 tons. •
It. is reported that 'arrangemente are1
-being made for theereetiOn ana- oliera, 'Lc
tion ,of an oil' Nal pleat = in Citiebec '
stock cattle, „horses; sheep•egraze hlmhiai to the, plants new in operation '-
every' season on . the Dominion forest ,at 'St.' John and Dalifai. The plan, is
rederyee in :Western Canada. This to erreie a 225,000' gallon tank, on the !.
' Freeing:, keeps the tire ',mien) at a 'Property of the-Quebee-Barbote-Cein-
'minimum. and at the seine time id qf missien by May 15' ilext..• It is hoped.,
. great value to the formers .and- ranch- !to melte the citY of Quebec -the main i
ors in the violo:,,ty of ere e•eserees, fuel 4t 01 on .the St, Lawrence for
The value et -dairy 'produt..tion in nil cil 1)atni1g.'ve•iee1.3'• •
M a e. ateea_ateeeee-eeee-eettee e1eerree;431., reported -A het • ,the pret ref ,.
Preductem of :creamery butte
werhe for the construetion of the plant e
otmounted to 1i,5504(J5 poinerse Rivers Vulp ;and Paper
butter...9,08,10Iu . 6J thzt '.conipsay, with a.i.apital of 23,006,000
Ing the year 108.ear1tlf creaniery Nyhrt 11 t zn March. It i•s•expected'.
butter 'eras ehippeti out of the pre:. that -the% eew•mill will be ia operatioill
Vince. ' This. reprwerds .2316,212 by tll'e ond tf 1923. • • •.1
•
' Cheap Thoughts • Cheap:. .
: • eh Life.. •
ChearctboUghts Will .h•urt
.ypin- life;' they 1011 cheapen
everything ahout I. -
.• haft alwaYS. -notioled . tha
Oplie.-"Whee'go' through 'life':
skimping;.. -• eheese-se
• hunting for cheap things, •
-always_ loOking- for 'bar,
gains, have 'cramPed,-
Sandlities.7-They nar-
vie,inrs. of • things4 . a
Aviv,: _horizon,: and ...their..
-:-oheapness--,-,and-narroWnes-s-_-
.areatamped .all over, *ern. -
is thelargeit'tlityught; the
• largerYoutiobic; the inter.'
, -,e?;pedtation,z-whieli -gets - the'
-large? things,'• makes the.,
• broad, .geneyOUS,',.•43inindant
--mind.: • . '--
• 4.
Peite
i"
•
-""•-e•
Lee,,01 51WATE e deo
WILL HARPING BE MORE SUCCESSFUL.?
•-ehlorris, in the ,Qmaha Bee.
Real Golden Cisimes .
Jr. the lefixican State of Sonora. on
the headwaters of the Rio Mayo, is'the
ancient reining , village of . Tyrepa,
Which la .early days. ivies famous for
the sweet -toned belts cast there fretn
copper procured in the neighborbicied.
LP was from Tyopa. that chimes Of
bellswere.obtalned fof•-'man-y- Mist ions
on thfaCiiia_Coast,„ and -from 'th-e
same source came hells that were
hauled by ox teams acroes the desert
to 1lide4f9n eettlemente.ln Arizona ,and
New Mexico: There was one suph etet••
Dement at. Sitka, Alaslea, eStablished
hy. Proneisetin .monitS,,which: got its
chtine of belle from . Tyopa,
. Some of these belle are still in exist-
ence, 4heir tones 'ds sweet as 'ever.
'Manyeefetheneleaveheen melted in let.
ter -days for, the kold and, sileer they
contained. ..The sweetnexte of their
m'usic, in .fact, N as °dile to the; circurn-
1,,
etance• that itbo t 25 per.leent of the
Hudely relined c mkr from which
they were cast wds silyer and gold. •
• '
How We Acquired'the
Orkneys.
It appears that the Orkney Islands.
de not really belong to Great Britain
in the sense that •• they -were' neyer
ceded by treaty or acquired. by con-
quest. They were •simply transferred
. bY-Denmarke tie Scotland -L -.in 1468 -in
' pledge for the payment of the dowry
of the Princess of Denmark, 'Who was
Jam's • .•
- married to
g co
land% 1
•
In. the deed of transfer (which is
still in existeriee, it is epecially men-
tioned that 'Denmark shall have the
right• to redeem thein at any future
. time by paying the .original, amount of
•
•
. o •
There is little! 'homrever,
that Den -mark will ever attempt to
• . •
exerciae-t
h t • p ne
dense _60,000. rfleriens, the original.
'amount of the dowry, woOld amount t�
,perhaps a trillion pound's .sterling, and
that is a bit more than the islandeare
worth:.
A Sacrifice-Worthy...of the : .• -GrasshOpper. Feet •
, A Bigger Gift.
. Name.. . • • . . • .Athat human beings are rarely' seen '
•
• •
The wt,i.,1 osaerifice." ' gains new' :to skip 'mid hop. It is however, a Two ,suitora had .striven foithe,haed
mealtime wheit.we thinl:%f the e.o..ry..form of 'exercise in which eleidren-are of •Mary, the. daughter of • Irish
et is to) dee boil t • Cee three Inindred went ;much to indulge, to -lb& great parents.' ' • , • , e •
children wile. were s eleCted to receive benefit orteeir physical•development..1 , One was a prosperotte:butcher, who
• • Plecobragement of eltia form of •ther- .wiste backed' up by 'pa arid ma; :the
.Cheritv cf Arrneeian Orphan, •
. -.c•tee. •offeree 1).3? the novel inventfou 'other was a' hanclamne• young clerk
•• .
• So . eniall a a •it mount . • of -food had .
• - Of -a New Vork•wemen• .-• It is a pair Of- -15
Who was b, k up y Mary.
n-slief workers mechanical grasShopPers, to be Worn The cerk won, and -married Mary
on feet • 'The 'graeslioppere, ef On the morning of .her first birthdaY
in (811:4ge. of cip. orphanage:that they.
gfant size, are put on like a -pair of- after her marriage .Mary -called. to See
eet old 'give nimait nothing even to the-
shoee, . and fastened -by straps and her liarents; and showed thent. a gold
three htlinired. Each child gct'only.
picce, of ,breadeand „a ‘few bucklee to the child feet They -have. wristlet R•hick.her huzband h„eit given
nuts. twice aday.- Of course the food l68 43r "rink...steel, terminating in. her
whichehold rubberleete-A Bat Mary!s.nioth.eresniffedeco. teteintite
•
did -not ueateY . .satiely their -hunger, -14W
equipped.. with these grosahoppers can
but it was en oug:i to. It r.,•eit• them., alive:
'tele ekt.p. or jumponach more .actiVely
-• When-e•the-,--ektIttren.-- -learned' 'Ali at --
, there -wre'hundreds more' in thenear.
o and eau: geee over ground 'quicker,
e,-byeertwaveTeeee.e.oeoefte,re.oeieeeffeerrniule.:1.k.. eau -Maar teet-tessen the shock
of alightifig. andgive *a delightful.
at all Alley voluntarily' gave up the .
'sense,. ef light -nese,. •
valiii Befen•e-ea eh Meal Abe y.drope _ • _ • •
• pelt their nets into a sack in One' cote . • .
ner of 'Old rooili, and when it was full
some -rileeef theme would caiTy it- to
the .fraetei t.rowd•in the street, 'Could' •
de -there-he- eteenere•ganerou8---Sacrifice - •
tleir the:0 .
Mountain Flowers.: •
. I The Caniera Finds New .
Persoiia' who have Made ped r tan " • Worlds. •
tours through 'the Alps alweys recent., These., cexitemee ,the ,theeeyeey..of
. the "vivid beauty of the Mounialn d,stefdfd-s, or minor planets, 'especially •
flo.wers, .CemparlsortS Dr, eeere- tee. --a-rd. atto-reed eeleetfaVe
Furey:show that, the •superior verity ' photokftiphy. Atue.ng a vast multitude
and splendor_ of 'floral' colors _in' estarseecieiwtiing- a plietegtephic
Alpe,-are-nOt-Anntglir411_;-:nr.7nc-ntere et p1 -at one, eperhepe, w be, eeed -6
„feet etpontraat . The reds, blpe,. and ha's/6 droWi. a short thin 'line -ort the
yellowe of the- mountain bloseeene ere, plate -during lionrs'ofrt;'•optinuoite
.mtich ---Theeer-treet eie 'Sentare-at - -
same species. 'of. floWere•grOwn-at or „onee that it 14* either on . asteroid era.'
dinary levels,. ,The leavee, =also, have.' -ce Q,oh.:_e/4.4teet observatioes136on. ;
edeeper and richer green, and 4111eto-‘ .41,4.et-ct! t'he Feint. • Only. the etiore in-
seotpic•examination-shows thaf•4:111er,), ; 11 are allerward observed:
phyl is mo: -re 'abundant itt Ilene with a;!..entione. hut ence,eliSCOVered
plants than in tbeee of the oialth;.. they 4:iiinot igeored,. and tile rapid r•
One fact 'N.V.Neh ..:;ents quite nature1, ere w111 Of tee flock beetimee-aii ene .
yetis Very inteeestine, .ie real :011 t1,10 'Ero•i, which at times '
mounta tete . have r ativele, pm -Aches, the. i -t li nen ier than all y. •
sarialier.aerial:cirgaw ati.i lorgclr ,aub- 211 '1,0.;illai• •meinhete of • the solat•13''
th.T.Twer-rf -1110.1m:on. aticl'A.,'"tercid• !-
flower v‘ticiCin.thaphaias sfon ree. 'es5, u Yell at aphelion '14.j2lorl)
ding at tlo:sumin't-of -1111 eseiting stein- tent thin Jupiter. as fal. v.:1.i their'or-
ha: r elite en !lie, lfloit
• -slopes.'bugging E,c,11, itil;'110rE'd he': intee.eting.. inenthers eef the entire,
.ramparatively y ,anj 1) U(1 ntenip ;Ina erl.zelit nod.. r Joust ant obei
ing • up , with' aecenteated •beenty 'front , ,:ereeit ,,ircAiinstaneeS 1
the grotnel.. • , . • • - t
pernin.
...
1`..•
said; -disape-
provinglye but if ye'd taken the ad-
vite_eof your_ paeente_etis „not
watch ye'd be haying On yer wrist, bu
a grandfathet's, creels,'•
• STILL LEARNING . •
- • - • • -- •
Ikeeneliteading, reactieg, until My eyes are sore; my dome
of thought. feedIngiwIth new and ancieht lore. 1' read the
grand eldemaStera, the poet and -the:seer; their -thoughts, like
porous plasters,: to. inemory adhere I read:the moderne.feller,
. 'the etMain Street' ,' tyne ofeecribe, whose. book's, the-loreitmet
the Weeks of ilarold Bell; Any of every .geezer NO() has a book
to sell. One cannot grind forever with: any sort or milh if he
Makes `i..o endeavor the hopper part to fill. So Many brilliant • •
strinjings 'start .out to conquer fettle; theY'll all -be. neveer*•.Kip-
lings, tied beat. him af his game.' That they. are grandly' gifted
. no person can deny, Whet rnarks how'they heve lifted their lyres
, and lutes ,on high..., They make a _brave beginning, their fiery
spirits soar; we see; soon, be wineing the .wreeth beet
' wore." They dash off , setnething clever, they glitter for
-a-day, -and-then-wink out forever,. and -cease toeputettpehayi They
: 'do not had' or study, :their minds they do not echool, bu.O-Chase
Where tightts'arernddf; to playa game a poi.,
...tion proper.; or turn out flour, I wist,. unless' into its hopper you
„ • ,
• put seme sort of grist.
New Map Provides Latest Information on Lind Con:
ditions.
•
essentials is a good map. On the
In peace as -in war one of the first formulation of a. piellicY of road con-
terateuramucatni jotiseionoba2Idaactn,h!'ordiraex?ntragaslytoolitlioettitmeleet.1924:
.0esPte:bilnigshmoefn.tshowst:,rietiecits nedmapu-inpoankingto
. . census has. !!.i LL her population .
HEAVY TOLL UPON
CANADA'S FORESTS
PULPWOODWEEDS
FUL HANDLING.
•
•provide maps of the war zones to the to 813,008 virhieh is laigelY centred in Rapid, Expa.nsion of Pulp and
, .
maxinium of their caPaCity; as every the area included within the original p '
feature of the country had to be btenadaries of the province although ?` aper IndustrY Requires Pre -
'known to officers responsible for:Mille settlement is pu hin fartli north . " f Future '
s g er no ' vision or .
taiy movpments. :, . . . 'with inereasing momentum, Coverink
.. ,
In peace times accurate maps are in a total area; of 251,832. Orittare •rales, The Pt" and lar'cl' induatrY 15 one
every sense fully as important- All Manitoba has a considerable .water
land tiunafers, mining claims, forest: area, this %latter representing 19906 of Canada's most fin -portant Interests.
Utilizing the forests of Canada as raw
ry permits, or registrations of Posses"' square miles„ Inoluding the ares'eur-i material' it Is essentially an Industry.
pion are establiihed by geographical veyed in 1221 there is nOV:r' available-1.!illich
, this information,* which , is , especiallYacres o
.- f this having 'been eovered bk biterested,• and 'its rapid. late years has been a feature of thegrowth. of :..,..
e
:CartaslianF ea .a,.vineie are
or fastronemical position. To provkla for . ent-f7 5,$48,300 acres,. 12(4800
AMPortant, Where' new settlement- is the ten4ey Parties • of 'the Federal
Dominion's ma-
•Procitoding. the Natural Resources In TopograPhical 'Survey' during the past , •induStrial ' progress.
telligene Brrn
anch of the... Department year. Unpatented.hoesAlnd
teadS (aletin. NO. 4,8, of .the News Print Sere,
. , vt.cq,. Bureau" gives"- the output of the-
• of the eInterter. has recently issued a on Vilch'. the eritrY.' dirties have-not itzteen' 'ICanadian pOer' M-1.119 ieort" ..•
revisededition of the Homestead Map yet been conipleted, inert*, 1,296,000 Ing- as 812,206'1°ns .for the year 4921.; .4
,series of the Prairies,Provinces.
of Manitoba. When the first Home-. 2,884,840 acres. , • whereas the output of the twenty-eight
Per •Mill of 50,805 tOnS,
The latest...map of this series is that occupied account for approximately
acres, While. lands alienated but un- or an average
Branch has also issued
steadM1413 of?' lYlarlitoba w183 issued in Looking to the. future.of the ProVe '611211:terndne8,tatnrC.3647616116storere Prteirngniill
a
1905 that province had approximately: ince when clevelepment oils pulp and
. l . - 'e
however, the map is aseuring a tre- ng Lands ,.,
was 37,e, ....
350,000 popidation. .An inflox of im- paper industry will undoubtedly take As showing further the improved condition of the Canadian paper situa-
Migration was taking place and home- place, the Dominion Forest Btion, the decrease inproduction for
ranch ,
stead entries. were nunierous. The has established or proposes to estab- . the twelve months of 1921compared
'
'northern extension ta Hudson's ,Bay Nth a eonsiderable numbwith the same period of.1920,. was 24
er of forest ,
and the .60t111.. parallel had not been reserves aggreper cent in the United Stateand
gating a total of 2,886e •
transferred to the province, ,and in 700 in acres. These are situated 'the. but 8 per cent inCanadaUnited
s,
cfmsectuence 'only the. smaller area. various portioos of the Province,. oti • .,
wee included in the map. With the is-, land net at presforNove.mher were 63,261 tonswhile
ent required., Sweden,
or un- her next largest supplier.waStates !mite -its of paper from Canada
suance of 'the. seventeenth edition,i suitable, for ag•riculture,. ,The'•Graz, . , ,
from whom She obtained but 5A16
mendoUs iniportance in western Sfe leases on a • considerahle area of land ' .
tons
fairs. Serving the .original purpose ! for grazing purposes. ' . ••• :; Her tetal imports (rem all coma_
tries other than Canada were but
eof-desi-girarthet--the loCatiOn or IandrIvbis map is of great value to thoie 6,218 tens. . . .. •
'
a.vaiLible' for - ehomesteading, lands' contemplating . taking up land in- . 'POP' and Paine:- ExPaits;
alienated but unoccupied and . which Manitoba, and, in cohjunction with the -During the same month Canada sup
are for ,sale, and landehomesteaded' published listsof untiecupled lands, plied 267454' tots of ground „eroodputp,
but on which patents are not yet ie- and a new pamphlet shortly .to be is- 13,340 tend of sulphate pulp, 20,508 •
sued, there have been added the len- 'sued on "Farm. Loans,." enablethe tons of sulehite pulp and 44,835 cords;
thin of Indian,: reserves, • forest re- prospective Settler or those content- of pulpWood .
.eetves, timber -berths, grazing leases, plating •extereling their land land holdings . this paper'and•ptilpwood all Comes. . , . .
national parks, land. districts and land ,to secureuseful infermation regard- from the natural forests of Canada,. •
agencies, l'ailwaylines, topographical •ing land eettlement Copies 'of he forests tehiele are the growth of ages:
. features, new surveys and deseriptiee reeek.....,eleee of ille two pamphlets re-. How long they can maintain the sup- "
'metes Of the eliaractor„of ;the .country' ferred to7ineY-be-bad-Ort applicatiern ply is .upkiiiiwii-;*'* the *4ainand7s---Iii:
-beyond 'the surveyed areas. This Map to the Natural Resources Intellkence creasing, end mills have to bring the •
also shows the trend ..of settlement,: Branch of the 'Department of the In- pulpwood greater ..distanoes .and at e'n- •
which is an important feature in tile ,terior. •:' ' :- ' .. .. hanced cost ; The larger Mitle,„ for . • - :.-- --- --------e-------e-eoeeeee -. ---e---e.-- tanately, have.realized that the safety ;
The University s -Public., • . • ..Everest Again. • -
, : of. their investments in manefacturin-g.
. . . .
, Service: -
_
. • 'the „plant depends upon the „inaintenenee •
.. •...
• The attack onent trete t in
. •Ilired:a3ras, the t,' of • the • trth, is :,of An adequate ealpwood. supple, ewe..
are replanting U.:Octet:Over areas and
The last iwe for this academic about :to be resurnee. 'It iS a mistake.
more intensivelY protetting,their
yeir of `The. Varsity," the -under-
to call the atteriint of .1921.•a failure,l'ixte. ming timbee, froth...fire: ... •
graduate newspaper of theuhlesi the term
, University is • qualified carefully. .. • .• ---7--':'"-"'''-• '' . •
of Toronto, don.tains a list of the out Though „the highest point 'reached•waa; ,
about 23.,006 .feet, the •recennaissancel • .- Start Anew.
has been accomplished whia nine. pr.: I . .Life Id n series iif 'chertZes ' to begin
Cede the •eventeal triurnph. • ; '4' !"afreeh. 'We •accept erre' •-e iefusei Per '
, When..t, he Party -, .w.erft :into Nepal :, I haps we are 'discouraged overa'breleen-=
*-fi.fid* Tibet a year ago the' northern"; resolve. But_A. des mot...r.equire a
approaches Aq'the'eateintairi were un -I eesolutiOn to. la3r hold .efielife again. • •
knOrn to Whiteenee;,:- Novl' they are'We may reneey, - the tineiggle even
..alrlibat as. an open hook; The picked! without •formulatIng.,,n.determin"ation7,
inen of the present expeslitien 'knonr against the evil wheee h:!:1.bn us •is; soe
every .eleinent of the":probleni. The Yi strong or the discour.i.gc•iient that u'ri-: .
know . what to '.expect. They knots,- ! nerves:. -.The •Impeet are in, is' never .
-whit 'errors:tocid• * , - . t. -•t 't-r'PrOmise t -D ourselve's thar: Iv: will .
side activities of the. previncial- uni-
eersity. .Frorn *this .eepert it appeats.
that Ontario's' uniyersitY ie doing• a
large aneount of Special work _for the.
general -public arid...without reinuriera-i:
"tion-opanty-kind--- Though admittedly
handicapped ..by lack of fund's, the
University of .Torerito seems to be
making. a successful effort -'.0 serve
its constituency in in- adequate way,
The 'list referred' tie includes a 'large
number , 'of ..interesting lectures t.hat
--.--
wereOpen, to the pubtic 'free Of all . From 23,000 feet. upward the firstdo as we should, whet matters. is' the ee...
cost,• in• this list also are eeVeraL MI- .:tc., oreieetheablifty'ofethe-huinatiiitti'-trietual-perfOrinaiice-- A iid- 'We - may
portant conferences to•which the pub -
chine.. to carry on, in an of extreme ! proceed to that psrf-orm an; e.- w I th *no
110 were invited eend' also -a ntertibee _of rarity-lalowifit 'filte;a'-'-khlre-idd-g6,!with-qTriatfie'dtrel-f anY-11117:1: • -' , ' .•
ahort courses for which only a nom, many steps to be cat and much iS1'mn- I
It is easy to let oureclyesdrif t into
nal' fee was charged._ ,•„Frolo the re- 2;We effort -required in reek- aed lee ;', a state en diiiiirited-that ' we do net
e ..
po On University Extension it also.
work. The Duke of Abruzzi reached care ete-hat becontea of as. 'At Epch a .
appear-Z-11*A the same serviee is being
24;600 feet eitewhere in the giant1 meinent a•%verd from another or a e _
rendered' in the'rural districts and that -ranee. .Tlie.:heigliteof.theletentneiteeover th-ought ' .eowei!d-erin Weer .-may make -
the r people or Diffirio, in einuffiTiii.
20,000 feet, has been, far exceeded by all the differenceeeWe most: be faith-'..
'well as in city) • are auxious to take ,the -aliplane-andy-hy_titeLbalioen.._ But . fuli. hee--aVse , . seiiie 6/1-e--e7;z7ti.-y-tikangY-7:' ' - •
-aaVaiitif.a7-LarLiFe:.--i*Q-eiTh-faliiii: .:
-trfeTaltitude redercle above 24,600 feet elsewhere, etxpects it. Wa Must rise
o-wn provincial univeneity. = At'a time
hAve been made by.thc mechaninal de -1 to the level of that trust in is If. .
when publicinterest he education vice that saves bodily effort 'and eer-.1 would not mean so mach -to.disappoint :
, shows signs of such a marked revival,
ries oxygen, apparatus, so that the i. ourselves, but -we tannot ask a friend •.
it is gratifying to know that the Uni-
'climber is relieved of. all:problems .02' t to take le.s- than the bet we have to
varsity: of ;Toronto t is satisfaetorily
axes an ropes, , an perhaps recalei- I give. We cannet aleveys be in the '
meeting this quickened interest '.
---':---- - , ., teantenatiYeehelpetaj_whoetak.e_teetheirtaight -of -thosethat-we-woUld-satisfy:
...........-....,-..,...-
up, supplies to be transported and the same ...And_the-duty. never to
. heels when there' are tents to be..put I. Yet the duty, present or • absent, is
rmany.Seeking Revenge.. mmis to be cooked. The Rental ascent gev_e...upe,nevereafter eve-eVereeflung, e • -:-.-- . '•
r..._ .._ - - -.--- -----
, - ; ------ 's • . • . ,of -the 'high ' ructuptalris,-if no lanclitig- to remain- prostrate in-theanire,
-•;','"L'ActionNationaler_publishes a let, 45 attempted—le •obviously a -very- dif- .• .. It is not the low' 'whiSper' 'Of -an In-;
ter from Mayence in which'its cdere
si
. P-• ferent bunesS from the, pedeestrianeepersOnal"-ideal for eehitevew‘e are --like-=-!-:--!-•
pendent:says: . . • aseent; and the reasen for public in-' liezt te•rise and go 011 tiret ,and
•'''.All the.German will id strait*-
te,-;. ' 'Wrest in the conquest "of ,the earth's the •surest •ineentive is the ewieli of '
Ward the meet rapid preparation for loftiest 'peak is that itniesos one Wore one perSon that We shall keep en try
the wan of revenge. It is Sufficient•to 'Victory of 'thee indernitable .apirit. over 4ng. • The enly real inisfoetune in life " •
observe seriously and ,attentiVele the the, obstacles nature' imposes for our is to have none who cares iyhat we
industry of the Reich. ' :' ' : • human -mils to surrneunt.'
•"In seven month's cif this year thir- • ,,...,.....e—eo.•
teen factories .of Westphalia, West. • A fleck a iwan s thatbelong te,ilie
Prussia andr Bevarfahave proditced biehop's palace' In. WellS, Sernereet,
re'
2,748 agricuKural tractors of the small England, use the ancient Meat ae their:
German type of 1918. These tractors, _eeeemer,e eve? ee.cie ,ane tbkp44_
Which arte toO :heavy for' agricultural ace window's hangs a- repe that reaches
purposes, are intended for war, for in
twenty mineetes_theyeeareole_ era
formed inteetank.s. .Proteeting plates -
and screens are constructed and are
Always in proximity to the place where
the pacific 'traeto? drawa the agri-
cUltural machine.",
GLAR- FELLERS—
e • ,
- pup, srAomek,Niogi4.
•&to&cu‘t:14-1'
-.17-11:01ZeLlrxe4aa4claksPee-
FiERCE.1
'iltase.Q0e.strpNI•
• ' HArtk. i4(45vii.E-
\_.:0 5H
7-1-‘1=Cf:5 A
72-)U6H oNe.
eci4MIZttsa Tr-HERE's
•
A STICKEt2. fOR..
It •
•
, ; •
, •
• tt
*
y Gene Byrnes
•
Pi* k-kiNRgt A5.1•16/4E
6 !AA\ t?,%.1 s: 1De.*.RT
WASTh.ek.--Dt5E2T-t.s
5PeNce 'WHERE.
01-144tted6li-
Ju51" kelsoz.,
*44) od.t*v4E.0.11AFNT!
...
•
make a nnrspiveg. The true friend
would help •us, not with e gift cf
things, that - anybody 'can .,give, but
With the stimulus of that personal •
inspiration which none else supplies.
-It _iseeesy,te, sayethat .we 'have
vote on thc.. question of our own en -
to the water and that is attached to trance into the wefid.' Here we are,
andr-whenefer and musriernain, and we ar761ioured to
the swan e are hungry they tug at the Make the best orit We must carrr
pe until they sueceed in T inging the the load, and our consent ict unasked•
bell and seine one throws deWn food if we drop,„the burden,'Imman 4ocie1(.°'
to them.' A -bishop's daughter -taught finds its Own way,"in OW1-1"tinie,'
i;tinislt us, no matter what peitalt3r •
inexorable Nature
is in the refusa). to do our part, to ac-
cept. responsibility, to stick to the
usiness in hand; liciwever ineenven,
ient and uncoinfortable. There is 110
time to spend, no energy to waste,
in grief overjailures and demerits'
we-must=stortr-scoliiing ouryelves 01•
bewailing e'er faults; the. Ugh the Airy
is clerk ate,the scent is bleak, -Veen-111Ft: _ „.
• t)-ieni the trick.' •
.;
I Kt,i0W
'THAT ot-tE!
• M1/4( POP& '
HEAD
!AA
rfte •
111
4..
st4
&'titeerre
oreesZ
7
"S
To on.
In Teems' He Understood. .
An o!cl sea Ouptain was repiuving .
his' ding:)itt forbeing out late in.an
automobile will). that "lubber," as he
called her beau.
., •
--"4":111t7--fatIrerr. -we• %were- leeralturd,'--
she eXpliiiiied. "You re. the 'w1:1•41
died down in ono of the tiros and' we
had to wait unfij It epreee: up again."
•Bxerylied.y onglit to at nt lea9t
twelve qearts of caneeel tomatees
the winter, eay dietitians. Tito
oro cr