HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-08-24, Page 7•••-•••••••••'
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•••J
•.reatLPpportt.t
moiSoomeitossalmo
- WIRELESS OPERATORS
In eider to meet. it 11000-14PrOld demand the Marconi Cempany Imo
decidea to open a
• . :SCHOOL OF ,INSTRUCTION ,
at Ito Head Office, 137 MeCiiii Street, Montreal. under tut inuteelate and
euthoritative control. the nest, of its Itind le Canaan,. Unrivallea. oppor.
tunitico fin- travel are offeree to young men with torilsition and extern"
•who deetre ta adont •Wirelees Operating ext a profeetsion.
vAn experientred Inotructor is in charge a the School and a Standard
. ;Marconi Ship tiet lo III uoe for practieal instruction.' DO.Y aria evening
clat3nets. Enrol immediately or the Van ileselen, Write for •PreePePtus•
TilARGOill WIRELESS TELFGFAIII GO OF CANADA
MONTREAL.
17777-77,777*P*;#77'777 'PlfgF77771;49
CANADA'S APLE
SUGAR INDUSTRY
PRINCIPALLY LOCATED IN Tim
, PitoyiNcE p.r. QUEBEC: '
• 55,090: nakeis or Sugar .and Syrup in
theDominion; Holding 1,000
.Sqwere••1$111100. ,
The pOssfirle, Money , value to. Can-
.
via 'of -the, maple industry is .far
greater than ..is • generally sypphsed.
. There are af•ift•esent zip less than:
000 makers of maple sugar and'syrup
[Ingle Dominion. . AllOwing -a ten-
.
acre hush to each farmer -would mean
•Chat .550,000 ,acres„ or ., 'about: .1,000
square miles,. are being...reserved . 'in
•: 'their natural wooded state, a rriost im-
portant matter for the conservation of.
:ou.r ' springs and rivulets.this
largearea, ne less than twe-thirds is
'situated in the, province of Quebec..
There are a few sugar bushes- in On-
tario anda:negligible number in the
. Maritime Provinces. • For Some inex-
plicable reason it has never been real,'
. . ieed- that -we -have-in. Canada -millions
• 'of Flares of'n-iaple bush running. ftom
• the mirth of Lake Superior, to .the
• 'shores. of New Brunswick and Neva
Scotia, all standing.in their primeval
condition, waiting only to be tapped to
yieldto the world , its remarkable
• -wealth: When it is remembered that
• It is Only in the border states Of New
.Hampeliire„Vermont and Maine that
. the sugar maple grows within the
Unted States, and that .with this ex-
ception we, in Canada possess the
whole world's , supply, the great -
portance of the industry will- be rea,I4
• .1zed," •
. Two2Millions Worth." •
• It is -eatiMated, :Says the Montreal
Journal of, Cernmerce,, that. in 1915
.Carrada produced. two ni11ion ' dollars
'worth of .nia.p10 Syrup and Sugar. In
. 1911• -the output in the Province' .of
••• Qhehec. Was' Valued" at .$1,680,000, ....a
_sum_ .144 per - Cent • • greeter 4hathe
Produttion ,.of our small . fruits.; • con-
siderably greater in value than :the
.--.•sheep ahnost eqa1 tii• the sale
of ottr Poultry', exceeding that of our
*hole output of cream, and ‘.six times
• the: Money 'obtained': framhoney and'
wax. These comparisons ',serve' to
'.-sliOW.7tha:re1ative• impartance of out
Maple ,'industry, - the - Possibilities ofj
Which are too great to estimate; if,
theimmense .woods Of Ontario and the.
Lower F,'iovinces were cultivated as
-• they should be. • •. ' '
•. peculiarity of :the ..Situation is
that there ia practicallY n� • demand
• otitaide. of 'North America' fey this
• •• ..COniniodity, and for - no. 'other reason
than that no effort has ',been :made to
make it.known•to the countries• ' be-
• . yend the se'as., Needless to Say; dice
the exquisite flavor has been -diseov-
•-ered. by the millions abroad thete;will
•...be no lack.of demand for'tfils essen-
.. 'Hay. Canadian Product. • "
•-1U.• S. Takes'All Export:.
• 1 • 11•31t7.14 711r.3
•
duction we could not possibly sUPPI
the demand of 100,000,000 people.
• On April 15, 1915, affer our las
yield of sugar had been gathered in
anACt was passed ,at Ottawa t
entnend the' Adulteration. Act. This i
a 'simple atateMent and gives but lit
tie idea of the struggle and centre
Versy that has been ,going �n Lo
years before' it was possible tozer
suede .parIiament to prated the in
iluStry against fraudulent • nianufae
turers, Who never went near a nuiPI
• bush, have been putting up a. mixtur
of cane, sugar' and' water , fiavore
either with a small percentage o
maple syrup or with an essence call
"BilaPleirre." • These • syrups an
sugars were labelled with such names
•as' "1140P10 .flavor syrup," "Maid
compound," etc., while many were no
labelled it all. • From ihe followin
table will be seen the extent to which
thin systematic. adulteration has •in
jured the maple. industry, more espe,
daily since 1890.
Production a Suga
Years. •
1850-60 ,• 135,000,000
1860-70 . 175,000,000
18,70-80 . ... . . . : 190,000,000
,1880-90 225,000,000
1800-1900 • , 212,000,000
1900-10 196,000,000
•Adulteraiiim• Stopped.
0.
e•
g
In 1900 the first steps were taken
in Protest. In that year, 2,000 sugar
makers signed a petition which they
presented to the Hon. Sydney Fisher,
then Minister of Agriculture. The
difficulty at that time was the impos-
sibility of obtaining chemical . _tests
whereby cane and beet sugar &mid
be detected in the maple product: In
1904 the Agricultural Department of
the State of Vermont discovered that
by Using subacetate of lead, they
could determine if Maple sugar or
syrup were adulterated. This was Of
Material assiatance 'to our Inland Re-
venue Department, and in Feb., .1915,
a bulletin was. issued giving the re-
sults or. &mica' teats on a -number
of syrups and sugars. . It was found
that :76 per cent. of this collection
was adulterated and only 24 per ,cent.
pure. • The publication evidently had -
a beneficial effect for in May of the
same y-egatat-second test was 1/rade'
which showed a decided -improvement,
nonly 34 per cent. tieing adulterated.
From that time the Department has
issued annual bulletins, but, finding it
impossible to' stop adulteration, the
act already referred to .was, placed
upon the statute books. A Most gra-
tifying result is ahoWn• in Bulletin
325, just recently published' although
'dated Qttober, .1915, according to
which only 15 per cent. of the sam-
ples were found inipure. On looking
over; these pamphlets 'from year tol
year the names !)i• the same offenders'
occur again' and. again. Evidently
the policy hasbeen to pay the an- ,
nual fine and: proceed • as, 'before'. I.
Prior to April, 1915, the fine Was
merely . nominal, :but under the new'•
regulations it is to be hoped that .an
end wj11.•be put. to the fraud. "
The Word "Maple."
The amendment of the Aduiteratipn
Act prehibitb the' Manufacture and
sale o adulterated maple syrup or
export market is in the U ;
United States
During the five years from 1908-1912,
- 99 ,per cent. of our exported maple
Sugar went 'to the Republic and: 50
• 'Per eent'ef the syrup. During:. these
- five' yeare we exported altogether 8,-
685,000 lbs, of sugar and 20,000 gal,
• lone of maple syrup, a mere bagatelle
In cOmparison'•witli our capabilities.
In May of this year -the Ud-
nite.Btateik
will remove their custotnn duties ti
both Our., maple products, 'thereby
opening •ini to -iis a market that With-
-eut exaggeration may be ternied nn -
limited, for at the present rate cif pro-'
10•11•101.111111O17114111i1.11;110 ••••
Many are not aware ,of
the ill effects of tea or cof-
fee drinking until a -bilious
attael, frequent headset -les,
--nervousness, or some other
ailment starts them think-
ing.
Ten days off both tea and
coffee and on -
•n•
POST
"Maple" to pure maple sugar or
sprup, imposing a. fine of from 150
to $506 and costs for wilful. adidtera,
Hen; And from $50 to $200 and coats
for the sale of the•adulterated article.
. While the fight has apparently been
wen, it is .felt that only. by eternal
will it be possible to pro,
•teef',the: hanest Maker. Those Who
have been instrumental in bringing
about these important . reforms are
naturally Much encouraged 'and feel
that the maPie industry ' Stands on
the thr,eshold �f a great development,
with the unlimited markets- cif Great
Britain and the ,United. States tying
before -Lite -Canadian_ Porestrat Jour-
nal. . • . .
• wHy is .THE: suN HOT
Jt .is Heated Like a Piece of 'White
, Hot Iron. •, • • •
If we ebiald:beild up n
solid colum
orice Irene' the earth to the sun,' two,
miles and a. half in 'diameter, spanning
the intervening distance of 93,006,000
• miles, ,and If the sun Ahould concen-
trate his .entire Power ,upon It, St
wonid •diselise its A single‘second, ac-
cording to a calculation 'made by Prof.
.
• Te produce thie enermoug amOunt of
heat wouldrequire• the 'hontlyhtittilag
of a, layer 'of. anthraelte coal more,
'than hineteen Teetthicit over the -en-
tre sutface of tile -sun. If --dr
were .coinposed of stitid coal and' we. •
this
mit.' heat froni the binning of
that 'coal the ecu, wetild 'burn out ' A
in
• --,-the pure food -drink ---will
show, anyone, by the better
health that follows, how tea
or coffee -has been treating
them. • • - • •
"There's a ,Reason:"
• for -•
POSTUM
Sold' by Groeers;
oanwaian Po0time,,6erea1 go... tta.i
. • .WInelsoi.. Otit,•
'THE. GLEN
AWAY TO, THE'VITAR
BRAVE LASSIES AWAIT FOR LQY.
• 8STQ RETURN,
Maimed. and Minded •Relies• okoatile.
fleide Fortune WelcoMed litome
• . With Promo:, •
There is a kindly Wind blowina-from
over the loch, writes. n ,gorreepondent
of the London limes. It conics steal-
mg.down trent the slopes, of Ben POO-
ich, ruffles the Still water in. patches.
and creeps tbredgh the castle policies,
. the great oaks something • that
keeps them whispering all the imorn
The little town .s.emna sleeping. The
• plash ef the brown. waters . over the
'Welt beneath the castle bridge fills
the ears. A heron. :stands. -motionleAS
in, the. shallow Water, surfeited with
,
the fall meal he has juSt finished.
'Then from the direction �f the. town
.,th.erq. conies th.e sound of a dreM. If
we draw nearer we will set why. it, IS
that the loch -side is, 'deserted. In the
the eirrch square sen0 200 kilted: lads
are saying. -a farewell .t� their sister%
and methers and :other. people's sister§
and mothers., for they •ate Marching
to the' .warS, as their 'forefathers, haye
done. before „them -from time imme-
morial., •
Thislittle hamlet has sent men to
,every 'war thitt, Britain has engaged
in, and no matterhow far back ,you
go, every eafall,, 'siege, leaguer,' eve*
brawl. between nations has seen Mtie
Callein MOr's men ,well inthe fore-
front of, the 'battle. And so it. is that
these mezi have left the loch -side and
the bra, have left the fis.hing • boat
on the beach and the sheep without #
shepherd: •
•
A Chorus of. Farewells. •
.. The last good-byes are being said,
and e girl with eyes 'as blue, asthe wa-
ters oftheIoch on a sumn,!er's day
calls; to her brother; a tallnpmer. "Bee
and no forget , to pipe to they Ger-
mans," she says, "and Jook after
Sandy forme. I'm feared he'll be led
away by ton French lassies." A cor.-;
• poral.answers her, "I'll look after mY-
ser fine," and he kisses the girl and
rejoins .his ranks. •
• The officer in charge of the eom
pany gives a warning, and the n
hoist their web Slings over their
shoulders: The. pipers form .up in
front of the column and .as they move
off they toss the drone and the stocs
of the pipes -en to the hollow of their
shoulders. \ There is a chorus' of fare --
Wells breken into by the wheeze of the
filling •bags and the buzz' of the great
drones. The drum beats on the set-
ting down of each left 'foot, and away.
theyIgo with ea:ps•flattering in the
breeie, sporrans arsWing to the step.
The drum rolls and the een,iti waken-
ed as it has peen' Marty' 'times 1 in the
vast with: the. lilt of One of the finest
matches that ever burst from the
chanter. "Bane Ionaraera" it is, bet-
ter known' to you as. 'The Campbells
Are 'Coming." Round the town front r
end, past the old irm and the great
stone -arched gates to the castle walls,
where the pipers change their tune to
the salute, "Failte 'M'harcuiti." By s
the burying ground they step. out to
the march once more, and Until theY m
it Wan tlork wheu they twitt r through •
• to the.front, and, whotr•I caw hat.11.. 1
was dark, too, icastwaYa, it was fo
ifrie "Oh, Sandy, Sandy,? cries the
•girl, and Sindy knows that the splash
of wet on his hand is not ° from the
ran t1ni4been threatening for the
last hour. .Be these three go up the
little street to the cottage where, a
• very old lady inc.,,o,:ts theta. "Come
• On the hoose,,, and we'll just have
prayers,'" is all she says when she
has stepped from the one-armed cm.
brace. of her son. Andthe four of
them, kneel and offer. thanks. .
Put the scene baek 100 years to the
• 'MD," or back further still, and there
is nothing new in ft. Think it out for
yourself, 'and ask' what it is • that
bringe thse nien of the heather and
the glen tb fie& for England. They
have been treated as outlaws, hunted
and slain. Their dress and their nrut-
sic was forlsidden them, their very
. ,language, was proscribed s,o that* it
was a crune to Speak of it. And yet
—and yet the music of the piob-mohr
echoes ovek the fields of Flanders and
the. deserts of Egypt, through the
ruined colonnades of Grecian temples,
and is even heard in the AfHean jnn-
gle.
t Are' Ifei3
r
. toaredneog? ,Tho best
PrePareeingssfor man or
Woman s» the prep.aredness
that cOlte$ AV/31'flvn
hannekny with Ia. . Sum..
mer cut,Out the heavy fOoda
thattax bodily strength. and
vigor, gat Shredded Wheat
Discuiti, the fooa. 'that eon -
tains alFthe body;building
material in. the Whole wheat
grain rn a digestibleform, For
breakfast or 'luncheon with
FAMOUS POET HAS Ehits„§"TED,
herxies or other fruits. 0
...,-1111$1r4Flirrr$
Serrie FPMetire,grfora in Enrly English,
Prints.
Tiaa,t.913reeches" Bible°. "Then. the
• eies or them both were 'Opened, and
• they knew that they were naked, ,and
they, sewed lIgge leaves tegetber and
made themSeives Breeches." (Gen, •3:
7): Printed ta 1560.
Trrugs13P4.. that thou.
ehainod6 afraid
r any
• Buggcs by nIghte; nor for the narrow
that ilyeih by day" (Pealto. 01 5),
Printed in 1564.
Tbe "Treaele" Bible. "Is there ;not
treacle at GlIead ? Is there. no PhYsi-
clan there 7.?" (Ter.', 8.: 22); rrlatptl
in 1568
5cr
Cod OS.V P.74
COMe
WORN
KVEI*i
i7-411
4etC"11
The "Rosin" Bible. "is there no
rosin in Gil ad ? I tl /a i
1elan there T. ger. 1: .22). Printed in
1609, •
a lore no p ye
The 'IPla.Ce-makers" flible. "Blessed
, are the plaee-reaters ; for they filial
be called the children of GO." (Matt
t"e: .1.i-e's•,-..el •••! '7,-> 5 : 9). Printed 1561-2., '
4:S•40.Waes- \', The "Vinegar" Bible. , "The Parable
-,.....n.a., , ,,,, or the Vinegar," insteed of "The Par,
V 4_,
.1, ..„ able of the Vineyard," appears in the
cbapter-heading to Luke 20, itpaa 0.2t -
ford edition' ef the Authorized Vereiate
which was published in 1717. - •
• The "Vaulted" Bible. This extra-
- Made 41 Canada ordinary name has been given to an
edition of the,Authcrized Bible, priate
. . ed 111 London by Robert Ratter and
HITTING TIIE -TRAIL. • • - martin 'Lucas in 1631. The 'negetive
was left out of the Seventh Command-
-- -
Rarest of Sport in :the Rockies or 1 Mingenitn;165a9n,dsayWoltilhiaatmolilgbutronteieWzreiati-
•
of Dr. Usher, the prieter was 'Ailed
ber and across. country toward a dis- it shall come to pais that the fishes
: ., Selkirlts. : •
I
' . 2,000la or 3,0001. '
Canada is a land of trails. .
Trails' 'over ' Mountains and hills,.
hath "ears to ear, let him heart"
The "Ears-ToJEar" Bible: "Who
by the banla of rivers beyond inin2-- The
across' prairies and through forests,
"Standing -Fishes" .Bibie. "And
'43): Printed In 1810.
will stand upon t," etc. (Ezek. .47 .
10). 'Printed 1n.4,1806.
The "Discharge" Bible. ' "1 discharge
Printed in 1806.
thee . before God." el 'rim. 5 s 21):
,
most alluring, Of the'm all, and hitting • .
itersailosr is etuter krsa,rsallt the
sportinfirnomR ohlie
rte'bRekah arose, and her camels."
ebeltah's,Camels" Bible, ."Aud
. Kan,anaskasis Pass err th est to the (Gen. 24: 24.:,:wi6f1e).H. a• PterpteEdibilne. 19,3i.t. any,
i'Yale gateway on the west. •
man come to and, and hate not his
trails have been mode in the Cana* „.e. .
Hundreds of Miles of excellent :t
(Luke 14 : 26): Printed in /810.
father,— ,yea, and his own wife also."
•ian mountain ranges by the Caned- "To -Remain" Bible. "Persecated
.FAtLY
1 soup kor AUL cflept.137.C2 mra.ALerts
Ifed Noyes,jotosEntfigells.:Aht.inVeArse Welter,
•Not content to ging in, many noble
poems . of the. glories xkitain'i3
•
uttglit, Mr. Alfred Noyes, the Englinh
.poet,„ bas returned to the Old Country
frprn the United States in ;ptor to
take Up military duties: In doing this
he, sacrifices a -distinguished, position,
for only two menthe ago he I.)raa
pointed profeasor Ebglish. 'literature
it Yale.
Mr. 'No , h
States in February„ 1914,.when he•aec-
cented' a professorship at' Phieceton
UniversitY, is 36 years of age: Not
long ago he confelesed that,. unlike the
rnajoritY of , poets, he was able to live
on the proceeds ,of his reuse,. On which
Americans promptly dubbed , him the
Prosperous Poet.
. ;For sonie time; however, before he
left -the thrited-Statesa-•Mralloyes-hall
been working strenuously in • the
cease of the allies. He has read his
poems and given readings in more'
than.•200,..Amerlean cities and sixty or
seventy colleges and eduoatiouel.
•stitutions, and thereby raised thou-
sands of dollars ler war funds.
"The impression I have," he says,
"about the American point of Vieve, is
that the *hole 'nation is :anxious to
do 'whatever it can to help the cause
of the allies?' . 'Noyes
however, theGerman influence 'in the
educational inatitutione of the United
States. "A very large proportion or
the staffs of the colleges and universi-
ties," he says, "hae. received .all •
educational training, Of, .irt any rate,
its, pest -graduate training, in •Ger- I
rattily." • • .
•••I
• ''These Universities;" nayt.s • • Mr. •
Noyes,. "are turning out 'thoesarids.lor'
.students every year on a certain -use
terre•and the great majority. af cases.
emanate:1/2 ftene Germany, which does
everything 'she:can to g,aptute ahd en-
curage.Atherican students: -Thi-1s
where we fail, for, •owing' to the re. •
gulationd 'existing • at our universities,
Ainerican studente are diacourmed •
from coming ,over bere..". •
In appearance Mr, Noyes bears no
esemblapce to the . traditional, \poet.
He inight be:Mistaken for a bellege-
th/ete, and, as an. Arner19an oba•brver.
as •stiid„ "he 'gives theAtapreesion, of
eing man -aa keenly aware of ,-,tr.re
idewalk as of the stars." • •
.M.r. Noyes, Who :is a Staffordshire
an Ji,, birth • " d • 19
tent sky liae. made' Fq!ci
• men; and by nature. •
• But the mountain trails are the
•ian Pacifie Railway -and -the -National Ira that -was born -after the -spirit to
Parks department of the' Canadian remain, even. Solt is now," • (Gal. 4 :
Gevernmeat. Most of them .are made
a9was,)perpetuated This togrianphthicealfiresrtro8rv,oNVBIlibcihe
for pony use, and mounted on one of
•• printel. for the Bible•Society, takes its
these sure-foote Iit e eas •lee o . e • '
chief importance fnom the curious
.west, you can be an expltirer of the i
c rcumstances under which it arose A
wilds and 'revel in the, experience. 12mo Bible was beingprinted• at Cam -
Every mile of the devious .Way is a bridge in 1805, and the proof-reader
way of varying charm, every turn of being in doubt as to whether or: net he
::i • . should remove a commaapplied to
th t *1 1
e rex revea s new won ers.
his superior, and the reply, penciled -- • • •
Many trail trips are now made in.
.. Tee Hard.nearted
• • "Do yeti think that getting' Married.
ylUig,wetoungnrri'tedr'aiasendrnyi
Wo"nirerfrc4nitg
salary on that account";'! .
Is going; to make you worth more to
:this firm?" . •
"FT don't know, sir, but Pm" sure I -
hali need more money," .
reraembe,r if Wet ^
• give, more rrieriey • well need More
frem yon." •
wor , ,
:
Litnard's Liniment fi.umberniaa'a rideddi
" • . Less.,Than isiothing.
."1 don't think I'deterye era this
examination," said the pupil,. in he
' took his geometry papers. •
• : "No, Ida not either, john, but that
I was the lowest I could give you,", said
the teacher. t,
Just Eye Comfort, At ,
Your Druggist's Sfle per Bottle. rtlurineE)e
Se1veinTube325c. Forilook of theEyermeask
• DrmistsorMartnel4.eiteteedyCo...Chlta..
•
. wornan ean•get more pleasure out
o a goadcry an aman gan act•
from a good laugh. -
,
•
dik ter Eanard'e and tate no ethos
•
•
(01
<4'1
orre Granulated Eyelids;
Eyes inflamed by expo- •
• sure to SIM. DUN anti Wind
eEyeRemedy.NoSmartings
•quickly relieved by Marine '
loops. There is the one from Glacier
station up the Co.ugar Valley te the
caves and habit by a loop route and
over a pass that brings to view some
Of the sublimes t scenery • in the Sel-
kirks. The literal up.s and dow.ns• of
this imimie scenic -route, a -s the tail=
ways wmild• say, add' to the interest,
now; in the bed bf the valley, closed in
on the margin, to remain, was trans-
ferred to the body of the text, and re-
leated in the Bible Society's 8vo edi-
tion of 18f-5-06, and also in' another
• 12m� edition of 1819. •
SUMMER COMPLAINTS, •
• The fellow Who waits for good luck
to come along and help him out it
apt to find that bad .luck is the only • •
thing travelling his way. .
• SEED rema.Woms
' -KILL LITTLE ONES. S NED FOTATOES, IRISH COB.
. At the first sign of illness &wing
by trees and huge plants"like the De- the ,holt weather give the little ones
vil's Club, ,now Climbing a thousand Baby's Own Tablets, or in a fevehours •
feet from. which superb views are had he may be beyond cure. These Tate
•
, biers. ' peleware, carman. Order -
• at .on.ce.. Sulniii limited. Write..for quo.. . • ,
tatiOns. H, W. Dawson. Brampton. "
1
of -the hingly-Peakg ince Sir Denalti„
The trail traveller will find another
region at infinita:varietY and 'atteme.
tiveness in the. series et. traila -radiat-.
ing from Field and leAding up the
Ypho Valley to the Yeho.Glaeler field
as its upper end:- - , •
Lake Louise` *ill also prOvide de-
ectable. trail:nettle, -especially that
54± are over\ the hemp -backed bridge the ter of the late Col. B. G. Daniels, of '
tune continues. It stops with a sad the United States • army,and, pnjoys
little gasp as the bags deflate and are as greata 'popularity in America as in
tuelted un,der each oxter with the stoc England; •
ri▪ bbons to the fore, •fluttering their
dark bine, yellow -striped tartan rih-
. • .
• The Ghost' of a MeIody.
-•
Suddenly a man in fir front ' four
breaks into swig. ,}lis clear voice
echoes back to the listening women by
the loci' ' •
1 a merry men sae brave;
Their hearts are o', steel, an' a -better
• keel . , •• .
• Ne!er owre.. the hack 0' a
. • , wave. . •
It's he when -the leek lies dead• in ita
•trough, ,
• When naething disturbs it ava,
But the rack and the ride 'o' the rest-
' ..less tide. • "-
An' the splaah o'" the grey sea -maw.
• tinder the shadow of the hill the
wind steals- the song and carries it
away and up the glen, but as the road
crosses a tongue that jutsinto the lake
it is still borne faintly down to the
listening .womtpl.
• :
THE LARGEST BUDDH.
One Hundred and Ninety Feet Long.
• • and Forty Feet High,- •
••The bronze Biiddha ofeIrdkohania is
commonly thought to be the largest
statt. e of that -god in theworld ; but
there is one in Burma that exceeds it
In at leaet -dee dimension 'and "given an
. • .--..--••=-11.••••-•••-r........
•
We dash 'through the drift and. sing
•• to the lift
0' the wave that heaves us on.
From the crags under the beason it
is repeated wistfully. "The waVes that
heaves ,us �n." The light goes and the
lamps are lit in the cottages along the
front. • The tall girl who t44,9 anxious
about Sandy is the last to leaye. •She
Shades her eyes with her hand and
looks again, listening the while, and
down the Winding Waters, "thetrough
the h " there h f
a melody.- But the wind is fickle and
it Stays but a mement The :girl turns
and, goes into a•cottgae near at hand.
'You'll no' be wintin' the light yet
awhile; mither," she SaYs-,,. and- the -old
woman agrees. • •,
The seasons have changed the leaves
n the glen ttg the yellow St. JOhn's.
w •t 'chit 'th I th t t
of the Lachlang".• There are no young "
nges e woo • or e ar aYi
les than. 6,000 years. Since the earth
"It •
'be binning; •Its _heat must be genera.f men left in the There are but
, comes 'So near to what the
Wnen the Engnsii were .building the
railway from•Rangeon to Mancralay..in
-,ancial prestige," he said .prinidly; "I
1881, : they searehed the vicinity of
Pegu for stone with• Which to make
the 'embanknient thregigh the great
swamps. in the avhble area there was
only. one elevation of any ilnporta.nce.;
the engineers thought': that this hill
might •provide the necessary material ;
so they dug into its bead, 'and were
surprised to- -find some artistie brick-,
work. On clearing away the earth
farther they found e enormous stone
statue that' represented iitiddha in a
reolining Position. The statue is abbut
one hundred. end: ninetY feet long, and,
including the -Wick base, r1 is more
than forty feet high. The Yollohama
Buddha is illty.efive feet high epd'on
ei
hundred and ten feet in ciretimfereeee
Although the Burmese Statue -is not so
artistic as the Japanese it is a wiine
derful piece Of work. • -. . -
Not, the least remarkable thing about
It is the way in which so huge a menu -
lets .will prevent; summer ,oLiarriplaints,
• if given.occasionallY to thew -ell child
and will promptly,cure these:troubles '
if they „come . on suddenlY. Baby'A
Own Tahlete,,shonla always be, kept'
in every home Where thereare young
,children. There it no other medieine
as .good and the mother hasthe guar-
antee of a government analyst that
they are absolutely 'safe. The Tab,
eading to Paradise Valley. and its lets Are sok:, by medicine : dealers or
circle of giant .seinmits, and Sentinel by mail at 25: cents a box from The
PasS, leading to the valley of the Ten Dr., Williains' Medicine . Co, Brock. -
Peaks, 'While in the ,RoCky Mountain ,Ont. • • •
• •
-Park and Banff'the routes are multi- ' -„ • . •
plying year by year. . : Conversational Disappointment .
Yes, trail hitting Is 'rare sport," 1 "I understand thetyour new servant
repeat, and no' country - in the World; is a disappointment"
affords, greatei_•• facilities _fot its_ene-,-..'"Tes;" replied • Mrs. Gaddingten-
joyment than. our •CiWn Canadian Prye. -` "The last family she worked
mountainsF. Y. •
for'doesn't seem to be at all interest-
A .Pertinent Query.
Thp'Doghe, Canadian NA -
tune was speaking a few words to a , Show at t
' A man who had made a -liege for- .
tional Exhibition has been run for 21
'.
class ayears, and is the seeopd largest on the -
t a business e. Of cdUrse C t• ent
• 14 A • s • • -
- • •
. isrvetePAPERS rooa.s.azia •
pRoosr7-5.-smAi.,igopilo NEWS AND JOB
towns.. file mo - at ie In '71,te(?•=:,
of all businesses. Full information on
_patiaTlyinl°Wn West WAZIoalidePlatselen'FOraTZ
1111/SCELLAIyE017iii
ANCER, TUMORS, • LUMPS. ETC., - •
teral:alexegtleout plAorwn:iltnWrlts
tie before too late. Dr; Bellman
• Co.. Lindted., CollingWood. Oat
Become; a •Ftesglate.reci Nurses •
• eed receive pay, while learning
• The Beth Israel' mosidtal of New
•: 'Vora city. Founded' 1890
Acondiesd by the New tYork State Education Dept.'
Oeirs a two -and -one -ball year.courie in training for
mums *all safeness thed.inainteinanne. Apra:oasts
Must have one year With school losIrnotion or Its
'eduaarional equivalent. Nor particulars address latb
Israel Bonito , de Jefferson St., New York. • .
tscAt.
• Anierlia's
.Pioneer
Deg Remedies
soolcox
DOG .DISEASE'
Flo*.to Feed
-galled free . to aby, addreas by •
the Author •
11. CLAY Gib-VERO., hie.'
118 West .31st Street, New •York
.••••••ro•••••"•••,•-e••••sre,te,•••••
• ."All'success e, all my finl
OWe te one thing alone—pluek. Just
take that for your motto ---'Pluck,.
7P.I'Pu
He made an • n impress'i.ve.PaUse here,'
but the effect was ruined by one -stu-
dent;" who naked iinpreeCively:
"Yea', sir; bat please tell us: how
And wheal to pluck?"
" Aattions to Qualify:
The, •recruit was being swain in,
Everything went- 64nm-tingly until
the :question 'was,asked "Have yo,n
6V6r. been in prigonT" • • • -
•• '"Ne; sir," was The reply. ,"I've •nev,
.er -been in jell; but don't mind. doing'
a. few days if- yob think it necensary."
' • ••
.Like many other successful institu-
tions, the Canadian National Exhibi,
tron was in' .flnancial .stkaits many
times early , in its career. On one
occasion one of the Directors -gaVehis
personal 'note for '810,000 before the
gates, c,ould be opened: :Now it. pays
an erinnal surplus of
Toronto.. '- •
. .
ment has disappeared absolutely front
Burmese history and legend. • The
news of the dis•coVery at 4nee bronght
.numB
berless uddhists "to the place'
who gilded and decorated' the gigantic
Image as a' work of devotion. The
soles of its huge feet were ornamented
ht treat cost wfth an elaborate glees
'mosaic, and each toe was mribellisltecl,
with' a separate decoration
• How it Happened; .
First Woman (Angri I y),-,Yotir
- -
Johnny -gave my Welhethe-measi
1:
Second Wemaree-No such thing!
Your Willie' came- over where tny
Johnny Was 'and took 'em.•
Is Millions of, .years Old the sun cannot
t cotne annually," led. in some nrere persistent Way,. old:men • and, Women,. and the sthray people want the
• ... Hon. James. Puff' brief -description ,pt
• 'rhe greaf physicist lieheholtz wan' youngstern .fretting that they: ,..irtignt
:I . ' . .. the Canadian Natio al EXhibiti -
keeps tire sun 'hot, .The sun ,is 'not blue-eyedgirl avaitS on the je.to fora
. .
. ... . . , . .
burning ; it fe' beated.to the gloWilig 'ret.1.0 14r d - ... Stopping your . adVertising when
steamship that is. ee. ee own
point, like- a place. of whits •hot • iron., ..she..feet, She -)cne.vt• s thi4'; , but . . she business-- iA dull, is like tearing °id a.
ftelmholtz found that if we suppose darn because the.,kater is low. '
. . ., ,•
t fit St to explain satisfactorily what too, be ellowed t0 go to the was. The :, , on.
• . •
:flatlet wait here. At last e: a • puff of
.smoke; heralds the • approach of • the
'little boat that sooe. afterward creeps
round the promontory. As it ties up'
lit the Jetty the girl acee- •
• , Two Hilted Figures, on the Deck.
SdAs tileni throughAria •,of tears
for one Man, ,her brether, has an
empty sleeve.- And •yet he is the
luckier pf the two, for. he helps • the
other• `man „to 'the' gangway, Putting
the sun to be eon'tractIng by.only250
feet a year we wouldreeetve eur
Sent amount of heel. . ••• .•
" In other words, heat isheing literal-
IY squeezed ont of the. min. • Professur
Newcomb eStithated,' that • When .the„
squeeling 'process has -continued . for
about...7,006,000 years. the 'stin wilt be
ene-half ite•nr6aeptat1ze,• • .
• „
In four yettirs, 1912-15, '3;597;00
people have Visited the Canadian Na- .his handl on the side • rails.. "Twa
florin' Exhibition, in all that.
time 'there has not been •an accident
getting tin prof? theears at the wain
entrance. where .1 .actifilly all the
traffic is handled., • •
%41'•
steps, 'Sandy," he warns him. but .the
blind. than is safe at last, anksofter
l•ienas. haVehelped him on to. the (luny.
.t.Vtlidna' sop, much oP the: French
la§Sies, Alition,'*says he braVely, ',for
•
Storage Batteries
-Generators
Magnetos
•Starters
fiend. them for •prompt •
• gopairo to
OANAIDIALTfi T 0 It A
11ATTIOUV • CO., •X•ItkitTED
' 117 Mince° St., Toronto.
• Valuate Averts,.
.16321Wierra.,
••••••••••
Pretty nearly every man rememberi•
that he was once a boy,. The trouble
is that so --few -of •ussecall the kind ot
lipfs-
•
idinard's Liniment ram* by Phyelelane.
,cm.•01.•••••••
A 'Talented. Father, ••
A' father had deeided thatbe must.
• administer a stern lecture to his
youthful son: • • ' -
Father -spoke jildicionsly,. but sev-
orelyf''he redounted the bey's 'rills-
deedS, 'and duly explained the .witys
• and 'Wherefores Of hjs sohnen rebuke,
his, wife She while .standing by; .duly
•hripreased '
Finally,s When tire father:teased. fo-r
breath 'anti incidentally to :hear the
euipties "-• acknoWledgehient of error*
the boy, his face beilming With adMir,-
ationl.t4rned to his Mother and said:
4"MOtlISI',"•isii't dad intereatine"
'•• A Rising Concern. •• •
• .".56 you'v,e ;our. money. in
a pew-airnhip-company,"/
"Vee, It our airship goes 'u, the •
stock -will go uri." •' , •• • •
,"Rut suppose it t!oesn't7'"
"Then ilia company' Will go up." '
tary Preparedness, but she can el--
ways look daggersht a man when
• she 'Wants to: ' •
•/ •
Neer Winardra Liniment ifi tile house
:
• Nothing- to His ---Credit.
"It's been ,ten years since rare had
my salary raised." • •
"You, ought to be ashamed of Yotr,
self." ". • : • ,1
to b h dWhy?" '
.
—"Te think that :in ten ears . you
• couldn't prove yourself tq'I be worth
more Money to your emplOyer.'•
• . .• . •
•
Miriard'a Liniment Co„ Limited
---. •
Gentlemen,:4 have liked , MIN,
ARD'S LINIMENT On My vessel and
in my family for years and for the
every -day ills and accidents of. life I
consider it tag rip equal, I would not
start on a, voyage Without it, if it
cost a dollar a bottle.
, CAPT.. F, R. DESJARDIN. •
Schr., StOrke, St. Andre, Kamouraskas
Earth Terentary
• • A woman may not believe - in mili-
•
-
Under -the Contiol, of the impart-
• meat of A.grintiltare of Ontario
• - ESTABLISHED 1862 .
; ,
•
Affiliated with the Univer-
sity of Toronto:
1 College sviir te.ot—W83 -on Zdondg#,
• the and of Oottiber• 3•916!, '
110 Undirersity Ave., Torento, Can,
• CALENDAR Dr. 4PPLICATiON '
E. g; &range,
••••• ;'•-• .
------
1 .A Gold Mine On
Xo.cur Farm
You can double your prate. by
storing up good green feed in a -•
BISSELL. SILO
“Sununer iced all Win.ter Lcinin
Scientifically built
to keep silage fresh.
'sweet and good to the
last. Built -of select-
ed timber treated with
Wood preservatiVes
that prevent' decay,
' The BISSELL SILO
has . strong, •rigid
walls, air -tight doors,
hoops of heavy steel.
Sold by dealers • or
"addreos us direct. Get
free , folder. Write
Te E. Bissell Co.. Ltd.
Dept. U
Elora, Ontario.
••••
4.
Poor,. But Honest.
• an---holress*-and_han___-
peer, ,but otherwise hotiest.
• •"How Mitch do you •loVe me, dear?"
She asked after the nianner of her
' "I love' 'you," ha replied in a tone
replete With candor, MfOr all you are
worth,"
Wheelock Engine, 150
18 x42,wlth double
main driving -belt 24 ins,
wideraand Dynamo 36 LW:.
belt Oaten. All in first
ciass coidition. 'Would be.
sold: togepier or separate;
iy ; also a l�t of sliaft10
t a very great bargain
!room Is. Tecluired 11014
ately4 . •
' IS, FrankWil8011 &1oni
73 Adelaide Strtet West;
.E1.). 4.
' 1 ' Toronto.
•
•
. • .
•