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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1921-4-7, Page 7The Sea FishCatch 1, of 1920: The total value ot the sea fish catcl in Canadian waters on both coasts in 1920 Was $26,153,844. British COM bia led the Provinces of the Dominion with nearly half the Dominlon value or $12,612,773. Nova Scotia, on the other side of the continent, took sec •ond place with $8,763,000. The otlaei provinces in order were New Bruns- wick, $2,528,314; Quebec, $1,513,43.3; and Prince Edward Island, $736,325. Salmon continues to maintain its place as Canada's premier fish, and in 1920 it accounted for the largest in- dividual revenue with $8,130,876, from `a, catch of 1,182,278 cwt. Cod secured the second place with a catch of 1,- 871,294 cwt., having a value of $5,053,- 269. The lobster catch of 376,855 cwt. was worth $4,249,480, taking the third place.a.mangtanadian flair, and not far behind it in value was. the haiibut, tvlio,se total of 245,364 cwt. had a value of $3,368,058, Another fish Which - reached over the million mark during the year was the herring, with a value of $2,012,638 coming from the catch of 2,146,986 cwts. Following in order of value come haddock, mackerel, smelts, sardines, pollock, hake and cuslt, and pilchards, well into the thousands of dollars in value, and• be- low this 'figure alewives, oysters and black cod, The principal fish of the .British , Columbia, catch is salmon, ,the pro- viiiice accounting for almost the en- tire Dominion toll with a value of $7,778,100. Nava Scotia's first, fish Is the cod, in which the province ac- counts for by far the greater palt of the 1)ominion's total. In New Bruns- wick the largest revenue accrues from s,oles with $345,380, smelts being a close second with $313,627. In Que- bec the premier honors go easily to , the lobster, which in 1920 accounted for a revenue of $370,585. The waters about Prince Edward Island also yield lobsters to a higher value than that of any other sea, product, and the year's value in the little province from this source ifas $497,248, I,, - 0 il BY DR. J i MIDDLETON ° Provincial Board of Health, Ontario , A . P Or. Middleton will be glad to answer questions 011 Public Health maI, • 0 tore through thie column. Address him at the Parliament 13145.. 0 Taranto ,- ' ,,, 1:314 11;i14. XS1,11:111, ULM" 111111 1311,11:11 '1111 'VA IS IOU 1215.1102 HEALTH LootA HON Miles of Cars ,Used to Ship- Ved According to the. chief grain inspec- tor at Winnipeg, -141an., enough weed seed to fill a freight train 48 miles long was shipped out of the three Prairie Provinces during the last three years. This at a time when the ..cost of production of crops was at its highest ,point; seed, implements and farm help were high; yet the farmers grew this weed seed, _harvested it, threshed it, at a cost proportionate to that of the highest quality of grain, afterwards, shipping ,and paying the freight on it to market, -where, owing to the presence of the weed seed, the rrade of the wheat was loWsered._ Fur - cars were being used to ship weed sppING miles of grain Planned. the inounts 'and I.- wild- ', . , tt s abiesata affillatio;v7iiit 'Bellevue and flower and fern corner. The "1.1orow,o liospital for Inciar- Allied ITo,s1.).itals, New Yorli City, ,Birds Are Forest policempn, offer,- a three Years'' Course of Truin- g f ILI f‘e";(1 tesa l'1.1.'04:f"is(j14011'137 iloul ath (a.) x'ef o id. ec::.1,ris oaf erieuglilj;iet'ltdi gefae)(13oi.;i:een;:91gtiri':11:tr,2fil'relliiiiiilheasiiidli'n,°ttPulst.tah0,1re.trbzi,4: lo 0 ' ' 1 , . , Canada: The forest services federal ad°P gm. le pupils receive uniforms "or the School, and provincial, are carrying. Out pro- a monthly allowance and, travelling teellive measures, and the federal de- feather infor nation - expenses to and from Now Yorit• .1.,nr ' Partment Of agl'iOulture has a staff Sueericstenclent. ftp...47 to tit° of ei ome gis a Is c. tgote all th.els energies to his wort. 111allY liCit Via 9k9k 9k1261`111* VS% tB. sta via yra .11;1 3 ears- methods- are bein itgjenj- gdevised, btn.1 (continued from last issue.) haetzi disappeared from the been the public will be most interested in hands and feet and in addition the one thing'that stands out: in those The temperature during the rash ' investigations nanielY that the rpatient on the day of leaving the los- o,.'- periodvaries from 100 deg. to 102' pital should be given an antiseptic servatl" 01- 1-)[r(1, cae of' or 103 deg. according to the „severity of the attack, and almost s'°°.n " through a- sterilizer before being al- sets, Ther"c' may some birds which th t 1 th papules begin to break, resulting in the so.called desquamation. After this stage the progress of the disease to- wards convalescence is uneventful, if particular care is taken to ward off ,the complications which sometimes arise in scarlet fever cases - and bring ' about serious results. The most dreaded of these complications are nephrites (inflammation, of the kick- -ney), and inflammation, or suppura- tion of the middle ear, the latter ac- companied by mach pain and causing a rise in temperature. Kidney trouble can be best avoided by keeping-,the patient in bed for at least two weeks after the rash has disappeared and reserving the diet strictly to fluids. Rheumatism sometimes intervenes in scarlet fever, usually' in the legs, and causes much pain. It requires care- ful treatment. During the second or third week of the disease, if conval- escence is proceeding normally, the patient usually develops a healthy ap- petite and complains about the insuf- .ficiency of the diet provided. It is at this stage that the doctor in charge has to be firm with the patient as a too early resumption of solid food is liable to bring on kidney trauble., Complications such as inflammation on_ the middle -ear are especially seri- ous on account of the possibility of deafness resulting, and must be given earnest attention by the physi- cian in charge. The throat congestion can be relieved by antiseptic gargles, • • , warm applications, etc., which the doctor will specify. ° It was formerly believed that infec- tion was spread by the loose particles of skin during desquamation,' but this theory ie no longer held, it having been definitely proved that it is from the., nose, threat or ear discharges •that others -become infected. • To allow'a patient therefore to leave the isolation hospital or place of quar- antine, it is first necessary to see that the tonsils 21-0 longer appear enlarged or inflamed and that any discharge from the nose, throat or ear's is com- pletely dried up. All the desquamation should also b th d 1 11 h.. th t reauaine the numbers of forest in - Pe a ore Tops 0 no lowed to rnix or i t", t•Witl o not eat fore,sq, insects but general- ly speaking it is. tiae that„ the more other people, whether children orbirde, tile fewer insects. ' Canaaian a:dui ts bOys and young men in the past have Although all discharges from nose' been too prone to go into the woods -throat or ear may have cleared up with a gun and shoot at everythiag when the patient leaYs e e th hospital, in sight without thinking of the injury even a slight dischargeofthiskinthey might cause. Canadian fares recurring t a day, or two. later may are thie pitic,es for healthful recre cause a "return' case, that is, a case tioa but let those Who go into the occurring as a result of coming' in ' id 0 - as a, ViE4THER seed there was an almost universal I' demand for cars -which could mit be - satisfied. Crean 'seed, -cultivation to kill the weeds, and' the cleaning of grain before shipment will overcome such waste. <,•-• Wisps of Wisdom. . Luck is a. good thing to trust In— If 'yea aren't 'hungry. ' Contentment Li better than riches .YOts have them both. .An 06.o. the only. thing that .can cheat 'a. Wonsan Mit of the.14st.word. Meet trials With mines and they , vanish: face. cares with a song and they flee. Do. not measure your enjoyment by the amount ot, money spent in pro- ducing it, A -man who allows hisneelf to be Carried away : with enhusiasm, often has to walk back, It is the 'height of 'tally to throw' up atteninting .because you have failed. Failures are wonderful- elements ,in developing character. What He' Said: , The new typist determined 'to Make a' good impression strIba her chief. She tureed. up half an hour Garry.. and be - 'gen tidying Up the ream. When that It -as done she: examined her type- writer, discovered it 'in a shocking condition, found a bottle and gave it a thorough oiling. While amout. it, she. . examined all the oher typeWriters in the office and oiled thesis, too.' There is nothing, :she thought, like making hers., -elf indispensable ' Her chief arrived.. He • looked around , hint with an aim- of satisfac- tion and crossed the man,tlepiece.. Then his smile ,changed to a frown. "Miss. he said, "have you seen cough .inixturel" The bee, in proportion to its size, is dirty -five times as strong as a horse. Scottish Customer (to dentist):— "Hoots, mon, five shalidn' for a wee bit teeth. No; no; the man over the road pulled oat two an' broke me jaw / for one -and saxpence." What- other language ever spoken -by man can compare in richness of opportunity with English? Take, for ea amp; 1,,heSe words; self-conceit, , self-assurance, self-sufficiency, self - complacency, self-will, self-confidence, self-esteem, self-reliance, self-respect, iA.11 of ,them express something of a man's menial attitude toward 1118 own abilitieS and aehlet-ehientS," yet with what' various and qelicate shades of meaning! As, they are here set down they form almost a progressive series from the neutral or mildly condemn- atory to the worthy and desirable. There are both racial psychology and tistory in that list, HARD ON BABY The Canadian spring weather—one day mild and ,bright; the next raw and blustery, 'is extremely -hard on the baby. Conditions are Such that the mother cannot take the little one out for the fresh air so much to be de- sired. He is confined to the house which is 80 Often over -heated and bad- ly ventilated. He catches cold; his little stomach and bowels bee -eine dis- ordered ' and the mother soon has a sick baby to, look after, TO pre -Vent this 'an occasional dose of Baby's Own 'Tablets' ehould be given. The7S", regu- late tae stomach and bowels, thus pre- venting 9or banishing colds, simple fevers, colic os any other of the many minor ailments of Childhood. The Tabiste are sold by Medicine dealers or by Mail at. 25 cents a box 'train The Dr. Williams' 'Medicine Co., Breckviliet Out. Boy Spoilt Notes. Canada'S capital city has the distinc- tion of having more 'Scouts per capi- ta than any other city at 100,000 or more people in America. It, the 'Boy Scents of. Ottawa 'were: to join hands 'they would be -able to encircle a very large section of their home City, * * To have saved three persons from death by drowning, at three different times is an excellent record. It is held by A.ssistant Scoutmaster Ed- ward Walker (19 years old and a Scout since 1911) of Grimsby. He was recently recommended for one of the highest Boy Scout decorations. * * New Roy Scout troops are being formed in Many parts of Ontario. The latest towns to' register new Scout or- ganizations with -Provincial Head- quarters at Toronto are Port Col- borne, Manotick, Merritton " (two troops), Dunnville (a second troop), Whitby, Minden, Richmond, Fort Wil - item (a third troop), Trenton (a second troop), and about a dozen new troops in the citlea of Toronto, Otta- wa, Hamilton and London. Many other new troops, are also in course of formation and Will be, ellartes-ed by the Provincial Council later, * `'The Trail," Ontario's publication for Boy Scout Offlcers and Leaders, 'A U TO RPM , PA HT'S for !nest makes and models of cars, Your old, broken or Worn-out parte! replaced. Write or wire us fleSorib- fug what you Want. - Wo carry the largest and most complete stock In Canada of slightly used or now oartEl d automobile equlninent. We ship .0,D. atiSistiliere in Canada, Satis- f.actory or roftmd: in full our Motto'. Hacatan Auto, Salvage- Part Supply,. 923-931'• butter -hi St. Woroato Oat, be careful not to burn them up ai contact with the returned patient, not- to destroy unthinkingly the no Parents should be on their guard when game birds, which are forest polic the ".convalescent child comes home men. Let the young people shoot lest it develop "coryza," or a slight, much as they like,gbut wills a causer "running of the nose," for this, is not a gun. usually the cause of further out: New Citizens for 'Canada. With a population' of less than WO Persona to the square mile compared ,to England's six hundred,. with only Live per cent. of her -rich agrieultural land in the West under cultivation awriiatkanal y a few nationalpeoietoinpaaeyb ttehden elan! terest in the form of taxes, the reason why Canada is hungry for immigrants cap readily be understood. Immigra- tion is thequman rain without which Canada must parch- and wither up. If Great Britain had a large, surplus ta of farmers and farm hands, Canada might not have to invite Immigrants a- rn, from any other source. But Great Britain is net so much an ogricaltural as a merchant and manufacturing centre, ana every year grudges more 'and more the farmers or farm hands who leave her Colonies for the Do - salmons. She is quite willing to send out countless city folk in the hope that they may be transformed into farmers in their new environment, but she has' fewer farmers to Spare than many other countries from which Canada in the past has drawn excel- lent settlers. This is illustrated by the homesteach: entries. From 1897 'to 1919, only- eighteen per cent. of the British immigrants made entry for homesteads in Western Canada as compared to twenty-seven per cent. of 1. the American immigrants and twenty. no' per cent. of dies foreign born e from Continental Europe. In certain parts of Europe where there is a genuine land hunger, there is not enough land to go round. Five dr six acres per family is all the land available in certain parts of Belgium, breaks, other members of the family or neighbors becoming infected D H.E Ti'g110 T through fendling and caressing , the child on its return from. hoSpital. ONC TREATMENT - Some cases, of scarlet fever shOw little.or no rash and indeed little 'ap- pearance of illness nevertheless theta cases are dangerous to others and Through Its' Use Strength and should be isolated for the full period ,of six weeks. The reason for this is Vigor Was Restored. that even the slightest discharge To be tired after exertion Is nature from the nose or throat may transmit Rest and food restore the body to no the infection although the illness IS mai after such fatigue. But to b hardly noticeable. Mild or "missed" tired all the time 'is a symptom of a oases of this disease are the chief anaemic Condition that will not b cause of all the epidemics that occur, corrected until the blood is built up. they being just as infectious as the Such an a,naernic condition is s more seve're cases. gradual inits approach and general' so lacking in acute pains that it is of ten difficult to persuade the suffere to do anything for it. But it Is no condition that corrects itself. If th blood is not enriched the trouble wil increase. The 'nerves will be under nourished and neuralgic pains will fol low. Digestive disturbances often re suit from thin blood, sleep is disturb ed and a general breakdown may cc A. T. asks how to relieve chronic constipation. Answer: Diet and ex- ercise are" the two most important timings to deal with. Do not eat too dry food. Drink plenty of water. -Use fresh fruit and vegetables every day. Avoid aperient medicines as much as possible. Take sufficient exercise, preferably, out of doors. , J. P. IL asks' if a child who previ- • ously had whooping cough should be Mr. Wilson Johnson, Nineveh, N.S, allowed to go to school if another says: "A few Years ago my system member of the same family has was, in ii, badly ran dawn condition. whooping cough. Answer: There • My nerves seemed always an edge, no need for the well child to be kept and I found myself so weak that I at hernia, providing it is not allowed could hardly do any work. I suffered to came in contact with the patient. The previous attack would make it from headaches 'and from pains in the practically immune to whooping back and under the shoulders, and cough, audit is only by direct cough: was often so Sleepless at night that mg or the discharges getting on the when morning came I felt as ti're'd as clothing that transmits the disease. when I went to ,bed. I was taking medicine all the time, but it was do- ing me no goad.."'ilfen I read the testi- monial of a man whose condition had been similar to mine, and who strong- ly recommended Dr. -Williams' Pink Pills. I decided to give this, medicine a fair trial, and when I had taken six boxes I felt much better.' I continued taking the pills until I had taken six more boxes, and I 'can only say I am and even on that the thrifty D ' - r frequently brings up a .family The great immigration of Ulm e from Central Europe which La 1 Canada nearly 300,000 of her 7 farm 'population was due to stant subdivision of farms wh only fifteen acres to start wit Ukrainians have become a I set to Canada, and have at their a expense erected four large colleges' for higher education. Then again we owe our fine stock of seventy thous- and ,Scandin'avi'an settlers to the lack of sufficient land in Sweden, Norway, Denmark and Iceland. Have these foreign born ma,de goad Canadian citizens? Bead"Thee Edu- cation of the New Canadian," by Dr. ,)". T. M. Anderson, of Saskatchewan, and you will say "Yes!" In one or two groups,,atfirst there' Was opposi- tion l'Otthe learning of English, par- ticularly among the older people, but now it is difficult to find sufficient teachers to meet the demands of the schoola. And it is not only in the schools where you find the foreign born. More than half the students at the University of Manitoba are of foreign parentage. You find childrei o the foreign born as leaders in the professions and in the Cabinet of at least 'one Provincial Government. Canada is after all only repeating on a larger scale the welcome 'to and the assimilation of the foreign born which has characterized the history of the Mother Country. The Flemish tweavers and the Huguen-ots who found refuge in England, are but a few of the foreign born immigrants who help- ed to build up British industry. Cana- da's chief industry is agriculture, and her agricultural prosperity is due in no small degree to the thrifty and in- dustrious new Canadians who have come to the wide acres of the West from the over -crowded lands of Eur- ope, and whose children to -day are proud to speak English and to sing "The Maple Leaf Forever."—A.D. has now a contemporary in "Scout - jug," a similar paper published by the Saskatchewan Provincial, Council. Both are greatly appreciated by those for whom they are published and are, already wielding a big influence in co-ordinating the work of the Boy Scout Movement throughout their re- spective provinces. * * * * Persons interested in the Wolf Cubs the junior branch of Scouting—will, he"glad to 'know that a new booklet describing their work is now avail- able from Provincial Scout Head- quarters, Bloor and Sherbourne Sts., Toronto, upon application. rt, Selling Young Trees. A boy in northeastern Ontario built up 'an, original and profitable business by taking :orders- for. shade 'trees. • With digging tools, luncheon .and some 'fishing tackle Or a gun, he would go, to thee wOlaas along a Creek two miles away, or to the rivtr. There,. while he hunted or fished, lie kept his at the mouth of the Waterhen river eyes open for straight,. lyell-snaped glad I did so, as I am 110-17 enjoying the best' of health, and. I advise all men who feel run down to give these pills a good trial." ' Dr. Williams' Pink Pills can be ob- tained from any dealer in medicine, or by snail at 50 cents a box or six boxes tor $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. :'• Large Taking of Whitefish Eggs, The Dominion Fisheries Branch re- ports that upwards of 50,000,000 white- fish eggs have been placed in the Smoke Island hatchery, Lake Winni- pegosis. These eggs were collected. trees, . tram six. to . ten 'feet tall and which- carries the discharge of Lake sometsmes taller, and when he found good ones, he dug them up Carefully, hauled thens into tawn and set them out for his customers. For every tree he receiviect froan one dollar to five dollars, aCcording to its SiZO amid kind. For rock 'maple, white ash and beech lie charged a' higher- price than for soft maple Or elm, because they were harder to find. Sometimes he tramped mileS to find a Particular 'kind, of tree and wherever he v'ent, be was always . on the lookout for species that he a - flie-ht of birds, especially Of the''birds as it is a territory' from which, the that soar and float, like gulls„ hawks timber has been cut in the Past fifty Winnipegosis to Waterhen Lake, thence to Lake Manitoba.. With 7..‘ake Winnipegosis freezng ea.rly in Novena beta the greatest difficulty was exe perienced. in securing the :eggs; the tug and outfit finding it .ilecessery .to whiter at the egg -collecting camp. The collection Of 1920 is treble the quan- -tity collected Lim preVious year, Fast-Fieeting Day. th shortot day in the year?" , Lobby— Ile day your father pro 'gfisoisteosl)teed.give you a lickin' afore you .1aSsified Advert:,,,Trent3, SPUN INTO ' -LE OR _ blankets, Ceorgetawn Voollen, :0 Ns. Ont. AGENTS WANTED. GENTS, IVAN'..C.C.1): 13E1 NATI'VE -,43. Herbs is a remedy for tile relief of , t ipati ludi„- roll ilioneness, J, Rheumatism', IcIdne; Tro.ubles, It is .4 -01 -known, having been, extensively adz vertised, einee It was first manufactured o In 1.1s.S, by distributio,. of large' ouantl, ties of Almanacs, Cook- Docks, Health T.3oolts, etc., tmisl ed to - agents free of charge. The remedies are sold at a mice that allow.s agents to double their mone-Y. ./Slonzo 0. Buss rileclical Co, 12,1 St, Paul St. East, 1,,,,Int,tr.a I, Ttlention this paper, An Irish' Joke- Tlioughtflil Some authorities are of opinion,that tile bagpipes were an Irish invention, An Irishman, discussing matter with a Scoteman„ added insult to ill- Diry by saying; "Yes, the Irish invent- ed the instrument and sold it to the Snots as a joke three hundred Years ago: But they ha,ven't seen the joke yet," ' Tommy's Choice. The teacher had been speaking of unique and valuable collections of ob- : jects of art and interest, and spoke of the fabulous wealth that had been expended by some of the collectors- on their particular hobbies. Thinking to obtain some idea of the characters of the members of his class in this direction, he asked them what they thought they would like to col- lect if they had plenty of money. Up went the hand of a boy who was noted for no particular brilliance—in fact, answers from him were very scarce on any subject; so thie oppor- tunity was seized by the teacher. "Well, Tommy, and what would you collect?" "Rents, sir," was the prompt reply. The lesson was changed, and that teacher is recovering from the shock. His Hearing Restored. The invisible ear drum invented by A. 0, Leonard, which is a miniature megaphone, fitting inside, the ear en- *irely out of sight, is restoring the --eareds of people in New ' "-vented this to A. Avenue, New Yora a prompt reply. Spring Forest' Fires. One of the most dangerous seasons of the year in regard to forest fires is now approaching and it behoves all who go into a forest on any business to be easeful with fire. When the snow leaves the forest, last year's leaves, grass and. twigs- are left as dry as tinder, and a lighted match or cigarette stub thrown down carelessly falls into material as inflammable as a barrel of shavings. After the spring bad thing is dear at any price, bad Imeband cannot be a good m n. If yen owe nothing, you know what you are worth. There are always more foolish buy- ers than sellers. No one is so wise bu little folly to spare, Adversity is the balance in which to weigh your friends. -11: is a 'mistake to think that danger can ,be ,stirmounted without danger. -You should. 'pay just as much for Your experience as the resultant wis- . he haS a done is worth, • MONEY ORDERS. ' It -is always safe to send a Dominion Exprees Malley Order, Five dollars costs :three cents. A Dubious Farewell. The minister of a Scottish country Parish, whose eLLimate of himself was not of the lowlieet type, had accepted a "call" to a wider sphere, and Was paying a few farew*ell "So ye're gaun tete leave us," said one of the oldest of Isis female parish- ioners, as he sat clown, "What will we da -e noo ?" "Oh, Mrs. Macfarlane," replied the minister, in affable tones, "you'll soon get a far better man!" "'Deed, sir," came the despondent rejoinder, "I hae my dots. We've had five in my time, and every yin o' them has been wain than the last!" Minard's Liniment Relieves Distemper Japan. s="cess. In ,some parts of Central Anne. is ,a mark of respect to turn the back upon one's superior. CORNS Lift Right Off 0 without Pain rams cense on and the new grass and Magic! Drop a 'lithe "Freeze -sae" on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it 'right off with fingers. Doesn't hurt a bit, Your druggist sells' 'a tiny bottle of "Preezone"-for a few cents, sufficient to remoxe di -to -1'y hard corn, soft corn, Or corn between the toes, and calluses. new foliage starts the danger is great- ly reduced. People do not realize jus a the close of winter, 6' lii mc Forest Experimental Station. The Dominion Government estab- lished about four years ago under the Forestry Branch of the Department of the Interior, a forest experimental sta- tion at Petawawa, Ontario. This is on a part of the military reservation that is not required at the present In skating as In .-no, other. sport time for slithery purposes. The tract Issan bas succeeding in rthitating the, is achnirably situated for the purpose, could. not find in his own neighbor - 'hood. and vultures. A good skater -will or sixty years, and, he new forest LS He always .asked the owners of the land on which he tonna the trees for permission .to take them,' and .few withheld it. eSometimes " they asked, him totakeonly certain ' .kinds of trees, cm' trees from certain .Parts of the wooaland. Usually when he of- fered to pay for the trees the owners. refused to take anything, and he never had to pay more than twenty-fiVe cents for a tree. Often he was allow- ed to do some odd job in return for it. At first the boy paid for the use of a team and wagon by working for the man who owned them; but "when his father bought motor truck, he used It on, Saturdays. He usually planted' his, trees 'in the spring, to get the best results', He also dug and set out wild ferns, mosses, grasses arid plants, for which he received from ten to tweiltinfive cents apiece, At his suggestion, many People planted wild -flower beds, and dio became so.expert in making trees grow that people often hired him to set out fruit trees, vines, shrubS, ber- ries and rare plants from nurseries. loor that work he usually received thirty-five cents tin hour. 'When a park was laid out near the square, he furnished the trees, set out plants and move ,for hours without apparent ef- coming on in various stages of growths fort, and with no violent motion of and different kinds of trees. The _tract arms or legs. He progresses as the reSemble-s so much of the cut -over bi,rd does, by constantly changing the lands in Ontario and Quebec that the equilibrium of his body. To perceive results of the experiments made in it the' likeness and the beauty of it, will he applicable over a great ex - watch a group of skaters from a tent of Eastern Canada. The experi- point high up sonic lofty building, nients cover too wide a range to be where closed windows shut out the gone into in a brief nate, but in a sound of the steel on the ice, amid the ouly impression comes through the For Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Gout, use U ME for quick and sure relief. BEWARE OF SUBSTITUTES $1.00 a lobe THE LEEMING MILES CO., 1.13, ' MoNTnEAL Agots tor Er. Jules lotrortmE RELiEvrs Word, the result will be to show how quickly forests of different kinds of trees grow, and haw best to handle a cut-ovet or burn.ed-ever forest area in order to get a crop of pine, or spruce, or birch, or any other desired tree ready for the Siw. Already valuable information has been secured and this will be increased as each year goes by and the effects of thee different meth- ods of treatment become — "Please," g'os'pel Mrs. Newlywed excitedly, on, giving her first order to the butther—"please send me a pound of steak and some—soine gravy!" Life is constanti7 weighing us in -cry sensitive scales and telling eVery me of us precisely what his real eight is to the last grain of olust. through which there is scarcely any danger from fire in the woods, comes' on the inost dangerous season, Care by all who go into the woods at this time means a great reduction in the fire -hazard. "The head of a child does not in- crease in .size after the seventh year,"; says a scientist. What One of the Best known Travellers in Canada Says. "Now I am going to give you an un- I solicited testimonial, as they 'Say in the Patent medicine advertising,-. Heretofore*, I have had a; profound contempt for patent medicines,. partidularly Perhaps this is• due to' the I reason that I bare been 'blessed With a sturdy- constitution, and have ..never been 111 a day in my life. One day last fall after a hard day's tramp in the slush , of Montreal, I developed a sovere pain ' in any legs and, .of course, like a Man who has never had anything wrong .with him physically, I complained ' rather boisterously. The good little wife rub them ,says '.1 will linimentwltbA7re 1eIs1- hen. Well, in she comes with a Ta of'liIINAT3'S LINIMENT and gets busy. ' .1.3eileve me the pain diSappeared a: few minutes after, and. you can :tell I the World X said so." , Signed) PRANIII- E. SOPENS, 'Mont:re-1i America's Pioneer Dog Remedies Book on DOG illSEASES and How to Feed Mailed Free to any Ad- dress by the Author. SE. Clay aloYer Co., Inc. 118 West list Street New York, D.S.A. 1 ASP Ft N "Bayer" only is Genuine I / !lora Soap Shampoos Best For Children If you wish them to have thick, healthy hair through life shampoo regularly with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Before shampooing touch spots of dandruff and itching, if any, with Cuticura Ointment. A clean, healthy scalp usually means good hair. ' Soap 25e. Cictment25andSOc. Teicti525c. Sold throughouttheDeminion CanadianDepou Lyranno, Limited, 544 Si. PF,u'l St., W., rdqsareal. stmvca.withollt 'mug' — OUCH! ANOTHER RHEUMATIC lilt GE Warning! Take no elle...tees *with substitutes 01:agenda° "Bayer Tablete of Aspirin." Unless you see the name "Ever" on package or on tablets you are net getting Aspirin at all. In. every Baker package are directions for CMS, Headache, Neuralgia, Bleu., matism, Earache, Tooth ache, Lumbago and. for Pain. Randy tin boxes of twelve, tablets cast few cents. Drug- gists also son larger packages,. made in Cana do. Aspitin 1,s the trade. mark' egis Loved in Canada), of Bayer alanatatstare cf Mamoaceticacidester Minard's Liniment for Dandruf7, of Salicylicacid, sam Get busy and relieve those pains With that handy bottle of Sloan's Liniment tt rnb- woug,hly—peneirctes withou I -IAT Sloan's does, it does thor- bing to the afflicted part and, promptly relieves most kinds' of exter- nal pains and aches. You'll fliid it clean and non -skin -staining. .eccp handy for sciatica, lumbago, neuralgia, over -exerted muscles-, stiff Joints, back. ache, pains, bruises, strains, sprains, bad weather after-effects. For 39 years Sloan's Liniment has lielprid thousands the world over. You aren't likely tO be an exception. It car- tainly does produce results. All druggists --35c, 70c, $1,40. - ISSUE No, 14-,6-7,1,.