The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1926-6-10, Page 2Natural Resources Bulletin.
tie,art So Sad Anon' Canadari nela Maps Wheat
tands jt. No other natural pro-
duct, evhether of agricultural, foreet,
mineral or marine origin, has exerais-
eti :mole vitalazing influence ulson the
Mre. S. Hearees,
BJ. No. 1., Enter- •economic life of 04=44% in reeent
. prises Oa., svrtege—"X have beta). so Years. Wheat has been the most pow.
etful aaetor in attracting population
greatly' benefited byusing Milburae's a. mi capital to the Dominion, in bring-
Bertmid Nerve Pills I feel that I ve,g1 esdrgin areas ender cilltination, in
should mite you to t11you how grata wasening the market for domestic
manufacturieg, mining and other in.
ful I am for ',yous
r plendid remedy.
My beset luta be bed for the past. dustries, in building tep the veal -rem
aVe yeies, and my nerves in such a end value of export trade, and in
tatI not deep at night. d creating the purchasing power neces-
sie coact
sary te finance Cana,da. s heavy Ise -
I waa tired all the time, my appetite
as pooraed 1 1194 no courato do Ports of textiles, iron and steel, auger,
W, ge
coal rnd other •essentials which,
fo
anything, and did n '
ot care whether 1 , strious reasons, are drawn whollyorr
died or ilea ee one day I told My hus- -N,arge...5„ from abroad
baa. lsthat I was going M stop adders The statist
ics of yearly erePa give
ing, as I might as well be dead as the but a faint. pietism ofatiner
the in
Way 1 'iota and that I would be better which wheat
wheat hasinipaenttd:When
Eedtheaia
tenial progarese of c
Nerves So tiad
Could Not Sleep
off. Western Canada filially captured the
Olet no one tmows what I euffered
faith of the land -seeker, when the de-
froxa my nerves as I was afraid of
lesions respecting its climate and fer-
every noise 411"1 fl7. ea " tility were definitely swept away, -
every sound. populetion and railway advanced Two Sticks and a Bit
All the remedies, and. doctors, I had more rapidly than they had ever be- of String. The girl they loLveTrves.alked in through
tried did md no good, until one day fore invaded. a new country, In the • the door
a friena told me about Milburn's period 1901-19t1. the. territory em- 1 During the Great War a young
Heart and. Nerve Pills, a94 after tek., braced by the present provinces o :araerican officer confined in & an. GermAs dead aa a TallaY in autOlout
dntther
ing the first box I could see a change,
ana after taking six I am new cotes
pletety rid of my troubles...
O1 feel that if it had not been for - 00,000 acres.
eight -fold he population, and the oe- _nenearltable
copied farm lands by over some 66,- gentility and olevernees. Before en -I
---aa•-' listing, tb.e, young
ployed in the chemistry department of i
eerie/m.0e oe yane.ea he Nor asated of her why she had sought
man had been ems t But theY stared. at the embers, and
neither said,
cl hi head her way
Alberta and Saskatchewan increased orison fureished his captors with a
a
experience there leapea toexplain his
standing behind us that is
Some Liberala large iron industry and possibly his dead!"
Musicians.' "She is
your Pills I would have been dead and
buried by now.'Me great raustelans 'have been clever resourcefulness. .
"
H. and N. Pills are put up only Iv noted fon their -openhandedness and One morning, just at dawn, a guard Though a lament before •one whisper -
The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, generosity, aad some carried it to the on one of the outer wane, happening
e ed, aMy frlend!"
Ont. extreme of the spendthrift. Prominent to glance toward the oell occupied bY And his friend, "My mare than brother,
among those who devoted large sumeilthe prisoner, saw his hands apparently We alone shall see that face to the end
With the smile that eh° gave no other"
to charity were Liszt, eta wonderful moving back and forth around one of
Neither cried -out, "Behind ray chair
She stands and her hands are above
my hair!"
• e.
FOUR CENTURIES OLD
Boteler School of Warrington, England, eelebrates its fourth centenary.
Among' brilliant Warringtoa sehelare ere Malthus, of population essay fame;
and Priestly, who diecovered more gases than all hie predecessors combined.
Of aai the queer inhabitants of the During tbie perioa the lower side ef
occan, one ef the most mysterioes in tale fish has begun to whiten like the
tile eamoees which are undergone are ibellY of an orainery fieh, . •
the so-Celied deallsb- r1113 in'tqUilSts i SeielttlhOlcIT it is not merely the Oa '
the entire rarer y of balibuts and flown- that is moving' from oneesede to an-,
dors, the eolee, the plaice and others ' other, but everything connected with
which are not so wen or eommonlY the eYe, -tht' optic nerve, the eyelid, all
Wometa With
Weak kidneys
• %sow Use
Children Should Have Best
in Music Study.
All who have ha9 an opoprtunity of
watching the growth of a child's mind
know that the brain in childhood is
pianist, and the "Swed'I&h Nightin-
gale," Jenny Lind.
It is told of Mozart that, not finding
any money in his pockets to give to an a short piece of braided string, the. •
Though one had said, "There is none
importunate beggar, he hastily sketch- ends of which were tied to two small
but you,
asily
plastic. It receives impressions,
ed a song on some blank paper, and pieces of wood. Nevertheless, when
Since, Heaven has chosen and blest us,
e
i
and retains them. Children are in- told the mendicant to present it at a the steel bars at the window were ex -
And we alone in the skeleton hands
,
Ai pithlisher's and he would re- embed two of them were found sawed -.....
stinctively tameless1 and rhythmical, i cart --11 uould Imo* the hands that caressed
cease a good sum. The beggar did so, almost through, a. mere sliver of steel
and early childhood Is the time for foe -us "
and received the money. But if this is at the top and bottom. serving to hold ... '
Neither said, "Welcome-" neither
tering the lave of music which is plant -
true, .why was Mozart hiraself so often them M place.
ed in every child's heart, anti which by ht
careful continuous teaching you will in need of money? Why did he not
develop into a real feeling for all that present his own songs and draw the
explanation. The apparently Innocent -
is best in meek. east for himself?
Rossini, although having a repute, looking string was the only instru-
They did not cloalst that she was there
• When we know that each stage of tion for stinginess, was liberal toward meat he had used. After soaking it
Like a perishea skyin the autumn,
the child's development requires its his old parents. Atter the first three in. water and letting it dry the string
So still they . grew, so cold their
performances of eaelf. opera he pro -
own kind of inseruction, we realize
what a child has missed who reaches duces]. he welled send them two-thirds
the age of 10 or 12 before beginning
the amount he received for composing
his or her -work that stould have been it.
taken at the age of 6 years. It is ia- _
teresting to note however, that when.
nursery. rhymes haae been absorbed at
a very early age the interest in taem
ie retained for many years; in fact, it
- —, - teeneve,r iost Parents do not realize
that pianoforte playing is only eine
phase or the clilld's musical education.
Song singing. ear training and rhyth-
mic expression form the groundwork
for success In future music lessons. All of the bars. Within half an hqur the,
this is suitable work that can be taken The Bride—"I want a piece of meat
. improvised saw had cut one eighth of
in our elementary schools, and if the withoet bone, fat or gristle."
an, inch and the bar perceptibly weak-
Pu.blie demands it, can be given. The Butcher—"Madam, I think you'd bet- •
weak-
ened. •
present time is very opportune for all; ter have an egg." . s
__.........a.__. Who can read such a story without
who are interested in the growth of 1 a thrill of admiration at the thought
We'll Say So-.
good music in our Dominion, and for I of the marvelous piassibillties within a , ,TTT-imo
all parents who wish their children to1 Seee--"A dollar doesn't go as far as
determined will? es, there any barrier
have the benefit of a musical training it used to."
that can stand before the Intelligent
to use their best efforts to have music He—"No, but it goes faster."
resourcefulness and courage of the
placed in an important postdate M the truly resolute soul?
school e.urriculum, for it must be re• I
membered that apart from it e value as Oh My Head 1 It is not our-oenurces or our lack of
resources thatsooften keeps es pris-
m' educational factor, it can give the
children eoreething that no other sub- How It Aches! mere le this world. ' It is rather our .. . 'S
failure toaatilize :'weisot we shave te -the ' Re—
"I -was ou,, wean a couple, ,ca
Once the head starts to ache and fullest extent' that so often shuts us. skirts last, night. . . '
jest can give.• --•
The best thought, all the finest et- pain you may rest assured that the out from the larger freedom and pro- ?he—"You still, have 'eat on, I see."
..-....--........-na..—..--......-.•
fort that men are making in education Cause conies from the stomach liver gress to which we recognize we are •
—and in other spheres, too—lead in or bowels, and the muse must be re- entitled. "Young men," said the great A True Pioneer.
the direction of the obild, the young moved before permanent relief can preacher, Doctor Talmadge, '"don't say An Mternational amenity of which
There is no better remedy on the you have nothing to begin life with. both England 'and America may well
child. It is for him that reforms are be had.
splanned and carried into execution, it marked to -day- for the relief a 1.3._ Go gowg to the uhrary and get some be proud is the attempt to :raise. one
is for him that philanthropists, and • aches of a kinds and of every dee- ' books and read of thee wonderful. hundred thousand dollare to end,ovr
even party pelitecians show a soldee midden. that mechanism God gave you in your hand, the chair ot anatomy in the London
• rude unparalleled in the history of the tin your foot, in your eye, M your ear, Soh,00l of Medicine, as a tribute to
teachers have begun to see that they
must direct their most careful and .13 Ltrd0(,:k::: .,
,..
phemy of you have no capital
and never again commit the blas -
to start with. Equipped? Why, the Elizabeth Blackwell who having beeo
unable to get a- merical educatiern in
Great Britain, eeme to the Ilotted
world. And it is to the child that our
earnest thought.
1 poorest young man. is equipped as only States, and found here the intellectual
Preserving a Man's Shirt. B- L.G.----0.10-• • afford, to equip him." denied her. Having been admitted to
the God of the whole universe could hospitality that • the old counry- had
Many times a man't shirt which is practice in America, and having
because the collar has. eut it just beGaffe nt. proved her ability, she returned to
the bars of his cell window. An of-
ficer was summoned and prisoner and
cell searched. All that was found was,
kaown, but all of whim' belong to the
same seleuttale Sandie.
From e ode:taint: etanapolet there
are few things in all nature that are
so remarkable-ethe evohitioa of a else- site after a •lapse of never More than
few weeks, in a veery short epace of sometimes, the trip, reqsaires
Mee in a few mealte, perhaps in a tedays; n
time the fisle changes front an ordluary °eleYsfamrlel. oernfieYiesedaeYeTealaunidtlievaertyhacitowshe
fish to e. flatfletto each .other
. ,
the Muscles and ell the cartilages, as
Well as all the lerge and small heriree.
Atter the beginning -of •tho -trip the
whole eye has reached Its permanent
...
k
0
b
Wheu bora the ilpunder, as a well: So there you have 3, ease of evolue,
nown example, i$ built jest like any -tion from tie ordinary fish to , .1 'extra-
erdleary fish, an en fewer than two
'dismay tele • His Melee are greeuish
rown, he
swims about la°rilvilta"Y weeks. Not a good eeoluttoo—but in
nd his eyes are in their proper places, the ages to eome it will be better--
one on eech aide of his head.
In the elle-lige, which eequires LillY a
few days, he anaely -turns $0 that he
swims on his side, one side turas white
Mee the beelies• of horiaontal s es n
but et present the ohmage is somewhat
satisfactory to the flsb, white). bas
made it possible that he'may live witle
eat so veal much leboe and without
taking too many ehances of being in-
--wonder of wonders—one eye basins
jured.
Ne Woman. UM be etroegand healthy
Unless her kidneys are well, and uihe
times out of ten the hickeys are tD
blame for the Wee*, leMa and Belling
backafrom whiett she suffers so much.
When you find your kidneys out of
order, when your back adios toad pities
and gives you endless ibieeey, all sem
have to do is take a few boxes of
Doenef Heaney Palls, and yod aria
that all the sehes and pions will vainale
and make you healthy end happy and
able te enjoy life to the :utmost.
All , druggists and dealers handle
thew put up only by The T, Milbtfra
Co., Limited, Toronto', Out.
s
to travel, and slowly but surely passes • '
ever the nose and aeon else este Itself _The two eyes on one side do not The Schools and the Future
close to the other 0Y13, bath now b6ing 1°°k IrarY weR Perhaps the tloull'aer of Forests.'
on one side of the head. can see everything he wishes to see,
i it is a well-known Axiom of skilled
Taking tee,,eeeemed tamale,. as the but his eyes are by no means a aetatit -
specimen, we see brought into the
world e little fish that looks fer aiX
the world just like any other ordinary
fish, He -swims about for a few daya,
get -ting bigger and fatter, and then de-
velops a tendency to turn occasionally His rapid evolution hate not yet
aceenedethmenhoisniv.eo, sort ee taming new reached the stage where he cell get
*his stomach and such things, where
A few. days la,ter his flat -side turns they belong, and he has to tarry them.
last longer, and thee it may be noticed along op near his throat and almost
that one of his eyes appears to be where they would be if he were an or -
starting to go to the top of his head, divary ash.
This eye, always, of course, on what! Postmortem en the Bounder stows
is soon to be the underside, goes that his internale are making headway
straight over the top of the head or in getting where they belong and are
nose for it is both, and keeps going un- • elowly, that is from century to century,
til it has come within epeaking dis- I getting a little nearer the place where
tance of the other, which haso remained they beleng, under ,the spine Instead
absolutely stationary. of alongside it.
ful, His, interior arrangemente a'41reitiging that -rale alVeal to "tiee`I'll'e"
ie isafinitely more effective than the Ap-
peal to "logia" The eerily driven An,
weed by a ooramonlyeahared mat -ma'-
am far a great cause fu.notions bet-
ter than an army of eullen menscripts.
The wealthese of the' cauee of forest
proteotion Sn Canada Is not that men
and women axe ignortent of the offecte
of forest fires in national Impoveritsbe
ment, but that they fail to comprehend
their pommel perinea -elite, Oceans ot
logic, in the sense of cold statistlee
anti patriotic appeale, win aocomplish
eomethiog with the mature and
thoughtful reader, but are liable -to
leave untouobed themasees of people
who have absorbed through genera-
tions a set of plauelble mlicencepttons
and. prejudices eeceedingly difficult to
-disturb.
The -focus point of educationall effort
In forest preteotiou must always be
the Canadian. public school. The eland'
mind is marvellously generous, In ito
attitudes, keen to detect false ,doctrine,
eager to to pledge and be plledged to e
vital national muse, The Canadian
Forestry Aesociation invites the atten-
tion of its members to one of its most
produotive educational schemes, the
sending of lecture manuscripts every
fortnight to ten thousand teachers in
all parts of Canada. Each manuseript
is now Illustrated with pictures easter ,
reproduced on the blackboard. The
teachers are delighted to have such
interesting and constructive materiel
and their lettere to the Association
testify to a rapid and permanent de-
velopment of interest in. the forest re-
sources. Every and at twelve or :fif-
teen years of age is a natural and will-
ing recruit to the forest conservation
cause. Give him twenty years -more of ,
life, under circumstances that often
stuff his mint with half-traths and he
will not surrender except umder an ex-
-convention in Detroit. •
can Sargical Associationit the enamel
To Wirt the army of juveisile Cana-
. palenbsoirterlebaarndditleenntg-d.rawn „oat education-
.Mtpicians at Play. dia.& now automatically solves the
gravest features of the. forest problem
• One ;Wonders wben the great cone- of Canada a few years henoe,- - Cana-
poseraever got time to play, when one than Forest and Outdoors.
e looks at their enormous eutput. Yet
are also sort of mixed. Practically
every other creature in the world has
his interior apparatus rigtat nide up,
blet not eta the flounder.
Work.
Let me but do my work from day to
• daye
plan was frustrated he made a frank In roering market -place or tranquil
In field or foreet at the desk or loom
When the prisoner realized that his
To take the hand that she stretched t
, room;
Let me but find 11 111 my heart to say,
When stray, t wishes beckon me
Gradgihn'egartthe—e hope she -:had brought "Th19 nlisYm(14)°Y. ririV7k; blessing,
not
was passed a few times throughan
oiled rag which he carried with him in
him, Of all who live, -I ana the ane by whom
lieu of a handkerchief: afterwards it
was dropped into a tiny heap of dust
This work eau beet be done in. the
Each waited as if turned to stone •
in one corner of his- cell. -The dust
•
la ,
right way." '
Caught, Not Bought was found to be coenpesed .of. leen fa- , Then shall I see it not too teat, nor
- . The triumph in hi•s- flesh and bone. -- '
—Frank O'Connor. * • '
caught this fish?" • in small pinches from the machine
' •
Mrs. Gayfellow---"Are you ware you ings and, emeryawhich he had brought •
To suit my spirit and to prove nay
shop where he had been, compelled to
I work every day. , • .
It Dipping the string in this dust he
took hold of the two pieces of wood
that formed the handlee, stretched the
'string tight and began sawing on one
Ga.yfellow—"Of course."
"It smells very strong!'
"Strong? I should. say it was.
nearly pulled me overboard."
Sound Advice.
otherwise good hae to be thrown away
A small boy found the following sere London and teund,ed the London
low the neck band. Rip the band loose fence in his grammar examination: School of 'Medicine fol. Women. A
for a couple of inches above the worn true pioneer!
'aehe horse and the cow le ill the field."
wrote:
place, then rip the shoulder and yoke It removes the eause oa the head- Ile was told to -correct it and to give
seams till they lit 'smoothly in the col- Put up for the past 47 years by The Better Fit.
seams for a few inehes. Cut out the. sate, and with the dense removed you
worn parts, of the shirt; fold over the will not be troubled any more, his reason for the correction. He
lar. Stitch together again and a good T. Milburn So., Linaited, Toronto, Ont. "The cow and horse is in the field.' "That's a tine clress suit, Harold."
shirt will result. Ladies should always come first." people now,"
"Yes, I don't rent front the same
SitstfffirsseweargatasWatrbss
MUTT AND JEFF—By Bud Fisher.4
Jese AND weR.e
RtbiNG 111e BRAKE
BaAme oto tt\ice.
Weite 11) JMICSONSVILire'
FLORIDA ir sagtelo
vIa GoT TO feiCaMeleb
tatetLateeste Veto
sperrED AN'S)
diaAetcaD M caoSS,
' tvw eer 1/44rrt-i. A
e Loa, votiewl.
Mott, Some Bootee -Gee -as iTeiale‘eadia4`
A TtaUcte ladoesGaT X Wale
teaeseteaa Gus)" AND el-aaveb
area: eteiNteteat> IsoLLAte. SILL
ANIS r BOUGHT aWaTiCieesre
Tie •ri ACk<SONtitt..1-€ WM-1/4
--rtis cote.): Neve
IIZP,\Jet. uoxE:
le;
•
alkeStera SoFT,
latleIteG ite A !Meet.
SaGeSeatel r kvo
A Fltee eislooia -- -
Last' teiGtet
Then shall I -eheerful greet the labor-
ing hours, --
And cheerful tern; - when Use long
shadoens fail
At eventicle, to play and love and rest,
Became -i know for me my week is
best.
--Henry, Van Dy
•
With the First Arbutus.
Pink, small, and punctual.
Aromatic, low,
Covert in April,
Candid in May, '
Dear to the mos's...
Known by the knoll,
Next to the robin
In every human soul. •
ke.,
Bold. little beauty,
Bedecked with, thee,
• Nature forswears
Antiquity.
Dickinson
Strictly Modern Remains.
Professor Beanbrough was jubilant.
•
• Dr. Alex. Primrose
grditinent Toronto surgeon, -who was
elected a vice-president of the Amer],
several of
games of various kinds. Mozart, for Agricultural Wealth.
Weal• were very -fond of
instance, wes abnormally fond of bil- Ottawa.—Gross agricultural wealth
• needs, as, indeed is Padereweiti. Mozart of Canada at the end of 1925 was
often aneepe his friends white play, 832,942,000, anincrease of 024,6ar
000 ever 1924,"according to an en
mate recently issued by the Canadi
Government Bureau of Statistics. The
total agricultural revenue of the Do-
minion last year was $1,708,567,00a,
an increase of $264,890,000 over the
previous year. By provinces' the rev-
enue from agriculture last year was:
Ontario, $477,159,000; Saskatchewan,
$416,02,0G0 Quebec, $282,739,000;
ing . -by humming over melo-
dies-. Once after led had -spent anoven-
Ing thus he family went to the piano
wide the exclamation, -"Here it Is, now.Listen!" and he played hie beautiful
Quintette. -trent the -first act of "The
Magic Flute". He had been compos-
ing It during his game.
Every musk worker should adopt a
sport ofo
sme keed. Commander Sousa
sbovel. 'See whatma-Jose! Lhevinne go in for trap-
we have uneerth- I
, shooting. Brahme Alberta, $245,662,000; Manitoisa.
"Alet!" he- cried, as he rested bis
ed ! r believe that we have discovered le known to have $142,046,000;hBritish Coltimbia. $42,-
the rembeen fond of carde.Kullak, it is said, ains of eome herbivorous aeree 444,000; New BrunsWick, $89,500,000;
phihian of tthe order plesioseuril" used to like to box. vertu made a bob. Scotia, $89,120,000; Prince Fd -
Farmer Sodbuster took a good look. by of farming. -
"Nope, you're wrong, Prof.," he said.
"Them bones belonged to a hog I
buried here two years ago last fall."
- Paper can be made trona practically
anything that can be
pounded into have been 15.2 bushels; oats, 31.5
Pull)* bushes; barley, 25 'fuel -vas; rye, 15.6
bus -hes; corn for busking, 46.4bush-
Rece.ntly a nightingale singing 100 A man, once said Sir William
els. Wheat in 1925 sold at an aver -
feet away from the London broad- Temple, has four choices: to exercise age price of $1.12 per buehel. T'
casing station 2L0, could be heard much, to be very temperate, to take total crop was . 416,849,700 'wise
rtaraost perfectly by radio listenees. phe-aic, or to be sick. . , from 21,972,732 acres, the ee.cond allege
, est crop on recded. •
ward Island, $23,869,000.
In the same report the average
yield of wheat per acre in Canada for
the ten years 1916-25 is shown to
-c?
eeeeaesesrl
...-.. r
Nete`s-
wt-IGe wE
ddee oael
PiNhEAD!
fi
,..,............-..
— p,,,... ...-
„,..2 „
„..----
tc:--
,,,,t40,15..,
'
essesess-e----
s A
,.•
sedierVe'•
• 1.
I G/als.:-,tiz 1:'?1,4wat Tbe.l.DM 01: OW
400ort!1lii, 103, by,11 a 3-'') C,, F4030
11,1i11
ii;if
' The, Bad cold of To, -day
May Be Serious Torruncrow
The cold may start with a little tan-
ning of the nose, the acad becomes
sealed ip, but little attention is paid
to it, thinking perhaps it will peso
away in a day or two. You nogleet it,
and then it gets down into, the throat
• and from there to the lungs, aria be-
comes a case of coughing moruitig,
noon and night •
However slight a cold you hey° you
should never aeglect it, for if you do
it lb just possible that it -will develop
into bronchitis, pneumonia or some
other serious throat or lung trestle, e,
• Dr. Woo
Norvvay
Pine
Syrup
90 .1112.4u..:5;:a4"fr14:7eineay., for all those
• e
who sudor from any form of bronchial
• 'trouble, as it stimulates the weakened
organs, 90011101 and heals the irritated
perte loosens the phlegm and muaous,
6'101t.idascaunitutulrattioui
tto. clear away. the
Inbi