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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1926-8-5, Page 2Canada from Coast to Coas $a herr, Nova Scotia.—Thi', Minis- August 1st last, according to the: aup- ter aMinos of the Nova Scotia Gov..1erintendexie .of +transportation `C.P.ii, ernmenPt has confirmed the revs re- f at this point. Elevator bins through- ports that a 'contract has been en-; out the West have been virtually teed into with Henry L. Dougherty �F,; cleared o£ met year's grain crop and Co. of New York, for an exclusive,the preliminary work in connection research oil ,exploration covering oitt with the distribution of locomotives area Nova Scotia, Their geoagi and box cars for handling this year's cal survey report is to be filed with) yield is practically completed. the Minister. Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, -- Total Fredericton New Brunswick. —• enrolment at the University of Sas- The main contract for development, katehewan le the past year was 1,977, work, including dam, tunnel, Emil f an increase of over 20 per cent as power heal -e, in connection with the compared with the previous year, work at Grand Falls has been award- j whilst the extension department ed by the International Paper Com; j reached over 20,000 persons, an ;le- per)/ and operations will comnneuee ; crease of over 40 Iter cent, This year immediately. Formal corttrence'menrt I approximately 110 degrees will be con-. ceremonies will take place hi August, ferred and 20 certificates granted to Quebec, uebee,—Quebec butter and. who have completed courses in cheese are as much in demand, if not; more so, than any on the English market, according to the Hon. J. E, Caron, Provincial Minister of Agri - agriculture and pharmacy, This brings the total number of degrees which have been conferred since 1912 up to 1,006 and of certificates 456, a culture, who has just returned from s notable record for the first . .fifteen Europe What he believed wae:. of years of the Univereity'shistory. vital int. ra t tothefarmers of we- a e s Q bee was the necessity of devising means of supplying Canadian butter and cheese to the British markets the Red Deer, Alberta, --Twelve colonies KN��GEO�. TRAJN Neat ra 1 Resources Sulleti�lt. _ , y te seeure trig By. , l trout out;.' harries dui1ng tynQoai Caned wzl' 1' na Wiilia, Qunrd ozi Royal Trains . sl;orzSlble for .th e safety f the o, , n wtXtter WeattJter; is an e3.i,sive -Under Three Sovereigns. , I e uiatnorab1e ekpet+lattGe was when In tact it is union more effthing, usive ante iterative hem all over tate world : i was• guard of the famous "Honey- visit Honey hazier to retain sit a prescribed eom� visit this oouftry, and 1 frays come in- 'taeon Train," wltich'conveyed Princess pass thein most oP ixs a recsir te. Heat to contact Afa4ry on her wedding trip with her Pp a.atact za^stir jiraetic agar evea�y i �- will actually leak through the aver - crowned bead of tiny iLn ortanee dur- .husband, (,Lord Lascelles. We ran ago wutril or roof much as water will bre tate last (aril=flve years. from Paddington toSltifzzaly, neer 'V oleel- leak through. cloth and .deitn3ite mete.One of the strangest, of. all these v ritttinlit:an. It was a veritable a , • • . trim -411h, and there were crowds' every" sure ln414 �t#t have What there, is then whose stay in Britain during the reign where along the rine tryl ig to catch a r needy? of Queen Victoria is sisal remembered, icllmltse of the F•rizioess and her has- I. The^xemzedy is simple and twofold,,' There were, of (ourse, no 'motors . iu band. The saloon in W1119h theywttrasn t The first requisite is pz+opar construe•• those days•, and, as he was very in, (I yelled was simply one maws of iia ,tion of buil�liz gs, that ray absence„ e" quisitive and (carr of going to variousl' Rules Wiped Out, {' akimpingxi' good'E`fittings," et ,That places5 the Royal �treiue of easel trunk To -day, the "s+peclal precautionary • is' apparent and geirerally appreetated. line were much. in request. working rules" relating to Royal The second requisite' iS the use of Wanted ells Own Railway. trains have 'been prkaetioatly .abolished. heat -resisting pr "Insu'lating'�' mnater, needless to eu bride that a iaas, The Tatter (,actor is -not so w el' •..: •:=.a�...a..�.:.�,., •..zax:.a�.x,sx• :w:•�:rx �s.�•x.�:e:•...:., :... . �E.. t He was. taken to Windsor for a great It is . e daces tnI? ., � � State banquet given on his.1ehalf, and. Boyal epectal is worked 'with sorupu i known by. the average buirder er SERVED SIX EARS IN.PALESTINE expressed au almost ohirdish curiosity Iotas care, but that applies to every:, householder, but a little study and in- Rcv, S. B. Rahold and Mrs. Retold, who have served for tate Past ate train. I telii ent ex nditureWould ire -ty the r el conoeraing the engine, He wished to 8 P` years in Palestine under the British acciety for the propagation of the gasp , haw fast it omega go and vs''hait Queen Victoria was the first crown -1', outlay many times over. l t are making a tour of Canada and the United States. More Schools for West. Gnaw . ed head to set foot: tn. a train, and in I Duringthe past few years the use { avauld happen if it ran off the line. { {When he got back to Persia, he de- her early enperieneee of the Iron Road of, various insulating materials in I Glared he would have a Royal raziroad trains were in the experimental stage. building conetruetioe has been'stoa•d Eating Habits of tests. ` Right down to the end, she still otter- i;y increasing. By suoh means the and a�trahl of his ozvn. Regina, Sas Construction of new'Whoever it was that first observed ie shed tire, •idea that,drivere had a tone-, escape of indoor heat is prevented in bees have recently beenplaced here g t1 .In those days many theatrical parties of b lie n y se~hoois in Saskatcltewazt is brisker a goat mouthing a tin can must have_ „ nese. for excessive speed, that,lecomo- winter aid outdoor heat iss barred in res ithe three races of beeserrather than fact, were taken down as. "specials ' to tives might explode, and bridges were t summer, Not oiily are substantial rep ant eg this year than for many years past, a believed in inf encs Winrlsox, as Queen Vietorla had .a i t rnaitrly need in America—Ittxlians, o h leh -n been for he circulated the story that goats fab a p e. whole total of 343 1 year roan • the grew a - arn� o pans, an Caucasians, e .beine in the lank ' ea ,'great love fur drama. At many of school. p ..ns avt g le to o11a s ns the idea li 1 that has It Is difficult to believe that when building tnsul atian but more comfort- .le h d 1 test b O i t d Ga submitted to the architect s bnauch oP t cans a ridtettlous BE g f theePrince of le le a ,Stec to seles t� the resent time Bede to find out which are best far e persisted through the ages.. these pix ormances, fuer and labor savings effected by !Queen Victoria first tried- the "newt11 able and healthful living conditions 1z g the Provincial Department at Public Wales (Bing Edzvard) was present, of continuity of Alberta conditions, There are a large But the wan hunting goat cares no i o n- !tangled method of travel, there was aro provided and he saleability >f et than you oe 1. and was brought by Royal train toLon- It z It is estimated that more than 54 nsore for tin in its, di y per cent. of the plans were for new to supply. Ottawa, Ontario. --According to a recent report of the Bureau of Sta- tistics, there are seventy plants in the Dominion engaged in the cotton tex- number of beekeepers in this dietrot .and on the visit of the 'Dominion apiarist this summer a field day is to he herd. Victoria, British Columbia.—Brit- tile industry in which a capital - of rah Columbia will send some 10,000 $60,209,854 is invested. Approxim- men to the prairies late this summer ately 20,000 persons find employment to aid in the grain harvest,, it is esti- in tba industry which has a produc- mated at the labor department here. tion value of $30,289,131. Winnipeg, Manitoba. --What is left of last year's crop on the prairies- is just about 2,000,000 bushels of wheat of a total of 181,142,519 bushels mar- keted on Canadian Pacific lines since Sir Adolph Tyck Who died recently, head of the well- known firm of art publishers, Raphael 'l'.uck and Son, of Loudon, England. 8000 -Mile Talks Made By Wireless Telephone Berlin.—Experiments with wireless telephone within a radius of 8,000 miles have been carried out with suc- cess by the government's commercial radio station at Nauen. Officials of the Ministry of Posts. and Telegraphs announced_ they have talked with German officials in Buenos „sires, Tokyo and Ronne almost as plain& as on a local tedephane axil. 'Ino experiments were conducted on the new 10 kilowatt 40 meter wave length sending apparatus which was designed especiaaly for the wireless *transmission of pieturees. Judge as Employment Agent. A Judge can often give other valu- able service to the community besides deciding points of :aw. Last week a • man was being tried for failure to sight and precaution' apply to the man support his family, and he claimed at the wheel of every motor vehicle as that he had been unable to get work they do to theengineer with his hand at his trade for measly a year. After on the thrott'l'e. e few questions the Judge went to Early advisee from the , prairies re- ceived by the department indicate that the demand for outsidee, harvest hands will be heavy and that a large part of the available labor here• will be• absorbed. ' Verses in a Forest. I. This is the feast, The guests assemble. These are the goblets—these Are the fluted •stems• Of the goblets—even these trees That hold the dark sky trembling. And must poor man, Who has so little daring, With such companions Such a banquet share, With dead levers—with phantoms-- With, hantoms—With cold fairies-? II. Every tree in the grove Is a miser of Tight, Crying over and over, Give me my rights. And each tree asks of his kindred That their leaves be withdrawn From his sky, and their hindering Shade from his bright lawn. Stella Benson. • Works for approval, schools, while the others were for ad- ditions end alterations to existing schools or the construction of teacher - ages. Good schools are now to be found in almost every district of Western Can- -Stop, Look, Listen! Vacation time brings a melancholy harvest of fatalities and casualties anr_ong motorists, and numbers pay with their lives for failure to heed, warning signals at grade crossings. At present about 200 persons are killed and G00 are injured yearly in such accidents. Public opinion and railway administration in reaction thereto are bringing about a _ reduc- tion in the number of grade cross- ings; but as congestion increases on the highways each crossing becomes a greater potential menace, and we stili have with us an undesirable host of • joy-riders who, desiring to show that they can beat the locomotive to it, enlarge the heavy toll of death and disaster with every week -end outing.- What will impress the lesson .that such reckless tourists need to =earn? The time must some when every im- portant highway crossing a railway makes the intersection at an upper or: lower level; but with our vast trans- portation systems still in the building over so wide an area, this desirable. consummationwill not soon arrive. In the meantime, .simple rules of fore - his a""lead- I.�emon juice . added to the water rins private dace p when boiling foils gives it a better ing firm, and secured a ;(ob for the n ratan to start next morning. color. MUTT . AND ' JEFF—By Bud Fisher. What he is after is the taste of the den. after tare'1>erroraranae, {saloon carriage, 011 stores were tried,' harmed, ; I have a clear recollection ai; the but there r . complaints of he dor. on indivl�dual >refer - paste bens�ath the 1•zbe.s As a mat-' t e weet 0 Depending I , no means of scientiftcaily heating. her , building's so treate Is. greatly ter of Pact, the:goat is one of the veal young Duke of Clarence, Queen Al' cx, So •,: the ladies-in-waiting and etRer ,.ences several different types af'beat cleanest feeder of the live stock ' ndrit s eldest sett, On ono occas •an members of date household who made insulators are in common use, such s he and our present King, dteseea in, world. He will not eat hay oe straw long journeys. from Winds,or in the eviu- as well fillers, quilts, blocks, flexible' sailor suits, accompanied• their mother that has been underfoot nor kitchen ter were often half frozen, sheets and' rigid boards. scraps that have become the least bit to Portsmouth. As s special treat, A „Narrow Squeak. The er growing demand far• these rise - • Education is free, Rural schools tainted, • the young Princes were allowed 'to three miles apart in the set- hat Billy and Nanny like the best have a short ride on the footplate of are about t k theengine: tled districts. In districts where the is clelioate foliage, thought when hon- population is scattered over a wide gry they will eat brush of most any area, there are consolidated schools, kind. Sheep are grass-eatersy con to which the pupils are conveyedat aiming” brush only when compelled by the expense of the school districts in „any g During all my years on the line 1 aerials is already providing an added have never been in a serious .accident, pwtkt or many Canadian raw mater- ,, ,, but I head a narrow squeak once. I is a some d tt*Tiieh wound otherwise Very Daring, was guard of the Weymouth boat train be wasted. Among such materials Years passed, and Prince George be at the time: Some.:workmen were i''e:t Pay .be mentioned wood waste, eel came King George, . During the, war he ing' a large tree near the embankment grass, fax and other vegetable fibres, hunger to do so If a horse or motor van to a central school each morning and returned to their homes in the evening. The vehicles used in transporting the child- ren afford proper protection from in- clement weather-, and during the win- ter months are heated."' A,. -------.4b.-. sass at all is travelled extensively to visit munition g , Stun rock and asbestos. Other not far from Y% eymouth and it fell gypsum • to be had they will leave the hazel, centres, and the G.1'Ruya1'train was . Canadian raw materials which in fit- willow and other bushels entirely alone, often out. On one cocaeion a night aeras the line just as the 'ex journey ',melee was approaching at high speed. ture may be utilized in the manufac- But goats always prefer the green was made to the Swindon railway Fortunately, the driver pulled up in tare of low temperature hea,, p, insul trees• and shrub growth And another works When the train was ready to the nick••of time,.• ators include limestone rock, ' mica interesting diiferencce is that .sheep go back to Swindon Town station, his After fifty-one years service, I ani waste, scrap glass, waste rubber and never stand on the hind lege to eat, Majesty said he thougut he should like retiring to a little; cottage near Pew- peat• to be a driver for once. soy, Wilts. I kno=w the rough and the Considerable study on the subJect to a height o six feet or more. The distance from the works to the smooth of life en the Iron. Roacl, for 1 of in uliation has been made by the Many, many gouts suffer ,from mon- station was exaotly one mile; Queen have been •porter, signalman, .travel- Dominion Fuel Board in association atony of diet, because of the ignarauce Mary vias naso on the - footplate, and ling.inseector, and guard, and have tra- with the Natured . Resources Iutelli- of those who care tor them. When left the King drove steadily, pulling up ,veiled over every inch of the G. W. R., Bence Servide and inquiries addiesswd to his •choice, this animal varies has exactly at the mark on Swindon Townto either. of those bodies will receive: and I can truly say that, if• I had. ad my diet a great deal; it is his nature. An- station. i timeever again, I should want to serve attention, other thing to remember in keeping.a Kjug Edward also ha,d a great band -"once more on the ratlivay. goat' is the rock salt. Place a large nese for engines, and. on one occasion lump where the' animal can get to it I rode . on the footplate of:the engines when be desires. drawing the Royal train from Windsor G•oaas require drinit:ieg water only; to Basinstoke; but, of course, this was at distant intervals, and persons . who :thought "very daring," and everyone are'unaequa.inted with the nature and was instructed to keep • quiet.. about it. habits of these animals usually get the j Princess Mary's' Honeymoon Train. Idea that something is wrong because I I think my most wonderful expert they drink so seldom. Succesful keep- euce was the week I spent on the Royal ers of goats usually water them only � trains—tore were .two cf them—that two or three times a week—not oftener i conveyed King George to the West to than every other`''d-ay. , j inspect munition works and camps Good results in the feeding of any . while the struggle with Germany was animal depend greatly on comfortable I at its height. living quarterr, and this is particular- I The whole journey was''Made in ab- ly true with goats. Their shelter solute secrecy. As the King intended to should he fairly warm, though 'veal- 'solute on the train, the Royal "sleeper" laced, of course, and it must be dry at t was borrowed from the; London & all tines. Much- dampness, and es-' North Western Railway. But' during Peer ll�v exposure to cold rains, will. day, his Majesty used a small Train , seriously affect the gpat's health, and of four beautiful coaches, drawn by an' - �much standing in mud gives °hint a engine suitable for climbing the gra- He.--"W1iy de you ; call me a chaane- t troublesome disease called foot -rot. dients round Dartmoor. •� .,,, - Care for a nanny ` goat properly and i le•on. she will give rou .bout pleasure and°t" At night the Royal sleeping -car train She—"age always. change g p was put away, in a specially cons�trtict- when you (tear dad coming," ed secret sidings. Every night for a -.- week .a different place was chosen. Further Commandniient.. Tlien, during the clay,' the little train was • brought' out and, journeys> were. Thom Glia'It net•aboose aff1 etion; , but a goat will do so, eating the foli- agef prof) Leeds. E. Eubanks. Automobile Best Aid to Cupid Says Briton• made to various centres of war -time Saying; Of titie'I lack, activity.This worthy grief I still can bear L4ndon.—Marriages are now. made One of the most thrilling- journeys 110n- my ul$riis•sive back; in automobiles, and the old-fashioned ever made in oharge. of a Royal train I Qr:. This small visitation idea tliat,they are made' in a ballroom was on June 21st, 1922, when the Fits (nicely in any Pack.,' and that young women are kissed in•'Prinee'.of .Wailes returned home fronts Thou shalt not choose affliction,. conservatories has to go by the board," his Indian tour. color 14 says James Golquhoun, who:holds that The whole distance along the track young women and ,men. are really com I Batt take the one that coiues; Greet int with sigh orepialmady, I htoPaddington - - as Witli' swords or, funeraldrums•; - front' Plymouth Admiral Browning and Lord panions to -day in.spite of the effort of ro ymou w Or like Jack Hornet• in his C Stamfordeam. luted y C eermg people, while e the old-fashioned folks to keep a the Relish the bitter plants: station dense throngs had waited for—Le�ano•ra Speyer. Are the king's two right band men. traditions of fifty years ago. ° Admiral Sir Montague Browning le Only the really beautiful girl re- hours,..The train ran specially- through T�ristoI -not taking the avoiding •spur the first and priueipal naval aide=de-mains unchanged arts still ,has the • Lord Stamfordham ! line -to `give the loyal inhabitants• of Egyptians Made Frne.Linen.- camp to the king. privilege of being dumb, says Mr. Col- • ocheer e. Prince. Compared'with th•e •amen wra in s* achancet the uepp g by h at th corner, however, is the king's most intimate l quboun, who believes that most of the the city s n of h Efficient friend,and enjoys his complete andhumbug" Anel this reception ' when the train found oe one t e an ent Egyptian. I h nreserved confidence, He' has been The Roll g#11. Hollyhocks, stately . and tall with their silken, colorful faces, stand on one side, and on the other is an old stone wall over which, iii' jocund com- pany, morning•glories climb, purple - and. pink, blue and red, vying with the rainbow. Nor is their gayety lessened at :being modestly checked in their rioting, where a columbine rings its. rubicund bells. Instead, they run. co- •.; ciuettishly chase to the corner,_ then. - dash up` an old apple tree on the far. side of the wal=l,' gracefully trailing -ove�,•its gnarled branches and s, g ing In the 'soft breeze. Leaning far above the' columbine,. they -peer down: at themselves in the little brook that Slips into, this olid -fashioned garden. Spreading to' the corner of the fence, lilies of the valley grow, their white chiming bells' enfolded in the green shelter of their leaves. Across the:path hen -and -chickens sprawl out sg at comfort, shaing the .ground with.desty-milder and live -far -ever and forget -me -nets along the sides of the long 'bed, And such a gay, Cosmopolitan •coy pally as flourishes in the middle of the garden, hobnobbing with each,ctber in the sunshine. There are the foxglove In rainbow shades, the ,gay marigolds and bachelor's battens, airy petunias and jaunty phlox, . mignonette and ;tweet baby's breath. Among all these, here, there, and 'etrerywhere looking• up with piquant faces•,' are the pansies of. yellow "and gold and purple and black, massing themselves at the end of the bed for pne grand 'ensemble of color^ ,, Across from the pansies, banked tier on Stier, are jolly sunflowers, rho -tall men of the garden, while dancing and nonsensfceal in the r^la bobbing their gay little heade,•tlie pop- ttons itetaveett boys and.girks has dis ., , n vroduoed ta-day is ostttvel coarse pies and pinks, peri�yrngles and prim it d j I positively pop - roses race with the old wall a.l•the way , reached Paddington was historic. mummies, the finest linen that can bo Prim - in army, and when King Edwarri i have made ;many journeys upon �—.. oclash o f ,There 1 brook. Ter sn r �C :: to re b o v .,• ,. di) t a •Ii,. R a n s� r e r. I o 1 H h .,� ,cors .,ss en ins � s - sae n A c�. wan u •e v^te secretary to his successor, then g tg li p g m s coal at !appeared - trains when the Prince has been a pas - ascended the. throne he became pri- . • l Prince of Wales. This is Lord +Stant• At a depth of 66 feet the water of "Sue" in travel, and is tnpatien.t at a rare of netrlyiia:f a hiudxed weight color, no babel of tongues; each speaks ' Sea i twice as salt as it is the idea of a special 'saloon. Bat he par mile run, and during a 10,0 mites' the language of beauty in his of tt rosy. fordham's ]..test portrait taken just the Dead s after his '771.11 Birthday .which he cele- on the surface, and at 1,000 feet, never fails to gave a cheery word of jourr.•- y wr_x require brated a few weeks an. three,times salt. thanks to the driver and those re- oil. as rwtsYt, wow Looto Qvti PReuatce D R1G141'0: SIR Ssb TELLS Mc - THAT a Lot44cies "Pp, R . SAS't's ttit AM t'i"G--r,n TotP.k r"r1Ar S ut.A'S P BLO,M%NG bc-AD Be✓AT isrWE 1 'Net eT ALso 5 A i' I RPycaS PR carts IN t.oisnlAt-: T.) LIAR- etto / 'L Dorsal' BGt-iC-uc• ANY t-eiebona PAfee::fa SAGD Slay Tid tNG aC Tt1% Kit.1h teal i! seven pint; of They take In the sunshine and -give ,i back a an with a joyoue bent which tells of -lavish a'hundanerei, The Lewes:" sing here and traila their nets in the old` apple tree, tuning the voices at their nestlings to ,ilia melody of the brook, ::Painted butterflies flit like will-o'-the-wisps alighting on this beautiful cup and. that. Then as the four-o,clooks say good -night, .a tweet Paco crcowried with soft hair is glimpsad, :and dare lady sof'this oi.1-fas- h ionad garden Stu es down dowTc upon the gay, faces looking up In :hers.' Ali the flowers scam to answer,to her role call as she passes along the Whitewashed cobblestone path, ; According to Jef This News Was Old Stuff. Bgt><tvs� LotineN PAPERS Aitv`T Pfhleer s6 StALe Isstduah i Tee eget 1` e'er t,Ah,odrJ - ,A Portrait Sketch. You are like .a secret valley • , 1Vlusicel aiid still;' Yait ai•e like a, grove of pines Alone on'a hill. Sweet as feeest brooks, awl strong Aspines agaip,stolear Bret. Beautifules distance And a great height. --Marie Emilie Glirhriht. Great Britain, is a coinmonvfeaith, independent natioes bet of in-• terdepefideat nations, -A-- Viscount lturzvhatn.