HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1927-11-30, Page 3THE BRUSSELS POST
For Sntetri<i m Connst ^l clyion
MAKE your roosts fire resistant and free front
drafts and cold by erecting Gyprnc ceilings
and partitions in your here. Gyprnc can 130 put:
tip I0 half the tittle required for Iath and plaster ---
raving time and Iabor costs. Gyprnc takes any
deceratiolt. Let us show you a full-sized Gyproc
board ready to apply.
Writs for tree booklia-"My Isomo." It will tell you
Low a ypcuq limbo:ail Gy,win Instituting Fbr.tn,ing tuul
h eel. v will reduce your [eel bill from 20 to +le;'i.,
TIIE ONTARIO GYPSUM CO.. UNITED, PARIS, CANADA
FiE°epIlO+s ;r f -Hlbo
For Salo By
Wilton & Gillespie - - - Brussels, Ont.
Tom Mix in a Smashing Western
"The Canyon of Light," Filmed
in Yellowstone Park for Fox
Ace of the Rope and Saddle in One of the Most Colorful Stories of Dar-
ing and Adventure in His Entire Career. .Scenes of Rare Beauty
Never Filmed Before Serve as Background for Spectacular Feats
of Dangerous Riding -A Lost "Ghost City" Wrecked During
Fight with Desperadoes Thrill ing Action on Flanders Battle
Fields a Feature.
Tom Mix has the role of Tom Mills,
limy contain in the French battle
front sequences that figure in "'Idle
'Canyon of Light," the cowboy ;tat'
latest Fox Filets thriller, which will
show at the Grand Theatre Friday
and Saturday of this week. Many
of the scenes were filmed. in• Yellow-
stone National Park and the picture
has all the dash, color and drama of
the West which !hart! Mix screen
dramas. The range hears the call to
arms and the best blood of the "fight-
ing West" answers for overseas. The
Westerners capture the enemy key
position, hut Captain Mills' buddy
falls during the attack, ;just after
writing home in praise of Mills.
When he lands in America he re-
ceives a letter inviting him to visit
the parents of his slain buddy.
11111, returns tel his native town to
find vigilantes organized to curb
desperadoes led by his brother-in-
ir,w. He finds his aster dying at
the moment the vigilante:4 are ready
to hang her husband. '.Bills answere
her plea and tricks the vigilantes
committee. He frees Itis brother-ha-
law
rothet hl -
law and gives him his own horse so
he can return to his dying wife. Tite
desperado, instead of going home,
dashes to "The Canyon of Li:rht,"
his gang's lair. After his sister's
There
4i
Here and.
S ere
Reports received from various
guides in New Brunswick state that
partridges have increased; moose Arc
lentiful and doer greater in num-
TS than last ycnr. On the Little
Tobique River heaver are more num-
erous this year, but not elsewhere.
Alberta's wheat crop is so good
that D. C. Coleman, Vice -President
of Western Lines of the Canadians
Pacific Railway, believes it will
reach 180,000,000 bushels. The record
crop so far is 166,000,000 bushels,
produced in 1023.
Rosebank Pride -71118, an Ayres
shire cow owned by George Pearson
& Sons, of Waterdown, Ontario, has
just scored a Canadian and a world
record for milk production, having
given 23,641 lbq, of mills, 978 lbs.
fat with average test of 4.14 per
cent. IIer five years' milking.record
is 87,843 lbs. milk, 3,633 dbe. ftat.
Aviation history is being made
nowadays. Canadian Air Board
officials announce that enquiries
have been received from 15 cities in
Canada desirous of forming flying
clubs. At the sante time Sir Philip
SassoonUnderrSecretary forAir in
the , British Go3wernment reports
that the first' of the two huge
6,000,000 ctrl}}e feet dirigibles being
built in England for inter -Imperial
commercial communication will be
completed in about two years and
that the maiden trip will likely be to
Canada.
Nova Scotia has won the Agent-
General's Challenge Cup at the Im-
perial Fruit SItoW held in Mao -
cheater, according to official advice
by cable. Nova Scotia obtained the
greatest number of points in the
overseas' section of the show, the
basis for award being 4 points for
each first prise, 8 for each second;
2 for each third and 1 for each
entry receiving 76 per cent. Nova
Scotia had 48 entries and won 7
firsts, 8 seconds and 5 thirds.
of a
game
The establishment
sanctuary In western Nova Scotia
was announced recently by W. L.
hall, Attorney( -General of the Prov -
lade. The reserve covers an area of
approximately 200 square miles and
cense-lee fine aceecrea .speje8tj-C
I death, MIPs has the vigilantes pre-
tend to hang him and outlaw spies
carry hews of this to their
chief. The desperadoes find the let-
ter of invitation and go to the ranch
for a fiesta, expecting to loot the
place. Mills had expected this and
when he arrives there the desperado
persuades the rancher he is an im-
poster. Mills is imprisoned but es-
capes too late to prevent the robbery
and abduction of the rancher's daugh-
ter. He follows the gang to a Ghost
City, an abandoned mining town,
and after every building in the place
is wrecked during the fight the des-
perado leader is overcome. Heed-
: boiled critics who have seen previews
of this latest Mix thriller say that it
contains some of the most daring and
spectacular riding ever shown, to-
gether with -scenes of wild beauty in
the Yellowstone Perk sequence that
are a delight to the eye. Suspense,
Itoo, ofa superlative kind with 0 real
story packed with romance will
make "The Canyon of Light" a pic-
j time that is slur to enthuse any and-
' ience. Dorothy Dwnn has theleading
feminine role while °thee well-known
pleyrts in the cast include Ralph
Sipperly, William Walling, Carl Mil-
ler , Barry Norton, Duke Lee and
Carmelite Geraghty.
tilers ani /crests and lakes m
which trout and wild life are sure
thrive.Th new sanctuary will
to e w t y
take in the chief waterways of Lake
Rossignol, Shelburne River, Jordan,
Sixth and Fifth Lakes.
According to the latest Bulletin of
the Bureau of Agricultural Econo-
mics, Washington, Canada ranks
next to British India as to tobacco
produced in the British Empire.
"Stimulated by the preference grant-
ed Empire -grown tobaccos in the
British market since September 1st,
1919," says the report, "the produc-
tion of tobacco it Canada has in-
creased from 14,232,000 pounds in
1918 to 25,884,000 in 1926; Ontario
: furnishing about 76 per cent. of the
product and Quebec most of the re-
mainder."
1 Gasoline has done all the damage
possible to the .horse industry in
Canada, exceeding to W. J. McCal-
lum, horse imparter of Brampton
and Regina, wit) arrived in Canada
recently on board the C. P. litter:
"Metagama." Mr. McCallum brought
with hint over 100 champion stal-
lions which he purchased through-
out the British Isles, France and
Belgium during the summer months.
He will take the valuable shipment
west this winter and will dispose of
them throughout the prairie prov-
inces. Mr. McCallum is optimistic
regarding the future of the horse
industry' in Canada and states that
more pure-bred anunais are needed
on this side of the water.
Man of the Runny, at Eight
If you were a wee lad, hardly
eight, and you hadn't seen your
mother or Cour little brothers and
sisters for ever so long, and if you
had a pain toyour chest all day-.
well it is doubtful it you would smile
as bravely and say "flow do you dol"
so eheorlly as Bert de00-stretched
out wanly on his little cot In the
Queen Mary Hospital for Consump-
tive Children at Weston.
Serts daddy hill been dead for a
long time, and his mother goes out
washing -and tb1A wee lad used to
help look after the others. Ite caught
a bad 'cold and might have been
snuffed cul' -as many another little
human candle has been by the chill
. wind of oonsumptlon-but that he
• was sen!n ust i time to the Queen
j
Mary elospitel for treatment.
I 1S Would yeti not like to help title
work to go on, through a contrlbu-
lton to the honpltal7
oontrlbutlona may he sent to Vert,
A.
Marlton, Provident, College
Street, mo iao
'WIfl lit16 MY1TE:I1Il':S ARM t»Oi,u.l''m
Seotda.nd Yard •'( tbiaet" Meets tit
Eleven o'CVnce Caen Das.
Illeven ii'cloek 1. peibahty tee
morafatal hour of tie. clan' fee Tom -
don's eriutinats. 11 1, tie heat when
ycotlalnl Yard usu,lly volt! H., "cab-
inet" toe:.4. i, -r, when the eelr•'rhi.Ga
meet. to Late ! i. 1 01 17". tits.. its
Lendone. .fitly crime will.
Mitch of '• till ted ', u i m y
ut sttec! tut ,sr t i n •„
been wade in the 7''"! ? n„r ll.
When the greatest t t lis w1b.vil Lou-
don „ulpleys to d fiat 'u, tloilartys
of 111,• uuderwield at, I ri,t.Lt. lie
gether in the h tame,. uU•rell C„
ruotu at Op, end OS 11!,• F:111 ,ul,ul •»t
While Big L'ou'r hawk vc•.1, nlinpnut
from eleven to 1iv, lt.• „ lurk th•
most crowded sixty minnt 11) Scot-
land Yards twenty-f„ut.huo, !day.
The table In the eonierence room
is often strewn with prole, flashlieett
pb'ii graph:;, 1tu11 1 Thr , yIl. t 1n• lo -
ports, and the rellee elite•:: -artt-
eles of clothing, weapons, ur finger-
print impressions -which often play
a leading part in s110hlg Scotland
Yard on the right trach,
A great deal of preliminary rou-
tine work has been gi ne through be-
fore the "Cabinet„ :accts. All the
telegrams and telephone messages
which have come in through the
night have been dealt with, ell the
sealed sacks of letters and parcels
which have come by mail and courier
have been sifted by the official sort-
ers and despatched to the proper des-
partmonts. Only the more important
matters are referred to the chiefs.
Once a week the divisional detec-
tive inspectors from London's twen-
ty-three police stations came Lo Scot-
land 'Yard. They lay before their
superiors the week's toll of crimp,
and give en account of the working
of the C.I.D, machine in their divi-
sions. At the end of each month
Scotland Yard audits its accounts 01
"crimes committed" and "crimes ac-
counted ter," and a copy of London's
strangest balanetasheet is laid on the
table of the man who commis the
working of the world's 1, :eatest Po-
lice machine.
TURKS' Nd'2B' AMBITION%
Angora Being Miele. (leer -Automatic
Telephones and Cabarets.
The new Turkish capital is spring-
ing up with lightning rapidity.
A water system for 120.000 inhabi-
tants has been put in, gangs wonting
on It day and night. Since March
five furlongs have been Pierced of the
414utiles "Grand Boulevard Clhitti"
running out past the new town to-
wards Tchankaya, where the resi-
dences of the president and ministers,
legations, and embassies are. It is a
fine double highway forty yards wide
with trees punted down the centre,
and even 011 Fridays, the day of rest,
work is pushed til along it.
A quarter of u tuillinn trees have
been planted to provide the nt w d10-
triats with much-needed shade from
the fierce summer sun kind the re-
current dust -storms.
Nearly 1,000 residential villas,
each with its square of ground, have
been built, partly hy the prefecture
and partly hy private persons. Huge
buildings to house the Agricultural
Bank, the Ottoman Dank, the min-
istries of justice and health and the
ou+tnnis direction are almost ready
to be handed over.
Ch• ap and ContitttlOtle nne-decker
tumor -omnibus se rvi •es- link up alt
parts of the new town. The hotels
are improving fast and even a num-
ber of night cabarets is have been open-
ed. An automatic 1.dr•phone system
has been installed, aid a 1,900 kilo -
stall. 'bc. ttie light station is being„
erected to tulg,u' ni the present sup-
ply-. A gas eonc,•ssiun has been
maul tea.
There i' o !haul influx of r
71 s a C u ff x e -
pt senlativice of foreign business
!.roans, the principal ease tnls:•ing kit
Iu went beam; heti itit. Nt-ttrly every
usher European 'mike has obtained
elem. inyportant
About: three miIhrtt sterling Is to
be spent. eta 0 ten-year thwiopinnnht.g
Program. The 1009r 0'tui 1Itt at pres-
ent being made so rest, have to be
executed on a iitutiee , t about $500,-
, 000 a year. -London Uitily yiaiI,
NEW I I I,, A I t' 1' _ 91 I.I A T THEA/11Y.
As an Organ Plays Only a Secondary
Part,
Prof,I11
lartfu Mendelsohn, e
1, ohs who has
occupied the chair of diseases of the
heart hi Berlin University since 1890
pats forward the theory that the
heart is not the prime motive power
for lire, but ea an mann p18o e only
0 secondary part.
The uc tivity of the cells of the body
in absorbing the eliminating fluids,
says the professor, constitutes the
chief motive power in forcing the
blood through the system.
Dr, Mendelsohn, in support of his
theory, calls attention to the fact that
many persons with exceedingly weak
hearts continue to live., despite the
fact that, in these particular cases,
it 1s impossible to believe. that their
hearts can pump the blood through
the body,.
The heart and blood circulation
merely playa reenter role in distri-
buting the fuel and resulting refuse
to and from the various motors
throughout the body -namely, the
internal, glandular, and epidermic
cells," says the professor,
Dr. Mendelsohn states that this ex-
plains many cases of the burial of
persons apparently dead, and he ar-
gues that other tests besides cense•
tion of the heart-beat aro necessary
to establish true death.
Restorative for Jaded Nerves.
51 is a striking fact that a lump of
sugar candy in the evening Is a
mulch better restordtiVe for Jared
nerves and, drooping spirits than a
cocktail, for it is • nourishment and
not stimulant,
A Poor Reader.
,jimmy (shyly): "I can rear} your
thoughts, Miss Ruth,"
Muth (coyly): "Then what makes
you Bit so Tae away?" A
c..
Never Fails
"Whim 1111_ _t sent ho les in the
lobby whom 1 don't. knew !.Tont Adele
1 and 1 .e it expects me to know 'Who
he• ',, I tidte fm warmly lay the
-hand, look straight into his eyes, and
say, 'And how is the old complaint?'
1 have never known it to. fail."
No Static
"4Vlly ,Io you always draw your
chair up -in 'front of Smith's radio
when we're calling on them -you
can't make: it wont."
"No, and neither can Smith while
I'm sitting there."
Willing to Help
Mr. Brown was rushing through
the interurban station the other day
when a grotty girl stopped him.
"Will you help the Working Girl's
Home?" she asked.
"Sure," replied Brown. "Where
are they?"
Quite Sanitat'y.
Doctor-"I1avc you taken every
precaution to prevent the spread of
contagion in your family?"
Lady -Absolutely, doctor, We
.hou;rht a stinkers- drinking cup and;
we all . re chinking from it."
Hard Bump
.Smith -"How'd you get the black
eye?"
Jones -"I bumped into a door,"
Smith -"Oh, that'e old stuff,"
Jones -"It's the: truth, My wife
threw it at lee."
Her Threat
:Madge -"Well, if I can't have
hint, no other girl is going to have
him!"
Cora -"Gracious! Are you going
oto shoot hint?" ,
Madge -"Nn, I'm going to spend
his money."
Realization
• Client: I want to sue Mr, Parc:
fur libel. Two years ago he called
me a rhinoceros.
Lawyer: Why didn't you sue him
before this?
Client: It' was only yesterdety
that I saw a rhinoceros.
The Limit.
• Adams: My brother-in-law and
his: wife live ncatr yeti, don't they?
Gibson: Yes. They ere the most
accontodating people! I ever 10,0.
Attains: You don't say;
Gibeon Yes. They have no tele-
phone, but they said would be trla,l
to let us install ours in their house
so we wouldn't be bothered calling
them to it all tile time!
{ The Shriek of the Desert.
Staffordshire Woman (of her hus-
band): He is 62, but I have found
that he is flirting with another \vc-
rmin. He is worse than one of them
shrieks in the desert.
{ Usually
Machin: How long are you going
to be away on your vacation?
Jordan: Well, the boss expects me
back on the 10th, I expect to get
back on the 16th, so I'll probably be
back about the 20thl
Getting Satisfaction
"Do you keep your cows in a pas-
ture?" asked the new housekeeper.' as
site paid the milkman.
"Certainly, modem."
"Well, I jest wondered, You see,
I've heard that pasteurized milk is
so much better,
BLYTH CONGREGATION
CALLS AYLMER PASTOR
•
BLYTH, Nov. 22 -At a meeting of
the congregation of St. Andrew's
UnitediChurch, held here this after-
noon,
fternoon, for the purpose of selecting a
minister to fill the vacancy caused
by the resignation of Rev. G. Telford
who went to Fredericton, N. 13, early
in September, an unanimous call wa s
extended to Rev. Mr. Stewart, of
Aylmer. The stipend offered is
$1,800, and free manse, instead of
$2,000 as formerly
•
WEDNESDAY, NOV, 30th,_ 1:127.
WHERE APOSTLES LIVED
'9rchacoloarkstea !'laim to have Pound
the 1.•tun!
Alrhtleelogititii elitiin ti 11gpe ran.
•ec,•r, rl ut ' „t :! • er'unl 11•0,1'W to
!.!lett N7 Part[ 11v"ai tw?Cllr• r t •ruing
t't�ri•ti i:en It} to tilt. lt"nt_rnr Ah -o,
1'• 1 1 tr,1
Paul 1 i,• 11 i 11,1 t h ar
;mit beet, be eie.;:0 ie
a1i o '1 th -cr ! lion•
pelt nt;a ,f ( 1,
Ant ricatt e•a, ane, r V.10 1 t.ho
f;amnt:a shipl,uild,.r, c 1•"=iiia,} •il',ltia.
Au entire mem, pi z ti le is. in
the aetoal wnldi1i,ut in shielt it wan
at the titre of tie- Apo. 11c's, has been
' xeavatt d
lire ltouuo itt ilttti.i a sad, -r the
leteiliea of rot Sebastian, forming'
part of its foundation!' .n.1 formerly
!tiled in with 'Hire; eiimpli.ioly ldd-
1111, Its 01 t 'I,.. '!'1:.• 1 c r; ',
jnsiat the 11cittnine of fee c.tta-
eolub of St, iehastien. Mr. Cramp
took great interest I❑ the ar,•haco-
logieal possibilit.lca of th.• re father-
hood and decided t.0 riu•snce t}l
excavation of the foundations of ills
basilica.
More than one hundred inscrip-
tions testifying to the presc,aee of St.
Peter and St. Paul have been un-
covered from the debris. Prayers
of the early visitors to the place
wretched with sharp instruments
into the stucco walls show that it
must have bcaon the goal of pil-
grimages for the first Christians
even during she times of persecu-
tdotl t,
According to the inscriptions, the
holier.belonged to Marens Clodius,
Vermes, Roman patrician evidently'
converted to Christianity during the
mission of the Apostles. The room,
which has just boon unearthed in-,
tact shows the pagan decorations of:
the first century which are so welt
preserved that the designs are per-!
feetly clear and no doubt is possible!
as to their origin in the first con-'
tury, Other roams not. about to be;
excavated, show evidences of Chris -e
tian signs, which has led ecclesiastics
to the opinion that the Christian
symbols were affixed after Hermes.
had been converted to Christianity.
The decorations in the new room
portray the head of Medusa with
frescoes of doves and vine's and gob-
lets of fruit, representing peace and
plenty. Tho colors aro distinct and
though there is a simplicity of de=sign
age has served to mellow the mark-
ed contrasts and blend them into
harmonious shades without in the
least impairing their clearness.
The excavators have earefutiy pre-
served tilt fragments found during
digging. These have been selected
and matched and it is front these
that the more than a hundred in-
scriptions have been vemplated, The
Inscriptions are found both in Latin
and Greek. Sone date from the first
century, which has led the ecclesias-
tical authorities to believe that the
house 'for the: first three Centuries
was used as one of the very Srst
shrines of Christendom,
The inscriptions read:
"Peter and Patti lived in this
house,"
"Peter and Paul hreneht C}lria-
tianity to the Romans from this
house,"
"Peter and Paul pray for us all,"
The decorations on the walls of
the other rooms depict the early
Christian.
BOY -EMPEROR AN EXILE.
iirltan-Tung Is Living Virtually as a
Refugee,
The Chinese- boy-enhpe etir, H: irnn-
Tttng, is new 19 years of ace, and is
living virtually as a release under
Jerianeee protection in Tientsin.
Probably he lives his life to Mr.
11. I Johnston, his thee.
t'dfri nr.
• ,o
Who, about two1. , when ha
yal
sn c tlled Christian .etian c n rat Fong
seized Pekin, arratimel the trop: toy's
escape by motor car to the leeation
quarter. Demands were made at 1111
time for the execution of theem-
peror.n-
Hsaa-Ttln,, was married Imre
than three years ago to a charming
Manchu print•, ia, and ,,It elle is with hien
at Tientsin. In F.'hruaty las he tele -
Mated his birthday in •the Japanese
concession, To a few foreieners who
were invited, ha dreiarcd that a pas-
sible way out of China's ilITivulel0a
was a return to the monarchy. Per-
sonally, he said, he did not desire
to resume the alt r°nr', and he also
slid not believe that the Chin'-,+ pee,
pie wished for any form of mon-
1 arch
The'. emperor is, of Bourse, the last
"Son of Heaven." as the Manchu
rulers were palled. Ile was deposed
by the Republicans when 11,e was
quite a boy. They allowed hits to
reside in the "Forbidden City" of
Pekin with his tutor, Mr, .Johnston,
tho only Soren, -icer who has been p' r_
nutted to live within the imperial
precincts.
Dtdn'L Send the SSoney.
The death of John Drew recalls
one of the best stories told about
that distinguished actor. In 1906
when his brother-in-law. the femme
Maurice Barrymore, father of Ethel,
Lionel and John, was caught in San
Francisco during the earthquake.
Maurice was a great matinee idol and
a lover of comfort, During the ere,
the Csovornment commandeered every
finale to help stop the havoc, Among
those who were pressed into action
was MaurI0e. Mr. Barrynlore was
by 00 mean fond of physical labbr,
but being caught in one 01 his im-
pecunious momenta, he could not
leave' town. He wired his brother-
in-law for some cash to get away.
Drew, who thought it a groat joke,
wired back: "It took an earthquake
to get yon out of bed and the army
to pot you to work. Stay there."
Pas -de f:atolls,
Pas-de-Ctllais is the French name
for the Strait of Dover between Eng-
land and France, connecting the
English Channel with the North Sea.
The part 'of irraltec bordering on the
strait Is the Department kat -do.
Wait.
'Duck or Hen
.,401.0 ,„a y ..ul.., or au,
Why is it that duck eggs are not its popular as hen eggs? The: only
reason wc+ know, is, that the hilt ADVERTISES just the moment
I'll', lays an egg, while a duck keelts'lnlert1 and 'hides her egg under the
Army, We try to be like tate h, it. We try to tell the world we have
a great line of building limber; dimension etc.
All No, 1 5x 1;, C. lied Cedar Shingles {Edge grain]
All No. 1 Extra N. H White Cedar Shingles
Alex, Murray & Co.Asphalt Shingles
Cedar anti Hemlock Shiplup ai:d Ccniils;
lido,,,, Flooring. Ceiling Mou,ttittg,, Etct,
Urs=yid 2:t4 Hard Mtil:c for Hay Forx Tracks
1 1-4 in, Pine Wagon Box, Lumber, Etc,
Let's not be Ducks
Phan idler II^rt-
J MY
�i��C Ci`p
G
tOr Kills
W1 omter P, Q.
Phone No. 30 WIl DELIVER
CANADA HOLDS LEADING
PLACE IN POWER WORLD.
}las Fifteen Groat Electric Systems.
Study of Development of Hydro
Power in 1926 Reveals inter-
esting Facts.
It has become the customs in re-
cent years to rate as "great electric
power 1 systems" those ,nubile utility
systems, under one financial control
and management, which lmee 0 total
output of 100,000,000 kilowatt-ho:ire
or more, per annum. Such systems
are usually completely interconnect-
ed and may contain. severe] power
stations.
A recent study of such eysteme in
Canada for the calendar year 1026
shows th'll the Dominion now pos-
sesses 15 systems of that class and
that the total output of these 15 sys-
tems, excluding duplication, repres-
ents about 82 per cent of the total
output of the public utility or cen-
tral station systems of Canada. Th,:
systems referred to in order of their
total output during the year 1926
are: -
1. Hydro Electric Power Commie -
,ion of Ontario.
2. Shawinigan Water & Pow^r CO.
Quebec.
3. Montreal Light, Heat it Power
Consol tdated, Quebec.
4. Canadian Niagara Power Co.,
Ontario,
5. Laureutitle Power Co., Quebec,
6, West Kootenay Power Co., Bri-
tish Columbia.
7. British Columbia Electric Rail-
way Co.
M City of Winnipeg hydro Eleet-
I tt Sy eteln, Mnn'tobe.
9. Winnie,:: E,loctni. CO„ :Tani
,.0, 11 a thouserel killawatt-hours
each.
The total output in 102!3, exclud-
ing dtih)lh'atiun due to laureha:ae•C1
power, was nearly 10,000 million:
• kiIlowatthours, the total installed
plant was over 3,300,000 horse -pow-
er of which over 96 percent was wat-
er -power, and the mesa load factor
or deer,. of utilization wax (10 per
cent.
Modeen pt •1e 0e c in power ;supply
i incl, : .. ingly tot .u•(ls lar,,, inter-
connected system, with their ad-
vantae:a of ".ff e ,trop, economy, and
reliability, end the above is obviously
0 very snl:'sftmrtory :showing. The
q teosli"It rtitr?roll:/ preaents Itself,
how does this compare w•s:h other
rnunti tee? There is (rely one other
conntiy in the F., chic in this re-
spect and that is our immediate -
neighbor. The United State' c, with a;
population t.iv , -,. timeit as great as
that of Canada, bite naturally a tench,
greater number of systems of the
class under con.silel'ation, but it can
he shown by statistics that Canada
bas a large lead both as to the num-
ber of such systems in proportion to
popultion and as to the output from
such sy::tems per head of total pope
ulation.
IMMIGRATION SHOWS
INCREASE FOR YEAR.
But Figures for October were
Slightly Lower Than in 1928.
OTTAWA, Nov. 21.-•-intanigra:ion
to Canada for the month of October
this ye t' totalled 9,433, compared:
with 10,612 its the ecI•r.'sponding
month for 1x'20. While there was
a slight d ,1 !cosi its. October, 1927, as
,:olnst the total of Octnbe•r last
tuba. ayear. yet for the seven months of
10. Canada Northern Power Cnr- ° the current fisted. year. that is front
aeration, Om erie and Quebec.. April 1 to Ort. :,1, 11'27, the total
11, Dominion Power and Transtni-- nntttigtrctGm ttt 1110,15x, .empanl
sins Co., Ontario. with 100,41'./9 1717 the nn'l1 " period
12. Ott.tw,t tt Hull Power & Tran, I.I.: year, ee inerease of 17 per cent,
mission Co., (Potter. Cif th. tato] r!f 1110..1 31` :narrlalltn,
13. 1>uke-Privi' Power Co., t�.l�'ts •r.
11. I\iintIt. tic1uht Power Co., Cin
a to
c r
1 /. Southern c':tuada Power
Qtu-bee.
The minted output of eat 11 t1 these
ey stem14 -aeeed.9. :did in many
IS a large multiple e'f, ;i hniid.'e41 mil-
lion kilewatt•l;e ars tier all^tea, soul
Ilia fir,: fem. sesta ,t: in ill_ lt:t '.fsr
1" 11,11 tam, „mint the Brit1eli Isles;
1x1,1,21 from til_ United States; 25.-
199
6-1}19 front h';V cosec of Northernhe
rn
Europe and the riemainieg 33.139
from 33 other gaulttr.; : of the •
world. •
in the seven menthe nisi 1'e,viow'
28,801 Canadians return.", from this
1.'nited States who had gen., intentl-
lin to reside there perul.,I01tiil'.
,>m.RV.m,✓a=' ,,a4%0.9i1V11. +Txcts•.-.3.P:IISSYA1u..®,mrucou.a„�,CC•tM�:fit.:. 31MK.'Ctl!'
Chrisrtrnis
th
C�7
Cirds
IT IS NOT TOO EARLY TO ORDER
PERSONAL GREETING CARDS
TO SEND TO FRIENDS
AT CHRISTMAS,
WE HAVE ALREADY BOOKED SEV-
ERAL ORDERS,
SEE OUR NEW, AND VERY ATTRAC-
TIVE SAMPLES,
The Post Publishrog House