Loading...
The Brussels Post, 1925-8-5, Page 2E 1 1 i f 6 SIXTY CEN7IES ON THE NIS Were, hats Atrt0a contributed to the ti^0u14't isi lllzatlon? r A Seethe et a mai} of the huge core lineal, of Melee with its ,11,202,000 sgttavo tonsil of 1#0.1.0a dk ciosas a alis• tie141100'1 talent -ion of European Colonies Controlled by Groat Britain, Emcee, Italy, ;3slgiutu, Spain and Por theta. Both the Preece and the Brl: t}* possessions au Africa aro larger than, thio Untied Steles, There are only three indepeneent states in Africa, Egypt, Abyssinia and Marie, representing one-fiftaontlt of the total area of the continent. But Egy,ptu with an are oil arable land Peal than the state of Maryland, has held a con's'Pimettss place in history throughout recorded time. For sixty cauterise Egypt has been a hula of art and ature, And tar sixty oeasteries irrigation lute been practiced Watlnuously in the Nile Velloy, More than sixty centuries ago EMT' tianss established a calendar, which with a slight modification that was in- trodueett in 1582 atilt servos to mark the passage of time. And sixty centuries ago the Nile basin ivas the ?some, of Egyptian aarohi- lecture, glass making, pottery, spin- ning weaving, dyeing, metal industries, cgriculture, astrenemy, matheanatioe, s ad literature. Egypt le African in origin and de - 'elopement. The descendants of the pyramid builders still live along the Nile. There are about 1,000,000 of them, contumely lumen today as Copts, and they togeth:;r with 13,000,- 000 Arabs and 100,000 Europeans make up the population of Modern Egypt, Nor Is Egypt noted alone for the length of its recorded history. Per- haps no other ec'untry hoe had so long a struggle for liberty. From about 1000 B.C. to 1922 A.D. Egypt was ruled in succession -by the Libyans, Persians, Greeke, Romans, Moslems, Turks and English. Thus after thirty centuries of strug- gling, 'Egypt, on Mesa 15, 1922, again to - betaine an independent k gdom. And the present Idug, Fuad I, is the ninth a the tine folulderi. by Mohammed Ali, who on July 0, 1805, was appointed governor of Egypt bthe Sultan of Turkey, and who at once started a re- vival of the industries which had de- clinedunder Ottoman rule. 6t0(0 nettonal Pride awe with all tate iadestrlal an'I eeonootio tendeatelee of 1 to world. • Int sou a fetsinres of national life Egypt hi Well. to the fore. Its trade ' balance ie favorable, its production its~ • creasing, its rate nal debt extremely nmttid, its budget bt,a,res :tad rte eur aeatey Is emetically at err. Few outer c:auntrles. cels boast of such conditions to•dpy. I Though Egypt, exclusive of, the Attglo•laliyptien Sudan, covea'e about 848,000 square utiles, the real Egypt is in the Nile Valley end Delta. In. this, the heart of Egypt, oomprisleg 15,900 square miles, are her indusirlee, 99 percent. of her population, and her I agriculture, The rest, of the country is composed mainly of the Libyan, Ara' bran and Sinai deserts. The Nile, awaits longest river in the world, eontlnuee to be Egypt's, fertile eouroe of life lune wealth. Running. 3000 miles from Victoria Nyanza Lake Ito Alexandria, the Nile meastu•es out 960 miles of its length in Egypt, tra- , nosing the country from end to end, 1, receiving no tributaries In this stretch of 900 mllee but irrigating 5,400,000 acres of enable land. About 4,000,000 iacres of this 'irrigation empire are : watered perennially by canals, where - I as the remaining 1,400,000 acres are irrigated *nee a year by the basin sea - Item established by King Mens sixty, centuries ago. Turning now to the commerce of Egypt we And that• her total exports for 1523 were worth $280,843,000 and her imports $212,445,000, showing a I favorable balance of about $68,400,000. On account of the preemmieence of t. cotton In the economic life of Egypt, any discussion of Egyptian trade may well begin with that commodity, On Ian average the cotton plantings cover ,1,600,000 acres and the annual produc- tion ranges from 575,000,000 to 725,- 000,000 pounds. There is a tendency to luorease the cotton acreage. And every effort Is i being made to control the insect pests and diseases which effete cotton. In every feasible way theEgyptian Government Is encouraging the use of better cottouaeed and better fertilizers in order to meet the increasing de- ' mand for cotton. Last year the chief i buyers of oaten stood in the order !England, France, United States Italy and Qermeny. Wheat is another Important crop. Egypt also produces substantial quan- Utles of carry, barley, rice, millet, beans, lentils, peanuts, onions, cane eager, flax, sesame, henna, tobacco, forage crape and fruits. The Real Egypt. And traversing in th,es'a few sen- tences the 5000 ye -ere or more of Egyp- Ilan history front King Menes in the hazy past, 4000 years or more before the Otuesilan era, to Kiug haul ,I 1n 1926, we find a modern Egypt with Into Ontario's Little Known "1 am expaet:ng to make a trip up the Skekalt river, going north on that E into the NaJagami, and then to Little Current, Drowning ar Ogaki river, and! want to get as good mars as poseib:e of the oauttry." The abwve is a portion of u roger—et far information received from a gen-1 *man 1n one of the eliddle States, by < the Department of the Interior- Should this request be addressed to ninety- nine out of every hundred Canadians ! they would, without doubt, be unable to answer it. The rivers are all branches of the Albany river, which fiowe into Jam's Bay. Such an in quirt, However, ie. a sam'pie of many hundreds that have been received by' the above branch from American tour- ii,ttt, who this year seem to be parties - Lary interested in canoeing and camp -I Ing in Ontario, es'pecially the northern} Areas. point of making real friends, the pc:a- oli.erdon of which lo a valuable as'eet 00 a man or to a country, Mother o' Mine. If I were hanged on the hi h bill Mother o' mine, 0 n1^ther n' mine( 1 know whose love would follow me still, Mather o' mine, 0 mother o' mine! 1f I were drowned in tiro deepest sea Mother o' mine, 0 mother o' mine: I know whose tears would mime down ! to me, Mother o' aline, 0 mother o' mine! If I were damned of body and soul, T know whose prayers would make me wttot ei Mother ti mne, C mother 0' aline! —Rndyard Kipling, New Gas in the Sun. and; north-western portions, shah of Prof. FraJtr:ick Slocum, director of thio area to as, yet un:aurveyed, which the Vanlerk Oheei'vainry at Wesleyan, oondfitiou seems to have tt taspinahkra; tette of the observations very of a new gas as for the more adventurous spdrita:l the result ofer obse:t a,tons utade during among 'the American business and pro- the recent atoule of the corn. Ha says i the vapors a.ound the rte aro visible f'uw'onal men. Santee 02'those enquirers; only at the time of a total eclipse and are ata enthusiastic about their pro-, scientistshave eeno.'ledeii ss a result.' Jeoted tripe that they appear hardly of their observations that they have abed to watt for the time to stare, ; dtsravered a new gad, while many wb,o have previously, Prof. Slocum a'ald they are not yet camped in Canada or have pad•:1.1ei and I portaged a•I•ung her little known ready to announce what the gars Is or streams and lakes. are keenly Icoldng; to distant, the probable qualities. forward to a repetition of their execs/let Meat Eating In Britain. In this touriet trafEic Canada has a, The per maples Cor: e:upton of wtrnderful opportunity, not only front' le Great .Brltain,.i?ee rht1' i from 11600 • a financial st:ar,'lpcin't, hut from the mints .B.1023-24 to 1311§ pounde in equeely if. not , m'rrlYi.�*tlpartail1 Rcru'„- • 1924-25, Imo+..--.."-"-•-. amts. 4,40,46 MUTT AND JEFF—By Bud Fisher. ON •THE MAIN MOTOR ROUTE The number of Amerleau tourists from western points aeon ori our streets recently la substantial evidence of the value of Um good roads system ut Ontario, whet has placed this city on the route oovered by motorists In tre- v�iling between Chicago.end the Maritime Provinces, says an Ottawa correspondene, The map shovnt herewith la a portion of a new road neap isaued by the Natural Resources Intelligence Service, which shows some of the mala #roads of ;Canada, together with the connecting roads in the United States, Thefact that a direot,route is now metal- able, vt l -able, over the best of roads, front Chicago to Charlottetotyn,and that it is being used so extensively, le eneouraging- to the many aggreeeivo organizations that aseco-ope'rating In the promotion of touring, and particularly tq the Na- tural Resources'lntelligence Service; which lies become a cieerieg-itouwe for tourittit information lir Canada,. The Flag. An old subject has been given a new i Little Lodine mother lied taken ben dress in a prize poem on "Tho lrlag," 1 to church,and together they sat In tee for which The London Morning Post saeond von' of the gallery. has awarded 450. These linen will Leslie named particularly lntegat• make the Englishman's blood course , ed in a Lamely who sat in the brat row, a little faster and porhaps help him Every now and again he would emus better to counteract the propaganda of his neck forward In an eitemPt 00 880, "The' Red slag," The first verse 1s as the faces of tee two girls: follows: Unfurl the banner of England; Tell to the heavens her story, A thousand years she has held it fast, people in, front before, bat I know their' A thousand years of a mighty past, names:' "FIu'sh, dear!" whispered his mother., "But I do!" persisted Leslie. " Tlreir oame'sl "How do you know?" came the In - quirt', " "Well, every time the young Mere, Natives of Papua are, in most cases, man says his text: 'I will lift up mine very superstitious, and go in fear of eyes to the hills,' three two big girls the witch-doetors. look at each other and smile. A Junior "Sherlock." Ancient Lawsuit Legal' battlers. over trines to land are notoriously long drawn out, but even the most stubborn of them seldom lent a thousand yean;. The tribunal of the little republic of Andorra, hoverer, is :trying a case that goes hack to the Sear 790. When Oharleinagne return - ea from an oxpeddtion to Spain he lett a thousand.: hie soldiers on the south I slope of the Pyrenees, 118 a roar guard. Ito prevent the Mooltt from entering Prance. To each of thorn he gave an allotment of land—one hundred and ilfty square •mules in all, That sand Is the greater part of the present terri- tory of the little free republic of An- dorra. The litigation concerns, one of those original grants and has been 4'n the'dourts for a' thousand years', Value of Education. A man and 'his, wife who had both been brought up in a country village decided to upend theit•,summer In Lon- don, where, according to rumor, the ' When the sermon bad almost molt- ed lie •comelusion, Laslle turaed and whispered to bis mother: "Mother, I have .never seen those The tale of a nation's glory. Red for the nation's heart, white for the stainless brand, Blue for the girdling sea That for ever guards the 'land. CROSS -WORD :PUZZL, (41THE INTEANAt DUAL SYNDICATE SUGGESTIONS FOR SOLVING CROSS -WORD PUZZLES Start out by filling in the words of which you feel reasonably sure. These will give you a clue to other words crossing them, and they in turn to still others. A letter belongs in each white space, words starting at the numbered squares and running either horizontally or vertically or both. HORIAL 1—Tortures 4—Circles 7—Springy IO—To pierce i1—To make level 13—To pucker 15—Petition 18—Little child 19—A ditch 21—Recess In a church 23—Organ of body 24—DIsputant over trifles 25—Hard fat 27—Don ated 29—Small barrels 80—Regaled 83 -Culinary herb 34—The Jury 36 --Belonging to you 38 -To sorutite24-.. 40—Destroyer 41—Hereafter 42—Falry VERTICAL` i—Dowdylah woman 2—St! 11 3—Sudden blow 4—To split asunder 5—Frozen dccsort 6—Slope 8—To border Lipari . 9—Trial 10—To fixmast a 12—Midday 14 -To make rough 10—To pass by degrees 17—Tho waste from burning 19—Placed on a wall 20—To coincide 22—To corrode 23—Sailing distance In race ' 26—Unbeautifui 28—Outlet 29—H i I lock 30. Diet -."'- `• .- 41 "7* -rabic 33—Two-masted vessel 34-0Low murmuring sound 36—Fabrications 37 -To be under obligation 39—Swarm of young fish streets were paved with gold. Having spent an enjoyable day In- specting London's interesting sights• they renah ed to a they tad Heard- a great deal. V 1 In the interval the fireproof curtain was let down. e ow In the contra was writ-, ten the word "Asbestos." "Now what does that mean, Wiidio?" asked the wife, pointing to the curtail, 'Oh, that's a Latin we'd,' replied, William blandly. "It means came " Accountability. Natural R:Algursea Bulletin, Sometimes matt alto betake them' Tho Nalturel Pees InteUigenop solves to abaft stirs st7hed' Oho open Servlctt to the De artnlent of rho 00 apses asbutue that no law holds where p the new 0130088 to be and that whet Itozior at 000atva 05.70:•.. ll'raltele Thompson called tee'Itound of Canada 18 rapidly becoming a dairy Heaven cannot Hollow theme so tar. It 00untry. This is ovi4o iced in many is a convenient tboorl I,or tlws0 \alai � ways, particu1P1'ly In the growth of seek their own pleasure and he'levq'our exports of C14lry products, 50 18 teat in sl&lt iudulgenee they will and it. i well for the country that such is the. Tho, have ,kvsa au opiate kc eon- 0060, all authorities agree that there act°noal 4;4' oral• •Ube ddstancs tl5010 is no better means' of keeping up the will Olirry aro accusing voices of 011810 ; fertility of the soil than .rho keeping tiiondiswho 'car'edfor tlueamand wished' of cattle. Feeding' to lire sleek the them Weil anal wore concerned for produce of the fermi is tto 1? oHai stop their misfortune or felicity. They are nearer the finishing of the process of out off from anY reslponslbillty Lon' buss -'maintaining the food supply.tidt turas, Nono small call theme' to aocounit. It is interesting to note the large Nono Shall 'Present them .with a damia- .ingrea6e in the supply of , f ua Bus'- . lug fatly of .expectations, unfulfilled. dairy produce to tither cgtit:ittrie 8 Dues .ng1925 ax or�s'rtYached gu i P FlonceLoa•Uh they are carefree; theirs la much in advan0o of the previous soar, Otto 'tSt1x! d t pea•Loct l4benty thht oven ; Butter shows the greatest increase, sluinte and. a>vgolto-»ince "„.t,.. 5)00 the exports for Oho last fiscal year bound 0o gooSoow � nevet know. i p But ons, In Wee myth sYW created by tatal:Ing 2A,501,081 pounds, compared Y With 13,©98,068 pounds in 1024, Oho in. own fisted, ta,toone are ti ee utter• croased"value being 33,645,271. ly atwat301pwted, to follow heedlessly Cream and rnilir showed largo gains their nett devices, They still 14y un- } during the past two years. In 1923 der the law, for the saw is, not so Hutch theta 5voro 1,712,245 gallons of cream a •stwlu'ts operative in a given place as � shipped to Oho United States. This it le alt enveloping' atin culphere. air' {was increased In 1924 to 2,783,866 law goes everywhere, e, tl a thea we galinns, while 1925 saw the record of breathe; it enters, like the light, by 3,884,188 gallons being shippeINT across the minutest crevice. In Palet, no man 8 alto line, Experts of fresh milk in t•Ito, tor als his effort, can exclude iIi 1928 amounted to but 856,034 gallons, kis can put a mileage between Walsall its 1924 they reached 2,101,396 gallons awl asvy plane, 01171)"8., oet; be cannot ' and in 1925 a total of 3,088,212 gallons separate himself from to operation of avant the the United States. rrinciples'Ghat are universally and ins Our exports of cheese, zvhkb.lor a perio0otbly true, aro matter w s avil18 time' shorrod signs 'eese, lining, are hits ti t ea;s is ]iib oars and runs away again on the rice:: of'deelinbeing 126, - front them, as Bunyan's hero in that' 063,200 poundo, this year, against that aplo area° oc'Piigrinn'•a Progxesa" 114,7'77,000 pounds last year and 114, - tuna from the City of Destruction.648,900 pounds in 1923: The first and the last aim of lrumaai Similar largo gains were made in government is to hold seen account, exports of milk powder, In 1923 able, The will of the people le not hut 8,017,691 pounds were exported, tnansloted ' by the highhanded self- This increased to 4,826,603 pounds in. sntfiiciency of au absolute autocraoy, 1924, and again increased in 1925 to , The will of an overruling Power for , 7,205,677 pounds. thelinito litetimeiof a man isnot carried 'It Is doubtful. if • any other branch out by one who says lie does not care of industry can show such proportion - what any owe 'thinker, what any ono ate gains, in the past three years, as suffers, so long as he has what ill e calks has the dairy industry. It is but an - la good time, "A public office or a pri- other indication of the possibilities , vote life, wbeftever its tenure, must of Canada's greatest natural resource conform a land, millions of acres of which t to saw d to that onform —the la mi u c tt will discover not a 'hars'h constraint are'still awaiting the settler and his Fond of Fiction. Ile --"So you're fond of fiction?" i She "Duu't I listen very attentive y to you?" - - \'Neighing Un Winnie Winnie was a winsome young thing,' and it was her amhiticm to beeoma a lobrarian, She tar.,- quite friendly with the local librarian, and often she would talk to him on her favorite subject— brohs. One day she was telling -him how wattle= fond she was of the Wav- erley Novels: "Then you've read Scott?" he as'ke'd. "Naturally; they were all written by him, weren't they?'.' "Did vc u tthe e• tate. 'Ladyof the t Lake'?" he inquired. - "i'erfectiy lovely!" came the reply, "I have read it four times, ,And '1Iar- ntton; and 'Peveril of the Peak,' I simely'dote on bafh," 'And 'Scott's Emulsion'?" he •elude tinned, growing tired, "Oh, think that la the most won- derful thing Scott ever wrote!" 1' A'Cow for'Miaeions. When contributions for missionary work were asked for et the Primitive Methodist Conference at Scarborough, England, recently, one delegate pro- mised a cow. l iAnswer to last week's but the 'generous latitude of the spirit plow. that finds bis iY o •t tui freedom in obedl• enaR. c on the S 'I'1•affl ue-- IYIQIint Logan. Canadian Canadian Rookies and second in height Tho Suez Canal, in whioll the ,3. -itis' Mount Logan, higbeeJt peak in the government baa' a hasty leveatment in shares, has Just reported the figures 9,882 to Mount Meliinley, alone among the for 1924, which show that 25,109,882 tans passed through the canal in that Pealts of North Atiierica, with en silt' year, a tonnage three titres as large tude in excess of 19,000 feet, has been as for 1895, 25% above that for 1913 scaled for elle first tune 137 a party of and over 103'' above the tonnage for six headed by. Captain A. FI. McClarthy. ' 11523, This 'record is looked upon as 3o formidable are the obstacles on the diatlnctly encouraging, especially as trail to the peak, as well as on the rock canal train° Is conduot'ed with many and ice of the final ascent, that it will ' regions of diverse obaracter. be a long time before this grartirmun- . The largest trade was that with Bri- tain ie includedIn aha tourist inner 00sk .India, ' Neat came trade with a'ry. 'Meanwhile, it will remain shroud- I Chino. and Japan, and then with ate ed most of the time In its veil of drift+Strait Settlements and Australia, azul ing fog and cloud, inhospitable and re- • New Zerland'. Tho ptredomivanco of patient in it; contours to the athlete' British regions especially India, is but not the esthete. Edward Whelp'i striking. It ie also noted that three per, conquercr of the a'tterhorn, who ldiths of the trade through the canal alttnb•e3 in the Canadian Rookie.; a gee- i lastyear way carried by British ves- eration ago, said that the region Isseis, which carried 15 -million tons, as "fifteen Switzerland., rolled into one." 1 compared with under 2% million tons Whatever the scientific value of the 'on Dutch ships, and a ::tits over itj latest traverse of the mountain wilder-1millions Ins n Qerman and 1'• muttons ness in the Yukon', It opens a new i In French and Italian. Japan and the vista to the explorer, as when tho Duke United States were reyoosible for un - of the Abruzzi conquered tb vast gla- cier of Mount St. Ell•ss, or Bassen Stuck finally achieved the summit of Mount McKinley. uzzle CO 0PLOT,;YONKERS -t ;i - You The copeEB JeFF'/// -4, ' '01 (. 4 V •� . ,yf.>•.:. :, � :''a J ! i'''ii. it e "l • ww."-ale.• r /i'„ p Ji'0Y .,;..r�. — ---__ 'WHAT bY@ McAnl COFFce Gl2iNUCa7 -•=THtS BOAT'S THe AsTeST NG ON '�• Lint" A RACE Yeti _,....,...._Th.oa� e.-- . i t ` .a 'l J � 1 .. .,.�i i y �.d'tJ' . 3'✓.. % ° .' ' .. L;<i/: .r, P .:.,,,, y.. -w- , . n .. _ •: `i.. ... ":".,"• ,fi` � f i . ,`5'�.!'�:1/,✓4'9/�%yil�✓'�i". -tilt' O IIj' W A 11111111111 u ?^ tai 0 1i' O L L 0 1 L' jj E 4:111Na4,1111iiida 9 YEGG � _; 11111 , �C. ,t'1 2litellr El s"�Y R S.,. ''° II R© E Lageera T-'_!f1e,0{antee lr i£ -+a slag IL A I I T EYAG y x LSA A 1 4 •a L01 5""38®0 ./../ees ,1191 . I q ""'r + MCorl+rhl. 1911.E 1, r: �n{ {I ,+''�,/'�+Yaa'.1��1,-L'�" ? ' N C. ': -e•.. x l 1 -,�• 13'-'r /f.�ii ��� rl,herltlreu tin:, , I, his n 095 ,, A''I,,,, •t. _:?.�� illi 1I .- . Ir 1 I I IN �III�I, •...:'. 1�� !il� '(I III ,� �kl-'! �°"r`i tI rte, ✓% e,-_... . �+.�' "'��, •J -�.... ..''- -°i�4N eettO LEE"'wA.pA(1Et;U 1 E L A el G E i L E rI B = 1f3 :�19 20 $ Z2°s•-t T e- a 4 r2 as 'Art.F.,1. 2e at ' is• 27 2.8 130 ■ 31 3z 33 �II ra• 38 39 -il •mow GMltt• 401 ■.,.... i (41THE INTEANAt DUAL SYNDICATE SUGGESTIONS FOR SOLVING CROSS -WORD PUZZLES Start out by filling in the words of which you feel reasonably sure. These will give you a clue to other words crossing them, and they in turn to still others. A letter belongs in each white space, words starting at the numbered squares and running either horizontally or vertically or both. HORIAL 1—Tortures 4—Circles 7—Springy IO—To pierce i1—To make level 13—To pucker 15—Petition 18—Little child 19—A ditch 21—Recess In a church 23—Organ of body 24—DIsputant over trifles 25—Hard fat 27—Don ated 29—Small barrels 80—Regaled 83 -Culinary herb 34—The Jury 36 --Belonging to you 38 -To sorutite24-.. 40—Destroyer 41—Hereafter 42—Falry VERTICAL` i—Dowdylah woman 2—St! 11 3—Sudden blow 4—To split asunder 5—Frozen dccsort 6—Slope 8—To border Lipari . 9—Trial 10—To fixmast a 12—Midday 14 -To make rough 10—To pass by degrees 17—Tho waste from burning 19—Placed on a wall 20—To coincide 22—To corrode 23—Sailing distance In race ' 26—Unbeautifui 28—Outlet 29—H i I lock 30. Diet -."'- `• .- 41 "7* -rabic 33—Two-masted vessel 34-0Low murmuring sound 36—Fabrications 37 -To be under obligation 39—Swarm of young fish streets were paved with gold. Having spent an enjoyable day In- specting London's interesting sights• they renah ed to a they tad Heard- a great deal. V 1 In the interval the fireproof curtain was let down. e ow In the contra was writ-, ten the word "Asbestos." "Now what does that mean, Wiidio?" asked the wife, pointing to the curtail, 'Oh, that's a Latin we'd,' replied, William blandly. "It means came " Accountability. Natural R:Algursea Bulletin, Sometimes matt alto betake them' Tho Nalturel Pees InteUigenop solves to abaft stirs st7hed' Oho open Servlctt to the De artnlent of rho 00 apses asbutue that no law holds where p the new 0130088 to be and that whet Itozior at 000atva 05.70:•.. ll'raltele Thompson called tee'Itound of Canada 18 rapidly becoming a dairy Heaven cannot Hollow theme so tar. It 00untry. This is ovi4o iced in many is a convenient tboorl I,or tlws0 \alai � ways, particu1P1'ly In the growth of seek their own pleasure and he'levq'our exports of C14lry products, 50 18 teat in sl&lt iudulgenee they will and it. i well for the country that such is the. Tho, have ,kvsa au opiate kc eon- 0060, all authorities agree that there act°noal 4;4' oral• •Ube ddstancs tl5010 is no better means' of keeping up the will Olirry aro accusing voices of 011810 ; fertility of the soil than .rho keeping tiiondiswho 'car'edfor tlueamand wished' of cattle. Feeding' to lire sleek the them Weil anal wore concerned for produce of the fermi is tto 1? oHai stop their misfortune or felicity. They are nearer the finishing of the process of out off from anY reslponslbillty Lon' buss -'maintaining the food supply.tidt turas, Nono small call theme' to aocounit. It is interesting to note the large Nono Shall 'Present them .with a damia- .ingrea6e in the supply of , f ua Bus'- . lug fatly of .expectations, unfulfilled. dairy produce to tither cgtit:ittrie 8 Dues .ng1925 ax or�s'rtYached gu i P FlonceLoa•Uh they are carefree; theirs la much in advan0o of the previous soar, Otto 'tSt1x! d t pea•Loct l4benty thht oven ; Butter shows the greatest increase, sluinte and. a>vgolto-»ince "„.t,.. 5)00 the exports for Oho last fiscal year bound 0o gooSoow � nevet know. i p But ons, In Wee myth sYW created by tatal:Ing 2A,501,081 pounds, compared Y With 13,©98,068 pounds in 1024, Oho in. own fisted, ta,toone are ti ee utter• croased"value being 33,645,271. ly atwat301pwted, to follow heedlessly Cream and rnilir showed largo gains their nett devices, They still 14y un- } during the past two years. In 1923 der the law, for the saw is, not so Hutch theta 5voro 1,712,245 gallons of cream a •stwlu'ts operative in a given place as � shipped to Oho United States. This it le alt enveloping' atin culphere. air' {was increased In 1924 to 2,783,866 law goes everywhere, e, tl a thea we galinns, while 1925 saw the record of breathe; it enters, like the light, by 3,884,188 gallons being shippeINT across the minutest crevice. In Palet, no man 8 alto line, Experts of fresh milk in t•Ito, tor als his effort, can exclude iIi 1928 amounted to but 856,034 gallons, kis can put a mileage between Walsall its 1924 they reached 2,101,396 gallons awl asvy plane, 01171)"8., oet; be cannot ' and in 1925 a total of 3,088,212 gallons separate himself from to operation of avant the the United States. rrinciples'Ghat are universally and ins Our exports of cheese, zvhkb.lor a perio0otbly true, aro matter w s avil18 time' shorrod signs 'eese, lining, are hits ti t ea;s is ]iib oars and runs away again on the rice:: of'deelinbeing 126, - front them, as Bunyan's hero in that' 063,200 poundo, this year, against that aplo area° oc'Piigrinn'•a Progxesa" 114,7'77,000 pounds last year and 114, - tuna from the City of Destruction.648,900 pounds in 1923: The first and the last aim of lrumaai Similar largo gains were made in government is to hold seen account, exports of milk powder, In 1923 able, The will of the people le not hut 8,017,691 pounds were exported, tnansloted ' by the highhanded self- This increased to 4,826,603 pounds in. sntfiiciency of au absolute autocraoy, 1924, and again increased in 1925 to , The will of an overruling Power for , 7,205,677 pounds. thelinito litetimeiof a man isnot carried 'It Is doubtful. if • any other branch out by one who says lie does not care of industry can show such proportion - what any owe 'thinker, what any ono ate gains, in the past three years, as suffers, so long as he has what ill e calks has the dairy industry. It is but an - la good time, "A public office or a pri- other indication of the possibilities , vote life, wbeftever its tenure, must of Canada's greatest natural resource conform a land, millions of acres of which t to saw d to that onform —the la mi u c tt will discover not a 'hars'h constraint are'still awaiting the settler and his Fond of Fiction. Ile --"So you're fond of fiction?" i She "Duu't I listen very attentive y to you?" - - \'Neighing Un Winnie Winnie was a winsome young thing,' and it was her amhiticm to beeoma a lobrarian, She tar.,- quite friendly with the local librarian, and often she would talk to him on her favorite subject— brohs. One day she was telling -him how wattle= fond she was of the Wav- erley Novels: "Then you've read Scott?" he as'ke'd. "Naturally; they were all written by him, weren't they?'.' "Did vc u tthe e• tate. 'Ladyof the t Lake'?" he inquired. - "i'erfectiy lovely!" came the reply, "I have read it four times, ,And '1Iar- ntton; and 'Peveril of the Peak,' I simely'dote on bafh," 'And 'Scott's Emulsion'?" he •elude tinned, growing tired, "Oh, think that la the most won- derful thing Scott ever wrote!" 1' A'Cow for'Miaeions. When contributions for missionary work were asked for et the Primitive Methodist Conference at Scarborough, England, recently, one delegate pro- mised a cow. l iAnswer to last week's but the 'generous latitude of the spirit plow. that finds bis iY o •t tui freedom in obedl• enaR. c on the S 'I'1•affl ue-- IYIQIint Logan. Canadian Canadian Rookies and second in height Tho Suez Canal, in whioll the ,3. -itis' Mount Logan, higbeeJt peak in the government baa' a hasty leveatment in shares, has Just reported the figures 9,882 to Mount Meliinley, alone among the for 1924, which show that 25,109,882 tans passed through the canal in that Pealts of North Atiierica, with en silt' year, a tonnage three titres as large tude in excess of 19,000 feet, has been as for 1895, 25% above that for 1913 scaled for elle first tune 137 a party of and over 103'' above the tonnage for six headed by. Captain A. FI. McClarthy. ' 11523, This 'record is looked upon as 3o formidable are the obstacles on the diatlnctly encouraging, especially as trail to the peak, as well as on the rock canal train° Is conduot'ed with many and ice of the final ascent, that it will ' regions of diverse obaracter. be a long time before this grartirmun- . The largest trade was that with Bri- tain ie includedIn aha tourist inner 00sk .India, ' Neat came trade with a'ry. 'Meanwhile, it will remain shroud- I Chino. and Japan, and then with ate ed most of the time In its veil of drift+Strait Settlements and Australia, azul ing fog and cloud, inhospitable and re- • New Zerland'. Tho ptredomivanco of patient in it; contours to the athlete' British regions especially India, is but not the esthete. Edward Whelp'i striking. It ie also noted that three per, conquercr of the a'tterhorn, who ldiths of the trade through the canal alttnb•e3 in the Canadian Rookie.; a gee- i lastyear way carried by British ves- eration ago, said that the region Isseis, which carried 15 -million tons, as "fifteen Switzerland., rolled into one." 1 compared with under 2% million tons Whatever the scientific value of the 'on Dutch ships, and a ::tits over itj latest traverse of the mountain wilder-1millions Ins n Qerman and 1'• muttons ness in the Yukon', It opens a new i In French and Italian. Japan and the vista to the explorer, as when tho Duke United States were reyoosible for un - of the Abruzzi conquered tb vast gla- cier of Mount St. Ell•ss, or Bassen Stuck finally achieved the summit of Mount McKinley. uzzle CO 0PLOT,;YONKERS -t ;i - You The copeEB JeFF'/// -4, ' '01 (. 4 V •� . ,yf.>•.:. :, � :''a J ! i'''ii. it e "l • ww."-ale.• r /i'„ p Ji'0Y .,;..r�. — ---__ 'WHAT bY@ McAnl COFFce Gl2iNUCa7 -•=THtS BOAT'S THe AsTeST NG ON '�• Lint" A RACE Yeti _,....,...._Th.oa� e.-- . i t ` .a 'l J � 1 .. .,.�i i y �.d'tJ' . 3'✓.. % ° .' ' .. L;<i/: .r, P .:.,,,, y.. -w- , . n .. _ •: `i.. ... ":".,"• ,fi` � f i . ,`5'�.!'�:1/,✓4'9/�%yil�✓'�i". THE .: ,- , 9 O IIj' W A t O RP u ?^ O H R O 0 1i' O L L 0 1 L' jj E 4:111Na4,1111iiida YEGG ,*.=ii^a;1S3: »-"d- n a� . • it ,';+,.. ti • \ fib. 1.4)..0„,,,,".,, it 11 � , / , r ''', !/� e 1 � a � Y," _ pi�� , �C. ,t'1 2litellr El s"�Y R S.,. 8 A A R© E Lageera T-'_!f1e,0{antee lr i£ -+a slag O paCt1t S 5 ' K 1,...11101A EU A I I T EYAG y x LSA A 1 4 •a L01 5""38®0 ./../ees ,1191 . I q ""'r + MCorl+rhl. 1911.E 1, r: �n{ {I ,+''�,/'�+Yaa'.1��1,-L'�" ? ' N C. ': -e•.. x l 1 -,�• 13'-'r /f.�ii ��� rl,herltlreu tin:, , I, his n 095 ,, A''I,,,, •t. _:?.�� illi 1I .- . Ir 1 I I IN �III�I, •...:'. 1�� !il� '(I III ,� �kl-'! �°"r`i tI rte, ✓% e,-_... . �+.�' "'��, •J -�.... ..''- -°i�4N eettO LEE"'wA.pA(1Et;U 1 E L A el G E i L E rI B = R G Essentia s of Home Construction. Economy, duras' lily, .pernuauence, beauty are ilip four eaentials to strive for when building your 'home. They are all obtainable if you use proper forethought in chco'sdng type of archi- tecture and eonstruotion. The Little Fellow Races With the Broadway Limited. --_... `� Itl ,., ` L pp .„ jIj� 7,)) l i L .. WHe2G'D Ge GRINbere, r�WHeeLS,S ' :: il° �rt rev , , -.. ,it }fti y. v • c4k 1, a '`z -t ;i - You The copeEB JeFF'/// -4, ' '01 (. 4 V •� . ,yf.>•.:. :, � :''a J ! i'''ii. it e "l • ww."-ale.• r /i'„ p Ji'0Y .,;..r�. — ---__ 'WHAT bY@ McAnl COFFce Gl2iNUCa7 -•=THtS BOAT'S THe AsTeST NG ON '�• Lint" A RACE Yeti _,....,...._Th.oa� e.-- . i t ` .a 'l J � 1 .. .,.�i i y �.d'tJ' . 3'✓.. % ° .' ' .. L;<i/: .r, P .:.,,,, y.. -w- , . n .. _ •: `i.. ... ":".,"• ,fi` � f i . ,`5'�.!'�:1/,✓4'9/�%yil�✓'�i". THE .: ,- , 9 1Looe AT Fool TING Got -•: I ;_� • . - /�.� l / �f / J P/r G �t4y' Ti* -.._�, -., n3. ail `1 : 'LS,a r"/,' .1 t O,R- . , � r,i. / ,, 0 �/. v ///, • - � � / • ✓ �' MISTER MUTT, -RI"Ice's A cALL FRo _-. HoSITAL CoR. ,YoT`sABovT JGFP® JST HAb A RAGC, MUTT, AND tT eNbeb IN Z A TLC:: iWIiAT GAN ATte7 LL,HE TRAIN A RA/cu., Y tAt'VGl7AT 11.1{6 f ND yl / oSSING AT THc `SANE MOMeNT L �t,,,,,,., �1 , ,*.=ii^a;1S3: »-"d- n a� . • it ,';+,.. ti • \ fib. 1.4)..0„,,,,".,, it 11 � , / , r ''', !/� e 1 � a � Y," _ pi�� , �C. ,t'1 N. rale c c uO, +R"` r "dl- .I,r at%- .. t e. � . ti.. %i•: ,�. -- It' 'b 4: "" " -a j,! - * ,� � rt* liY .* r • n, te. �t ,,4,...L' I"" . �� :n`. Y �; ./../ees ,1191 . I q ""'r + MCorl+rhl. 1911.E 1, r: �n{ {I ,+''�,/'�+Yaa'.1��1,-L'�" ? ' N C. ': -e•.. x l 1 -,�• 13'-'r /f.�ii ��� rl,herltlreu tin:, , I, his n 1 �� +�"•°w ,r ti ,, A''I,,,, •t. _:?.�� illi 1I .- . Ir 1 I I IN �III�I, •...:'. 1�� !il� '(I III ,� �kl-'! �°"r`i tI rte, ✓% e,-_... . �+.�' "'��, •J -�.... ..''- -°i�4N .' .t ..'I `l I1 � + I � 'l II 1 I.''I %✓.,... _ ' 1 1 � I I 1-1. t rx..• .�-.. -.en ...i^ ",.... �•'-fir -... -' der a million tons each. Repayment The mayoral clfair of a certiln tug - Heti town was once occupied by a man. of great generosity. Among ;the applicants who scughl re- lief front elm during 1116 tenure ar et - flee was a local chattcter :mown as Tim. Now, Tim had rather a deubtfel reputation. FIe had never done a great deal of work, and several people were of thoopinion that he never would Nevertheless, Tim didn't see why he shouldn't ask the mayor for a donkey and cart to set up in the 111g—end—bone basdnese. So he called on him one day, and, after being admitted to his private of- fice, made his request, "Well, Tim," repliedthemayor, "If I give /on this money, how are you go- ing to repay me?" This was rather a poser for Tim, but suddenly a brilliant idea struck 11in1 and he blurted out: "Well, ser worship, if you're hind enough to advance me the necessurY PI'I tell you what I'll do. I'll nem° the donkey after your worship." - Polite In the Extreme, It 1s frequently observed that au- gust is not what it used to be. One day in a hotel parlor several lvomas friends wore talking by the iih•c, when some ono suddenly dlsoavered that the dress of one of Otto women was alight, Commotion ensued and, happily, the burning garment w.as extinguished, Thereupon a polite old lady sitting op- posite remarked with the utmost self- eontplaconcy "I hood observed tar some time that Otho lady's dress was burning, but as I had not Otto honor et an introduction t0 her I did not like toymemticn 1L" 4 �_.— A New Club. 'Woolen who have not had their hair altingdled and do not intend to do aro eligible for membership of a club new• ly formed In Parts, Despite 0111011 pro- pagandttr however, only twenty -Dight members Joined the chili in a recent wek. It is possible to save ::tones' by be- Iing so busy earning it this you haven'! Limo to spend it. " •