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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1924-08-28, Page 2KEtt gariereal'leatteeleg,-,Beeleeee,triitieeete; 'Neeee 'Dieconneetae iDeefeeee4etiede In etheee-AlleWeel. eMelienoettee Cieee, Pet:chef/eat ' " • • „ _ RACE seattelop, ;Agent,. eteareeffietear-14 Flee • DIelelote9elere , •-• " • tRYDONt ary0624,; 8'fic"fti4; No*.ry, Publlc, ete. :••elLOAN eletOCK •, e9LINT0N D. J. 'C. 'GANDIER. Offiee 'Henna': . 1,e0 to 3.80 pee., 7,30 ' to 9.00 ,in. Leundays,a2.30 to 1.30 lema ' "Other nears' ayappointment 'only:. Office end Residence.-- Victoela S METCALF. • Offlee Meurer to .7 -to 0.- Other hours byappointmerit. , , DR. N. S. BROWN. 1...M.C.C. ,• • • Office Hours' 1,39 to 3.30 p.ni.• 7.30 to 9.60 p.m. - Sundays 1.60 to 2.00 tem. . Other hour e eppolearneet - ,Pheimes•• • ,• Office, 218W e .Residcefee; -2181 DR. PERCIVAL-HEARN. • Office and Resideecee ' Huron Street • Clinton, ,Ott. •' Phone e9 (Formerly occupied-- by the late Dr, ' O. W. Thorepsee)., Eyes Examined, eme Glasses Fitted. Dr.'A Newton Brady, :Bayfield Graduate Dublin UnivereitY; Ireland. Sete Extern .Assistant Master, -Ro- tunda Hespitca for Women and Chiltl- ren, Dublin. Office at residence lately occupied by IVIrs. Parsons. Hours: -9 to 10 a.m., 6 to 7 P.m. Sundays -1 to 2 p.m. DR. A. M. HEIST Osteopateetie Physician. Licentiate Iowa and Michigan State Boards of Medical Examiners. Acute and chronic dieeases treated. Spinal adjustments given to remove the cause Ot disease, .At the Graham House, Clinton, every Tuesday forenoon. 50-31VIP. iteurence, CoMpanies, . • DR. W. R. NIMItif0 CHIROPRAOTIC SPECIALIST Ctinton—Resiaentitil calls only. Seafonth—IVIonelay, Wednesday, Pre clay and Saturday. - Mitcheit—Teesday and Saturday! efter- Phone 40 Seafortht.Ont, DR. McINNES Chlropractoe Of Wingham, will be at the Ratten- limy Howe, Clinton, on Monday and Thursday forenoons from 9 to 12 each eveelt. Diseases of all kinds aucceestullY handled. 6-22-'24 CHARLES B. HALE Conveyaneer, Notary Public, Commis. stoner, etc. REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE HURON STREET - CLINTON • M. T. CORLESS • CLINTON, ONT, District Agent The Ontario and Eqftitable Life and Aceideet Ineurance Co, ,• West Wawanosh Mutual Fire Insurance Co. Estaelished 1878. President, john A, Meleeezie, Kincar- dine; Vice-Preeident 12. L. Salkeld, Goderich; Secretary, Thos. G. Alien, Dungalmon, Total amount of insur- ance nearly ;12,000,000. In ten years number et pelitiea have inereased from e,700 to 4,600. Plat rate of $2 per $1000. Cash on hand $21.000. H. L. Salkeld Goderich, Ont, Turner, Clinton, Local Agent. GEORGE ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Correspondence promptly answered. Immediate arrangements can be made for Salea Dete at The News -Record, • Clinton, or by calling Phelie 208. Cbarges Moderate and Satiefaction Guaranteed, • B. R. HIGGINS Clinton, Ont, • Generitl•Fire and Life Ineurrinee. Agent for Hartford Windstorm, Live Stock, Autontobile and Sickness and Accident Iteurance. Huron and Erie. and Cana- da Trust Benda, Appointments made to meet paettes at Breeeldeld, Varna and tayfield. 'Phone 57, • The McKillop' Mutual • Fre Insurance Company Head Office, SeaforthiOpt: DIRECTOR?: President, lames Connolly, Goderich; Vice, James Evans, Beeeliwood; Treamnor, Thos. n. Hays, Seaforth. Directors: George McCaleney, Sete forth; D. F. McGregor, Seatorth; 3. G. Grieve, 'Walton; Wm. Ring, Seaforth; .M, McEwen, Clinton; Rchert Terries, Matlock; eohn 13ennevrefr, Brodhagen; Jas. Connolly, Goderich, " Agents: Alex. Leitch, Clinton; J. W. Yeo, Goderich; Ed. Hinehray, Sea. teeth; W. Chesney, Egniendville; R. earmuthe Brod:Elegem .-- Ana money' to be paid in may be. Paid to IVIopeish Clothing doe Centott, • er at Cutt's Grocera, Goderich. _Paatiee desiring to affect IllStirettlee OP transact other bueinese wile be ; premptly attended to mi altPlicatien to atiy et the above officers addressed to their respectiVe post office. •Losses ate/meted by the Director v,ho lives zearest the scene. - Among the eurious things accicleet Ally swallowed by human 'beings are • ..open safety -pins, staples,, sniall,Pleees o jewelleey, emaiLtoys, enclelie liatin'of an umbrella, e Cleafe on its wiegs as well as on les legs enable athe hoatzin, a South Ainerlean eird, to climb •trees' like a e„ tebeleeeteeleA' erne.ee.,eu,;bsneletioriee$2,00:p.ffieYe,ae inekeea'iieeeeeee0uliediaaea'adeeeeeere .•e2,50' ea 'the “teSe. or 0 thee ''foeeign 00nelteieeee ;No' :pettere. deseentinued. "e.eietil.alreeeeaea ereepareetimeee e tee eoption' of" thee publieher,' The ' date to..Weleh every„ aubseelptiae 19 'Mile le •eenoted -ciiiethe Advertisiee :Rateee-Tianeient eideete etieemeetee 10 . cents, Ter nonpareil, lIne-for ...fleet' insertton 'end: '5 cents -•per !-; line ;'for each enbs equenteiteete teen. ,Sinell.-_atleektiesimenea not to eXceed- One, ',thole, esetah: as, eLostet ..eStrayectee,er etetoleet," etc:: -,lleseeeteed •'enee foe M-• (teats, 'andeeeh sitesea.. quent ineeefion 16.,eeMs.: . ' •-ee Comintmleatiorieinteneed forepubll- cetion xiu9t, a a-gualeintee ofegeod, .fall,11,,he aeccimeenied ,by tee llama Of G. HHAPI- M. R CLARK Propeletor: ••' ; Editer: itftWtbkm • T•IME TABLE •, Treino will ereive et and dope -ref -torn Clinton as 'follows: • Buffalo and Goderich Dia'. Going Meat, depart 6.26 a.m. "• 2.52 p.m. Going West, ;ar. • . 11.10 a.m. ar. 6.08 • dp. 6.51 Rea." ar. - . 10.04 p.m: London, t-lbron'-0. Settee Div, Going South, ar. 7.e6 • dp. 7.56 a.m. 4.16 'min. Going North, depart' • 6.5e p.m. 0 se- " 11.05 11:13 a.nte Constipation the bane of old age is notto bemired • by harsb. purga- tives; they rather aggravate the • trouble. For al gentle, but Buse laxative, nee ' Chamberlain'a Stomach and Liver Tablets. They stir up the liver, tone the nerves and freihen the awned' and- laoweis duet, like an internal bath. -ea Woman's best friend. From girlhood to old nge, these little red health re - starers are an unfailing esuidebaanactiveliverand a clean, healthy, normal stomach. Take a Chamberlain's Stomach Tablet at night and the sour stomach and fer- mentation, and the headache, hove all gone by-morntug. All druggists, 24c., or lormell from Chatidaphiln OlsScIca Company, Toronto is ;FA:1i The HOuse ofbavid. By the time this year—Emplee year eedrawe to a close, Britain will have been visited by prattieally every sovereign in Europe. • It is soothing to our netiOnaLpride, teeretoie, to be able te refleet.111,4 :it length of dee- our Xing 'takes precedence over them all. ' • endeed, if there is any .teu•thl in le - genets, he is directly descended from King David of 'Israel, one ot whose descendants Is reputed to have mar- ried Doebaid II., a Scots king, some- where about 580 Bee. Eschewing legends, however, and keeping to history, it is eertaie diet his Majesty am Maim an ancestor wbo successfully led the Picts and Seas amanst the Ancient Britone as long ago as' 330 B.C., the year in which Babylon fell. This was Tergue, the son of -Ter chard, who is reputed to have been descended trom Dochaid II. and the Jewish princeee, .After the defeat of the Britons. the two Celtic races in Scotland were so pleaeed with Fergus that they vowed that the kingdom should alwaye belong to his deseend- ants, arid so far although aome two thousand years have now elapsed, the (lath has been leapt. The House of David, as the descend- ants ot Pergus were called, rated Scot- land until the deaths' of Alexender and the Maid of Norway. The croWn should then have passed to the Eitel of Carrick, better known as the Bruce, who was also ef the House of David, And, after a period of. Warfare, Bruce die make good hia Claim to the theone., The Bruoes Were sueceeded I7y the Stewarte who became' heirs through the marriage of Walter Stew- art, High Steward ot Sekland, to Dorothy Bruce. nye Jameses in sue. eeesion wore the crowei before' Mary, Queen of Soot's, changed the epelling of hee name to the more &Millar Stuart. • Then the -deith Of Queen Elizabeth, brought the- Stuarts, in the person of James' VI., 'to the themie of England, through the marriage of an earlier Jetties • to a Tudor priacese, Six Stuarts were crowned eovereIgns of Scotland end England. Of these one, Charles I., eves executed; another, Janies 11., wee driven Ante exile; a third, Mary, ruled jointly with her hus- band, Dutch William. On the death of the sixth, Queen Anne the throne was again vacaht. During this- queen's lifetime Scoa tish etetesmen hed successetzily' in- sis•ted that her auecessor meet aot oely be a Protestant, but one of the Houee of David as well. The 'British Parlia- ment foun.d that the only person who; fulffiled both these, condithate was the Pleetee of. leffieovee, He Was, directly deseentiecl'' froei r20ccja1b4.beth; tee daughtee of 'Jeines 1ewho„-la,1613, had :married Predeticlee tee Deeetee Palatine. - • ' • . 'The Hehaeerians,•'as, thine weee call: ed, peoeee themselves able rulers and wortbe empresentativeeeof the line of Tet -gut. ' Since the eoronetion. of Ge°!gc the succession liee never been Ielroken, • ,The letters of the word cell, are the initials of the pesitive statement,. `.."Cast away negation." Thae 1s 'the; fleet step for a young Marl to take if t he wants to socceed in a big way.' P. Greenslade. Wbe» Cupid hit els snagk 'he ge erally Mrs. it. , I • -IeEE YOU *TSIF . etterseee', 5ritan eat:WM.4e, aTo . la4e4,athete4lefieeteli •dtte•oe9lee3:eti.os Meeteand' whiseeree effine ad • abgii teeleee ee w0a1l9d, lon 4- to nfake wh the Jg11a sa teie'etioe• TicieePee •littleeeetieltenMeelt, was en ,411‘,.* !‘.11‘49."'f.e: Piir.; ,..eie*eeSe eeebei...,:eeea.4-eeeele-eeleee•WeiWieeehOd•-•Tet10,e'e. theinleeee eeareeheee' 0141 .Yeee',Iteed•-eretn-sideeet,3.1.4;•7::' eeftel`:it.4., thumped- hiSears'' 4 f•Tot ell the direetions `linVe 'giyren'; :the reee;yi tette jest k hanclitetoilteand' the 'gains esetlee•Weeeerie.,heekkeein. ' is reedy ee •eei '•• • joet'l 64' . the, leti4ei.r.clynpn,: the •lisieilleer-e Peetee'.ebonehelearneel' to welie..Weee Mtiefiealetee,plaeers etate'eeitig:•!ieditiet Way '.encieterel the'4,,,0017;z:),!isaf' they beeeheen,' told to do aaY,'.0::e ,:s.i;ette• neal,.it forgets ; 'put...out , ..0*,gatle.1, 'Beeteeeheolt.;eo.ninebellei•eleelte'llaat Then alter minutmOr. so, the le.e4er•'hkidt',eiternetleneetetee' 'And the next eitice the handkerchief,"'ind"Ualle'l iMar; he.,:Veinsitibered' his lessen-:,.thil 'change." This thrie ,eVeryene "does ,'avOified!!the rieighlaorhoOd'..of the httle What the plaYer, to hi's-right :hak.been bidaids'13.ety,ee. ing up leader steeds' le fent 92 the late•4:61d,v enoqgn, to Nyeaild 'kilo*. he, nitist ,riot. difem l 90 ,tie eek !,-0; Australia ,can raise bonny bebiee, „Melbouree, wh� won a g 100 prize ia iti a ._ . heit 1 OOP SO. eillttliO, Joel:L-400a eeee .,,Painfti 'i,n filefn e d- joinja , end, Stiff , ,mlifielefl I he i,caenoe be,peerritinente, , ciltrvnea--1/4,Yr.,-1;RePr or 0?Itqrasii,,,, 51)1?k, ;treaintrtt,''.' alur4 leave °°A5tit'Utienal. "Peke the great bleed- 'pelf " • tenie tnedietee exeoa,ePe . eleg'fletel, ' -Which' eerreets!the :lead' ansda1Ptr‘erdiai ' the'blood on"whi h /I C9 ' "II' 9 ' 13 , -,, . e X team attsra . de. ' •ete tie, anct gives peetniateete relie• f, Ie 00labirod the moot .i'ffecti , ' e 1 in tee treee, e e se. • 'el' e Oeen a • -.aen o ld sep,se TRADE VtlITH ' BELGIUM , I 'Mini :XoafrwY OP::::01:110:V5,:inh:st In C't14ineamdaoulth gtraeaatyll eexxtlatirt anises in time to rival it is being built between Belgluin and Canacla waft 2 '44a nec 111 ty ete the pacific 'Coast s trade which Pro- lug the mast favored nation treatment the recent Empire contest etiraeiee ore'-itel el i°1:meig401111:11 tries, _let° manY oe weecli her Reeds secaare especially favorable mita' Th, .Dorninion is,. periodically concluding new and favorable trade arrangementa, and these au ceming to give her aa areque -place alone tee tr den a doing, the one ow tlieeeme cif ;the' linel• He , ie mearly 'four ;years. old , , olio does not change at Ones, the leateer.i but -artee, ofeen 'sleeps in the yard' calls his name, and he le 'eat of the ' under t near faucet tkat leaks OF CANADA. imitating the one at the head. le ane -i We have never eeen him touch a bird FOREST INDUSTR.IES _ game. • a tiny bit Hundreas-cie birds conie The leader•thenedrops the hatidker- 'erbt hlevy ueaaYe chief again; and the ones in the line 1003 50101,7.1405 start doing the movements they did One day a baby birdlell out of khe the.first place,, of course as People nest M a rosebush. Tatters ran and are dropped from the game and the caught it in his mouth and began line becomes' thorter, it is harder to playing with it-, as he does a ball of watch for signals, keep your own -mo- catnip, and never ofrered to bite it. tions going, and see what the neighbor He .getye it to me and rubbed armind on the right is doing. fe t as ueli as to say, "Wasn't e n As the game, continuo, the leader that a, nice ball to play with?" It, should give the signals closer togdther. apparently, never occurred to hen that The last player to go out of the game he eottld esit: it. is the wiener, and Must indeed have The thing, that makes this all the been wide-awake, more remarkable is the fact that Tee- ters is a mighty bunter and keeps the '"TATTERS"—A TRUE STORY. garden and adjoining fields clear of gophers and ground squirrels, and the Lots of folks say, "1 like kitties, but garage free from rats and miee. I won't have one a/Oiled because they Toeme this is proof thatelcittens can catch birds." So 1 want to tell you be taught to leave birds alone. ---Mabel about one that doesn't. lane MeIlwaine. CANADA'S RESOURCES IN WOOL Abundance of Sheep Lands—High Quality of Our Wools— • Flocks Increasing. The sheep indastry in Canada made considerable expansion during the war years. There was some decrease dur- ing -the years 1921, 1922 and 1923, but tele good prices which were =databl- e(' for Iambs and the upward trend in Wool prices has again stabilized the Industry and the present tendency is to increase rather than ..deerease the siee of flocks, -The estimated wool prodeetien of the Dominion tor 1923 was 15,530,416 pounds. 02 this amount from 10,000,- 0,00 to 12,000,000 pounds passes through the regular trade channels and is sold either to Canadian mills oe is exported, The balence of the wool clip is worked up loeaely by farmer' wives, being Spun into yarn tor socks, mitts,' underwear, sweaters and other articles of apparel. Abundance of Sheep Leeds. • The isheep resources of Canada. aro more or lese =Matted in that there la abundance of watte lends In most of the proviecee admirably stated for sheep raising. Furtherniore, there are nutty farms, particularly in Weatern Canada, that as yet. are carrying no sheep, The climate anCeatural tome graphy of the country Is admirably suited to the raising of sheep. In Eastern Canada on mixed farm' lanes and in the grain belt of Western Can- ada, the small flock of ten to fifty ewes Is generally kept. These flocks can be' maintaineil at little expense and return an exeellent revenue for the labor required and money invested. In the rougher parts of:Eastern Canada and in some districts of Mailitoba larger flocks of from one to several. hundred head are kept under semi; ranching conditions often by new set- tlers who Italy have been originally nainers or fishermen. There are still, available many areas suitable for the carrying of flocks of this size. . Itt southwestern Sasketchewan, seatherte and parts of northern Alberta and in British Cambia sheep ranching is practised quite exteneively, but even in these provinces there are teacts of land available 'fee ranching or semi- -ranching purpos Be. Wool produced from Canadian sheep, both in the east and in the west, is of a very high quality for each respective ; grade. Pastern weela are 511 pre. dewed fr.= the domestic breeele of sheep. They are very strong 01 fibre and bright in character. The bulk of eastern wools grade medium comb- ing and low ineelum combing with solne fine medium combing and consid- erable quantities of low -combing and eoarse. Relearn domestic wools have exeellent felting qualities and are well adapted for the maeueacture. of med- ium and heavy weight goods, including serges sold tweede, rugs, blankets, sweaters and underwear, In Western Canada the percentage of domestic wools is steadily increas- ing. There Is' else a probability that the amount of range wools will be In- creased considerably in the next nye years, Western domestic wools are of much the same quality as eastern woels althotigh they probably run more to the finer grades. The nature of the soil and the openaess of the country tends to the produetton of a beevier ahrineing wool. Soileirifting also de- tracts from the 'brightness of the fleece and on thie• account grades of western wool are subdivided into bright, mei-bright and; dark. Wool produced form Weetera Canada range sheep comearee frivol:ably with wool produced en other; rege areas- of the world. The bulk of the range *epee run to the flee, Atm medium centhing, and medium,eambing grades. Wool Grading Since 1913. Wool grading, which vras that insti- tuted by the Domialoe Liee Stock Brancli le 1912, hals done much to im- prove the mareet" qualities of Cana- dian wool. Aboat twelve thousand sheep raisers new conalgn their wool for grading and co-operatlye sale. This oonstitutes about one-quarter of the iheep raisers. The growere leave their own marketing egeney, the Cant:elan Co-operative Wool Growers, Ltd. ehis organization Is an affiliation of eome thirty wool -growers' associatioes and handles all the co-operative elate ments consigned for government grad- ing. . As a result of grading, Canadian wools are new putcha,sed freely on a graded beds in the 'related States 'and itt Great Britain as well as by Catm- diem miles. The more general use of purebred rains ie steadily increasing the percentage of the higher grade and, „having in mind the preseht strong demand for -breeding ewes, it is confidently expetted that wool pro - deafen will materially increase dur- ing the next few years. Why .He bhera. idritt" Reprofie T :._ ,At a eervice recently conducted be a well-known minister a pewtti of young people behaved badly- during the nest part of the peoceedings, whis- pering, fidgetieg, mid giggling. The minister dicl it�t roproee them eirecte y, but during the notecee he said, ; "You will, I hope, excuse au interpo- , lation , at this paint. While I have' be= statding in this 'pulpit toffilglit have beenreminded .of some words 01 advice' one, of the Mote:emirs gave to the eau/peas when • I Was. In college. elite ver e chary ot reproving people publicly Riir bee sale.. 'Cage ,when I Was', In a Pas- 10.1fee lealleee ill MY eernatin:n.a. act- ministerdd 85eevere rebuke te 'aemung man who was. constantly tallteng2and giggling 'end shuffi ngab out. •.Mter I deacendee ,froti the pulpit at the teed' of the service tine of the officiateof the church cattle to Inc,ansi Said, "X think -Toll were ileaeyisee in speaking seyerely to 'teat. young man, because the, Mime fellow is' an idiot", • I VMS hutch chagriued to, know thee unwite r harl 'added affliction to e 14, 't I a who wee, aIi• et 90 sore y f fa cted; an ever eiece thee 1 haee alwayg re. etalited fmon7 r,epraveng'Lthciee 'who be have badlet in'clutich, lest 1 eeeelce be repreeing anotlier idiot ' • • ' e1 will lilt say ,WhyiI have recalled these words 02 1111. dear old tutor and will only add hat they impressed inc so much thot I have never yet publicly re -Pee -vete bad behavior in Maven; The offerlory will new be taken," loin the rest of UM seryfee Lie 'young oftend ere believed eiereectly. N� More 14ving &sits? Tbe invention be tbe!Japenese of a diving appliance eteicliedispeeses with po • the 11SO -Of in.littPlalf; pl'Oltal.SES to veva- do luticinfze the 'pearifng iialuetry. Ja The new militia:4'de coneises of a email meek. with fOO-O 0511- awl' run - bee eeeeeethich 'eee-eies the eyes end etee. The • meseeee 'eouneetee to a cylinder 'about- lttetleiia, wtigleti LiIled iviih-compretsmi ia earriea Oir the cheit, •. .• The ,sUpPly of',atr to -1116 nose Is re- . guleted ey•tee Minetle, evhipe ceetrele an attachment toi'& tube- connecting the eylinder with' tire 'mask. The.oici ecembersome deicing, nit 18 thus., diepereseA 'with, andetlie diyer, with 'the greater freedom ellowed to his limbs, •cau work -more 'expeeitious- The seaeon just concluded was a very euccesefuleane as far as tee lo ging and lumbering industries we co/lammed. Quebec, Ontario, Briti Columbia and the 'Maritimes all cOrd exceptiotal cuts and the tot achievement is expected to substa tally surpass *that of 1622, which self =owed a subetantial lamas over the year 1921. Altogether t activities of the past 'winter 'eons tute axs encouraging index to t Canadian lumber and allied trades a Ole condition ot. the export mark wieh its inoreas:ng demand. According to• the statistics recent published covering the lumber oper tions of the year 1922, there were, that year, 2,922 mills operating against 3,126 in 1921, e reduction six and one -hale per cent. The aye age production per mill, however, 1 creased from 918' thousand feet 1021 to 1,074 thousand in 1922, Du Ing 1922 A total ot 3,138,598 thous= board feet measure of honber wa& r ported valued at $84,564,172. Th comparea with a production of 2,86 317 thousand feet board measure 1921 with a value of $82,448,585, gratifying increase in both volume an velue. Every province of Canada contributed in some measure to this commercial Production, two provinces ot the Mari- times and two of the Prairie Provinces only reeeeding decreases.. Britlee Columbia wee the leading province with a prodnation of 1,167,854 m. ft. b. ra, valued at 327,571,142, a heavy increase over the preveoue. Year, On- tario followed with 776,280 m. ft: b. m. valued at e25,687,380, showing a entail Increase over thoprevious year. Que- bec, which came third, accounted fOX o preductioa of 649,354 m. It. b, m. wceith $17,489,026. Otter provineee itt order were: New 13runsw1ck, 360,030 m, ft. b, ne, value 38,906,894; Nova Scotia, 101,951 feet, value 32,509,912; Manitoba, 54,930' feet, value $1,871,. 062; Alberta 25,618 feet, Table $519,- 791; Sealcatehewen, 9,609 feet, value e233,922; and Prince Edward Island, 3,472 feet, value $85,043, Production of Pulp and Paper. A. yet more important branch Canada's forest produot ,industriee that of pulp and paper, which hae ex hibited pbeuomenal growth for som time, Whilst the exact figures of th production of this laclustry are no available for 1923, It is knewn that they are much larger than 1922, whea a total value of 3106,260,073 was ac- counted for. In the past year the mill ea.pacity of Canadian plants was in- creased by some 380 tons daily, or 114,000 tons per year. The produclion of the one item of newsprint increase from 1,082,000 tons to 1,263,000 tons. The products of the forest are co oupying annually a relatively highs place the Canadian export trade and have now come to take Bacon piece only to agricultural produots The exports ot wood and paper in th calendar year 1923 amounted to 3267, e33,964, of which the United States aecottnted for 3266,346,429, and th United leingdom 320,641,944. Th principal items in title, export. ever planks and boarcle to the extent ca. 375,010,713; mentifaotured wood to the,vatme ot 349,262,911; pulpwoffil to the 'mem of $13,524,000; Shingles. to 30,902,000; laths, 35,095,168; teed seerahr:•1,t,tirubeeor,e ep4u,101237a,OnOdepaper expthts from, Canada in 1923 showed an in crease of 20 per cent. over the pre emus year, there being an increase in Otto export of every kind •of paper end Pulp. The value of the exports ef An- iseed paper ehowed It greeter advance ever the 1922 totals than did the value et the 'exports of pulp, bowever. For Canadian boolt and, writing paper the principal markets evere A•ustralie and New 2;ealand, smaller quantities going to • ehe United /Cingeoni, ,Tapan and South Africa, Wrapping paper ex - tee were chiefly to the United King. in, Australia, South Africa and pan, , Dy ter the greater part of the pulp eeported feom Canada was deetined toe the 'United States, which took 210,- 05e toas of mechanical pulp, 146,141 toes et ealphate, 147,694 tone of bleached and 167,182 'tens ot un- blea,ched "fotal of '678,077 tons out ot ae exportation or 875,370 CarEltalall. ePOlts, ef,pulpwoo,d for the,year amounted to 1,884,280 ecirda valued. at $18,525,004. This is the highwt figure 'reached by the ex- ports' of this raw material, and Is a big increase ovep the expeets of e,011,- 832 cords valued' at *10,859,762 in 1922. • /honestly; &mantle are coming to be made, untie the Crinadian foreste as saiiiilles of timber diminish else. where, and the eiPerts of the pro- ducts, of the: wdods assthie a greater aggregate in Mae eigure0 each year. le paetioulea. is the - United. States a beevy liepoirter, iinore than fifty Per ,eena, 02 its Oa/maim/I leaPortatione bo- . • her place,in the vaned of commerce . : Trade and Commerce and the Belgian on:ew,:thri evOle.es ct:uuetereies at the Orient! 'signed by the Canadian Minl"eir 01 -Compensation. : .,Con,sulrOsneral, this hicelentalie be • • °).'e charms that• ititi.:atytilelitileir4set'd Inetcaosilig: then C'we.hinaedhiana Sloadeaselbeyarcieary—Time's encroaching, eleeiegre icerninaleaea'eleggniectialiapogia;ati, 'ier!ein ' bagirteinyg: a thread et ;111tilieliBtelgsilliirnvieYantililenDet.Onitulair s'isilitsrtaada37o . tial increase the post -War era lfas • And yet, as one by one, these s-igns appear' • iberg°11tgrhoitnneatnhaede"tioU•lBneelg.°11111enX.PQTrhtSe gin0: They only intimate that year bY Year crements noted are ma greater than Has laid ite store of riches at one's appears, since a proportion of Cana, feet dian goods eventually reeching Bel - peat T° .4°wer Wn Menl°1:ja8 to glum are consigned to Great Britain When one mese seep eeeee from and are „xeceeded in Canadian trade youth's warm eheer, demo Even 90, returns as exporttshetoitnlicereaTlanci.tsedaiI.effinrge: markable, and the new, treaty should, But eaoln_deoade hes comforte, of its• through facilitating trade, swell these Onereweocuglildizneot have the power toitill ftliiirethpeavs.t •,scai year 33.2ieethe was The eykeisndred Bed -refs in another' • s' .g.t="'s Trance end the est Indies. The total Had not one through dife'e wider value of trade transaeted was 323,793,. knowledge grown 317, of which 0,340,875 represented ele Able to comprehend the heritage, That is TM:Mee compenenting- gift to age. ' and 317,452,442 exports front Canada iportations into' Canada from Belgium to Belgium.' Almost the entire amount —Charlotte Beciter. of the export trade was made up of agricultural products, this aMounting to 315,2£4,377.. This again was large- SteTvheensOnnlYpaivdistint the btoerbk°sbheorpt 01"tolViuirs'. of these heine el4,053,335, represent- ly made up of wheat imports, the value Walter T. Spencer, in Louden, made a ing the cost of 12,558,270 bushels, lesting impreseton on the °weer, eIn either imports were: wheat flour, oat - Forty Yeam in My Beekshop Mr. meal and. foiled oats, sugae, uneraett. Speet er thus, deecribee' It: factured tobacco, •canned fruit, rub - Always remember duet:let when bee Shoes, eneemetie tire 'casings, Robert Louie Setevenson came tato ntY kraft wrapping paper, fresh pork, shim. It was in the year 1885 that he bacon and hams, automohilea, canned ' made hie one call oe me, during a- selmon, agricultural Implements ahd break In a louiaey from Eldinbuigh to asbestos fibre. • Bourriernenth. The clay had, been veil,. Remarkable Increase In Exeoet Trade. wet, and he eet elewe wearily, in a Wheat the import tratie tram Bel- ehair in lay shop 'parlor to examine giant shows very little mcwernent, the sorne pernplilets that he had inquired ; ex`port trecle to that country Is in - about, He told me that one of. creasing at •a very remarkable rate,. sboes• leaked, and I suggested tbat ,In the year 1908 Canada inmerted takeeit off and allow it to be dried. ifrom Belgium goode to the extent of I thmight Mr. Stevenson wonld be in 32,880,649; in 1914, $1,491,144e In the terested, to see Et catalogue that I had past ,three yeara inteorta• have. been jua•t lseued in which the firet edition $8,845,718. *4,994,787 tend $5,34e,875 re- ef his New Arabian Nights (two rfi- speetivcey. In 1903 Canada exported. eines, publiehed in 1882) was listed at goods to Belgium only to the extent 8s. ed. in .the original cloth. A moment of e2,245,747, or less than the vaiue earlier he had be= aepreesed by the of her impoets from that eauntry. By sight ou my sbelves of some slate 1914 exports had doubled, beam 34,. copies of the book—a libeary sat.phis ',819,843, or slightly in excese of 001. 02 tll t 1 r a s a ports. Since the war the export trade volume. ean see now the change on has been greatly develoPed, with sub. . his face as he looked up front the cata- stantial increments teeth year. In 1 oe 1°G.4361; •1922 the value of Canadian export Mee- Spencer," he said wiet- trade to Beigiunt waa $12,359,300; in fully, "no one asks' about fleet editions 1923, $12,527,524; mad la 1924, $17,- Thellodest Stevenson. of my books, do they?" Poor Stevenson's lack ot self -con- 492Dit2etions in which this export fidenee was never Juettfied, for tlie trade with Belgium might be extend - book gradually Increased in price, ee .beye been periodically pointed out moving to four guineas, to six, to In the past by the Trade Commission - eight. At the sale of Colonel Pre er in that country, elm case in paint deaflx's ltbrary 1 gave 8147 lor a to d „ nee 3, as, we sat there talking on thetrainy night, ever . thought I ithould liye to see the day r -Where late•wingliew limited is. the edi- , tion, I had to bid am., a5. dm 111 O 1921, for a book that thirty-seven years , earlier I had priced at 80. 60. An ex. e ceptional experience surely In a book- . eeller's own tifetimel ' Py I3ut neither R L S. • A --Insltdration, , • , 'Phe Manee-,'''Teleeeetend -et a cc/ is faluste in My eat,," The )isu at'e 'a. gq.rmor?'f .The cot 'the leadet oi 10 laze' orchestra. ell fo, • He•--eYotere an artist at dancing." Sbe---'elncl you're a caricate 110 10," Uncertain. '-kea.oher El, the geogrepby 'Meese— "Johnny, how is the earth divitled?" „e luny. (wbo road e the ,'foreign news)—'Don't ,knew: e haven't, rend the papere, tiuii, Inorning?' ' being that of apples, *elate sent from British Coltunbia. via. Panama, had a very favorable receetion and opened the way ter a bertatn future trade in this regaid. There are other open - Inge which euggest themselves on a survey of trade figures, and Canadian businese men will be the read1er to take advantage of them since accord- ed such a preferential entry to Bel- gian marleets. The immediate future should featme yet further increases In Canada's trade with Belgium. IViarvels of Science. On a hetet verandah at a seaside re- sort a vieitor approached, in the dark, Otto spot where a beautiful „girl with bobbed hair and melting baby -blue eyes was sitting with an adoring youth, th h'Ile Aneared e nair the new, effiner beard her te•yi "Aren't the Stars beautiful tottiget? I love te ale and look at the stars on a night like this and think about science. Science 'so interesting, so wonderful; &one You think, se? Now take astronomy. Astronomers are such marvellous lama. 1 can understand how they bave been able to estimate the .distaece to the moon and to all the other planets, and the size of the sun, and how fast it travels, but how do you suppose they ever felled 'out the right 'melee of all those stars?" • OtrieckSeceesOM BOY-I/FAT What these men have done, you can del In your spare time at heal° you can easily master the -secrets of telling that make • Star Salomon: Whatever your experience has been --,whatever you maY be doing ziow—whether or not you think you can sell— ?'• pet answer thle question: •Areryouhmbitious to earn 910,005 a year? Than get in touch with me at once! I will prove 60 100 without pose or Elgt sou can easi/y, Leanne a Star Salesman. 0 Aid shim, pax hocV the Salesmanship Training and Free Employment Service of 1.414.0.5.A. will help yea to quick success in Seding. Read Thete Asnasinel. Sidries of Success toned MI ht Trre $1O,000 A Year Sang Secrets • Tto 'accrete oe Star SolostMinship lie taught by the 51. S. I', 4., ha, enahle0 thousand/1, elmott overnight, to leave behind tor ever 110tirtidgery ' mail nay 0 Wind -alloy Juba that lead 00vhere: No matter wlist vro 000 usw drine, Or /10‘1 re Selling Wets YOu e sis tutor. ,Got. 613 tads. • National Salesmen's Training Association, • csssalio‘ foe. - ass .sss' TorOuto.•Out.