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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1939-02-24, Page 6%g- ­­ _ , VitaMin B I .nd .�sential ' . Making Alberta i Prosperous PV, I k on reRO mu have f ree arewOO& 14 ; minerals restore health ! I I 1, AT, Tom �111 W" Forests I I. 11 . privately owned I%= plenty of L ,slid vigor. Both in ! I .,,. I ity fuel and deliver 'it to the needy i Dr. Chases Nerve Food � ,_ 1�1 ' .4.1 1. 11 I "I , �t�.". will 's door. rftwns owming forests �r_ ---..— w1hich a' depositor signs, would a . I I r"If ' Pay . e opening of' Alberta!s eight1l, I I It nat -1 _: 1-11, ;�, I,- . _T_________1 —,- Th Premier the po, the money re- . kindly 1srW him an axe! They 1K. - Legislative Assembly sees . wer to invest , I %',, (Oiyndensed from Events, in Reader's Digest) "The wood William A. A ' art,s Social Credit ceived, or to buy and sell goods with �.0, � I I I 1p -am, . . YOU twice I " I.. . by bequeathing 80 saw of woods to Government, -ta - mandatory Pro- the funds. . ,.�,., �-',- 1940, Thus it wouldbe quite possible for �,,�-�'! � IZ P. Holdswortli, head the town. it has given the communr vincial 101,80 I ;,�,,�,!;, -U the cldldrell of Russell, Mass., lue�­Yllelda additional rev'6111le a4l the of the Forestry Department in t e UY & ic 6 ,urce of fuel for- - ,,, taking almost no steps to advance its the Government to enter the whole il, ,,, - . , they . win live in their:town. trees grow. And witb�,a the lifetime Stste Conege at Amherst. is a lead,ar tiie, needy. a44 a steady small reven- Original Social C?edl-t pr;DgramL In- sale basluess—undertaking mass buy- ...; 1,15'.. - pI&Ated 'the trees in the town foxest. .."Miby us from the sole of fuel wood and stead, the speech from the throne Ing through Its Provincial marketing J i; ... Iree Town costs will be borne ,of the men who moverent. ,; I:; comes lumber. and the really -import- man," he excl4almed, "I ebuld- pre=h CbristnLw trees. New -trees, 15,000 I, � eWs t6w,n forest, which was I has forecast such orthodox legislation boardl­­wI0 those fundig, It ,might k ,�Y11 ,,,-.-- 'ant money. Without as expansion -of Alberta industry, ex- for example. " , 'ii 15 years �go with less you a whole -sermon on town forests,'� at a time, are . furelshed ,purchase 'beet sugar � J I ­ :too acres -and an appropriation In Americals town forests on,-, De- I asked, -,What would your text bel" charge trom t" state nurseries ana ten9ion ,of the Government's "Interi'll, growers' W P 1 t "40111I . :- 00. Russell is just one of the 1,_ gins to understand what "5111vic"Iture" He re,plied: "They Pay!" - pianteA by'toviuspeople. So the for- ogram" treasury braii-ellies, and aid xetallers, making a Profit on the deal. . W, 1, 1 I . erican towns that own forests. really means. The towns cultivate, ..They I47,11 sam he "not merely est is more voluable awn it was when P" lal With these profits it could pay off I W, as a- good farmer culti- indollad-S 'and cents, but in a deep so-. the late olantawsbequeathed It. road building- varlous.Governinient debts or contri- 11 I se forests cover s,000,000 acres in their ibrests ' In run-down New ,11ampshire's 101 town forests 119UIP�r I . - vates hislandl, planting, thinning, bar- ,.iej and spiritual way. But Mbertals -debt unorthodoxy may bute to the 3 per cent bonus which . " R`, I states, and their number has more v,esting, always increasing vulues. In rurW communities, what wAs once a now t6tAl -20,OW a,cres, vai7'ng in size ,be carried on with legislation for can- the Government now gives to vouch- PASTE I' , I ..,�Itban doubled since 193.3. Why? Be- from four mores at Brentwood to 3,. ceiling some of the agricultural ad- er ,purchasers of Alberta,inage goods. .AZ1 - sk), 1. 4 .. 1.,11 they .1 .pa7. And"because almost ,no town f�Drest are the trees ever com" souxes of wealth can be made'so a- . .. 11%',,',`�,I�A, awa�, as in the .case gailL When town forests are m1anag- 580 at Gorham The statq also has vances still gxisting as a charge a - i �,,,'W town, can h4ve one. pletely -cleared . 410. - . ". " _ private timber tracts. ed as crop units, they can produce the oldest town forestin America, ea� ainst farm lands. I �.�, '' �, have been common wdith too many 9 . sticks?,, said an Engilab gentlen�aR 1. 1. I F�:, %.Viorn ItDres�s have recreation annual yields of fire d, and yleA,s tablished at Newington in 1710. The The Legislature this week began its 1�1 t time immemorial in Europe. Two Sbme town -a observing his, Scottish butler, Prior 1., 4 :1'*.,h4vds of all ,the forest land in Switz. facilities, -picnic groves,'bridde paths, of lumber every five years, When a folvat has au-pplied fill the fuel wood e nst a background 61 un- Redwood's Last , .1, �,, - -ki trails. These are pleasant by -pro- woods is razed the brickyard, or what- and buildfaiglumber of Newington for certain political developmenbi�-­Uncer­ - - ­ f ; in dUcts. But the main objectives are ever industry had been depending on two d tainty as to whether Premier A 11. , , ties; in Bulgaaia more than hal -t stands, still thickly wooded Toll Road Free ver of the house. - "_ of its famous profitable harvesting and the prOtec- ft must either move awayor pay high them I . iZ49 I�.- 0orniarry a vast part bart will call for Provincial elections 1and Scandin- ti,on of reservoirs and watersheds. -freight -and go'broke. With. a perm- and luxurilous. - Amerka's nearest. this year or wait until 1940, uncer- 'IN% Sir, but they might r000ga 1111'_ Block Fonezt; in France acquireW In anent supply of firewood and lumber, replica of EupOWs traditional Fairy t At nppn, on Tebruary 11 when deeds them," was the reply- .. ,,,, I ; , *viau,dountrles, more than one-fifth of How is a town forest aThI04 as to whether the Premier will were recorded registering transfer of 0 11, L. " �iall the woodland my recent tour of the tow -n forests of local indust,ry has a Permanent fu- Tale forests- run again, uncertainty as to where Muir W I oods, a:, ISational Monument In This is. the way rW write a sarea&'_ "I L , .., I.. . Pri t 1900 we had only a few New En6land, I put this question to tuxe. - I . church bell cracked a. while back the United Farmers, vote will go now Marin,County,'to the Pederal -govern- tic letter: Y . or 0 in the United States. They Gene Parks, selectman of the town Of. "The last time I was in Sweden I (oround 1770), it was carted by Ox that that body has ceased to Fv�;ction Str My typl,st beling a 2adycamot 1:, small ones . ment, thd last toll road in the Re& .. from saw a 22,OOD acre forest which bad team to Bostoti, recast and, repalred .. 1, were in New Harapsibire, and they Russell, wh<we forest had grown Politically. cod Empire (except Golden'date take dowu What I tbink of yOIL I be- 1�, . and 100 to 3,000 Oxays In 15 yeam been in danger L of extinction. Saw. by a chap named Paul Revere, who Sman me-rition is made in Alberta!s W idge) and the last toll. - -a I L' . t bad been ,supplying fuel, money Bri road to Ing a gentleman, canuot Write it. You I :� I Since colon,191, times. In 1913 -Well,- lie said, "in O&"Ilcaso6� it niffle, would move into a R)calltY, cut was paid WM money earned out of legislative halls of the onceq)romieed it an! . I � : limber sed the first was maybe -what you'd call a Yankee it all to the ground and move a�way, that foreeL If the bell *Meks again, $25 -a -month dividends. The emphasis National Monument In America, was' bemg neither can 9W68 - I. . I I In, .1913,11assaChur-etts Pas -body was beq- A while back the government insisted the fiore& can still pay for it. . I ',hovl-_and the Aberhart hope for re- thrown open, to free traffic. . O'' ;. . . state law encouraging town forests ', trick, except that every After years of civic effort, the Call- In a Pine River, Mimm, restaurant: .. . I _V . Fi unity, Vermont's 1§tate Forester,' 'Perry H. .. other states have fonowed� end today efitbed and nobody cheatted." ftee�ft that it be operated as a Comm election—appeam to lie chiefly in the? forrida Legislature in 1935 Passed, a "Don't ask us for intOrmatiOn- If we ;,� . yeaxe ago there were many abandon- forest And I'll never forget the big Merfill, had mare.news from Sweden. pus ,,,, .the -idea is solidllY established. New there .By the new torest lawls over them, all hing of a program to make Alber- bill enabling ,the California' Highway knew anythjug we wouldoft belhere:' ,,, 't - has ed fairmp near Russell whose taxes permanent sawmill therve built ta Prosperous through development Of Commission to purchase the Muir . 0 . _ York State has 579; California . Instead of portable tin stacks firn1ber land, even though Privately inidustries within the Province—orithe .,�158, Pennsylvania 134. Several Statea were a burden to the owmers, It vUs now owned, must be managed in such a Woods toll road and make -it a part "Did you see that, Dad'? That can- ,. ,,: - co %ig the towu plenty to keep to that come down, it has a brick -smoke way that future growth io not biazard- farm, in the factory, and -in the Tar- . *rer changed bal 11. , I in the South and Midweat'have up ad ads . of the ,State -highway systenx f a prown into a ailir , ". , wards of 20, and ,the map of N�fw open in winter, and got the kids to a k, like a f I 110 f bou; ony forests in Ame-ri ner Valle -oil fields. Marin County, familiarly -known as IIA.ndkerahjef: . . - In this connection -the throne speech ­11hals no I �. Etagland is peppered with them. school for the few struggling fami- There's a symbol for you! They will ed. A t the -1 Sao Francisco's playground, lies at umpg. Your mother can .7 1 ro- ca which vere consistently doing that, disclosed that increased consideration ll, n always have lumber to cut, The - ­ The great. state and national for- lies that remained. So the tow fa- - the northem end of the Golden Gate change a five -pound note into a smaN .. ests are primarily conservation and thers used the money to move the eat will always be there." , he gai(t bplong Ao towns and com would be given to production, PrO_ bridge sad embraces Muir Woods, a Holdsworth of my mwkti0s"Our Vermont prosperity , . hat." ... -pro are Supported' backwoods families to good land near- I told, Professor . cessilig, transportation'and marketing 427 -acre wooded tract on the slwe Of . 11 0 . ..� I recreation .jects, and, at e ct to forest , and, economic fature," he said-, "are it -is expected'that . I.- as such from thepublic funds. Town er town. Everybody was happy, and surprise th fa that wn. a bound up i1a forests. We have more of farm products., Mt. Tamalpais. The area was -named "Is there any truth in the Tumor , I forests are expected not'only to sup- the abandoned farms bedame the even the little oriesi began to pay so than: 500 big.indidstrial establishments a par�etirig board will be established. in h6nor of John %Mulr, explorer, na- , port -themselves, but actually' to Con- town forest. Most of it vias already quickly. He said: . It was further diselosed that the " � . which die -pend solely upon forestry for turalist, and writer, and, was estab- that Angus McTavish has *Wb.t thmt U tribute to the town coffers. wooded. Tihe open fields were Plant- "Don't let your enthusiasm blind, British Admiralty ihas interested W lished as a National Monument by filling station -at the cbrner?" 1 . videndr, their raw MaWrials." - Presidential —Proclamation in 1909. "Well, I don't know for sure, but , . . . The for- you to the fact that the real di s,elf in the Turner VaII4 I .1, And they ,do. If partially wooded ed with 246,04DO young Pines . He told mie Vermont now had 44 th I , pray Small divi. eat, said Mr. Parks, was already pay- are in, the future and. that the grand- as a resul,t of their increasing develop- Theract.was donated by the late Wil- e 'free sh" Signt was taken down . . I I when acquired, they ingand when his grandchildrw grew e6t results come with the passing of 'town sad 00mmum-ity forests, over 10,- ment. Total oil production al ' most -iiam Kent and - his, wife Elizabeth Yesterday." I . . .K. dends immediately. Cordwood, pro up, after the lumber came in, they centuries. We are only beg -inning 000 acresin,an. Notably successful tripled last year, ,producing richer Thacher Ke.qt, in Order to prevent the ., -duced by thinming the ,stands -a -pro- is the one -at. Essex Junction, a vil. royalties Jor the Province. Now, Eur- magnificent_ trees from. ,being logged . . cess wbdeh increaser. the foresit's va. would ,live tax free it! Russell. sourerthing that somebody else will ' I.. - finish after we axe dead. That's what lage of 1,600 ,people , which started ope's war clouds, and the growing Bri- �nd the site used for reservoir pur- I I 11 .. _ ___ . I ,bad aiwuys.supposed that it took I mean when I sAy the first big divi- buying foresit lend in 1890. In all, tiah consciousness of Canada�s posm- poseo. I I I 1. ,I, . a hundred years or More to inake a they have bought 800 acres for $10,- billitles as a source of ,supplies, I IT POURS , : . tree of -any size. But at W,estfteld, demAds are spiritual. Working wi 000. Proft from -the forest has -paid a case opening just one week before the 1. Mass., I was shown a prize spot plant. trees we eirvision the future in lang- , of war, have boomed Turner Valley Golden Gate International Exposition Fiery, Itching Skin terms then our own brief lives. that off and cleared $3,000 besides. in the eyes of the Royal Navy. . 0 ,' . I., ed less than 20 yiears ago in red Pine. er lRutland's 4,000acre forest was pur- on San Francisco bay, visitors will I The trees, set out with checkerboard I Town forests are teaching this lesson, To attract capital to Alberta for be enabled to visit a grove of state- R Nty :: 4 . . precision, are now more than twenty by example, to,owners of,private wood chased for $60,000 in 1910 to insure housing purposes, a bill wfli be intro- ly redwoods (Sequoia seulpervirens) *_ I- Gets Speedy Refi6f tracts. I know an old farmer . r supply. They have duced. exempting housing loans ,from :..­ ", 11 Im ; .11 feet tall: they have been pruned up who is the city's wate trees, every within a few minutes frorn San Frarl- . . �11 r, * tending a 50 -acre stand of pines to been planting 50,000 new the provisions of Alberta's debt leg- cis' I A , .11. . Here is a clean stainless penetrating anti- to about 42 feet, so their upper Cc across the world-famous "long- ;i -.- ", his baby grandson through col- year for the Vast 20 years. During islation. This would protect loans is- . 1. septic now dispensed by chemists at trifling branches make a solid green roof, send - eat -span" bridge., Here they will fi,nd ca I I , cost, that will bring you speedy relief from Pierced only by sharp shafts of sun, l6ge, precisely because he knowts he'll the past five "ars this forest has sued by lending institutions under the - in the park not only tihe primeval red I the itching and distress of Eczema, Itching be dead Winself before the boy or paid over ;11,000 ,interest -on the in- terms of the National Housing Act. His- , Toes and Feet, Rashes and skin troubles. . light, slanting. Itwas like being in a ­ I woods but a variety of other native :-- � Not only does this great healing antiseptic cattledral. This lo-4ly spot is already the trees have grown up. Town for. vestment. edral At the same time,- extension of rural *trees such " C%alifGrnia laurel, tan I _ ,- )1. oil promote rapid and healthy healing in ests are doing more than anything As I walked- -through the cath road building will be carried on by bark oak, Douglas fir, mAdrone, alder, I. 1, open sores and wounds, but boils and sim- '�roducing thousands of cords'of fire- else - to imbue the private tirryberow,n_ aisles of these forests, shot through -means ssist- nutmeg and -buckeye. The millside I . � pie ulcers are quickly relieved and cleanly Wood, -Which pays for uph-eep and al- . - with bealed. In skin diseases ---the itching of ers of this too -rich -nation with ,the with arrows of surijight, carpeted ance, to municipalities and Improve- slopes are covered with sword. ferns 1, J Eczema is instantly' stopped-, the eruptions lows a small profit. Westfield also Pine needles, I faboug�hl, "Why any ment districts. often reaching a helgilit of six to 111F HANDY POURING SPO , dry and scale off in a very few days- plans to eliminate local taxes, with an new spirit of coneervation." 1.Th up e is true of Barber's Itch, Salt ov(�ntual lumber revenue of $20,000 a At Durham, New Hamps boy Could do It, and live to enjoy, oodwardia and, * � am The throne speech specifically pro- .: - Rh:u� and other skin eruptions. hire," the in bis owu -later years, the forest he posed the ,extension of the Treasury lady ferns. ftr dw &V Pot" .14 7ffit "I . o of fuel are local forest is operated exclusively . . 1. bottle at any cut each year from the towfi's 5,600 for school funds. in 1900 Ohnithus strength) in t -he original branches set up under Premier Aber- Fqower lovers will find, wood violets, It's free write I modern drug store. I acres; figuring. $2 profit per cord, Doe clinched his name's immortality Sd could almost any town. More �art's "Interim program." ' This ap- adderi a tongue, trillium, wild ginger, 0 Fits the special top of 'the 2 M , and, more states are Corning to realize pears to be directly bound up with clintonia'blossoms vying with tin of Crown Brand, Lily VRLUO .11 . I o . . . tile importance of small, community- increase and and Kam syrups. � . - --- the. Government attempt to sweet scented azalea and other e is easilycleaned and can be used I . . " Owned forests, aryd are passing laws AlVerta industries, in this way: .shrubs. Wild life also abounds under over and over agAim ­ . to encourage them. Your own state In these Treasury branches Al,ber- national protectiom 0 Pours without a drip. . 11 . foi*ester mu probably tell you bow tan% may deposit their motley and re- Foliage of years forms a soft brown 0 roy es mean I I I you can start ,one in your town, celve out non-negotiable vouchers, carpet and quiets the footsteps, as the Makes the 2 lb. tin an excellent , I % .0 . S. Forest Service, in ,be used for purchase of goods and � I : r . he caWt, the ­TY. . visitor naturally quiets his voice, in table container. I I , 7.1 5 Phf .. Wastlangton, call. Your town Could general monetary purposes. And the the depths of the ancient cathedral. 9 The protective cap provides a .- i.`. . for its Government, through the certificaie I .1 'I" . ,.. not make a -better investment . sartitaXy cover- � . I 06�z . future. W humanity survives, trees -0. . ";:;; esult of ig�> - .1. .."'. ,.:",.,, - a& ,a r - - Q& . I :7y. -,.:f., 10 % __--� interlocked, and parallel. 11 ly from year to year .1 . !ej .. .: .! . it difficult FARM NEEDS LISTED Tell the boys d at portraits of fa moup i . , # 1k .0 — weather conditions makes I y st2rs can still be obtained far . . . , . . . -to forecast the price outlook of this "CROWN BRAND" labels, �., .:, I Early Amen-ican LottenieS apples both in barrels and in boxes �. � n mmnu ..�­ W% for export were sharply higher 1 Smaller farming units, more divers -1 [ROWN 8"m I . � , .;, .. t , . Surviving, aottery ,tickets in the the fall of 1938 than in the previous ified farming and production of higher z hands of collectors indicate that un- year. I : C411 th grade livestock were -three reiiWies EORN SYRUP ` ­ tg about 1825 ,the lottery was a high- Saskatchewan agriculture pro-, The Famo I "' _... ", " rted to the Dominion 15epartment scribed by J. G. Robertson, Provincial The CUADA STARCH Co., Umftd, Toibnt* L4, ... : IleN W,6 ein 4 P99 IY esteemed means of raising money, repo ', : , P. used by Prominent men in England of Agriculture on sales of trees dur- Livestock Commissioner, in an ad- I , . . . and America for both business and ing the year ended March- 31, 1938. dress at -Sas-katoom . I ___' ? - : � I start cc, X yot, public -purposes. The original pro- AVple trees led the, list TbGugh markets and p4ces for Can-' r; , 1111011g,b ts W tter W moters of the English , colonies in two-thirds of which were winter var- adian wheat were beyond Canadian . . . .11de - heo America received much of -1heir early ieties- McIntosh continues to lead all control, bacorr was a western, product . NORTH I - i.!,, ilia a . finsulcdng from such lotteries -as that other varieties for In which the West could compete, pro� A -M. 11 11 /al/c Cie YOU W". of 1612 for the London Company. the sorts that ,continue to be popular are , duce in large quantities, and which Exeter ...................... 10.34 11; . rQthe Want to merchant , Duchess, Melba Yellow Transparent, I ­ a , III group pi—oting the Settle- I . had a market in Britain ready to ab - L . '.1cf, Fl&meuse, Wealthy, Cortland, Delicious ly in reasing quan- Hensall . ........... ........... 10-49 . yof, --A Lotteries -bave flourished, in Eng- and' SPy- tityk, Mr. Robertson sai& ?, X.. Ile'r lrlea,r(l " a jbi,n',te land sd=e 1569, when 400,000 tickets . Sales Of Pea0h trees dhowed a de- d ��." . . ­ I.... 0 T,41 , at ten ",lings each were sold to cline whilepeari; and Plums were up high quality cattle, directing its atten- - .: . - I,,... i : i1j, fivairice public works. A little later Bartlett and Kieffer accou tion to quality rather than quantity. ­ .""g...:%. �, .M. ..".'. - , 1��� the British MiWurn w -as established- per cent of the pear plant! k` 64 ,51*,::..� `-:W%:::%::t,:;:::, ., by a lottery; GTeenwdch, Hospital, the Wingbam .................. . K .. . . . with Black Tartarian, Bing and Wind W';%, I . I ;%;!� ,: ,!::,!%-X_��::Z"�% great dirst1ittution. for disabled seamen, United States and Argentina, he said. . 1 .. . - tery for the unked hospitals -of Dublin . sonable measure of prosperity, but Win0hin .................... 1.50 i4 . ..... .. ,5 tablished. . Peak Oil Output In Canada western soil would only bring about nlyth ........................ 2.17 . "� �, " " � The heyday of lotteries in America , repetition of what the West had un- Lorldesboro, ................. 2.26 I 11 .., : 1 .11UPP4 IW -,,�- . was from the 1750's to about 1825. If Shows Growin'g Market dergohe for the past eight years. in V08 I r" . ;5.- . oriental Congress needed, funds for In -creasing availability of domestic 0 Kippen ...................... 3.99 1 �� I � 11 11 � I I 11 r/ . .. % . crude oil for refining purposes , in Hensall .... : ................. 11 ­ : �� I I 1: % By lotteries Faneuil Hall, Boston, and Canada Is seen In, a recent Govern- JUST A Exeter ...... ; ............... 8.58 . :� 1; the State House, New York, were re- . .; .� I - 8 % ment report showing that oil fields I I ;., I bedilt after fires; city streets were I . . � : 1,; in the Dominion yielded. a record out- I 1:1 ,W M , 11 � 110 paved; new Idghways., bridges and -an&one- SMILE OR TWO . f �. - ... M, canals were constructed, put in 1938. of more than two . � V, ..��.... "An George half times that of the previous year. "Father, whaV,g a counter -irritant.?" C.N.R. TDW TABLE " 1. 11 .re VV "A counter4riltant, Son, must be a " 1 9 a df th-e Mountain Road Lot. rDbe re -port published by the Da. EAST 11 ,.,,,.��.. 8 I tery of 1768. Building funds for our partment of Mines and Resources� re-- person Who shops all day and doepli't A�M. P.W 4�` 1, V Jo.h.n,n most Illustrious colleges were so rais, cords a total of 6,870,000 barrels in buy an�,�ng." (Werich . . 4 ....... �.. 6.35 2.30 1. " . fiam and Mary, Columbia, University pared with the 1937 figures ,of rMoing, DRUr , . '... � watch - ellilcl, I of Pennsylvamda. A14 denominations 750 barrels valuedl at $4,339,353. 2,943,- ::What are YOU gghter?" 6.59 3.00 :'­ . he ,b,,,, �1 0 except the Socipty of Friends used Although the -report does not pub- lorn LaVerW." St. Columban ........ 7.17 3.22 ,�,'-, -hen I them in bx9A,dilL- churches, Amo,rig 1j,,1, consumlWou figures for reftnin . ,I gm, Wi8h ya .11 ticheits surviving aire those of the comfpanies. in 19�38, the trend- towards . Mitchell ............. 7.30 2.41 . 'piscopal Church; the greater use -of Canadian products is, "It's a book you presented to Mo- WEST i .1 ".,% .1ce - noself �-, Pl&iiiville, Conn., Meeting House; the , jnfflcated In 1917 statistics which ther , Years ago." . itll 1.06 9.28 l, INA, . __ : - ^_QOJV _" held I I , . show that although the use of Im- does Harold Bell *Tight? U.30 9.47 �1� 1.141, 10ean h A� About 1825 the lottery became com- ported oil increased 14.5 per cent. the What . 1'11' a to his - - 10 U eh it merd'Mldzed and lost its reputation, quantity of domestic crude oil used On wholm. did William Tell? Clinton .............. 11.4� 10.00 f'; A,; � he e. � fatuil though it was only,zboliahCd in 1890 was nrore than double the figure for What does W11,112ah Gibbs McAdoo? , . I Y' lvllezA when tbe Louisiana State Lotter.Ve 1936. . 1, .. cuskot t'� frandbive expired,. I I Practically the whole of die 1938 worth T . I 11 .!"%,, record Production came from the What femkDus words cUld, William t Turner Valley oil fields in Alberta, Perlin? li_. the -report states. In the first nine ' 0 . EAST �'?,,U-il�111 4 ."X' I "HOW about that- ten You borrowed . .1 ,� I �11 New Orchar4s Are Planted - months of 1938 Turner Valley's out- - O.M. �-`,,"� W"t, k , 0 0 . now I call them ath upward tread, in recent years, ac. I kept It only ten *" I , I these hadi been brought Into produ - � ;,,�, '' I every evening. tion difAng the year. . . . 0 . !­­� Dominion Department of AgTiculture 5.15 i'll 11 .. and TMde and Commerce. In -the Markets for Turner Valley oil %6re . cted to a traveHing man wbo case of apples production has' been pTincipally the three Prairie PrOV- In OUr family." WEST 113 �!� :j , , I . I I . says this. In those few words he tella you much increasing steadily slncL!� 1926 and,the inces, the.output going to thet ou . Undle: ,,'Why, Jack, what on earth '' ' A-ff. "I I � nifly. He sets an example by, 1938 crop, while only slightly higher the proration basis, and allo able do you mean?" it, t n 8.30 , �' � I I about himself and his fob . production being governed, by the de- Jack: "'Weill, I gst punidlied if I MeNaught ............. :::: ... 12.03 � 4 ,.� . . . ..�jng homer eVery eveniiig—hy, Long Distance. I five-year At the beiiiii, of .the harvest. bitb my fing4r nalls, and, when baby 1 .- I_, % yi. . Ing season, the report says, ,Production V#0 'his fbOt In 1140,1111,011th they t . .14 I . :1 up to nearly 29,000 bar -We cllt0s" 11T . , I BY taing low Night Rah" (W h agply every evening after cent years indicate that tbe,upward Wag stepped , , , " ZLdr VL7 IJW40W OYdu doWt think my guests would 116, ` 11%