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The Clinton News Record, 1928-08-09, Page 6,) , To the Farm Boy.it offers a'traini�g that will better fit it, for the `Occupation of Farming and for Citizenship. FOUR YEAR COURSE . Leading to the Degree of.ltaohieloi of $ciente •in• Agriculture. TWO YEARCOU .R SD Leath 11g o the . Asisacvate Hi ,stns: SHORT COURSES Short Courses in. Live -Stock and.Field Crops, -. Poultry ;Raising, Horticulture, = Dairying,11Bes. keeping, Farm Drainage, ;Farm Power, Baking., STUDENTS S. IN TIID FOl`JR • YEAR, COURSE! •.i May s et;lalize in the Third and Fourth Years in Animal Husbandry, F1e!k1 Husbandry,, Horticul- ture onrticulture Dairy : B ee-keeping or Fury ' one of the Sof/mires . of , Baoteripl,o Bo-taai: Chomistir or �'Y, Y, Y Entomology. COST OF COURSE, The total cost for Board and Room and Tuition Fees for First Year Students does not exceed $200: Ask for College Calendar Descriptive of Various -Courses. G. L 'CHRISTIE, B.S.A., D.Sc., A, M. PORTER B.S.A- . President. - Registrar. Educational Conservation Jack Miner Calls Attention to Great Wealth of Ontario's Northland and. Her Lakes. $100. from Tourists as Good as $100 from Wheat Shipped Out / "'Game and Fish Conservation a National Asset"" By Jack Miner. "Since making the statement In a Irormer article In the Toronto Globe, that I stood for educational conser- ivatton, my mail has been heavy with requests for a full explanation, and in bi[ef I will say that during the last fifteen years I have been lecturing I have no doubt spoken to a million or !more schoolchildren In North Amari ca, to whom I have emphasized the Importance of building bird houses, If I can get a child to build a bird- house he will naturallyerect same on es pole, and that boy or girl at once Are, am 1. eady. e, ozir Children ,„„, for It Baby has little upsets at times. All your care cannot prevent them. But yeu can bo prepared, Then you can do what any experienced nurse would do—what moat physicians' would tell you to do—give a few drops of plain Castoria. No sooner done than Baby. is soothed; relief is just a matter of moments. Yet you have eased your dhild without use of a single doubtful rug; Castoria le vegetable. So it's ale to use as often as an infant has ny little pain you cannot pat away, ,And it's always ready for the crueler pings of colic, or constipation, or dfar- heaf effective, too, for older children. Twenty-five million bottles were bought last year. becomes a conservationist, More- over, he becomes a better c4tlzen be- cause of the love kindled is his heart. He certainly' will not kill the bird that is going to nest in a house that he has made, nor is he likely to allow any. other person to destroy a bird in his Vicinity. "This I call 'educational conserve, - non.' But we must not lose sight of the fact that we have got to have laws—and strict laws—for experience and personal observation have tauglht. me that kindness without firmness is a total failure, And we have got to have qualified game wardens to en- force these laws. There Is a small percentage—less than five per cent.— who are outlaws, and this small per- centage of people easily can upset what has been a0cemplished by the majority of people. "Too Arany citizens look at censer vation as merely a sportsman's pro- position, when the fact of the matter is it Is one of Ontario's biggest as- sets. Between Sudbury and Fort Wil- Liam there are thousands of square mites of territory which has been stripped of Its valuable timber, and at present practically good only for mire ing, big game hunting and fishing. No State in the United States or Province in Canada has such a vast sports, man's paradise, and if we will' take the wolves out and let the deer in. crease, not only by the actual money paid out tor licenses, but that left 1. the country by tourists anti hunters will give a bountiful return. Stop and think of the different places tourists leave money—ralIways, gas 'stations, hotels, stores, taxis, boat fares, rent of cottages, rents of boats, and, Inost. encouraging of all, the money he would leave with the guides and set. tiers. "I still stand for raising the bounty on wolves, and at the same time rais- ing hunters' license fees enough to meet the extra. bounty paid, Get the wolves out of the. country, allow deer to Increase and time bring more tour- ists to Ontario. We all know that $100 brought la by tourists has just as much purchasing power as $100 re- ceived for wheat shipped out. Let's get together and educate each other how to make Our Ja'kes worth more. It was told by ono of Wisconsin's Gov orninent eilrcials that lakes in Wis- consin and Minnesota were more Valu- able to these States through money brought in than the same area of cleared agricultural laird, and en) all know these States border on Ontario. Such being the case, what is the value of our lakes, which up to the present time are free of pollution? "Think it over. Don't lex, us get gather to 'talk laws,', Let ne get, to- gether and 'do something.' ” Maid: "The furniture man is here:" Mistress: "I'll sea him in a minute. Tell him to take a chair," Maid: "I did, but he said Ire would start with the piano and radio!" Ones thousand pairs. of Hungarian partridge have ,been ordered, from Czech -Slovakia by the Ontario Depart- ment of Game and' Fisheries for Sall. delivery to restock some of the game bird sections of the province as speed- ily as possible. WHEN IN TORONTO Eat and Sleep at SCHOLES HOTEL, : YONGE ST., Opposite Eaton's Rates: $1 Per Day and Up. r,E,aUlN0 PH11,l.BPS- For 7kouhles due to Acid INDIGESTION ,o,, to STOMACH aameRN. al6AtlACH It ;s't'd stir rA, • 0, jt reast popple call milgesti�ol} zcass acid: in th otomag Ao has soured, Tho' instant ! g an alkali, which `fie I Y 3. ra.izosr uj:-, t don't d use cinch) }>eljls, Use ' 'eetor would d n ' dn�e est elp is Phillips',' illi par the , fl 50 Years vas ric ll t,. D o f� )itIpri 7.t has x'enlafped' etdxxd Melees. Yeu will• 101 not ua, d d 1 k its 1 ,q n effect ' �� o 11,1 life efficient, Gy lack MI'nsr ' 011e Thtusday afternoon i r ',April 1620; a big cal stopped, in front'ot my house and as th" ee geritiemen •stepped rout,; I recognized the Paielliar face of (fTilam Pop' Stineon:`ot IJetrott, or ;gen'1zer oP°•T.,W.L.A.•In that vicinity, as one'pf the party. 'I -'at epee went to• the"road- and my friend Wlll 'intaCs decoct me to Charles Folds and :James Heylvorth, of ,Chicago,. -and as ti e foul; strolled about niy apreuiises we eP, ar- ently" Ada In love• with each other, -and to :be' truthful, u , I'don t Over remember seeing the wild geese. act Mere,abund- ently cheerful than•+they, were" that memorable" afternoon' for the water, land and air 'se -eased 'filled with:; them and the swish of their wings and honk - hie voices combined: with' the cooing of isencletails ".of mourning doves and the 'senor of: robfus and other- birds that made the evergreens that border the 'goose Ponds fairly' echo with God- given music.. All this combined with the regularity and•vigor•ous growth of the trees I have planted seemed to, hold these' dear men =speechless, Fin. ally Charlie Folds put on arni around me and said, "Mr. ruiner,” :7; said, 'gust Ball' Me Jack, pleese," then he cheorfully said, "Well, Jack, you notice we are not saying anything. Jack,• my dear fellow, we are speechless, this. Is beyond our belief, this Is a demonstration to the world, a new idea, namely, letting the birds come to us to be taken care of." Finally we drifted into my home and nil kood wife had' supper prepared for us four, . in 'owe -Observation room, the window allowing- us full ,view of the pond and we eat- down and broke bread' together, and had areal love feast,. Yes, we poured out our hearts to each other and their conversation was based on the betterment for the rising generation, and, dear' readers, please pardon the quivering tone of my writing" for there ere tears trick- ling down my cheeks, right now. Just to think, that my hair was tar the whitest of any one of the`four of us, and only two short years have passed, but to -day, I am the only survivor, the other three have passed on, and L am all alone to tell the story, and to be brief, these big-hearted men grasped the situation, and arranged that I should have a donation to help me on with my weak. And they also arranged that I she come to Chicago and accompany the on a week -end fishing trip into No thern Wisconsin. At the appoint time, I went, they met me as agreed, and on a Saturday morning we ar- rived at their .fishing ,reserve, and Jinr Heyworth rowed me out and I caught the first speckled trout, and the last one I ever caught. The next morning being Sunday, I put 0n my rubber boots and wont for a stroll up the bank of the stream above their two artificial lakes, here I saw two or three, occupied beaver houses and I flushed several pairs of mallards that were evidently nesting •Sn that near vicinity, and when fully one -halt mile above the line of their reserve I went to cross the stream on an old log bridge evidently used by the sottfeas of that country every winter. The bridge, I should say, was about fifteen foot wide end the clear water fully three feet deep. Ae the sun was hot, my rubber boots` were extremely warn, so I sat down on this bridge aird lulled them off, and soon I was listening to the songs of the migratory birds that were flitting among the. scattered trees in this swampy ravine, the sun beamed down nice and -warm and I stretched out like a blacksnake and was about drifting off iuto•'dream• land when the corner of my eye was attracted by a glitter in the clear :water, and now lot me 'say to the Sportsmen of North America, that in niy younger days I have enjoyed see- ing five different varieties of ducks in my decoys at once—and in Nor'ther'n Quebec and Ontario I have time and time again had a carload of noose at the niercy•of my rifle—yes and during the last fifteen years I have seen the wild geese fly up_ -so thick and close to - my ,little home that the vibration of their, wings have actually shook' the windows, ,but'. never in -alt my` un- dreamed of beautiful life ..have I be- held such a thrilling, glittering, over- flowing beautiful sight 'as I did for the next hour, and I had hard work even then to break away for I am absolutely certain that I saw live times as many speckled trout going un that stream es this whole fishing' party of ten of us' caught In the two days, but before leaving I took partirplar notice and here' was a public fisher- man's path beside this trout stream. Now Who was the cause of these speckled beautieg glittering their way up and up—and upZ—this stream, why certainly the very • same class of self- sacrificing men that paid my way and were the cause of me being there to see them. God tells ue in his word "that a good-mufi leavoth an inheritance to his children." Who will doubt this blessed' promise, when wo think. of our belayed Will Dllg, 'the founder of bur Izealt Walton League. Bless his �dear memory, he left a heritage to a vallteful nation, for the overflow' of hie life was •the LW,L.A. 'IIe joined us .together so that if we will only ire 'self-sacrificing. enough tyo can soon pay back our debt of extravagance and'have- the thrilling and loving en- joyment of seeing the overflow of our ,lives go over the- top and up the streams. The same as I saw the over- flow of "Pop" Stinson's, Tim worth's and Charlie Feld's Iife going up the stream for our, children's chil- dreh, i?oar-reader, will you be self-saerifie- g enough to be absolutely certain the l. is an overflow to your life ha Will gladden the hearts of those hat are to follow, and now in closing, • $ust wish to eey a word to those that re nearest end clearest to these dear i>ubiio ,epirite4 gentlemen, especially ire r I° w v an fa 1 l � d les i Do net think hak yen bow alone In your grief, for your loss is North Atherica's logs, do et lot ,us leok 'upon Mesh as gone rorti us forever. -,No! not 'they have' usl gone oil ahead,_ • •+'Ill niy Fathers house aye many mahsions," Well, If there , are man- lons,--theee• must; •be windows. Per shoe eQge uy,' I 'cannot sec Llreir sipep 14t.C..� foams, in ill's cold olayr but their bec- to u b an s tt by e• i o °P nOwaO lawn if V rd OUCfJ9'�•�` 11Ejt% vel i n n h d s til smil Y ern th , 1•enwi d fie e 'Peodrle ;Wllo Csro hungry iv'itft' " C+,....,,,,,,,..L.,,,•.,!+'cod on .the Table �Xtb° n7&� � z i 1� Bp1 �p�,�/��pj � .-x...,41111131Y cannot eat.:, Actual ut Eat SY !ore Ci gad.y tragedy Fs snggestpd by these' simple `r• 'words, so,' often hoard, uecauso loss-pf appetite "„a the beginning oP trouble' Eriglishvrarin en; Howeverr Are ;that• eoonor o • later r Yeveals itself as Cutting Do -w 1. On' .54VeetS' iru`digestion, nervous dyspepsia, with and Ta11Rg to., 'violent headacheH - and other serious symptoms:, Loss, of appetite, whethe Tob4cco a man or womaii,' isea symptom you dare -not: ignore. ' It '. The trade papers' e J 1ng11sh con g You do,,nluch int., factionei'y and tob'afcc/manufacturing #snug is'euro to follow. show b 'statistics.: h-Englishmen'Tire soaves of a good uppotite=ihe Ytat are eating more sandy atnd,;'smbking secret Of keeping well—is to keep up less, while their women are 'smoking ,illi'quality of the blood'. By enrich- Veil - more, and Sating less -candy. : r and' purifying the blood Dr. Wil- The causes were debated in L,on llama' Pink Pills 'supply' strength to. don iecently ,at a confectioner), ex the enfeebled -organs of digestion, and cion oigan'tzed ,Uy, the `Manufac-' enable them to digest thoroughly the teeing.Cohfectionexs''Alliance; bald at food eaten without eaystng pain or Olympia, . The 'situation •had -:become d1st• i•ess, Proof of this is by seidous, the: head of one firm'said, be YIr. William H. Kelly, Kingston„Ont„ cause "while girls :had gone off sweets,., who says:—"I cannot recommend Dr. the, deftclt: in consumption has not Williams, Pink Pills too highly,' I had been made Up by the men. Smelting been''bothered with lndtgostion in a kills the taste for sweets, and sweets chronic! form Yor almost':ten years. kills the' craving for smelting, . We Cverytlring I would eat would turn are not interested la how soon mon' Both; I felt as though there'.was a big will return to smoking, Our problem 'ball in my stomach all the time. I is how to increase the consumption of telt tired and weak and would often sweets among women." turn dizzy. I doctored and tried many Another, 011 being asked io account medicines, spending many; many dol- for the change in`'tho • habits of the Mars' but to no avail. One day I heard sexes,. said: - a lady Praising Dr. Williams' Pink "The war caused it, The manufac Pills and I decided' to try them. I am awing of confectionery was cut down;' more than glad •, did, for soon I found that of tobacco was Increased. Cigar- relief, and after taking the pills for a cites were plentiful, everywhere. The Couple.of months the trouble had dis- beat a.weeta then made were sent to appear•ed,'and now I cap eat all kinds the front. In the trenches 'smoking of food, and,have again my old time was very often ,forbidden, but the health and strength.” men could eat'on all occasions the send for These Health Books, millions of pohnds of sweets sent oyer, Two useful books, "Building Up the while the women' over there aril at to d,” and "What to fat and !low hove began to smoke because they Eat," will be sent free by The Dr, considered it more in keeping with Williams' Medicine' Co., Brockville, their war work than nibbling sweets, Ont., if you mention this paper. The men brought back the habit with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold them, with a particular taste for care by all dealers in medicine or will be mel flavors. sent by mail,. post paid, onreceipt 'of "You can see them chewing toffee Price, 50 cents per. box. , nowadays at horse and greyhound races, • When they want strength of mind for a difficult niblick, they again chew toffee. As for the office, there Is many g man to -day who keeps a bag of sweets beside him on his deslc in the city: Sweet -eating has at any rate annihilated tobacco chewing in the Iower classes and` snuff -taking in ed CAMERA • INFAMY! 8 U Y! the upper." t one tasteless spogii.Pnl IA Witter: pputralizgs many •ti re ilk Yelli p in 10 p1 , The:sosul s pike tmijjeilluto;.with N' d egier-eifePt . Clj}e o . learn r tt o, i. y" i ox= .r w l ,.t3 ii a t •d ss: 1 't c 9 0 }c�ytro r y . L a A 1:...w al fly . s . u re ., xne.. o iiro;'fo 'e fin) e ' g t n o ??hill ilyc mfIk a'ne av)'ea¢ribo4 1>y ph,'ss. j „•§l:� ,, 1,..,p47;111.1, o. xrooting a cess , amide.'Bal i ettle contains full, 1reo tienil--any Beall Cholera infantum is one of the fatal ailments of childhood. It is a troubie that comes on suddenly, especially during the summer montlis, and un- less prompt action ie taken the Little one may soon be beyond aid. Baby's Own Tablets aro an ideal medicine in warding off this trouble. They regu- late the bowels and sweeten the stom- ach and thus prevent the ;dreaded summer complaints, They are an ab- solutely safe medicine, being guaran- teed to contain neither opiates nor narcotics or other harmful drugs. They cannot possibly do harm—they' always do good. Tao Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mall at 26 conte a box from Tho Dr. Williams Modicius,Co., Brockville, Ont, Renunciation You would renounce the tabled sen, Forego adventure and abide An sill>rotesting cavalier Domesticated at my side. You proffered twice your gallant dreams, And lett your freedom at my feet, And planned a colorless career In some inglorious retreat! Because Move you foofishiy, I bid you go—I must bo wise , . , I could not bear the daily fear Ol anguish dawning in your eyes. Because I love you all too well, I shake my head and matte you go; I give you to the seven seas— Perhaps I shall not lose you so! -Alice Porter. The Color Problem in South Africa Rolind Table (London)•: The na- tive' in South Africa will slowly pene- trate into, the higher ranks of labor and establish a claim to equality of economic 'oppartunity with the white man. , • There are many who fear and oppose the doctrine of economic equality, for they See in it the tsar, to social and political equality—not In the immediate future, perhaps not for five or ,leu generations, but In the and inevitably. With social equality they see the extinction of the matte race, with political equality the disappearance of white ideals. , They tear that five hundred years from now 811 Rarry Jolrnston's prophecy may have justified itself and ,it may have been shown that the colonization of Africa'' by alien peo- ples produce a compromise -"a dark-, 'islcinned race with a white man's tea toes and a white man's brains." ' ' ' ,But what the dim future may hold no ono can now usefully predict. Custom •in Dre88 Cincinnati Enquirer; Custom is what makes It so Improper fov g man to appear in company with. his sus' venders showing"and' perfectly proper for bis wife to go around with her garters visible as tits sun, Minard's Lintrient UniVersal remedy ' Author! "Yes, 2 am doing `very well, I make jokes and my wife makes pictures for them," Palates' "With me it's the opposite. I make pictures and my, wife mailer jokes about tbomi" Zellte-doa.7eI 31weLaina.-..ea.a a719 NEW AND sLiaoITLY USED, $10 UP, Post, Shipping Paid, Write 1003 " or Latest' Illustrated /cycles and Accessor_ les R EGTA_ 7Poar an 'E10yola, V •INorke,: 191,-3-9 Du Dee 738610 No. 32,-'28, Blue Bloods for Canadian Pool Calgary, Alta,—Considerable inter- est was evinced oaten the Prince of Wales, heir to the British throne, join- ed the membership ranks of the Al- berta Wheat Pool last year. The popular Prince owns the E. P. Ranch, which is located west of High River, Alberta, Just recently another British nohle- man signed an Alberta Wheat Pool contract. This personage Is George Bridges I3arley, eighth Baron of Rod- ney, who operates a thousand -acre farm east of rfdmoaton. In 1018 Lord Rodney and his wife came to Canada. On their arrival in Edmonton they hired out as "man and wife" employees of a bachelor farmer neer Tort Saskatchewan, While Lady Rodney did the cooking, her husband worked as a hired man. For a whole summer- they cooked, slept and work. ed from sun -up until sun -down. A few years Iater• Lord Rodney bought a farm in the district and has since increased its size to a thousand acres. 1 --to is a real farmer and toils as hard as most of his neighbors. Another British peer who is a mem- ber of the Wheat Pool is the Dulco of Sutherland. The 7,000,acre Suther- land farm at Brooks has been under a Pool contract for a number of years, The Duke of Sutherland's farm ate Brooks is ane of the show places in that district. The' land les irrigated and the farm beautiful with large groves of trees. Let Minard's Liniment Relieve Pain. Alice (acidly): ,11 hear that you've accepted Jack; I suppose he never told You he proposed to mol" Ethel: "No, not •exactly. IIe merely said that he. had done a lot of silly things before meeting me, But I didn't ask Nhim what 'they were 't THE PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION of Canada Asset $2696157.00, ea0rplug to policyholders over S190,000.00 TOE ONLY PIIIIELY CAN- ADIAN CoagpANY issuing Sickness and Accident /near - since to Members of the Ma- sonic fraternity Eaclnaivoly. Agents In all principal Cities and Towns in Canada. E. E. GLEA50F. J. a, rezzrig, Pros. 0 Goa. mgr. Secy. Asa, Nugr. Head Office: GRANBY, Que. Stings and Bites. The pain of insect bites disap- pears quickly with the appli- cation of Mlnard's. Try a bottle. Ir xtremes Lea o Serious" Illness' §unburri in Moderate . Cases -Has Good Value Although • ,.Care Should $e Taken Washington "The general pubfi4. has bean'Se impressed with the value and•uecesisty ,sun 'baths' in the Pre-' vention and cure of,,Mimeo that pep- ple, in<some instances, have gone: