The Seaforth News, 1931-07-02, Page 7ORTH NEWS.
PAGE SEVEN.
TH Ui1aSU&Y,. Jukt,Leal. x e, Lea __:_. _ --- _. THE SEAF
. A PRACTICAL OPTIMIST
A Western farmer's 'house stood on
le in the
high ground, but his farmy,
botto5n la'mdls. In the ,recent floods
!1Water'to,e!figured
the farm was lowered wlth.
a ,&vele of several feet. Hes ne'ph'ew
'weittt down to call on, the old gentle-
crud him standing on the
matt and found
ba'n'k hovered ant across the welters
that ,cinerea his ruined creep'e. Ap.-
his uncle, he said, "Well,
Plooked,
'sa ie Mateo
'Uncle Mate Shat looks rather bad.
„
dbB t at? ,
' turned to his
But as °Ute old man
ivepik le there was the customary
"maybe :i it his eyes. "VJ ellhe said,
„-'observe,;
"Maybe is had for my crops,. but
k
anyhow it. will do+o'wn those pts y
gopthers!"
Mount b1ivet. Sam. xv. 30. The
same Jehovah is "file lifter up "o'E.our.done
heads," by to ;gift of holy c'onlfiYlence,
and the hope of•a• resurre'ctioti through
that of Jesus Christ, Pr by
the triumphant and h'a'ppy return of
David to. Jerusalem,
4. I cried unto the Lord with my
voice, and he heard ante out of his 'hol:y
.v„.•
, David, driven from Je'rusale'm, s'tsll.
and prayed aowaard the "holy
Brill" of .Sion, Christ •item a strati-
" pp',.
ger on the eolith. "merle .supplication
with strotng crying," to hi's Fa'hher m
heaven. C•hrisit Haas heard' for -his
own s' k,e• Dia id 'a heard, ' andA
e v wets card, we
shall be'heard, through htm,
5. 'I Paid me down and slept: 1
awaked, for the Ford sustained me.
I'B'e'holld Dlavid, in the midst of don-
ger, sleeping wiltlhout, fear, secure;
bhrousgh th•e thyme .protection, of awra-
kintg to engage and vaitlqui'sh his en-
writes. Behold the Sion of Davis!
canis osi•ni hiim'self o hi -rest to o'ii
P g t s s p
the cross, that bed of sorrows; and
ooim'menldi'n+g his Spirit. into t'he Faith-
errs hands, .in full ciontfidenee Of a joy-
furl resurrection according to 'the pro-
arise at the time appointed. 'Beshsolld2
this 0 Ohri• tion and ,let faith. on
' s a tea 1
Uhee hbsw to sleep; and howl •:to die,
a short death, ere death ou
ie., only a
kareger sleep; and that the same God
swatch'e's over thee, in thy bed, end in
thy ,grave,
6. sT wild nkat be afraid of tett .thou-
people, that have sit Uhe'm-Y
sands of people,
selves against me roun'ds'abou•t. -
'F.a'lth, revived and invi roasted by
•• fi
prayer, and fixed on•'Gnd alone, is a'
stranger' to fear, in the worst of
tunes. The innumerable examp'l'es of
saints rescued from tribulation, and
above all, the. resurrection Of the Son'
of God from the dead, render the be-
Ne've'r bold as a lion; although the
n!am'e'of his adverslar be ,"legion."
p. (Arise, 0 Lord! save .me, 0 myap'proachin'g
God; for thou hast mitten all ,imine
enemiee upon, the oheek bone; thbu
heist brbken'the teeth of the un'godl'y.
rDhe church, through 'Christ, pray-
e'th in these words of David, that Je-
hovel would arise, as of •old time, in
the power of his might; that he wotil'd
filtialiy.break the power of Satan and
his aclhiereurs p'luo the spoil ctrl orf
jaws Of those: bea's't's of prey; an,d
work th+at,gloriotes deliverance for the
members, which is already' wrought
for the Head of the body mystical,
@, ISat''vatlon •belongeth, `or, be' as-
cri'bed, unto. the Lord; Nh'y blessing
is,: or be, tion the
P y People,
Th'e Psalm ends with am'acknow_
ledigemen ewhich.ought always to full
the heart; and, upon every proper oc-
cassiou, to flow from the month of a
" e is
Ohrfstiau; rame9y,' that salvation
not to. be lead from man, from the'
kings of the earth, or th'e gods of the
heathen, from saints or angels, but
froim Jehovah alone; to Whom alone;
therefore, the glory should be ascribe
ed. If He will save, noire can des-
iFetIBal l destroy, ,none cart
save. Let Polak, then, curse Israel,
or h_ ire,B!allaam to curse thein for tial;
be but thy' "blessing", 0 Lord, nposa
thy people, 'and it sufeice'th, `
quality. The King' ra•spb'erry has
well in place's' and is hardier
than the Cuthbert. Miller has also
done" well' on tire `prairies. On the
Pacific Coast Fillbaslcet and Su'p.e'r-
Wive have been found very satis'Eae-
tory. Alit eleosbd mentioned are red
The hardiest and best
varieties, a
purple variety is the Colombian, and
of yellow sans, the G'o'Gden Queen.
The black raspberries are not as
hardy as the reds and are only suited
to the warmer parts of Canada. Some
of the horst are Hlid!honi, Odder, Cum-
berland anid Gregg,
mal number Of electrons as they 'co'ol
under ewcessive pressure: 'Both of
these lairds of pickle an. iron forma-
tions are found on tfie e5rth and now
special analysis :orf metallic meteorites
.reveals thlat both' kinds, are found in
'them. This would seem to suggest
that these metallic meteors may have
originated from ' the earth; having
possibly been hurled into apace by
some of the titanic upheavals that
the, earth's :crust shows imus( have ac-
t h
curred,'in the remote past miles
•,.
of semi -roc k fprmutfon liar been torn
and thrown backward as 'from - a
mighty plowshare. A few fragments
being shot into the sky and like the
proverbial arrows have come back
again;
neral. Methods of m'appi
aerial p'hotcgralphs were deli
a result.
'In 1923, aviation was pia+
the Department of INation'a
and the `Royal Canadian A
:was established. Though s
organization, the R:C.A,iF.
year undertaken e large pr
civil operations, Due to the'
tion with the Forest. Service
'o ra,hica'I ,Surveys of the
P g 1 Y
meat of the Snterior, and .
partmenhs o f the Governme..
ods of:conducting aerial sure
been deveiosped which have
Canada delfinitely in the lead
nations of the world, in this
Aerial forest surveys are c
ys, by sketching
in three Ways,
p'hotograp!hy,' and vertical
graphy,
Sketching is difficult in u
territory and is necessarily i
as to details, hurt where then
;ground control it is of gr 1
tance as a preliminary to
cruising. Photography provid
ever, a permanent and matte
correct record of the groun
tions which can be studied .
for any purpose desired suet
P
o•graphy, geology, agriculture
power, or forestry.
Oblique photography whit
sentially a Canadian method
any, is applicable to large are
a fine degree 'of accuracy is
ground is fat
quired, and the
From these photographs itis
to map •both the topo ra 'hi
g F
ures and the forest types f
miles on each side of, the
flight and prominent feature
located at even greater distal
this system 360 to 600 squa
can be photographed in an
pending on the speed of the'
Transparent grids which t
of the peegpective have been
out by the:Department of tl
for for various altitudes, foca
of camera, distance Erom
centre to .ground plumb and
ronce from the margin to the
horizon. These grids which
divided into sections ten
square, when superimposed
enable the map
the area with sufficient ace
most purposes.
Vertical photography is ni
curate than oblique but, owin
smaller area covered, the cos
siderably increased. Vertica
graphs are usually taken fres
altitudes, 5,000 to •13,000 feet,
higher and the scale varies
attitude and the focal lengtl
camera.
The photographs are taken
end overlap of about 60 per
a side overlap of from 20 t
cent Variations in the sea
photos is taken care of by th
of radial control in lot in
p g•
Since the numerous fakes
of our forest regions make i
g
for the use of flying
the lack of smooth open
spaces precludes the use o
most of our aerial surveys
conducted during the swum
are dryareas, however, wile
water nor smooth landing
available, and summer flyin
-
eluded. 'Since 'lel-8 9 the F
vice has been conducting wit
surveys with planes equipp
skis and the winter picture
anything, better for forest
than summer pictures bee
conifers (evergreens) stand
much greater cohtrast from
duous (leaf -shedding) trees
shadows are longer and more
enabling the measurement
heights with greater accurst
Upto date the Do•min•ion
have photographed 380,94
for to o• ra hi
p g' p cal
115,065 square miles nettle
260'$75 obliquely, and the for
been mapped on 89,440 t u
In addition the provinces o
and British Columba
vera! of the pulp and paper
have conducted extensive a
veys.
The Forest Service, Depot
the Interior, 'has developed
heights f
measuring g
shadow's in -vertical photogt
directly in oblique photogr
by this means the young
delimited from .merchantabl
Knowing the height of the
acre it is possible to estitttat
tone of timber per acre, am
accurate measurement of t
covered by the various types
!level that the time is not f
when it will be possible to
better estimate of the eb
aerial photographic ;surveys
now being secured from an
ground cruise where the cru
are run twenty chains or m
THE GOLDEN
7,
T1Lr{'AtJURY
July 4,
And J'aco•b ,went met him,is way, and the,
angels of God Gen 32, L
As +Jacob was favoured with a'•
heavenly vision; when he firstdepart-
ed from his father's House, so the Di-
vine 'r 'Being thought proper again to
Eauou•r hfun withthe sive k
w s , token of
his roteeeion on his return thither,
P
tet order to enieourlage 'ger to meet
with confidence the dangers he sari to
'anter. Iien'ce' we nary '
lilac whenGod desi, 1i hisf
that,
t, w g s people 0r
e:atraordfnaory trials, he prepares themPeace
b y e ttnaondli+uiary col iEor'ts . ;Wei
should think'•'it hale been more sea-
smnalb•le •far these angels to Have ap-
I, eared .to lain 'axil in the heat of his
a 1,s
engagement, (either with Labatt be-presi•den't
fore, or Esau after,) than in this calm
and quiet interval, when he saw not;
i.nmti'ineu't peril. Burt God will• have
a when weare in peas t
s, w e p e, o ore
for trouble; land, when trouble •conies
'
to draw -cam Fort and encouragement
from former ex,perieivices; knowing as -
surectly, that he who has de'li'vered in
six ,trottl les well a'l'so deliver .in n
severe
and in due time out of allThis may
be a r' testi abfon of Go 's people
eP t d P F c
art death, who are
Canaan o their then retaining to
t heavenly Fa'ther's
'leo i
house; the; angels Of God •will then
meet thein, to congratulate thein on
the ,happy finishing.to of their labours,
and carry' them to their everlasting
rest..
(Saints in glory perfect made,
Wait the passage through the shade;
(Ardent for thy coming o'er.
See they throng the b'l'iss'ful shore!
HIGHWAY OF ROSES '
IA continuous bower of roses' for
250 miles along highway 3'A from the
Bridge to Windsor is the
dreanf aE the Women's In'etitulte of
Welland; County.
, IA. start hors already been made.
Wlth Clue no operation o£ Col, Hugh
Rose, or Westland, of the
Rose Society, `a number of bushes.
'have been planted. Some are already
in bloom. It fs, proposed to plant
buxshe's on both• s•idets of the hi
highway
at the rate of 250 for every three mile
stret'dh.
The Wtomen's In•s'tfttites ire the
countties 'weslt of 'Welland will be ap-
p:ruadhed with a view to carrying the
Project through• to Windsor. The
road' from Bridgeburg to the border
will• be knd\vn as the Rose Highway.
The proposal was laid' before Wel-
land county council some six gtonth's'
ago, but nothing concrete has been
done until the W.,I., at a series of
meetings under the auspices of the
Ontario Department of Agriculture,
decided to push the Rose Highway
in earnest,
'
J•EALOUSY MOTIVE OF
TORONTO CRIME•
. —
Murdered on the door steps• of a
house at 282 Church Street, after she
had laughed derisively at her former,
lover's thre'a'ts and entreaties, Geor-'
gins. Luxton, otherwise known as
Jeannette Young, aged 30, died from
a knifewound before the police am-
balance arrived at the General Hos-
vital, in Toronto shortely after 1:1 0=
clock' Thareday night. Th main, Wat-
ter Collin's, aged 55, admitted to the
police later that he had had a butcher
knife specially prepared for the mor-
der.
Crazed with jealasy because she
had left him three weeks ago to live
g
with a Chinese waiter named Henry
Jluig; dogged the two an'd in
desperation Collins.s said to have tried to
take his own life two weeks ago. Af-
ter she spurned him Thursday night
he chased the woman screaming up
the steps of the Churcdn Street house
and stabbed her twice in the back as
she tried to open' the door and es-
cape.
The murder was committed with a
ehanpe,ed down butcher knife which
was edged on both sides as keen as
any razor. Within ten minutes Of the
struggle on the front tseps of the
Church Street rooming house Collins
was arrested in his room.
The man Collins died in his jail
cell soon after being remanded for
murder. He had been hysterical all
night and 'wars al'm'ost unconscious
when taken into court. Vanco'u'ver is
tho'g'ht to be his home.
FARM FOR SALE
•Tuck-
Lot 11, Concession 4, H.R.S. ,
land, fh, containing 100 acres of choice
r
land, situated 'on county "road, 11.4
miles south of ,the prosperous Town
of Seaforth, on 'C.N R.; convenient to
schools, churches and markets. This
farm is all acres of choice,. well fenced;
about 2 of choice 'fruit' trees,
The sod is excellent and in a good
state of a tlhivahion and all suitable for
state,
the of alfalfa, no.. waste 1'and,
farm is well watered with two
The i g
never failing 'welts also a flown
spring in the farm yard; about
acres plowed and reading for spring
seeding, also 12 acres of fail wheat;
remainder •is seeded;with alfalfa, The
buildings are first class, tn. excellent
repair; the house is brick and is mo-
dern,ihard"a respect; heated with fur-
nate, hard and soft water on tap, a
three-piece bathroom; rural telephone,
also rural mail. 'The outbuildings con-
list of barn 50x'80 feet with stone
stabling under; all floors in stable
cement; the stabling has water sys-
installed. A good frame driving
shed, 24X48 feet; a 2 -storey henhouse
66x36 fees. , A brick pig pen with ce-
ment floors capable of housing about
to pigs. The house, stables and barn
have hydro installed. Anyone desire
ng a first class home and choice farm
should see this. On' account of ill
iealth I will sell reasonable. Besides
the above I am offering lot 27, con-
cession 12, Hibbert, consisting of 100
scree choice land, 65 acres well under-
trained; 10 acresmaplebush, all seed-
el to grass; no waste and. On the
premises are a good bank barn. 48x56
feet and frame house, an excellent
feet
well, The farm is situated about 5
miles from the prosperous village of
Hensel! on' the C.N.R,, one-quarter of
a mile from school and toile from
church. This farm has never been
cropped much and is in excellent
shape for cropping•
p ort pasture. I •will
sell these farms together or separate-
ly to suit purchaser. For further par-
titulars apply to the proprietor, Sea -
forth, R.R. 4, or phone 21 on 1.33,
Seaforth. THtOS. G. SIHea:LTNIG
LAW, Proprietor.
SIGNS OF THE ZO•DIA'C
In his - app.a'rent eastward move-
meat among the stars the sun is now
the eastern boundary of
the 'constellation of Taurus, the .Bul•l,
'which he left on (Wednesday last, and
started to cross the face of Gemini,
the Twins. More than ,3,000 years
ago, when the sun's apparent annual
path was divided into 12 equal parts
to correspond to the 12 months of the
year, each of these 12 •divisions was
con•si,dered a sin of the time of the
gphotograph,
Year. For this reason these divisions
were called "signs" Of the zodiac and
the signs bore the nate of constel'la-
tion roughly, that was situated there,
These "signs"' were then thought to
be permanent marks of the sun's pro-
P4
geese in his annual circuit of the sky
and a definite indication of the sea-
-son of the year. In the month tor-
respohding to June; for instance; the
sun then a'lwa'ys starts across the con-
stellation Cancer when it was said to
"enter" Cancer and the star maps al-
\gays indicated the sun to be
;there, where •tie reached his most nor
therly elevation and stood still for
R
day and then began to decline to-
wards the south again. This point
was called the summer "solstice."
The team "saistice" meaning the
place where the sun stands still, with
reference to the north and south
motion,
At his olbservatory in Rhodes,
'140 B. C„ Hi pparchus, noticing
a new star burst forth, .consulted his
star chart,- to see i'f the new star was
indicated` thereon, Ile not .only
found that it was not. but also was
to find that the 'remnants of
'ancient charts did not contain it
either and also that the:positions of
p
the' eunrmier and winter solstices, t•he,
e'quinoxiai points and the pole had
shifted westward ariIon 'the stars at
g
a rate 'that indicated a displacennent.
30 degrees westward in a , lit'tle
g
more than 2,000 years. fast then
.be erie tnmvn but its. cause. was not
d•iseovered' until the begimiing of else
'11$'tti century when Si' Is'a'ac ;Ne'wton
was,able to show that the combined
orf the groviture pull of the
alliin • and the sun on the tui in
g g
equator' of the earth would be surf-
ficient to cause the earth to gyrate
in teat circle, once in about
25.000 years, giVing to us the im •res-
tion that `rhe stars are thus naoviaig
shoit li we ktioav fhat it is really the
g
earth tubowiy gyrating. `This ctispiace_
meat is so serious for star positions
of Righrt .Ascension and Declntatton,tree
to be anything like being near ac-
curate new charts must be drawn at
•intervals fof at least every 50 }rears.
Our resent pole star is now about
4'6 degrees aboiii=e our north horizon,
in about 12,500 •ears hence it will
y
likely swinrg directly overhead- and
the bright star Vega will act as page
star.
[During Jiune'and July the. earth is
skirting a wide .stream of meteors
when" a few scattered ones may be
looked for 10 came from the dfrec-government.
tions of the constellations Scorpio
and Sagittarius, ,Well .down in the
southeast, when thea strike the earth
atmosphere.
Iltecen't hivestigations •regarding the
con osition of these objects in° the
lightpof"the new physics has ind'i'cated
somewhat about origin
not hitherto known. It has been
found that the atoms of iron, nickle
and caller ,substances either arrange
•themselves in a shglitly different way
or are, perhaps, deprived of their nor-
On The Psalms. %
The right of the Psalter to a pl'a'ce
to the sacred can.an math never been
disputed; and it is ollte.n cited by, our
Lord and his apostles in the New
Testament, as the .work of the Holy
Spirit. Whether iDevid, therefore, or
any other prophet was employed as
the- 'instrument of communicating to
the church such or such a particular
Psalm, is a' question .which, if it cam-
not ad'way!s be satisfactorily .answer -
ed, needs not disquiet our minds.
When we discern, iso au' epistle, the
well known .hand of "a friend, we are
not solicitous 'about the pen :with
which it was written,
Pslalm I111.
This As'a'lanrs said to have been tom-
Posed by David, wh'e'n he fled from
son Abs'atom. Thus circum-
stormed
sbanlced he expresses hiniselll en
Reruns well adapted to the
p paraPlel
ease of the Son of David, p'ers'ecut-
ed by rebellious Israel; as also to
'tha't qf• his church, Suffering tribe-
da,tfou in the world. ; 1, 2. He cam-
plaits, in inch anguism, Of the mule
'ti•tu'dle off his enemies, and of the' re-
raadhea cast oven him as` one for-
p Pptroy;
alaken. by God; but, 3. declares, not-
'witbslt'andimg, his sure trust in the
divine protheses; 4, 5. he relates the
success of his prayers; 6,-8: derides
the impotent malice of his enemies,
wird ascribes salvation to sehatali:about
J
11'Land, how are they increased'
that'trauble me! tlfany are rtrey that
'ri'se ti• p against me.•
La\ id is atsltbnisshed 'to fiord that "elle
'hearts of the mess of,I.sra'el are' ,after
iAlbsa'tlam," 2. Sam. xv. 13. that bus
couusallors revolted,' •alai his friendet
falling off continually; and that the
'kung of Israel is "forced, to 1e'ave his
oap6tal mourning sand weeping.'Thus
Mourningprevera:tuce:
led Forth auk of !eras'eUem by tuts trim
cltildr!en. ,in' arms against him,the, holyof
g
IJ'esits sveni °forsakehi sand Sorrowing to
g
the cross, in file day off trouble. Thus
is the Chunrh oftentimes opposed• and
betrayed by her sons, and tete axis-
tion by hes pasisio is and affeotio'iis, S'o
true it is, millet "a Man's foes are they'dus!ting
of lists'.•, own h ous'efi!0i .” But Inche; who
by prayer engages the assistance Of
Jehovah, wil'l rise striperfor to all:. •
2, 'Many there be which say of my
s„,
soul, there is aro help for him. in. Gdd,
iAffliction•an.d deserltiom are fwo •very
different t.hinigs, but often confounded
by the world. Slhimei reviletd Dlavld,
ars re'probate'd by hea've'n; and the' tan-
gene of Me.Shineeis afterwards, con'-
:.
ceratgai!g the (Son orf Ilavad, was, ;He
trusted. in God; let him deliver him
tots> if he will have him:—Se'e'2.'Sam.
svi. 8. Matt. xxvii, 43, The fcarrul, fur-,'ntaai'y'years
aginations of our' own d'espoiediit'g'
hearts, and the suggestions of our
-
crafty adversary, frequently' •join to•
help forwiard this uno'st dangerous
'tempta'tion. in lire hour, of sorrow.'
•Wifa!t, therefore, bath r faith to offer?
We shell hear—
3. But thou, 0' Lord, are a .shield
'for ire: niy ,glory, and the lifter up o'f'
MY head.
iS{nc'h is the answer of David, and of
all the saints, but above elle of the
King of ,Saints, to the tem'p'tation bee
fore mentioned. ,Je'o'liwali is a."e'li i.eld"
against this, and al'l'otther fiery darts,
sfilot by ,Satan his associates: he
is the n"glory" "I''df Christ ,,situ the
church, c'h with .Which ,the will due daywhat
ch r Y
be seen invested, th'oug'h for. a season
it appear net to the world; any more
did th'e'r'oyalt of David, when,
Y Y
we'eip.in end llarefioio't', die went nip
General ,B'ertrand, famous in Bel -
:glum for the defence of Lie, a and for
the •Yser campaign in the Great (War,
crapped dead in a Belgian. theatre, He
was a national hero, credited with de-
laying ,the (German's ten days at Liege,
while Marshal eaocre reformed the
tines • of .the French army of defence
of Paris.
The Premium Clydesdale Stallion •
• FAVOURITE AGAIN
Enrolinent No. 1961 Form A 1
Monday.—Will leave his own citable
at Brucefield, and go to the 2nd Con-
cession aE Shanley and south to Wil-ditions
liani •MdKenzie's,for noon; then south
eye' miles. past Town Line and east td
Kippen at Al, Hativey's, for night.
Tuesday . --East to the 10th Comes-
cion to Angus 10 he Kinnon's, for noon;
then east to the Town Line to the
9th Concession to 'Wit. Patrick's, for
night Wednesday.—,East tConcession miles
Coynand e Bros.eth ofor noon het o Robert
Doi 's for' night Phursd•a —West to
Gemmel{'s corner and north to MB!
Road to' G. R. s IdGa'ntney's for noon;
then by way of MoAdem's, side road
to'thg 2nd Concession and west, to
Garnodhan Bros. for night. Friday—
West by Broad!oo't's' Bridge and
south to the Midi Road to his owe
the 2e. for night: Saturd'aly West to"
the _nd Concessionn.H. of Stanley;. and
north ;to John •iOclEwan s eor noon;
then home to his own stable for'nigiht
g
Terms—To insure, $15,00, payable Fe-
bruary 1st, 1932;
R. D. Murdoch,
Proprietor. and Manager.
'Before you look for the next job be
sure you are filling the one you have.
SURVEYING' CANADA'S
'FORESTS BY AIRCRAFT
protection and Appraisal of Forest
Resources from the Air
-
The use of aircraft in- the protect-
ion and a aisal of the forest re-
Fpr
sources has been perhaps the most
4 , r e_
important factor in the post-wa d
vetopment of aviation in Canada. The
vast forest areas en which means of
transportdtion were slow and labor-
loos, but which nevertheless demand-
ed adequate protection from fire and
for which in•forntation . was required
as •to the available supplies of timber,
provided a useful field' for the em-
ployntent of the trained airntett ,whose
brilliant accotttplishntents during the
war brought fame and honour to ' he
ifa'me of Canada.
iII @hese days, when ttiail and pass-
.tigers are carried 'by plane on regu-
tar schedules, 'winter and summer,
and the drone of ,the aeroplane engine
is a •commonplace to the forest diel-
lers .and even to the 'E'skimos in theq
Arctic, it is hard to realize that it is
less than twelve years since aircraft
were used in Canada for other than
military and what might be :termed
"s'tun't" purposes.
do the spring orf 19:19 the 'first de.
monstralion of the utility of aircraft
in forestry woo. was made. Two fly -_of
lir boats of the IH.IS. 2 D. type were
g
lent .by'the Dominion 'Government for
this experiment anti it was proved
that planes could be used to advan-
tage in locating fires, transporting
then and equipment to extinguish
thein and fn inap'piug timber tracts,
In the sante year, the ,Federal .Gov-
ernment created an Air (Board to eon-
trot 'commercial flying, conduct flying
operations for civil services of the
and to organize the air
defence of ''Canada. Aircraft and
equipment to the value 'of' about $5,-
000,000 Iliad ibeen presented to the Do-
minion. by the .T.inperial Government
and a number of ,flying boats that'were
used by the 23'oyal ,Canadian Naval
,Air Force during the war were on
hand.
Th Department
c ep t of the ,Interior
conducted nt series 'of investigations of
aerial pthotographle surveys, under
the immediate direction t i
e of the late Or.
E. Deville, atl'that time {Surveyor ;Ge-
THE GARDEN.
. IPo'wclery mildew is a troublesome
disease lin a .year of hot, wet weather,
It is a very common Euargus, expert-
tally -on roses that are trained to a
wall or seine other lace- wheretheyamazed
ca'nno't yet free amenlatiot i
S t orf a r A
whitish powder appears iii' the leaves
and at hilt base of the flolwer buds,
and the fofiage loses its height sen
g t b
This tatlfdety . can be
preven't'ed by dust'in'g' with a mixture:
of parts of powdered sulphur to
one pent dry arsenate of dead,
commonly called lime settpdi lir arses_
ate of lead dust. Flowers of sulphur
is, not ,as good for this peepo'se es a
'apecialfy preparle'd•; finel y '' groundmiles
stdGpfuer; Which can be pun -',effect
chia'sec froth, almost •any, dealer -in in,
sectio s ansds fins gictdes. The situ-
ate of lead .in. the. dust, not only Will
conifrlo'4'leaf-chewing' insectsaround'
lint will.Ontario
also prevent the stliphor frolic'iu,m'p-
•• bli•us •iivcreasin'. the adliesiv ''-
'ic'e's of -the •m•ix'ture.. •A a ;1: e qt ai
badly y madew
eld plane ,cannlot be restored' to its or-
igi;ii'al .green'ine'ss Sy this treetmrentt.
;; P
spreadmngis10 new 'itfilea eeveuted Erom
—The' Cuthbert Ra Pberiy has
„
been tjse outstanding variety'F• r
in t•he teitn crate carts of
Canada, but Where the "winBans ane,
coda Hardier, sorts are desired: The
Cuthbert is' a wary good shippiirg
variety, wli•uch is one reason it is o osl
also, In "re'cen't year's tine He•'beret
ralslplbenrghas come
tee forrand
is now eneralle
use. The plant is hardier than; Cuth-
beet,- is very vigorous an'd productive
an'cl. the fruit is large, of attractive
co,Dor, and good iu .quatliLy. Ie is,
however, a Tittle too juicy bo make a
good .,sh•ippiiiig berry, and is most
sesitab.le for, hosiie,•.tise am tl'•'toea+l •mar-
'kits. The Herbert succeeds` well on
the prairies when r t'oel it l
[? oe t c With sol,
and is ihoupht well of there.their,probable
Tine h arcW• est cultivated sort is pro-
hlably the Sunbeam, whiclj can be
grown successsfal'ly over most 0,1 the.
country: withau.t protection. The
fruit however, is lather itiferier:'in
THE,PURE BRED CLYDESDALE„
STALLION
a jr ( qq, h hh}}
Carbrook Flashlight
(24641) •
'Enrolment No. 1958. Approved. Form
1•
Will stand at his awn stable, lot 3,
con, 3, Hallett, for'the season of
1931. Terms to' insure, $8.00.
T. J. McMICHAIEIL Prop.
The Pure Bred Percheron Stallion
Dlgm agn , t}'
plllplll
(12115):
will stand at his own stable at Dublin,
for season of 1931. He will .make calls.
on request. ,• Phone 24 r:19, Dublin-
central, for dates, Terms $13 at suable,
1st of February prompt. $14 on calls.
'Wil'liam H. Keeler, Dulin, Ont.
EARN $5.00 TO $10.00 DAILY
Earn part time, while learning fol-
lowing' big pay trades: Garage work,
welding, barbering, hair dressing. Po-
•siitions open. 'Information free. Em-
ployment service from, Coast,to
Coast, Apply Dominion Schools 79
Queen W.pToro Ito.
n
, x,..
Stntple and Sure DT Th
lectric'Oil is so simple in
that re child can wrde'rstan
structions. Used as a lit
only. direction is to rtib a
used as .a dressing to anply
•
mations are so plain and
'stye that they are readilyo ne
Ity 'Wing and old.
,w
Douglas' Egyptian Lmimen is an
g g3 P t
.excellent leg wash for stock. Also
removes corns in horses and quickly
relieves bruises,. s p laidtss s ll'usthan
N we 9 gs
and joint stiffness.
ng .Frans.
eloped as
:ed under
Defence
it !Force
military
;has each
ogram of
co -opera -
and To-
Depart-,
ither de-
nt, ,meth-
eys have
placed
of other
field.
otiducted
oblique
hoie-
es,
tnatica ly
d condi--
1 leisure
t as top-
, water-
h is es -
of sur-
as where
not re-
ly 'level.
passible
cal feat -
or three
line of
s can be
ces. 'By
are miles
hour, de-
plane.
oke care
worked
ae Inter -
lengths
the grid
the dis-
apparent
are sub
-
chains
on the
ping of
uracy for
ore ac-
g to the
t is con -
1 photo-
.' higher
or even
with the
h of the
with an
cent and
o 40per
le of the
he system
in most
deal con-
boats and
tau ding
E wheels,
have been
er. There
re neither
P are
g is pre -
rest Ser-
Iter aerial
ed with
es are, if
mapping
ause the
out in
the deci-
and the
e distinct,
of tree
3'.
services
0
severe
purposes,
ally and
ests have
are miles,
E Quebec,
a, and se-
compatties
triad 'sur-
rtment of
methods
rim the.
aphs and
aphs an¢l
growth is
e timber.
trees per
e the vol -
with an
he areas
>, it is be-
ar distant
secure a
and from
than is
ordinary
ising lines
ore apart.
onias' Lsc-
appli'cation
d the i.n-
ti'ment else
nd when
The di-
unmist'ak
understood