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The Wingham Advance, 1922-02-09, Page 7•E ! I w h I' F t o �- !p ! ,F. �, y Sr i' i i, 'R • 1N The'' i gam Advannce Fulrislred at Wingharlra, Ontario • Every Thursday IVlarn1nll A. Ot, S11[I;GIfi,Publi ilei;, Subscription rates; — Olio year, $2:00; six mouths, $1.00 iu advance.' Advertising r'atee on application', , Advertisements without specific di. sections will be inserted" until :forbid and Charged. accordingly.: Changes for contractadvertise. iuents be in the oglesby non, P'_ari- day. BUSINESS. CARDS Wellington Mutual Fire Insurance Co, Established 1840 Head Office, Guelph risks tal itm on all classes of insur- able property on the cash or premium cote esters. ABNER C'OSENS;'' Agent,,. Wingham DUDLEY HOLES BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. Victory and Other Bonds .B,ouyht and Sold. • Office—Mayor Block Winghani R. VANSTONE BARRISTER AND SOLICITOR Money to Loan ,at Lowest Rates.•• WINGHAM, J. IRS' N ARTHUR • I.. � D.D.S., L.13. $. Doctor. of Dental enta Surgery of the g Y. Pennsylvania College: and Licentiate of Dental' Surgery of Ontario. Office_ in Macdonald Block. RDSS Graduate' Royal o l Dental G i ege~of Den al e' Surgeons, Graduate University_ of: Toronto Faculty of Dentistry OFFICE 'OVER -H. -E, lSAJ !RE .CA M. Y. , R. RL B.Sc. MD GM Special- attention paid to diseases of Women aiid Children, having taken postgraduate worlt in Surgery, Bac- teriology and Scientific Medicine. Office ifi.the Kerr Residence, between iheQueen's Hotel and the Baptist Chu ch..' All business given careful attention. Phone 54. P.O. Box 113 oj@htr• CRedmond I C. II i M.R.C.S. (Eng). L.R.C.P. (Land). ., PHYSICIAN "ANDSURGEON (Dr. Chisholm's•old tand) DR.. R. L..W STEART Graduate of •`University. of Toronto, Faculty of Medicine; Licentiate os. the Ontario College of Physicians and Surgeons,.. Office Entrance: Second Door North of Zurbrigg'a Photo Studio. JOSEPHINE STREET PHONE 2� at pant C.Cdr. Calder Generai'aPractitioner-•.>^ . Gra Y• Graduate of Toronto. Facility of Medicine. Office-Jot. s e phline 5 ., two-doors;:south of; Brunswick,Hote7 Tele hon —O p es ffice 181,'Residence 151" Town and,..parrn Properti es: ` Cell Tana sec my list• and get'ry-prices. •I have .sonie•exeeltent values, Gr STF T WING HAM Office 'teen; !call Phone 1:84: DR V ES � S P HYS ICIA •'• N C 'IIR ... ,. OPRA C : TI It is tor ea le s e t'o peep well than to: ao•_ cover. lett ; ;health; -Chiropractic Ad- jestrnentais theKey: to Better H'ea'th,• They „remove the Cause'o11.Disease. OR. J. • ALVI.N FOX . Phone i.91. , Hours -2-5 and 748 p.m. DRUGLESS •PHYSICIAN O$TEOPA T}IY • bR. F. A P.ARICBB Osteopathic'Physician;''bnly qualified Osteopath in North Ii n on. Adjnetmoat of the spino: is mora quickly •s•eeiir4d and, with" fewer treat lnonts,•'tiian by any other method. €31odclapreesure, and"(Aileen eztaniina-,, tons •Made. OFpI'C'E O�i{rR CHR1STp 'C STORE Education Counts„,. °lIdary,: said nthe 'nrrtr5.ties'sbf the�, hence • whop;.';ire d'i.seoieroddust, oil the table, ”"I Can, 'write my name en'c. table."' "Yes, ela'ana replica. Mary, .,'taeanlii3es. . always .'oicl there - 'ea • nothing ' like education," ldolfey lost, nothing lost„ coerage lost, nileCT ilea; honor lost; Mere lost; ,soul lost a11: 10slt. '' 111 C• •Shinfoents of ill.Mxor and slithaleysireztiing, lirpri ytiicarco.r, continue to nxpye •ahoi ncl via the Petra •nearly 1„500.000 irons: ma to tiie Atlantic" Coast, and arderFlenti paled value CI; C:aiee". Deo- in 2,50,000 foot °Bots are being received, 'duets in too ptovince of l:V-01:e wan' on att'•averag,e,of one ,. 'week. '> Lpston, for the year 102] , „r.t3 224,6„'f; accnAd- is.hocoming a good mareet for British.' :pig to tho Dairy lJ1.3:a7suis+'3i0TIV-: Ui' the Columbia lumber, • awl 77eaifyeveiy Depai njent•at Agriculture. 'Me niriru- ve,seel -saiibig from Vail CiuCY f 'fur 'LAI'; bee of c ea- erne' 1.7.,. „,,et '!rete 42 I.1. east ecaet calling r if calling Beton, carries, ;1020 to 55 ae 1021 Tho choesse,Inane- lumber and slin eles for that 1)7,7_1 . tion o•f Saskatchewan i'i1 .e .sea during A fox ranch lias been slartea by Or. tiie Yeas° nearly fourfold; ice creee J. J. Gillis, at :Merritt, 'Southei'u I3r'i- : prodectioa was :e,li htly 1e o,, ani the tie% Columbia. Dr, (i11is is said to Alec -lint- -of whole -'Brill fed on the have pua'chased' 20 pair of foxes in .iarans;`:,it was :;e timatotl, cosy ider•ablyy Pince Efiward Island at a cost of $40,- more. 000, tor fcundation stock, T'li,e imperiail.ee of fresh. water fish l3ailt, owned, and chartered locally,' clic;,."'tb Saskatchewan is indicated by the steamer City Or, Victoria,, receetly:;'the fact that alpeoximttel-y $300,000 sailed from Vancouver tor 'tile Orient wp el -le oil fish are being caught ..in the with 4,950,000 feet of' lumber, the' lekeS• of the province ,anal marketed largest cargo of -lumber -ever taken out annually, according to the Jass report of the port of Vancouver. . of the: Department of Labor and. Indus - The year's returns show -'a rRemtrk isles: Tbe speeies caught include gold abbe increase in trade through the part eyes, in fliete,• pickerel; pike, sturgeon, cf Vancouver.. The cuetons and the 'trout a'ud tullibie - inland r'e•venue figures 'show an in -'Fe -siting in 'Lake Winnipeg is `excep Crease of over a.nriliiorr dollars over tiona.11y -good this year, according. to 1920. The total' sum collected during O.' S. Deindeo•n,.ehief fisheri'e's' inspect, the 'fiscal year ended •December 31, ,ca•. From ,that lake' alone 1,500;000 1921, was $12,137,032, compared with ,pound,,., o] whitef.,h'Will be takeir.this 211,081,432 for the corresponding aseasoae as well as a large•nuxnber• of•. period in 1920. pickerel, jackfish? and tufl ibie; Th e Approximately 000 men yero•cosise fish -are brer1 plentiful 1la edin'employment bythe Alberta son t_al for several yeals'previorslY.' - :K; � tTsj :.:, 3+n,,•;;%. :•�>,k.:, :.>{ri. ;:. w s�td ',}•+;• :.":.•.s;.;•�Rr::Yo„..V..:y .1F...+,.•,.0. :.. .�i",;i!:•}`�''F'' , .�: i '•.:%;:�:•1i..Y•ci'i!:::.. :;..ar,.c::ai,:'::'�+�ir;•.•i °`,y';;:.�•`:''"<:,�<.::f:;i kiSs `St8, i�l2; ...rr •?v;. .v .: _•ria-: Goverment bureau duringthe past` Mr. Davidson slated.• A. BIRD'S-EYE: VIEW OF THE CHIPPAWA POWER CANAL• year, while .76,732 application's for Joilit action be Manitoba, Saskatcbe This photograph an. idea p g ives of tate immensity of the canal, and the beautiful eouniry it pass+es thrp,u h, work were received,. according to the wail and Alberta in securing the In the distance can be seen the Niagara River, into which the canal i g 'annual report issued by 1. W. Mitchell, transfer'ba f natural ress'urcee to thdisch axges.: e -ell, v lib director of the board, The percentage control et the Western Provinces and •of the men who applied for work and``the adoption eat- similar inauguration who- were placed was 741/2 per cent„ as policies, are reported "adopted by the compared with 80 per cent. in 1:920.' • representatives' of the :three provinces 'Out of 691 cars of -Wheat ineniected• iii conference here, consisting- of the at Calgary, Alta., 1n November last,' Premier of Manitoba, the Premier and 403 *ere graded No. 1 hard arid No. 1 Attorney -General' of Alberta, and the Northern, the two highest standards Provincial Treasurerand other mem-. known to all the trade, and the balanoe Tiers of the Saeltatcheevan Cabinet. • was all of contract quality. .„ , Trapping: is.heing,,earried ..on more Saskatchewan , i ro o i p p ?t onto tiopu- extensively. in Manitoba, this season lotion, ranks. first in pouitry produc- than foe -the last ten yeazis, and the re -i tion among the 'provinoee' of Canada. siiitaot catch is abnormal,c : ” - de lar ed• ET. According to Federal statistics, Sas-- Yewdall, manager`of the Winnipeg Fur .:e .: i• Inn+' :. n'. +. . v,._,Salaa„_ ii.�CUGcdxew,dil:. 31aU'.7.j4 V,.I vv4;;:`u war�•,.u...,.uq:., w, Company, Thlole who- or” only about 1,000,000- less . than, ,On- deal In tura b • in'aihare c ,Y re ervrng,, five tario. Alberta ranked '`third with 4'-• ♦t:iine¢ as many parcels this year, as 534,000. Manitoba aidQuebee are they did a Year,.,s o substantial about equal' with in= 3,500,000 each. Bre crease in. 2h€ price of furs has occur tish Columbia made a fairly good read during the:past' year. 20111 CENTER ATT J TAS NED Ja• TWENTY-ONE YEARS', F'. AMAZING PROGRESS. So Crowded l �A tI3; IxsiweJiatao�ns Discoveries anCl.: -Events First -Class Importance. The twentieth century eompleted. its twenty first; year, on the ctiollie of mid- night, December 31eS, _and- therefore. attained its majority. It may mow be considered to have grown to m'an's es- tate. What is its, record? It pray be said at once that it has achieved more in its youth than any of its predeceslsors in the whole course of recorded ;,his tory. , The first twenty-one, -oars of the la'st” century were remarkable in many ways. Almost alit the great p'hilan- thropies of the world teak.' their rise in 'those two decadetsr,. and they sale the tis+e and fall of Napoleon,;. But the, world of: 1821 • is: a: far afore, remote world +than the inere-la• ee of a - P hun'dred.years would leadbn'e to,'sup• plow. The rnatcthliess . material prop. press of the nineteenth ;century had Searcely commenced `1821.,Uelongs io the' ancient ';r egrme: ' '-But, • sltrangety - enough,. -Alien every,;. b appeared t -ha1f4 e n 'hccnuer ed' and invented, so hat the new-bamaa 'century•did.not''deem=.tq-have',ha1f chance' f . . o even equalling atsnad�ees- P. e.. slor, the:'past •twenty on+e 'years'', are simply crowded leitli+ discoveries, • 1i-•, ventions, and event."s cif first-class :ins portance.. A Sturd . Venn stet Y. 4i It seems seaicel Credible edibl until Y e, ono begins to hark baeit to 1900, tliat avis tion, wirelees '.tele -g aphy;,'the thee -molting' picture •the'Stibmasine and' 'matter= car barely: existed when• tale welstiete.. century: was born' ,; These tremendods : one .. � f:ptrblis will bear Geniyaiesoni witltranv' five elv i >ven Mons during the whale . course of taro f.he lash has seen all its main develop- ment fent in,the new centur•y., ' Then•:ne one needs. to be reminded that tile- century which alas ,barely reached the end .of its twenty:first year. has seen the greatest upheaval' in the. history of inan; the' most colossal war. that histoi ' records. Nations as far apart as"the U.S,A and • Australia, the West 'Indies and China, engaged.»in' the; :conflict,: .aiid ;co•rrpletely• traneiormecl Europe,re- name/1g landmarks which had stood for 'eel -Mai -fee; :es;. and -' iip1fenving dynasties w?iielr loos. their root" in the Middle Ass One of the •primary effects of the. war rias '.been the new status it„bas given to the; English-speak,nations. Itigoes without:,saying,.thlat the United States Of America holds a position in -tale world's councils to -day to which she could lay no claire in 1900. A Youth• Will be Served!" An• even greater arra more marked advance in world ilufluencn and import- ance mport ance may be claimed by Australasia, Canada; :and South Africa; and few will have the temerity to ,declare that the. 01d: Country- is not to -day far 'pore intirential than_ she was when this century dawned. And„' as though. to mark the cen- tury's en-tury s attainment- of its -Majority, ' ,two of the most rem'arkable ;events' Have he ern reserved fdr.tits twenty first'. Year -etrh`e Washington Conference and the Irish Settlement ' -These =events•, `of the - greatest• sig- nificance and quite unlike - a;nything, Ci'y�F7 Yvheeh� baa' "�'.c^,ur-ad befc a-•.--='- t]i tale sin le esne ti'•' g p on of the. •aritin of g? g �se'lf goveirriment as•South ' Afriea; r so soon after.:the Beier,.VVar- wi11•go:down: to; pos'teritY aa: an' epoch-making achievement of young Mir 1.1321. If we turd tie elhe.sociolo'gioa`l •record of these`twenty=one'years the'aohieve menu, despite 'the' tremendous, ,catac=, ,lysm o'f the•war 'are not les..rem , Sark= able and unique. There 14Y' at the' pre- sent': moment,' a vast •wave•.of .urenr 1, ” p,aynieilt sweeping over the iardristi•ia1 Worlds ; but throughout the .Englisli- speakin+g,,;corrntries,- at leash, the' rise in' '_the -s'taildas'il of lifer °is aniazin g,. whils- the;conduct and 'demeanor o£' the Teeple is beyond praise-,' "Business' as Usual.", last centuy—say.•Ehs. telegrapih,.;tele. locomotive -ell ins 2 tr ' 1 phone, g e o� r The ub uii.cius r" we s r.,ws' a era r' l? $ P p b rn all m and .: the r' rn los d a o h' r bn` e a f.;,• g although-, the ;eyelid e,ar . I p a d b o u w $ our e , h: l es . r. g Y task in which ' ft is greatly ' ' tot that d b thio 'flaying picture. But ins Lot e Y the Fitting Spe . acles. great ..coal -strike; lasting ,:so many, Not long ago per,.+one who were 1s weary:weeks, and entailing so much ginning to.have difficulty in readin shop, pick out a passion' and misery, pasased with but would go into a -P minor and. sporietic' distulrbauces, of s'peetac1ee through' which print e-' g pa nrailks• a great advance on .anything the nineteenth century can show. That there are ea:lees-for anxietyis: only to say that we are still, alive and carrying on the business of the world; but the middle-aged man, loo'king back at te h latter deca.cle of the last century, and coreparring it with the first twenty- one years of are new century, will not hesitate to express a firm opinion th at the record. of the.latter era is,one to. marvel at, and, in many respects, to be thankful for. ap-. reared to them; more -distinct arnd bu them; If they got the, spectacles' tai taheir eyes really needed, they leer kicky.' Even now people go into a optician's' and ,ask mer=ely for a pair o glasses. The optician can, test; lir eight only bybolding g Y.'lenses .of i d ffe ent strength in front of hie customer' eyes—a process not much better tha his encasing hist specsacues himseu.:. Finally the oculists, .who used to -con cern themselves chiefly with'treatin eye diseases :such as cataract an glaucoma, begaai; to, realize that ey strain caused ,many of the disease they treated. So;the oculists, made y at e n f e r - s n g d e- s. I -Ie Spmke in Time. A cextain eloogynlan in the United study. of 'optics ans of the defects 1 States who'counselled I the human eye end worked. out' th a young woman problem of'•rec if i ck against marrying.:a.youilg es t .. ng them with glace of his.flo 'pian -whose family histo, ,eve' led h nn less or marriage, is to be conr- n. e ch: t e ex s fit f y a rs • In fitting glasses there is, often much mended, Tl,e aggr•ieued suitor pro. mare to dao than merely to find ou ceeded to lnsng anoth;6r suit a ainet.' hat lens, enables.. the person to se them+inl ,.tor but ,the.` g roost clearly. The oculist elect e jury, after very amine evetly part of the eye—the r. brief deliberation, has brought in a - t csy'stalline' lens., ,the muscle for eler fan: tine.; the verdict fo gyp • If everybody ,.hawed the same Cour • } that. move=the eyeball and those ^tha glen*. w+arnin o, • inside side' the eyeball ti which near s r yy i ve p ageousfl7ankness ur "' t tl-'late. or contract tihe'pupil,,the fluids those -contemplating mlatrilrmny, there, shock ,to .the delicate: Structures.' with would be a eonssrderable reduletlon, in in and the surface at the trans aaen the n mb r P u e . of no- n eu ` iric e mare,',. • e :' g s illi;ngg the Beasts That Prey , Dosses' cause • , depredations d by the of ,beasts of prey which kill cattle, sheep anSi other livestock i. a e very serious in the aggregate. ' It is a common 1 f. n habit 'o� farmers te kill off the. foxes, rrac000ns�, an t d other vial animals' ern their lands, for the protection of their Chickens-. This is dectaxed by the g- r Y e 73ioloorcal Survey to be a mistake. Poultry yards can be made Safe . ago a against iifva976n' at small expense, and the i +tell' __.. n gent agricul- turist would do well to hold sacred the d°ein'e of fur -bearer': s vasa, his •: proper^Cy: A hollow tree; of no value for lumber and scarce worth felling fax, firewood, may keep him in r coon -skin overcoats. Returns from ar fox' den may- he worth more than•the income frons- a $1,000 Government bond: - Skunks are the best- wild -ani mal friends the farmer has. Almost any. farmer might have.two or three dozen. skunks at work• fo'r'•hinf, destroying 'nice, graseho• ppei's, white ; grubs, ettt„ and funis-islheng $30 to $100 worth'. of flu` a. year, if he 'would respect their dens, keep his chickens in plunk -proof yards and be taettul when. he meets them in, the evening. First to apreciate the cppnrtimity of nt turning into ready cash £he ::fuss pre - due ed on their lands were the- owners of marshes in the' Eastern States iia- habi+ted by mu'slerats. One enterpris- ing fanner in Marylaind counts' the muskrat heneee on his marsh each autumn, and' then decides how many of the animals. shall •be trapped and. how many Deft for breeding stock.., Marsh owners in Dorchester- County, Maryland,,har�veet an average of 100 OOP to 125,000 muskrat',skins a year.. Beavers are sometimes very useful in storing water, whioh keeps streams running during' tats di'y season. In one instance, in the Southeastern ,States, where irrigation reservoirs had been. drained by a protracted drought, peas-- er dams were opened on four creeks in the mountains and enough. water was obtained to tide over the crops until the coming of lite fall rains, There 11 pail, of the eyeball im fr+oast, rnequalr won d not be so 'man innocent Y nc.cen ,ties fix'evirieli•cause ,.sill gmatism. H children, paying• forthe'.marrtaI• mss mali- e g takes„'of.their progenitors. "Marrying parsons” and comp+lai'sant justices of the peace, with an eye to the fee- arrd not to the unborn, often sin against • u ere Of the race p Y the eye and correctingthe with hetf t h - At present Of- various ingenious :farstrumeints,.. the use of *hitch requires experience• and skill—so much indeed that .there has now arisen a pew profession concern - those who insist on mental• ed entirely with detecting defects iaa and ` h si na wi ca • well' -being as a •prere q uisite to a q 1as�ses. T r , '. g ,he p actitoauers, wah�o'a;re • matrimonial alliance are to some ex- called optometrists, are •'ficenise of tent pathfinders; before long. they. will' dx examination by `the state, and in many find theiiselves on a :broad and beaten highway: travelled' bythe thoughtful' g portion of mankind. Humor of Children. , Amusing examples of:childish:humo•r were given at. the RoyalSanitary'In stitute,` Biiekingham • Palace Rad; S.W.,by Dr. Kimmins; chief inspector of the elementary schools+. in London,' in, a lecture on "Laughter "- Saying. his prayers one night 'a boy 6f five solemnly:said, "If L die tonight, please, God, excuse- me conning to of the states: none except optometrists and physicians are permitted -to- pre- scribe glasses. .14bedioa1 men contend that there are oea tain defects. of the eye that cannot root be surely 'corrected :unless the eye Is examined `through a pupil dilated with atropine, but they adrnit that'. the new. instruments are so ingenious that the cases in which the use. of atropine is nieeese,a ee are much less numerous thran they- used to' be. - Looking Ahead. 1.1 Yen pajamas''.., Little I el ' ' I t was vet_ Y quick atienita.l •"At theca e of ill+ne'a" r 'Y „g g eat. change sweeps, over 'the -mind of children," xl said lir '' Kinainins, "They begin to read good; books and to enjoy funny stories -<arid jokes,. To' a parent: who asked: what bock she -lilted beat a,nine- year-old • girl • replied, ' "Well; ' really,, I believe' tale'funniest` thin " es is g w �lfir Shakespeare s• ' "Comedy -of .Er-, ears." Jokes connec ted' withethe ciasseoom are :espe'ciaily ',po'pnlar with children of ten. Told .to, write a sentence in- cluding the word."notsithsia.nding," a boy wrote, _ ,"MY ' brother• has shiny treuegre, ,batt •notwithstanding," • Itis a,sier to ,s`ir ppxoss the first de- sire than" to satisfy, all' that follow it:—l+ rankinn. arithmetic, but on • one occasion he failed to volunteer' any answers to what •' tate s�elvoolmisti'ess� thought was a very simple' question, "Come;" ate said. "Two and a half T per cent:. on- fifty doTIave for 'six .m+onths... How much le that? 'Can't you work; that little sum?" "I could, miss," replied Ikey," "hut awe and: a half' per cent. don't interest ..:teze'st Me!" The rapid multiplication p d u pllcation of insects is, one orf' the dangers always facing the worlds. .' . Freddie--"Wliat's the ;ailatter.'`can't yp;tt skate7 Eddie (trying for' the first tne) "I oroli't know yet, I can't stand up `long 'enough to' RINI out.". failure.. Identification all Woods in Canada. As competition in • manufacturing and merchandising increases between count, -and, c'0' t Y t_ntry, Canadians need to have all the assistance science can give them. In the case of forestp ro- ducts this is provided by the Forest Products Laboratories of the Depart- ment epartm:ent of the Interior. The Laboratories are Italy equipped for identifying woods of all kinds and deo this: without ut charge for any citizen, of Canada. „ at1. This. service has been much .utilized by Canadian nsanufactarers and others in the past year and the number of examinations made is consttantly in- creasing. Inquiries .may be a'ds1 'eseed to the Superintendent, Forest Pro- ducts Laboratories, 700 :University i s ty St., Montreal. Are yen ' adding KI'CI 1 anything to the World's �h+appiness ? If 'not, you're a a Ire:i4;ste.r ;.GEAR FF.I.I.ERS=+' ,Ey Gene Byrnes 1\Y Mo-rrtt:c2, JusT.AU • TWO EI•'PC?1Z ` ,M4lN' Cr- ?'-1COL) UM! 1!!lY MGrTHER PlAo- YS GtJas Mt,6 DIME- 11s. Walz `iahklN' +'1KY COD , l lt'Clr.& til 11::9r• l t*'(\ \ DO' WITH., ALL. «CNC. %iaN `( *ng the Gtune. The best, way to understima AV: game is to look One to PUS': it; licit to read the rules, but tO applyr Those who are engaged earnhig heilslen of the lot of the toilers, that is not to be gained from heing oodelled and •boildied in the lap of idle luxurY,, They who hoer music; played enjoy it the more and untlerstend it the bet- ter front knowing even a little about: nnt,sical perfharmance from their ow The optimists ere stireing that they haven't time to note every- thing that might &does go wrong„ demonstrating to them that the out- look is hopeless and victory- is, But they who are in the thick of things have -heard all these old., worn-, ,out objections many times. They are sick of the words "imprudent" or "im- possible," They have loot patience -with the ho4dbacks, the etandpatters who would prevent them from launch- ing out and pushing on. "Let's go!" That eoldier slogan. was good.'one for Liz all. Bedene you set ydoowain. ihn.t. general ,tis a delusion, and your own particular life as a failure, try the experiment of living, with al/ , Tbose who cavil at the universe are usually those who are afraid of the open; who shrink ,eway from blows and bruises into some warm aird fiesce- lined, upholstered retreat. From their environment of torpor and languor they deegairn agahist risk. They decry the notion of a ruling iponiwtesruiffnelmino9rtal affairs -that could per - But suffering is part -of the neces- sary discipline for us all. If we had no bad times, we never should knew what the good ones are like. it is be- cause much of life deals so roughly with ue that we find such exquisite happiness -when t,he ram golden, hones come.' Those h•ours 'are more tlean veer& the rest. C Ognpad Facts, 'Canada. A tonl fire which has been bertaiie,g for aver one hundred and thirty years is:somewhat of a luxury in these days of high priees' for fuel. Such a fire, however, found along- the Me:ckeezie 'River. where a seain of coal, is still burning ag in 1789 when seen. by Sir Alexander Mackenzie. , Canada bas large reserves of coal, ' but it is situated in the eastern and -western portions of the country. The only coal. fields on tbe sea coast,s ol? North America are in Canada, 'The d,eposits -of bituminous sands along the Athabaska Rrver are from 150 to 200 feet thick, from whence, hdrawn by the heat of the sun, tar rune into deep pools. This deposit represents the largest known crecur- rence of solid asphaltic. material. Sueh facts as the ,above are a revela- tiOn to many of otir people but are o-nly a few al the many contained a pew edition el a booklet, "Compact Fadts, Canada" just issued by tho Natural Resources Intelligence Breach of 'the Department of the Interior at ()ttaws, from whom copies may be University Finances. The authorities of the provincial university went before the Ontario Government Last week with the build- ing program for the next three years. Four buildings, it was stated, are long overdue and should be con1meneed at once. These are a forestry and' botany building, a women's building for fe- male students' residences and gymn- asium, either an. achninstration 1342114- ing to relieve University .College of the executive offices or an eXtension ciommodation fox University- College, and a supplementary heating Plant One and a half ntillion dollars, assured now but spread over three. years, would enable the University of To- ronto to commence these four urgently Reason Sufficient, MTS. Parkleigb was started by the following observation on the part of her five-year-old boy: "1 like God better than 1 do dadde." "Indeed! And why?" deal quicker than God does." hkoial COO L.NER, • eine-