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The Wingham Advance, 1921-01-20, Page 7. . -1111.1"...." � � I 11 � � 1� ." I . . 1. I I -1 -.1 11 ­­ _­­ 11�_ I � __ __ .. I . - _I "M "a I P! 1. I I I . ML I I R -1 -Re Quid Observer ,�; ___ ____ - - - - IMUORATXON PROBUMS, I POCt011 tO ,do, 444 the United States � When the United States, AvIlich has 411 110141119 its 4011ar at $1.20 or more iiever liad more than a one and a half simply raises the prices or its goods per ,cent. Of ImMigr4ti011 to USIA14- to prohibitive rates for .those wh9se late as compared With C4nadW,a three money is discounted. A� A conse- and a half, finda the current more Quence buyors take their money to . ithan, she can stem, and, decides to the market where It counts Tor most, .,Shut down, altogether practically for a and all the I@4uropepm nations and par - year, there may be material for to- ticularly Germany are deriving beue� fictlon, In the Canadian situation as At from ,this automatic adjustment. . well. *Varlous proposals lor restrie- ,Canada stands halfway between the tion have bwn made at Washington. United iStates and Britain losing as ' ,One Is to,linilt the members onter- much In sending money, -to the Ulittod . ang ,in Any one year to five per cent, Staters as it gadua in sending to- Brit- ot th,o number of any coantry's citi- ala, ,and ,at course losing trade to zens, already residing In the United Britain -and gaining trade from the States, If 5,000 nationals of any United States On the ,samabasla. Ger- -coautry lived du tho United States many to Said to be doing better In .then 250 only could follow them In the ,trade -than any oth.e.- European ua- next year. A popular measure -of . tion, having settled Idown to thrift liraltation. Is one of education and and industry as anecessity, and ha.v- means, so t , hat only -the best classes Ing as its c4tef boadleap a sca,rcity could enter, This frankly abon- of coal. This difficulty is one, how - dons .the Idea of the United. Stees ever, NvItleh other ilations have ecjual� as the xetugo of the derltitute and op- ,1Y to face. Germany's raw materI9,18 I pressed. There are already more of are fairly abundant and German Ia- � n sed in America, bar appears to -be more -tractable . then I)ncle Sam cira -provide tor, -He than elsewhere. A,part from - .the hab 1,000,0Q0 norw out of Work,' and military party and the Kaiser and I lie Is 2,000,000 houses short Of the de- Pruasda the German people alwa,ys . . Irapd. To Introduce a further -haven had a good deal of �oommoa sense and of unrighteousueDs among these in oitce,rX of the -Prussian Incubers, It the shape of a mass of tlio European would ,not be surprising if -Germany 11 -proletaTiat Infected with Doishevism as it survives In, Saxou.y, B&Taria, -' I .is more than Uncle -Sam can contern- Warten burg, Baden , 4 hur, -k an &T Ingion. !, . plate with satisfacti,ou, The ireal made a morerapid recovery than any � *1 Aifficulty'. It is geasrally r2coguized other part of Europe, %, The conatitu- 1171 Is -the great moderA city to which the - , . I Uous of (Bavaria, Baden, Wurtoni- I helpless and fundless ,Immigrant � burg date from the years. sucoeeddiig . -Oli,Ags with the reqsDnless hope Of the Napoleonic ,campaign and that of I food and,waxinth and shelter, , it he -Saxony from IS -31. Thoao'!oountries I could, be conducted tc� the laud and had therefore .a -whole generatlows, I -established there the problem would start of Prussia In reformed poll- . be solved, but huge numbers of him ties, &nd.1t is only In Berlin And the . are go helpless on a tarm as lie is Rulir valley ,that ,the German work - I . anywhere. The only hope for this man seems Inclined to turn Bolshe- cla,za Is to be ,placed on a South Pa- . Tist. The Maxima Socialists W111 oific isle vheX e -even -cotton is un- have nothing to -do with the bourgeois necessary, and perennial palms and socialists and the extremists -are now .. baria,pas and -crystal springs ,are lined up With the ,third dntortational. I 414Dpen day -and night." Wha,terer Tho first International -Was. founded I . the -native may do, and the degener- by .Ivlarx an� &tg&.-s and onded With 0,te native has mo desire to do any- the ,%vat of 1870. The second inter- t�hlng, 4ho Immigrant must work. ,national was founded in 1889 and ' Work must be his creed. As he Is comprised fliq Labor and i8ocialist loyal to at he will succeed. ,He ,can radioals in All 'nations, The thdrd - even, outdistanco the native by strict International Is at Nvar with ,� r a if othe attention to business. Canaft, any political movements whether -of la- niore tliau anyother part of America, bor or Capital, ,and they announce hai not ceased to be ,the laud of hard ,that -where they cannot takelegaA Ac- . work, eight-hour days to .the can, tion, to overthrow ,the, established ,trary notwIthat-miling. Anyone who system their members must worksec- will work as -hard, as diligently and Tetly and ,illegally. It 1.5 specially . 'Intelligently In, the old aands, as he pledged agadust the "yellow interna - will be compelled .to do here will find tfonal of the Trades Unions founded . isuccess, as ready to be wooed in one, at Amsterdam." Instruction Are, 11 places as another. Those Who look given ,to weed but the personnel of I for an easy alto during the next gen- the PUty Organization "in order to - emblon uve doomed to disappodut- Oleam the Party VstematIcA1-IY,fi,6m A 11 , . I ment. The 'war I -has,,lald 6 burden all the petty bourgeois elements � . upan. its all that few fully understand, which 'novitably creep 1nt6 IV, Mos- � I . wid it Is an old principle ,that "every cow will have no ha,1f­4ie&rtod S-61- "FSTROM , � ,vian. 4=11 bear, his, own burflMll -whito shevism and the -collared, the AZ.& V N -V III ,though this. does not interfere with intWilligent, the benevolent are not . � anyone elso,helping him it he can, wanted among these 119hinaelitish I Only thme w1ro are'resolved to bear lunatics. The -more intelligent iGer� Last November -a splendid e*lbl- I ,their own, can ever hope to be able mans perceive thAt -to exclifinge milt- , I -to assist others, and there Is Justifica- taxism for this is to jump from thd ' Investigation Do 11 . Alon, in this for every national meaa- frydog-p4n. into .the tire,, -and they are Yard. . ' ure, making tor� on equable distri-ba- determined -to ,choose a eater -place Mr.,111aekiis' And the general public tion, of the load to be borne. than either. It this stable element at cost. The luterouts, of the Prov- . gains control -in Germany there is I lace of Manitoba were adjusted to -TRE BOOT ON TIM ,OTIMR , some ,hope far laurope, but with the I . . . the satisfaction' of the prairie -prov- - LEG. * 93oIshevists on the bno hand and .the . . ,,-Surely you realize that the ulti- Itaiser-lidnd on the other the ele. . I lations of the -red fox. ,What .the ,I-as;tocbjoct of the independent L.Abor mon-ts that seek poa,ce and Industry American shows at Boston, Mass.and ; .Party, Is the collective ov.,norship of have no easy rba.� to travel. , S q 1 ­44mb �. . all the means of production, distri- . -Picked up the receiver irritably. � I I . butaon and -exchange," Is the query THE BAOVETS DEA1. I addressed by <)no character to auOth� A musical -buzz answered him, and Menzies allowed himself an expres . I ) t I . er in a seTial story, published in .the � A good deal of � opposition to -the . settlement entered into by .the Gov - At the same time the furlias been Industridl Damner and intended to present the ease of Labor In the form ernment of the, Kenura Water power ', of fiction. ,1yes,,1) is -the reply, and the Dngllsh River timber limits C *.�anada . I 1�that to the main part of the pro- have been expressed, but it Is .-diffl- .1 0M.6— . . �"_____10.1- gram, All Cie other items are ,only cult to see what better arrangements . vallistion.11 This 'Character in the ,could have been made. The former . atory has turned ,over from "capital- Government -had solld the Like ,of the of Ontario and, iQuebee were -consid- � ored of little value. They were te- IsIn" to beooiae a tadlea� labor soc- Woods pulplImit by tender to Mr. V. - -,qbe , (,, . lallst, and the first thing does Is W. Backus with the condition that lie would establish A pulp industry al - to Carl III the editors or the local ,newspapers and notify them Of Ills I'-- e Mora. Then tho War broke out � change of heart- "Of' eontse"' 'he and upset everything. Mr, 'Backus In Ontario the first change in view came when -great silver mines wore says, "you know that I have never had intended developing the Lake ,of discovered In ithe 2iorth region and it dictated to you Who you should. silp- the Woods r,ower, but ,the Interna- was .found that these, areas, prdvlous- , ,port in �the canipaign, but seeing that sq n, decided to tiOnal J'olnt Comm' `aO ly considered a wilderness, possessed I the Zirms I have t1le controlling in- use the Norman -din! as a ,regulator I a wonderful, wealth; Then it was - � terest in supplies (sia) the majority in tontr4DIling the Like of the Woods learned that there was -a huge cla.y Of the advertising In, your, papers I waters and this interfered With his belt -there that ,offered, wonderful I -thought that you would be into -tested development The Like ,at the possibilities far .the farmer. As 'a w know tha-t I Was Supporting X111- Woods limit -proved on-IiLvestl I gatton result some very fine farms .have �,,iule David:�,on." Jimmie, is the la- to be Inadequate to supplying the been deieloped in the northera On- bor candidate and Was PORsIbly un- amount of material required to keep pulp mill going, Tlx� ta.rlo districts within the last decade ttware of wha,t Ilia agent was doing in all extensivo dr two. . The same is trIle of the Th7ovince contravention of the election laws� rvoveranient provided fur An in. of Quebec. Each year Is proving itot to speak ,of adopting On his ewn creased Water power fro -la the White more -conipletely the great ldDort- p behalf the policy for which ca, Jta,i is Dog Rapid$, on ,Condition that the db - [ anceof area -that were .thought wortli- less and almost Impossible until a alwi,ys ,roundly dOuOunced by Ia,- Velopment lie carried out at OnC4 st.ort,time age. ,,,,a bar; The. editors, however, till Agreed and that the Government retain Am - Annually the Governments are en- to ch,augo.t.heir policy -and to Support ple contract of the water Power in the Interest. The English ,deavoring now to :encourage .settlers junmis Daxfdaon In the campaign, 'no In the Sequel 'Ile Was publise River pull) limit was put up 'for teh� to enter -these districts; Toads ate.bb- laud ,doubt This is .An example of der for three nionths, and four tell- . elected. ,,,abor fiction And we do �aot'bollovo I ders Were received, one ,Of $5,000 425,000 emelt and one Ing up'la the forests. .Ia -the eum- ,that it Will gain admiration for ItS, either A.Mong labor bonus, ,two Of of $So,000. The last Was from Mr. Mer -the settlers till their farms and. ,clear their quarter sections,- while ethical standards the electorate generaly' No Backus and WAS accepted, Tile' cou- , 11 men. or Intelligent 'editor Will 'Consent to ,be all tents of the limit ara stated lofficial ly to be6u, ovor�ostlm4ted by ment In -the woods in pulp cutting bull -dozed, end the polley 10 'One ,have �60 per cent. in itild-ItIft. to and, So earn thb ,ready cash that Is essential for the development of VZrtiso 'O"Co trying to 'Shun. 41)OUt the bon,% Alt. TAckAs Iiihat 1UT1116h their new farms. . A -future ,of great -importance is ­__� (;ZgXANV AM) LABOR, 4gl;0,000 gliarant" ,thgt 0-s6 work will 'Pt&y a now being spoken -of very optinil8ti- eno,y dd Zx0haaft V9106 i1% 04rr . be dOX10, *114 he' will So tontfs 140rd tor all #Pruce, (Lad 40. cent$ 'a � U04 Avr4a wok. out " they tre "* I 4 , %_C*0G1,'K , "I WWORAX ADVANOX - —, �.'�-,;,�%4= � " . <-,!� , 1! 3' (. �, � �,� J.' , I � , -oiMIL5, � I HOME �/ � 5WF-ET ( HOME //t by I , , �' I Vorl "I lllw# I 1�0 - LA — GEE WHII)KEW rtlAe!; NOrHIN My FOLIA$ ARE GOIN' T Lf*f ME r7O TkIRV <XXLEGE WHE14 10V THRU, 5CH001. I I I - 11 . . . 1 ­ .1 � I � . I , 1: .11, I - I cw�d fora,11 other wood out. This Is I - . __ . .1 I I . ! . ___ - — - N_ __ - V � . expected to bring In a yearly rov. 11 I � i enue of from $150,000 to $250,000. , cipally caxrlord on as silver fox farm- "FSTROM I Nenora will get a big industry, �xud THE MAiLdEd AZ.& V N -V III I -among non-partlaans :the deal is e- . law permits the tntry of lropoi ly rex- I garded. as a very fair one for the %tered breedingstock free olithe or- .1 portant. proportions. -0 � province. .Public 4%rnorablp eup- ,Silver black fox Is a peltry that Last November -a splendid e*lbl- I porters believe that .the White Dog )By FRANK FROEST. Rapids should have been developed Late Superintendent of the Crilrninal I ' Investigation Do 11 ' by -the Hydra Power Commission, and — - partmont of Scotland Yard. . ! --- . ... -_ the power so, generated distributed,to . I Mr.,111aekiis' And the general public ,GHA,I?TE:R IX. It hrid been a triump)i of organlZa- at cost. The luterouts, of the Prov- - � Menzies, of ftotland Yard. ,tion, and vigilance a -ad Menzies. had gone back to hea44 ters to arramge I lace of Manitoba were adjusted to Punctually at haU-past aix the llt� ,that the histories of'1Trhe. birds he had the satisfaction' of the prairie -prov- tle pl4ted alarm clock exploded and caged should be -ready before ,the po~ ince premler. . Weir Menzies kicked off the blankets. lice -court proceedings lathe morning, I lations of the -red fox. ,What .the Punctually at seven o?clock -he had He was struggling Auto his overcoat American shows at Boston, Mass.and ; breakfast. Punctually at halfpast when the ,telephone bell Ta'ag. Re , S q 1 ­44mb seven he dellved end weeded in the -Picked up the receiver irritably. � I I square patch, -of ground that was the "Hello,"' be said. Facts About 7.. envy And despair of Magersfoutein Road, Tooting. Punctually At twenty A musical -buzz answered him, and Menzies allowed himself an expres . I ) t I past eight he left his semi-detached sion that should ,be toreign to a. At the same time the furlias been house and boarded a ear tdr West- church warden. Then fax awa7 and ', mInster Bridge. faint he caught a voice. -That Mr, C *.�anada . There,were occasions -when ,the Tou- tine was upset,but, it will be observed Menzies." "Yes," he answered, Impatiently. 'Who .1 0M.6— . . �"_____10.1- -that on the whole Weir Menzies was , . ,`Spe9.k up. is it? What do you NY -ant?" . Until a few �years -ago the great a creature of liabit. Ile had all that respect tar order and metliod that has A prolonged buzz reached him. -He .1 areas -at the north of the Province made Upper Tooting what It Ia. was conscious Of someone --speaking, but only intermittently could he hear of Ontario and, iQuebee were -consid- � ored of little value. They were te- 'From the hea,vy gold wateh-chain that spanned 'his Ample wrist, to Ilia what was said. " .ga.rded as lands of terrible -rocks and . much -timber -of great value, but as far Tubleund -face and heavy ibla.ek mous- Pretty don-up---1)pz-z—como at once—bpz-z--it thirty-four—buz-- as places of habitation was concern- tacho, he wore Tooting .respectability all over him. Gardens, F_e,sl,gfou­bUZ-2!' "Number, -ed, they were -considered valueless, It Was a ,cause of poignant regret please?" said a haw and distinct voice. In Ontario the first change in view came when -great silver mines wore to him that-cireumstances prevented ; him taking any part in the local gov- "Blast," Said ,Menzies simply, and discovered In ithe 2iorth region and it ernment of the borough. Neverthe- put down the telephone* This addle - was .found that these, areas, prdvlous- less, he ,belonged -to the local Oonstl- i tion ta forcible language on Occasions ly considered a wilderness, possessed -tutional club, and was the highly es- of annoyance was I a wonderful, wealth; Then it was - teemed people's warden at the Church I to'blin inhis Own reflective moments. learned that there was -a huge cla.y of All Saints. The a,cute observer I tion, now that so many axe to'king up belt -there that ,offered, wonderful knowing all this might have judged LTImmy Hallett's first impression on possibilities far .the farmer. As 'a him, as a deserving wholesale iron- awakening -had been 'that someone result some very fine farms .have manger .1 was' swinging -a aledge-hammer frr�g- been deieloped in the northera On- And iihe efite -Observer Would have I ularly on to his temple.* He lay still ta.rlo districts within the last decade beea wrong. .for a little, wondering why it should dr two. . The same is trIle of the Th7ovince Punctually at Iialf-past nine Weir I Menzies would pass a .flight of Max- , be. 3�y -and by he igat up and,tried to piece togethex the ,events of the even - of Quebec. Each year Is proving ,up back New I Ing. His head aclied intolerably, more -conipletely the great ldDort- -row Stone stairs at -the of .Scotland Yard into the chief Inspec- and he found consecutive thought anceof area -that were .thought wortli- less and almost Impossible until a torls roam of the criminal investiga- I 'Palaful, . . It was totally dark, and he could st.ort,time age. tion depaxtineat. From his button - -hole he woi3:A take -the choice blos- make -out nothing of where he was. Annually the Governments are en- som—gathered that day at Magers- Then the whole sequence of events ,deavoring now to :encourage .settlers fontein Road, Tooting—place it ,eare- flashed across his mind and he stag - to enter -these districts; Toads ate.bb- fully Ia a freshly ftlied vase ex- -gered rather -uncertainly to his feet, ing'built aMd villages chnd ell-brulshed m6ning ,and steadying himself against the Ing up'la the forests. .Ia -the eum- Coat for a -packet of alpaca, place . wall, struck a ans,tch. Mer -the settlers till their farms and. ,clear their quarter sections,- while paper protectors on 'his ,cuffs and The feeble .ZlIcker showed him a in the winter they secure -employ- settle down on his high stool-4he pre- ferred a high stool—to halt an hour's blue -papered apa.rtment, tarnished as a dining -room. He -had, been, lying ment In -the woods in pulp cutting corresp9ndenee. 'just inside the door, and now he and, So earn thb ,ready cash that Is essential for the development of - ,7 11t, Weir JAen7les, Church waarden tried ,the door. It refused to answer -to his tug, and he Tealized how weak their new farms. . A -future ,of great -importance is of Upper Tooting. was, In tact, Chief Detective Inspector Menzies, .of the lie was, -as he all but toppled ,back - now being spoken -of very optinil8ti- Criminal Investigation Department, wards. The n1atch -went out and he -struck another. cally for the .- Hinterland of on- New Scotland Yird. Not that he made any secret of -It. There was no Tea- ThOil It was that he noticed an ,tarlo and Quebec, witli Its vast na.- tural wealth Ia ,farms, ,forest, mines son why he should. It lr� only on, rare ,electric switch, and -pulled it over. A rush of light flooded the xoom, and I and furs, No longer ��a that Section occasions that a detdctive needs -to 'conceal his profession. I he tottered to one of the Jacobean Of Canada -considered a great wilder- little valu.6., � -the residents Of Mager$- Although arm-chafra at the ,head Of the table. ness, of .. tontedn Road, Upper Tooting, knew The sledge-haminer was still :9wing- The Government of Prince Edward 'that Mr- Weir Menzies was an ad- church ,warden, they had I to lug at his templqs, and things swayed , dizzily to -and fr�) before his eyes. He Island has aa annual revenue of near� ralra,ble. I made a resolute effort to pull him- ly halt a million dollars, of which take his reputation as a detective on ' trust. And being constant subscribers 11 501t ,together- His eyes roved over $370,000 comes train the Dominion subsidy. - to circulating libraries, -they knew the TOOM, and he -noticed a pedestal i I him,as an innocent fraud. teleplione-on asm%litableln the car - I . A mant ,something over forty, with nor farthest from him. Prince Edward Island spends au- increasing waig-t-line, and a ruddy "NATImt WAS -the Maine a the chap nually more than one-third Of its ,an. face was obviously agalust the rales Pinkerton gave me an introduction revenue -on. education, aad almost of �11 .the established autharitles It to," he muttered, -and drawing a buu- one,-flfth On hospitals, charities and was only understandable because'ho die ,of papers from his breast pocket, public hea,101. � . I was at Scotland Yard. Everyo o Sorted -them tillthe envelope -he need- . ' .�n knows .that official detectives To I lay at the top. The' Bureau Of Statistics estimat- heavy, dull, unimaginative tel that bad convicted them of hid�ous er� the total yielld of wheat for the � always out -of their depths, and can- .Vlc,OC<4x"3c4,�t-VOK4"ik�M<C<4-�lk I . . I Dominion In 1,919 at 197i361,000 bush- I tinually receiving the good-natured I ,1� 1 els. At an avcrag6t, price. of .$2 per I'assistance of amateurs, by w4oni they ) A A bujvhol, this means that Canada's are held In tolerant contempt. Magerstonteln Road. Upper Toot- 0 WEIR MENZIES �* ;V >' Wheat crop last 7ear $400,000,000. . 1 Ing,. Would have Smiled broadly had 91 3� Chief ,Detective Inspector I�V I anyone ,remarked tha 1, Chief Der IV 3� The total area'sOwn 'to Wheat In tectitrt Inspector Monziesheld ail ift- '# ,New Scotland Yard, 18. W. IN Canada, last year was 19,141;337 acres, tornational reputation—thmt he Was :V A �O A . which makes the yield per acts 10.25 bushels. Of this, 18,402,444 held one of the subtlest braftis In -the service; that he Nvas a man -who had A:t�",�.'I�,"'2�,V:k'".t'X"IE44t*":*Al�". acres wore sown to spring Wheat, the time and again ,tshoWn ,reckles cOur- .(To be continued). �.vdid, ircta this being 181,22-Fi,600 16r age And audacity In bringing off a I coup; .that ha, in short, had indivId- -Cauflously the mail be�"an to move -,tcros�j the heartil-rug towards. the bushels, the fall wihL,at yielding ' 133,000. The estimates Show that ,rfect knowledge uality and a pL Of . 1 , telephone, -Pour shambling step% he I the total 1919 trop was 7,000,000 busheh, In excess ofthat for the year every resource at his disposal in carrying out any purpose to WhIch he .took, and then, something that had beon'hidden by the t0ble tripped him � � " 1018. %vas assigned. and he spraVed -an all fours. Ile — Ile. looked a, commonplace basineSs gave a little gasp -of horror, and I . eq -DrodueOA The liarle,1110 PrOvinc - man; lie was aconinioaplac� business man, with many Of the traits of Ills steadying himself on his knees , held , his liand.j a toot in front of his face, � 2,284,000 bushels Of wheat last year, 000,00 are credited . class. lie hated ,the unexpected, and lie a gazing at them stupidly. They were . � of which about to prIM(-.o J1dwaTd Island, pretested that loathed With tierce aboinluation, those cast's In wet—wet with blood, and the thing that had tripped him was the body of — All of Quebec's wheat last 'Yea? which -lie was engaged -that meant A departure from ,the Ordinary routine. a mail. it wag one thing to -be brought In was of the spring variety, And amounted tt) 4,394,000 bushels, at J% yet there was no Man more capable of dealing with the Slippery 411trica- association -at Second hand, so to speak, with a crime, ,is are doctors, Value 'Of $8,S00,000. The yield was, that of 1918, cles .of Bach Cases than Ile. He had Journalists and detectives, 'but quite about 2,000,000 beIONV <1110 to a much reduced acredge. the, faculty of adJasting himself to an emergency, of Tuthiessly destroying 4nothr,r to be so closely identified Avith it as to be an actor It the ft=a. — - rilho Saskatchewan River forms One suporrinous red tape that in twenty- three ra had carriedblin to within Hallett had seen Vldlentel And even death Ia his time, -but never had of 1110 main, drainage systofte ,of The coantty drain. - yea one Tung .of the top of,the ladder. cold -horror to thrilled him as It did Western (, ,Znada. has an area of 165,000 ,square Miles, It vat shortly before -midnight. '140 had returned from 6 re -1110W suburb, now. In ordliaw conditions, with norves. previously unshaken, lie would l,- . . I The greater Part of the Area (Itftin- a corps of Assistants, lie where, "With cessful had no&t, entirely mile have been little ,more Moved than A epectator At a -pla3t—V6rhaI)8 eV0A i ed by .the Saskatchewan RIVer Is, ,composga �Of open ,prairie ,country.] .tftad6 il raid upon certain plook-Dockets, Vito 5 to, -tot roallife, ,tragedies Are IOS161Y well staged managed. 1 The river depends largely upon the , and thear �toothllls had beea too Well ac"Alutea wltu 'tho . ' ;dML d4tettIVOG to ,91VO them any ,rk%T1 t&JJeeS, hoWelt4er, h$LA lbolft- 'C'" S '11111 home to him t'hb last awelty MoAt-l"ins 1011anoo. apirod to bring for Its Supply of WAter. 11_-_.__-.__1_.._. 94fid� FUR FARIM00*4100) RMEN'T -1 ' I STATUS AND FUTURE PRDSPEC, T'S -. "Fur farming" Is not 6trictly Vor- . I both diroctand coIlaterla Jineg, T,hJ$ , I roet -but a .cmvenlont ,term which has registration m4y be expeotod to I been appliend wrearing of fur -boar- Atmulate the bre,eding of a suporlor ing animals In captivity It Is prin- I strain of foxes as podixroad 4talmais I cipally caxrlord on as silver fox farm- undwIll naturally be In tra4domAnd � lug, an, industry of Canadian origin among purchasers, especially from J w,41ch has Spread to the United tka, United states, becauaa American 14 States, 04pau, Russia, Norway and law permits the tntry of lropoi ly rex- I � ,other countries And bus assumed Im- %tered breedingstock free olithe or- .1 portant. proportions. -0 dinary 10 Per kent duty. . ,Silver black fox Is a peltry that Last November -a splendid e*lbl- I 1 has always bee4 highly -prized and i tion of live silver Taxes Was hold at . has Commanded 0 n1110,11 Wgber PrIeft Xontreal under ,the auspices of -the � to," the individual skin -than any other Comanis,slon, lot V a W It � ,qnser,v tiou, hie fur. This Is due ,to its rarity and IntriValo -beauty. It is a deep, ,rich, IF, encouraging the fur-tarming In- i i . lustrous fur ,and exceedingly , diffi- .,dmtr3r in the interests of wild life, , - �.-"zrvatfoa. Nearly 400 taxes wera � lealt to imitate, To (lye a Ted a ,shown, divided Into 16 different , black Is Rjuiple but how -to tip some ; classes, 4 prizes beluggiven In each of the black guard LASTS with white Ia ! class. Trophies were also donated � nature's secret. � by 1 -be provincial, governments of . Aohiovornonts 0 Fox Rancliem Ontario, Quebec, Prince Edward is- I The blaick fox is nota, distinct spec- land and New Brunswick ard -by the ! Sea. Blacks and Silver blacks Occur Cau2ftu Fur Auction Sales Com. � 1 naturally, but ,only as accidental -vat- . . piny Car a'anual 00111petittam, The I I lations of the -red fox. ,What .the Montreal, sh ow was followe(l -by I fox farmers have achieved Is not only American shows at Boston, Mass.and ; to solve the problem of Tearing this Muskegon, Mich. ! -animal In ,captivity but 41so to breed Foxes, like -other croatures, have � it true to type ao, that, no 11thlow- their ailineats and our knowledge of backs" -to its red ancestors occu-r. All. their domesticated congeltvil. the q trace -of,rustor reddish dage has now do- does not always apply to the O' . ,M, . been eliminated from .the tar 4)9 the The Health, of Animals )Branch, ot the : beat, strains Of TP.11clx-bred -foxes. Department of Agriculture, has ap- At the same time the furlias been pointed Vtm J. A. AlleTt, veterinary .. actually improved, in quality. This I expert, -to carry on Investigations � ; 4as been accomplished by Judicious into tax pathology. As a ,result, an a various Improvement ,has alwayo been ef- parasites, as ,fleas and intestinal fected % the .control. of vulplue, dW- worms. Add to -this the fact that temporr,, intestinal war=, etc. �e� . — — f mer can always kill his . ,P*e_wnt Oatlook. . animals just at the season when -the fur Is at Its: prime and it will be seen Par iranching Is now on a sound that, as between rauther and tmp- basis. The day of Inflated valIxes is, per, the advantage lies all with 4he -put, Breeding ,foxes can now bo former When It comes -to obtaining a purchased at, say, §1,000 to $1,600 Ql' -first class pialt, pair. As three to four pups, Is Wx It must not be supposed ,that all average litter, this price cannot be the pioneer fox -farmers bad, to do considered ,excessive, unless fur 'val- was to Obtain some wild silver foxes I ues Slump -far more thaa they can and put them In a pen. Many diffl- reasonably be ,expected to 'do. rox cultles were eavuntered and Some -ranching could be profitably con - experimenters. abandoned the ;It- ducted at *200 a pelt Or even less tempt, believing t)—t -the alanchlug and this is very much below the of -foxes was impra,dtleable. Their v.%lue ,of the last sales, . monogamous disposition Was not -The risk of over-produetion, must, recognized and the quartering of sey- of course, be taken Into considers- eral, pairs in �Dna -pen led to the young tion, now that so many axe to'king up being killed. The right -style Of -the business. There Is the same I pen and Mesta bad to be evolv�ed and rii�k -bowever, -in raising any kind of .the -proper methods of management IIv& stock, it may be objected, Of discovered. This was Only achieved course, that the demand for -the pro - after many disheartening aetbadksl. ducts Of cattle, r,'heep, hogs and poul-' But finally, by the persistent, earn- try Is steady and Tellable, while the, eat efforts of eapable breeders like demand for AiT wraps is subject to I Dalton, Oulton, and Gordon in Prince the vagaries of fashion. -The pro- Edward Island, Beetz In Quebec and ur -V duetion. of silver fox f is a luxur. I Surrowman and )C'ark an Ontarlo,the trade and .can hardly command the difftcultles were overcome and IO,v- stability attaching to the Troduction I farming definitely established as of stapleA. On the Other hand, the practicable, class that purchases silver fox Is m Dogged perservance had Its reward. class whose, Income Is not -seriously In 1900 Dalton and Oulton, then In , restricted by periods of husiness, de - partnership, realized, $1,900 for a sin- prmlon. Again as -regaxds the tour gle Skin at the London Tur sales. Mat silver fox m4 become too, 'com- Their neighbors now began to take a I monthrough over -production, It must � keen Interest in the buslaess and I be borne in anind that not every one � some of them secured a few pairs of I who Starts In (the business will ShOw 1 breeders. GraduaRy the jealously an aptitude for it. ,'There Is al - guarded secrets of proper �ox man- I ,ways room at -the top" and it is prob- - ' now they are ably ,that the skilful breeder ,who de- I ! common property.' Meanwhile, the v Otes Ills attention to the 'raising of I industry made .steady progress in high clisspelts need have, aittle fear . Prince Edward Island and splendid I that his business will not pay, -prices were realized tor sking, About Not much,progress has so far been, . 1912, the inevitable boom period I made In the xanching of fur -bearers, . started ,with its accompaniment of In- other than foxes. There IS, -how- I flated values and N�dld speculation. ever, a, handful of successful, miult The war brought a sudden, slump and larmers in Canada. Experiments ,are an interval of .gTeat uncertainty pre- being ca��ried on with marten and valled, Despite this,-morst Of the f ish er. Ra -coons and Skunks have . ranching concerns Weathered the bee)k tried, but liave been found U11 - storm and have lately enjoyed anoth- profitable, as the value of their skins, or period of prosperity. is not sufficiently high. Good prof - Recent Progress. it -4 have been made -from muskrat Fox farming is still making prog- preserves, but these are not really .. m as now -pos- fur farms, as the animals are not sible to register foxes In a -herd book kept in captivity, nor are they fed or some eaa,ea for in any way, beyond protee- years ago a breeders' Association tion against -onemies. It Is hoped, ,vas, formed in Prince Edward Is- bowever, in the near future, to broad - the basis, tar farming by -the land, but last year Another stride forward was� taken by the formation . en of ranching of more thMU 0110 species. of an all-0anadian association With a. In -the work of expetimentatlau which national register. The requirement is aoNv going on., the knowledge ga;la­ for foundation stock Is -four genera- ed -by .-tlie lox ranchers 18 aikelY to, I tions -of pure silver black ancestry in . afford valuable suggestion$. I . touch of terror. The'auddon. assault, _____ I en, butter two cents a Pound and beet I the locked room, and now the dead I halt a cent a pound, AlIlk sold to- man. had strung his nerves to a fine � -two .cents a gaillon, cheese for one edge. He could have shrieked aloud. cent a pound. ) that He Nvlped his hands on his handker- i A Cambridge Student Tecords -chief, but the stain -still remained. in 1612r) Ilie paid �1.91 for two pairs Of Carefully he stepped over ,the body and Taade his way to the telephone. I shoes and repairs. Charlotte Bronte, the writer in 1849 wrote to a friend., His imaginatioll Was beginulig to I -1 eacl.os� a five -pound note ($25) work, and he recalled cases whore perfectly Innocent men had been the I and will. Viank you to buy a pitout shower bath and such a boa and cuffs victims of circumatautial 'evidence as you can get for the 1110110Y." 91116 that bad convicted them of hid�ous ,-ecelved the articles ,and wrote thank - crimes. I Ing the friend as follows: "I have The story ol the ,checks thrust up received the furs %afely,and like the, him in the tog seemed to him Adicu- v,,2ble.% very much" and asks the lously unconvincing. Had his mind I friend to bay -herself a present ,with been less overwrought ' had he been the change. able to take a calmer survey of the inconnes Low Tool matter, he would probably never have given his own position a thought. 110 in spite of the prlws, however, it fingered the telephone book clums- wan just as hard to got the where- ily and his mind reverted to the colu- I withal, -to buy ,the articles, as at pres- eldenee -that he should .hold a letter of introduction to one ,of the amlor de- I t, al ent, for the incomes Nvere evu ly, Mal", Vroia 1200 to 1800 A. D. the tectives of Scotland Yard. avorage Nvage for -uii,,I,IllPd Lbor wag 11-QnPer that It Should come In -so eight -conto v. -day. In fact, Ia V1.47 handy," he grinned foebly, und then WageR hfttl drOPIK'd to two cc'114,8 -% NNeakness Overcame him. day for a lang, d,.iv's worit. but after', the grrat plagnit� �f the b'a�,,k death .(To be continued). Vioy advanced -to five eents, nm day. � --- I r MICES, HAIVI; B.B.72IN GOIXG .Vanvtlautiiq� to advaue(� Ir'll" thoy leathpil fifty cents a day Sr. 1800. 'UP 1170..�, A TASMI`,�77D Thrift and 8avinq Alwaya win. , Tile cue thing whi�-,h 1ps rnmainett � YM, A 37, S. ; constant has been tho advantage *Z thrift and t3aving. The advance in price,.* ,since 1914 Andrew Carnegie said th-%t a. X11111t has so vital a bearing upon 1he lives So on lbe -,vay.to .sut.-c2r;a if he can set of every Individual that nviny have uside "g;tilarly one dollar out 07 . come to regard the advance as unive every five dO, ars earned. in history. on the tolitram prlt,_% have been eadvanclug for over %) Inquisitive or,hmigr�, a mouse pok- ,housaidd years. Prices as teVealed I � ed its head between the open Shells of in ,old England '01ronfoles might make Ia .live *yater In all HInglish fish market one aigh at; At a fairy tale, yet the I oconoulic conditiong of those da,Y8 I one night not long ago, when the Mal- lus�k i6tamped the sharp eftes of Its were, Infinitely worso than at ptes- Elteliq together, killing biM. The ent. I mouse was fou"-A� in the ulausm4l U0 No H. C. L. Therl , by the proDrIetor next morting. Posallized Wood corpusieA havoF in Ihe vaiddle of -the Isth century, .1 bt�en alse6vorc�a In the TeMiLlno of *ovead, "gs were two cents tL dozeu, atito-deauvian Monsters In OXTUA�ft. .% goose cost six tents and a hft two The U-alng of tiny tMes btv6 0* cents. SqUgbI3 were,A)z cents a do%- 'been found -petrified in tog MUM