West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 22 Jan 1925, p. 6

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Buttto.'Thodoor-d.ni-. 2n: Scotch Me peered ht. ”'00! low." ma tho agent. “'0'" had our little hit of mu together; so. all him aqido. hon about the Insurance?" Assurance and Insurance. Three ”men the rod-faced “proo- poct" had pushed the young Scotch h- nur'vnce agent down I Ion. light " “am. The third tim. he turned b his work. uthlod that I. had at. no Iasrt d the per-hm! m III. F'ortrfivo silver foxes have been brought into France from Canada by M. Bernay, a blood" from AM. who intends m develop . farm don. the lime of those so Wally con- ducted in more northerly dimes. The precious animals, valued at ”no 20.- 000 francs apiece. have boon tmgtB- ported with great care and very spa- eial attention to their diet. M. Bunny intends to use than forts-it-ttret, for breeding. and in thin “y build up a silver fox industry which can supply the market with akin. It . mtiy lower price than that " which they can be obtained when imported. Foxes from Canada to France manta tuned works that I Inst known. we}! known. I the thtivertrit and: the v Pasteur Inuit disease which thnntéhed to il the domestie nnimh in " was not Dr. Green of hirr ti th W far N Ind glyce- rim in fl Canad‘an's Great Discovery. Giycorine is sometimes used with alcohol to reduce the evaporation to I minimum. However, it is rather ex- pensive and 1390 has I widen-y to damn” the rubber hose connections. If tr'vr-iru is, used. mix tho nicohol up a It Thirty per cent. d.nntured alcohol and " per cent. water will begin to Inset. " " dam. Forty per cent. denatured alcohol and sixty per cent. water will back: ttt freeze at 2 below new. Fifty per cent. denatured alcohol and GO per cent. water wi", begin to freeze at 18 below zero. If “only per cent. denatured limbo! and 80 per cent. water will begin to from” It 19 degrees. Ton per cont. don-turd aieohol nnd Mt per cent. water viii begin to from. at " clause: Fain. Anti-{rm solution. Before my , running mm. but tttill not 'Cowhte “wheeze solution in used. the "our it to overheat. 1 circulating system should be inspected I (:th 1 for leaks, and repairs made, if men-I to obtain maximum "Bei-er from' nary. lt is usually a good plan to ro- IL low gravity guoiine now being“ place hose ronnecuons at this time of n... a. ole ”an“- on. p-vhnnfnr] The following table shows different. 1y proportioned mixtures with tempor- otum " which the which»: will begin My”. DomuunntLMm nation containing calcium chloride or other simiiu' eompounds, as they corrode the inside of the radiator. The only satisfactory Iolution of 'hich I know is alcohol and water. Denatured Ikohol is profound. but wood uimhol an be used. Wood lico- ho'. often contains free “out: acid an! aboufd never be used unless It in ha-rttobefreerfrx-neaifaeid In pm; damage to the radiator will remit. h was not until tho dueoveriass of Crown of the University of Min- ta called attention to his earlier {s that D'Herelk beenme in the known. Even in Park he is not known. Fortunately for his fame, University of Minnesota under ts the value of publicity. Tho pur Institute does not. HOW TO PROTECT MOTOR CARS IN COLD WEATHER. The Automobile Id ATOR COVER n who studied medi- He is one of (Men. who have given up , intensive study of pry small siatries at mm. and he has not dentist without any why. he has buried ral years in Indo- ' Dutch East Indies Ming tt can for the aver. it is rather ex- m, reeommenf under avenge con- o hm a tendency to ditions, the oil be drained approxi- !wr hose connections. manly every 500 miles in order to luv-r1. mix tho "F,hol guard uninst excessive wear of the equal proportions and bearings or eylinder walls. in t'rre wine percent- Cars In short-trip service in cold thr, above tat/e. weather. on account of extreme dilu- "rrumfrsred that it is tion of the oil, should have the motor “Mann from time to oil changed every 800 to 500 miles. what is 3041: due to If the car is not driven this far in I _ .,., " ewe”), to month the oil shouId be changed once l :., .m. .,.”. '.oss by a 1enth.yetrard?to.f.mileatre. . . watly in approxi- -r temvwraturo of ator cover is used. "Dr that is adjust- ." the radiator can ' the motor to ma- 'tym adiuatud to I ' keep the motor sat D?scovery. Maxims From Maxim. l is the ultra mr. Every man must live with the man f all b:terroria, It he makes of hhnselt! an dthe better " form of animal job he does in moulding Ms character. ., "in which ”my tlua better company he will have. "wr'ir my for tctr-a- The world owes nobody anything cr q. mum thw Nicer! what he earns. ' depopulntirtg the In 0t t proved their ex- “ion is Dr. F. Ct1 Pasteur Institute, W who studied medi- le is one of (Men. " lo have given up ol ntmrsivo study of in , small siatries at e. and he has not " P of fame been” bt scoverk-s not Ion. Jt'9r'MP.NT. Mfd weather the van-'1. which VIII .. thmlwh the rad- lose motor to run rwine would. _ fame hecanno works not long y pmvvd them wipe out Southern 'e, toss tn of 40 pm t. Ilcohol Lituta medi 1"t)'C'Gradtrates of Toronto Uni. The versity to be Appointed to ( Board of Governors. In awordance with the University Ice. Art, 1924. the Liontenant-Governor-in- the The following havo been nominated: H. G. Acres, n.Sc.; Dr. H. B. Ander- son; G. W. Ballard. M.A.; A. R. Bart- let. KA".; John R. Bone. BA.; Fl. Perci- val Brown. K.C.; W. A. Buckle, B.A.Se.; E. R. Cameron. K.C.: R. W. Catto, B..\.Sr‘.; Jan. Chisholm. K.C.; Rt. Hon. L. P. Duff; Lewis Duncan. 8A.: John J. Gibson. B.A.: E. A. Munoz. M.Sc.: Dr. Margaret John, "ton; A. C. Immune. B.A.; Russell E P. Locke. BA.; C. s. Machine». M.A.; Anna MaeMuretty, K.C.; Hon. C. A. Mann; Dr. J. C. Maynard; G. F. Me. I'arlnnd. BA.; J. V. Idioule. B.A.: a. N. Mohawonh, EPA; W. N. Moor. ( hon“, S.P.S.; E. 3. Bold, B.A.; H. S. Robertson, B.A.; Ron. Wm. R. Ridden; ’8. D. Sally. BA.; Con. Smythe, I “be; C. Loo-lb Wttmtet, BA. Europe now has 10 PNstdents and " Bavarian. Council has Med January 7th to February 11th. 1925, " the period for voting to elect a panel of mm per- Ions from whom nadunte‘ "pretax-nae the: may be appointed to the Board of Governors ot the University of Toronto. What a man knows that he can't use is a hamtieap--ryom “Hudson Maxim: Reminiscence: and Com. ments," by Clifton Johnson. A man ought not to be so reticent as to sit like the owl and think and blink his wisdom away In silence; It ls well to be In touch with nanny people. The man who keeps other people trom looking In on him shuts the window and draws the curtains so that he can't look out. Heavy burdens carried make ordin. Iry burdens light. We are built by our reactlnns to our environment. Genius needs obstruction. He who would "no long should work but. indirectly through the service ot others. He gets more tor his bread who ptt.uty it on the water than he who de. Tours it himself. The warmth of the are is better enjoyed when shared than when mon- opolized at the cost of crowding other: into the cold. A man oueht not to be so reticent as to sit like the owl and think and Another condition which must be guarded against in winter is the for- mation of water in the crankcase. A sight formation of water is some- thing which is natural and cannot be prevented. It is aggravated. however, by the injudicious use of the choke. fmsquent starting and stopping of the motor as might be occasioned by num- erous short drives. and failure to change the motor oil at proper inter- Tho oil pan should be removed and washed out with kerosene occasionally in order to prevent any accumulation of sediment which might have a detri- mental effect upon the bearings. 1 Always use n light, cold test motor oil in cold weather. The motor on should be drained more frequently in winter than in Bummer, " the cold temperature aggravatu the dilution of the oil by raw-fuel, especially when the choke is kept closed too long. It is not advisable to drive . car until after the motor has been turning over at a rate of speed approximating twenty miles per hour long enough to give the oil a chance to get well into, all of the working parts. i In starting the motor, nuke sure; that the choke is ptsWd til the wayl out until the motor starts, then push] it in slightly until the motor Irarms) up but do not have it even partly out) longer than is necauary. Do not race] an engine to warm it up, run it u nn engine speed approximating twenty miles per hour. I (SA-um I To obtain maximum "Bei-ter from, the low gravity mine now being. mod, the air outer-in; the carburetor! should be moderately heated. In hot', mther, the normal air iiiiisi'itiii'il, is high enough. Provision is made, however, for heating the air entering the carburetor in cold weather. The temperature is regulated by a sleevef over the carburetor air intake, which should be closed during the winter months. It will assist greatly in Ip- proximnting the summer temperature! of the motor if the radiator cover is] used " mentioned above. ; LIIBRICATING SYSTEM. (To be concluded.) an serve himself except hrough the sank-e of Brass Iri Colors. A process has been discovered that makes it possible to obtain brass In colors ranging from bright yellow to orange and from red to blue. While at the beginning of 1928 Slam Leone, West Coast of Africa, had a crown agent's overdraft ot £69,- 000, by the same year end It wttsdl88,. 000 in credit. Ono Stove 8uttittient. Old Mrs. Green was down at the wharf at midday seeing her niece " on a trip. Glancing aloft. she remark. ed: "Well, they'll soon be starting, my dear. Both tunnels are smoking and they wouldn't want both funnels just to get lunch.” I've been wanting a bit for a week." Then aloud, with a smile very wim ning, he said: “Good morning to you, Mistress Crow; how well you are look- ing! how glossy your head! and your eye is as black as a sluei. Your figure, ah madam! it makes my heart thrill; I can not describe you in words. I'm sure it I once heard a song from your bill I would greet you as Queen ot the Birds!" The gratified crow hardly looked tor a Ilaw in sentiments charm. ing as these, hut alas! as she opened her great beak to caw, away went her morsel of cheese. it was quickly snapped up as It fell on the rocks by Reynard. who waited below. “This is very mind cheese." said the wily old fox, 'now I bid you good day, Mistress Crow." An owl who sat near her re. marked with a hiss, as his goggles he wiped and adjusted: “Haven't I told you repeatedly. Miss, a tiatterer'g not to be trusted '."' A Fable. A crow settled down on the limb of a tree with a fine piece. of cheese In her beak; thought the fox on the ground. "That ('lteese would suit me; Lord Cecil, to whom was made the firgt award ot $25,000 by the Wilson tonddatlon for his work toward the goal ot world pence. is shown on his Ir- rival in New York with Lady Cecil. oberott-Titanta.' Did your starlight mirth With the song of Avon, Quit this workday earth? Yet, while green leaves glisten, And while bright stars burn, By that magic memory on. return, return! Round the forest fountain. On the river shore. Let Four silvery laughter Echo yet once more; While the joyous bounding or your dewy feet, Rings to that old chorus--- In flower and leaf. While the blue to richest In the starry sky. While the softest shadows On the greensward lle. While the moonlight slumbere In the llly's urn, Bright elves of the wild-wood, Oh, return. return'. Northern Ontario misses none of the conveniences or comforts 0310794 by the more thickly settled parts of the province. Here II shown a. modern transmission tower for electricity. Sierra Leone Prosperous of the Fairies. --Felieia Hemans Certainly the (master and zebra have been known for more than a thousand years, and no one has been able to transmute them, by interbreeding, in. to any kind at a horse. Had they any legitimate claim to such noble ances- ztry, the Arabians would have shown ,dun eolorings, stripes and bars, all ot Iwhlch are conspicuously absent. Naturalists state that the average mouse has a daily run of about ten miles. The Arabian, and his undoubted kinsman., the Barb. are desert horses, accustomed to subsist upon scanty food and little water. Unhesitatingly, the Arabian and Barb are assigned to their own species unfouled by such ignoble forebears. It would be difficult tor any horse- man to adopt the suggestion at some scientists that the Arabian might have been descended from the tarpan. the anger or the zebra. This conclusion may be justly reach. ed by considering only the caravan movements and war invasions. When to those are added the water-borne commerce of the Mediterranean and the probabilities of the transfer ot the Barb to the east, and the course of centuries back to the west and north of that great inland waterway, the matter resolves itself into an entirely powihle solution. comformable to the history and development of European civiliz'ation. The preponderance of evidence tae. ors the belief that the Arabian horses were obtained through Egypt, from the Libyan tribes of Northern Africa, and that by long and careful mating the superior type of Arabian horse has been maintained through m't“ . turies. There have been many hundreds ot! books written on the horse. A lite-, time devoted to the study has brought: the conviction that a. large majorityg of these writings, so far as examined by me, contained little original mat. ter, and that those which may be re garded an authoritative must be con.! sidered in the broad light of recorded, history and of acientffie discoveries' in order to assign a correct value to their conclusions. I Recognizing the thoroughbred " a fixed type of highest quality, result/- ing from painstaking and careful mab ing to obtain particular results. many students are agreed that the Arabian might have been originated and per- petuated in the same way. says the National Geographical Magazine. On the other hand. the Arabian and the Barb of Northern Africa are so alike, and yet so distinct in every possible way from the ancient. horses ot the steppes and of the European areas, that admirers of the Arabian and Barb are unwilling to assign them to any but a distinct classification ot their own. The early history of the Arabian horse is shrouded In that impenetr- able veil beyond which investigator. have been unable to (“mover n eatin- tactory path to knowledge. Arabs Love Homes. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO , Every right action, every trmrl for artillery observation. This' mm- thought sets the seal of its beams on. tary equipment ia to be “WW II I person and faee.---muskin. - H925. The authorities of Mile End, one of the poorest London districts. have de- eided to appoint a "universal donor" who would be prepared at a minute's notice to give his blood for transfu.. sion of a fee of 25 for each case. The hospital committee believes it will be possible to find a man whose blood is suitabEe for all cases, says a London despatch. London Doctors Seek Blood Donor for the Poor The government's pension list of widows and their children is smaller than it has been since 1917, although there are 2,215,000 soldiers' depen- dents still calling John Bull their pro- vider. In this number are 800,000 children, but these are rapidly being reduced as they grow up past the limit for governmental aid. . Straight hits from Cupid's bow have reduced the number of Britain's War widows by M per cent. and drereased the annual expenses of the Ministry of Pensions for keeping these depen- dents by 28,000,000, the latest depart- mental report reveals, says a London despatch. The commission's plans include an inquiry into and comparison of the educational systems of all countries of the world. British Pension Outlay Reduced by Re-Marriage , Londoners who live partly on the ‘trade of tourists, such as hotel pro- prietors, modistcs and millinera, are !nnxiously anticipating the early ar- rival of scores of wealthy Argentine women who are making their shopping trips to Europe earlier than usual to got back home before the Prince of Wales arrives there, says a London despatch. The French Government has decided to, establish PP. institute to accommo- date the International Inte:lectual Co- operation Commission, says a Paris despatch. Francois Albert, Minister of Public Instruction, has introduced a bill in Parliament authorizing the necessary expenditure for this pur- pose. The director of one big West End store says the average woman shopper from Buenos Ayres disposes of from 3,000 to 5,600 pounds on clothing and millinery while in London, and then goes to Paris to compiem her pur- chases. World's Educational Systems Surveyed by French Not even the spendthrift North American comes up to the high tide of the disbursements by rich South Americans, the tradespeople say. MsnrJave already reserved rooms in West End hotels, and the steamshin companies report a goodiy numbvr of bookings for late winter and early spring. i Stories About WellKnown People South Americans Spend More in London Than N. Americans 0 soft star of the west! Gleaming tar, Thou'rt guiding all thing. homo, Gentle star! Shine from thy my heaven, Pour joy on earth and sea! Shine on, though no aweet eym Look lath to watch tor me, Light of a thousand streams, Gleaming far! o soft star of the west. Blessed Star! o soft star of the west! Gleaming tar, Thou'rt guiding III things home, Gentle star! Thou bring'st all things home. Gentle ear! Thou bring'at from rock and Win The seabird to her nest, The hunter from the hills. The tither back to rest, Light of a thousend streams. Gleaming tart 0 soft star of the west, Blessed Star! n ttttr-mite walk tor pleasure. Such was the habit of Lord Haldane, ex- lord chancellor in the British cabinet, when he was " the Bar. After read- ing his brief. he would open his front door and set oit by road for the lee- Writing a. parody on one of his poems in which she rhymed Burwuh with words that indicated its right pronunciation, the woman mailed it to Mr. Kipling and the poet was no Bur. prised that he wrote her a. letter of thanks. Not many men after their day". work Is done would care to undertake Knowing his beloved Sue-ex and the queer localieml of the downaman'e Ipecch is one way to win the regard of Rudyard Kipling, " " enterprising young woman who had tailed to get an audience with him, discovered re- cently. Burwash. the village near which lies Mr. Kipling'a old English manor, "Bueman's," is pronounced not at All u it is spelled. The "w" is lost, leaving "Bur'tua." Strategy WM: Klpllng'a Anew-uh. To the Evening Star. " Igh Speed Pedectrlan. --r. Hemtuttr Dutch Purchn'e War Planet. The trovermnent ot the Netherlands has ordered twelve high speed scout planes and sixteen two-seaml- plans for artillery observation. Tht, mu. "With those bony changes, the size and shape of the clvitiea in which the eye- ue lodged are involved. All children are born with eyes fashioned for 'distant' sight. But of British child. ren, ten of a thousand will have lost the power of seeing clearly " a dis- tance by tho age ot 4, and at 20 the near-sighted will number 160. The reason is the elongation of the eyeball. unknown in the newly born." "Modern civilization has piared our bodies under conditions altogether new to them. Our digestive system: are breaking down under our dietary. Our teeth are swept with disease. Our nervous systems, in many cases, are breaking down. Contracted palates Ire common. In a considerable por. tion ot the population changes in the bony frtttttework of the face Ire taking place. "Our hunting foretathen had Mao their close-range work. To chip 3 flint implement needs not only a deft hand, but also close and accurate vision. They made bone needles and had to thread them. They engraved on stone and bone. But for the once they had to apply their eyes to tasks ot close vision they had to apply them a hun- drvd times to distant objects. "We spend our life in 'near' work." he explained. lecturing on "Near Sight and Civilization.” "We spend it in reading, writing. typing, printing, weavng. tool making, and the hundred and one offices required by modern in. dustry, all of them requiring the use ot eyes at close range. Doctor Say; Food May Impair Eyes. Myopia meur-siwhteu'tiessr--rnay be dun to some delimency in the modern diet. Just as riclipts result from lack of minerals and vitamins. That is the suggestion of Kngland's most distin- guished anatomist, Sir Arthur Keith. Despite England's great Industrial life there are stiii more people em. pioyd on the land than in the mines and quarries, the ratio being 1.161.298 men and 83.062 women in agricultural pursuits to 1.061,749 men and 3,864 women in the mines and quarries. Another interesting fact is that the greatest industry in the country is that ot "personal service." The gigan- tie army of people caterlng to [hepar- sonal comfort of their fellow crea- tures. which inoludes servants and people employed by institutions. clubs and hotels, number 1.676.425. or whVh 339,944 are women. Of Indoor domes. tie servants 1,148,698 are women and 61,006 men. clerical stairs but including religious organizations. law, medicine, etc. The men number 306.830 and the women 859.983. There are more women than men In professional occupations. exctuding ers and trackmen, barge workers, atevedores. street singers. flsherwo. men, coal and shale mine workers. builders, bricklayers, glazlerl. tile makers, brick and pottery makers. metal workers, dynamo motor attend. ants, locomotive engineers and tex. tlle workers. But of the 156,283 per- sons employnd as dynamo .motor " tendanta and stationary engine drie. en: only two are women. Women own factorial, manage them and supervise them. They are plumb- ers. riveters. safe makers. sand blast- erl. gunamitha, farmers, electricians. electrical apparatus makers undertak- era. chimney sweeps. iighthouu and lightship hands. bookmakers, race- horse trainers and jockevs, aviators, brewers, ceiiar "men," railway station masters and yardmasters, railway workers, farm managers, railway port- Women Invade Every Field of Labor. Of the "at srmy of working people, numbering in IMI 17.177.050 persons. no fewer than 5.065.322 were women, ssys a London despatch. Several startling revelations of the state of British industry are made in this Cen. sus. which has Just been made public, but most unusual among them is the extent to which women workers are creeping into every conceivable occu- pation, Dr. Charles H. Mayo. the noted sur- geon. makes clear. in his habitually kindly way. that medical science has done about all that it can do to end the danger of mass diseases. end that the problem of living to a ripe old age is now up to the individual. A man must be persuaded, he says, that it is worth while, when he reachea the use of " 'rt he looked over and helped to keep hm machinery going. The dif- tieulty is, as the famous surgeon seems to know. that a man who has survived to his tortieth your in this vale of tears has by that time aeettmulated too many other troubles to worry shout so trivial a thing as his health. aide. Even in more recent years he thought nothing ot going tor twenty- nve and thirty-mile tramps. It was to Lord Haldane that I Bri- tish Judge was referring the other day when ttis and. In a case in which walb lng-speed was mentioned, that it would depend upon whether the per. son was wanking at the pace of the lord chancellor or that or an ordinary mortal. Safety Come: First. A commny parade v: _ (rich-<3 by the sergeant Inner at Ir.e ion! har. mks. When .11 “cm in pouft‘on he called out: "All men who are fond ot music at. two pea-m inward," F Instantly halt . dozen soldiers. with vision of playing in the regimental bum. .terpperd tomrartt. "Now," he M, “you Ill men m tint piano down mm the om, eou’ can”. on the (can: tioor to tho target-11w me. in a, I--.. " Twenty-eight mi.2ion fr: put up in purse: and sta's. s ferenco between the r‘a-ipi outlay in purses was ahrorh nine expense: and the ("his tation. Twenty-three minim: francr ware taken in at the tttrnsti.'es of the Paris raeetraeU during the 1924 scam“. says a recent deapateh. The Pee tit. an of the pari-mutue: betting row-rt- ing to the vuiou racing: orttanizn- tions controlling the tracks amounted to 44,000,000. The total amount of money bet ot the tracks during 1924 spring. sun:- mer and fall tenors amounted to 1,100,000,000 tuna. idea that these cream”: are sensible, but all the time these ideas are Min: destroyed. They are dninur only those things which are inherent.” imi' Tho bee, according to (hit scientist, who Joins issue with Henri Flim- and other writers on insect life, is bury only because he is built that way ord cannot help hinuelf. "All through your ¢..hs--r\.2:iu:m." the lecturer deehumt. "you ttref tho idea that these cmtura: am and)“. 1,100,000 Francs Scent on Paris Races British scientists are dism-liinp: by one, cherished illucipns of ‘ childhood, says I London tloun Now it is "the burr littfv be " th being shown up. Awarding to F Balfour Browne, lecturer of the r, Institution of Great Britain, ber; seem intelligent, but really are awfully stupid." Bee is industrious '?eceuse the rr by M: the s sands Captain In Baron says the evidence indicating a connection between the eardy people of this region and the Maya: of Yucatan, Mexico, is accumu- lating. He considers one of his most important finds II symbol of sacrifice. a grotesque mask. which he uncovered in Aztac Canyon, thirty-live mil: R south of Las Vegas, Nev. It is Iiku the masks known to have been worn by Maya priests when they conducted the traerifieial services where thou. sands of victims were immoiuued. to reopen some of the old turquoise mines and, by systematic excavation. to trace the curly races from Bouider Canyon to the eastern border of N9 vada. The captain is trying to discover, u nearly as he can from arehaeolottiea1 evidence. who these people were and where they came from. It is his plan Capt-in Alien Le Baron, British archaeologist, who has been explor- ine excavations of ancirnt villages in Nevnda, passed through here recently on his way to the Coiorndo River to continue his quest for the identity of the first inhabitants of the American Continent, says a despatch from Ton- opah, Nev. when it is compared with Canada's branch banking system. In the whole of Canada there are 4.058 branchea of chartered banks. Furthermore, the work of the elevators is largely eonhned to a few months. Quest for Identity of First Inhabitants of America Thin is but one of the several 'serie. of elevnton owned by min. bundling and flour milling companies. Them were 4.213.160 acro- under fied crop: in the three Plaid. Provinces the past season, out of at nvniiable are: of 170,000,000 urea. What the future has in store for the grain handling in. dustry when the new" part of thin nm is brought under eultivation may we“ be imagined. Getting the grain to world markets requires an organ- ized effort that can hardly be appre- ciated by those not intimatefy connect- ed with the work, but the Get that a much " four and five million bushels have been shipped from Port Arthur 1nd Fort Willem in one day by lake boats gives some indication of the enormous volume handled. During the year ending August, 1923, there were 4,112 iicenses issued to elevators and track buyers in Wcr'ern Canada. What this means may be appreciated The Natural lacuna: Intelligence 1urvusottuDiorttterattete" Ottawa an: The Saskatchewan (Jo-operative Elevator Co. is one of the lam indoo- triea in Canada of which very littU ia hoard, except among the grain grower- who are members of that organization. In volume of business handled, however, it has a place of ita own, and ita growth baa beau " most tnttrve'dous. The company in now operating 485 country elevatora in Western Canada, having built 62 new one: during the past season. The de velopment of this industry baa been gradual. being built up as the grain growing areas of the west have been extended. The company's ebvntora during the past season have bandied a total of 337,554,000 bushela of grain. Natural Rm Ballotin. Music Lover's 13b it is Made Theet Way mall ia tU hrs. The dif- ‘eiptaauud the mrbed by run- francs We" Moment.” ing. t If th exp)“. At Northallerton, on. the Lost North-Eastern Ram"), my Elm have on threc occasions rere- 0:11le by "‘Ir'mihu hr -tt-qedt.e.tiastotulw Recently a swarm of bee -ion of the ”wider y the Cheshire village of SM tl clean nu! " " str " it m ly ti o ter The tr tm In are the The marked -ttte to thos III the under: bx the raw. . Immun- place. I who wor be mum hands. I the late _ the Holy tl lun- an.l lb I'll photon: not loam bet; It. old Bible do. Graphic, the world, r bean quosum . holy Mare t ChrtBtlatts , when the M Palestine thr Ipot Is Mn 1( tt do“ 'the World'. Moat Foot, Burial Grourd Paper Money Peril I did better " " Why Watt. the Wake DI: mom At tenor I with: tombs 1 cm , ll tt [-51

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