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Durham Review (1897), 10 Jun 1926, p. 6

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Chnr'.erterarwn. P.E.t.--The va", tho raw fur production of Cum! the 900mm 192L192}? war, 'trr,tt' compared can. 815,642,317 fur m of 199-1924. um “minty Government r total number of was o mm taken during the Wes In 3.820.326. a sir,rht doc from the pnvioun your. Prince turd Island at“! had: as the Important marine" of ranch-hrs vor to: rafts. Yarmouth, N.S.--httereet has I, been Iron-ed in the het that quantities of co! was: nun-mu and: commercial purposes. found was-lard ashorp on the cot Nova 3mm. Each ti Yo brings pneum- quantity of 'eaves or h which an mm " the. vnt umle meadows he the nrtion of the v1 This " haul" out of roach t wuves by I“ teamg 3nd spread dry. The mah, centre of the in, ties along the shore Between P and Yarmouth where then, a gathering station. The anne‘a put in about 8,000 tons. for whi harvester is paid from $9 to $P.'. Quebec, Qua? Authm been given by tho Provil mom to tho Shawinigan Power Co. for the cons! - Iirc- from Quebec power imo from Quebec t Inc, in the Sam” dist banned that the entire v Itruction of tho line, ine erection of tho iron towers the ”Hos. the cutting of wry right~of-way through the dizzing of trenchen n "Strong nearly pu': lt pvr'ormalm lucid be w the amount M rs. G mush! n Gnyfelf 000.000 " 9m Some Liberal Musicians. Minn MUrT AND JEFF-ch, Bud Fisher. Caught Rev. John Mack.» J. very strong." , I should any It tert me overboard. (an h rough having a reputa- nu, was liberal toward I. After the tlrst dam ot Canada hem was! io (has! Or gar, he hastily sketch. me blank paper. and m to present It at a "s and ho would re- . The beanr did 50. money. But. if this Is Not Bought " ? Why did ho not will. Ind draw the nt " LIT! can mm TV R ha h " ed large sum: the wonderful :mah Nightin- W x the lnd1ans who received n tw SPP. " t ttttding Ive to an t to omit ONTARIO ARCHIVE: TORONTO hir 8t on pro as It u Mrg and aspect to be in oration by the beginning of Aumst. Two more units an pinned for the fo'hwirte two PP" n'hr, wh'ch wil'. mako the total exrrr-rdi'crro on hui!dinrrs and machin- ery briquettes from coke coal. Winniree, Man.-At the Dairy Show he'd in London, England. Can- ada earried " the premier awards for butter, according to eahle adviees receivod here. In the tsalted (9:195. an Edmonton dairy won first prize and the second award went to the Shun! lake. Man., creamery. In the un- salted (an, the Dominion again mm the oremir.r award, a Regina cream- When We know that each stage of the ('hiiti's developmunt requires its own kind of instruction. we realize what a child has missed who reaches the one or 10 or 12 before beginning his or her work that should have been tukm at the age ot ' years. it is in- tertwing to note, however, that when Ulll‘ak'ijv‘ rhymes have been absorbed at a vr-ry early use the interest in them is reininml tor many years: in fact. it is new-r that. Parents do not realize that piunotorte playing is only one phase of the child's musical education. Song singing. ear training and rhyth- mic expression form the groundwork for success in future music lessons. All this is suitable work that can be taken in our elementary schools, and it the publie demands it, can be given. The present time is very opportune for all who are interested in the growth ot good music in our Dominion. and tor all parents who wish their children to have the benefit ot a musical training to use their best efforts to have music placed in an important position in the school curriculum. for it must be re- membered that apart from its value an an educational factor, it can give the children something that no other sub- Ject can give. The host thought. all the Bnest or fort that man arp making in education and in other sphrrm. too-lt-l in the direction at the child. the young child. It is for him tint reforms are [fanned and carried into execution. it in tor him that philanthropists. and own party politicians show u solici- '11th unparallclod h the history of the world. And it is h the child that our luau-hora have begun to see that they must direct their most careful and surnrwt thouattt, w} ter t Esuuhnault. B.C.Cln f the rompiotion of the Hunt dry dork here. Yarr ‘re preparing to estah waiting phat next to min. The plant will ly Children Should Have Best in Music Study. Itt Erman of tho Bond. The three riot oNee. of Saskatchewan lend rnspect to percentage of settlers n have plid: Saskatoon with M per '. and Regina and Prince Albert h Mn- 94 per cent. U r, ch It rem “in: u r $1,000.00! mton. MfuxAbout four thou- Pn have been placed on Alberta his spring and the demand has n (any met, so Waiter Smitten, union" of Labor, reports. n r POM have tt Sound Advice. "I want a piece of meat P. fat or gristlo." "Madam, I think Fou'd bet. an." 1 growth or a ehild'g mind he brain in childhood in waives impressions easily them. Children are in- :nurzii'ul and rhythmical. ldhood is the time torfotr re ot music which in plant- hills heart. and which by inuuus teaching you will a real feeling tor all that ne f "ow ackinq had an opoprtunlty of B.C.---rn anticipation n of the new Govern- 're, Yarrow’s Limited, to establish a ship- next to the zraving n will be constructed : is being rushed in I, equipment installed dry dock is ready for Dish]! contestant. -Eiehty-seven per "a under the Soldier I have mado par- mt collection period. of the amount due t. according to the They will manu- m petro'eum by ' process They ant for making During the Great War a young American omcer cottiined in a German prison furnished his captors.wlth a remarkable evidence ot Yankee in. genuity and cleverness. Before eu- listing, the young man had been em- ployed in the chemistry department of a large iron industry and possibly hi» experience there helped to explain his clever resourcefulness. . One morning, Just at dawn. a guard on mm of the outer walls, happening to glance toward the cell occupied by the prisoner. saw his hands apparently moving back and forth around one of the bars of his cell window. An ot. ilcer was summoned and prisoner and cell searched. All that was found was a short piece of braided string, the ends of which were tied to two small pieces of wood. Nevertheless, when the steel bars at the window were ex- amined two of them were found sawed Who can read such a story without a thrill of admiration at the thought of tht, marvelous possibilities within a detaminnd will? is thl-re any barrier that can stand before the intelligent verumrtutftrlne.cs and courage of the truly resolute. soul? It is not our resources or our lack of resources that so often keeps us pris- oners in this world. It is rather our failure to utilize what we have to the fullest extent that so often shuts us out trom the larger freedom and pro- gress to which we recognize we arc entitled. "Young men." said the great preacher. Doetor Talmadge, "don'tmar you have n-v'iiinz to begin lite with. Go down in .th library and get some books and i'4'iHl of that wonderful mechanism God "xiv.- you in your hand, an i enty in your foot, in your eye, in your ear. and never again commit the bias. phemy of saying Mu] have no capital to start with. Eqmpped? Why, the poorest young man is equipped as only the God ot the whcle universe could afford to equip him." Gallant. --- A small boy found the following son- tence in his grammar tsxamination: "The horse and the cow is in the field." He was told to correo! it an! to give his reason for the correction. He wrote: " 'The cow and horse is in the field.’ Ladies should always come first." FOUR CENTURIEB OLD Hunk-r an haul of Warrington. England, celebrates in; [numb centenary. Alumna human! Warrington scholars are Malthus. of population essay fame and I'mvitly. " ho discovered more gases than all his predecessors combined, Two Sticks and a Bit of String. F An international amenity of which'; both England and America may well' be proud is the attempt to raise one' hundred thousand dollars to endow: the chair of anatomy in the London; School of Medicine. as a tribute to: Elizabeth Blackwell. who, having been I unable to get a mericai education in Great Britain. came to the United V States and found here the intellectual, hospitality that the old counry had idenied her. Having been admitted to, inmctiee in America, and havingi {proved her ability, she returned to' §London and founded the London' iSchooi of Medicine tor Women. Al l, true pioneer! I The girl they loved walked in through the door As dead as a valley in autumn, And neither turned his head her way Nor asked of her why she had sought Though a moment below one whisper- ed, "My friend'." And his friend, "My more than brother, We alone shall see that face to the end With the smile that she gave no other," Neither cried out. "Behind my chair She stands and her hands are above my hair'." And neither turned his head her war l Taking the ordinary fiounder as the Nor asked of her why she had sought i specimen, T we see brought into the him; [world a little tIsh that looks for all But they stared at the embers, and:the world Just like any other ordinary _ neither mud, l tissh. He swims about for a few days, "Sb. is standing behind an that is , getting bigger and fatter, and then de. dead!" l velops a tendency to turn ocettsiortal1y over on his side. sort of turning now Though u moment before one whisper- I and then only. Though one had said, "TUre ig none but you, Since Heaven has chosen and bles! us. And we alone in the skeleton hands Could know the hands that caresmd us," . Neither said, "Welcome." neitherl sought I To take the hand that she stretched! out. 1 They did not doubt that she was there Like a perished sky in the autumn, Bo still they grew, so cold their hearts- Grudging tho hope she had brought him, . Each waited as If turned to stone To feel her hands. to taste alone The triumph in Ms t1esh and hone. ' --Frank O'Connor. He- "I was out with a mum skirts last night." She -“You still have 'em on, I Better Fit. "That's a fine dress sum Harold." "Yes, I don't rent from the same people now." was out with a coufsle of A True Pioneer, Love. 500 ot trll the queer inhabitants ct'ihe ocean. one ot the most mylteriaua in We changes which are undergone are the saccaiied ftatlishe. This includes the entire tamry of hailbuts and ftoutt. ders. the soles, the plaice and others which are not no weii or commonly known, but ail cf which belong to the F, xme tseientirte family. - From a tse/entitle standpoint there are few things in all nature that are so remarkable-the evolution of a spe- cies in tt iew months, perhaps in a Jew weeks. In a very short space of itime the insh changes from an ordinary (tish to a ttattis"n. A few days later his fiat-side turns last longer. and then it may be noticed that one of his eyes appears tp/be starting to so to the top at his head. This eye, always, of course, on what is soon to be the underside, goes straight over the top of the head or nose for it is both, and keeps going un- til it has come within speaking dis- tance of the other, which has remained absolutely stationary. When born the tiounder, as a well- known example. is built just like any ordinary fish. His elders are greenish brown. he swims about horizontally and his eyes are in their proper places, one on each side of " head. in the cthge. which requires (my a few days. he ttreally turns so that ho swlma on his side, one side turns white like the bellies of horizontal titrtrea and ~wonder of wonders-one eye begins to travel and slowly but surely passea over the nose and head and sets itself close to the other eye, both now being on one side of the head. powexs; Then shall I chmrful greet the labor. ing hours, And cheerful turn. when the long shadows tall At eveutlde. to play and love and rest, Because I know for me my work is best. Strictly Modern Remains. Professor Beanl‘rough was Jubilant. "Aha!" he cried, as he rested his shovel. “See what we have unearth- ed! I believe that we have discovered the remains of some herbivorous am. phibian of the order p'.tsslosauri'." Farmer Sodbuster took a good look. "Nope. you're wrong. Prot.," he said. "Them bones belonged to a hog I buried here two years ago last fall." Recently a nightingale singing 100 feet away from the London broad- casing station 2L0, could be heard almost perfectly by radio listeners. room; Let me but tind it in my heart to say. When vagrant wishes beckon me astray, "This is my work; my blessing, not my doom; Ot all who live. I am the one by whom This work can best be done in the right way." Then shall I see It not too great. nor small. Let me but do my work from day to day, In field or forest. at the desk or loom, In roaring market-place or tranquil To tit FLATFISE! MYSTERY» 13E CHANGING EYE With the F irst Arbutus. Pink, small, and punctual Aromatic, low,' Covert in April. Candid in May, Bold little beauty. Bedecked with thee, Nature forswears Antiquity. Dear to the mass, Known by the knoll, Next to the robin In every human soul my anirit and to Work. -Emlly Dickinson Henry Van Dyke tve my During this period the lower side of the f.rh has trgrm to whiten like the belly of an or-ihmry ttsh, belly of an ordmary nah. Scientifically It in not morely the eye that v, moving from one side to am other, but everything (-nnnemd with the an, the optic n-ervu. the eyelid, nll the muscle" and all the vnrtilageu. as well as all Hue large and small nerves. Postmortem on the fioumier shows that his internals are making headway in getting where they belong and are slowly, that is from century to century, getting a little nearer the place where they belong, under the spine instead of alongside it. After the basinning of the trip the whole eye has reached its permanent site after a lapse of never more than ten days; nomcximes the trip requires only four ur tive days and then the two eyes are. on one side and very close to each other. One wonders when the great com. posers ever got tirnrr to play. when one looks at their enormous uniput. Yet several of them were very fond of games of various kinds. Mozart, for instance, was abnormally fond of bil, liards. as indeed is l’arierewski. Mozart often amused his friends while play. ing billiards. by humming over melo- dies. Once after he had spent In even- ing thus he finally went to the piano with the exclamation. "Here it is, now. Listen!" and he played his beautiful Quintette trom the first act ot “Th. Magic Flute." He had been compo.. ing it during his game. Hitt rapid evolution has not yet reached the stage where he can get his stomach lnd such things where they belong, and he has to carry them along up near his throat and almost where they would be it he were on ur- dinery fish. Bo there you have a cue of evolu- tion from an ordinary ttrsh to an extra- ordinary tiah. all in fewer than two weeks. Not a. good evolution-but In the ages to come it will be better--- but at present the change is somewhat satisfactory to the fish. which has made it possible that he may live with- out so very much labor and without taking too my chances ot being in. Jured. The two dyes on one side do not look very wdl. Perhaps the ttounder can see ewrythlng he wishes to see. hut his new are by no means a beauti- ful sight. His interior arrangements gre also sort of mired. Pracilcally every other creature in the world has his interior apparatus right side tut, but not so the fiuunder. Dr. Alu- Pr"rrrtromt Ivarious ransom. RN draw Prominent Toronto surg'on. who was large-2y from abroad. elected a vice president of the Ameri-' The statistics of yearly can Surgical Association at the runual but a faint picture of the convention in Detroit. .which wheat has impeik "T-r-i-r.,-..- ,teriul progress of Caro Minimum at Play. IWestern Canada {malty t' Ono wonders when the great corsHaith of the land-lot v, Every musk! worker should adopt I sport of some kind. Commander Soun- and Josef Lhavinne so in for trop- shooting. Brahms ls known to have been fond of cards. Kullak. it is uld. used to like to box. Von“ mark a hob. by of farming. Paper on be made from practically anything that can be pounded into puip. A man, once said Sir William Temple, has four choices: to exercise much, to be very temperate, to take phyrie, or to be sick. one Yet of tor I ott-.--Grmu, ngriculturn} ", 't rh of Canal: " the end of 1925 Ar., 47,. 832,942,000, an inereutte of S3e 2-HT».- 000 over 1924, acchding to m. on. _ mate recently issued by the (‘unud .tl Government Bureau of Statistics. l he total micultunl revenue of the Do, minion Int year was $1,'7i)rs'Gc7.u0o, m increase of 8264.890.000 (Her tho 5 previous yen. Br provinms the rev. Renae from agricuiture last year was: (Ontario, $477,159,000; fhaskatvhrwan, 1t4t6,o2i,ooo., Quebem $282,739.04): I Alberta, $245,665,000; Mynit I a, "i42,046,000; British Colvrtthiu. Cc'.- 44-l.000: New Brunswick, $393, r“. than: INova Stalin, 839,120,000: Prime Phi- l, ward Island, $23,869,000. lusions respecting it, tltr-later tility were def'mite',s ”wry popu.Utiort and rni‘wny more rapidly than they hm! fore invaded a new country period 1901-1921 tho tisrvi braced by the present pm: Alberta und Batrktttehmwan eight-fold in population. :m: cupied farm lands by over l 000,000 new. It In ”well-nova axiom at an“ advertising that the appeal to "desttNr" to tnAnitety more elfeottve than the up. pul to "ttmic" - The army drlm rc- 1mrd by a commonlychnred mutual not Mr a great mun tantalum: het. ter than an army of sullen cmuwripln The wanna" ot the cause " forest protection in (‘anadn is not that men and women are ignorant of the oath-rt- of forest ttreq ln national lmpuverlalr meat. but that they tttil lo comprehend their personal partnership. th cans of logic, in the sense of cold mutant-n and patriotic ”meals, will at-t-uulplkh something with the xuwlunx and thoughtful reader, but arp liable to leave untouched the mam of people who have Absorbed through pun-m ttone a not ot plausible mlm‘nmmpllona Ind prejudice. exceedingly mull-uh to disturb. To win mu 1 diam; now an grave“. feature Among Canad stands first. N duet, whethvr ol mineral or mam ed such vitaiirii, economic life n years. Wtwul h:.:: " L It erful factor in awn-min nnd capitll to the Um ini ine virgin tireas Lnut r tl widening the numb-1 t manufacturing. Wing a dustrios. in buiiding up and value of export tr creating the pdrehasitur ( sary to finance Panada' ports of textiles, iron and coal sud other essential: various muons. are dun life. under stuff his ml will not run pensive and al bombard: of Canada a few dun Forest and 0 In the same report the nvrrlgl yield of wheat per acre in Curwn'a fm the'ten year: 1916-2r, is shown b hnve been 15.2 bushels: mm. 51.: bushels; barley, 25 bcheis; rye, 1.3.4 bushels; corn for basking. 46.4 birth els. Wheat in 1925 sold 'Ige price of $1.12 per ' total crop was 416,fU9, from 21,972,732 acres. the est crap on record. Sher "A donut doesn't go u , it and to." mr--"No, but it .0- Mn.” Many times I man't Muir! Much I; owerwise good has to Ire thrown uuay because the collar has run it, jug: li,w. low the neck band. ttit the band km. for I couple of indies above the worn place. then rip the chowder "5d yak. mm tot . tew Inches. Cut out tho worn out. ot the shin; fold our tho nouns till they tit smoothly In the col- lar. tMutt too-tum and a good mm viii result The Schools and thet Future of Forests. Natural Resources Bug resting and Construct their letters to the ity to . rapid and pl: pmem of tntermt in t was. Every child at 1 years of up! is a mu recruit to my forest e. Give him twenty y Agricultural Wealth. Preserving a Man's Shirt wr We'it any so, nng-druv uit 416,849,7é in!!!) the mari bu " h wl wayg Inad n aver- l The bushel: fur ll very "s in TI " 'tt l i KS.', gin: Odd! Mirs WIN Mr: gun lvn " (In tir Brok . ttrx Vb no? the w STORIES or wm KNOWN m-mr in As of Old

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