The Christian name of Isabel is a *~"**" "Dll'l i m not at all ambitiouns." corruption of Elizabeth. It was first C en t mes corrupted as a compiment to Queen _ When washing flannels, never let Elizabeth, who was called Rlizabela. them lie long in the water. They Afterwards the first sylable was shou d be washed and hung out to dry dropped. tas quick.y as possible. It is homes of this description tha: many of our wayward and homeless young people require, and. when parâ€" ents fail we should make every posâ€" alible effort to find people who will recognize this opportunity to help in the training of a boy or girl who otherwis» might be sent off in disgrace to ‘a puablic institution. years upwords, writes J. J. Kelso. It happens frequentiy that boys and giris are sent to Reformatories simply for the lack of firm discipline in their own homes. Recently an urgent reâ€" quest was made to have a young girl sent to a Reform School owing to horl wilful conduct. The matter was deâ€" layed until at length a home wnl found for her with people spoken of as being "frm and exacting but'jn-t' in their demands and ready to show appreciation when it is deserved."| The girl was placed with them nndt under their guiding care the necessity for commitment to a Reformatory has | apparently disappeared. | Not all parents or guardians are able to manage or control a vigorous, selfâ€"willed child from nine or ten years upwords, writes J. J. Keiso. It Among the trees or shrubs from which bark is gathered for medicinal purposes are the cascara tree, slippery e‘m, witch haze‘, wi‘d black cherry or rum cherry, prickly ash or toothache tree, burning bush or wahoo. Then there is the fruit of the juniper and Mexican tea, the flowers of the hop and the small roots or rhizomes of ferns, couch grass, white helebore and tard, caraway, horebound, peppermint, svearmint, thornapple, and even the dandelion. _ All of these foregoing plants can be cu‘tivated as well as other varieties of medicinal plants such as coriander, dill, fennel, thyme, deadly nightshado or belladonna, garâ€" den chamomile, etc. ] den seal, seneca snakeroot or mountain fAax and wintergreen. Many other plants of medicinal value native to Eurore, but which have escaped from cultivation, now cccur as more or less commeon weeds in Canada, particularly in the eastern provinces. Included in this category are white and black musâ€" CGinseng and mandrake are only two of the many native roots from which medicines having wellâ€"understood efâ€" fects are prepared for modern use in the treatments of the ills of mankind. Among the medicinal plants which grow wild in Canada and for whkh‘ there is a considerable demand is golâ€" wywound and carried home with many religtous ceremonies. When secured 1# beeame a family spirit speaking io â€P if properly consulted, and be n{h. good luck to the house in which it was enshrined. Cure Mankind‘s !!is. wit‘ amay .100 oo 100 _NHd TCRTOOE/trew is so Hittleknown that im land with much superstition by the Chinm.’ clearing operations it is ruthlessly who ascribe to them almost miraculous slaughtered when patches of it might powers. According to an old fancy| be left to yield from time to time the mandrake shrieks when pul)odlpruï¬tabb crops. Prof. John Davidson from the ground. The resemb‘ance of ’ of the University of British Columbia its commonly forked root io the bhuâ€"‘ says that on one lot 140 by 110 feat man body, a ressmblance also shared bY | (oneâ€"third acre) which came under his the ginseng, is probably the ground of | notice, 94 cascara trees were burned. this superstition. The mandrake has The immediate value of the bark on been regarded as an anthrodisize, and‘ these trees he estimated to be worth used in amorous incantations, as a about $80. A piece of waste land in love amulet, ete. C. Elton, in “Originl!cuean treea may be managed to yield‘ of English History," says that the a perpetual crop and new trees may mandrake was found beneath the PGbâ€"| be easily started from seed. Cascara lig gallows and was dragged from the grows both in tree form and as spreadâ€" ground and carried home with many ing shrubs, and harvesting of bark religlous ceremonies. When secured may begin when the trees are eight 14 beeame a family spirit speaking 10| or ten years old. PCV . eeRe? Resathbtlee Te Ap ieA Th i e alirâ€" Kind But Firm Discipline. The gathering of medicinal q the bark and leaves of tree«, do appeal to the average Canadian er perhaps because of lack of 4 edge of the varieties and parts may readily be conwerted into And yet, in many districts, this MEDICINAL PLANTS OF CANADA wh AND JEFFâ€"By Bud Fisher. ay apple or wild of the woods of are regarded helebore and ;l-,,,::v y ki <auing | EAECeC ES t!" hoP | and why ; Wasn‘t Ambiticous. \ _ "How hbigh are we now*"* asked the timid aeroplane passenger. "About four thousand feet," said the pilot. "I baven‘t started to climb yet." "I don‘t know whether 1 mentioned it before we started," quavered the pasâ€" senger, "bu! I‘m not at all ambitious." | â€"Even slag from the steel furnaces 'llas many economic uses, Two of its major uses are as a basis for coment and as a fertilizer. â€" Soil requiring rlime and phosphoric acid are improvâ€" Ied by the addition of crushed or iscreemd Slag and some 15,000,000 barrels of Port‘and cement are being made each year in the United States with slag as an ingredient. In Novaf |Scoti| s‘ag is used in road construcâ€" tion and as railway ballast. Just as the presence of certain base metals in‘! ore used to make the ore undesirable to handle, but now through new proâ€" l cesses of recovery represent values sufficient to provide a profit, 30, too,| some day, the slag may prove a sourcei of additiona! revenue to Cuudiln' steel companies. I Hia not sufficient for the eutnblishmenct'l e un mim" and mystery <arc -|°' a manufacturing industry and .olcompugion words, grown out of the "| Professors J. Davidson and R. y | same anclent root and signifying that I'}Chrk, of the University of British the world without speaks no language h Co:umbia, have beeg makfng «n in"that man can clearly understand, while q vestigation, with financial “.i.t.n“](he world within also is without the *\ granted by "the National Research POW®T to utter its hidden meanings; ‘| Council, to determine whether or not| 894 D#th fade awayâ€"into dim frontiers "|other trees, herbs and plants can be’where mystery sits in voicelessâ€"silence ‘| grown to advantage. The results have| with her fingers on her lips. ; been very encouraging. It has been} Religion, of course, has been man‘s ‘|found that not only the bark of the 8T°@!est adventure in mystery. But ‘|eascara tree but also its wood _| philosbphy has followed close behind, |ses active medicinal propertiesl. The"h"e all the arts have found in it | British Columbia foxglove has beenlthe’r fruitful source and inspiration. | found to be equal or superior in conâ€"! Music, architecture, peetry and paintâ€" "tent of the drug digitalin to that found . ing derive all their glow and rapture | elsewhere, while for the production of ; from the subtle and mysterious forces ;0' the drug stramonium similarly ‘ which move invisibly behind the face | good results have been obtained from‘ * !Pi"&®. beyoad the wreach of serise, ithe thornapple which grows wild in / and work their magic upon the spfrits many parts of British Columbia., The of men. f | 'npotted hemlock was found to contain! H_ul. stranger than all these e‘xplolts! |a higher percentage of alkaloid than'"' imagination and dream and. love | the average found elsewhere. and hope is the way the solid and prac-‘ _ ‘The. investignations commenced in tical adventurers of business and poll-’ tBriti.-uh Columbia might well be carâ€" tics and al the purely physical labors ; \ried on in other parts of Canada. The, * !Hfe r00t themselves deeply in the ‘ Emedicine-man's drug chest must con_fsame world of mystery. How is all | | tinuou:ily have its stock replenished : 2â€5 en‘ch‘amn}ent of_ s\:eavlng and sew-;‘ and why not with medicines made in Canadian factories from homeâ€"grown a perpetual crop and new trees ’,;,:;:' The wonderful thing about man is be easily started from seed. Cascara!‘"@ WAY be builds his life on mystery, grows both in tree form and as spreadâ€" draws his inspirations out of mystery, ing shrubs, and harvesting of bark hopes where he does not know, dreams may begin when the trees are eight| WD®"% be does not see and believes or ten years old. where he cannot prove. Knowledge is The climate of many parts of Brit.! 10 more than an island here and there, ish Columbia, as the Natural Re| YMD !ifts itself a little way above sources Intelligence Service points out,lth° waves while the great ocean of is particularly favorable to the growth | mystery round about laps all the of drug yielding plants, but one drug| 0re® 0f thought. ‘ ; car.oads of t | tree are shipj | ish Columbia : pture the well ; medicine fron | belongs to the erica, and Br | distinction of of the British tion in the Washington are looking further sup dation the British native. Ow It i 3e cads â€"are Uses for i comes from the resi ~ Carloads of Cascara of the Balsam fir. , perhaps, not well kn is of the bark of the e shipped annuaily fr umbia to firms which e well known cascara 1e from it. The cas to the northwest coas and °" ol being the on.y portion jritish Empire in which it is . Owing to its rapid deple the States of Oregon and ton, manufacturing druggists ing to British Columbia for supplies of the bark, but the so little known that in land operations it is ruthlessly British Columbia of being the on‘ly the , not well known bark of the ca | annuaily from firms which man which which manufacâ€" cascara sagrada known cascaga coast of own Canada resinous exuâ€" ga tree of Amâ€" has the portion wn that cascara Brit‘ | Little Eyifily had boen to church for | the first time. On hber return her ‘grandmother asked i‘ she had been a good little girl. "Yes, Grandma," she said. "A man go:k‘ even offere 1 me a plate full of money, I only and I said, ‘No, thank you.‘ " tuies Export shipments of apples from the Okanagan Valley, British Columâ€" bia for the past scason, included the fo..owing: 65 cars to Scandinaviaan countries, 8 cars to China, 29 cars to Germany, 4 cars to Newfound and, 18 cars to South Africa, 42 cars to New Zealand, 55 cars to the United States and 405 cars to Great Britain. In adâ€" dition, 108 cars were shipped to Onâ€" tario and Quebec, which are often conâ€" sidered as export markets. Distance is apparently no handicap when high’ class products are for sale. "f But, stranger than all these e‘xploltu! of imagination and dream and. love‘ and hope is the way the solid and pracâ€" tical adventurers of business and poll-! tics and all the purely physical labors | _ of life root themselves deeply in the same world of mystery. How is ajl! this enchantment of weaving and sewâ€"| ‘ing and dressing and decoration which | | makes all the business in the world to | be accounted for except by some myn-' | terious c‘ements of desire and delight, ‘ [ within which science so far has been * !totally unable to define or even: lol say where they reside or how they go and whence they come? ' And here is the mystéry within the mystery: Man lives far more by what he doesn‘t know than by>â€"what he does know. The known grows stale and commonplace. It is the unknown that lures and beckons. * Music, architecture, peetry and paintâ€" ing derive all their glow and rapture from the subtle and mysterious forces which move invisibly behind the face of things, beyoad the «reach of serise, and work their magic upon the spirits of men. Mute and mum and mystery are companion words, grown out of the:‘ same anclent root and signifying that the world without speaks no Ianguage' that man can clearly understand, whllej the world within also is without the, power to utter its hidden meanings ; | and bgth fade awayâ€"into dim frontiers where mystery sits in voiceless silence | with her fingers on her lips. | ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO In which six Canadian seascouts sailed from Montreal to New adventures and they are seen after arriving at New York. Apple Export. Polite Mystery. [ 2e A tm a a ' 327909 * h eï¬ # A v :t Ne ha ' 9 > juml PA lnps Pmd es ns o m ic NE crvacctue d ie t o s se i l Niieer m son se im â€"* ie ce ie e Y4 | ts & in t Ti h eies Stipe o.A * se . ~....., â€"â€" enc y ‘ t s Ks % sA «e "thh w leiee e ,v_;v;v‘«"‘;:;k._& oo v x Re M x j T "‘ tee Aitim m \w povesd e y%' a \ -\,' e P se lt o . Gaee : e Cc n Ti o ~>F2 | Ne + iWt c > â€" oi *4 % oA u-{-“: ow f 28 L \‘ &t,e.. A e + Tostes~ Bog., o s / w > j . ut 2 w * a ie o ( AZ 4 C T. im BA Jns se e "'. ‘ ¢ % ce : o.raiten w â€" 2v+ mmoint + t i JP P ; en aP m hok cer . F .. & ; § td e s hy t ca f';at;vff in en‘ y D. C A â€"â€" k‘ n oniky f ;,-ch’*‘ /} Iu:""’"","‘j“ } 3 :,\ hor [3 f ‘.. ‘-‘ 53 KE on * "Gd us C f i\ C e n ol d " a T apiy s e C y ) s 4 . flls 0 2t .%. ' ic m o ts M e A »a >A ds .. w 4 { e t M oo stt : â€" HAp d e x % 4 mXE . D * z. %. t a 4 d * â€" . "Wheannt y # t _ â€". smy .. * : * U s P ht Yose.. : Snd \ Py aile > es csy BP To o Pm t |> t s s k > e o 9 i #3x+ "#h i * Fam # bas s-ï¬h‘ f ‘ 2 4e Seigatiegs, * A. cce /s '\},‘ B > l 2 CCCOEEEemmapmemmnemmememmnntetmmmana i anmeseettmmadice sB omly cleanses it, twice as long. , _ It is estimated that less than half of our maple trees are tapped each year. The manufacture of maple proâ€" ducts is one of the most profitable side lines a farmer can develop when one considers the shortness of the season required and the fact that trees may be used as fue! when they pass maâ€" turity. T‘e’ supp‘y of maple prod!cts‘ is much less than the demand and this is a situation that will become increasâ€" | ingly apparent when the peope of other countries learn of the deliclous‘ flavor of maple syrup. | Awo pre on me? | today * en ‘nme [ail ieaves bend and swing,| 1 liked coming to Ascension, there It scemed to me some violet throat | were so many interesting things about Might onen presently and sing, ;'i»t the "blow holes" out of which, far But they were still as birds at night, | inland, the sea water would spout like Each with his head: beneath his wing. ; fountains twenty feet high or so and nb idys htice 5n Y ie mson {break into spray; then the most beaut!â€" P;oï¬table Side Line. [ful "rainbows" you could imagine #ZE908 . gwould form amid the spray, hang in It is estimated that less than half , the air a minute or so, then vanish ; W uvinas esn oun 3 Hpciy: 4 We Beay c s m uo lr.“. Now iris, like a flock of birds, Down to the pool‘s green water fles Sunning small, lovely, curving wings > ‘And radiant, scented dyes. As in a mirror, on the pool The gold and purple lfes. I waited, hoping for a song, I saw the tall leaves bend and swing, It scemed to me some violet throat "Tis thus I see you sailing out of Malta | ._With syour black hull eager for the ' spray. How can it be you‘re Just a dusty ’ model In an antique shop, I saw the other | day ? â€"â€"Anne Robinson, in "The Singing Blue." Before you use a new toothbrush, ak it_ in hot salt water. This rot There‘s a pungent smell of tar upon your rigging And the salt of seven seasâ€"if all were toldâ€" While the air is heavyâ€"sweet above the ~ hatches 4 With the perfume of the spices in the hold. I can hear the stalwart sailors singing chanties As they weigh the dripping anchors at your bow. The ~tropic sun‘s aglara upon your mainsail And the spray 4s flashing up before the prow. "I‘v Y oA x | D TWENTYâ€"SEVEN FoOT BoAT The "Golden Step." but makes it last York. The oldest is 18. They had some thrilling en f The negro custcmer brightened up at this. "Dat‘s more‘n what 1 expected, boss," said he. "An eddication and a pair ob glass>s, all for five shillin‘. T nebber learned to read." "Can you read that bottom line?" "No, suh." "These glasses will fix you so that you can read it," declared the optician confidently. [CTTECUS cwenty feet high or so and Sorrow on the acres, break into spray; then the most beaut!â€" Wind in the thorn, ful "rainbows" you could imugino[ An old man plowing would form amid the spray, hang in Through the frosty morn the air a minute or so, then vanish; the strange rockâ€"formations, and crut-l A }?;:‘:.o:n:‘::e:’:r:';;“ ers fu‘ of dark, motioniess water. . +4 Follow the plow team 4 It was like a trip to the moon.â€"From | ‘The old man drives; "Sam Noble, Able BSeaman," an .5uto-i : 4 biography, sA 2 | Mother turtle would waddle up the | beach, her faithful mate following, scrape a hole in the sand, deposit her "traasureq, cover them up in a little mound, and then make for the water again. . . . The beach would be lined with these eggâ€"mounds, and it was fascinating to watch the little turtle Appoar ~when the sun had hatched him. If you bad the time and the paâ€" tience to wait, or better still the good fortune to be on the spot at the right moment to witness that sight â€"then yo considcred yourself lucky! The moung would seem to enlarge, the sand slip, | and the first layer of eggs come to' light. | A peculiar thing about this island ’ was that the people didn‘t refer to the seasons as Spring, Summer, Autumn land Winter as we do, but as the Egg, the Turtle, the Fish and the Vegeâ€" table seasous. Great flights of Wideâ€" awakes, a bird about the size of a seaâ€" gul, came to lay their eggs in such droves that sometimes they actually hid the sun, while the air was raucous with their cries. They dropped their eggs on a wide plain called Wideawake Fair, which in the season looked like a fleld of snow. . . . Huge marlnetor-‘ toises came in swarms to lay their , eggs. | "Ascension lies in the middle of the Atlantic and is supposed to have taken its name from the suddenness of its arrival on this planet. It was said to have shot up in a night. It was used as a naval depot, and here we came for stores. Ascension Island Turtles. An Education Thrown in io THRECR NT ap 23¢ ane 9 % ‘om expected,‘ to hear t gra &A Husbandâ€""It _ isn‘ I want the neighbors beating you." ickled Jeff‘s Funny Bone His Reason. Witeâ€"â€""I want you to tell me, Harold, why, when 1 start to sing, you always £0o out into the garden. Don‘t you care The OM Crowâ€""You don‘t look like much of a man." The Scarecrowâ€""I‘m not, I‘m just the common or garden variety ." The more important of the places and events selected for commemoraâ€" tion at this year‘s meeting of the Board include, Louisburg, N.S.; the naval battle of the Shannon and ‘ | Chesapeake at Halifax, N.S.; the Yorkâ€" | shire settlement, Chignecto, N.S.; Fort ‘ |Lennox on Heâ€"auxâ€"Noix, near 8t. Johns, ‘|Que.; Fort Three Rivers, at Three [ Rivers, Que.; Fort Frontenac, Kingâ€" ‘|ston, Ont.; the embarkation point of Brock‘s troops to capture Detroit in f 1812, near Sandwich, Ont.; the westâ€" |ern terminus of Sir Alexander Macâ€" |kenzie‘s farthest point west, near Bella! |Coola, B.C.; and the old Hudson‘s Bay . |Company‘s posts of Fort Augustus and‘ |Fort Edmonton, near Edmonton, Alâ€"‘ l'bertu. In addition to the above sites,| it was also decided that the eminent Ipubnc services of the following outâ€" standing personages in Canadian hisâ€", tory should be suitably commemorâ€" ® ated: Nicholas Denys, at Bathurst,‘ N.B.; Joseph Wallet des Barres, at ; Sydney, N.S8.; Sir Howard Douglas, at (Fredericton, N.B.; Bishop Alexander !Mno[)onell, at St. Raphael, Ont.; and , Sir Charles Bagot and Lord Sydenham,‘ at Kingston, Ont. | _ The work of selecling for commemâ€" oration historic sites of national imâ€" portance is steadily growing and as the recommendations are approved the sites are being acquired by the Deâ€" partment of the Interior. Eventually it is boped that every historic site of national importance and interest in the Dominion will be marked to be handed down to future generations and keep green the stirring romance of Canadian history. 1 Canada, held recently reported that 130 s viewed during the ye dition to the several recommended for cor others wer» selected tional importante." T is an honorary body ecognized historians, a« capacity to the Domi: on historic sites matt And troops of starlings A tittleâ€"tat and prim Follow the rooks That follow him., At the Historical Sites Board 9 Winter Field. t it â€"isn‘t that â€" 1 dun’ti ux u_ £ D 1 annual "meeting of the Hisâ€" Classified. to think 1 am E. Coppard A. Cruickshank and the other were: Dr. J. C. New â€" Brunsâ€" , representing A nice thing lt must bet;):,\:alk little hams sitting around getting betâ€" Little Doris had just heard her grandmother speak of curing hams. "Oh, Gnndm_n," she exc:aimed, "what A census of the Buffao herds in the various mational parks of Canada taken on December 81, 1925, shows that in Buffaio ~park, Waeinwright, there were 8,873 buffalo; in Elk Isand park, 446; and in Banff park, 23. __ In proportion to population Cunsd with its 464 goif coursos, bss :n than the United States, so that «. mer visitors from other comntrics n â€" noi. worry about dhaving to miss :i game. The province of Ontario i with 160; Quebec, T6; Alberia, 60; 3 katchewun, 53; Maniioba, 5j : Ifric Columbia, 39; Nova Scsotin 17; Ne Brunswick, 11; Prince Edward isan 8. â€" Beveral new courses will be cof pleted this year. Wifteâ€"â€""Yes, that wo yeers bcl.ind the styles The happiness of life is made : minute fractions; the little soon gotten charities of a kiss, a smil kizd look, a heartfelt compltment the disguise of playtu] ralliery, and countless other infinitesimals of » surable thought and genial fe»!in; Coleridge, The new industry in Saskatchewon should fill a long felt want and bs merely the forerunner of other indus trial enterprises exploiting and ut!liz ing the large and valuable clay reâ€" ‘murco- of the provinco. There is a | constantly growing market not only on | the prairies but throughout Canada | for building material such as Lrick tile, terraâ€"cotta, as well as stoneware and tableware. The existing industry in Canada is totally inadequate to s«up plying domestic requirements and the _substantial import is necessary, With the resources of Saskatchewan, as w»!l as other parts of the Dominion. there Hubbyâ€""He i is wife‘s skirts Not a little of our vaunted sen« ness is really vanity. It occup much space that it is continual!y | jJostled and hurt. } The year recorded an increase in im , ports from $7,158,371 to $7,478,08%4 , and a decline in exports from $543,57: ‘to $220,818. Imports covered a very 'wide range, the outstanding item, be | ing earthenware and chinaware, ac . counting for a value of $4,558,194. in ; exports building brick accounted ?0 |$22,027; _ unmanufactured clay o 11‘8,498; manufactures of clay for $85,â€" j 883; earthenware for $16,878; and por j celain insulators for $88,033. «5 OUNOT parts of the Dominion, th is excellent opportusity for indu&n establishment to meet this noed Prince Edward Island $3,020. T\ lines of manufacture were brick, fir clay, structural tile, drain tile, sow» pipe, and glazed and unglazed pottery in the establishment at Estevan, Sas katchewan, of the International Clay Products, I4d., which is planning on production on & large scale and which anticipates a wide demand for its pro ducts on the prairies and beyond. The company owns extensive clay deposits at Willows and Knollys in Southern Sagkatchewan on the Canadian Pacific Railway, and experiments at the Uni versity have shown these to be equal to the best English and Austrian de posits. The plant bas five kilns an4 is capable of producing 34,000 bricks _at one burning. When the plant is completely organized it is stated tha:t it will be in a position to produce brick of al kinds as well as sanitary ware, hotel ware, electric porcelain, terra cotta, floor and wall tile, and clay vosâ€" sels of various kinds. Imports and Exports. The total yvalue of clay products proâ€" duced in Canada in 1925 from domescic raw materials was $9,503,575, an in crease of 3.1 per cent. over the 1924 total of $9,215,077. To this total On tario contributed $5,164,845; Quehb«. $2,424,923; Alberta $626,598; Brivish Columbia $502,790; Nova Scotrta $422, 690; Manitoba $176,194; Saskaichowan $113,841; New Brunswick $68.774; a id lines ap ment in eers for past few sive wor to In the ambitions towards industrial development which Saskatchewan has shown in the years since the ond of the war a considerable"shareâ€"of attenâ€" tion has come to be devoted to one of the province‘s greatest potential reâ€" sourcesâ€"Its clay, It was beliered that the nature, extent and the conâ€" venience to transportation of these de posits pustified aspirations towards a position of some moment in the ceraâ€" mic industry. _ Accordingly private prospecting was augmented by the ad dition of a Department of Ceramies st few years a great deal ve work has been accom; Fruits of such efforts are the establishment at Es the Happiness of Lif:. industry. _ Accordingly private ecting was augmented by the ad i of a Department of Ceramics e provincial university and an exâ€" in both practical and theoretical appointed to foster its develop in all ways and prepare engin in all ways and prepare for the future industry. Behind the Styles. "He is always hiding Golf in Canada In accomplished . potential reâ€" was . beliered and the conâ€" on of these de ons towards a it in the ceraâ€" ingly private ‘are engin ‘y. In the of progres evidenced com It is inter great signii by the pres compil June 1 and c« The â€" great could have b depressing | a years has ho ing fow of in United â€" Stat« There is prol that g ing in 1925 ~ $138,0( amout c $92,000 ; municipa ©orporation $107,925 $148,850,000 _ was L6 against $139,% the Republic‘s purc $76,600,000 in Gove ©00,000 in municipe $104,004 600 ,000 with $24 £60,600 i total is securities in the Un Republic $10,000, 00( Pasteur Stamp Wanted by League of Na At a time when every is gences an upngrade tendeo dian affairs and attention rected from many sources Dominion for investment the reading of the report dent of the Investment wociation of Canada, an which gives its best end« ford a maximum »f protec who have funds for inves culated to a1gment such «© revivify faith in the futw Imjon. "No euch opportu curred #ince the organiz association ten vears ago cabou the A ian pre pounce fugeos is f mous chen teur is put of the conc the League his death 1 Inv fol bec The and lings inven pricst near ©eovers â€" tentbs © planting and optimistic out sent," states the J every reason to ti look and be than land of so #wreat n During the eording to the municipal fing fected to the 000 in round Da minion Gove minion guar movin in a h Sheâ€""Wh It squeake a Heâ€""Can‘ jron in the & In the Royal library at W Custie are iluminated books s cious that they are kept always lock and key. The Royal library was mair‘y buir b3 Queen Eliz Nothing helps a man so muc} feel that ho is wanted.â€"Bish Ripon. \ Upon the ocear it nightly, like ) Whs [) Increase in U.S uon ten years ag timistic outlook t states the preside reason to take pr ud be thankful w so great promise ng the calendar ; to the report, G< pal financing in to the extent of : he O0( im C divi corp« Planting by Machine Municipal Fina nited Stat« P Beside the Sea ben ef Municipe CANADIAN «04 It Was Inherent d1 1¢€ Ne rni re unt $4 K# vestme nt