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Durham Review (1897), 13 Jan 1927, p. 6

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e Canada‘s Future Financially Assured BANKERS® PRESIDENT IS OPTIMISTIC. 1t prog! the yei and th cent. 3 print | in the nets, Lacal and Fmign’ is St ry of C. E. Neill, Presiâ€" c nt Canudhn B“*m Assoctation. crops a the far 192; mis imor this pro @no for the now the retw tinug to &lL ow short! y Since electr prelated . to bo C that auch great in increasing ( electric power sl dally klNowatt ho 1s close to 20 1« 1925. Constructi metallurgicul pla «t Aryiida, in th M With a fow excoptions, knifoandâ€" fork sandwiches are served hot and wre more substantial than those made are more substantial than those mads for tea and other afternoon affairs. Each sandwich is an average "uncheon or supper portion, and by varying the fiXings, they can be served all the year round. To make, trim, erusts from bread 'Hehioancrtwodayso}d,fiten diiee â€" tThe erust is not wasted, but dried and rolled for crumbs.) A smeall amount of butter is then creamed and softenied for casy spreading, and matching slices of bread are spread ready for the flings. The {oLowing recipes are for homecooked fi with a few straight from the ¢ emorgencies. The sandwiches th served with sauces require pate encugh to hold the sauce nicely. nish attractively, for dainty ser wavays appetizing. For sausageâ€"andâ€"apple Nling and slice three tart apples, rol cores. Â¥Fry in butter, dusting pepper, aailt and a Kite sugar the meat out of sausage sking, and shape it into flat cakes. L wiices of fried apc on a Slce of and a cake of sansage on top The y Knifeâ€"andâ€"Fork Sandwiches. |4"d © â€":sed and Profitable Busiâ€" meste. o s 0 ts bread and garnish with radishes, a seaifion and parsley or watercress, of thimly aliced pickle. Liver and currantâ€"jeiy filling re his clock for 20 years, it about oce year ago. * Hamiiton. â€"A report from Beriin, %â€"L of a clock in a large railâ€" way â€"terminal there which â€" showed simultaneously the time in a dozen different countries of the world caused no wonderment to John Duncan, 250 Prospect Street, this city. He has a clock, made by his own hands, which shows simultancously the time in 26 different centres of the world. i MARE MCbSENEr ic CC 10 CLOCK MADE IN HAMILTON SEOWS . TIME IN 26 DIFFERENT COUNTRES Healthy State of Industry Mr. t bank statements are DegIn« chiect the Increased prosperity is. Porhaps the outstanding is the substantlal increase in bank loans, indicating the volume of business. The Sepâ€" consolidated ‘bank statement increass of $41,566,000 in such rer the figures for the previous Huge Power Developments t we ut $4 CY 1y & D;;.Q;';Qrked off and on. at Â¥ ES 2. 79. Qu # f1 Qu ob Cre is another indication of wsperity of the country. ve months erding Sept. and 1926, the total value foreign trade amounted 00, $2,023,025,000, and $2,â€" This incease is at the $200,000,008"per year. bot Roy a pound calf‘s liver (wash se in total deposits. wth in the volume of another indication of erity of the country. months erding Sept. i 1926, the total value nle» trade amounted Minsral Outlook with the other s ce se\ hi oi deci 20 years, and completed year ago. The clock is Trame 14 inches square. » Lake St. J s« in Northern Onâ€" give promise that iis source will conâ€" Tho new smelter will be in operation cun try da. manufacturing and ter of satisfaction for the prevI0U$ irict, and it is expected that the cfp!â€" also shows &N ;;1 expenditure in this plant will exâ€" total deposits. cool $100,000,000 before the projected r tho volume Cf qevelopment is completed. The large or indication Of yoiume of water power which is availâ€" of the country. able in Ontario and Quebec promises hss ending SeDt to make Canada one of the worldis , the total value jayling countries in the manufacture trade amounted of alectroâ€"chemical products. It is exâ€" ,025,000, and $25 pected that investment in the instailaâ€" ease is at th¢ ;;,n of new turbines wil be made at 008"per YeAt. _ im» rate oft not less than‘ $60,000,000 f Industry. per year for some years to come. ant bramches of Foreign Capital Attracted. cen increasing!y _ The fact that there is prosperity in year. Pig i?CD practically all lines of Canadian inâ€" t ten months © qustry, including agriculture, mining, Bank 3 nOW Ud nai An l n monis ut. incre «lian mineral ;.$00,000, and ar 3 haing made . increas©, forestry and fishing, indicates that the | was 35 D°" present growth is sound, and this is| «ar. New# attracting e attention of financiers| ad of that in all pafts of the world, "In recent years investors from the United States . st as IAN8® haye become keenly interested in najority Of Canadian resources, and they are now ir in & T© investing about $200,000,000 a year in , . than n Canada. In the past few months there is crop P hkas been a marked increase in the inâ€". e to ACAIN terest which investors from Great Briâ€" z powor. In iain are taking in this market, and s for f@rM thore have been substantially more iwher th&@n inquiries from abroad covering Canaâ€" w products, dian conmditions. Such facts indicate hich makes that the financiers in theso countries as largely are fully alive to the wealth~of Canaâ€" * | dian resources, and that they are proâ€" brapmraky ‘paring to take advantage of new opâ€" on top of the _ c at Canada‘s TORONTO or way hi disâ€" can fo that ar !, SQasol Lay tw OV 0 Ns W yA The reproduction above shows & slavery coin minted in 1838 which h" one of three known to exist. It is the property of a Toronto man. * rlin, The names of UNG. YALIUMG® EZTOIGTC raj}. | shown on the clock areâ€"stationary and e d‘do not revolve with the outside disc.l |Hence, these names are nevet npoido‘ 02€N | down. One half of the disc.is white used| and the other Lalf black, to signify| 250 night and day. The disc .makes one | as a revolution every 24 hours. ‘ hich| Among the 26 centres or countries n 26 whose time is shown by the clock are: . | Rio de Janiero, Iceland, Lisbon, New n. at ; Zealand, Mebourne, Tokio, Pekin, leted Rome, London, India, and cther p.aces. « is | The clock requires winding every four portunities as they occur. It shouwld not be forgotten, however, that there is no real lack of capital in Canada, and there are encouraging signs‘ that Canadians are awake to the opportuntâ€" ties which surround them. It is not that we deprecate foreign investment | in this country; on the contrary, we. are glad to have aid from every source in developing the latent wealth of the country.â€" Those who live in Canada, howover, should be most famillar with our fRtdeveloped resources ,and should h+ most ready to take advantage of this new period of growth. As wo conâ€" template the fu?m of the country, wt# must realize thit it is our duty, as well as being to our advantage, to profit by the prosperity around us and the oxpansion which lies just ahead, by doing our full share in this task of building a great industrial nation. and cook until temder, then chop fine). Add one tablespoonful butter, sat and pappor to taste, and one teaspoonfu‘ sugar. â€" Butter the bread alices slightly and spread each slice with currant iwlly, then the liver filing. Garnish with watercress. Creamedâ€"egg filing wil please To make, cook until hard enough fresh: epes to allow two to each sandwich.: Butter bna.d. slice the eggs and arâ€" ramnzo neat‘y, dusting with pepper and salt, then put on the top slices. Have ready a rich cream sauce, or a cheese sauce, and turn it over the sandâ€" wiches. Garnish with a litte parsiey ‘a\x‘xd thin slices of broiled bacon. The checse sauce is simply cream sauce with a tablespoonful of grated cheese added at the last moment. f A Pretty Chemical Experiment. I‘ut a piece of beetâ€"root into a glass. Add a little limeâ€"water, and the piece will bocome white. Into this colorless mixture dip a plece of white cloth, dry rapiddby, and behold! the cloth will be dyed red. Parthenon Was Church. The Parthenon, built as a temple to Athena at Athens, was used 2s a church carly in the Christian era. A locomotive whistle more musical than the wellâ€"known screeching type is betng tried on a western railroad. * <ak A Rare Coln. Musical Locomotive of the variotus countries Glace Bay, N.S.â€"A new colliery reâ€" cord was made on the 14th of Dec., ‘when the Dominion Coal Co. pits proâ€" < duced 19,700 tons. The day‘s producâ€" tion would have been well over 20,000 tons but for a collision between two ®Felectric locomotives, smashing up fifty boxes but leaving no casualties. A .1"206 HPâ€"' from the Outardes River. The lowest series of waterfalls has been developed and q‘.ectricity will now be available for the model town which is being built by the Ontario Paper Co. and which is known as Taschereau. +. Toronto, Ont,â€"A mineral discovery of some importance is reported in Northern Ontario by R. S. Potter, of Matheson, to the Provincial Governâ€" ment. â€" The find is declared to be copperâ€"zincâ€"lead ore and may be a continuation of the rich copper be‘t in Quebec Province. - 22 wor _ Ny cics isAÂ¥ e S Winnipeg, â€" Man.â€"The Provincial Government duplicated_the prize won Reflectors for Vehicles Given to Quebec Farmers has "First Cast Out the Beamâ€"" If we improve ourselves we improve others by our example. * Emperor Hirohito and Empress Nagako, larged to 60 pages tdl:nsuona.l circulatic precial rreeses and sterotypes by J. R« of ago, had hai no previous experience |1 a wide range and enables blind people to From Coast to Coast lntroiu« wORLD‘s FIRST MAGAZINE 1 by its blind invgntm' into Los Ange! id farmers !nl Quebec.â€"Plans are being prepared are soon going for the erection of a building in Batâ€" rifts from the tlefields Park to serve as the reposiâ€" he form of reâ€" tory of the archives of the province fixed fore and and also as a Provincial Museum. Wilâ€" ed by animal frid Lacroix is the architect, and the is Department| plans will be submitted to the Proâ€" hese reflectors| vincial Goyernment for approval in y are so adaptâ€" the near future. It is estimated that s come within| the cost would be about half a million they catch the dollars, and, should the plans be acâ€" that the new cepted, work will commence next FIRST MAGAZINE FOR THE BLIND GOES véntor into Los Angeles several months azo, it h: circulation, "The Braile Mirror" became posih‘s by J. Robert Atkinson, its publisher. Atkin:on, »rience in the mechanical line when he began hi by sixteen successful Manitoba butterâ€" makers at the Royal Winter Show, Toronto, by presenting them each with a cheque of a similar amount. Maniâ€" toba in 1926 won twice as many prizes as were won by any other province of the Dominion. Regina, Sask.â€"Thousands of dressâ€", ed turkeys and chickens left Saskatâ€" chewan for the eastern provinces and the United States to gupply the Christmas needs. The shipments were made mostly out of Regina and Sasâ€" katoon, and were consigred to New York, Chicago, Boston, Toronto, Monâ€" treal, Hamilton and other points. ‘ope; 8 to the Orient; 3 to Australia, New Zealand, Hawaii and Fiji; 7 to \the Atlantic coast of Canada and the \United States; 9 to Central and South | Amfbrica and the West Indies, and 3 Calgary, Alts.â€"R. M. Bacon, of Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta, who came from Har‘an, Iowa, eleven years ago, and took up a quarter section of land in his present district, now owns 800 acres." Since ho began in Alberta his wheat crop has averaged 40 to LO.bushe!s to the acre and his oats 80 his WBeAt Crop® N&B ANVEFERg®N TsbA ie AadQrats C1 TT LO.bushe!s to the acre and his oats 80 |the various children‘s Shelters of the to 100 bushe‘s. 'province. I hear frequently from my Vancouver, B.C.â€"Fortyâ€"three reguâ€" | representatives _ of the substantial lar steamship lines operate out of the| gifts made and the encouragement Port of Vancouver, according to tbe that naturally follows from this genâ€" annual report of the Dept. of Maring@ erous remembrance. and Fisheries. Thirtsen ply to Eul'-'I If 1 might make a suggestion it 1 wo! & F 4+ 0 2o o o 9 24 04 smend iante onl to California. Quebec Plans Museum * on Battiefields Park A printer‘s problem: To eliminate the "punc‘‘ from ordinary punctuation. Is there a more harrowing job than that of the farmer? â€" the new rulers of Japan. the Vt_nednn'lca‘l Hine when he began his isvention. . read advertisements for the first time in their Mves. Oneâ€"half century ago both Canada and the United States were maincy agricultural and their respective popuâ€" lations bore a very similar ratio to their respective areas of improved land. For every thousand acres of improved land Canada had 212 perâ€" sons and the United States 205 perâ€" sons. The Dominion then, as now, possessed a much smaller sett‘ed area, but apparently was, if anything, slightly the more intensive‘y deve‘opâ€" ‘ed country of the two. For & given area of improved land Canada had more popuhtionâ€"â€"whether engaged in agriculture or in manufacturing, minâ€" ing, lumbering, fishing, trade and other pursuits. u e Saim 12(4 0.+ mped ie d amar it "Foâ€"day Tht / BWOE No 3 un tha bnvecercuad © i different. Both countries have in the* improved agricu‘tural land, the Doâ€" meantime enjoyed great agricwtural| minion is toâ€"day less intensively deâ€" and great industrial growth, but their| veloped than it was fifty or sixty relative intensity of deve‘opment has | years ago. been entirey changdd. â€"The latest xje-! It is a notable fact that if the Doâ€" turns show that Canada, instead ot;mlnion were toâ€"day as highly or inâ€"| having more persons in proportion to ; tensive‘y developed as it was over its the area of improved land, has now smaller area of settement of fifty ot much more than half as many as‘ years, ago, its present population the United States. In the last fiftylwould stand at more than 15,000 NOD years the number of the country‘s inâ€"| instead of rather less than 10,000,000. lhabitnnts per thousand acres of im-l The rapid expansion of scttlement proved land has increased in the Unâ€"| over vast prairie regions, where |ited States, but in Canada has deâ€"| farming is featured by the use of clined by over 40 per cent. | every Jaborâ€"saviag implement and by i _ ‘The full exp.anation of this change a high screage of working land per involves many {factors but hinges mian, has reduced to an vnprecedentâ€" mainly on the fact that during the edly low figure the number of persons last generation the major share of in Canada per thousand acres or other American growth has been along| unit of improved land. ‘manufacturing. mining and other ln-‘l According to the Resources Service tensive lines, while Canadian growth, the Dominion now appears to be exâ€" fentured by the immense spréeading coptiona‘lly ripe for a long upward out of Western settlement, has been trend in intermsity of development. \ more largely extensive,. | This present position in regard to in | _ This, trend of Canadian developâ€" tensity of development is one of the ‘ment has probab‘y approached its exâ€" most significant points in the whole . treme. _ For fifty years the ratio of ; range of factors shaping Canada‘s | population to the extent of improved outlook, and is perhaps the most sugâ€" land has been falling almost continuâ€" gestive 6/ all in affording some idea o ously.‘ It has already falléen much the possibilities of future Canadiar lower than it ever dropped in the growth. 4 The great need just now is for: goodâ€"hearted people throughout the province to open their hearts and hkomes to the home‘ess child. The folâ€" lowing letter, sent by Mr. Kelso, Director of Child Welfare Work, to L. Putnam, Supt. of Women‘s Instiâ€" tutes, should be taken up by all interâ€" ested in real phiianthropy: Dear Mr. Putnam,â€"I ¢annot «neak too highly of the splendid assistance given by the members of the Women‘s Institutes in equipping and supporting P â€" aicu t + P\ P If I might make a suggestion !L, would be this: that. presidents and ‘ secretaries of the local Institutes act as homeâ€"finders, for however good the she‘ter may be, it is only a shelter, and our earnest desire is to see every child firm‘y established in some good: family. At the present time we have nearly two hundred children waiting for someone to claim them, and it seems too,bad they should have to reâ€" main in storage for a year or two with so many comfortable homes in our province that might be gladdened |by their presence. Our motto isâ€"â€" |\Every child a real home; g child in ‘every home. Yours sincerely, J. J. | Kelso. The children were playing a ainging game in which each was to sing that he some little bird that no one else would think of. Little Charles thought he had a good one, and when It came his turn he sang: When a man aims at nothing he selâ€" dom misses his target. Homes Urgently Needed. FIFTY YEARS‘ PROGRESS IN CANADA s To PRESS o5 Droven £0 "I ma little scarecrow I‘m a little scarecrow!" ?.l-;t make a suggestion it this: that presidents and of the local Institutes act a result of, the ken with blindms ention. The ma Prize Winner. se i CCC y ago both Canada United States. The number of perâ€"‘ States were maimy sons in Canada, per thousand acres heir respective popuâ€" of improved land, has declined from ry similar ratio to 212 in 1871 to 124 in 1921, the year of areas of improved latest returns. The similar trend in thousand acres of the United States was arrested at the anada had 212 perâ€"; low point of 176 and, since about 1890, ited States 205 perâ€" the tendency there has been sharply nion then, as now, upward as a result of great intensive smaller setted area, development in the form of manufacâ€" was, if anything,| turing, mining ang other industrial intensive‘y deve‘opâ€"| pursuits. > two. For a given| The turningâ€"point for Canada canâ€" 4 land Canada had|not be far away. The country has onâ€" _whether engaged in | joyed a remarkab‘e renewal of extenâ€" manufacturing, minâ€" | sive growth during the last two or fishing, trade and|three decades with the resu‘t that, !judzed on the basis of number of Wuls is etrikingly|nepu‘ation in proportion to extent of popular that it is enâ€" of the invention of blinaness at 35 years The magazine covers \Polandâ€"The Key According to the Reso the Dominion now appe ceptionally ripe for a trend in intersity of This present position in This present position in re: tensity of development is « most significant points in range of factors shaping outlook, and is perhaps the gestive 6‘ all in affording sc the possibflities of future Mak OBR OE EitE REC CC ere c 0 other countries in Europe would of; necessity become involved, and whert| i the disturbance would end, or how it | would end, no one famiiar with the| | deep flowing currents of international 'po!lucs toâ€"day would dare predict. On | |\the eastern boundary of Western| Europe a united and prosperous Pu~| land presents a stailwart front toward the advance of communism. Divided and weak, her territory would become the woestern boundary of Eastern Europe under the influence of subâ€" |versive doctrines. It is to the moral, | political and material interests of the H'who'.c world that Poland should be | sufficiently successful in the carrying | out of her plans for reconsiruction to | prevent disturbances from within and | to maintain her position in the interâ€" "Poland is the key of the European edlfre," said Napvicon I. over a hunâ€" dred years ago, ana J. D. Wheipley, writing in Current History, reaches N O P contacten ~ ie «avs: "The writing in Current History, reaches the same conclusion. He says: "The foreign relations of Polard are of more than passing interest and conâ€" sern to other nations, for if they are good, the general pesce and security of Kurope are practically assured. If Poland should engage in a way, either of an offensive or defensive character, other countries in Europe would of ‘ 2 2 x .ds national councile." London Building Sites Exceed New York Value excess of ;;liuésfio’frusfn\flné New York adian agricu‘ture, property, eccording to reports of reâ€" emtama ie n en cent Fifth Avoenue sales. Since 1923 Mmy langulges Used the estimated gross value of real R : estate in the city "proper" has In-‘ _mf“l'e Ho‘y C“y creased. by about £10,000,000. In| ‘London â€"â€"Tel Pilim . streets near the Bank of Engiand and | sulem ::;1 :;'e})::n&;:‘ :::":“,e'::r:‘n the Stock Exchange, office propPerty| elevan languages and the exchanges realizes toâ€"day from £70 to £100 8| w; A i with th | will put them through. square oo_t' as compared wi t “‘! Writing in the monthly Teegraph average price of £60 a year ago. . I"‘lnnd Telephone Journa‘, L. M. Smith the Bond Street section of the fashionâ€" | superintendent of twlephones in Pal able retail district property VAIUCS qgine eays: "Palestine has, in additio: average in the neighborhood of %O!to t'he three official ‘.;mm’ngesâ€":}:;-v;l ‘;"3““(: f“:t‘tb”t if" ‘m‘;'yf"thb“ .‘.’:.n’;lish. Hebrew â€" and Arableâ€"several °' 2.0ndon 8A ef © ‘f"‘ or t“";b"g:o(her languages in common use, such z‘l‘(“'pom ": ;::ty common at aby |as French, German, Spanish, Greek, | a squar * 1!tnlian, Russian, Armonian and Ruâ€" ¢ 5 Am*â€"sgan ue ( manian. s is ©mhi s irmidab‘ 9 , After Five Years‘ Silence. . | cunoy m ano of ul o. Ingusge: oo After being doet and Aumitor Ive o6 served ithout muck iroub s in is ';mn as the resalt of a boxing .CM"" exchange ‘,hnre”:vr"“ i ';d"“' a London man has rm"d;tho talephonists speaks ai :\'I‘C; \"‘.'N.\ ;?oth bearing and speech in an nx;u-‘w we‘l aud. <an Aeal. with ‘ing manper. _ _ * o bor mumnare uh cm | ME MRRMEDL ol ns (yy (p oi zen SimPle demands fer nombers passod London. â€"Building #ites in prinélâ€" pal London business quarters tend to fetch steadily rising prices ;slighfly in Whilet in hospital for the treatment of a deepyâ€"embedded splinter in his finger, it was found necessary to give him an anaesthetic. . On regaining ccsciousress, the patient exclaimed to anâ€"attendent who touched him that he was "All right." In some mysterious manmer eilher the '.noec(hoflc or‘ the shock of the operation had restored both epeech and hearing. If we attend. a singing in the sky; But feel no fear, Knowing that God is always nigh, And none pass by, Excent His sons, who cannot bring Tidings of evil, since they sing. Colors Birds Don‘t See. It is reported that birds are blind to blues and violets. Nation of Europe Symphony. â€"Holen Hubt Jackson. Resources Servic®, °_ 3/ senadn appears to be exâ€"| "W""> he produ t aA !ong “pwardgof lgflcultural of deve‘.opment.i“"m any farme n in regard to inâ€"| A CHALLEN ent is one of the What about t ints in the whole In 1870 we had shaping Canada‘s lion people eng aps the most sugâ€", with an arnual rding some idea of flion gollars. Ir future Canadian population ofâ€"a We hear, | Proud Position of Canadian Canadian farmers TCUO!!" ")".~ time to time, a great deal of gratuiâ€" tous advice from their city cousins on the virtue of studying efficiency in their caling and discarding . oldâ€" fashioned methods. Somotimes there is a veiled hint to the efect that ke is spending too much time in his automobile and otherwise. neglecting his farm. Undoubted‘y, some farmers are extravagant and probably are not working as hard as they shou‘d and their ppor financial returns can genâ€" erally be attributed to neglect of their business. _At any rate, the implication is, that the Canadian farmer is not "tending his Initting" as close‘y as his c‘ty brother, who is represented as the indefatiguable "goâ€"getter," who counts that day lost upon which he is unab‘e to add one more touch to the perfecfion of his business or inâ€" dustrial machine. THE U, 8. REOORD, Secretary Jardine, of the of Agriculture, said recent: ing the past fifty years the persons engaged in farming in country has increased cighty cent. while the output of farm ks en 0 C uV 34 persons engaged in farming in that country has increased cighty per cent. while the output of farm proâ€" duse has increased 300 per cont. Notâ€" withstanding all that is said concernâ€" ing the opportunity to improve income by better methods of farming, a conâ€" iemporary south of the line p )ints out that the stubborn fact still remains that the American farmer has inâ€" creased in efficiency, and, what is more, he produces larger quantities a# sovrlenltural products per nerson Canadian farmers more, he produces larger quantities of agricultural products per person than any farmer in the world. A CHALLENGE FROM CANADA. What about the Canadian farmer? In 1870 we had two and a third milâ€" lion people engaged in agricu‘ture, with an annual production of 242 milâ€" tion gollars. In 1925 we had a rural popu‘ation of about 4,700,000 with a production of 1,458 mil‘ion dollars, \and that was a low crop year. Our lo nunces a+ mnuadnition in‘ 55 vears is In 1870 we had two and & lion people engaged in . with an annual production lion golars. In 1925 we 1 popu‘ation of about 4,7200, production of 1,458 mil and that was a low crop increase of produwition in 600 per cent., with an rural popu‘ation of sppro® per cent. Our system of is almost precisely the san Unjted States with value tinm nar man enormously productic and that increase 600 per rural poj per cont There is no urban indusiry vhat can boast of any such spectacular increase in per capita output, as far as 1 am aware. The plain fact is, that the Cenadian farmer cvidently stands at it,he very top of world egriculture in point of efficiency, and, while we are lon the subject, I might further point ‘ut that in the sphores of economy of manegement, hours of work and inâ€" tensity of application, he can unquesâ€" tionably teach the urban dweller very | va‘uable lessons indeed. The farmer | appreciates deeply an inteligent inâ€" *terest in his problems by ail and sunâ€" |dry. But he is weary of unintelligent | criticisra. While there is always room for improvement, Canadian agriculâ€" \ture is evidently very efficient. ‘ DOUBLE THE OUPPUT. ‘ Canada is not, however, producing a sufficient vo‘ume of agricultural products for export to sustain and furnish full time employment to our urban population. This is where the economic shoe pinches rather than in .\ the matter of farm inefficiency. In *otl\er words, we want more farmersa .‘ rather than better fearmeors. It will tion per man enor the latter on accou The Canadian far beat hollow be found difficult to materially in prove the very bigh standard of Ca» adian agriculture. | An Odd But Simple Puzzie. â€"One of the party suddoniy scks: "Can anybody put ons of b‘s hands in such a position that his othar hand can‘t touch it?" ~Of coums, everyone in the room trise at once, end there is generaily a groet Aeal of fun at the «umssy attempts. The position is to clasp an clbow withone of the hanis. Turkish women are } yers and doctors, The dispute over the control of Tangier in Morocco finds Spain and Italy on one side and France and Engâ€" land on the other, ~Musso.ini picturâ€" esque‘y calls it another revolt of the proletariat against the middleâ€"cassos â€"Spain and Italy are the proletarianse among the nations, France and Engâ€" land the prosperous and wealthy bour gecsie, HE PARAMOUNT even the gross rura was aA .0. £{ product farmer AY 0d PoS!T d U.S. Dept. v that durâ€" number of oming .awâ€" hat can Al {res 100 "reo n It has bece & true coma euspicion . an t the *X the If U whts that (} B ittiett W Ho W t

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