_ _ _ .. mee Crem Beneath the loud mours and the cric *° ~C°/" Duriding put up in the orâ€" dinary way, with siding and unpainted 1 l1 last about 20 years, but the same building, painted about every five years, will last about 50 years. In the case of the unpainted building, if the siding is replaced at the end of 20 years, the cost would be about the same as it would have been to paint it about every five years. Th‘s is not the whole story, howâ€" ever, as tWe unpainted building at the end of 20 years will have only about 15 per cent. of of its original value. This makes no allowance for the great advantage of appearance. â€"P.EI Atflahnrb:.“‘ A farm buildin'x put up dinary way, with siding and 1 ‘Il last about 20 years, but building, painted about .e years, will last about 50 : the case of the unpainted b the siding is raninashls i And the Canadian exhibit, a repâ€" resentative of this newspaper was inâ€" formed on a recent visit to Paris, will have a place of honor directly under the Eiffel Tower on the banks of the Seine.â€"Halifax Herald. will seek to indicate the development of «ultural and technical phases of life in the young Dominion." And the Canadian exhibit, a repâ€" resentative of this newspaper was inâ€" formed on a recent visit to Paris, will have # place of honor Atwankiue anlk.. hatinussing tb ts c Pac ts3 2 There is early announcement that Canada will place an exhibit in the great Paris Exposition to be held from May to November next year. The design and extent of the Canaâ€" dian display will be decided by the Exhibition Committee â€"of the Doâ€" minion‘s Department of Trade and Commerce. The Canadian exhibit, it is said, will seek to imdicato the Amucmcl. o Another sign of returring prosperâ€" ity is the number of new and used cars which have been purchased this year. The peak of the sales is May, and, according to a graph prepared by the Dominion Bureau of Statisties, the peak has been raised each year since 1933. For 1936 the total numâ€" ber of new and used motor vehicles financed during May was 41.5 per‘ cent. more than in the same month last year.â€"Hamilton Spectator. Saved by the Paint A farm building put up in Editor of the Bran how well he did wit garden this year. He ner one Sunday, â€" Standard. Amorica."-â€"Sydn;-y Post "The Long Whart" Hundreds of miles nearer to Europe than any other port on the Americar Continent, Sydney offers the only logical location in the Dominign for the landing base and terminal airport of any North Atlantic airways service that is established on sound commerâ€" cial principles. Cape Braton Island is the head of "the lons wharft of Fus ce Pan â€" us o4 _ The Kuminer-i-s-ghd t.l'nt a satisâ€" factory explanation \ns been made in connection with the complaint of a Fredonia, N.Y., man, that he had been sold an island in a lake in Peterborâ€" ough county by an official of the Onâ€" tario Government and that he found when he arrived on the scene that there was no satisfactory access to the property on which be intended to build a summer residence. It turns out that the island wa. not bought from t > Government, but from a priâ€" vate individual who had picked it up at a tax sale and had placed it on the market with a list of other proâ€" pertics advertised in the> United States.»-Peterbough Examiner. How to Identify the Pines The leaves, or needles, of all pine trees grow in clusters and may be readily identified by their length and number. â€"The ~Jack pine has two leaves to a cluster (occuiom.-’!y three, about ene and a quarter inches long; the White pine five leaves, about four inches long;: the Red pine two leaves, five or six inches long; the Pitch pin= three leaves, about three and a half inches long; and the Scotch pine two to a cluster,; about two inches long The cones take two yewxs to mature. â€"Canadian Forest and Outdoors. MB Ti Gtliiiy Up es veanis > s 3 Few members of the medical proâ€" fession, or for that matter any other profession in Canada or even ¢n the entire North American continent, can lay claim to the truly remarkable reâ€" cord just celebrated by Dr. L. N.‘ Bourque, of Moneton, of 60 years‘ continuous and active practice in medicine and surgery. It has been a career of few equals, and throughout the six decades he has rendered sigâ€" nal servicd to the community.â€"From the Moncton Times. L Clearing It Up The Examiner is glad th ar Behind the Wars A" _Editor‘s Dinner oud rumble of war ruâ€" cries of fear of armed sh of arms that is alâ€" VOICE 60 Years of Doctoring the Brand;nâ€"-s did with his THE WORLD AT LARGE pine five leaves, about four ; the Red pine two leaves, inches long; the Pitch pine 8, about three and a half ; and the Scotch pine two CANADA CCC C"% 9OE Irom a priâ€" who had picked it up and had placed it on h a list of other proâ€" sed in the> United mes nearer to Europe ort on the American ey offers the only n the Dominign for and terminal airport: lon Sun boasts h his vegetable had it for dinâ€" St. Catharines Record § To smile is human. In their variâ€" ous ways, our animal friends do | manage somehow to express â€" emoâ€" | tion, but only man can smile, obâ€" serves The Chicago News, The smile of impish wit, the arch smile of the coquette, the timid smile of the bride, the glad smfle|‘ of meeting â€" after absence, _ the friendly ~smile of greeting to the' stranger â€" all these are humanly familiar. Youth has its sparkling smiles of health and gaiety, its smile of pity for the infirmities of age, while age smiles no less pity. ingly upon the innocence of youth, The father takes smiling pride in the prowess of his children. The | baby‘s smile is one of sheer delight, | surprised and interested. And the madonna smile, the tender smile of, the mother, is sacred the world ‘ ; over. Werubtraiictihc B ol _ The decline in novelâ€"bi ported by booksellers as by publishers, has narrc fiction field. Two types sell. First, the highly cated novel by the author lished reputation; second, of action, the thriller, the story.â€"London Observer. Of the hundred most widely read books of the moment,, only oneâ€" third are novels. â€" Fiction is down; facts are up. Facts are the rage â€" nicery dressed, pleasantly narrated, enter-“ taining facts. _ Readers demand them; publishers are tumbling over each other to supply them. The facts for which the bookâ€" buying public are at present eager are alarmingly varied, nor are they all necessarily "hard facts." They may be facts historical, biographiâ€" cal, scientific, archaeological, â€" critiâ€" cal, or simply travellers‘ facts. But they may also be facts philosophiâ€" cal, religious (the fact of a writer‘s faith) or facts political and â€" ecoâ€" nomic (the facts of opinion _ and theory), or sensitive, perceptive | . facts, the acts of the poet. The decline in novelâ€"buying, reâ€" };:ortedkby booksellers _ as well as‘ "Uienee <& Tok ADe td otf the "What is being read?" The answer to that question, obtained by the Observer from 16 publishâ€" ers, shows a remarkable change in public taste. C Ogm n 22227 CCP PWerred â€"Life â€" insurance companies reâ€" port there is little danger of being killed by lightning. Apparently so. Older residents report that lightning is something they used to get quite often when they had rain storms.â€" Oshawa Times. Better Investment â€"A few dollars spent ann keeping well is a far better ment than big doctor‘s and bill.â€"Farmer‘a â€" AAvanaaea ot Blowing Our Own Trumpet For a long time Canadians were too Prone to take the tourist trade for granted, somewhat in the manner af manna that dropped from the heayâ€" ens. Slowly but surely the general public is being educated to the fact that the tourist industry holds first place in Canada. Instead of passiveâ€" ly allowing business to come to ur doors we are now beginning to take an aggressive attitude, advertising OUr Wares and doing awawre inr._}_" ", "C6s »nood spilt in ‘he economic phase, of course, than in the armed, but in some respects it is not less cruel and not less bitter. ready going on is almost inaudible. It is the clash of tariff weapon against tariff weapon, of the everlasting struggle for economic and commercial supremacy. It is, in fact, a phase ‘of war. which never stops; armed interâ€" vention is only a later stage and when that has run its course there is a pause in which the victors divide the economic spoils and while the trade war is gaining new momentum. There is less blood spilt in the economic phase, of course, than in the armed, but in soma Fammaats ts ‘to | ostos 'll.l'nDa!f“ When It Rained Farmer‘s Advocaie e Dride, the glad smite & after absence, the ile of greeting to the _ all these are humanly Youth has its sparkling ealth and gaiety, its ty for the infirmities of age smiles noâ€" less pityâ€" the innocence of youth, roallyâ€"< takes smiling pri'd-e' of his children. p is one of sheer deli. Smiles EMPIRE PRES S J a happy one. For years on and the United States flooded with literature exâ€" of motor caravans from how in the United States n pass through Kingston Ottawa.â€"Kingston Whigâ€" ts spent annually on a far better investâ€" doctor‘s and hospital CANADA THE EMPIRE narrowed _ the types of novel highly _ sophistiâ€" author of estabâ€" on is almost inaudible. It of tariff weapon against on, of the everlasting economic and commercial , the novel e detective TORONTO (2. Wheat shipments were heavier by 115,645 tons, corn, barley and rye also increased but oats decreased 15,629 tons and hay and straw 32,099 tons, due largely to heavy shipments of reâ€" lief fodder last year. M e s m EeE ! _ Forest products decreased . from i638,470 tons to 623,837 tons but other other commodity groups showed inâ€" "creases. Agricultural products increasâ€" ed 136,441 tons or 12.3 per cent., aniâ€" mal products 23,055 tons or 12.6 per cent., mine products 107,804 tons, or seven per cent., and manufacturers and missellaneous 190,076 tons, or 11 per cent., producing a net increase in total freight of 442,743 tons, 8.5 per} cent. in ' oTTaAWA. â€" aA considerable inâ€" Crease was shown in revenue freight loaded at Canadian stations and reâ€" ceived from foreign connections for forwarding by Canadian railways durâ€" ing April at 5,650,198 tons, against 5,207,455 tons in April, 1935, the Doâ€" minion Bureau of Statistics reported recently, April Loadings Higher By Alâ€" most 450,000 Tonsâ€" Statistics Bureau Increase Noted In 1936 Loadings "But the _ records _ shows these fears to have been completely unâ€" founded. No hardshir whatever has been worked on the milk producers in New York or any other state, but on the contrary their situation has been steadily improving since The Canadian _ trade agreement, Wallace said, had proven of advanâ€" tage to the New York State dairy farmers in spite of fears it would let in a flood of competing products. "You _ may remember," he said, "the great amount of fear that was promoted when we made the trade agreement with Canada. For exâ€" ample, it was argued by the fear disâ€" pensers that New York would suffer tremendously because the agreeâ€" ment provided for a reduction in the duties on cheddar cheese and on sn annual quota of 1,500,000 gallons of cream. Forest Products Down Speaking at the Oneida country ’falr. the® Agriculture chief said that farmers had been left facing chaoâ€" tic market conditions due to adverse court decisions. However, he said, Government activities have _ aided the dairy industry by raising prices, and have a‘ssured an improved feed market in spite of the severe drought. Boonville, N. Â¥., â€" Secret lace â€"said recently _ "The ment believes that the courts will ultimately sho creasing willingness to face States problems, Hard Coal Lighter Wallace Says Benefit Felt Where Fears Existed Trade Agreement Has Aided States which left the injured. Three of the twentyâ€"two cars vaa ul ~ ET Secretary _ Wal rails near The Governâ€" the _ Federal show an inâ€" face" United 8 _ "Let us Pray that we have to live in a totally world." "Yes," continued the dentist and I‘ve never whole professional life ; er who, when he laug both rows of teeth al round." "I‘ve watched you every minute," he said breathlessly, "I‘ve never taken my eyes off your face." Mr. Bryan felt a thrill go through him. _ Here was something really worth while, - Later in q watching his hand. Alyâ€"iwo cars of an eastâ€"bo und New York, New J Towners, N.Y., pictured J@ mmed together along ently was held s flow of oratory found himself a man oblivious to audience â€" reJjat Chester French ( Sculptor"‘s Wisa» Once Bryan speech, "Oh!" said th know where it i sermon, and so read it to you." i ue e When the sermon officials of the tow; know where this p what deaths had 1. .\ ~"On account of your neglect of the your wantonness a; the anger of the n voked, and therefo plague come upon is raging in every vin IF C mnemaktnteitit thiecd 2l s ers were not immune from â€" the pirate who took them _ down in shorthand, put them into type, and sold them to other clergymen, Spurâ€" geon, the celebrated preacher tells of a certain parson who delivered a discourse in which occurred this‘ passage : Fortunes were made out of the dramas adapted from Mrs. Henry Wood‘s "East Lynne,‘" says Mr. Paull. Of this popular novel there ’were no less than seventeen â€" verâ€" sions from 1874 to 1908, several running at the same time. _ Mrs. Wood, of course, never received a penny. And to add to the irony of the situation, one adapter actually sued another for infringement â€" of his copyright in the alterations he had made. * The impudence of literary â€" bueâ€" caneers ere the International Copyâ€" right law arrived is amusingly illusâ€" trated by a story about Wordsâ€" worth told by H. M. Paull (in his fascinating book "Literary Ethics"). Wordsworth once received a letter from M. Baudry a French publishâ€" er, asking for a sketch of his life to be prefixed to an edition of his works â€" pirated, of course â€" which Baudry was about to publish. The poet was naturally indignant at this barefaced notice of thievery. But he was also amused at the form Baudry‘s proposal took. ‘"You need not trouble too much about detailed accuracy," wrote the French publisher., "Piquancy is our main object." Even sermons deaths had h;b;ened. ‘‘‘ said the parson, "I do se c Au0e . Pithy Anecdotes Of the Famous Freight Train Leaves when _ William Je was making an imp his attention was dra in the audience who â€" as held spellbound by oratory, Finally, _ imself addressing this ivious to the rest of s Wife"), â€"â€" relates Mr3 the evening the man, s chance, seized Bryan‘s 1 every street." sermon was finished the the township _ came to this plague was and "ns Ol your sins, and of the House of God, ness and your gluttony, ‘ the most High is proâ€" therefore is this great upon you, and eath I pials ooo 4 never before j protlis(calâ€"4 (in "Memories of Wtc n s n y Cmdk is, but it was in my I was obliged to » ere made out of the d from Mrs. Henry Lynne,‘" says Mr. s popular novel there than seventeen verâ€" by famous preachâ€" am _ Jennings an important was drawn to Danlvsvli in my ) apparâ€" by the Bryan is one of the not Te cugols Cc y uen 3 dn ks ; The beans of the Indians were usuâ€" ally of several colours and sizes, The "Pease" mentioned by the early writâ€" |ers were in all prcbability small beans. The bumpkin â€" was grown | through the country as far North as the St. Lawrence, The melon too was grown by the Indians and mentioned by the early French writers, These melons were probably the progenitors of the Montreal muskmelon. The Sunâ€" flower was cultivated for its seeds, which were used to make both bread and broth, while the tobacco: called by the natives "Apooke", is described as being poor and weak as compared to the tobaccos known to the white men. The plant was dried over a fire, or sometimes in the sun, and crumbled n (n evemeaiics s ie 2 Cld various shades, l;u't the most fantastic â€"2°°CG@ oquaw corn~ jg today, white, yellow, red, while others were blue of Yrapiang |ak cce uy e ' The crops raised were corn, beans, pumpkins, squashes, tobacco and sunâ€" flower. Of the four varieties of corn, one of the early kinds was only three or four feet high and bore an ear not more than 6 inches long, but an atâ€" tempt was made to grow two crops of this corn in the one season. The two ,varieties of late corn would be known Itoday as Flint corn in the one case, . having the plump grains, while the other was the Dent corn, well known 1 to all farmer folk as the corn with the dent or depression in the outer end of the kernel. Much of the corn ears were of various colours, as the sol called Squaw corn lu Â¥rulow : cer sn‘ & powder, ©G@ IoUr grains of corn andâ€"beans, and covered them with earth. Occasionalâ€" ly, a vegetable of one variety occupied a bed by itself, but usually various species were grown together in the one field. The gardens were carefully weeded by the women and children. When the corn was about half grown, it was hilled. Little houses or shelters raised upon platforms in the fields, were occupied by watchers, whose duâ€" ty it was to keep the birds from inâ€" juring the crop. l The women‘s planting implement, which they used sitting, was about a foot long and five inches broad. Beâ€" ginning at the corner of the fleld, the women made a series of holes, about three feet apart, into which they placâ€" ed four grains of corn andâ€"beans, and covered them with earth. Occasionalâ€" ly, a vegetable of one variety occunied s.| In any consideration of early garâ€" is |dens on the North American continâ€" ) | ent, the contribution, small though it r| be, of the North American Indians to ,. | horticulture should not be forgotten. o | As one writer has said, it was the g | Indian who taught the white colonists p | their native agriculture, "to cull out e | the finest seeds, to observe the fitâ€" ; |test season, to keep distance for ; | holes and fit measures for hills, to , | worme it, and weed it; to prune it and dress it as occasion shall require." | To the Indians, therefore, some honâ€" . | our is dae, for not only were they , . | the first gardeners in North America, I but they did their work without modâ€" ern tools both in the clearing of land and in the making of the garden. In that branch of the Algonquin | family commonly known as Virginia Indians, every family, at the time when the while people founded Jamesâ€" | i town, had its garden, generally 100 x | : 200 feet, carefully cultivated. Their | market was in their own homes, and hence needed no Marketing Act in the | c disposal of produce. In clearing new | j land, the trees were girdled near the | y ground by bruising the bark. When sufficiently dried, the trees were tellâ€" | ed by the aid of fire and stone axes, and the stumps burned. In preparing a field, the ground was worked over with wooden instruments, made someâ€" what like mattocks or hoes with long handles. The weeds and cornstubble were dug up and allowed to dry, then made into heaps and burned. Indians Taught Settlers Their Native Agriculture First Gardenres In North America Haven and Hartford freight train 5 right of way. No one was usually mixed {n_ colour pattern. Indians were usuâ€" s2,j & 006 SmMarter or more practical for growing girls â€" than a dress cut along princess lines, Here‘s a darling model with the new square neck. Butons down the front enable daughter to put it on and fasten it quite unaidâ€" ed. It helps her to be quite indeâ€" pendent individual every mother wishes her daughter to be, . You‘ll be amazed at how quickâ€" ly you can run it up on the sewâ€" ing machine, to say nothing of the saving in cost. iiadetb /: 1. . 2. .4 .# »0u can run it up on the sewâ€" ing machine, to say nothing of the saving in cost. Style No. 2508 is designed for sizes 4, 6, 8 and 10 years. Size 8 requires 1% yards of 89â€"inch maâ€" tarint wsths A, 00 22 UUf There isn‘t TORTTTF CC CEXEIRVE the regulations effective. About 25 per cent. of the creamâ€" ery butter made in Canada â€" last year, a total of 238,854,600 pounds ; was produced in Ontaric. _ The grade marks must be printed on the package in letters at least oneâ€"quarterâ€"inch high. The grades are first, second, third and no grade, It is expected the four provincés in which creamery package butter‘ is not sold by grade will pass later the necessary legislation â€"to makel the regulatione affanati... _ The Department of Agriculture, however, decided to postpone â€" efâ€" fectiveness of the law a fortnight to give merchants a chance to clear stocks of unmarked butter and to become familiar with workings â€" of the law. ‘ : Gradeâ€"marking of creamery butâ€" ter, effective for more than a year ’in Manitoba, _ Saskatchewan, Alâ€" berta and British Columbia, is proâ€" vided for in regulations 27 and 28 of the Dairy Industry Act of Cm-‘ ada. Ontario implemented it at the last legislative session, and the law was proclaimed in the last issue of the Canada Gazette, fixing the etfec‘tive date as August 15. | ' "Did she remember you as a friond } The Department of Agriculture during the war?" » announced recently all packages of | ‘"Yes, but she wasn‘t sure which creamery butter sold to consumers| war." in Ontario must be marked with| "Did you inspect any cotton mills grade numbers starting next Sepâ€"| abroad?" = tember 1, bringing to five the numâ€" "Yes, The president of one of the ber of provinces in which the finest plants . in‘ Germany took me practice is "in force. D nnanaly tha Bs Must Print Grade On Butter Boxes At certain seasons the Indians lived on fish, squirrels and turkeys, where turkeys abounded, and on the flesh of many animals if it could be obtained, but in season they depended largely upon their gardens and such wild plants as acorns and berries. Later in the year both flesh and vegetable proâ€" ducts were dried and thus preserved for the winter when danger of faâ€" mine was often in the offihg. Howâ€" ever, at certain seasons food was . abundant, for it is on record that Capâ€" tain Argoll obtained by barter from the Chief Potawomack nearly 400 bushels of corn and beans. Captain Smith procured from Powhatan two or three hundred bushels of corn for | aâ€"pound or twa of blue glass beads.! In harvesting, the corn was picked and placed in hand baskets and empâ€" tied into larger baskets, ‘The ears were thoroughly dried upon mats, care being taken to protect them from the dew by covering them at night. When sufficiently dried, the corn was placâ€". ed in the house in piles and l’elled by twisting between the hands, Theâ€" shelled corn was then placed in the | houses, sometimes occupying all the. space available. | anything smarter or until _ the right ~should comes through, bringing t] at the finish of the swing _ Thirdly, the reversal of the turnâ€" ingâ€"over movement of the wrists is finished exactly as the club head strikes the ball. _ And fourthly, all three employ the "leftâ€"eye" stanceâ€" that is to say, during the address the chin is turned to the right, and as the club goes back, the turn to the â€"right of the chin is ‘increased. The chin remains in that position until _the right ~shoulder comes comes through, bringing the head up, uk Â¥his Hirtub® on neer nssm ment of their hips begins the back as well as the forward swing. It th shoulders take the initiative, the stroke will be mistimed. Secondly, their hands move before the club head leaves the address position. A slight bend in the shaft proves that their hands have moved an appreciable disâ€" tance before the club head catches them up. M. J. Astle in Chamber‘s Journal notes â€" There are certain details of the swing which are common to Walâ€" ter Hagen and Gene Sarazen, and the same obtains in the case of Bobby Jones. The first pilot for consideration is the reolative action of the hips and the shoulders. It is evident from a study of these men that the moveâ€" ment of their hips begins the back "Not immediately. Europe is ready to fight at the drop of a hat, but they can‘t borrow a hat tc drop." "You must have travelled exteonâ€" sively to gather all this information. How long were you abroad*" "Two weeks." *"Thank you, Mr. Springs." _Do you think there will be an other European war?" "They have a New preme Court." "What did you do then, Mr Springs?" _ "Gave her the hat." "Did you discuss politics abroad* "Yes. They were offering eight t« five on Roosevelt." "What do you think of Europe‘i new economic program *" "Yes, on account of my new Tyâ€" rolean hat." "Yes. One afternoon a girl smiled at me brazenly on the street." "What did you do*?" "Investigated." "Did you find out why she smiled at you?" 4 ‘"Do you think that such a car is practical ?" ‘ "I don‘t know, and please don‘t ask me about the roving frames?" "How did you find France?" "I couldn‘t. I tried to use my own ’French at the airport and landed in Switzerland instead." "What did you find in Switzerland " "Rolls Royce taxicabs with a footâ€" man on the box." ‘‘What did you find in England *" _ "How did you find the English autoâ€" mobiles ?" "By looking behin the fireplugs. They use bnpy Austins for taxi cabs. Next year they will be sold in pairse â€"one for each foot." * "Did you observe any vice and crime in Europe?" l "Yes,. The president of one of the finest plants . in Germany took me through the mill." ‘"What. did he show you*" "American machinery." _ "What did you do then*" ‘"Sold him some of mine." ‘But how will you get paid for it?" "By barter. I will ship him my new doubleâ€"draft roving frames and he will ship me in exchange a new Gerâ€" man automobile with the engine in the rear and tank and spare tire in front." & The Golf Swing .*"*Yes, indeed. l'vent back to a cate and found the same girl sitting at the same table. The chairs, however, had been reinforced." # "Did you visit any of your old batthefields ?" * ‘] Marlem Pew in Editor and Prblis» */er writes: If I were handing out priz es for newspaper excellence, in ons | form and another, I would surely pin a blue ribbon for interviewing on tho breast of J. E. Dowd, editor Chalor{te (N.C.) News. For snap and interes| I can‘t remember a better line 0| quotes than given by Mr. Dowd «o 'ca. Eiliott White Spring, ace aviator during the war, now a wellknown ’Bouth Carolina textile â€" manufacturer and widely known author. Col. Springs | had just returned from Europe, trave) ling on the Hindenburg, when », bumped into the editor and the toj lowing conversation (recommended to all students of journalism) took place: Mr. Springs: "Certainly. It was positively painless. We went aloft at Frankfort after supper, and two days and three nights later we were ready for breakfast in New York." Mr. Dowd.: "Mr. Springs, Will you tell me about your trip?" Deal, but no Su But re When : to o by in more than North An vincial g studying a trol of ra by tha Que reg in | &N 4 m Seek {, terials ter mill substar of wha may be of no 1 versity eod live tion all as the ; dently : growt is ins nitely and 1 erable tor which will not t duced in mcecess to which is r to h: desir préeciably grass ju Juice squ was adde that ¢ annour mot kray Juice QUEBEC CJ Our rememo be kind The Just w ar ut Dr As M A Ad prC W W IN