» consul, may be made into a monu- .ment, it was announced by Maj. SEPTEMB_E_‘R_ 1s. 1931 _ THE cnaaporjllcrowly cuAaolAN. BOND QUOTATION CK 1ND Market = B, swawam‘ 10m: correspondents a! Greanahleldu & 00., Momma qg xfinisil-caxEz-nag m§3jRZRIHIXYKEMZEIH Reports S & C0., Charlottetown F New York - EIC/l Grige (Spoclll tn Johnnlnn k Ward) 0pcn|lligh|L1nv lulutlNtCh Pl t} The Montreal Stock Exchange (lipeciul to Johnston 1k \\'nr1l HISTIJRY ill FUR FARMING MOSTIHJAL 3% t: ll .. .. 9175 ("you Air Reiluc 73%| 13%| 721A ‘IL/ ~45’; Stocks fi Ill 1.1m! Amiiiii .. . .... ... . ‘m. 1:17.’; flit/I! Alyfihtan . U554! 95% iliitg ’ Bell 'I'(‘l(l[lll0|l(2 l/ I ’ ‘l.’ AFN-sill! . - m“. C N u - All» 9.190 Am ‘I’ n .. “f, M q ~_ / nriV/Jllltlli , , 1.5,; Jmulmlltl-llldrlrlln Oil 10:71 l‘ N ll 10h)“ u“ FJ?! {v ' opal‘ dfiiilw 3L4‘ - ' ‘u. (' '."“"". A 1H"“‘" " wrlrilll on . 10=l1'1' N lt . “n; “"5" ‘A... I. f; " "l ' “l “l .. . ' ,* ‘.f"' U". l"? 1*'?"’:§'l\~'1'»|11lllluu rower all I11 N It pyiijiil; 33-231»... 'r Tel '15s ilfltl-‘igilfiifijlisll-‘lz- A (lnlllhAlllfd ' f l tug-feline..- "Q74: 1mg?‘ 1h.‘ 11mm, 10”," all“. ‘lhlhuu 1011 inn '1 lentil-ail 1: vermi- .. 11 The Fur Statistics Branch of the 1i ' . . . . - . . - - . -- . __ a .- _ H 1, . e / i .- Ln“ v i pr" Mn Foundry . . asp, _o ‘ ‘J ‘m “M” Awhisuf," __ ,._ ' §,f',""I;,¥ig:"IY_X‘ Bureau of Statistics at Ottawa has 1-l»llt1»ll.1=n1-11 Nlllellelu . . . . . . . .. 36m 1 m olwrlor. SECURITIES: l‘:i"t,_lcl‘\"‘i'<l-lti-l l Wsijnst issued a report in which. for a "'4 Mill"! -- r» 11m 52.15 ‘w... lulu-é? . n lilrefacc, it gives this account of the 21% gull‘ “PM 5 "m? 1M0" "t "mvprip" I’ llur falming industry in Canada , .‘_’“' 51,-; ' Ilrcw l‘f1l ' ' 1431' B. L .1,“ '21, - “W1 W! y i In the early days of the fur trade m i nu lllll d u PM“ (- . f/_ ., , 1W‘ m" '“"“'““ - “I lllllt“l'1l\vfl~‘rl‘ ' ‘ "‘ q " lit was the practice in Canada for T-"ll" l‘ ll 4'11 Nllllivlnlvllll " :1 '1" _ Jul-Hi" p l]; __ ,' SIM "((._,",m'ln" . 1’ (rappers to keep foxes caught in . . . . ‘. int ‘ow r, . \- "1 F“ I Pr‘ ' -- n _ _ , , m 1- tTthe . 401/ i“ . ‘ . ._ - ,_ __ _ re warm “ea er alvc unl "My: 1'1‘ lllreul-rlellml hm“ "nli (l'0‘\{' (U ‘:5 “m L,“ fur was ilrinle and from this cus- Nllnt ‘ _ -.. ... .. .. - i v L , """' MM U" 1 tom has arisen the modern indus- ,_., . . l _. . lcllviifltvlhllll"! - F'l"t'\1llll i; (“out (“an (‘bnnnr-lw-c .. I try 9f fur fflfmlng, The earliest fififly‘wl"l'-',l,i',‘l.rrs Hiuuv i'nw . l»; lrglnlllulo lrllhmu)’ mrillerltic record of the raising of 11c - _ - . . , -‘ " " trawler-clu- _... slim I: islpyuxgolrlltt I :_ ‘A xlolltrcai l foxes in captivity comes from the DHRKET "Ewmv. F0“ SEPT. “m. lull}: : 12-! i123, it Province of Prince Edward Island. m“ m." MM, _ | The Montreal where about the year 1878 a num. "WI "Ir" -l 35%! i ber of foxes war-c raised on a farm , . can I.0.\I\l.\'fi.\': 1.0m) slrasowu. um Funds r i =' ' Allvflll-Ilil . . . . . .' ‘. . J , _ a. Mwrwu“ ,H , s1mg“;"riliinlcnwlgsalsi filth 1,111. M1- .. I .._ ncal Tignulh- The beauty of the aullrlivl-‘Ili: " ,‘“.;_\»‘T 0;. ‘NEH, ‘ ‘ ‘this 3:3" a?‘ (Ir et fur of ihe Silver Fox and the con- .iI!'.-...... , _ , ‘mmvgmll I > For ihe week cmlml (‘opfcmhrr lifh llgtul i sequent hmh Dnces realized from ('ilf!-"""7' y _ . , Y _ -- _ fmpiiillllllPé“ P” .. tllafllllulvlilerln‘:nimogIui-éiilgnlyltfrfiliha, rllls Ifxigclc . the sale 0i’ t-he pelts caused atten lmzl; ' its. sllnwrui fl fair inlhlwlvcnn-llt llxlcr Johns Hun“ {zsmdm m ‘7°l""""" ‘g ‘Pmll Ho“ to be dlzrecmd chiefly to this Muiiirg |i"llril'~fil\l]‘1|“1'1-‘1i4il||g week. Tlhlii was due, in lien (‘op l“ “Hz-tum,” A OrflllllliglI‘l,0\\‘|l,il5l bl-CML a color phase of the commo“ _ I L _ ,_ j. 1-1. m- u an IIDIHIU‘ 1 ~ A L‘ " ~ - * 1 ' _ ‘ ‘ ‘Mme, 2.01m curs in, lomlillgs of éfillll"f\ll'lixl 1.231118 “inc RlMwA" A": o“ ‘l ma” l l red fox ‘finch has been establish- .. -. ~ - 1 - . . . . . 1. ' _. >11 m’. '1' 1!. . . . ““"~‘ ““"' llllllir lflllfrlllulil: 'r~.'1-'."§'-r“1"1.'e" el§1'1'§1‘-“:v'll~l'<"§ llnlllmlill-Ilrl 111.,“ 2.115" wptl- ' \“' 5" 5"‘ 8 ' rd through exlwrmwnts 1n brvedms gain in thc lnllll. ‘Phln guvc the tulul lils 7" ' '""“" ~ l carried 0n by the pionec: [ox far- lmldinpa for fllu Wonk n hettcr-ihiln- f‘ Rog i3“ lmiwflllil "ll i 12-, IIF/rt 131$ ~ 1W M m i, gxlilanltlriiii-ll qfinllfrpilllc! lilgaqllgigcfglil:law-ll; 11>’ Plrrtv :1; i.» I lllllltlli‘_‘ll“lll€:f:'nA l‘ i i nlcls. r ‘ ‘ ... H. - ~' - - ‘ 1 ' i . , I _ . ’ . . “niih-[hfk __ rive-reuse 11! .'l.l:'1 pr. for ilm sumo u-vok bi Y (‘out . iifl-"iil (ififgtl- ‘ ' ' " l ‘$531537’ 15-“) 18!? the“: cflme a period slillliltlril\‘illelrdlllf sew Jersey . luvliulll rllllxcqofufikflizl ma} -l\"'r.\ilII'uL() m‘ i of ilnillili prices for fuls and the fox ..,. . . . - . . l ever.‘ wlla nilll sharply m- w" inn-ll . -.i -i',-_.l farming industry grew rapidly in n mv nlln-r rc1-1-ni years. being 511171 Penn linll prince Ed“vflyd Isiand In 1913 ‘plural £31111‘. fllIlllill lino?“ J EXPERT URGES AMERICA To an rnunlcration by the Provincial M-Tn-p; "Dy" pnlcns {llrkvfiuf-Bslugvrnltll; ‘llllllrlf ‘riot-k was 1mm‘; Kifa... MAKE OYVN CITY PLANS Commiqioncr of Agrlcunuae Show. . . n11~r w sumo wee up .‘ ,, “ ‘ nonlxum or (uixana nouns ‘Lidia-fin .\"1~1lr. ore fr" curs. nnd stir?‘ slew-s cd 277 fox farms in that Province .' fulcrum n01 , 1,, . 1 __ [a ,' v _ ‘nix auxin-T lssunfl) iliynrcnr to deli ml“! rrlri-l lzlll-rll-l 11:1: Nlnl “Him BERKEI-‘lgu: ‘twessl- H h with a total of 3.130 foxes. While ' 1 ". II decrease from a year ngo S Brands 9D- 1 Al loug _- . ~ 0141,1031 ma"; 100m or 4_.-.~'s1ll. s n law Europeans have made vastl t exwnmenls we“: being calmed on ‘av-v 11.19;‘? lag-s; 103m '3' (Lot Q11 _ Y m“ - in Prince Edward Island, attempts ‘ill-Twila lonTlI-I 36138 s walla} ‘T. .< 31233523: mill” ptl€““l"§'t‘*:‘ M" raisins foxes in captivity were Studebaker CODY Em u r e ~ - ' TAXWLE 15st,“) H" (,0 H _ w v 1 '_ also being made 1n other Provinces, 1 ‘ . ould stllke out for herself accord the ‘records showing that foxes , . _ __ w 1.10.12 'l‘l|erc was lml- -l 1» u _ in to its ti i . ' £115; l. ' Ngsmng’ m“ hlmlnc“ flH||*__"'h:grI‘-"1'(thus; kg P“ c“ “F needs DY Cflfl were sllcccssfillly bred in Quebec .131“. _ ' SvpfLlil-IO llllilntllv pectin-per. v1.1» disappointing ‘mmvlci’ fmmer Berke“? my in i898 in Ontario in i905 and in m; __ _ n" 11mm (cc no on 11' aim-k lnnrkct hall nn plannj“ e m»; said on ~ . . ' _ “hm _ 0:.‘ 11m"! “all?vxlxdllpntcéffginpayn) llcnllnlellf. n-mi . _ from Elgrroxs’ h“ mun“ NOVA 800L121 ln 1906. afvmx “ Ptlrlililflfll. ln tin]- l'niil;‘1l gllirhimllllr-‘li l h -: He re 1'0" I t d th In 1912 and 19w the Commission ::;:'.r..:'...'::"l'::':'r l5. mill".l:'l..:l::! i‘ lifornia 2.531.” f “a” °‘ °’-" °‘ °°““““’°“ l ' ‘ ' ‘ ' ' ‘ lerulrlm-el1»rlr.=¢,,|.,,- ,|..,.i,,,,,,i,,,,,, “m, fomm t m y“ ‘efsm’ 0f CR1“ hausiivo inquiry into the history - _‘ >- r-ra y n 1|] t _ '. a _ . _ . 131-11 "My nrutri-lplrlliue- hlllilllflfilllyilrfiligniih‘ wool Lo v grfis on Hojsmn erg: itojnal tCon and possibilities of 1ul farming in Nnvl mm q 1 "1- 1n "'1" "f_$l1"\\'1uicn|l Power. reducer] _-__—--_-__ ” g a c In 911m‘ Citnlldgr and the resulting data .\'u\'!, Hull-mi 1 w _ Iilifinfl Iunniinn in $‘1_‘.1l0 11M“ im- tional Congress on HOUSlIIg and w“ pubnshpd in 1913 and this gave . ll)‘ l c a (‘tiger y rum i‘ m; ‘ r - . boulxlox or‘ 1".\.\'.-\n.\ s-unc 1l1-r1n111- signs 11f 11 inrn in lmsl. TW" Planning’ livid in B'€l'lii1. ~ G‘._\"_\NTEEI) "ox"; nose. but ihcsr- have not y»: fllfllln , “n, Impetus to the ‘ndustrlh The their lllli\1~:|r:||l1-c. The turn. hon-ever, PflllCC Eduard Island SllVCI‘ FOX r X R " " “*3 ‘PM 9755 "Mm “m: n“ he n“ on‘ In Work Breeders’ Association was formed D in 1915, and the Canadian National . < . GRAIN W?! D» LONDON, Sept 14—-(U. PJ-Sur- Sliver FOX Breeders‘ Association in ‘_"" l w 1861185 veys oi shipbuilding taken in i920. Branch associations of the iF-‘pcrlnl m Johnston s Word) Great Britain and Ireland show Canadian Association have also CHICAGO The Flltflfe further decreases of work in hand. _ been formed in several of the Pro- During July shipyards along the vinces. Fox farmin is now car- Winn! High Lnw Lust ¢ m d h Firm r F u u, s _ (Canadian Press) . . ' _g_ F,“ __ ,_ _ m 4dr; 471;, per, eaa arnols y B, t e 0 Or l, e cV M rlcd on in all thc Rovlnccs of the m, h“... m, W. ONTREAL. Sepia. 11-—A huddlei . . . ‘m- -- -- “L; fig": “Mi cm, the River Tyne. and in Bel- of Swncs weathcpwom and dis iDolnlnlon and the number of farms W, fast, Inndon. Liverpool, Soutlmmp. placed lay six months ago besidci has steadily increased. The latest .- 1 . . . . ;-,,.1: ton, Plymouth, Portsmouth, Hull, Dorchester strcet near the dcCp/Stlitl-Etlfls ayalliiblL’, VlZ., those of 4914i (Special to the Guardian) Cardiff and Dublin operated on n hole in the ground where the ex_itilc present report, for the year 2r?’ AW nc. . - art-ti e basis or wer t rar- - _ . ' I , - my‘! ‘ 0T1‘ A, 0 , Sept l4-Prem p m , e empo cavamns wew bung made for mei i929, show 4,493 fox farrns in Cana 0r Louis A. Taschereau, of Quebec, ily closed down. new Canadian National termini,“ do with a total of 103.681 foxes, of has made an appointment with The building of the giant Cull. The “(mes were m0 dcmonshcd {ab} which 97,190 are of the Siver Fox 165.7,} Right Hon. Richard B. Bennett, ard liner near Dunlbarton on the m; or the 01d Prcsbywrmn Church breed. - J LIMESTONE ROCK SHAPED LIKE STATE OF WISCONSIN iUnited Press) BERLIN, wls., sept, 14 -—A big limestone rock, resembling closely a relief map of the state of Wis- Harrv T. TTlppe, engineer. - Trim"? on a recent inspection of 1h!‘ Eureka locks of‘ the Fox River Illnc miles from here, noticed the odd rock. more than a. foot thick and several yards in circumference It is similar in shape t0 the state and shows in relief the almost cx- act location of the Wisconsin and P0X Riven. -_.__..._______. district federal the Dominion Prime Minister, for Monday weck. Sept» 21. for the fu- ture of the Beauharnols Power Corporation. In the meantime, Mr. Bennett may go with Hon. Dr. Robert J. Manlon to Churchill for the opening of the Hudson Bay route. Premier Taschereaukl conference with Premier Bennett is necessary because the province of Quebec controls the Beauharnols Light, Heat and Power Company, which is the operating organization of the Beauharnols Power Corporation. and which owns all rights. titles, water leases and land necessary for the canal and power development. The charter powers of the Beau- harnois Light, Heat and Power were granted by the Quebec Legig- Iature. The Dominion Government has control over the amount of water that may be diverted from the River St. Lawrence, and is hop- ing that by goodwill and cooper- MAINE SNUBS STEIN SONG 1N SEARCH FOR. STATE DITTY roannnp, Me, Sept 14-11:. PJ-Maine is seeking a state song, but will not choose the “Stein 50ml." traditional tune of the University of Maine made famous by Rudy Vallec. "The Stein Song may help the University or Maine, but it doesn't Bay a thing about Maine as a "Bit," 1.“ phasized Daniel W. 3098!, state publicity bureau chair- Inan. ation with the province of Quebec the future of the enterprise will be assured, and that those who invest- ed their‘ money in good faith will be protected. GOAT BOASTS SIX LEGS (United Press) TROY, 0r, Sept, 14 .-Mary Jane, two month old goat owned by Wai- ter Fox, has six legs. The extra legs are above the hind legs. The goat is normal in other ways. Stewart Jones 8|: Co. Correspondents of Greenshields 8c Co. I Members of the Mon treat Stock Exchaniu l,» 88 Great Georne 8L, Charlottetown n-i-s Clyde is practically the only out- standing work now under construc- tion aiong the famous waterway. Rows of huge cranes, idle and rusting away, line .both banks of the Clyde. Long stretches on both sides of the river are silent and free from the ring of hammers and voices of men busy at work. WhlstWs Silent heard no more. The lines of un- employed increase. Unemployment in Glasgow and surrounding towns is higher than it ever has been. When the Clyde is idle, all Scotland senses the dc- cline of national and individual in- come and feels depression mole acutely. At the present time less than 500.000 tons. excluding the Cunard liner, are under construction- This figure represents almost a million tons less than the figure for July 21, 193i. Returns Show slump Lloyd's Register Shipbuilding Re- turns for the quarter ended June 30 illustrates the slump in British and Irish shipbuilding. The figure for the quarter ended June 30 is lower than any quarter since Dec. i887, and includes nearly V, 68,000 tons on which work has been sus- pended. Tonnage under construction in Great Britain and Ireland amounts to only 30.4 per cent of the world 5 ‘L-N —--l; war were 51.2 for Great Britain and Ireland and 42.8 for the re- mainder of the world. ers under construction in the world are being built in Great Britain or Ireland. Steam tonnage in contrast to immediate previous uiuartera, exceeds that of the ton- Infile 0f 010W!‘ Shift! under con- merely peeling, drying and grind- struction. tonnage. The average percentages in the last 12 months before the About one-third of the oil tank- building, of St. Andrew and St. Paul which had stood there since 1868 as a wit- ness of the Faith and a home of the faithful, many of whom had done much to make Montreal and to build Canada. Today that huddle of stones 1s re-asscmbied six miles away and stands in order and in beauty. each stone neighboring once more the stone it ncighbored since 1863. It. was no disorderly huddle 0f Each had been numbered and Ciwh was carefully transported t0 the new site. They were stones of i111 shapes and sizes. laboriously hcwn on the site on Dorchcstcr Street in the days before stones were W11 by machinery in a yard and transport- ed to the site all ready made. The church now stands again 85 a witness of thc Faith and \\'i1l bl‘ the chapel 0f the Roman Callwllc College 0f St. Laurent. The transportation of this fab- ric in sections must be almost l! not absolutely unique in thc annals of Canadian clillfcll architecture. It is the same chluch rls it was when it was erected, yet it is not the same. Its former site is now swallowed up in a vast hole in the around- Its congregation worships in n borrowed hall or as the £11958 0i a §isier congregation, looking for- ward to worshipping in a 116W church on sherbrooke Street be- ing built on the site of the former home of Hon. Cairinc WiBOn. omou POWDER r-carccrub (United Press) AMHERST, Mess, sent. 14~N<> longer need thc housewife wcrp while peeling onions. Research directed by C. It. Fcllcrs of the Massachusetts State College has do veloped an onion powdc: which i In addition to thc Silver Fox, the ‘ patch or cross fox. the red fox and ‘ the blue fox are also raised on Ca.- ,nadian fox fnTms. Attempts to raise thc blue fox in captivity were mudc in the Eastern Maritime Pro- -vinccs in 1912, a number of the foxes having been imported from Alaska where blue fox farming had been carried on for some years. These early attempts were unsuc- lccssful, but about the year 1921 Old familiar factory whistles are signeg that lily beside the big hole. fox (urmers m British Columbia found that the blue fox could be raised in that Province, climatic conditions proving more suitable. There are now in Canadian fox ifarnls 1.576 blue foxes, 9B0 of these being recorded by British Columbia and the remaining 596 distributed through Quebec. Ontario and the Prairie Provinces. Although thc fox is of chief im- portance, other kinds of wild fur“ hearing animals are being raised successfully -mink, raccoon, skunk imnrtcn and fisher and coyote. The ‘mink in particular, is easily dom- esticated. and tilrivcs in captivity if care is exercised ill the selection of environment and proper atten- tion given to its requirements in thc nlattcr of dict. There arc now 476 mink farms distributed among the various Pro- vinces. and mink farming in Can- ada may well be regarded as being pcrlnancntly established. Musk- rat fal-lning also is a rapidly cx- panding branch of the fur farming industry and numerous areas of marsh land arc being profitably utilized for the Tfllslng of this fur- bcarcr. The fnrlning of muskrat on these marsh areas consists as chiefly o1’ making provision for an adequate food supply for the ani- mals and in giving protection from their natural enemies, i. c, hawks owls. etc. On many of the musk- rat farms thc areas have been cn- may be used (without the tears) in place oi’ scallions. The process for makinug the powder consists in closed with strong wire fencing. In i929 the ‘number oi farms as raising fur bearing animals other ing the onions. than foxes was 1,0’ } as compared A New Way Of Marking Time (Charles Herbert Huestis) Time flies. "It's a way time has," as Artemus Ward once acutely re- marked- "Our life like a dream. Our timedike a stream Flows swiftly away; And (the fugitive mOIIIBYIf- THUS? to stay.” we used to sing at Watch Night services and the thought had a profound influence upon our boy- lsh minds. Time itself knows no division. but for practiral reasons we divide it up. The earth assists by dividins it into days and yea-rs as it rotates upon its axis and makes its long journey around the sun. The mm?“- too, helps by dividing it into m0nth5-—n0t exactly, but appfmflm‘ ately. Then man takes a hand and divides it into hours, and minutes. and seconds, and invents clocks and watches to mark the same. Of course these divisions on our clocks are really space and not time di- visions, for as every one knows in daily experience, hours and mimi- tes are not the same length. “How slow ye move, ye hours, As ye were wac and weary; It was na‘ sac ye glinted by When I was wi‘ my dearie." Bergson says the time measured by clocks. thc time of mathematic- ians, is really not time at all but a sort of “bastard space". In its place he puts duration, which he defines as “the continuous progresé of the past as it grows into the future and swells as it advances." Duration is the time we feel. There is another time division which we have not yet noted, nam- ely, the week. which has establish- ed itself chiefly by the aid of re- ligion-. There is ‘no meteorological reason why time should be divided into sets of seven and more than into sets of five or of ten. How the week came into existence we do not know. iFhc Hebrews had it early in the Christian era the Ro- mans adopted it, not from the Jews only but also from the Pag- WQBYY except in the month of February. The new calender would make all the months like February. Moreov- f-‘r, except the Hebrews, no other great, race, with the possible exception of the ancient Babylonians, had a week of seven days. The early R0- mans worked seven days and W911i to market on the eighth. The Mb)!- an civilization had a Wvvk of five days so had some Nordic groups. so had China. The ancient Egyptians had a week of ten days. During ihe clawical per- iod the Greeks did not mlmt time by weeks. Periods of fuse. rather than of seven seem to have been most common before th~ Christian era. The five day week is a per- fect fit for the year "XCQpl. on Leap Year; but it doesn't fit thc human biological machine, and Stalin the» other day announced that it would be given up in Rus- sia. It will be seen that the vast ma- jority of Gods children during the long ages of the past knew nothing of a seven day week moving cavea- ly through the year. Can we lm-l‘ agine primitive 1 man who made the week and gave its days their names. The proposed new calendar, how- ever, retains the seven day week and is careful not to interfere with the sacred associations of the Sab- bath and thc Lord's Day. Sunday will still be the first day of the present drift of‘ thc date between March 22 and April 25. and will also fix Easter approximately at the date of the Resurrection of our Lord, according to Church his- torlans. The proposed calender has four‘ excellent features. It will: (l) Keep the calender with the solar year. KEEP the seven day week as a true time unit. in step (2) (3) Fix the week days to perpgi. ual dates. (4) Establish uniform months, The new month is to be tucked in between June and July. and it ans. It belonged to a. scheme o! naming the days after seven plan- etary deities: the Sun, Moon, Mars. Mercury, Jupiter, Venus and sat- um. No doubt the sanctity asso- ciated with the number seven had something to.do with it. Some mod cm physiologists are of the opin- ion that it is a biological cycle writ ten into the human constitution. I think there may be something in that idea. The year on our calendars is now divided into 12 months of un- equal length. It is proposed to di- vide the year into 13 months of 28 days each. But 28 into 365 leav- es one over, and into 366 leaves two over. What is to be done with these days, for the earth refuses to sivw up and make the division even? It is proposed to meet the difficulty by making the 29th of December, or what would be that date in the new calender. an intercalary day to be called "Year Day“ The" when leap year comes the odd day will be placed at the end of June and be called “Peace Day" or “Leap Day" These days will be universal holidays. The plan outlined above would seem to be so sensible that one can only wonder wlhy it was not adopted centuries ago. Some people however. do not like the plan, which I may say is to come before the League of Nations in the fall of this year for adoption or reject- ion. The reasons for objection are theological. The Seventh Day Ad- is proposed to call it “S0l" after that luminary which is so much in evidence at that time of iiw year. So let us hope the new plan will be universally adopted and then we can scrap all our calend- ars and forget. “Thirty days hath September. April, June and November. . ." —1\"orthem Messenger GEOGRAPHY (‘Lass 0N LINER SYDNEY. Australia. Sept l4- 1British United Prcssi-A geog- raphy class aboard ship with a professor from Sydney University as teacher, is the feature of a tour to the East vfllich is being arrang- ed in connection with a steamship line here. Professor J. MacDonald Holmes, Professor of geography, will travel by the S. S. Taiping. el-lich will leave Sydney on December 19, The party is limited to 3n male) students from universities and great public schools. Calls will be made at Queensland ports, 11111115- day Island. Manila and Hon: Kongl Inspection of various industries will be made, and Professor Holm- es will deliver lectures on points of interest- fl a w ll G ventists are the most aggressive in opposition. 'I'he introduction of an intcrcaiary day will of course interrupt the regular sequence of the week. They hold that "the week ly cycle. ordained by the Creator at the beginning of time. has neve" been altered." The proposed calen- der, with its "skip day," they claim will "strike a death blow to Bible religion." 'I‘he Sunday School Tim- cs also. which cannot be accused of advcntist. or Jewish sympathies. in an editorial N/ltitied "Improving God's Law,“ under date Nov. 2, 1929 tells us that "God established the week of seven days," and pro- phesies dire judgments upon those who would interfere with its regu- lar march through the years and the centuries- One finds it difficult to take such objections seriously. If God made the week, He did not make it a good fit. It does not fit the year or the month; some days are left over with 695 in the preceding year. A few of the fox farms also engage in mixed fur farming, raising mis- cellaneous fur bearing animals addition to the foxes. m .. Things don't just llappcfl. middleman. 193i models $135.0 allowance for your nld machine. vited. and prchistm-ie are limited to 100000.000 lire, man dividing his time into scvc-n,ab0l1t 353.000 annually during the clay weeks? It was not God but ifirst five years of a papal regime. commensurate with the weeks‘ forward severing the limb. spring in ihe knife back into its position when the air is released. And there's a reason why the Woodstock ls so generally preferred in the progressive business of this country, as is indicated by the scores of telegrams and letters received. product. both in design and construction, barked hy an organizi- tion rendering unsurpassed service and ell-operation. Order direct and save agents profit! 100M to 150M lower in serial, S05. 00, and we will make you a hi! and not connected with the Typcrvritcr Trust. Banadian Importers, wholesalers, AMHERST. N. i. Vatican Again Has Coinage A coin collector south of the 11m? recently acquired a fairly complete set of the new coinage issued by the Vatican since the rapprochement 0i i920, between the Papacy and the Italian Govcrilnlcnt. It is the first issue of money currency for use in the papal realm since 1870, when differences between the two author- iiics led to thc self-imprisonment in the Vatican of the head 01 tbB Roman Catholic Church. One of ihe clauses ill the agreement 0! two years ago. setting up a Vatican city within the capital of Italy, was the restoration of the right of the Pope to issue coinage, which would be currency anywhere in the country. ' Slncc that time papal coins haVB been struck by the Italian mint. There isflno limit to gold coinage, but silvernickle and bronze coins or Nine denominations are repre- sented in the Americans collection: one gold, two silver, four nickle and two bronze. Pope Hadrian I. under the an. ihoriiy of Charlemagne, coined the first papal money, In centuries that followed, only a few the twelve week and Saturday the seventh. popes coined mom-y fgy yam,“ Moreover, Easter will be a fixed use. mdily of such issues being date-the 15th of April-in the purely commemorative or "Sgdg new calender. This will obviate the vaczlnie." PNEUMATIC PRUNING MA. CHINE INVENTED f Fnited Pmssi MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif, sepe, IFN" Ionizer will crews of men c0 out through orchards and vine. yards with hand clippers and 53w; P" Pruning time, according to s. (3. ltfudrich, ilorticuiturist, who ha; invented a pneumatic pruning ma, chine. Mudrich has announced com- pletion of plans to manumetur-Q the cqlliqmcilt in San Jose after se- “311 years of experimenting. The primer is made 0f aluminum‘ with a bras; barrel except for 5, steel knife and hook. . The hook is placed on the limb to be cut and when conlpressed air i5 r-eieama into barrcli the knife is thrown A steel barrel throws the Two men with the machine can do as much work as 20 with the 01d equipment‘. Mudrich claimg, ————___.______ Omelet Souffle 4 eggs 1-3 cup flour l teaspoon salt 1-3 cup butter 2 cups milk Few grains pepper , Make while sauce of butter, and our and milk. Cool, add salt nd lwaicl egg yolks, fold in thd hiics. beaten stiff. Pour into a llTcascd baking dish and e001; in p moderate oven, 350 degrggs and (of bout 45 minutes or until firm nd golden brolvn on top. 59W; at once JZiI-lllulbu Llnlnu-nt rlnmm aprulmi, \\\ fife“ There's a reason for everything. That reason-a be tier lt pays to cut out. the lhwsaml! model previous to 1981.4 We arc an independent dealer All inquiries lu- l‘. fl, BOX 4" lda ‘l o