PAGE EIGHT Plllllfii Ellwllllle-Tli-llly llllLY “Blondids Lucky Day” r NEWS — SPORTS — CARTOON — SHOWS 230-7-9 g i i 3 Days—Starting Monday Siheb thekinfd o!‘ womstrgmosf omen want 0o di~ "EVE-ARDEN lijftflbfBLYTH = BRUCFQBENNEH "RANCH l.\ WHITE" 1-1 \"r ll A 1 : I. . gmie ‘i. Q/G5‘E__MPIREED\Q Tdiiiyr... snows 2.30 - 1 - 8.45 I CO C HAR LOTTETOWN GUARDIAN JMELY NOTES ON TOPICS Silver Fox Farming . ._.._ . ......_._._..-~..... uuecreo WITH Russell Gilroil of Oukulle- 0"?" ai-io. is soiouruius $1 “S: Ngffl‘; Shore enloyiilfl ‘he i " tr {Fe m“ other summer facilltes mic 1- Mr mew “T” at." ....- Gilrcy has been com n8 9 d yeain. nrrl knows many P991319 1"‘ m!“ Prince Edward lsand excel)’- ionallv well. This season. however is rather cooler on the averaie than usual but lie manages to get his d-iily dip and looks as fit as a (iddie, Mr, Gilrov and his brother ha“. forgpd right to the trout in breedmg silver foxes zit-l mutations and in four veers have won .ch@|np1Qn5h\pS and 4 swee stakes i_¢ rather i-esiiiirkable s Ovid-IS Iwhen one considers that they Ell‘: ‘up against top Ontario exhibitors ‘am-ti also the 1'95! Ameflm" “bu” fitors at Grand Riarpids, Michigan show. One reason for their success .1155 been the tact that lh 8o oil and buy year after year iioin (lie best ranches. thereby constanhy renewing blood lines ar-l unprov- ;1rig t es. Mr Gilroy snowed us a ser es of advertisements which will appear in leading fox public- “ha; that ts evidence of his ap- Fociatimi of the value of public- ty. l The Roarin’ West Lives Again! l We ‘iscussed with Mr. Glll‘UY the prospects cf silver fox (arming ‘raw that the i0 percent diticr- ciice 1h exchange has disuppccirccl through our money being brrrufllll back on a oar wuth that of the United States. l-le said he believed that there would b; a better mark- et for silver fox pelts in the fut- ure because so Will-n)’ American ranchers have retired from fox Xarmirfl. and have gone in for mink farming on a large scam. The actual production of the fox farms of the United states mus! be one-third less than a few years ago and we know Canadian fox fanriers are "at producing nearly as many as they did Hc said no had a OOXIVCT-‘Jltltlll with quite .1. noted authority lrl thc U.S A on furs and that gentleman gave it Also -— Comedy - 5110115 POPULAR SCIENCE TODAY CiIliPITOL “SUN VALLEY _/ MQflfiAY CYCLONE“ rues. - wsu. , Shvifiyj" - rwlinodglflbyuil Upfiihlnn 5911c"- “THlS IS OUR CANADA" PLUS BRITONS’ DRINK BILL a OUTRUNS FUEL. LIGHT "1 x (By The Canadian Press) electrical uamnnicssnvo l SCHOOL m O Full Course and Brush-up on all branches. Teaching by ELIZABETH. prominent flair- Stylist ference of I hcrc was t ("busters Electricity also said that tobacco average British family i . i v Yet that scaffold aways the future. i i ‘ lUnion Signal, May Z6. i It has been borne in upon us BLACKPOOL, England, July 31 ~-Britons spend amuaIliY n11 drink alone l2 times the total of their, yearly fuel and light bills" a con- engineers RS. Thwaites. manager of Man- ' department. cost the 10 tunes be back again. if not to its old pop- ularity at least tn an increase; measure from what it obtains iri- clay It is a fur of bcauty W134 tltierefore cannot he denied a marl:- e . The above observations are 1H “m Wm, what we have reasoned out ourselves. We ‘have 5"?" 111° ups and downs "if silver ,l'oxcs nun a period of .15 years. We_cnn if; mggnibey when Charles Dalton 50d. 43 Its for an averaged $1333”) can}? one of them bi-ingir-Q the world's record price of ovei- slam/In] net, and we have seen the-m sch iTi-iough the cause of evil P7115991‘. Yet, 'tis truth alone is strong? (Though her pofflfln be the scal- fold I And upon tlte throne be ivrorifl- And. behind the dim tinkriouui. Standoih God, ivitiiin the shadow, . , ~ t an average of $15 00 a W11 "l Keeping watch ahme His own! B AL m 1V n’ Hm WM. a; -Janics Russell Louell. 1832:1918 a 21:13‘ _ p?“ Sam _n London for 250 pcui s- mllllfml- scicuriric TEMPERANCE mam $120000 ) n mm Wm me , INSTRUCTQgHg8ljQEGES AND Seal iver Fox Fawn. managed ay William Jenkins. and it Wgjcoigt: “To us has been entrusted the ‘grout task oi present-pg scientific facts to Olll’ boys and girls and the youth throughout our vast 1211mm- .lCfl and thc need is great. -1‘lie highest pflCNl pelt rm tlic _ bu, London 511g TliC roliowi year— 1919» wi- saw W Cllcrili‘ S McLure pay an nvcrcgc oi $100.00 a pelt for five pelts to C5il1l31~ Ellis of Boston Then in Malrh ‘*1 1920 Walter Grant of Fur Produc- 2 wl-tii American izovercivieiit Clamp?" fl a‘ duty ol 50 percent or. foi: furs and prices dropped to zero, The aver» age could not have been more than $90.00 to $10000 for Prince Et- ward lslarid pelts and we all wore very 1rd faces indeed. ' WHERE T0 START ers, Ltd. receivctl .-i clir-ouc fir" ‘ jiftv pelts averaging $6110 (i0. bu' t “lf you wunt to change a whole a very short. iliiic aiieruviivl: tlic civilization overnight-start children. li you Wilfll. _to Plflllk lconviction indelibly into society. plant it in the hearts of the child- renP-Paul Calvin Payne. Truly we have been wondrously led in the past. and we are humbly looking to our great Guido tor di- rection for the days to comc. l The writer 113:1 11F?" l]l;lOgi\rl1;1-'.'|"€i that we, as a great Christian Oi"-,OI\1Y B Yea? 5P 1'“ ' ganizatimi, sho-uld be much inlmuke enough o rnn tlgfnléflgyghogilg prayer, individually and collect-i 59350" BT11 Day some’ - "omhmg yely {Qr-"Moi-c things arcflllhe outlook was mos‘; unpimn. w‘. wrought by prayer than thls1but hill/int! 10-5 ‘i1 (‘l-Jél-‘hw-v w“ world iii-cams ofP-Tenriyson. [managed to surv Vt‘ '11‘- S $86113" Lei. us come boldly to the lllfflflei in business ever s ncc. 1d ‘own? of grace. that we may be enduedillved lhfmlflh the W95 an elihavg with power from on high and, of L11! 10118 043N041 0f V8279 W! 0MP strengthened in faith to go for- mentioned wc are liopfi \11 ° ward in His name. -—M. F. LEG- tinuing in what we COT-Kldél‘ P81‘- ATE, haps our most fascinating occupat- ion—fox farming- until the end. (autumn, 11%‘ ciiurciimuni The result of the Beer and Wine , l C dill: n, Michi- .plebisclte in Halifax was disap-i C‘ Moore" a 3 infiias bred some of the very as his opinion that silver fox would wh feels that all no needs is some silver and some white belly patch- es to make a‘ WhJc Mark garment. This, after all the money and ef- fort spent over ‘l period of W31"! to produce a beautiful lur. One ma; has a different typo of Silver. one with more lustre, better bluish cast underfur, wioer silver hand. more silky texture, and last but not least. shorter furrod. All the sbovc in contrast to the yardage found in the coarse. long furred wolf type of pelt. What brought about the disgrace and low price of the White Mark this, year? Was it the type n; qual- ity? Here tr. Michigan we had »ll too many White Marks sold as breeders the last few years that were more like skunks with a white ring neck. They did not possess the above beautiful t of fur. When and if the trade willing to pay a premium for a beautiful pelt, the good breeders will produce ii. I regret to say that some ranchers are breeding for quantity instead of quality, all roba-‘bly d-ie to the low prices oad for better than average pelts. When and if someone comes through with one or more real cause of clie-vinz and a remedy for same. it ivill mean thousands at dollars to tho rancher. No iii- dividual or association has as yet solved the problem of disposing of the chewed or low qualit pelts. The best theory or suggest on of- fered is to burn them. This idea. however. plays right into the hands of the parties who would deal 1r. there low grade or damaged pelts. Many ranchers are not sending them to auction with their good pelts. However, Lhey land there and in the same category and same s-ale-wvhlch does not make sense The Platizn-im pelts have been a life saver for most of us. Ways and means sil0l11d be started to maintain this popularity, to pre- vent their golng the way of the lie Mark. The Standard Pearl 11M slipped a 00a; this year also. Time wil tell ivi-iiit happens to our Pearllt-inas and Glacier B'ues. The Blue fox shows sign: of singing a comc-ibacit l-Ience:—- Trends. trends, trends. What are we going to do about them? I have not mentioned mink as I am not a mink man. but the some conditions apply Neither have I mentioned the mfluy. mmrr; things that have had their depressing effect on the Fm: pelt niarket- such as tne world Wide chaotic conditions, the UNO, Foreign ‘Trade, subsidies, ceiling, black markets, O-PA. [slbor troubles. strikes. unions and managements, luxury lax. rmolens and other t er, of cloth 1156C by the trimming ii-adc. end not being released. Any .. of (he above is a subject for a special article. Here is ii type of pelt that dc- niands a. much more delicate and (liticrciit way of carrying through to illc citing stage. It requircs n Wire ottom elevated keniu-l with no soiled lcdgeswboards or tables to lay on and stain the peit in urine, etc. Still there are roncli- crs who pay no attention to a few vital points to prover.‘ this. hence. ship a delicate valuable pelt. to market. and receive less than for an ordinary Silver. The Platinum type fox is not to blame for this bad management. There are a few fox- es that will =tand the ground pens. dirty. soiled kernels. rain sun and Wlliil have you. Hut it pays tn havc clean. wire. bottom pens and shade also to acme through with good uniform co7nr that the tradi- ocmimds. Silvers: Since orJy very light Ir D1110 Silvers are what the trade dc- mands, the above with reference to Platinums a lies to the ale and vcry light. Slvers Culiu-Whiit shall we sov about those? I can appreciate the position. of men working in receiving centers, as I have been on floors devoted to t type. It makes are sick to his stomach. one feels they outnumbei as“ rel. ‘i’ Wrrrm“ m e a an po o 4|, if a mncher has more than 10 ‘gr- . NEWSY i Ulla was a while mill? I have been “eadlw 1110mm H" Huxley‘; "Mani: Place in Nature a book written mainly to defend the Darwinian hypothesis cl "Eva.- utibn". This was the prelude w the 1% dispute between “Sciencfi and igion" that still crops up in certain circles today. However at .ne present moment I am more ‘nterested in a para- graph which siuIPOBW C8111 14> 11"" been a mutant. —‘-‘You know that the Negroes are said to behave i11i5 to have been. tne case and to im- agine that Cain was the first white man and that we are his descend- ants"— Then Huxley- goes on to say that Cain as a white man would quickly be wiped out by maizirii. on the West (Toast of Africa: whilst the Negroes would be uriiiarmcd. A sort, qf survival of the fittest! Such icgords Ere interesting and always have a nucleus of truth Passing by the origin of tne “first man" entirely. his name implies that he was colored like the "red earth" of the region where he dwelt lf Cain we: a white mutant the first Negro must have been a black mutant! Tradition places Cain. change o: color gave some sort of superiority for the white race in- creased and led the rest (Now it is eng ership by slaying its brother men) Is there a reference to the mutation in Genesis 4, ts "And the Lord set a mark upon Cain" . ? Further on, in the SBBTlC chapter one of Cain's immediate descend- ants committed (he second record- ed murder, an inherited tn-rxlency? Nature Notes Ono of the things that I observed on coming to the Island was the shortness of the potato-tops In the Old Country these are freq- PEHUY referred to as "White-vines". A friend sends me a press cutting that bears out the termz- "A seed 111w. planted no Mr. 0. Brookle- urst, last year grew to a heiizh of eight feet and had to be sun- ported by stakes The plant ivas taken at the 0nd of the sensor. and V19 ded 240 potatoes, I116 total "W113i "of which was nearly 28 Though there is something plwn. oimenol about this. therelsno doubt that the fertile soil. the n.l.d clim. ate and the longer sensor. produce l1 1113<11F15Y1E Krowtl: of the ‘potato- Vine’; but not longer than three lee-t. and often less, in the North 0f Enqland. The tubers were oom- mgulglullqmer than tlmseldof P E i e across an o of “The Northern Echo" d/gtetllmglflll. B13’ 26. 1938. The chief front page topic was the previous night's (us. of Aurora Bomalis. An oh- er ster, l s that this was the flrnsifglfi till‘: Aurora had been seen there for 51X!!! yea-rs The southern counties seldcm see this ifisplav; Nonhum. berhmd about 01160 in ten years while in the North of it is not infrequent. Scotland On readina, this account I turn- ed up my " eathu- Book" for that date The first thing thnt came to light was a picture of (he Sun. which had broken into a Lash of sunspots at that time One group covered an area 120.000 miles long air-j 00,000 miles wide. Science has found a connection between the sunsipois and such happenings as magnetic storms and nurorac. and these big fellow; lived up to their reputation "The Aurora tied up the wires in Gmada. U.B.A., Bri- taln Holland, France, Austria S in and Italy January 25th. 1938". ere was a great gae here that night and the finest display ii Aurora I had ever seen Tr-erc was a cor-siderable fail of the baromet- er at this time The Sun's rotation at its equat- or is about 5 days and tne spots in ice became “oentral" several times before they disap 51""?! 113511? On each occasion ere were disturbed and stormy times on our earth. m “ff-bombs owu bu connection with the eunépotsmei: ear not of . ‘Iihc tie g m; 1c p.15... a. main. a r e aipiilmlcxiliiggaiitialil Inland: celebrated their mo. in Asia, not Africa and the Ital aged. in ieopai-dlzing its leaxl- wuild NOTES Q AGRICOLA “new plant". There is a good polor- ed picture of tnc Axyrla In ‘Farm Weeds of Canada." 19M. ‘Plato 14. This valuable book may b0 00H- sulted a-t the Public Library. ‘Ifhe seed miust have arrived as an in- purlty in feed wheat The hay- mower has now hren ovqr the corn- er where the new weeds ew so the morrce is over for t. a year 01d Lighting Problem: Mankind has always had a light- ing problem. Ii: the Scriptures lamps are mentioned as existing in Old Testament times. These would be of the some typo used by the Romans in Britain centur- ies later; a. small shallow basin with a hande o-i one side and a "llll" which held the wick on the Other As oil is mentioned in the narratives, it nos pmbabl of vegetable. origin and non-e. osive. Until the advent of the Europeans. the Eskimoé usco hollow stones blubber and mos for wick to light- en their darkness. Lamps of that kind are not found in the Saxon ZLnies, for the art 0f candle-mag? had been intro- duced into taln, possibly by fan missionaries. We have al raid the story of King Alfred's candles. which were enclosed in horn lanterns. i" early du-ys and the peasantry “uuld be 818d Lo get “msh-llghts" which continued to used m) late in the eighteenth century The ruch used 1n making this light was (he big Juncus eLfusus which by the way is found hem The bark is stripped off. except; a narrow-strip on one side, then the pith is dried in the sun dip- ped "in melted 1a’. of almost any 1nd and allowed to "set" A spec- ial holder was nerded, with a grip rather like a spring "clothes-peg" Gilbert White 118a left on record "wt u 800d rush two ‘eet four lnflhes long, burnt. only dim, min. utes short of an hour and gave a good clear light. By the beginning of tlic nine- teenth century the use of candles “'39 m longer confined to the "up. »cr classes". StlL‘ ere was a lstlricilon The rer people used "tallaw cund es" commonly called “d1ps". The "quality" um»; wax candles. usually called moulds I" my yuutliful days I once can aucusrjs i946 the process o! making "dip ‘T was carried m at. the i-oiliglcyh Briefly the wicks We“ Lind u, l long rod. a stated distance; W these were let down (dipprdi 1m, a long narrow var. o: me ltd 131b,, and withdrawn When m». tallw on the wick became "set“ (midi the procflis was repeated tiii m, "dip" was sufficiently thick when it was out loose. Dips were solq‘ by the bound _ ‘The wax caddies were "cast" 1n special moulds not dipped The. wcrc of better ingredients. tlic til’. low of the hialiesi quality. “ugh a proportion o! beestvax and usuilly with green. ulyik or yellow @010“ in matter. Very recently Mr Colin llggins of Oysterbed Bring,» ,1, lowed me to cxsminc mi- Oi m: moulds which iiad sur (.1 5pm, pioneer days. it cor. n; of m metals tubes, arraiigcii u. “Y, series each Dllllf. to hold a gQfd candle. ‘The wick was iiliced ,,, each and the wax" run 1.; vhclqg. ing it. Such n‘ ut isil 1.. a real musetun piece and l rim [Zlilu n, y. it in such gcazl l-aiids. ‘ Tho Barn Swallow I have seen more Barn SWHEOZV} this summer l1"£<lll I have NW1‘, years Thev came first and 1. on the barn (op than (in g of the house. explored and in short acted as if tr. “l, made a dlsoovei-v that siiircd tlitm Here is a description of tli-yi plum, age: Barn Swallow. A O.U 611i sun. rner resident ltlule: forciicaci (let; chestnut. rest of the uppii- m,“ dOlp steel blue: Yump dllllmt black; tail deeply forked and with l Wlllte 5P0! on each fcaihcr N1 oept the central pair. Thioii ml chestnut; 'l.ll1'.lPl"pa1l5 buffv (AME tail-coverts rufous Fcmallvp, '1 brightly colorx-i and witn . 105s deeply forked‘ Long.“ “bu; 4 80 Tail 1o 4 15 lliillfif‘ 50 "Our most graceful Suqiioq» says Dr. Taverner and one my add, one of the most useful; on}, its food consists entirely C; 11,1. insects. mosquito. and lllc like " Ara SERVICE r0 ITEIIERAy .ei:i:>%~ - er — rt verseas Al i utlun Service has beeldwgéisenegugg; the United Kingdom to Tchernn vii tans... "E5525. A weekly (Palc ti '. Baohdad (Iraqi. The lull}: Northclt every Thursday, arriving in Tehecan on Saturdays, . i? The nearest f all th t . ‘ . W118 be about 000 miles from the earth. Illustration Station Field Days The Dominion Department of Agriculture, ii u-opqgflq m], Provincial Department o! QIHQIIUIIPI- Ill] hold DB7! on the following (him, Standard 11mg ill IllIfl-afltm Bunion Flcll Farm of Hugh J. MacDonald, Monloollo, August Deli pg g y,“ Speakers: Hon. W. F. Allan Stewart, D. O. Schumann, salmon F. A. Drlscoll, R. B. M L. W,. Roper hrmolT.AlbortBobq.A&iI,AI¢fllI|aiIp.m. Speakers: D. C. Salim-nun, l. 0. mum. I. I. (Icy, G. C. Warren, R. B. Maclilron. mama-oi, Farm of William l. Jolmstono. New kudos, August ‘m; gt; 3 N“, Speakers: Ilh Bruno the Lieutenant Governor , 1w. J. w. mum. uni’, Mb: Illtello mam, n, pf Lfii?" u‘ Farm of Thomas and Walter Noonan. Richmond, August 8th at 2p... Speakers: J. W. Bonita, 31.31., 01d» F- 4- 911N011. R. B. Maoliuon. w. J. ma, was, ii I Mun“. Fannoflenon GsllanhUi-balnkhgltilhatlp; Speakers: W. l. lhow. M31. W. I. Ill, ILL, L. W, h”, I‘. A. Driacoll, l. B. MacLu-on. Farm probleml. III! "I W"! ll Plvlnoo on tho Illustration Sta- tions and Experimental Farm be discussed. A jldxln‘ d“; h Livestock will be an added feature. ‘like this u an opportunity to moot your neighbon. to convene with Departmental nqmqiguyg, “q g flnworkthatjtnprogng, I - W. N. BLACK, Blpervhor oflllrtratlon lhllom For Prince Edward Island POTATO SAYERS m DAY pointly to those who feel that the‘? m“ ""1131 ‘Bf-Will their fuel and light bills. National 139st c0101- phasg foxes in thl‘ “m8 Cull, he will soon be ou of ~ , ‘I'll PARTY AND EVENING CLASSES ' Students may look for part time work in the llfoncton area t0 liclp ilicm drfrztv 9x. ltenses. ' Wrilc for tnirticulars. E L I Z A B E T H HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 822 Main St., Moncton, N. B. expenditure in Great Britain last year on fuel and tiizht Was i265.- OD0.000 ($l.l92,500,000i whr-rcas $584,000,000 was ]]-'il'(l out for_ to- bacco and £685.000.000 for (Trink- "You might find these figures useful when yam-customers com- plain their electricity hills are too high and say they cant afford them." he concluded. Do you require u PEIISOIII. l.0llli y’ in pay for an educational course to Improve your coming power? Anulv to mcmt brunet» of TllE Glllllllll Illll 0F Gfiilllilllli ‘laniiily Deposits prqvldo Io! npi-iymnn‘. — low lulu — lilo Immune; arranged and paid for by the lunli covon all loom In good standing. 6R 1 MacDonald Bros. THEATRE Mt. Stewart Fri. 8.30 — Sat. 8-10 p.m. "lrovntoi": Millions" DENNIS WKEEFE Ptiii l0 Plill‘ ANI: Mil l0 Lil/iii ¢W"T'Q"'¥‘§"F'F"P XURIS HOSPITAL fiprllsnav, AUG. m. p JUNE HAVOC jg“, Ammonium and and "m4- ROCHESTER U. A Million Laugh: ,now advocate the return of growing drink evil can only be curbed by restrictions ratherthan by open bars, but it was not ex- pected, considering the st rec- ord of the City in rcgar to tem- perance legislation. 55.000 persons were eligible to cast their ballots but less than half went to the polls. 14.589 cast their ballots in avor of open sale of beer and wicies by the glass and open bottle arid"1.413 aga nst it. that 26 per cent of Halifax Voters approve the beer saloon and l3 per cent are opposed, Whether the legislature ,will consider a 26 per cent vote a mandate to go ahead remains to be seen. The provincial laws will have to be changed and before that can be done the mind of the vot- crs of the Province should be de- iormined. That many be the next step and the temperance forces should consider the votes taken in Hali- 'fax and in the three Oope Breton towns, New Waterford, Dominion and Glace Bay. as the opening skirmishes of the second phase of the lung drawn-nut battle against the liquor traffic. The trafficwop a signaLvictory when under the Moderation League it introduced government control" as a zeni- perance measure. That ls now de- nounced as fiercely a: war pro- hibition and the same "moderatfi" o ‘saloon u the real step to “true fte rance." The saloon wan an jlnst ution of the horse and buggy [age and disreputable even in that iage. To go back to it in this mob‘ ,or age that needs sobriety and ‘alertness on the roads is certain- ly a backward step and would be a reckless disregard of public wel- fare. Yet this is just the thing that the iquor traffic ll trying to bring bout in these Maritime ,h'ovlnces. Intenstod forces are keeping the agitation for in- creanlng t c facilities for drinking. using the specious argument that the easier drinking ll made the ilQSl eager men are to drink to excess. , ' That was the argument used in {bringing about ths repeal of gro- hlbltion in the United States. lg- -ures jurt released there ahow that country spent lalt ear for al- .,cohol drink! l 800. 0.000 an all ‘time high and 9 r cent a ovs that of i944. at lflgge in: amount spent for liquor by Amer cam lut year exceed: all the money spent by them in one venr for all schooll, public and private. all collagen. un veraitlel and pro- fessional lchooll. for all Uiuverln l-i iunmd States, if not ln the world and his opinion on foxes is worth aylng attentlon to. In. the June lagging of the Black Fox Magazine h; 115,; an article entitled Stand- iard Silver Foxes Have Not Deter- iiorated. and we are taicms lilacrty of reproducing it ‘Most breeders would like m breed what the trade war-ts. Th4" writer resents tnc repeated 5W6- mgm by some ‘That standard silv; srs have deteriorated l have new. mt like apoioslzius (or ulv 9150!“. 1n pgunptizig ‘the color phase way o; bfggdlng The resistance met b)’ White Marks this season is mrisl. 'deplora.ble~ u» say (he lea-u Obi lty libraries, all public libraries and school libraries. all gifts 2nd bequests for religious work at homo and abroad. all charitable benefits. Add tn all this the gov- ernmnet expenditure for old as‘! pensions. dependent ChildrPn, aid to the blind. unemployment cam- enaatinn andithc United States eterans Administration. and niie begin! to lee what a 8P1? J1"? drink has upon the American people. When a people Sfujnlls more for cine questionable iiionl- gence than they do for all their cultural. religious and charitable work combined. one can hardly say that free flowing liquor and open beverage rooms have pro- moted temperance. ‘Plie enormo a total spent aver- ages about 8 per year for every man. woman and child ll'\ the United States. The average in Caw ldl is about half that amount, iuc to the fact that we still have re- ltrlctiotis on the sale of .ntcxi- cunts. But if the liquor int-area's have their way we shall not have thou restrictions lonii. the ' business. 5o I would say that l0 Percent was a fair estimate. 1111a. in spite of feeling that it must be 90 percent when you are look- ing at mthlng but culls. A bmdins mewns on nadoiui scope could be held in Ohloago August 10th at tne clolc of tho No- tional Board of Fur liar-m 0x3“. ization board of directors meeting Ausust 14th and 16th. I would not like to close this article with- out thankg-tgl all individuals, orffio- ers. assoc o who have rive‘: c-fngheir lilmrztlzfins 11107193’ in our behalf. In closing. let r_ne sav that hundreds of quality” male and female sit-or; have an sold‘ a.» breeders. hence have not been in the pelt market. Again I repeat, :iic_v are not do. tcrloratlng, arc not of lower grads 0T quality. we can prove it in our shows. but not form our opinion; bgiethe culls seen in an auction 5 . DO. Stewart, Bummerslds, m- cslved an order for o. lstlnimi male fox to a up“; Britain in October. is in. u far as known, the 1111f. platinum fox sh from America to the Ol-l Country. Mr. Stewart i; a noted breeder of prime-winning foxes, in fact is one of the out-standing breeders of Dan-ado, WELSH FAIR SUCCESSFUL CARDIFF, Wales —- (CY) -- The success o! the first posit-wai- my for Welsh industries, rcoontl - ed here. exceeded all expoohglona. Visiton from all rt; of the wag-M blaocd orders to t o value bf £2,500.- 000 ($10,000,000). Among tho artic- les particularly in dunand won elcc ric clocks. l non: liuAufY "l!" nlcht and the Ulglfltlp-heu I-I ed the Northern Echo thus-fiscal. W" V0 Re his With metal her nets covering tiuiien hair eorii giitterinm tnoats o mail and oarryg 8r: bsttrcoxcs and shleldee earm- eerllslui with nurse emblemna mar. - . t northern cart! twuoht to wlltllefl-te $5355‘ annual fire festival of cm lhdbelgg nc-{Lmtiyfimis not diffi- mumlumz uuoush the street; oi Hrwiuk: but (amino n0t_ be easy 7° 1113979?!"- mfiomaes concerning Business or abstract ideas. Tele. Three more Sit-gallon opnyon duo Ip u-i-iyc Aug- uot~ 1st; one 80 gallon sprayer slightly used, ready for lin- mgdiate use. Priced to sell. W. B. JENKINS 116-212 Gt. George Si. Lei WELLllElPS Elelgrrrififlériesscges would be lfidfllfipye. O O I 1n Mi old book in dated 1w. there only ppiiifiiiifii‘. the mmorological ob- wrvltbns of M: Luke Howard 1".R..S. 0f Acikworth, Yorks mi,‘ observer kept tab on the :h°llhlr for fortv Years and founi-i at the result snowed two cycles 0! Qlihteen years each ThEIQ w“ l treat. iesentblancc between thc 1W0 Periods and Mr. HOum-d w” °°nvm°°d m" 1'1 each cycle there was a succession b: you” Wm, X1101! than the average degree of Wlflhth. and a succession of years WW the avecasr Fmm further observations it is plain that he 100k: to the ‘uinar cycp" ,5 m, aarplanatlon of these ChlLn-WS. “l? Lil-n" Cycle however, is Oompleted 1n nineteen years, when the Earth, the Sun and the Moon return to the azime relative posit. iom n they first occupied; and Bo New Moon fails again on ‘he “me Y 0i Uh! month I have inst checked the truth of this and ind that New Moon fcll ‘in Jar. 3. 1917 and 194B. Modern thought finds t-hs weather deper-rlcnt on the eleven-year sunspot Cyclo mine; than on the Ullflar Cyclg This week I came ACfOsa g new weed in the barnyard It puzzled g‘ so‘ ‘I ‘amt i: to the Dominion 1...; oi- minim Th», a ouno that it was xyrll millvfif thoidsu, the Russian Pigweid It i. 71°‘ 115194 1n any‘! Manual ll Botany nor is it found in ililttoirs; the reason being that. it l5 a we“. an plant, while tne Manunls wcrc writ/ten for ozsternAmerlcii I have Mt helfd Of 1's being found hero tun before and it certainly r32; not appear in any Island list, IO down 8 In! by book of records u a, ti llElllllllllT vuur llllllllllllllS ' Modernist/k fty/ing A ' Superior Workmuns/iip ' Qua/it y Settings Z elk diamond: on lectured In this mod- cm mounting of HK yellow gold. N." A Wall Dlltlncllvo mounting, beautifully on nul to l“ ilunn III gncl h your old diamond. WELLNERS. Jewelers Since 1868 _