» ..>«.~.<M tea. .a 1- ~.«,... 1 4-..... ’w: .w’ .1 “2:2? A . Jew- ‘-:;~a.: 14 1:" "aweâ€""sh, "M‘fl'u. -'L"."-.. ’ : i v i "two; iON‘ iN JAPAN | Children A: err *Good General Training,'Wlth Some Specializing " The annual report of the minister oi state for education in Japan is in I many respects an inspiration and an; example to all who are engaged in educational work. It is not a mere record of good work done, although in this respect it is remarkable when i we rememperN the short time that l i Japan has been in contact with‘ western civilization; it is full of sug- gestive ideas, and those in supreme commandinsist on the necessity for all the work being of an educational nature, which would develop the powers of the students. On the one hand, special means are taken for the nurture of eflicient teachersr so that the teaching staff of every school should be made‘ complete and perfect. while, on the ether, honor and en- couragement are given to all persons of merit 'who are connected with edu- cation. At the same time profound attention is paid to the moral edu- cation of pupils and students. While a 'good general education is given ad a foundation, special attention is paid 'to every department of technical edu- cation. INSECTICIDE SlFTER Scatters Dry Preparation and Lessons the Labor For the destruction of‘insect pests that affect low-growing vines or bushes a New .York man has patented the 'sifting apparatus illustration. It is designed for the use of insecticide in powder form and an plies arsenate of lead, lime, slugshot. fparis green compounds and similar preparations with equal facility. A cylindrical can with a perforated lower portion contains the powder and by a i I | I l v I NO .WATER TO INCREASE WEIGHT regulating device the sfmount of poison scattered can be governed. The old- fashioned way of spraying vines was to make a liquid solution and to cover an acre of ground required a great deal of unnecessary labor, owing to the weight of the water in the mix- ture and the fact that only a com- paratively small area could be sprayed with one load. It is claimed that this sitter will-spray an acre an hour. __________â€" W i; FRANKNESS W '.Frankness is the art of saying things you honestly think exactly as you think them. To be frank is to .be naturally straightforward. Look the other fellow in the eye. In the same manner as a straight line is the shortest distance between tw0 points," so is frankness the only direct cOurse between all people. Because nothing is wasted. The frank man is the man best to be trusted. Look the other fellow in the eye. Proï¬ts in, Cherries,_ Cherries, according to J. T. Bealby, owner of a commercial orchard on Kootenay Lake, are coming to be the fur-st profitable fruit in the fruit growing industry, although involving possibly the most labor. Mr. Bealby's cherry orchardsshow a grosa produc- tion of from $1,200 to $1,500 per acre. He states that one tree on his ranch has given an average of $70 worth of fruit every year for several years, and that $25 is a fair average for the entire acreage. After the first tour years merely ordinary care is required with a little spraying and trimming. Apples, he says, glve'an average 1’61 turn of $250 per acre gross. Mr.- Beaiby purchased his ranch of 25 acres about six years ago, and has made a marked success from the start. "-â€"-â€"-â€"_'â€"â€""â€"'â€". _._- ___._-â€" CHANGE IN Turn. It has been decided that on Sun- day next, May 4th, until further notice,“ The-Salvation Army services on Sunday evening will commence at p. m., instead of S p. m. Open-air servnce at 7 p. m. JUNKIxâ€"In the township of Veruiam, ' on Thursday. April 3rd,.1913, the wife of I Mr. Wm. J. Junkin, a daughter. wins in ENGLAND ‘ Holdings Few of the Very Large Nave Shown h Profit Among the farms in England Tang- ing from 2,000 to 10;000 acres less than 5 per cent. have shown an an- nual profit in the last ten years. One writer in The Daily Mail goes into details in regard to a Midland farm of 2,109'acres,-valued at $95,000 under the Finance Act, but which ten years ago could have been sold for three times that amount. The receipts from this farm amounted in 1912 to $6,500. and the expenditure to $110, plus that amount. Owing to the general fall in the value of land the landlord has lost a large capital sum since he came into possession. It is calculated that in England the capital value of land fell 'by over $500,000,000 or $2,500,000,000 within a generation, and his due pro- portion of the national loss has fallen on this landlord. If put into theopen market the estate would probably not fetch nearly $100,000, but if it sold at half this price the landlord would be richer than he now is by several thousand dollars a year. . . One need not go into his reasons for holding, but it is clean that at present he acts as a sort of agricul- tural credit bank to the estate. What- ever requires capital to be done he does. When the farmers 'were_ in a bad way he reduced the rents to a minimum. ' In the eyes of both farm- ers and laborers, schoolmaster and parson, who complete the population, he is regarded as the pivot of the or- ganization. Without his capital there shown in the «would be chaos, and without his per- sonality much less' confidence, which is the moral side of credit. E. J. CHAMB'ERLIN I E. J. Chamberlin, President of the Grand Trunk Railway was born in New Hampshire, and was educated in a Methodist seminary. "Early in the seventies, when a mere lad, he got a job as timekeeper on the old Central of Vermont. Then he became clerk in the paymaster’s oiilce. That shabby little workroom at St. Alban’s proved to be a training-school for at least two great railroad men; for at the very next desk to Chamberlin’s sat a plump, keen-eyed youth who stuck to his work and never minded the clock. The young clerk’s name was Charles S. Mellen, new President of I the New York , New Haven & Hart- ,ford, and transportation czar of all , New England. He became Superin- tendent of the Ogdeusburg & Lake Champlain Railroad; and soon a still . more inviting opportunity came pound- . ing at his door. John R. Booth, want- ed to build a railroad northward from 1 Lake Champlain, to tap his immense forest preserves. It was a rough-and- ready piece of construction through almost primeval country. Chamberlin was recommended for the task. It appealed to his imagination, and he undertook it with great su.cess. Eric. lived at the front with his men; slept and labored out in the open. When the road was pushed on to Georgian Bay, it became the Canada Atlantic, and - Chamberlin ,was put in as general manager. He ordered two monster i locomotives that could haul a full train = a mile a minute. It was not long be- fore the Grand Trunk assimilated the Canada Atlantic. Shortly after he succeeded ‘ Hays, someone asked Chamberlin if the Canada Atlantic could haul heavy trafï¬c. The Presi- dent replied: -“Well, I guess so. I built the road myself, and laid down : some of the rails hands!" main in the service, Chamberlin went to Mexico, and constructed railways , there. ipioneering, and the outdoor life ap- pealed to him. Then when Frank :Morse resigned as Viceâ€"President and [General Manager of the Grand Trunk I Paciï¬c, to go to the Alton, Mr. Hays I could only see one man to finish the task of blazing the iron way out to th~ IPaciï¬c, and that man was Chamber- ‘ iin. Chamberlin followed his old tac- tics, for he went to the front with the men, changed headquarters from Montreal to Winnipeg. and was in the thick of things when his chle.‘ made that fateful Titanic trip. Cham- berlin, like Hays, is a vivid personal- ity; There is something about him that reminds you of his big-boned contemporary, Sir Donald Mann. Both men have the breath of the woods about them, and the look of the eye that comes from facing the' sun in the great open places. Where Mann is broad and thick of chest, Chamber- lin is tall, lithe, sinewy, and full of latent strength. Both Chamberlin and Mann made their first stakes in railroad construction. A remarkably nnruflled person is Chamberlin, too. He always lets the other fellow do the fretting. Here is one instance of the way in which he achieves his ends: with my own which he was arrayed against half a dozen men. At the very height of ,the negotiations, he sent for his pri- ._vate car and annOunced his intention of «starting of! for a week’s shooting .in the wilds. When one of his as- sociates asked him why he was leav- ing at such ‘a critical stage, he an- sivered: "I am going away so that lthe other fellowe.will have a chance MOVE-At Glenal'm: 0“ Fridayo All?i1 , to wear themselves out. When I come 25th, 1913, the Wife of Mr. John Brown, . back they will be glad to come to a daughter. terms."â€"_‘â€"â€"Gl.obe. Declining all offers to re: V He loved the adventure of , A difï¬cult situation had arisen, in ' . . 231:. . Helps the Washing The addition of a little biueing to water with which windows are washed will brighten them *better than soda and with no risk to their paint. Flapping Winged ’Aeropiane A Frenchman has succeeded in fly- ing with an aeroplane driv'en by flap- ping wings instead of a propeller. Water for Oil The rails of a street railway in a hilly section of Rome are successfully lubricated with running water. A CARD. We, the undersigned hereby agree to sell a package of live standard size 5 cent boxes of Silver Tip Silent Matches for twenty cents. Quality guaranteed; A. & C.,l\lcFARLAND. NOTICE. Take notice that a. meeting will be hold at Twomey's Hall in the Village of Fenclon Falls, on Tuesday, the 20th day of May, 1913, at the hour of 2 o'clock in the afternoon, for the purpose of ELECTIRG TRUSTEES FOR THE CEMETERY The owners .of' plots are requested to attend the meeting. Dated at Fenolon Falls the 23rd day of April, 1913. E. FITZGERA LD 9.2 ' Village Clerk 'Xrir'khrii’i‘érb'ki"? 'rttcdfll'i‘ «assesses»: 4 ’0 9v 4"“ 0' N l-é E:- Z H N El and how to save money by the use of this oldest and the newest ï¬nish run FURNITURE FOB moss Fen sons no CANGES Comes in three-sized tins, 30, 50 and 800. Gimmnteed by the oldest and largest makers of- relinble Varnish in the cities of Boston and Montreal. See folders for colors and instructions. . Agency at Will. GOODWIN’S Wall Paper and Frame Shop ormwrwwmwrwweww = =- -l â€" w â€" ‘ _| a "U :«iwwwwwe e to o {.403}. g";- .5 Next Simpson House L i n n s AV. assesseseeeeeeeeeeereeeee v 4 95>!“ ‘1‘ .K. Sold and1 Guaranteed by all good Dragging. They know the formulas One for each everyday ailments i aiuicnsnmsamis.«mamm- . mus. seams in SlPiiiiiS.- . IWEiiiill. PliiiiiiEB OF THE BLOOD sum tin-is In More! scorch" no "emu-1 Org-u. mam. llm 59y 30†pins sun-n Iu wee-trout bioâ€"H ,«u nuow non. . snumsu. Piiltiiiiiii. - nuns POTASSIUM AND mu m m: Ill!!! VINO... lulu}... i00--FULL noses-woo JY'w- V For sale by A. l. noun ,4 FENELON FALLS. ems-sees W ' ' ' were .‘ewwemzowrw W . as» News § ‘Mother was a Beautyin her younger days' Mother may smile deprecatingiy, but watch her go to the littletop drawer and take out the precious photograph ces are she will tell you of ‘her ad- mirers, and.» we can believe they were many. What. apriceless record of her younger charms that pilot-0g ‘aph is to mother, and â€"to you. Modern photography can do inï¬nitely more to preserve the record of yours. " taken before I was marriet .†Chan- ‘ 'J. H. STANTON, Photographer, Iflwing in the High Standard Maintained in this college, the de- mand for the graduates is far in 1lexcess of the supply. This unques- gtionnbly one of Canada’s Best Com- ‘ mercial Schools. Its record proves it. “TORONTO. our. ,Admits students at any time. pre- 3 pares them properly for choice posi- ,tions and assists worthy students to 'secnro employment. College open Inll year. Write now for Handsome Catalogue. W. J. ELLIOTT. PRINCIPAL Corner Yang: and Alexander Streets. e . ABT CIRRI‘AGES ' received. Call in and see them. FURNITURE DEALERS FOR SALE p M anitoba. "ALEX. CONNELL Local Agent, Fenelon Falls. imp GO-CARTS L. BEYMIIN 81 SON C. P. R. Lands In Alberta, Saskatchewan and Fenelon Falls. SUMMER g SCHOOLSE For courses in all Business sub- jects leading to positions as Bookkeepers or Stcnographers and for Civil Service and Com- mercial Specialists’ examinations will be conducted in Shaw's Schools, Toronto, (The Central Business College with four city ‘ Branch Schools) from July 3rd to August 16th this year. Students may enter any time for general courses. No vacations. Write \V. H. Shaw, President, for cata- logue, 391 Yonge St., Toronto. Local Representative W a n t e d To handle lots in Parkway Heights subdivision, Welland, Ontario ; the fast- est growing town in Canndn,-26 Mann- i‘acturing plantsâ€"seven railroads. Par,k-. way Heights is the only high-class residential subdivision within the city limits, Seven minutes walk from the Post .Oflice._ Electric Light, Sewers, Gas, Water are all available. Car lines, being extended to property. This isn one of the best investments in; Canada to-day. Apply. with references: LIU’GHLIN REALITY LIMITED} 32' Adelaide St. 1a, Teronto. I Ilake Care ‘ Of the old rigs.__ New ones. cos-t money. We make a specialty of re- pairing, repainting, etc. If you have anything that needs ï¬xing up bring it here. Or if you need a new one we can build itâ€"good .9. as the best. ‘ I. I. EHIMBEBS. Colhorne Street Fcneion Falls. S. S. GOING THEM ONE" ‘ BEQW’IVJR.i Furniture delivered to your home at LESS THAN CITY PRICES You run NO RISTC see our goods. Call and Gainer. FENELON FALLS. SEE OUR WALL PAPERS. ....- - mm“: -_.A.,_.... l A ,i. P; ‘M' r ‘7 .-v‘ ~. "3:3; Q0751 :9‘ ‘0 «L’- V .‘ .33 53" N!» ‘L. l .u . MSW: ‘- feet, 1 :-_ o . as; asp-ufgflt. 1. ~: 33" .‘ 4 a. :7. rd fag-g V safe «:2.- v