oo &..--Give advice if he does not have to have been so moved and settled. years ago about 500 boys per year : city. Edmonton, Alta--The new variety christened "University 222" fifty bushels to the acre on a | Wood its credit than is generally FW. E. turist, province. 'experimental plots at the University of Alberta has already much more to rally realized, Vietoria, B.C.--British Columbia's apple crop is 760,000 boxes, ahead of last year's production, according to Robertson, provincial horticul- The total yield is placed at 8,625,000 boxes as compared with 2,- 869,000 last year. This year's total is the largest in the history of the DUCK HUNTER DROWNS IN SCUGOG MARSHES Young Scot, W. G. Dean, Was Prominent : in Financial and 'Social Cireles in Toronto. Port Perry--His body firmly held in the cockpit of his duck boat, Wil- liam George Dean, aged 26 years, of 116 South Drive, Toronto, was found drowned in the marshes of Lake Scu- « gog about a mile and a quarter south of here. Alone at the time, Mr. Dean, it was surmised, had in some manner upset the frail craft and had been un- able to extricate himself. 'Mr. Dean was well known to To- onto socizty as 'the son-in-law of F.{ | 7 G..Osier, of Osier & Hammond, To- ronto brokers. The 'upturned boat was discovered by E. F. Osler of Bronte, uncle of the drowned 'man's wife, and. Samuel 'Wakeford and Jack Murray of Port . : Torry: She latter being an employee of the duck-shooting club to which the -- others belonged. "The four men had been out shooting ~ together, and Mr. Dean had been left by himself in his duck boat in one "hide," while the other three went further through the marsh. The last NORTH HAS TRAGIC END time that they beard him shoot was at 1.80 pm. When he was taken from the water it wes found that his watch had stopped at 2.15 p.m., so that itis likely that hs was precipitated into the water either at or slightly before that time. . - Mr. Dean was born in Aberdeen, Scotland, and was a graduate of Ox- ford. "He came to Canada late in the spring of 1925, and on June 3 of that year was married in'St. Thomas's An- glican Church, Toronto, to Miss Phyl- David Boyle ~ Of: Woodstock, brother of the late Col. ; "Kiondyke Joe" Boyle, who to the Queen of Rumania is "Uncle Daye" Just as his brother had been "Uncle , Joe." Mr. Boyle talked "old times" with her majesty in Toronto. ------ns. TRAPPING TRIP IN Two Brothers Started, One Returns Bearing Body of Fert 'William, Ont.--Bringing with bm the body of his brother, Mike Turecki, a young traprer, arrived here after a long journey, partly by canoe and partly by rail, from Irish Lake portage, beyond English River. The dead man is Lewis Turecki, 24, lis Amy Osler, daughter of F. G. Osler. 'He and the former Miss Osler had met some months before while she was visiting the 03d Coyntry. and 'the two arrived at Irish Lake portage last Thursday, when the fatal accident occurred. They hailed from Armstrong's Creek, Wis., and had in- tended to put inthe winter trapping. "Thursday ing they started to Torowta,. Pirie ot mas be beth 5 ont ng the war he held a| - and was wounded on' active services, --Talk loudly, but only a wise man can listen quietly. £5 ~8ee a failure, but it takes brains to discover the cause, x --Drive fast, but good driving is safe : ving. x Tell the boss where to hear in, but : it seldom pays big dividend : --Gat his name printed in big type if 'he'is foolish enough. id x take any responsiblity for 1t, men to settle it. ©" "Hther's wring two hotts later. --Stir up trouble but it takes wigs Ri Quecn has not finished shaving" And} fcrsooth. the Lord Chancellor was | right, beca | taken b sonators. get supper and Lewis went down to the. canoe. for.' provisions. In some alned manner a .22 calibre rifle in the canoe was discharged and Lewis was 'shot in the head. He lost con- scloustiess and died in his young bro:| Mike, who is 21 'years old, would not leave his brother until the end came. Then he paddled 25 miles for hap. The tragedy means the end of the dream of the two brothers to live a life of adventure and amass a com- petence as trappers. 25 minim i Mil Changing Time. i "Why does not the curtain rise?" asked th in that day all of the upon the stage were Young men--female . imper- boards n London in 1639 soclety was . the | When" rea! 'women went upon the totrible immorality of 1 thie attityde ofy oping its resources, 'They laid out kat the South West Point, and divided in .the photograph with his wife. Hon. Louis A. Taschereau, premier of Queboc, an office he has held for 28 years, He is In London attending the imperial confereyce, and is shown --No. 1 North. No. 2 North, $1.46%; No. 3 [$1 -|8, not quoted; No. 1 feed, 62c; feed, nominal; v. por ; oe grt, Srack, Ronagto-No. fi C} Oo. OW, 8 Millfeed-- Montes] to! 1.26; good feed flour, per ba Ontario outs, 48 to bbe, £05. $20. 5 HR nts. » = | Ont. good milling wheat--$1.80 to yp A shipping points according | $6.26; do, com. or . ; Barley--Malting, 60 to 64ec. Buckwheat--=86c, nominal. Rye--No. 2, 9c. ronto; do, 2nd pat., $7.60. Ont. flour--'t'oronto, 99 The eosnt Jormation of the Anti- cos rporation to exploit the pulp- resources of the is'and of the same name in one of the first incidents in many years to draw attention this interesting, valuable but neglected bit of Quebec province. Anticosti is a large island lying off mouth of the great river. grees of latitude (nearly the same as land of the best quality, similar, said | the late Sir William Logan, the emin- ent Canadian geologist, to the fine Bounty, New York State. over 300 miles of sea coast, is about 140 miles long, and 35 miles broad in the widest part, with an average breadth of 27% miles. Anticosti slopes coast to the grassy savannas which skirt the southern shore, and thus, in a great measure, the fertile portions of the country are protected from sovere winter winds, very healthy. considerably tempered by the waters of the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the heat of the summer is, to a certain ex- tent, moderated by the same influence, ! and crops come to perfection in geod! season. being rich loam intermixed with lime- | stone; valuable forests are to be found 5 on the quality, and well adapted for ship- building and pulpwood. which have been hitherto comparative- ant. summer, might be turned to profitable mals being visible during the former observed in thé summer and autumn at rivers, where they remain compara. 'tively unmolested. Hunting on the island is of consid- mals found on the island, whose skins are of marketable value, are black bears, which are very' abundant, ot-| 'ters, nmartens, and the silver grey, red, ! black, and, sometimes the white fox. Great quantities of ducks, geese,' and 'other wild fowl resort to the lakes and bays of the island. There is 'ai understood to be a few reindeer on the, ig.and, placed there for fpurposes of climatizing. : Joi A company was once formed for the purpose of colonizing the island of Anticosti, and for working and devel- town sites at Ellis Bay, Fox Bay, and the island into twenty counties, of about 120,000 acres, each subdivided nto: five townships. The scheme 'was not 'a success. In '1880 the Govern- several gradually from its elevated northern Thor rains. 1 greater part of the island, and pgris, 2 hough the simber general is not! who has retained possession up to the of the largest size, it is of a SUperior { year 1926. The syndicate now in pos- session is controlled jointly by the St. Maurice Valley Corporation, the Way- The fisheries around the island, | agamack Pulp and Paper Co., and the 4 A Port Alfred Pulp and Paper Co. The ly neglected, are valuable and import new syndicate will at once proceed to! : {exploit the pulpwood resources of the; _ The sca! fishery, which could be €ar- island which, it is estimated, will am- i ried on here as wel in winter as iniount at Iaast to 15,000,000 cords. it e------------ The winter's cold is top small ment of Canada laid a submarine tele- graph cable connecting the island with the mainiand, an inestimable boon to the shipping trade. Sir William E. Logan, in his Geo- graphical Report of Canada, after re- ferring to deposits of peat, or peat- bogs, in different parts of Canada, says: BL extensive peat de- ve ) its of ada are found in Anti- the Gaspe toast, at the inner end of 4 sore along the hn land on the coast the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and at the! ¢ the island from Heath Point to It is situ-Sgithi hi i W ated between the 49th and 50th do jaiiin sight one miles af South as abundant, might be turned | to a profitable account in the manu- facture of salt. Streams of 'excellent water reach 4 ™ | the sea on every part of the coast of Its climate 18 | Anticosti. They are for the most part to admit boats, becoming | rapid immediately within their en- trances, and even the largest of them are barred with sand excepting for A "NCE. ghort intervals of time, Vegetation progresses very rapidly, | spring floods, or after continued heavy There are a number of good The soll is of good guality,! natural harbors. v 8 In 1886 the island was purchased as game preserve by Mr. Menier of the famous "chocolate king," Thus another picturesque and de- account, large numbers of these ani- tached spot passes under the hand of commerce and already there is talk of season, and thousands of them beinz', fat being buiit to earry the pulp- wood to paper mils on the mai the entrance of almost all the bays and go logs to 7 per st i) Sa og pened elsewhere in Canada, the pulp- wood operations will be followed and i 4 { accompanied by colonization and agri- erable value, though of far less im-l4ulpure, so that some day Prince Ed-| ada of farm settlars from the United portance than its fisheries. Tho ani-\ ward Island may not be the only "Garden of the Gulf." tl mmeatstn "The Hills of Rest." been. Beyond the last horizon's rim, Beyond adventure's farthest quest, Somewhere they rise, serene and dim, Iso The happy, happy Hills of Rest. Upon their sunlit slopes uplift' The castles we have built in Spain-- While fair amid the summer drift Our faded 'gardens flower again. They all are there: The days of dream That build the inner lives of men; The silént, sacred years we deem The might be, and the might have Some evening when the sky is gold I'll folibw day into the west; 3 Nor pause, nor heed, till I behold The happy, happy Hills of Rest. --Albert Bigelow Paine, The thickness of the 'peat, the t, that of the north of France).® It con-{ from, 3 Served on Fie inhi tains an area of 2,460,000 acres of 4, be of an excellent quality, The height of this plain may be, on an average, fifteen feot above high water " k, and it asil i arable =oil of Ontario, and the Genesee a i 1, san be Soot grated ahd after the 5.80; seaboard,iin bi 5.85. Cheese--New, rr tons, 23¢. Old, lar triplets, 28¢c. Old Butter--Finest 87 to 38¢; No. 1 creame tiltons, 80c. , 36 to 37¢c to aoe. R Fresh extras, in carto to Bc: fresh extras, loose, 60 fresh firsts, 50 to x firsts, 41c; do, seconds, 36 to 87c. Poultry, spring, over 4 Ibs. tring, to 3% Ibs, 30 to 33c; do, Ibs., 80c; hens, ove: 5 1b to 5 lbs, 26c; do$8 to 2 to 2% 4 lbs, 24¢ 5 bs. and up, 86e. fo by Himes, $3.15 to $3.25. aple produce--Syrup, 1 fos to Tor 18%c; 2%-Ib, sins, 13% to ld4c. Man. oats-- No. 2 CW, nominal; No 0, Western grain quota. L fre} b included: Bran, per to Sah, fr per $30.25; middings, "Man. flour-First nat., $8.10, To- per cent. poten, per barrel, in carlots, Toronto large, 20 to 20%e; twins, 20% to 21c; triplets, 22c. Stil- , 26¢; twins, 27¢; creamery prints, No. 2, 35 to 36¢. Dairy prints, 20% 62 52¢; fresh secon: 85 to 56c. Storage extras, 44c; py dressed--Chicke:., spring, squabs, 1 to 1% lbs. 32 to 33e; = 30 to 82¢; do, 3 to 4 lbs, 82 to 36c; do, 2% s., 28c; do, 4 |g roosters; 22¢; turkeys, 40c; ducklings, Beans--QCan, hand-pi : It possesses | yng the, West end of the island there $3.40 bushel; nes, 36.1050 53 ap, 0 tras, 42 to 48c; storage firsts, 38 to are many peat-bogs, varying in super- ficies from 100 to 1,000 acres." Near South West Point there are, per Imp. $2.80; per b-gal., $2.05 j225 per gal.; maj le suger, 1b. 25 . - N 0 . large sat ponds, which, if] y,,eu_ 60.n. tin, 1234 to 130; 10: Ib. tins, 12% to 18¢; B-lb. tins, 13 to Cured mests--Long clear to 70 be, $23; 70 to 90 20% Ibs. and up, $22.34; s, in barrels, 0; 2 | rolls, $39.50 per bbl. w Pure tierces, 16 to 17%e $6.25 to $6.50; butcher steers, to $7 . fob, $11; do, off cars, $12; try points, $10.75; select premium, $2.27, 3 MONTREAL. Oats, No. 2 CW, T4%¢c; do, No. 8, 69%c. Flour, Man. spring wheat pats., firsts, $8; do, seconds, $7.60; do, strong bakers', $7.80; do, winter pats., choice, $6.60 to $6.70. Rolled oats, bag 90 lbs., $3.75. Bran, $28.26. Shorts, + 1 $80.26. Middlings, $41.25. Hay, No. r ton, car lots, $14 to $16. 3 heese, finest wests., 17%e; finest easts,, 17%c. Butter--No. 1, pasteur- ized, 84 to 34%c. Eggs--Storage ex- 39¢; storage seconds, 84 to 86c; fresh extras, 60c; fresh firsts, 48¢c. Com. bulls, $3.26 to $3.75; cutter cows, $2.76; poor quality calves, $10 to $11; do, better, $11.60; grassers, $4; hogs, thick smooths, $11.75; se- lects, $5: premium above thick smooths and lights, $11.25 to $11.50; sows, $10. Ccmb honey--$8.4 SEES EMPIRE WELDED CLOSER BY AVIATION | | | Sir Samuel Hoare -- Settlers From U.S. Ottawa, Ont.--Immigration to Can- States for the month of September was particularly active, according to reports received from the agencies of the Dept. of Immigration and Colon- ! ization. Last month the agency at Fargo, North Dakota, headed the list of the 18 agencies of the Department in the United States with a tota! of 675 persons sent to Canada, an in- crease of 300 over September, 1925. These 675 settlers brought with them cash and effects valued at $726,095. Only 10 were not of the farming class. The agent at Syracuse, N.Y., re- ports that more sottlers have been sent to Canada through his office since April 1st, this year, than in any year since 1915. Reports for last month from the other agencies show increas- ed migration of the best class of farm settler, when compared with Sep- tember in recent years. 'Bob was a stranger among us. Some. | 'one spoke of snipe: hunti to know all You take pty at the Motor Industri FP me en A | i | t 1 0 to $4 per dozen. Sentiment vs. Economics. BY CHARLES W. PETERSON, To those who see in the phenominal prosperity of the United States and the magnetic attraction it has for the people of Canada, a tendency which might some day easily lead to a weak- ening of the ties that bind Canada to tho British Empire, our present écon- omic position is not entirely reassur- ing." Because history shows that in the course of time economic considera- tions wi.l invariab'y prevail over pa- heavyweight , 18 to 18%e; tierces, ; pails, 14% to 16c. steers, choice, $6.75 to $7.26; after the death of Chaucer, there were 'no authors who could bear any com- parison with him, either in genius or in creative power, i] And while there continued to be some dogree of literary activity, the movement and the growth seemed very slow and fitful, until during the reign of Queen EHzabeth, when there was a burst of intellectual activity and @ galaxy of intellectual chiefs, that have caused that period to be remem- t0 | bered as the most brilliant epoch in literary history. But, before we pass on to the Elza bethan age, we must pause to consider the work of & man whose claim to pe honor and remembrance rests on a surer foundation than his own literary productions. His name was Willlam i | Caxton. He was born in Kent, about 1412, In youth, he was sent to London, and apprenticed to a mercer--a dealer in silks and woolens. After a few years, his master died, and Caxton went abroad, probably, it is thought, as the agent of the London Mercer Company. It was about this time that Laurence Coster, "in the woods of Haarlem, had shaped his letters out of beech-bark, and had looked with delight upon the impression left by the sap upon the parchment In which he had wrapped them." Invented Type and Press. Gutenberg, of Mentz, caught sight of these lotters and their imprint, and he conceived the idea that he could in- vent a process by which the impres- slon of letters could be taken, and used in such a way that the manuscript coples of works could be changed to printed copies. He shut himself up in a ruined mon- astery, near Strasbourg, and went to work. He Invented the type and press, the ink and inking balls, with which the first printing was done. Caxton, who had continued to live upon the Continent, became much In. terested, and decided to study the art of printing at a time when he must have been about fifty-nine years old. It is thought that he learned at Co logne, at considerable expense, as he himself says. He bought type, and it was at Co- | logne, in 1471, that he printed the "History of Troy," a French work, which he had translated---"the first English book that ever came from any press," triotic sentiment. While we cannot hopa to outstrip our powerful neigh- bor, wa can come much nearer creat- ing opportunities for our own people at home than we are doing at present and thus arresting the debilitating leak of our precious vital asset and stifling the inferiority complex we have unconsciously created in our | public mind, which cannot be without | its impertant influence upon the indi- viduai decisicn leading to gouthbound migration. THE NATION'S BACKBONE. It is useful to arrive at a clear ap- preciation of the general economic effect of an enlarged agriculture. The average person readily gives intellect- ual assent to the time-worn phrase that agriculture is the "backbone of the nation," but usually without posi- tive conviction or any adequate con- ception of the fundamental facts of the case. It is generally a mere figure of speech. It is, therefore, well to 'consider briefly to what extent agri- culture has been responsible for Can- ada's material progress. Forty-one per cent. of our net production in the | last census year Was agricultural; i thirty-three per cent. manufacturing. Our forests, mines, fisheries, construc-' tion, ete., account for the remaining twenty-six per cent. Our B billions of , agricultural capital represents 36 per cent. of Canada's total availab'e wealth. Urban real estate accounts for twenty-six per cent.; our railway plants, 10 per cent.; forests, 5% per cent.; mines, 2% per cent.; and manu-| facturing equipment, 2% per cent. A NEW COLONIZATION POLICY. This gives a line on the paramount Perhaps, although he had lived so many years away from Engand, he still loved her es "his own, his native land," and desired that she should be the partaker, at least, of the benefits which the new art he had mastered would unquestionably bestow. However that may be, not long af- terward he was in London, and had his press established in working order in the a'monry of Westminster, First Publication. The first book published in England wae also a translation from the French by Caxton, entitled, "The Game and Playe of Chess, translated out of thy French, fynysshid the last day of Marche, 1474." A second edition of this work was the first English book #lustated with wood-cuts. The first press was, of course, a very imperfect and rude affair, yet it was the kernel from which has grown the mighty tree whose roots and branches extend over all the civilized world. The printing of a book, then, was a long, laborious task, while now bools and papers are printed in such num- bers that if you were to devote your whole time to reading you would bo unable to read more than a very small proportion of the whole. The binding of Caxton"s books was very substantial. After the proof was corrected and the sheets were printed, they were sewed together in a rude frame, hammered thoroughly to make them flat, the backs well covered with peste and glue, "the pages were In- closed in boards--veritable boards thick pleces of wood like tha panel of a door, covered outside with embossed and glided leather and thickly studded i position of our agricultural industry and suggests that a policy having in| 'view the colonization of Canada's; {vacant lands along vigorous would speedily lead to increased pros-| interest all classes of Canadians ir- respective of occupation. [ Mr. Forke, Carada's naw Minister of | Immigration, hos recently announced | hij intention of speeding up the work of his department overseas. be hoped that his efforts will mest, with every success. His dapartment| square'y faces Canada's key problem. ---- ee ol om et Parliament Soon to Meet. Ottawa, Ont.--It is expected that 'ines, | completed book, which has borne such rich and perity in our urban centres and should b his assistants, Kept on with the business. 4 3 p z i 4 ENE on ls was. a feature e M I Exhibition at Holland Park Hall, London. Its passengers on the esate, drives dow to the shore, and th en goss for a cruise cn the water, a AACS ghar ry A NP ge sie € "| the next session of the Canadian Fed- eral Pariiament will be opened on or | about December Tth next. Before leay-| : iing for the Imperiak Conference, now, t jin session in London, England, Rt. | tMon,. W. L. Mackenzie King, Prime i Minster of Canada, stated that he i hoped to call Parliament to meet early in December. Counsiderabla business that was not competed when Pariia- | ment "dissclved Inst summer will be | taken up and disposed of at the forth. coming session, which will be opened PY | Governor-General of Canada, A oh ge Ae by Tis Excellency Tord Wiliingdos, can in 'here! with brass natls, whose ornamzmtal heads shone in manifold rows. Thick brass corners and solid clasps the fortifications of the ounteous blessings, One can but think tenderly, ico, of "he Hon! fhe gray-haired man who devoted the last twenty years of life to a work which he must have 'oved so dearly! But there came a day, when he was It is fo] SAL elghty years of age, "when the door of -the printing office was ghut, und the clank of the press unheard within." A William Caxton was dead. One of Wynkyn De Words, Ancther man, Richard Pynson, who had also been one of Caxton's assict- ants, started in business for himself later, and succeeded so 'well that he | was appointed King's Printer, "being he firet on the long lst ! bearing that ta." , : 5 Isaac Was Innocent. Isaac's shop was on fire, und the fire- men were on their way. As soon as they arrived, one of them sald, "I think wé'd better try and got out some of the paraphernalia" Isaac got alarmed. "Oh. ua, 1 i" lie shouted. "I assure you there ts no paraffin oil raids \ For more than a century and a half Z