V »* Canada from Coast tu Coast Charlottetown, P.E.I. â€" The fisheries of Prince Kdward Island and the MaK daleii Islands for tho ralendar yeari 1925 hhow thut iho total value of niurketeii (i.sh was $1,C)79,49;{, an in- rroiiao ov<jr the previous yi-ar of $:if)5,- t'Mi. lioheti-r.s accountt'd for over two-thirds of tho value, and Knie'.t^ , and cod for ovtr half of the remain- der. Three Riverp, Quc.--tt i.s announced! that the St. l^awrenoe Pniwr Mill.s, 1 Ltd., will at onti' proceed to double j tho capacity of their mill here. Thia j means that iii.stead of the present out- , put of 150 tons of newsprint i>er day, j the company will turn out 300 tona a j day when the necessary additioius to the plant are completed. The company has timber limits sufficient to provide a 40- year supply of wood. Saint John, N.B. â€" A shipment of SebajTO or landlocked salnMn was re- cently n)ad<> from here by tho Federal fiiih cultural branch to tho Dept. of Fisherio*;, Uubiin, Ireland, with a view to establishinf; thi.s famous gnnie fish in the lakea on tho estate of Sir Thomas G. G rattan Esmonde. A con- sijrnment of trout e^g* was also made from Vancouver at the same time to the Tokyo AnKling Club, Japan. Sault Ste. Marie, Ont â€" At tho be- ginning of March the Goudrcaii Gold Mines' mill ran its first Rold biick. It weighed forty pound.s and is worth about twelve thousand dol'.ar.s. This is tlie first brick ran in the Goudfeau field and marks the arrival of Alffomo as a pold-producinjj field. WinnipoK, Man. â€" The Elmwood I Pulp and Paper ( o., whi.-h has ncquir :ed a site in St. Boniface, will not 1* in the newsprint buiin.Ms. iU objeit ia a kraft paper mill with a mpacity from 35 to 40 tons output daily. Ac- cordinfr to a state-nent is.sued here by T. M. Ko'.lniar, th;? comoany also pro- poses to install laachinery for manu- facturiPK pulp out of straw. Sa:;kaloon, Sask.â€" Over 50 per cent, of all rogi.slered see<l >{rain jfrown in Ganadtr, wns produced in Saskatchew- an la.st year. Seed cleaninK machin- ery was installed at Moose Jaw in Iho fall of 1H24 by the Ro«istered Seed Growers (x>-operative Association and l>etweeM January, 1925, and Ijeforo seedinfT time of the same year, alwut 05,000 bushels of rejflstereJ Krain and over 200,000 lbs. of clover waa cleaned and marketed mostly to Saskatchewan farmers. The season of 1925-192(3 is expectod to bo more favorable, as the organization in addition to grains and clover, is handling bromo grass, ryo grass and corn. Calgary, AUa. â€" It Is reported here that a new gas flow at 3,320 feet depth, estimated at 200,000 feet a day, in the Mcl^eod No. 2 well in the Tur- ner Valley, forced oil up between tho casing. Government peroleum engin- eer Davies described the strike as "ft /ood showing." Nelson, B.C. â€" It is understood that tho Canadian Metals Extraction Co., Ltd., is to erect a zinc reduction plant in the Kootenny district of British Columbia, drawing its ore supplies from the Kootenay and Slocan dis- tricts. The company is being financed in London. What is Music? Many iiblloiui>liurH have Ki»eculatp<l H« to the nature of miislc ajxl liava .soufitit t<i funnuhite a theorjr to ex- plain [la luyMerit.uii power to »*ay LliH uiliuls and emotions of buiiianlty. I'lalo cuuMidered that mu»lc hulil no Kreut un liitlueiic« on cliaracter tliat. It wa(* the duly of llie lawgiver to rtKU- lato Its Ktiidy. so ilial ouly such mui Ic should l>u IdUfc-hl an wuuM buve a bene llclul effect. 'Jo .Viistolle aiso 11 .ip- pfc«i-e<I thut music, in addltiou to Iij) power oi bIvIu« piiJB4ire, bad uUo the liower of effectlug character. lie aKrtied that uiuniu waa one of the lui- rorlMut etsentlulu of education. The early Ie4idei-s of tho (Christian Church, a.1 might be expected, con- aliiered mu=ic a« coming directly by in- spiration from (Jod, the 8<jurce of all good, and us Inteadod to lift up our uvula lu adoration. I'robably Scliopenheuer, of all mod- Ernest Rivers eru philosophers, came the nearettt to New Mskoard prospector, who was a ; undensLanding music. To him. music passenger aboard one of the two stands above all arts, for It directly ex- planes which were forced down In a ' Pressaj the will Itself, Including not blizzard while Hying from Hudson to [ o"'y conscious desire, but al&o lii- Red Luke. Thereafter he "mus'hod" ; 8t'»''t. It is altogeth^er Independent of five days on foot, to overtake u party ; ^^'^ world of concrete things, and is of Indians who were to guide him to ^*'® expre.-slon of the Inner nature. a Lew mining site. | " ''^w ao^t eiprees particular emo- « ; t'<>"». but rather reproduces the essen- 1 tlal cliaracterlstltie of emotion. In such work as Beethoven's Bymi>honicfi When the Neighbors Helped. In an old-fashioned town where Anyone who ha.s watched wavee broaking upon a rof Uy wind is high realizeis the mighty force the waves exert. T Important geological factor, helping to wear away the land Natural Resources Bulletin. Canadian newsprint output has al- most doubled in the past five years while that of the United States has practically stood still. To-day the out- put of the two countries is substan- tially tho same although tho present year .should see Canada assume prt>- niier position among the world's newsprint producing countries, as tre- mendous plant expansions are actually under way or contemplated in every section of the Dominion. Exports, which are largely to tho United States, have increased almost tenfold since pre-war years, and tho proportion of exports to that country should even further increase as the various Am- erican paper concerns replace their pre.sent mills with plants in Canada where raw materials and power are not only cheaper but offer greater op- portunity for future expansion. It may be of interest to examine the pro- duction figures (to the nearest 100,- 000 tons) of the two coui}tries since tho war. Production of newsprint in the U.S. and Canada in tons: U.S. 1,500,000 1,200,000 1,400,000 1,500,000 1,500,000 1,500,000 That the increase in C.madian pro duction of recent years will be main- tained seoms inevitable, for as pointed out by the Natural Resources Intelli- gence Service of the Dept. of the In 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 Canada 900,000 800,000 1,100,000 1,300,000 1,400,000 1,500,000 mouth of WinriTpeg River, and a sec- ond is being discussed. On the Pacific Coast large interests have reorganized and put new money into some of the smaller companies, namely the Beaver Cove and Whalen organizations and a large and perm- anent production is looked for. A new rayon fibre plant is also l)eing planned for New Westminster. In addition to this, extensions amounting in the ag- gregate to several million dollars are being planned by the Powell River interests. This rough survey of the program of expansion in the Canadian news- print industry is by no means a com- plete one, but it will serve to convey briefiy and with emphasis the imme- diate future for Canada as a dominat- ing figure in the world of newsprint. "all human isissions and emotions riiid they still adhere to the Wednesday , utteranceâ€" Joy, sorrow, love hatred night prayer and praise meeting, an , terror, hope, etcâ€" In Innumerable de-' official of the Children's Aid Society : grees, yet all, aa It were only in ab- was in quite a dilemma. That after- stract and without parttcuiarizatlon; noon the Magistrate had committed a it is their mere form without the eub- young delinquent to the Industrial stance, like a spirit world without mat- School and the Children'.. Aid man , ter." Whereas Kant ignored the surface Is covered bv the oceans at the had agreed to keep him in his house rhylhuiic element in nmsic, Schopen- i present time overnight and start on the early morn- hauer considered it in all of its a«- The depth of about halt the ocean mg tram. Ho wanted to attend the . pects. Richard Wagner's devotion to ' ranges from 12,000 to 18,000 feet. The prayer meeting and, to make sure of , bchopenhauer Is well known, and his : rest is considerably less deep with the i ^^"^i^ and massive flow of water In the WAVES STR IKE 6000- PODND BWW' ^ That's Why Ocean Makes Such Great Inroads on the lumdL 19. St. '♦ \ Secrets of Science. By David DIetz. Seventy-two per cent, of the earth's and carry much matei-ial out lino th4 6e^. The smaller and slower tl.lua do little work of this sort. However, Ihey deposit .sediment upon tin; >hors. producing formations known to geolo- (l&tfl as tidal flats. Tlij c t(ia:i currents coustltiile the Historic English Residence Prey to Flames. Excitement among the owners of his- toric English resldeucea and the Bri- tish public generally has reached a high pitch as tho result of the burning recently of the tenth country mansion wltliln three months. The latest man- sion to go up In flames was Woolmore Farm, at WelUshani, In Wiltshire, which was once the reeldenre of Oliver Cromwell. The Hattlo of Round Row was fought near by between the Parliamentary and Royal troop.s. The house was 100 yards from un ancient tree known as tho Cromwell ojik, on which seven men were hanged on his orders. Recurrences of flrea among country terior, most of the large producing mansions have roused talk of Incen- companies have a definite program of diarism, but Scotland Yard as yet Is expansion under consideration and in unable to find any cunnoction between many cases, under way and financed, j "'e firee. Some nervous people are Now organizations, sonje of huge pro- â- "t'l'lbutlng them to communism. An- portions, have been in'corporated and """''" 'heory is that tho anthiuo elec- are definitely committed to productive ' ^'â- ''' 'Rtlngs of most English houses are programs. | suddenly going bad. Certainly cne A brief review of some of these de- ! '"e'^'on for the Immense damago Is the velopments may be of interest to show, '"^'IfilU''''' "'â- '' protection, since once not only the magnitude of the propos- , a country mansion catches fire It la ed plans in the aggregate, but also the practically doomed, as no arrange- wido geographical distribution of tho ""'•''•'< have been iiiado for a water pulpwood stands to be brought into â- ""PP'y sufficient to fiuench a major production. blaze. In Quebec a number of new mills will lie erected a.? the result of ojH'n- ing up more than 5,000 square miles of virgin llmlU in 192« largely in the Lake St. John and Ottawa River dis the boy, decided to take him along. When they arrived, the members en- quired who the strange youth was and they all became greatly interested In his case. Finally the pastor said, "We must make this boy the special object of our prayers." It naturally followed that they all became deeply concerned about tho lad's welfare. Several la- dies wanted him to dinner, to supper, for a visit, etc., and they decided to essay on Beethoven U founded upon j exception of about 4 per cent, of the Ov.-eQns. They are dtje mainly to pre- tho Schopenhauerian hypotheses. | ocean areas in which the depth ranges vailing wind^ which in turn ari. e from Hegel considered ,hat music stood j from 18,000 to 30,000 feet. ' •^*>« earth's rotation and the difference halfway between the extended sen-j The total amount of water in the ' 'n temperature- between therfauatoiial suoi',=ness of painting and the higher 1 oceans Is estimated to he more than | region and higher latltadas. .spirituality of poetry, but he did not ' 300.000,000 cubic miles or about 15 i The currents do very little geoliv work out any theory to explain In an ' times the amount of land which pro- ! glcal work directly. They nr^ import- adequate manner tho effect which music: produces on the emotioas. To Herbert Spencer, imislc was the lang- uage of the emotions and he placed It high up in the educational scheme fco also without doubt is emotional language a growth. In its bearings wait on the Magistrate in a body and, "If intellectual language is a growth request that sentence be deferred. This was agreed to and the result was that tho boy never got to the Reform ' upon human happlnese the emotional School. He made .so many friends and j language which musical culture de- learned to think so highly of himself j ve lops and refines Is second in import- in consequence, that he applied him- ance only to the language of ihe Intel- self earnestly to work and study and lect; perhaps not even second to it. is now a steady, reliable young man. No Traveller. The common hou-se-Hy lives and dies within a few hundred yards of the place where It is hatched. Opium From Turkey. Turkey Is one of the fttrgest pro- ducers of raw opium. ' « 1-?*â€" British race horses to the number of aliout 4,450 have been exported to all parts of the world since 1921. It Is still the rule of t'oulls Hank, London, that their staff must wear frock-coats while on duty. They are also comi)elleti to he clean-shaven. Tho strange capacity which we have for being affected by melody and har- mony may be taken to Imply both that it Is within tho prtSsiblllties of our na- ture to realize those intense delights trudea above sea level. All ocean water coutaln^ mineral matter in solution. The chief mineral, as everyone knows. Is ordinary salt or sodium chloride. It Is estimated that the amount of mineral matter in solu- tion in the oceans Is equal lu volume ant because th«y transfer^ iuat, thus tempering the climates in i' tudes and increaalns thd ralO^sH thia way, the currents iudlr.ffUjr' crease the processes whiclijitr.agk cha rocks. The waves make the to about 20 per cent, of all the land upon the land. Becaui protruding above sea level. | the ocean is constantly There are three general movements continents and islands of the waters of the ocean which make off their edges, them Important as geological agents â€" i The landward marc: tides, currents and waves. sometimes several ya The tidea are due chiefly to the at- some places. In this traction which the moon exerts upon and even villages have iti ^t^fi- Jittsrtt I tlif? irate* lug batfi'ibe id trlaiinin^ the earth. Due to the tides, the water rtees~aBd falls twice in a little less than 24 t'hey dimly snggcot, and that they are ; hours. Ou open shores the rise is only a tc}K feet, but In many Inlets it Is as much as 50 feet. These large rapid mavement i loosen In Bonio way concerned in the reallza tion of them. If .so. the power and the meaning of music become comprehens- ible." Aprons of Bones. The I^nniii.s of Sikkim wear made of human bones. aprons eaten away by the SMt. The forco with wt strike the shore in a It sometimes is Ha pounds to the square ^ext article â€" Td Rocks. Secure Reliable Brushes Good brushes s:hould be used when painting or varnLshing. It is poor economy to iiao cheap bnislios. They > I should be kept clean ,and when not In Tall Wags the Shark. | use should be suspended In raw Itn- The thrasher shark has a tail longer seed oil, so that they do not reet on than Us body. , the bristles. U> Dions Ishmcnl under tho new .Australian comi>ulaory voting law. whi<'li provides for flne,s up to $10 for electors who do not vote. This nilint; has been made by tho South Auslnillan autiiorltlos ciiargod with enforcing the law in tho Australia Exempts Mothers From Compulsory Voting. A woman who has to slay homo to tricts. Two of tho most imjiortanf of | C'>''o for her baby is exempt from pun- the new mills are tho.se of the St. Regis Company at Gup Rouge and tho International Company on the flat- ineau River near Ottawa, the latter mill alone l)eing designed for an out- put of 4.">0 tons daily. Tho Interna- tional Company is also enlarging its case of the Kcderai elections held last ThrtM Rivor.s plant by nearly 400 tons Novomlier. In .Vdelaldt" llntw of 10 daily ntid is expanding its sulphite shillings each (about $2.50) were im- mlll at Kipawa Other organizations posed on 135 eU^ctors, wliilo various in tho Three Rivers district adding excuses were accepted In (i,400 caSQS. substantially to their outjiut are thei • Wayagamack, the St. Lawrence and the Belgo Canadian Companies. In. tho Lake .St. John district Price Bros.' Limited and tho Port Alfred Com- j pany are busily engngf d in enlarging their facilities on a large scale. Great Builder of Bridges Died in London, Aged 94. Sir Uradfoiil Leslie, llu; ^'r,"at bridge builder, died in London on .March 21, In lii.H ninetyflflli yeir. Morn in Lon- Ontarlo's most notalile pul] and pi-jdoii. Sir Bradford I.H)slie wius an Aini-rl- per development.i are about to take , can by dr.scent. Ills great-grandfather place in the Kapuskasing, Thunder was a weaver at KIktown. .Mnrylnnd. i Bay ami Lake .\ipigon distriei.i, e-icli ' and his Ki-.Tiiilfallinr. IJobort Leslie, of which centre is to .se«> mills (f 500, who wa.i a man of idiuiderable mo- tons daily capacity, airording to un- f tlianiciil nnl iiMUhematlcal ^ altaln- officlfll informati<m now avai'nble. ! ni iK.s, and n friend of HenJ-.unin Frank- The capital required for these iioitlii Hn, wba eilahllshed as a watchmaker ern Ontario deveInpn;eMts ii j.tsted to |n Phltartelphla at the end of the bo nearly one hundred milUon dollar.'?. | oigiitrpnlh century. At Fort r IU4ICM the Backus Intcroits ars daubling their newsprint plart and th* wallboard industry is ronlem- phited. In the Msritims Provlncor a num- ler of small plants are unde- con- sidsratlei. (^.lu medint.i enlnr? indent Is prop.iori (two 100-ton machinei nt Bsthurst. N.B.,) snd a large de>f»»op msnt undiar consideration by th^^ Inter- nstlonsl Paper Co. In mneeition with ths tJrand F'sUs power development Tho Pmlrlc Provinces are having their " "POSTAL DEPARTMENT" REACHES RED LAKE Live by Sawlna en Buttons. Hewing on buttons for Iho <ity of Ivondon's helpless b.o liejors Is a hiisl- nesf that is bringing a good living to two women who hsvo hired one room I ne:i; He Rank of England for the i«ir- MItk for Babies. \ Japanexe s<-ieulli>t believes that ho ran Increase the height nf hla paper mills Installed, a 200- ;"»intrynien by feedlnf babies mors Early Voyageurs Place-N The inverstigatious Boajd of Canada li early voyageurs did for names for tho la their routes of trav(f' well-wooded loke Hears tin; narua lac des Bols or Wood laije, but the iMrgPst and be»t known of t'lese is the t^» ol] the Wooda on the l;itern^tieua^'Bi(iwad-| ary between Onta;li»^nd Jl ahesota, ; Th-» first-known iiention rf tlie.lake' occurs In ;i memoir of .Mitiei Begon, V lio was Intendait (>( >»wj^ranc« ixiui 1710 to 1726, '.hoiyth ke »d not, roach Canada until 171*2. T®; which is dated IJtli ^'eve narrates an explora /^fy Jo In 1687 or 16S8 by J.iq lejS a native of Thre« R:i....s. ascended the ^amjn'isti which falls into lake Sapt^i WHliaim. wintered al 'la'. in the following spring aux lies, oiherwiftf c ;ie* on entering wli^ili ' lo J« country Is barrea am; a hand side it is provl.; of tre«a and fllled \s lauds." I>ac au.x l\»; boilcs are evidiuu Ings of the nuia was know the Kren th»»"l»l In Verondrye's Jouniii I'roe word "minlsJk,' "island." Th.e tYeneli h i«j lac aux lies. I,ic . m-eansi "lake of thi; .A- tribe of tl.e Sioux It hea JwalLTS of tho Ml , first Canadian habl'a' ,j, ^â- ^^ ^ . of the lake of the >'.-flol,, u „ |,j J^ ^.f^^ .\ssenii.oiU "As«iit|x,bie laksv ng»rt« Oft nibUshetl Ibuod ••JSv^.the It^oh 4|^iM Is.l.;nt"&Ise ^ AsiaJboile* libolnas,'" n is fv*tt thet SPENT YEARS ON GOLD SITE, WITHO.UT SUSPECTINQ IT. ton pisnr. at Fort Al«xan(V>r, nssr th« milk. The upper picture 5how» the uirival of the Canadian pnt^tal department, in the person of William Itrnwn, isslst- ant postmaster of Allan Water, at Red Lake, lo Invc--Ilgate the camp's re- I quirenie.ils In the way of mall service. I Inset, in the circle, Is William Snilk. Hudson Hay factor at Bed Lake, wl.o Toronto, »ljo have tilaked claims on as a trapper has known every toot «if the iM>m» grouml which they proiipect- ; ground around Hewey Hay for years, crt three years ago. in search of silver. without ever siispnting that It con- .\t the lower right Is John K. flaramell, . laine.l gold. .At the li wer left are Wil- with a trout and pike taken through I ll.-sm Mogrldge and Borl Urajcott, of j the Ice at Rod Lake. that lake~of thf Wooli numercus iYenc;i wv, about 1719. I^ke of th-> Wools '.\ ; by the lYenoh iJcU) in Verend exolorathms in 1 Of all early tra the most closely lake. He built n t!ie Northwest A nesc'j In 1732 his son. a priest ( tlielr company of sacred by Sioux Uland In the lak landi) are olalmed the masfiacre. A the Tlctinis ha^ land In latitude 49 94 deg. 48', on<l for Boai\l of Canada proved the name Since Verendrye's •t th* Weeds him I'ntloiKMh â- ^^, w p >unia orfcC ' later y art.1 'Verwlidrje lil 't.id with the] •"fharles near 1 rre*»at .Min- f yeans later •'.\iil'»eaB) sad >ri #ere maar [|<mv>liic on aa «st three is- h' tcMie of ctepel CO VI on «n t* lonffituds MieotrraphlQ eatly ap. e iateac^ Ttam* t«k<1 ^iierfcl k