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Durham Review (1897), 10 Jul 1919, p. 2

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" Fi ’I T=. "C""""".""'.,',' -oeett within In davit u noon " all “to paid and forasatities concluded a-n-. mwtfuny. J. Tobin." "J. Tobin." Julie reputed (badly. In no a Numb! lune. Still non. d the others spoke; they mod to " vain; for mam. At Gil "Pninhst duty inform-mm-death of Mr. Henry Bmdur-.-anm-" Julie's a... node soft binning numb " but on. traveled dome the page. “A: Ill rum 0! etiquette. Barney's he. to the but freckle "rtreseed almost indecent resignation at the pausing may of his relative. Julie crept m to N sud reed the letter over] Us shoulder. Pa had just finished reading a let- ter; Me's rocking had ceased, and the: patchwork had slid from Gran'ma'sl trunnion: old hands. Romey alone we. able to respond to the question, In his sister'. gaze. He turned al mneault. uttered a war whoop and; tune his long If!!! about Julie in an infrequent caress. "Guess what's happened!” he ahouted. "Give you my golden alley if m hit it right first time.'" Julie'e knees new suddenly walt- bly under her. “Uncle Iunrs--" eh. fa1tered. "Not -the--the Lena?" he, delved into the grimy deep: ".Purtetetandumuirii'to"iC'i - . low bow. In totnl violation " .11 mu. of um. may bee l pened, Peletr, the ancient horse hoary, hopeful none and a: for apples Is the Bounce, hitching rink. Julie paid under the elms. She and John My had been “going togeth, lone. that. lacking him. life It! ahead oddly barren and purpc The brave project. of the aft seemed suddenly to have lost gliding of posn‘bility. "I'rn a silly fool," she t? hopelessly. "Eversthine's the Nothing'n changed. I’ll live he ny life and die an old maid " And I'd break all Four platter, very hard on platters. John.'" In spite of her surety Julie's was heavy as she crossed the Ind turned into the familiar under the ehnn, an. "A 1-h- h . - CC/il Ma was not listening. A ihmh the matter with Romey, too. He lent bed. He's Just young and there dots-) teaches h;: "he,,',' chaste)», W. n't seem to be much chance for Flue Cl','."' id T 1'1'll',d “Quit. pungent-u in Farmington! L235; 0!" 'ld',",.',', :Ihrine Ad - "ft itrn't because you're a farmer/Y t t ii' f k . edi is: John, that I'm not trr/mg to marry"ng .018; m ol',',',',',','., "KU', c '.,1 you. not even because youve not ”we"; Ja'.'"',;, I',",',', ma " l good farmer. Its because you‘re no. T, er 'l,"?,',,',' nto E . t" contented. You're willing to take;G tr' 'lmncd f ("oh ' ““219“ hard work and poor crops and same-i ran ma came rom " 't'l. o r no.” for granted. I'm not. I want; and green “hf: Iquares. Maybe I to do new things and find new ways) "tls, tto along! of doing old thingsfl want to plant o'e'.whp,',, £3323: way“; 133:] girngtatoes m a different field new)“ town!" Rm" A‘_]____. “n, I She pointed to the Fleming roof Ktowintr through the trees. "There', Grnn’mn Bradley ind Ma and Mrs. John Letreett--ovUt have they got to! look forward to and count on? Oh, you. I know they're happy in a way but I don't want to be deed-and- aiive happy.' I'd rather be regularly unhappy than that!" She paused for breath then swept on. 'Wm going to get free of the; loneliness and drudgery end wishing, for things I nn't have! I don't know, low yet but l'm going. That's Ae',tr he matter with Romey, too. He isn’t bad. He's just voumr and Hum Am.- I', CHAPTER n. Suddenly Julie began to laugh 'thtud. " know you think I'tn out of my head but I can't stand the "tt8tet9egq of things any longer.' If- if we should get married," her voice tripped over the words, "in a year,‘ John, you’d be taking me for grant- ed some as you do everything iii) Pd just be a part of the farm Like, the Potatoes and the plowing, that% .1: Pd be." i Buch, Green or Mixed Pure Fine Tea Tastes like what an infusion of Really Get a Packet, and Realize WM The Legacy on Wheels J l your heart t,li'd,iu.e,g,om"y. But already the u was ymg. 3323;! v"oYu0udoe,')'t',l' In the week that followed, the . I'd be sure to fll1 Fleming, kept one eye on the cloek her; with bouquets, to they went about the prosaic busi- mm. and do the' ness of living. Pat’s lugging shoul- ling in kov"imC7.lde.rs. straightened a little and/to the your platters. I'm mild amazement of the coy", he took ;ers. John!" ‘to whistling Rule Britannia over he 'ayety Julie's heart milking. Gran'ma’s quilt .bloomed GoiseU the fields forth in cheery hues of .?.ink and ', the familiar yard lavender; and Julie, visltmg .tht ; he and John MRS-l spare room unexpectedly, eurpnsed . Hm: together" so Ma making over her black mlh for 1 him, life stretched the trip to Toronto. The days slipped 1 1 and purposeless. into a fortnight and at last the l of the atternoonieaFerly-mrited-for Legacy arrived. 1 o have lost their It was John heggett who brought e ty. hit, ',g,t,"t', behindf the and gage“ c C' she thought' e tu" oline rom e on. t thing‘s th.e 'iii;iiiC",s,tttr/y the legacy was son iiiali Ie and John Mas- 1tg together" so nim. life stretched and purposeless. of the afternoon In beeyiso you're .3 al had my: By Dorothy Donnell Calhoun. heart fields yard Mas- i ge1eir'.'tlli)i,t [19:45»; 'ilh2t .__-- - - waters need not be .0 many. Hone-hoe: were formerly regard- ed on tuekbringem for thin; Nelson had one on board the Victory. , The Isle of Shoppe, ho lost over tro acres during the last 40 you. owing to the action of the no. 1 1,229 British prisoners in German hand: no ttill.unaefotutted for. The little path that {could never and _ I thought I should come back another I day i' And through its lure of leaf and blos- I com 'stray, And so I sauntered merrily along. , Humming a stave of some old lilting song ' That ran, "Seize Joy and beauty while I you may." But when fate gave me leisure to re. l turn I searched the hedge row. hour " hour In vain Where summer's growth veiled " with vine: and tern; And. though life's guts have brought me trounrod gain," Each Juno l mourn when dreams drift down the mind, The Lima Path. Once, strolling slowly don _ swept way. I spied. halt hidden 'neath tree, A mile wood” path that .nc--- "w "'outo", glossy with green paint and varnish, bright with nickel, mulling faintly of leather and gasoline. a brand new, ftve-paoentrer automobile.' (To be continued.) l er and a gold watch and a aeroplane. PII take you tuintr, Jule!” "We'd better not count our lega- cies--tilt they're hatched," laughed Julie nervously. But already she was Byintr! "When the money comes, bet life. I'm not going to stay in dead town!" Romney declared. going to Alberta and own a ranch. I'm going to buy a six-s er and a gold watch and a new; I'll take Von f1virur Jul-v" v _ --ee___e wumall‘l- v-‘a-W- qua-mty ill bundle of 'em to put in the mission-'1 and eook until I ary barrel. He was a genius at whit- sitstener, sweeten ltling. Henry was." Ffiiiiii from th, l The duty of Uncle Henry's obitu- ea added while 7nry thus performed, everyone spoke will neutralize " at once. lessen the amoul l "I'll put my share into the farm?! Now " to eol 1P3 looked out of the window ,jthitptltitte he: bees eyes that saw visions of golden we tttttt irpeak our grain and green corn instead of'heard I number, rocky fields. "Do you know, Emmie, they were not tt I always had a kind of a notion I " to the "perio; could make a first-rate place out of] for everythine. [Gran'ma Bradley broke the lilence iwita geqtle sigh. "Poor Henry."' she aid. “He might have been n little near and let .in his ways but he was a master hand at making willow whistles. ml used to make two dozen for the Sum. day school Christmas tree and 1 re-f collect once he gave Annie Summers,! -noaas mating. As they the yard. Romer, chopping 1 ther wyrodshed, rained I Never Sold in Bulk mm: a little andlto the ent of the cows, he took Rule Britannia over his ran'ma’s quilt bloomed ery hues of pink and d Julie, visiting Gil unexpectedly, surprised} n dazed men'c'édt'he'; Lerrgett Aad, brought, going to stay in -thi. Romney Ieelared. "I'm path that beckoned down a gun cigarettes family to an alder a big shoot- Ot all literatures Latin has been in. comparably the most cited. partly be. cause Latin is Mill famlller t9 every educated man, but largely also because of the practical bent ttt Lean e tun. Hence in more quoted nil Jul: 2 kii Vergll, but than any poet In the world. yet no one assigns to him a rank cor-1‘ m at!" '? th!: he? 13 F? tnttt (l/ttIll-ll',' s'r.'es {not n t a? unlisted” applicability of his sentiments; " con'nlels are so far-reaching In the”! wieglbm that they approacl! to lihdi tudes. . . . Anflttg curious to observe how in tfir own literature "Htuttlet," the most subtle and chum ot dramas, is, nevertheless, a perfect be put too low, while Pope would be put too high; tstill their respective value to the literature and to the na. tion would not be altogether Inade- quately expressed. . . . -'---- Ideal standards ot literary excel-gatorehouse ot nphorism and familiar l/i'; are not easy things to devise, but 1' rettertioru. . . . it is curious to observe what fair re-j All men cannot fairly be Judged by tutlts can be obtained by the most em- 5 their best known phrases. From Keats pirical and vulgar methods. Take, forja thousand people have echoed the instance, the test of sales. Entirely ; phrase about a "lay forever" " Main. misleadipg as applied to a limited ! at one that ever cited appositely those, period, it gives a very fair gauge it ex- 3 lines, infinitely more characteristic, I tended over a unincient lapse ot 2t ; that tell ot he la a of Shakespeare, the nove a . " :1 Si: {Walter Scott. have probably' '""t'oag""msnts, opening on the een sold in far larger numbers than . t'f, other volumes ot poetry or prose Ot '""iil','y, Beam in fear; land: tor. llction. Amt Bhtmsspeare'tr predomln- on. may is, an it should be, by far more It was Shakespeare'n way Itt9rtiti. marked than Scott's. In the same way centiy to encroach upon the common one would incline to “sent that the domain and Bar, "This il mine, though most quoted poet is alto the but. q millions, in... .....a un -- , I, The favorite method of canning l, strawberries in our household is the l following: Use only fresh, firm, ripe ;and sound berries. Prepare berries. jAdd eight ounces of sugar and two itablespoons of water for every quartl iof berries. Boil slowly for fifteerr,' minutes in an enameled or acid-proof! lkettle. covered with a well-fitted cov-f er while boiling. Allow berries to! local and remain over night in cover-‘ ‘ed kettle. Pack cold berries in glass! jars. Put rubber and cap in position,! not tight. Sterilize for ten minutes, in hot water bath outfit; if using a water-seal outfit or a 2.teii,,'i5 steam-pressure outfit, sterilize six, minutes; or if using an aluminum! pressure-cooker outfit sterilize for” four minutes. Remove jars. Tighten!‘ covers. Invert and cool to test the l Fl Berries, however, keep their shape ibetter and look better if done the .,; cold pack way. To make the syrup "or berries allow two quarts of water i; for every three pounds of sugar and boil tive minutes. This makes a med-1 . ium thin syrup. Wash and hull ber- (ries, pack in Jar, of course, jets and; " tops and rubbers must be boiled up; lin water, adjust rubbers and put on' I tops, turning down until the edge just: ltouches the rubber. Then set in water, which is boiling and boil ten minutes.’ Remove jars, tighten tops, invert p, see if they do not leak, and store in a dark place. A good way is to save) all your paper bags and slip each can in a bag. This helps to keep the! color. Raspberries are apt to settle; a great deal. To get around this let 1 them stand fifteen minutes after the I syrup has been added, when you willlt find they have settled enough so that' l you may add more berries. it is, you peeled and cut the rhubarb, H packed it into sterilized Jam, filled '1 the Jars to overowing with cold water, ‘uling new rubbers, and sealed tight- ly. Do not forget that troosreberries may be canned in the some wny, _',' swing both time and eager. And next fall if you want to experiment ‘with cranberries then too, may be' ’done by cold water method. ;' ! When you Open these fruits pour off'; or] Of course, you canned your rhub- '.trlt by the cold winter method. That we must can. Our war lessons show.. yed in the desirability of taking care of our surplus fiuit and vegetables, and if we lived in a section fortunate enough to have a home agent or II visit from I specialist we have had demonstrated to In the superiority ul home-canned 'tuff to that put up by‘ commercial eanneriea. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Summer Ontario th mu, upon nace fires writer lu Spenser cu, summer came so quickly to In in tario this yet: that canning time , “Pen us almost before the fur- e fires were out. But, of coum. must can. Our war locum- elm-r- Most Quoted Author Canning Tine. the hre. A pinch of ile the fruit is cooking some of the acid and aunt of sugar needed.] cold pack. Since the," as in glass n position, 'tt minutes if using a flte-poundi to settle! Steawberry Meringue Pie.--Hnve d this let ready a baked crust, then wash and after the sweeten thoroughly one quart of fresh you will; ripe berries. Fill in crust and cover h so that' with the beaten whites of two eggs, {to which has been added one-half cup eanninttlof sugar and one-half teaspoon of ld is thelvanilla. Place in oven and brownJ irm, ripe: quickly. This is exeellent.-H. FI M, . g; t Is 3 ts way ot estimating r2d'lil/ta:tl hr, Raf 1hTh f't'et', who has had $613 iniUshisg Eli tut. manity. and the authon who hare Md most int1uenee are on the who]. than whose words have been most frequent on the lips of men. - A -- - -'-..%r" ul by map who tttto A J8tttl sense Tiii. WW3. 1:11. we is 11.19199! one of the prose writers who id molt quotable . . . ot the great men, Scott is the least quotable. Dickens the most, while George Eliot ll per. harm" rhofe quotable then either. . . _ n. ._..J, ":qu Eor. I lorn." It was Shakespeare's way mturniti. cently to encroach upon the common domain and any, "This is mine, though "ttillioms have med it." Keats wan- ‘dered in lonely places; he does not come to us, we have to so to him. It is only from the le’ttered that he or those of whom he is the chief receive the tribute that quotation conveys. A phrase remembered for it: mere beauty, a thought kept in mind tor its strangeness, not tor its tamiligrity, _ froduced " the opposite occagion only i .,' Fruit Sandwich-A pleasing sand- Irie/i. is made by mashing berries, L adding sugar and placing between IT thin slices of hot buttered toast. After I the sandwiches are made, place be-l if tween hot plates until the breadh's ‘a little softened and some of the [juice absorbed-Mrs. L. M. T. , Fruit Ettenoe--ri'or each person! I beat one raw egg quite stiff, add one- l half cup of fruit juice and beat attain, Ithen add one-half cup of whipped men add one-half cup of whipped cream. Beat together thoroughly, chill and "rve.--Mrs. J. J. O'C. Strawberry Shortcake-To serve six, use two cups of pastry Boar in which is sifted three teaspoons of baking poivder. Mix in two-thirds of) _ If you have quantities of straw- berries bottle some juice to combine later with apple juice for jelly. Strawberry juice itself is lacking in} pectin and will not make jelly. But! mixed with two parts of apple juiceI it makes a pretty and delicious Jelly. For raspberry jelly use equal parts of raspberry and apple Juice. l Ine ms Raspberries, cherries and Peafhtsititieauy may be preserved by the sun method.!' somewhat The cherries should be pitted before! coming m weighing, and the peaches pared and, ready heal cut in eighth: or quarters, according" plaster cm to size. Cherries are especially good.lartist worl Use the juice of the cherries to moist-l the damat en the sugar for the syrup. this cast ' i Of course, you are going to tee,! ' some of your berries into sun New serves. There are seversl ways of i' 7 doing this. Bere is one. Pick the berries early in the morning, choos- ing weather which promises to be hot and dry for two or three days. Wash and bull berries and weigh. Allow equal quantities of sugar and berries. Place the berries on s shal- low platter. Make a thick syrup of _ [the sugsr moistened with just enough, ‘ water or berry juice to dissolve the:" sugar. Pour syrup over berries.‘I cover berries with a glass and set in,1 the sun until the berries are soft end I the syrup has jellied. The time iii) pends upon weather conditions. Then,‘ store in fruit jars and simmer for;t ten minutes in hot water bath. if, joint. Wrap jun ivith paper to pre vet, bleaching, und store. Contributed Recipes. ,.._........5 ucunlcap placing between d: , ,rqfirw.., -._. nun-nun] CUIUI'E fruit should? semhle the complexion of the lugar and]I At a little distance the feat Hand'- Edninaent Cur“ number“. P---------, Callaghan, the leader of the rescuing party. called down to Casey: "Kape alolve, Casey. We’re resculn' ye." Whereupon tthere came from the earth a muffled voice: "Is that big McIntyre up there wid ye?" "Share he is." "Thin ask him plate to step " ttttr, mains. I've enough on top o' me wid.l out him." There had been a slight accident in I coal mine, with the result that Casey was partly buried by a small quantity ot earth. In this way new noses. eyes. tore. heads. cheeks and Jaws are fashioned, and the patient is able to so once more among " fellows without the tear in his heart that he will be either an object ot horror or ot compassion. It is a great work. Most ot these masks are held In position by means of spectacles. which Incidentally further aid in the decep. tion, and add to the comfort ot the wearer. pear perfectly natural. amiGii tion 13 complete at ten yards or fanrncauy and the modus operandi is y somewhat as follows: The patient on coming to the artist-surgeon, is al- ready healed ot his wounds. First, a plaster cast ls taken, upon which the artist works with piasticine, moutding the damaged features anew. From this cast a mask is made of copper- plate; this is fitted and then silvered. After this comes the enameliing of the mask. and this is where the art f A studio in a hospital! It sounds 'look, and .thi' ite the any Lire", Joi.' h’mcongruous. but after one has tspent I [are and lingerie blouses should look, afar: hour in Captain Derwent Wood}! ' ---- - ', studio at the 3rd London General Hos, m" "ntmeat c". m " 90"- ll131131. all sense ot incongruity 0133!"! War pensions in New Zeuland ore I '""lllie"T'if""ttt A6333: Derwent expected to cost $10,000,000 annually. . r-"hr'-=="---r--r---u-er..,-.==-c.--e--,= lfWOOd. A.R.A., R.A.M.C. IT'), takes up " - .f the tank where it has been left by the isurseon, and it he does not heal as (the surgeon has done before him, at {least he ameliorates the lot of those I 'who have suffered facial distUure. All grades. Wrtte for prion. I ,' ments through wounds, and makes lite TORONTO CAL? WORK. (",a,,in,,et1l,1t, Q; J. OLIFF . . Yonou'rn ; n a n " n..- nun-u- ----- ___-- --- In the picture gallery you may see photos ot these trutrererrr, before ond after-the former often terrible; the latter, at the worst. odd-no more. Then there are the row: of plaster casts showing the nature of the In- Juries even more vividly. Wonderful Work of London Surgeon Briefly Described. cup of lard, or one large half-cup of tweet m. lumen with - rnltkcttttra pinch of "it. Roll out] as“ as}: tmtit ft is creamy Ind smooth. Bake in two pie tins of equal lite. Remove from the oven ‘when it is a golden brown. For thel fruit f1l1intr, We a pint of fresh hailed tstrawberries; crush them and! add one cup of sugar. Mix them with! a cup of whipped sweet cream. SpreadI each piece cf the cake with butter' and place the fruit between the lay-f ere. Serve while it it, warm. In the, absence of strawberries any fruit: any be used, even canned fruit.--} Miss z. I. D. I in. Several coats are GsLi metal surface, and fnally it is iy and skillfully colored to re- Callahnn‘c Call. NEW FACES FOR OLD. , to hide these inturies n or the wearer. the features up. ' and the decep- fresh TJEP..'.' t and! -_-- thh; "rtaftheArts pread cor mm! MEDICINE lay-I Arpu , tte, 'firu'ng, I The wetter clothes Are ironed, the more glossy and summer they will look, and this is the any sheer col- lar: and lingerie blouses should look. Bums PORK AND BEANS The I mm 1 "if :'lrr.iy "£32.?" i w.ct.antt, "Wâ€" “I" "'""heeteertett-ed by MI COMMENT GUARANTEE tlr HIM t APPLIED sdiiiiidii - 11itirt., t?hemieth Civil, Yllll ttr MALI", '-rr.rm.. -r..q © ggzycnxon TORONTO 7 "---- wuau uvuu c086”? At In! they won utely ensconmi In their cab. and Bridget sank buck with i "ts ot addiction. "thm, Muck." [he ma mm. “that only one can Ot regret n we and hue Mood on the pavexm " and “(choc our-elves pass, “mm: tt have been mum?" The (Item! words were spoken, an) the [any pair walked down the nisie and out lino the street. where a cunt crowd (new the. with loud cheers, " I--n 1L-“ _ Pat and Bridget were being married, sad the whole village m am. Pnt "I "aphid”! In c an coat (bor- rowed). Intent leather boots (Ion tight for him), a whit. you, and a bright green tie; Erma "one glorr on In but of the colon ot we rum M- through l The stream may, b be sated to pus 20 Cape Hatteras; 60 I ket Show, Ind no of Nova Scotla; the the Gulf Stream beit from the Cumin-a n It is not alwan the at m than In explanation of the c II stated of benettts re the bringing inshore Stream current, one mat tar instance. refer to a lunatic City. New Jersey it: world-wide fume u a entirely to the there loo. Gulf Stream. The Province ot Nova 8coti am of about 22.000 square n a population of about 500.000 The portions ot the Province of Quebec hula; water frontage on the estuary of the River St. Lawrence, the Gulf ot St. Lawrence and the Smut of Belle Isle. ,lncluding the Laurentian Highland region. a substantial portion of the volley of the M. Lawrence and the Island of Arttirosti, the Bird br land. md the Magdalen Islands. Throughout all these are“ the um» ten are long and wk: and the Funk new short and hot. Intent of the Gulf ammo. . The Province of New Bruncmtk bu an area of about 215,000 square miles and a population of about 400, 000. The winter Conditions through out the entire province are rendered more dlmcult by the tntiuenee or tho ubndor current. l The Labrador current sends a Innu- ‘volume ot water through the Strait: of Bette lilo; thence southwesterly do“ the can! ot Nova Scotia, New Bruin-wick and the United States. cre- ating A cold current. terhnically known In the "Cold Wall" between the Gull Stream and the North Am. ortun coast. I The closing ot the Strait- ot Belle ink. which an about u milo- wide alum- 1"T'Jt point. My ohm- on “but: current. um _hu‘biuu otAmtte+ andum moo- wby at. Lemme pom irlrr closet and" the winter nun»... would divert the "CMd with" n the Atlantic and “low the will“: “all.” ot the Torre Zone to elm-mm mm wound eastern shone. Sun), it (MW. it in thought. would increase the mm of land. god natural FGMHm-u lw billion! of doling; would r'lri,'vis ”A. prove living and public 11mm. furl " “out; would release Tttst q..:.' l fic of tuet, now necessary for In __' 1.; pupa-en, to be used in “Milk?” would be the means oiaupromti.t.r '23, population, commerce and rewmz. 'r l 2 'mm. Alumnae Would Outweigh Cost, The protect ham been promnnml pouibie by engineers. The curt “u , d be (not. but nothing in rumpurwvn to the results to be gained. The s; \'- in; in fuel alone to the hem-mu: areas. tt in thought, would H‘pu)‘ ti.e entire expenditure. M can. tttt the Arctic Current Ire-I - of St. Laurence and Meat Initiate Provinces. Notion Ingenuity ha. discovered a M elclent mode of heating lmu.~- y in 'riettor--that of hot water. Plum“ e and cadm- we sometimes, in the Iurt. I of hoopla]: or other large bulldmn- s' placed It a Menace trom the mum I ment- to be warmed. In such (1le ., pipes conduct heated weter into um i radiator: and back I‘ll!) when (wok-J ' Thus. cold water tn continually mm: in; the bottom at the “(iron Mme heated water thtws from the top, lt Lt now proposed to npply the WPt.m water: of the Gulf Stream to the l-;::~! fern Portions of Canada-end the Umm " [ States, that such legions might my} ’1 more even temperature throughput I the year and permit. a more lulu-m;- , vegetation. [rum may, by way of average. d to was 20 miles otrtshore In “um; 60 miles all Nantuc- uh. and 120 mites southward tbeotta; the, warm waters ot I Strum being there shut off , Gunman can! by the "Cold or the Uttrador current, which no but can pass. l-Vlde lune u a winter resort to the there low once! of the PROJECT CHANGE CLIMATE (Ill EASTERN CANADA One More Thing. ..._.., nuILB benefit- reslqltln; from ' til shore ot the Gull ae In". u l panic... r to the use ot At. 3emer. Vhld: oweu r To on! we STRAITS or BELLE nus. ion Booth hat, fut farmer "erlainty which In mile: and n to the PI Departamm for the new one bear: for not a utu' wri w Pi tem " Bur-h; Up th, One morning last ft crops. I tUte hr building with th spent a wr by " " "-<he G1 Ind the rthinz , n: b',',) Mattie It

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