But the originator ot Sherlock Holmes is the MM Crichton of literary sport-. M " MI “VOI- led the world out. 9: . duh. noun- tMn climber. on make I. - I cut through the mm " lam u may n professional mama, and In scored a good my centurio- tn It time. can we own the but of kn tannin players sit up and at. noun. u an indefatmbk motorist. ll 3 am- cult man to follow uro- country with the houndu. ad on and MI way both into and out ot I bunker to well u Ion auteur sultan. Maurice listened dtu. In his heart he felt a wild hatred of the an!) who had thmugh the years been u an evil shadow on his life. Rut what Wiett iiold had done in the past. was as no- thing compared with this last and blow] "I wish you-happiness," he said slowly. when at but Miriam hinted s: A Conan Doyle. dawns): - paremly believes in the and My. ham 1'. pair ot on. which I" by no nuns spiritual. In hot, the Mr of Rodney Stone. that but of All bow in; and prutMtttirtg you, in him. ulf no mean exponent of no “now. an of st-dofencq." "Yes." Miriam replied in a breath- less whisper. Then she broke out in a torrent of words. She had met Wing- tuid at the house of a friend just after laurice had started on his ill-amend Journey to Ireland. And he had at once become a most devoted wooe'r, calling on her as often as possible, and bringing her little progents. he [mutt traveller .. “new modern new“ w you Jul Lon- don; now that he is (one, the nun who an can": kettle-O. J. Cub out. Mrse-4o the world. mommy hold- tprmruee pm. It that In any corner of an. old out) ha ha not Without doigning him another wort Maurice brushed him aside and went into the house. But his heart was like lead in his breast. He an somehow that Wingfield had told the truth. Dur- ing his own absence this man had entered his home and stolen the only thine in it he treasured. "Maurice!" The sharp cry roused him from his reverie. A girl was standing hm-wny up the stairs. She had turned " his quick entrance. and was clinging to the _banister, white and shaken. "Is it trué that you aAGiiiU ed to that-to Wingfield ?" demanded Maur- ice )mrshly. M-urice no“ d lifted his suitcase an d the rack " the train slowed dow_n into the nation. “Jove, it's good to be back again!†he thought, as he made a dash for 1 taxi, and was present! being whirled rapid] “mouths. “(rdwd's yo rest cured! anyone just now.'" He gazed with 'ppreeiativeeyes oat on the good old London streets, with the Endless traffle obe ing the uplifted han cf a solitary beirllh'fl'l.,gll'd' no need to fearmbat one might flnd round the corner. A Manning iook was all the reply Mamie:: made. "I want your congratulations," went on Wirrttfulrl, watching him cloudy. “I have the haccr to to engaged to your ward, the charming Miriam.'" "You H!!!" retorted Maurice, taking a threatening step forward. , "Study!" warned Wingfield, with a laugh. “I still hold the whip-hand, you know." "It"; stronge _ttt Miriam hun't answered my last IV letters," his thoughts ran on. “I haven't had a line from her for two weeks. Aunt Kate said tell 3 well, or else I might have ','.1"r'ri"dAtld the dear little girl." Miriam was Howard's ward, and an heiress. She lived in. his house, with his widowed aunt to act propriety. But Maurice we: nlmdy looking forward to the time when Aunt Kate would be merely an honored mt, ind when a little gold band qn Miri m's finger wo'uld be all the Sega necessary. It named too good the true. Thai put In: at last dead.- hadn't heard' th word from Witrgiield since the inter; had inherited money from some cousin1 or other. As he recalled this mam.--', his one and only tnertyyr1ra1y1e'sd brow darkened. Wintrtield had bled him pretty thoroughly in those 'iiGi'-;I the price he had demanded for his sit-' once was a heavy one. And Maurice had paid to the last farthing, even) t'gh the loss of the money crippled) his using†and made things veryl awkward. i It mu his burden and he must face} it. Better that than to have the full! story of that old crime Jilted up, and; to meet ‘vertml fares Mrywhcf'eu Still. it was hard on a mont. I "Don't get ah‘t'rtfl I haven't come Lrout-about the o d business," Wing: mrld said, with m u% moon, "That " deutt--.Wx the time its, unless rou Wt up yet"? ' , .. . - He opened the door of the taxi, and sprang quickly out. eager to be face to Nee with the girl he loved, and who, he was Just beginning to hope, loved him in return. . Just as he finished paying the driver the front door of tht house was thrown open, and a man eaihe out. For a mo- ment they stood there in silence. Mauriee's face was dark and sullen; the other man eyed him with a super- cilious smile. . "Hallo, Howard."' he eried'. "Bit of I shogk Amy): an; litre, eh?†rletir,.,isrrtoFityr the srgerreif Gnd awkward. a " 'i At' first hot words of deftanee and It Wits his burden and he must {arr defence of Maurice had sprung to Mir- it, Better Ohm. than to lune the {unliam’s lips. Then, with instinctive wis- atcry of that old rrimc 111%."! up, andldom, she had bitten them back. Mem.. M meet ‘vertotl fares 'J'ii'r'/y't'dr'eu.i,ii"y' recalled something strange in Still, it was hard on a man.' .Maurice himself-some suggestion of The taxi drew up at the mac 01m shadow otrhia life. Although she his house. He had not Sent word ofth always understood from her dead his coming, hoping to take Miriam bylfilther that Maurice was truetNtgirfut in surprise, and to see thr, joy-light wayVhis business, her guardian had always in; in her dark eyes. ', been unaceountably short of money. He opened the door of the taxi, and! Then a great inspiration had come sprang nuicklv out. razor to be lapel“? her. his. FUrtiehir" yhort.ed Maariee Successful Authors at Play Probably the lust sporty of literary men no RIM Kipling. Mr June: Barrie, and - Barnum Shaw. The author of "In.†Ron" D. hov- ever, fairly not! run a bat, tad ttas oftonta1renparttnrnatduoatrarrr. pronoun“. a! the Pro", whilst for men have "ttttmelted" about country no believe. that a noun-t who wait. to write “live" nun. need: to no "live" pines. Ho we. I an. collection od hunting trophies. Two od Britain'. belt-known mm no " their host in a raettt-Atir Arthur QnmorOopch. the famous "Q" of "Dad Inn Rock," am John Oxen, ham. Both than men, are very much " home on nit water or fresh. for they are u may with an on u with a sail. lanes on u bike more than tho who} two “anguished men been into, my desert. or mountain range. or great river he has not soon, my wild beast he has not shot, than someone lhonld call upon him and toll him ot MI omission. and he will our.- ly include it in his next trip, min. that he reckons to do I pretty regular ten thouund miles tr "ar-except when there’: a world-war on. at st e variance with his role of lover. “E shall ask Maurice Howard formally for his consent to-morrow." Then, he added, with a slow smile: "I hardly think that he will find it advis- able to refuse his sanction.†A sudden resolution came then to Miriam, and she bent her head over the fire as she made her next remark, in- tent on hiding the suspense in her eyes from his watchful gaze. ' Maurice had received his successful rival with cold politeness, and then had left them alone together. And Aunt Kate had muttered some excuse and followed him, her worn old face anx- ious and tender. "You can do all that ittisrwards," rtplifd Wimrfle.ld, his tir. o.t.authpritr, tions," {Ended Miriam, her heiri Iii];- ing in er breast with dread. "Now that your ‘iuardian has re- turned, we can ma e arrangements about our wedding," Winfield inform- ed her that evening, as t ey sat alone in Ahe drawing room. to a pause. Then he aimed on to heel and walkedutoMr off to his Btudr, - Fate was driving her cruelly far on her path of deception. But Mirlim had trodden ithravely so far. She had plighted her troth to this man. Better that than bring disaster on the man she loved. nigger qujvering face in hk fund; The joy of his home-'eoming, withlAi.-.ttt all its dreams and hopes, had 'irGuiiiir.,l In: wild yt felt numbed and cold u he “mil“!!! irtht Int? qn any chair and buried his face thin}: of m his hands. And behind it all m 13mm ' the dread knowledge that he dared do! ehanee nothing. Wintmeld mu hold the up.:phced a per hand in this, as he had done arihand. along. I Ptle "I love you, Miriam," he said, quits calmly. "And I mean to marry you. I know that Maurice Howard gt Ewes on. But I am in a l" i.1 " prevent him marrvipr, any decent woman. If yo" .uuae me now, the day Maurice Howard makes you his wife will be the_day of hitrdpwnta1ly' __ - But Maurice had come back. The sight of his dear eyes, dun with pain and longing, had almost vanquished her resolution. "I must to on with it!" she mutter- ed, her hands clenched until the nails dug into her way palms. "l have set my hand to the plough. If I turn back now he will be more dangerous to Maurice than ever. But, oh, it's hard -it's hard!" The sight of MauMee's unhippinm had cut her to the heart. She had known of the love which her St2,t bore for her, and had dimmed d a, too. But that was before Wingfield had come into her life, with his vague hints of some dark secret in Maurice's past. At first she had hated the mun, for his own sake 3nd because she knew that Maurice. the man she loved, dis- liked him. But soon after their first meeting Rupert. Wingfield hal shop- pm! little meanin remarks concerning threApower hg hefd over Mpuricg. . .. "If people Jmew as much as I do," ne had at last said openly, "they would shun this man as if he were a leper. Thty would refuse to touch his hand, or even to see him. He would be an outcast!" While Maurice himself had been away she had found her chosen part fairly easy to play-until Wingfield haltToposed. ---e _ u _ __ _ If he braved things out and expand Wingtield for the seoundrel he kneir him to be, the other man would have a terrible revenge ready to his hand. “I love Maurice," she vowed, "and because of that I will do my F make him happy. This man oll!tt, to hand some secret of his. We , shall play him at his own game, and free Maurice from this unknown dread.†No; he must stand by and watch in helpless agony. Up in her bedroom Miriam also wu sitting in dull misery. "BHP I hyrtt..t. made. any Never?- A sob racked her throat as the bur- -, w, my,» if trunnion ova â€who: and upped; the, spun inaction. norm the citadel of its object, and like an avthncho With tt sowing enmity of 1,000 acres a. dar, one machine could Ider quately serve e lune gain-growing district, working either on the co. operative bui- or by connect. - overwhtml and mm a: obstacle; Mlnard’n Llnlment 'Rellovu Colds, etc. Gone were the shaddwsUhieh had beset their lives. With a tdad smile on her lip; glue rallied tuyxrertrfhe mom, At the and of each wing-tip than is s who to - down s thin strum of white lime, muting the ling oi the planted belt. In pnetlco only one tube would in used " s tins. the other being shut or. By his means it should he prsctiabls to plant one square mils, or 640 ms, in six hours. Brtng tony miles an hour tad snow- in; on. minute " each and at tho ttego to tum and get lined up with the white "or am tree!†she murmured, stretch- ing her arms high above her head. “Apd so is hss-vMayrieys, my lorrrr" - This kind of firing machine, as de scribed by Popular Mechwics, is built for tslow weed, with a roomy fuselage that providu capacity for I large annuity of min. On mh trip it pints I row thirty-six feet wide. Ar. ing only a few feet thou the ground, it cinch the mad with lumciont ieioeitr to bury it to the requisite depth in loose, prep-rod soil. eygg. "" um - - “uh“ “I“, - "m"", paging through .a widen (haggard on her my to any . message of hap- piness and love to the man who had been tried " by fire, and who had stood the tuggbly; _ - had bound them. In inarticulate fury he looked at her, so cold and still, and for the first time something almoot approaching love tor hegwept over him in this moment of def t. Then, with an nng'ry mut- ter, he swung on his heel and walked qultltly from_th? ro_om. _ _ _ Miriam waited till the crash af the front door, closed in fury, came to her ears. Then she leaned {weakly for a fee minutes on the mantelpieee. - Slowly the color reiurnid to her cheeks, ands bright light. shone in her q Friend. The newest idea for agriculture ii " airplane equipped for the planting of the farmer’s field with seed. It has a. system of perforated metal tubes. laid crosswise on the wings, out ot which the seed in forced by eir prel- Iure created by the ttight ot the plane. "The crime of a"dead man!" retort-" ed the girl stemly, amL he stepped back in amazement. "You know!" he almost shrieked. "I know the difference between the signature of Maurice Howard and the man I Iove"--ahe faced him 1msudlr--. "and that of his dead cousin, Maurice, poor Aunt Kate's wayward son. You can do your worst," she went on quiet- ly. di"dlf you breathe a Yep?'" f .. sor i Bio to an one Wt June: to my 'llf'2d1 l Y,-' man Fan-night .0 Ant» Kate atur--ond-" Then his desire to hurt Eunice overcame hie discretion, and he thruet a hand into an Inner pocket. "Read that?! he ordered, as he put into her hand I sheet of paper which he removed from an inner section of his notecase. "No; she loves her nephew too much to let him suffer for the cake of an- other, even if that other be her own tron," replied Miriam, her tones any- ing conviction to the mun who listened. nun ‘0; 'diiiit mt promise, of which you were so proud a moment ago?" mp- pe§_tho nun _deespe_rately., _ - l ne [-0 mum I!" Johnnie, any wan- dig-ppm MW, ff the wicked. His wildness had soon award his own? inheritance, 913d hed pecan to again, with tho dd than when I ehanee meeting with TrirlGi' bed tgif a doubled“ “Inn in his n . He had resolved from the first to woo her for her fortune, and because Maurice loved her. "You hold my promise," 1min! Mir- iam, raising her head pron . "And you understood from the beginning why I Consented to marry you. The fact that I know why Maurice {an you yin not lessen your power over "Tit will not," smiled Wingfield cyni- cally. l _ Bendini over the 6relitrht, Miriam pared wit (Hitting eye: over the writ- ten confession the sheet emttained...- a confession of a mean theft from an old woman who had trusted in the writer, despimble in its bunches: and paltry ip its_gains. . " . Her breath came sharply between her teeth as suddenly she held the paper closer still to the flames, to scan eagerly the signature. Then, before the man could stop her, she had thrust the sheet of pager into the heart of the flames, cm: init it beyond recla- mation with her satimshod foot. 7 7 Ar; angry snarl broke from Wing- fiel4'ts line}: ho_list_ened._ _ _ .. "And break her hearty' taunted tho rnttcrue11y, _ _ _ - "It was guild by a 'trick. I refuse ttt tstapd by_ it,"_mp1ied_Miriam. gun- "HlGrrGii/rorGmtArith a cry of rage; but she defled him, and he shrank from her accusing face. _ - ','l,Yr.oeiroou, cad!†she "i;reethed bit. terly. " o hold that over any man! Oh, you are htrtetull" _ - -.. 7' "1i -si'fiiivrtke- "iisjir',1,,tte, of the wing," ht remiydeg hey, wit " 'peer., int fm'lgem; finder the ring 'whiéh Wings of WG the Farmer's Ertthttaintrp ia the must business P' (The :End.) Who may not pm this my mm. Of man’s true brotherhood to man, Mod in the (not Creator'- plan, With than who followed in El: 'rat merrmaztlmoetumrmAterin oomerpointandeanhurtmetmett-. As each small tender bud that grows. Anon may turn to buuteous me, Bo etch kind action nerve: to ‘prove The Instant soul ot hum love, Bo ore we leave all: passing show, Where " are wanderers to and ho, Lot each life’s path I record be, Unbroken to eternity. It is said to)umr been titat discover- ed in Columbia by a Spaniel! named Antonio Ulloa. For a long time there- after miners in Columbia, ttnding ft commonly undated with gold, threw the pletinum “my. Recently laven- teen pounds ot it were recovered from the foundation of An old building in the Quibdo district, the site of which 'wee In ancient refuge dump. The inventor puts forward yet an- other interesting suggestion He puns an Brtitieial island home linden heath the waves, some miles out from the Goodwin Sande. The burden ot the conventional householder-rates and taxes, customs, dues, liceneing restrictions. ete.---eould not lpply, he contends, to such ioland coloniatl. brain, Bo and] we live not all in "in, Who mty not pus this way unln. Houses, streets. the-tree, picture palaces. etc., buried under the see, are reminiscent of Jules Verne. A mo- dern wlnrd, Mr. E. R. Celthrop, who designed the Admiralty mystery towers, one of when: was recently moved to the Salem, may be respon- sible tor this miracle, says a London newspaper. It has been suggeeted that a large lubmarine hotel and theatre be built at Hythe, the same principle it ls u- eumed being used as in the cue ot the naval towers. “I may not pass this way again." Let this thought burn in heart and -ort.tairtaterA'.er_trat_t" mama‘s-gumm- mmmuooolonoul'u. , In old. dd Wanna-hf- “and D110 I moron... _ _ - "ts calm .mBKM% with mat. PM The present high price ot platinum is lugely due to the “up; on of my Mies from Russia, which bu been the principal producer, But the mining of the metal in Columbia has been great- tr stimuluted thereby. The meal In Columbu is found ehtehr don: the Attica River tutd the Cauc- Vslley south to the border of Ecuador. The Atmto in 800 miles long (two-thirds of it navigable " steam- ers) and empties into the Gulf ot Darlen by titteen mouths. Platinum. which was worth " an ounce not very many year: no. latch" $110 an ounce to-day, or more than tive times " much " gold. A "sGGnn, le " country's need: Ho wu but one of the numbered bravo. No single land cu: alum him for its. own, No land can Btbr that be In truly theirs. He In an Empire you, mm and true. He cum. at Empire's all her will to do, And Britain ne'er forgets, the not: she hears. Sleep on, brave heart! 3 "cred tie that binds Still clouer- all the links ot Empires chain, God give us faith and attength to still pursue The path ot honor and his will to do; And keep unstained the Empire’s broad domain. plro Meat, ' And on who“ grave I has tas drop- . pod I tear. Ell-dun to lie within that holy Me I: just, and none will him day A all“ 'Midat all the noblest of old mum'- Who gave her ll'l, who noble â€all." led, ' its/ an: "not scan ton-roll the Brb uni nee. Npt his the glory of the soulful bard; Not his‘ the glory of an honored mu; Ho wu a wurlor true, yet did Bet With att a. pawn al- . hm m- Platinum F ields of Columbia "I May th Ppg_This Way brings us the petty round of irritating concerns and duties. Help us to play the man. Help us to perform them with laughter and kind faces. last cheerful- ness abound with industry. Give us to go blithely on our busineaa all this day; a n d undishonored; and mt us in the end the gift Homes Unger the Sea. --0. Montague Mum). l to tune. yet laid to and n TORONTO Atrntodrmotattrmtotmnaterthe hetaloeteftrmmsesrartieutoan- othar,gtadfaettt_tobeanw tsientdistAtrutoraeu.tttrrumtuv. amtfBeUtttarmmttadttttmidttr. A anhtehthiek. 1huantsatNrfastened ttttthott-ttttahh-. Theiron. “about! km to the WIN by mumdtwohim. Ahookuidtnth-owend aftuboard,whithf-nearthe topdthodout. Ifrtrrrhouseu ttneinwhiehrmdonotthinkit- viable to build autumn-bond into t1te_trmrberrtokthemrtrside orthovmll. Aeartatttmnrbehune trverftaetditirtbenottembte, 1mtwiRdoesnettrth-trervied fathom; The top of the old ironing-board will do, but it is better to make a new one. Me it four feet long, eighteen inch- wide It one“ and nine inche- attttsether. Aftottmdoneaait from the narrower end, drop a support tohoidtuboardtm. m; shouldbo three gut 1trtte,_tour inches wide and deal. It is very simple and "thrett so much time and worry. Have one of the boys " up your ironing-board like this on some stormy day during the winter. Any farmer's wife can do this too. It takes only a little time to install the ironing-board, and the busy house- wifo'n work would be lightened 1 great A Disappearing Ironing Board. “Pleue step aside. Can't you see I'm carrying this heavy, cumbersome old ironing-board?" City people have overcome_this dif- fidulty so they do not have to .y this. All they have to do is to open a little door in the wall, unhook the ironing- board and it is in plane. Maple Cream Fudtre--1 lb. maple sugar, 1 cup cream, % teaspoon salt, 1 cup chopped pecans. Boil the sum, cream and salt together until soft bulls are formed when it it dropped in cold water. Then add the nuts, and pour on a buttered plate. Fruit Rolls-.-? cup prunes, 16 cup f1gs, % cup walnut meats, % cup shredded cocoanut, 1 cup dates, 2 tablespoons orange juice, 1 teaspoon grated orange peel. Run the cooked prunes. dates, furs, nuts, and cocoanut through the food grinder. Add the orange juice and peel. Roll into tt long roll, cut. in slices, and MPP each one in waxed paper. light brown luring-9h cup meter, 1 tablespoon vinegar, 2 “blown: but- tae, 1 cup chopped nun. Flue the - and water on the stove. When the mixture begins to boil, add the vinegar. Cook a few minutes, and then add the butter. When the syrup spins a thread, pour it over the note, which have been spread on a buttered platter. Mark in squares when cool. When cold, break apart. and wrap each square in waxed paper. _. manyaone, nematdtheIeSslm-chinlrom Some of the hate have straight brim, others are in rolling brim shape. Frequently the brim will be one color and the crown another. Bril- liant “male and squirrel-gray are used together, an well as royal blut ami tan ttttd blnck and white-checked alsoâ€. combined with green, orange, to the crown. For trimming, wool cord: and tassel: are used, also Batty pompoms and guy wool tlow-s. . The warts are wide and soft, and come in the Ioveliest of color Combina- tions. They are made of moors. amel'l hair, and brushed wool, and the new idea is to hove a hat to match. The not?! with matching tun-o'- dunta' I: no novelty, but the out! with I real hat, in o becoming than. is counted omong the new things of the winter season. or bright red. Theltau are not hard to make if you have a knack that wuy. The best looking are made over a small buck- Willem " ixllnence gentle it deep in his but; Bittoaatoaeodeunnttfittyhigb, And-toertttemhewi11notdeeir. 'TUatmitoflrtaturehertmette) mqtaitrt Beisttranhthisftdt1t,andhestartd, Btrlish Economy. For tho brMant color note, and for real Vilma], try one of the latest wool surfs. They make a faacinatintt ub- Itltute for furs that not tsllof Ill our buy this year, became of their high for the right-- Mush proofs of be: worth than ho Motlter-dt%n. Thmurts-afhiBitfehomtho madam, ' She 1nd mankind his mind by bar 'dhdplinomnd; Aasdtutmini-hiehNrinth-t chem Berrgdanesetomarttsood,uam" hingmun. Sweets for the Party. Oid-Faahioned Nqt Ctsndy---2 cup. @amam’s. f ward in I With winter live it in well to keep') ‘these thth in mind and live acrupu-E lioetly up to them, not only for the; saving of fuel, which in nation? in', View»! the serious fuel titamtion, but! u a protection mint colds, 'ia-) cum and other illnesses which arel likely to follow if the " is not om-,! perly heated nnd humidified, It is Speculum: “and: more mulled than gambling, but u (allow lose- Just In much. " "I came across two words in a book I wan reading this other evening: “un- tempted righteousness: Isn't ours that kind so tar as money In concern- ed? Has my one of us ever known whet it was to need a twemy-douar biil---need It badly enough to be wor- ried tor days over not having it? It we haven't. we ouhm't to judge the fellow who' bu. We don't know what we should do It we were In his place. Untemnted rkhupusneu In good In It. way, but it lenjt qttaliBed to In In Judgment on a fellow who bu borne the brunt-and gone down.†"I no, Hammond." nld Vanderllp, putting out an impulsive hum. and Hunmond winced under the grip. "You're right. Untempted righteous- n-tttet aott god that's never had to an hard kttoeks--Mt't In truck to bout ot." the want of luck in to his}; Gii wit to talk well and too little judg. meat to keep am. Minard'o Liettmeett'u. Bum, "It gsve me n sense ot sudden neu- eee,’,' he told Hammond end Gray when the subject wu brought up Inter. "t had the same feeling once, when the men found a couple ot deed at: in the well we‘d been drinking from up at the comp. The water look- ed cleen. but it we- foul. and we didn't know it. That’s the way with' Lotion. Ugh! It disgthe me." Hemmend's words cute slowly, es if he were thinking them out as he talked: "t underttand from Derrick and Bhuer--they both room in (‘lerk Ehul---tut Lemon's term bills were overdue. Derrick tells me Lorton has been on the edge ever since he enter- ed college. Severnl times he has dropped out ot the boarding house for a fortnight or longer and boarded him- self on next to nothing. Sharer says the! Lotion invariably apologized to his callers about the Ire's being down, but that 'down’ was its, normal con- dition--to sue fuel. "Lorton acid that he took the twon- when“ bill out ot Morris' desk, con- tiderttly expecting that he should be able to replace it before Harri. dite covered the theft. It seems he'd had a rather ent reminder that morn. ing that h a bills must be paid within a tspec!" time That doesn't excuse the theft, ot course. It was a foolish and criminal act, but a. teliow who has never had any such strain on " virtue had better not be forward about condemning Lemon. Wherever a knot ot students gath- ered that a. Lorton'l one was the topic ot mutation. The “rest had taken piece early, and few at the ter lows bed witnessed It. Henry Vander. lip was one of those who did. aa. to my attention to the†de- tails than“ pay doctors' bills. In most warm-“vitamin“ there is . mum for htmtidifrinq the it, and the mus-pan must be kept f111ed, so that at no time it will become dry. Whenthotrinnroomusodrr that It “we books and the Nmittro begin to dry out. it is entirely toe M for the health of the W. tt you My man do. not gte_tvide may for WW po- rrsh,ttidi2he,e,f,,t"r',T'll'; is many to use pens a! "(or in order to ovum-m We!» note- ture. Wicks or clothe around m the pen. and extending over the Odeo or over a eroese't- on the pen tee, elite the evaporation. It the n It“. time and trouble to keep the pens ftlud, but freedom from cold! nnd generally better health more than re- pey the edort. The discomfort ctuted, by excessively dry air hrwem both the mental and physical efheieney of .1 person. For the safe of comfort, no less than economy of fuel, the air in the room must contain a sufficient, amount of moisture. l theirrmmsato7l, degree-crud.- -r.simrrtvt-etuhutrsidftr, irfthentrtreat.iarattlvbeuwnrhdt itiouldbe. mm.drymm. P.arith Imam"...- Amenhetedto66de, . . W moiatatrisuomeoenfortabuthnnn TMW 'oonstt-rfthdrrairtont- sreovi-oetugrttatu.teerlv. mtund70demF.Them‘Mm,gummhqu-knkw iiitAGiGitiiiGtoodrrint-iu,uaiasr-trehee “themmfll‘dhmofflnwyohgmflugndWhRIMHï¬- My people and it noon-nu ttPet1%t Wane. of and mum! N- and: 1.}. inch. mm its maver- "qttt0mt - mu - . "I“ GOARSE SALT L A NP SALT “onetime. More. from the cut; the Red and Anim- gboinc. from the south; Ind the Sas, i hatchewnn, from the West. T.he Law fin turn discharges north-easterly by te of the Nelson river to Ends»: 1 Bay. f, 3 In addition to the Nelson, the warc.hk . ,of the northern pert of the province ere collected by the Reyes and Church-' I ill rivers, both of which discharge into Judson Bar, the former to the south to! the Neleon end the letter to the [north The period of low ttow occure Jurist; the winter about!“ on ell the univer‘e ttf Manitoba. due to the Net tint peeelMtatiem during that period iis coneerved in the form of ice and .enow; Bood itow occurs in the spring ( end urly winner months. The rivers which - the prairie territory have e wide variation between low and Ugh thor, whereu meet of those in the human: country ere re- merkebly fuller. due to the etabil- hing ntreet of the may Inkee. awn!" end mete“ in their vet-lone drainage Mine. Among the Inner power aim. thou of the Winn!†in the moot advan- wly danced with Ward to the mount centre. of population and nil- ny faesititiees. Moat of the other: an Wt remote from thickly popu- w districts. inadeforumiudrerioatobonafide applicants cqnblo of prosecuting the development to I successful iuuc. The extreme anthem end south- western portion- of the province be- long “mentally to the Plain re- xion. compo-ed for the most per: of treeleu prairie, tanned with rivers of tortuous course. and an: gradients. The greater M of the province, how- ever, in Deuterium in dander, with the rivers typial of that formation; lake-like expenses followed by con- Seated channel: with {elk and rapids of mom or In: turbulence. Lake Winnipeg {can the collecting bum for the when liven. the more in" l portant of which are the Winnipeg, " Ail-hurl“.- Begum. The water power: of the proviso of Manitoba are administered under minions mutant to the Dominion Wear Power Act, 1919. These mu» lotions provide for the osrrloitation of the water power mute“ under full Government control of rum. rentals, etc. Then "tuition. “lately pre- vent unwise and pleura-um develop- ment of water power end provide for the permanent retention in the Crown d the ownership and control of the power project. Cancel-ion. ere only Application for “at power privi- lace: in Manitoba should be address- ed to the director of Water Power, Department of the Interior, Ottawa. General Characteristic of the Six (1 the line Can-dun vamcu M alt water and can then-for. have noun pom. vim, Nova smug, Prince Edward blind uni New Bruntr, wick. forming the Maritime Proxynces. Quake. Ontario um! Mnnituha my. “oh the thou“ " Budson's BM)". and British (inhabit. development, Minion and nae of hydro-electric enemy. most of the we pom will, in time, prove to be important factor! in the solution of the fuel-power problem: of the province. The Dominion Water Power Branch of the 0mm of the Interior, by many years of hydro-metric surw y and [ennui-ounce, have largely de- termined the power pouibilities of the province. Their report on the power whee of the Winnipeg river within the province shows that by an‘agr Cal regulation, some 560,000 h.p. me evnilnble within tannin-ion distance of Winnipeg. Their investigations have Ibo covered the Salk-Rheum) river at Grind Rapids, the Nelson river, the WW. Waniptgow, Nearly 25,000 people met with death or injury on British .tilways last year. m, umber killed m" 932, whit. 28,988 were injured. Pigeon, Berenn, Bloodvein. Dauphin, Fnirford, “hm, Incline» do... Gnu, Bumbwood tad Church- in rivers, as well u mullet sci-urns. -otr-tutints-teet-Pc. M. Atwood, Diegget Chief Enginee- of a... m was Inv- _ â€â€01,le We on the no; m. wild: have tmrved of vttnttiriortaneitrstu4retr'tal ert- mumduuWim'm-nd handrail. 'diasredthemratar pow- an an at â€out not. hom tho moret1tielttudrnruMthereo- vineeandnm,fortutr-mfre Windy tumor-ant for the explod- iutioetotthenotmimootareesofth* It in bubble, however. that with dad hauled cost M 0011 Produetion, t-oetata'oet, and labor diffieultie., can, and with Advances in the Art of Gm-rr-tture-au" Mina-WWâ€: TypthW WATER POWERS