West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 1 Sep 1921, p. 2

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#} Maurice nodded. ‘"They said thieves at the store." Forgotten, for the moâ€" ment was old Scroggie‘s ghost and the buried treasure in this new someâ€" thing which promised mystery and adventurc. "Hully Gee!" whispered Billy. "Ain‘t that rippin‘?" "Ain‘t it jest ?" agreed â€" Maurice, *"Say, Bill, there ain‘t no law ag‘in shootin‘ robbers is thereâ€"storeâ€"robâ€" bers, I mean?" "Naw, why should t.her(eio be; That‘ what you‘re supposed to , if you ge the chanceâ€"shoot ‘cm, an‘ get the| reward." | "What‘s a reward?" [ "Why, it‘s money con ntanur «xâ€"â€"<k tones Wilson‘s exclamation of _ surprise was checked by Cobin Keeler, whose long arm reached out and encireled him. He was lifted bodily into the seat and the buckboard dashed on up the road, the clatter of its looze spokes drowning the loud voices of its occuâ€" pants. The boys sat up and stared at each’ other. uPC £qc0,0 0y WEWiP â€" weky through the thicket of sumach, and reached a clump of goldenâ€"rod inside the road fence just as Wilson came out of the lane. "Mornin‘, neighbors," he greeted the men in the buckboard, "won‘t you pul in?" | "No," said the deacon, "we‘re on our way to Twin Oaks, Thomas. Thieves! broke into Spencer‘s store last night. We‘re goin‘ up to see if we can be of | mny use to Caleb. We‘d like you tol come along." BW Autici ns â€" SR 4 is 10, lom!‘" awoke the forest echoes. "Come on, Maurice, let‘s work our way down along this strip o‘ bushes so‘s we kin hear what‘s goin‘ on." The boys wriggled their way . PSRher CR 49 was away from home." ‘Oh, look, Bi}," said "they‘re stopprin‘ at your p! The deacon had pulled Wilson‘s gato. "He‘s showt Bfl)y Wwiimmarnrk ms 4 se mres _RKeep quiet till thay get past," cauâ€" tioned %il-ly. "Say! we needn‘t have been so bamed carefcl about makin‘ our sneak if we‘d knowed your Pa hkG Snss Beacs.% us Map Bhin udn 4/ â€"Amiract ‘ars 5c is 2l 41 0 an‘ too carly fer hogâ€"killin‘; an‘ that‘s "bout all Dad‘s good at doin‘, ‘cept leadin‘ the sinzin‘ at prayerâ€"meetin‘. Wonder what‘s up? (ee! the deacon is sure puttin‘ his ~‘d mure over the mas d ** i c yck k 0 CC Tt ECCeve â€" EOE as the complaining vehicle swept into sight from around the curve, | "By ;nckey. Maurice, your Pa‘s ridin‘ with im." Maurice scratched his head in perâ€" plexity. "Wonder where he‘s ta'kin" Dad ? l:'s' too late for sheepâ€"sheartn‘. * ow o _ 1 Tf uo baLe Tor sie You heard?" Bil] maumce was about to protest furâ€" ther when the rattle of loose spokes and the beat of a horse‘s hoofs on the hard road fell on their cars. "That‘s Deacon Ringo"d‘s buckâ€" board," Billy informed his chum, drawing him behind an alderâ€"screened stum». "Say, ain‘t he drivin‘? Someâ€" bo'i{ must be sick at his place." Then: ns Whew is tl8...% WB d Maurice was about ther when the rattle and the beat of a hors hard road fell on their ‘ll, here won‘t be no ghost to ::d the way to the stuff in the dayâ€" time." "Well, if we take a look over the place in the daylight we‘ll know the layâ€"out better at night, won‘t we? Trigger Finger Tom did that most times, an‘ he always got away clean. Supposin‘ a ghost is close at your heels, ain‘t it a good idea to have ‘one or two good runways picked out to , swkip on? We‘re goin‘ through that ba‘nted house in daylight, so ou| might as well make up your mndyto'l that." T y e C o C ECeTem, "Now that we‘ve got ol‘ Harry‘s charm along with my rabbitâ€"foot," Billy was saying, "we ought‘a be able to snoop ‘round in the ha‘nted grove an‘ even hunt through the house any time we take the notion. Maybe we‘ll get a chance to do it toâ€"day." ] "But, darn it all, Bill," Maurice obâ€"‘ jected, "there won‘t be no ghost to fia:! the way to the stuff in the davâ€"‘ CHAPTER IX. Moving the Menagerie. Billy and Maurice, taking the short cut to the Wilson farm across the rainâ€"drenched fields next morning, w.f: pl.am:in‘ x,he_ day‘s program. ‘ Synopsis of Preceding Chapters. | kill the robbers an‘ you Billy Wilson, who lives with hllicgllection an‘ lots of o father and stepmother and her son ,stdes. Then you‘re riel Anson, is the leader among the boys have to do any work; je of Scotia, a pioncer settlement near| an‘ give speeches at t {.ake Erie. é:;bin Koholez.-, one of hthe things." rustees, is telling the new teacher,| .. I atnt Mr. Johnston, about kis predecessor, youOcho.m}?ktzyi‘:;r;t:}}lm Frank Stanhope, . ho was blindod‘ "Wh in C while trying to savo norses from a "Tp; y I read it in burning ‘stable. A will made by 3} .lg‘g,'er-Fm.g?r Tim wealthy hermit, Scroggie, in Stanâ€" Alive. Oh, it‘s all hun hope‘s favor, could not be found. Billy! h But, Blll,?,),xow we and Maurice Keeler visit old Harryi‘ ‘e‘m.r?bbex_-s'. atr 3 O‘Dule to ask his aid in their search Ain‘t goin‘ to kill ‘c for the lost will. A storm delays the| replied. _ "Triggerâ€"Fing Aervendlat ... pered @3 a re money, you ninny! You A SON OF COURAGE y asked in awed BY ARCHIE P. McKISHNIE sounding "Helâ€" id _ Maurice, their. ”way Copyrighted by Thomas Allen. d ] Suddenly Croaker stretched himself e erect. A soft whistle, so low as to be p! inaudible to the indignant woman but s clear to his acute ears, had sounded . | from the far side of the wood pile. 'Pausing only long enough to locate h) the sound, Croaker spread his wings [ and volplaned down, emitting a hoarse 1 croak of triumph almost in Mrs. WiI-J | son‘s face, as he swept close above her.i s| _ _"Come here, you," spoke a low voice. â€"|as Croaker settled on the other side‘ 1| of the wood pile, and the crow prompt-,! â€"| ly perched himself on Billy‘s shoulder [ with a succession of throaty notes’ | that sounded like crazy laughter, but. . which were really expression of unâ€" adulterated joy. For this boy who had | taken him from the nest in the swayâ€" |ing elm when he was nothing but a| | halfâ€"feathered, wideâ€"mouthed fledgâ€" |ling, and had fed him, cared for him, | defended him against cat, dog, rooster | jlam{ human beingsâ€"for this boy alone“ [ Croaker felt all the love his selfish | heart was capable of giving. p 1 hy t e n eet " And now as wards the root C1 "Â¥a, 3323 O pceZt With anger, t| "You black, thievin‘ passel of imâ€" ‘.| pudence, you!" she was saying. "If n I had a stick long enough to reach you, e you‘d never dirty any more of my |newâ€"washed clothes." .: , On the topâ€"most branch of a tall, e‘ dead pine, close beside the woodâ€"pile, v‘ sat the tame crow, Croaker, his head a cocked demurely on one side, as he listened to the woman‘s righteous ,| abuse. â€" Croaker could no more help ‘ filling his claws with chips and dirt & and wokbling the full length of a line ) filled with snowy, â€" newlyâ€"washed .| elothes tham he could help upsetting . the pan of water in the chickenâ€"pen â€" when he saw the opportunity. _ He , hated anything white with all his sinâ€"|. 'ful little heart and he hated the game!‘ rooster in the same way. He was | always in trouble with Ma Wilson, alâ€"| | ways in trouble with the rooster. Only | | when safe in the highest branch of the]; | pine was he secure, and in a position | j to talk back to his persecutors. P ' He said something now, low and | | guttural, to the woman shaking her|, ‘fist at him in impotent anger. His,t | voice was almost human in tone, his | |attitude so sinister that she shuddered. h "That‘s right, swear at me, too," she ; !cried, "add insult to injury, you black | ; imp. _ If it wasn‘t fer bein? scared of | ; shootin‘ myself T‘d get the gun an‘ t] shoot you, I would so!" €~ P_ D PNatith 2 RnthaatPas : Lna lt As he rounded the kitchen, p atory to a leap across the open between it and the big woodâ€"pile Wilson‘s voice came to him, pitc‘l;ed and freighted with ans Lo POnt Roey NP ECVE | with the snakes er owls, an‘ you jest keep out of ol‘ Ringdo‘s reach, ‘cause ’he's a bad ol‘ swamp coon in some ’was{(s. You jest lay close till I come back." _ Whistling soundlessly, Billy went up the path to the house. He peered carefully in through the screened door. The room was empty and so was the pantry beyond. Billy entered, tiptoed softly across to the pantry and filled his pockets with doughnuts from the big crock in the cupboard. Then he tipâ€"toed softly out again. to ies s 10. 1 $ | Siih® 74 °P ind Alk cA 2 °_ "Oh shucks! What‘s the use of ‘ thinkin‘ ‘bout that now ? We‘ve gotta catch them robbers first, ain‘t we?" ‘‘Yep, that‘s so. But how ?" | Billy wriggled free of the goldenâ€" rod. "Come on over an‘ heli) me move ‘my menagerie an‘ we‘l plan out a way." _ They climbed the fence and crossed the road to the laneâ€"gate. "Now, then," said Billy, "you scoot through the trees to the rootâ€"house, while I go up to the kitchen an‘ smeak some doughnuts. Don‘t let Ma catch a glimpse of you er she‘ll come lookin‘ fer me an‘ set me to churnin‘ er someâ€" thin‘ right under her eyes. An‘ see here," he warned, as Maurice made forhthti trees.‘ "don‘t you get to foolin‘ sublcly Mbem. eessalhs ie ol . ] h Nutfiieigtstaintiiin AAvricared08 s ‘em, an‘ when they come to they‘d find themselves tied hand an‘ foot, an‘ Triggerâ€"Finger smokin‘ his cigarette an‘ smilin‘ down on ‘em." "Gollies!" exulted Maurice. Then uncertainty in his tones, "A feller ‘ud have to be a mighty good shot to do that though, Bill." | "Ain‘t goin‘ to kill ‘em," his friend replied. "Triggerâ€"Finger Tim never killed his; he took ‘em all alive. All he did was crease their skulls with }leeta, a-n"_scmge their spines with "i ne robbers an‘ you get the church collection an‘ lots of other money beâ€"| sides. Then you‘re rich an‘ don‘t ever | have to do any work; jest fish an‘ hunt an‘ give specches at teaâ€"meetin‘s an‘l things." ’ "Oh, hokey! ain‘t that great. How‘d you come to know all that, Bill?" ' "Why I read it in Anson‘s book, | SE IOMFR Ni essmc Mak . 2 1 i Billy carried him toâ€" â€"house he recited the "5Ct lim _er Dead er , it‘s all hunky, I tell you." y ko i Wls owls, an‘ you jest SNe open space woodâ€"pile, Mrs. to“_him, highâ€" goin‘ to kill , prepar | He un and thret Ion the t ;dm'knesa. "Are y ,Sufe, Bill "Bet y« | .. "Them" I‘H be g shivered | into the 1 ah . Py 0 B of course, ‘ll stay along up here notscaredcfhimlikes}lx)eist Ofl"l:r things. Come along." PC intP w hanintede / ... 11 41 ‘ "Yep, that‘s him. Now," he cried, tossing Croaker into a tree, "T‘H tell you what we gotta do. We gotta move ’theoe pets down to that old sugarâ€"| shanty in our woods. Ma‘s got _so nervous with havin‘ ‘em here ihat I‘m| afraid Anse might take it in his healg" to let ‘em out, er kill ‘em. I‘ve gml ‘em all boxed nice an‘ snug. All 1i want you to do is help me carry ‘em.| We can do it in two trips. Ringdo, | of entiran MI shee [ 10 PSLo SE Maurice whistled. "Gee! Bill, you don‘t mean t‘ tell me that waterâ€"snake you call Hawkâ€"killer is him ?" th ’ "Maybe I do, but I a@in‘t tellin‘ all I know," said Billy. _ "What‘s the good? Nobody ‘ud believe me." "What you mean, believe you?" "Why, if I said I saw a fight beâ€" tween a little brown waterâ€"snake no bigger‘n a garter snake, an‘ a fishâ€" hawk, an‘ the snake licked the hawk, d‘ye s‘pose anyone ‘ud believe that ?" “Iq dunno. Maybe, an‘ maybe not." H4@tuclll.__if, {1070€, & y 7 Tnlribpintsuirrtialiiiclid se 4 lay open Moll‘s face with one slash, They‘re thickâ€"necked an‘ take a lot of killin‘. This crow kin kill a blackâ€" snake with one slash of his bill. He has to choke the womper to death." Maurice seratched his head thoughtâ€" fully. "Say, you know a lot about snakes an‘ things, don‘t you?" he said admiringly. L aa es en e e ie on of them snakes kin do? ~You ?ig one d‘o_wn in Patterson‘s 1 o duliiiinn? Snignit wote dBiniecie l liha d ol ta 5s 13 _ "Gollies! _ Is that so? _ Well he couldn‘t hurt the black snake; that‘s one sure thing." "No, it ain‘t, ‘cause he kin kill a black snake a sight easier than he kin a womper, an‘ I‘ll tell you why. Black-‘ flla}cegâ€" hgxe got teeth. They bite. But OME wrulitye i. Mss t t t 1 3 4A joined him beside the rootâ€"house. "Oh, he‘s been raisin‘ high jinks with Ma ag‘in," explained Billy. "He will get his claws full o‘ dirt an‘ pigeonâ€"toe along ‘her line of clean clotkes,Lgs soon as her back‘s turned." |his since they had parted, recited | them, it is true, in hoarse unintelliâ€" gible crowâ€"language, but which Billy was careful to indicate he understood right well. ' "So you did all that, did you?" he laughed. "Oh, but you‘re a smart ‘bird. But see here, if you go on the way you‘re doin‘, dirtyin‘ Ma‘s clean clothes an‘ abusin‘ her like I heard : you doin‘, your light‘s goin‘ out sud-, den one of these days. Ma‘s scared to shoot the ol‘ gun herself, but she‘ll I get Anse to do it. I guess I better s}l:lust you up on washâ€"mornin‘s after| this." "What‘s he been doin‘ now, Bill?”) :_u‘keq‘ lt{.aun‘ice as Billy and the crow various adventures which had been § 4 090994 005 is c t The Toronto Hospital for Incurâ€" ables, in affiliation with Bellevue and Allied Hospitals, New York _ City, offers a three years Courss of Train. InT to young women, having the reâ€" quired education, and desirous of beâ€" coming nurses. This Hospital has ndoYted the elghtâ€"hour system. The puplls recelve uniforms of the School, & monthly allowance and travelline expenses to and from New York. For further information apply to the Superintendent. NURSES ? You saw the â€" 00 0C "HMHCs 4 llfew hours later. The earlier restricâ€" % ISTAMMERING Cured in 30 days. Particulars mailed Tnemns . KB c on coamies on d mm m on . ___ | Ere@at extent. ‘;;"e;:;snruvd to a | plant in the STAMMERING .« 1 oot gant in the d| Time was, not so very long ago, t| when thousands of men were crippled e,for killed while coupling freight cars. e"lt was considered unavoidable. Cirâ€" ‘|cular saws, planers, and all sorts of ‘sharp-cutting, swiftly moving machinâ€" ~| ery took their annual toll in lives and t‘limbs. It, too, was "unavoidable." 1 With the perfection of motor vehicâ€" t|les came highâ€"powered, quickly | reâ€" ; sponsive engines, and the natural imâ€" ‘ / pulse of most people, especially the ‘younger. to travel faster and faster. f t To one who reduces his auto speed | from 35 or 40 miles an hour to 20 it ; |seems as if he were barely moving; ’ | yet his car is travelling 29 feet a second. Even an active, alert person | :does not go very far in five seconds,! Ibut the car, if unchecked, will have â€" ; gone 150 feet. With the demand for Ispeed ability in a car, manufacturers | Xiucreased performances, until now I even a moderateâ€"priced car is guaranâ€"‘ teed to do its 60 or 80 miles an hour, |â€" and some, 90 or 100 miles. With im.}! proved roads also came the texmm-’t tion to "step on it." However, rate t of speed is a relative thing, for at |C times and places 40 miles an hour is safer to the public than 20 miles a | few hours later. The earlier restric. | * Krupp‘s works, at Essen, have 40,â€" 000 laborers and 3,000 officials fully employed on peace work. Minard‘s Liniment for Burns, etc. Apples and dates are as beneficial to the teeth as sweets are harmful _ The answer is that the approach of sleep checks the flow from the earâ€" ducts which keeps the eyes moist. These results a dryness and slight unâ€" comfortableness of the lids, causing one to rub his eyes. The Sand Man has come, and it is time to go to bed. Whence, by the way,wcomes the nursery idea of the Sand Man, herald of sleep? It is the ozone in the air that does it. The air at the seashore is full of ozone, which might be called a .conâ€" centrated oxygen. Ozone is a powerâ€" ful and healthful stimulant. They say that the sea air makes them sleepy. _ Wheeled along in a beach chair, one is likely to feel drowsy, or even go to sleep. People who spend their vacations at the seashore at this time of the year usually find that their nights are dreamless and restful. Canada can claim the distinction of being the first country in modern times to inaugurate a census taking. This took place in the year 1666, in New France, as Canada was at that time known. The result showed a white population of 3,215. than 220 questions, some of which were: amount of improved land, waste land, cost of labor, number of fruit trees, domestic animals, tractors, autoâ€" mobiles, etc., amount of all products sold during year. The census sheet covering manufacturing, trading, and business merely called for firm name, address, and nature of operations. ‘ year, time sick, time idle, if immigrant year of coming to Canada, date of takâ€" ing out naturalibation papers, whether owner of house or lodger, if latter rent paid, material in house, number of rooms, married or single, whether can read or write. The farmer had the hardest task, having to answer no less \ | _ No other country in the world‘s cenâ€" sus taking nearly approaches to that of the Dominion in magnitude, as the few cities lie along a fringe 3,800 miles | long. The total cost of the sixth cenâ€" sus was a little over $2,000,000. The work required 240 commissioners and 11,500 enumerators. In the farâ€"northâ€" ern regions the Royal Canadian Mountâ€" ed Police, the Hudson Bay factors, and ' the missionaries acted as enumerators and every Eskimo that could be lo-‘ cated was put down. The Indians were enumerated by the Indian agenta.l Among the chief questions asked each resident of the Dominion for the form entitled population, were name, place of abode, personal description, nativiâ€" ty of parents, birthplace, citizenship, number of languages spoken, occupaâ€" tion, employment, earnings for last On June 1, 1921, the Dominion ofl 4___.__._:1â€"â€"- Canada began taking her sixth decenâ€"/ nial census since the contederation.l The Boy‘s Point of View. | Oflicially the entire population is sup~, Henry, twelve years old, had been posed to be counted between sunrise accused of sending in three false and sunset of that day. In reality the !alarms of fire. He sat facing the judge census in the cities and suburban | of the juvenile court. Near by sat his _communities was completed in from | father, ill at ease, and scowling at his ‘ three to four weeks. In the far wildâ€" | son. Henry‘s head was bent, but now: ervesses, the work took from five t0 | and then he cast sulky, furtive glances, eight weeks, and some returns from | a; ip, judge, at his father, and ltl within the Arctic circle will require | some of the witnesses. The judge had about four months to reach the °2P+ | baen sharply watching both the boy} tal, Ottawa. The general estimate in ’and the boy‘s father. He did not like advance of the compiling of the figures |\the way the looketi at each other l is that these> will show Canada to The chargyes were made, and t:hen have 9,000,000 population. On this witnesses substantiated them. _ Then. ;’;:?é;l:z\?::“:fi:; w;;l; anuat!t:?a of 3; | the judge casually said to the father,! 9, Â¥ a e more ! ,, than two inhabitants to the nquarei I suppose you have qf.t Py t’-'kff toll ille. | your boy about good citizenship? I matar w«.1;_,____"" «20 women driving â€", 70 *articulars mailed " motor vehicles can also be tamed, and O. Reynolds, 399 Wellesley jmut. Then why prolong the slaughâ€" to. 7 ter? had spilled from Billy‘s pocket, he uuctcied aown to the ground, and with mony cares ing croaks procecded to make a meal of it. and peered in after his master. Then, catching sight of a doughnut which No other Canada Takes Her Si Decennial Census. (To be continue1.) a Sleepmaker. Getting Automobile Sense ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO | * 22020 1-! The ordinary passenger train does |like an e d | not average over 40 miles an hour and | the Wool | its engineer must have several years City, Th __,of careful training, and possess cerâ€"|ed at th .| tain abilities of judgment and skill beâ€" | the highe i4 fore he is entrusted with a train; yet ’view of ; ;fpracticall)' any one with at least one | mountain | good eye is permitted to drive an auto. | l"An hour or two is sufficient to master! I ; | the shifting of gears and applying the | _ If Cana "brake: but by no mcans all drivers | the result lhave the necessary alortnoss of deâ€" ’(armem, ' | cision in an emergency, and others are | railways, | careless, indifferent, â€" or preoccupied, !our work ‘Hence the increasing number of acel . destroyed ‘dents that occur every day in ou" | much of t | streets and hlihwun. ; | wiil ary 1 I The automobile has pot only come every per to 8‘!8{'] but ‘tto Ecrefi.u; like all other | what his t | good things 1g easily abused, and the commmmumames | gurest, qujekest, most effective vuyl, ‘ ’to reduce its dafigers io & mlnlxum is 3 O' to withhold its use from the .r., dus ana nndeserving. e , TD 'Q l Automatic safei? M“-Dhn#n r&IDN duced the railroad casualti from ’ Pheé usea thousands to SCOres: dangaram. .._ | {.% Ased . 7. CHOT D onceâ€"aâ€"year gang of men who come to | thresh. | Steamed brown breadâ€"1 1â€"3 cups graham flour, 2 cups cornmeal, 3 teaâ€" spoons baking powder, 1% teaspoons salt, 1â€"3 cup currants, 1â€"3 cup raisins, msmennenmmmmememenmmmmmmma 222222200 tions as to speed have therefore, wiseâ€" ly, been revised in many cities and states, and especially outside corporâ€" ate limits, to read "at a safe rate of speed." ihe recipes given here may be of assistance to someone who is tired of "the same old things" for the hungry, Onceâ€"aâ€"year gan@ of man wha 2...2 20 l cu e msC meie it we expect our boys to appreciate our point of view, we must learn to appreciate theirs." °_ _ 0 ° °" *EugHt C The wild men and women P wakiapes 000 L ,, _ â€" 3 _____ // % CUUeS as a eitizen, and you have neglected him. It is such fathers as you that get their sons into trouble. Do your duty by your boy. If we mmact : nune Snmere xsucln o cald The "You see the point," said the judge kindly. "You see now that you have abused the fine fire horsesâ€"your fire horses. _ Now you will think more about those horses after this. Some{ day, if you prove worthy, your fellow citizens will trust you with just such a fine team." "I‘ll be good to them, sir." Then the judge turned sharply upon the father. "You have a bright boy there, capable of appreciating his rights and his duties as a citizen, and "I‘d skin him!" The judge smiled in an odd way. Henry dropped back into his seat, and his head sank to his breast, but his face wore a different look. _ "But," continued the judge s]owly,! "suppose you were a fireman and had | to drive often to fires; suppose that just as you reached the fire hall wit;hj your tired horses a kid away on the| outskirts of the town turned in a false‘ alarm. What would you do to that "' kid ?" C CeweL coous o2 . u0 ol m ol We ’ ""Would you like to be a fireman and drive such horses through the streets ?" "Yes, sir!" "Some day, if you show that you. can be trusted, you may be a flrenun,"‘ said the judge, and Henry‘s eyes gleamed with delight. | _ 1€s, sir; yes, sir, I do!" exclaimed Henry, and his eyes were looking straight into those‘of_ the judge. ' Henry‘s head lifted perceptibly. "Yes, I do," he replied, still sulkily. "Do you like to see horses hitched to a shining red wagon?" ""Yes, I do." The boy‘s head came up higher. : "And do you like to see the horses and the red wagon going like everyâ€". thing with the driver hanging on toJ the lines ?" "I took him to the zoo once," said the father. "Henry," said the judge, turning to the boy, "do you like horses?" "Um," said the judge, "and you never took a walk through the city with your boy and made him feel that you and he belonged to a town of which you could be proud and in which you had your share?" ‘ "I‘ve not bothered much with the young ‘rascal," replied the father. "When I have caught him in the wrong I have thrashed him; but it doesn‘t seem to have done must good." has been , sir; yes, sir, I do!" Threshers‘ Dinner. _ casualties â€" : dangerous ~" °90 Gmive an auto. sufficient to master ‘s and applying the mcans all drivers ‘ alertness of deâ€" ncy, and others are nlles an hour and ave several years and possess cer. ment and skill beâ€" with a train; yet with at least one such | railways, ship m\:ne;-sv a;xd !our workingmen. If the ‘destroyed this destruction {much of the land a barren lwfll dry up our streams 300 MILE BREAKEY _j TY"C_ weOVF Jumiplu. From the proâ€" -’sent end of the track the mountain 5| soars another 2,206 ft., to the summit + | at an elevation of 13,547 ft. By means 'I’M excavations and tunnels the track ; will be extended unti] it reaches a spot {in the centre of the conical summit ]ldirectly below its highest point. From | the end of this tunnel a shaft will be ; bored vertically to the summit itself, !and in this shaft Dasserger elevators ;‘wm be installed, so that Alpine mounâ€" taineers will end their long thrilling | ’railmad climb with an elevator trip ‘ |like an exaggerated ride to the top of "the Woolworth Building in New York , | City. ‘The climax will fing them landâ€"; |ed at the extreme summit of on of | the highest peaks in the Alps, with a ‘ ,view of a world of snowâ€"clad craggy | Imountaln tops around thgm. I every person in ( what his business Keep Forests Green If Canada‘s forests are k the result will bensedt our In farmers, manufacturars â€" .. , It is now proposed to add to this wonderful experience in mountain climbing a still further thrill, by comâ€" parison with which the former wil; Appear quite insipid. From the proâ€" sent end of the track the mountain soars another 2,206 ft. to the summit at an elevation of 13,547 ft. By maeane For years one of the most incidents of a visit to the . been the ascent of the Juny the cogâ€"rail road that sta» Kleine Scheidegg, at an eley 6,711 ft. and climbs the mour at the startling grade of 25 p or an angle of about 22 deg reaches Jungfraujoch, at an C of 11,339 feet. ; them, season with salt and pepper and i!b&ke slowly until they can be pierced | with a toothâ€"pick. Serve hot. ' Turnips deliciousâ€"Pare, slice and cut in small cubes. Put to cook in !boiling water. When tender and the water has boiled down some, add butâ€" | ter, pepper and salt and then allow | the water to all boil out, Stir frequent. | ly after the butter is added so that al! lare thoroughly seasoned. ’ Minard‘s Liniment 7for USED AUuTos used J car deale= ®"" shows you they rum instead 0" t§JMD§ about | theÂ¥y are Hwa V | Baked onionâ€"Prepare onions of medium size, boil 15 minutes in slightâ€" ly salted water, drain, place in a bal:â€" ing digh, add whole milk to come well up around the onions but not cover | _ Beef cakes with brown gravyâ€"Preâ€"| Alberta, 8 in British Comm» | pare beef cakes from ground beef 12 the Yukon, as w (-}; as 3 : which contains plenty of suct. BRrown i2 Nov@ Seolfa $84 2 monson | on both sides in a hot spider and when ; Quebec. Theré t alt o9 [a sufficient number of cakes are! tb*s¢ farms worth $3,013,11 browned, remove to a dripping pan,| i"8 the year fnder w0 a o o dey make a thickened gravy in the spider, £9% POl® to the valuo of $4s: pour the gravy over the cakes, season ®*"C+â€" _ , : !w'ith salt and pepper, put in the oven! The high prices for furs w "l.nd bake half an hour or more. Serve provafiled during rocent yea meat and gravy on a platter together.! why far farming has iwmode » l Rice puddingâ€"2 quarts whole milk, Progress in such a short :) % cup rice, 114 leaspoon salt, % cup ; analysis of the reasons oi sugar, 2â€"3 cup raisins, nutmeg if likeq,] Cost will explain why ones Put milk, suger, salt, raisins and | is given l.o extenrding domest washed rice into a baking dish. Place !"C establishments at the pro in a moderate oven and bake 2!% to ard why it will remain a proj 3 hours. Stir very often for the first| dustry to the farmer with j hour. The pudding should be of .; taining a high lave! hoyosd creamy consistency. May be served| MArket Auctuations cold or hot. This amourt will servo‘ Many Factors Encowrsye in eight or ten. ! In gexeral terms f» ‘ Baked onionâ€"Prepare onions of high hocaue they were son medium size, boil 15 minutes in slightâ€" have become searcs becanse ly salted water, drain, place in a bakâ€"‘ produced and more is use img» whiigh | nA mrenife xt wo ol cla olsc o c 4 Thrilling Elev:t;iide to _ Alpine Summit. ’ Baked lqu?â€"-C' ut squash in half, place with cuyside down on pie tin in oven, and bake until done. Remove from shell, mash and season with salt, pepper and butter. Put prepared squash in baking dishes in which it can be served. This may he set aside for over night if desired and put in the oven 40 minutes before time to serve it. The advantage in preparing. it this way is that it can be prepared beforehand. T ! Ginger® cakesâ€"2â€"3 cup sugar, 23 { cup molasses, % cup afz’, 1 cup hot Iwntcr, % teaspoon e of cloves, ginger and cinnamon, % teaspoon ll&lt. 4 teaspoon soda, 2 teaspoons baking powder (level), 2% cups flour, 1 egg. Mix sugar, fat, molasses, hot water and soda together, add about oneâ€"Kalf of the dry ingredients (after, they are thoroughly mixed), beat well,‘ add the wellâ€"beaten egg, then the reâ€" maining dry ingredients, beat well; again and bake in buttered or greased | muffin tins. Bake oneâ€"half hour in, moderate oven. / Recipe makes 15, large cakes in muffin tins. | '“’ dn i budisighces .4 L «AM o ie t TORONTO during Nfi!:\ & .\%fl!fi f).«.‘{ M‘ is ull gone, '{f biitiogs 2t i IB8UE No. 35â€"‘21, pald, which wi.. &Q,t.hi world 2 cups sweet milk, 2â€"3 cup molasses. Mix together flour, meal, baking powâ€" der, salt, currants and raisins Add milk and molasses, beat well and pour into greased baking powder cans. This" amount will fill five oneâ€"pound cans. Fill cans slightly over half full of: batter. Steam three hours. | actually in stook. our streams and in Canada, no ‘orests are kept green benellt our lumbermen, facturers, merchants, >wners, and, above all, n. If the forests are destruction wil} leave Lanlk s » of the most thrilling visit tp the Aips has ~idd in Aatammatted rin, savings against old age able clothes tor the old, asd ; ‘&JTOS Idresnel for the young. â€" Mimilou« “~v='~°. sr oo, "Lerts the world would have Toronto‘ °/ during *ue seygn Pgoars pasl T; t an elevation of the mountainside the Junxr}au on that starts from @% |CANADA®S FuOR _ â€"= Dandruft. desert. 1t 25 per cent., deg. dill it an elevation infuse matter It is good for us to rem» price we are all paying for G» war. Bat for that war the th dred and ##ty thousand millio: havre beer spent for churches roads, schools, presents for lit!!« â€"__It has recently boen c the money loss» due divr directly to the war, and 1 lowance whatever for the an life, is $350,000,000 00 number of miles to some the amount is so stage cause a sorl of mental | pecause even great finan tomed to thisking in la; can but feebly sense this | _ Canada undc ubtedly | widest and most profitn préesent day for engas mestic rearing of furbe | The last resort on the c wild furbearers, ii offer conditions for folowine physically and economi them in what cclosost their natural habitat, Canada raise the bes but climate, food, en general conditions br/i. and glossiness unequa! the pelts produced domo icreulng demand is t} ment of the domestics bearing animals. â€" Not ; ficient be raised to furn uarket | previousiy supt wild product but a much of fur can be developed a Under the care of skil}e! the animals raised on ¢< be brought up to the )i# condition and the farme; vantage of the trapper in he can kill the animal a when the pelt is richest a thius be!ngfi sure of ‘,l,l.e !;lpl process wi.‘ continm The only measur problem of decress modern guus, smol proved traps and 1 factors in extermir mals and serioysly . bers of others,. Fo been diminishing in process will rentina ano Ccontisuai tread . northward perctrating t tundras has driven the « into thtir last rotrast neforo. in a growing ; the wealthy classes in mwerce and ecflciect sale introduced them to al: globe, whilst the ubig: bile encouraging the 5: boen a pronousced fac creased consumption of other hand the wilds are The contiscal trerd | In 1919 the status of the i | was considered to be of such : tions as to warrant governmen;| which was accordingly carries ‘the Dominion Bureau of Stat ‘:m discovered that fur farm; worth to the Dominion a tots} ‘968,591 that year, thore hbein: |gether 414 fox farms in ope: :cludlng 249 in Princo Bdward '48 in Nova Scotia, 21 New wick, 52 in Quebec, 10 in Onta; Manitoba, 1 in Saskatchewan Alberta, 8 in British Columbis in the Yukon, as well as 3 mink in Nova Scotia and 2 racoon t Queboc. Theré wore 6,43% ; these farms worth $3.01%.115, . ing the year under roviow 2.0° fox peluyo the value of $482,3; sold. / | _ Fur farming is one of the mo. cent of Canadian industries by: lvhicl has developed rapidly a»n 'und proportions of mnational i; ance in a short space of time. . vestigation condpoted in 1912 roy, ‘ numerous ulfilis were being h« captivity for their fur. Foxes »; specios and of all color vari skunk, mink, racoon, fisher, +« muskrat, marten and otter were / upon farms domesticated for peits. Since this time the ac, have developed into a staple in« Originating and spreading wis. the Maritime Provinces it has «q come to embrace in its scepe a) provinces of the Dominion The War Incubw: Conditions Especially Fav,. able for Domestic Resriâ€" » of Furâ€"bearing Animalis MADE GREAT STRIDFS SHORT EXISTENCE y de ng ba iC an ol larg« it 1 yet for un> at 1% K

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