West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 21 Dec 1922, p. 3

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in color. An asphalt deposit in IriQi dad forms a lake ninetyâ€"nine acres in extent, and of unknown .depth, interâ€" wected with rivulets of water. What Asphault Is. Asphait is a mineral pitalu produced by doecomposition of vegetable and wnimal substances over long periods of time. It is usually brownishâ€"black in color. An asphalt deposdl in Trind The bairnies cuddle doon at nicht Wi‘ mirth that‘s dear tae me; But sume the big waurld‘s cark and care Will quaten down their glee, Yet come wint will to ilka ane, May he who sits aboon Aye whisper, though their pows be bauld, "O‘ bairnies, cuddle door." Awv‘ just before we bed corsols We look at our wee lambs, Tam has his airm roun‘ wee Rab‘s neck, An‘ Rab lis airm roun‘ Tam‘s. 1 lift wee Janx‘e up the bed, An‘ as I straik each croon, 1 whisper til my heart fills up, ‘O. bairnies. cuddle doon." While Tam pretends to snore. "Ha‘e a‘ the woans been guid?" he At bength they hear their father‘s ft, An‘ as he ateeks the door They turn their faces to the wa‘ But ere five minutes gang, wee Bob Crier oot, frae neath the claes, "Mither mak‘ Tam gi‘e.ower at ance, He‘s kittlin‘ wi‘ his taes," The mischiet‘s in that Tam for tricks, He‘d bother half the toon ; But aye l Lap them up an‘ ery, "O, bairnies, cuddle doon." Wee Jamic wi‘ the curly heid, J He ayo sleeps next the wa‘, I Bangs up and cries, "I want a piecs," | The rascal starts them a‘, | I rin an‘ fetch them pieces, drinks, â€"| They stop awee the soun‘, | Then draw the blankets up an‘ cry, ’ "Noo, wesnies. cuddle docn." | aSsics, As he puts aff his shoon, ‘The bairnies, John, are in their beds, An‘ lon# since cuddled doon." inme bairnuies enddle doon at nicht, Wi‘ muckle faucht an‘ din! "O‘ try an‘ gleep yo waukrife rogues Your faither‘s comin‘ in." They never heed a word I speak; I try to gi‘e a froon, But aye hap tem up an‘ cry, "O, baimmies, cuddle doon." The bairt Some 12,800 Indian children are enâ€" rolled toâ€"lay in the 330 day and resiâ€" d&ential schools. These schools are not under the control of the departments of education in the different provinces, but are financed and managed jointly by the Department of Indian Affairs and the various Churches engaged in the work. In each province the Indian schools are inspected regularly by qualified school inspectors and the work done by Indian pupiis already compares favorably with that of white schoois in the same localities &n ecucation. I The Dominion Government reaiueo; the importance of wroviding proâ€". per educational facilities for its 'll'fl'.‘ and large appropriations for Indian | education are being made from year to | year. The Department of Indian A!-" fairs, of whkich Honorable Charles | Stowart is Superinterdent General, is | responsibile for, or is associated in the . maintenance of abuout 780 teachers of | Irdian youth. Most of the workers | are missionary teachers; the Churches | and the State are working side by side | in the effort to prepare fulure Indian ; men and women for broader citizenâ€" | &n educ ais Inital contact. Thke indian popuâ€" lation has been slightly increasing for #wome time; and in many parts of Canaâ€" da we have flourishing grouns of ns. The fimiliar "Red Man" of history and romance is fast becoming a figure of the past. In his stead, we find the Indian of toâ€"day, once again a virile, strong type that is being assimilated rapidly Into the Comnntitn PansALes race. Association with the white man kas won a partial immunity from the diseases that played such havoe with the health of the Indian at the time of his initial contact. Tke indian popuâ€" lntlon has booh alinhithe imoamunmutas oo * mm mm (Prepared under the Direction of Dr. Duncan C. Scott, Deputy Superintendent General of Indian Affairs by Mr. Russell T. Ferrier, Superintendent of Indian Education). FORGOT TO PUT THE CAT OUT . irnies Cuddle Doon. Progress of Indian Education WAKING WiITH A BAD sTART Alex. Anderson The twisting and consequent breakâ€" ing of wires attached to electric apâ€" pliances such as flatirons, toasters,‘ heaters, ete., is a universal annoyance. | To remedy this, an inventor has proâ€"| duced a rotating attachment plug of | which the centre portion turns freely when the wires are twisted. | | Frequently, says Mr. Melvilie, you \mu‘ght have seen Marheyo taking a nap in the sun at noonday or a bath | in the stream at midnight. Once I beâ€" ‘held him eight feet from the ground |in the tuft of a cocoanut tree, emokâ€" ing, and often I saw him standing up to the waist in water, engaged in | plucking out the stray hairs of his beard; he used a plece of mussel shell for tweezers. 1 remember in particuâ€" (lar his having a choice pair of ear orâ€" ‘naments that were made from the teeth of some sea monster, He would alternately wear them and take them off at least fifty times in the course folnda.y; on each occasion be would go to and come from his litlte hut with all the tranquility imaginable. Some times, slipping the ornaments through the alits in the ears, he would seize. his spear and go stalking beneath the shadows of the neighhboring groves, as if he were about to meet some hostile cannibal knight. But he would soon return again and, hiding his weapon | under the projecting eaves of the house and rolling his clumsy trinkets carefully into a plece of tape, would resume his more pacific operations u} quietly as if he had never interrupted . them. | In Armenia this year two thousand acres that were plowed by twentyâ€"two American tractors produced twenty bushels of barley to the acro against ten bushels to the acro on land cultiâ€"] vated by native methods. American‘ tractorâ€"drawn plows cut furrows ten: inches deep. The native plow, which; is that of Bible days, only scratches the surface. j Puget â€" Sound _ Indians _ recently launrched a 75â€"foot canoa hollowed from a cedar log. Cannibals are not always the fierce warriors we imagine them to be. So at least Herman Melville tells us in Typoe, that delightful story of the South Seas. _ As an exampie of a gentle manâ€"eater he mentions Marâ€" heyo, an accentric old man at whose house he stayed during his four months of captivity among barbarians in the valley of Typee. An important factor in the general scheme is field work. In addition to nearly 40 field matrons and graduate nurses who are working on the‘re serves, day school teachers, Indian agents, missionaries, and farm inâ€" structors take an active interest in the affairs of the Indian in his own habitat. Housewives and mothers are being trained and clean living is promoted. Although the work is slow the forces of Church and State combine to create steady progress. Special training or assistance is ofâ€" fered to the promising graduates of the day and residential schools. About 90 young Indian men and women are attending high schools and colleges in Canada. _ Financial assistance and careful supervision for these special pupils are arranged for by the Departâ€" ment of Indian Affairs. Other enerâ€" gotle graduates are given grants for stock, implements, household equip ment, or building material. This pro Eramme has been a groat stimulant to progress and has resulted in early inâ€" dependence. ual arts that will assist the pupil in later life. The boys are trained in farming, gardening, and the care of stock; the girls are systematically taught all household duties. Parlaâ€" ment annuan‘apmvides a@ppropriations â€"amounting last year to $1,363,420.45 â€"from which the expenditures for the maintenance of the various instituâ€" tions are made. The Churches which are coâ€"operating provide further funds to finance them. These grants are supplemented from Indian Trust Funds when they are available. In the day schools, in addition to the regular curriculum, emphasis is placed on hand work, gardening, hygiene, and give still further training in the manâ€" group games. The residential schools Huge Cance from a Log. A Gentle Savage. â€"â€"From The Star, London The car devoted to maple sugar and honey attracted a great deal of attenâ€" tion. This industry is probably one of the oldest in the province, and the farmer with a few maple trees on his farm is indeed fortunate, for there is a profitable and ready market in Canaâ€" da, the United Kingdom an the United _ As one of the most profitable sideâ€" lines to farming, poultry claimed a large share of the attention devoted to the diiferent exhibits. Four repreâ€" sentative breeds were shown, includâ€" ing the Chanticler which is a native of the province. Incubation and broodâ€" ing apparatus of various types were shown, as well as a model poultry house. Placards were profusely spread over the walls of the car, calling attenâ€" tion to common faults in the raising of poultry, and steps to be taken to avoid same. Part of this car was given over to the display of modern farm impleâ€" ments, including drainage, cultivating, electric light and household machinery. There is, at the present time, a splendid opportunity for farmers of Quebec to engage in the export bacon trade to the United Kingdom, and the Canadian Meat Packers Association has an exhibit on the train of the variâ€" ous types of bacon demanded by the Fnglish consumers, as well as those for which there is no demand. Live hogs, both fat and bacon types, were kept in the livestock section of the train, and an expert in charge carefulâ€" ly explained to all who visited the train the bacon situation in the Old‘ Country and urged the farmers of the province to take a greater interest in this industry, Purebred dairy cattle were also on exhibition, while arother car was devoted to both the wool and ; mutton types of sheep. Each afterâ€"| _noon an openâ€"&ir demonstration was | given to the farmer, satting forth the | good and bad points of each antmal exâ€"| hibited in respect to their desirability | for raising in the Province of Quebec. ‘ Many Attractive Exhibite. | An attractive display of grains,| grasses, cereals, roots and vegetableai was exhibited by McDonald Colle‘e.[ The grasses were mounted on green | baize and hung on the walls of the car, ' whilo the grain samples were placed | in small glass bottles and artistically | arranged on a long counter running ; the length of the railway coach. A| section was also reserved for tobacco culture. This industry has begun to| assume large proportions in Queboc,i and the farmers are taking a greater interest in the culture of the tobacco : plant than ever before. A model toâ€", baccoâ€"curing shed, advocated by tha Provincial Department of Agriculture| for tobacco growers, was on display. | _ On its six weeks‘ tour of the Pr&l vince of Quebec during the past sumâ€" mer over one hundred thousand people l visited the Better Farming Special ; Train, which was organized by the‘ Provincial Department of Agriculture | and the Canadian Pacific Railway, with ! the coâ€"operation of the Federal Depnrt-; ment of Agriculture and the Oka and | St. Anne de la Pocatiere agricultural | schools. The train was formed of fourâ€"| teen railway cars, which were dediâ€" cated to the different phases of agriâ€" cultureâ€"such as live stock, field crops, farm engineering, horticulture, poultry | beekeeping and sugarâ€"making, and? home industriess Great interest was | shown by all those who inspected t,he‘ train, and in all probability this initial | venture will become a permanent feaâ€"| ture of the educational programme of | the provincial government in future. |. SIX WEEKS‘ TOUR OF THE PROVINCE. "College on Wheels" Prove of High Educational Value to Outlying Districts. "BETTER FARMING" SPECIAL OF QUEBEC #|\* â€"AND THE WORST IS YET TCO COME 99 States for all the maple sugar and IG syrup he can supply. The oldâ€"fashionâ€" ed method of boiling the sap in a huge EBEC iron cauldron was illustrated, while farther on in the car a complete upto date maple sugar manufacturing outâ€" fit with its sanitary boiler, pans, flues, l OF receptacles, etc., was shown,. . Large and small beeâ€"hives of the latest deâ€" f signs were exhibited, as well as an old straw hive used by the early sottlers row ed of the province. ,d The Home Industrics Car. ue The Home Industries car was unâ€" $. doubtedly the greatest point of inâ€" terest in the whole train for the woâ€" h6 PTO | mon, Many of the old relics of the: st sumâ€" | early habitant were on display, includâ€" P°OP!® | ing flintlocks, powder horns, grandâ€" Spetial i father‘s. clOCk. DoLRery. Land Inoma That Canadian fishing waters are :x @1::; & exceptional in fertility, as well as in| _ !/ i. ame~ ~~/*â€"=â€"â€" area, is denoted by the fact that the| 7{:"‘1" T “;â€",{,N entire catch of salmon, lobsters, her-: it 33. 5 * ::;,‘;‘__“”a" ring, mackerel and sardines, nearly all C of the haddock and many of the cod.r t 5" l . hake and pollock are taken within 10 & t or 12 miles from shore. Further, the nomne o)‘ {2.. . value of the Dominion‘s fisheries reâ€", _ §§2yKrw e jX â€"=~ sources is enhanced by the cireumâ€" mapaien . _ _ :. _ stance that the colder waters of the 22 ~ (u)) t > northern latitude produce fish of the pâ€" J css finest quality, while climatic condiâ€"‘ maâ€"st l tions also facilitate the work of disâ€"‘ e M tributing and marketing the catch in | good condition. ‘ Tinoâ€""I‘ve heard it said areas remarkable. The Atlantic coast line, from Labraâ€" dor to the boundary between the United States and Canada, measures over 5,000 milesâ€"not including the lesser bays and indentations It emâ€" braces the Bay of Fundy, 8,000 square miles in area, the Gulf of St. Lawrâ€" ence, ten times as large, and other waters which make the total area not less than 200,000 square miles. Moreâ€" over, 15,000 square miles of inshore | waters are entirely controlled by the Dominion, while Hudson Bay, with ai shoreline 6,000 miles in length, is greater than the Mediterrancan. ’ Crossing the continent, the Pacific shoreline is over 7,000 miles lJong andl has the unique advantage, thanks toi its multitude of islands, of being ex-l ceptionally well sheltered for fisherâ€" | men. Finally, the fresh water lakes | of the interior constitute an area of | 220,000 square miles, Canada‘s share: of the Great Lakes alone covering 34,â€" ; 000 square miles. l |terested in the advancement of agrl-f , culture, in bringing to the farmer inâ€"‘ |formation of the new advances in the | science of agrtculture. Much time and | | labor were expended in equipping the | ; different cars and careful attentlon{ | was given to selecting the exhlbits.; | The train has been appropriately termâ€"| | ed a "college on whoels." | border on Canada. In addition, the lakes and rivers of the Dominion conâ€" stitute approximately half the fresh water of the globe while the great tnâ€" land sea of Hudson Bay, still practicalâ€" ly untouched, may be regarded as a reâ€" serve. Their actual extent alone sufâ€" fices to render these various fishing by The educational value of the agriâ€" | cultural demonstration train cannot be | overâ€"estimated. In the outlying disâ€"| tricts of the province where the popuâ€" | lace is too scattered to have an agriâ€" | cultural exhibition, or where the inâ€"‘ habitants are too far distant from| those of the more thicklyâ€"settled disâ€"; tricts, this train serves as a courier between the agricultural colleges, red-: eral and provincial departments of Agâ€" | riculture and other organizations inâ€" | father‘s clock, pottery, hand looms, and weaving machines, all homemade,. Weaving methods employed by the farmers‘ wives in the remote sections of the province in the manufacture of homespun were also demonstrated. Many of the samples of their handiâ€" work were of the finest workmanship, and brilliantly colored with homeâ€" made dyes. Canada‘s Fisheries of Great It is not generally appreciated, even Canadians, that two of the four Aocording to Ciceoro, Damocies, a sycophant at the court of Déonysius the Eider, tyrant of Syracuse, having praised in an extravagant manner the blessings and joys of royalty, was reâ€" provedl by his master in a singularly effective manmer. He was seated at a sumptuous banquet and surrounded by all the trappings of royalty; but on looking upwards, in the midst of his pleasures, ho behcld a sharp and naked sword suspended above his head, amd held by a single horsebair. This sight instantly sobered Damocles, and taught him the salutary lesson that the lives of kings are in peril every, hour. This story is alluded to by Horace. tions, in order the better to look after their own interests, and the formation of these associations has made for good results in the relations between the Branch and the individual proâ€" prietors. the forest reserves was first practiced in 1914, and the value of the use was soon shown by the increase in the number of stock grazed on the reâ€" serves. In 1919 the number was only a few hundred short of 100,000, alâ€" though since somewhat reduced owing to the depression in the industry. A striking feature of this work is the number of small proprietors theat are served in this way. In a number of casea, however, these have formed themselves into coâ€"operative associaâ€". been marked, although, naturally, the doepression in the stock industry of late years has been reflocted in the use made of the reserves. Grazing in Forest Reserves Open to Grazing. In accordance vith its established policy of making the most of all the natural resources of the land under its control, the Forestry Branch of the Department of the Interior decided some years ago to throw open for use certain areas of the forest reserves in the Prairie Provinces that were adaptâ€" ed for grazing and were not tinmediâ€" atoly required for reforestation purâ€" poses. This policy has been suppleâ€" mented by the initiation of a regular survey of the grazing lands of the reâ€" serves. The success of the policy has it whole. _ When pressure is applied they disgorge io insects, which someâ€" times are not only uninjured but even alive! Petrograd is the coldest capital in A number of them are, therefore, turned loose at sunset in the neighborâ€" hood frequented by the desired moths or beetles. A toad lassoes its prey with its long flexible tongue, and boits The toad is such a tiny creature that he seems of lHittle use to us. But toads also have become instruments of re search. Numerous species of insects fy or creep or come to the surface only at night, and consequently aro difâ€" ficult to collect. Toads are nightâ€"feedâ€" ers, and eat all kinds of ingects. Some time later he issued a paper in which he proposed to utilize these creatures in this cofmection. And other experts whom he consulted agreed that the method, which has freâ€" quently been tried since, was successâ€" ful and saved a lot of expensive analyâ€" Tinoâ€""I‘ve heard it said that ‘The pen is mightier than the sword, uoi it on s ie e tne the results of his previous day‘s work by eating â€" the carefully weighed samples of butter. He noticed, howâ€" ever, that the adulterated butter bad been untouched, and thereapon proâ€" ceeded to experiment with mice. He was annoyed By m'1;:e in his labâ€" oratory, and one morning found that during the night they had destroyed Some years ago a clever analytical chemist was engagod on a zeries of exâ€" periments with a view to discovering & means by which the adulteration of butter could be discovered. less pests have been found iofibo-o'f great help to us. Many animals are nowadays utilized by man in curtous and unthoughtâ€"of ways and, indood, some creatures which formerly were regarded as use But perhaps the most remarkable inâ€" Sword of Damocies. When Animals Help Mn |__" ‘The bride wore a lizardgreen silk on whose cheek blossomed the flush | of dawning womanhood.‘ " "Not long ago," says a metropolitan newspaper man, "I ran across a counâ€" try paper which contained this paraâ€" graph in regard to a local wedding: _ The doctor turned back to his patient. "Did you see that?" he exâ€" claimed. "To my knowledge that dog has never been in this room till now. There he was on the other side of the door, waiting for it to open; the dog‘s rature told him that perhaps the one whom he wanted to see was on this side. Then the door opened, and he found his master wolcooming him. So, my dear fellow, will it be with you. We know little about the othier side of the door, but what we know is enough. The Master will be waiting for us, and He will not fail to make us welcome." â€" Then the doctor departed; he had left behiznd bim something more healâ€" ing than all the medioine in the world. Mis patient could face the other side without fear. With the wonds ha turned and, openâ€" ing the door, started to pass through It, But as he did so he heard a rush and a patter of feet, and the next inâ€" stant a huge dog sprang through the doorway and, pawing eagerly at him, wagged its hondisome tall and tried to lick his face in heppy welcome. "Another lifo for those that are worthy." "But, doctor, can you not tell me something about it? You are a Chrisâ€" tain, they say, what is on the other side? What ars we to expect?" Again the old doctor shook tis head. "Ah, I fear it is beyond me," he said. "Who knows ?" "Then, doctor, earnesitly, "can comes after doat] ty. "I can plied, â€" an. could anyc ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO The man who exhausted upon gulp his breath courage. In his of fear and hope. "Is it true that I docts or £0 Oxen are used in many countries as | beasts of burden, but«at one time, on | the Cornish coast, it was = recngnh-ed' thing for the fishermen to tie a lamp | to a cow‘s hors and turn the :;uimal: adrift on the clifis as a guide to vesâ€"| sels in distress A London man some years ago purâ€" chased a Scottish island, but found the place overrun by adders. Six pairs of peaâ€"fowl were sent there, and they son demonstrated their partiality for snakes 2s a diet by completely ridding the island of the pests. Pigs, too, are great devourers 6f sorpents. Cockroaches have been used to rid vessels of bugs. while in Brazil beetics are proserved and used to make jewelâ€" lery, such as scarfâ€"pins. At last a feow giant toads from South America were introduced. They spread over Jamaica, eating up the younger rats, at the same time being immune from attacks by the fullâ€"grown rodâ€" ents, In this way the pests were desâ€" troyed and the canes saved. The Other Side of the Door. assed the rats to some extent there was little change in the state of afâ€" fairs. Things went from bad to worse. The Cuban bulldog ant, a terribly venomâ€" ous creature, was imported from the neighboring islands, and, while it harâ€" They multiplied to an alarming exâ€" | tent. As many as 200,000 wore killed | in single States in one year. But. slaughter did not seem to diminish | their numbers, and they actually overâ€"| powered and ate the cats, ferrets, and | mongooses brought over to fight them. | stance of the toad‘s utility was maniâ€" fested in Jamaica, where at one time the sugar crop was endangered by the ravages of a large kind of rat, called the cane or sugarâ€"emiing rat, a creaâ€" ture ten inches long. The ol« Well man who was I must t 1 will seo Wedding Note. G Gis o Or M was lying worn and the bed seemed to in an effort to take eyes was a look both the OUu Doctor," he gasp ill not recover? yi0 t« PiS 1 recognized | w»,, m ad Frave 1." he re what |._ Ear specialists may soon proscribe | for deafness with the same case with i which coulists Getermine the type of !glam for the eyes, An apparatus | has been designed to show the definite mechanical limits of the ear; that is, its ability to react to the range of m and intensity of sound. With that information it will sible to construct apPpliance to the needs w the ingividucs server, an inspirer, an uplifter, an onâ€" courager. Just think what a dif@erence it will make to others and, above all, to yoursel{, to go through the world 2s a booster, instead of a knocker‘ If you are a booster people will like you, will be glad to see you, will alwave have q good word for you. But no one has any use for the knocker, the cap who is always hitting somebody, pasé ing along unfortunate gossip. making insinmating remarks about wthers, beâ€" ing jealous of others‘ success, who is always grumbiling about hard duck and unfortunate conditions. He casts a shadow wherever he goes. The boostâ€" er makes the eun smizz a lHitle brightâ€" er. The knocker draws a cloud over it.â€"O. 8. Mapden. thing loarn being Moose were numerous about thirtyâ€" five miles north of the town and in the ewampy areas, and caribou woere seen in the vicinity of Birchbark Lake. Don‘t go through life i Don‘t go around with a ha ing people, conditions, t Mr. McCloskey repoits that Candie Lake district, only son miles northwest of the town of Albert, there is a large band that is probably the largest t Canada. of M. D. McCloskey, D.LS., w been making investigational : for the Topographical Surveys Department of the Interior, in : some 50 by 90 miles in extent, & directly north and nort\wost of Albert. An interesting sic game that still exiâ€" and as yet unsettie katchewan, is given brie? periog unler re ating stations aggreg and their attendant t: have been completed, under | construction have abready been prc takon mation der th If You Want to be Popular. d enurgy generat more pC ve 18 Mn The Dev HFERE LIES "rm HERF" The very bost of Cow Ponies a A Gallart Little Gontlieman Died on this Spot, Bept. 3, 1870 Another bereavei cowboy grow yet more eloquent: 4 HERE LIES "WHAT NEXT* § Born â€"â€"â€", 1886, at â€"â€"â€" Died July 16, 1892, near Pt Washaki¢, Wyo. i Mas had the Body of a Horse The Spirit of a Knight t * and ha ~OUJ anything be more simple and adequate" But the owner of another "reel bors" felt the noed of a euporiaâ€" | viceable and beloaved, [ Enmter a pomemeor | the more intimate and | "triend of man" is. U D been so honored have nsually been race horges or else chargors ridden in war. It has remained for our riders of the Western ranges, whose*horses are to them often as partner, horse and dog rolled into one, to erect hore and there to the momory of emme of those good frieds monuments 3t appealing and guaint simplecity Mr. Paul A Rou‘, in a rocent article on the cowâ€" boy, gives a few examnies. Hore ara tes they reov soted poss! tes tnd have ‘NAnN opitaphs on dogs, Teore are a number of famous epitaphs on dogs, of which perhaps the most renowned is Byron‘s upon Boatewnain. Horsos that were just horses, friendly, serâ€" viceable and betoved, are less often granted a permanent memorial than ie l d ud Epitaphs on horses am t us famillag than epitaphs on dogs. Tâ€"ore are a number of famous epitaphs on dogs, of which perhaps the most renowned is HPHONR‘S UDOLH BORMCUMH | Hknmness Band of Elk Marine Provinces Hydroâ€" Electric Power. ‘ould anything b in sight. Instead to praise. Get a ment in > hydrom e Domin ) survevs Jevetion of the Man Frected This Stone. fri 28 nE of Elk in Northern Saskatchewan. Some Real Ho:ees. w Cata supplied to câ€"operative arranger ative in .o doing h: and red rovinci pmk #Lutions to us sections _ of the policy ¢ provincial go the Department egard to hbasie l markable developim« tiog the lation it will be posâ€" et appliances suited it bu JTIM a real hors Oct 1, 82 LD1 lif te uring of wat Maritin e and companionable is. Hor®es that have tem A1 Pudalol 18 t onal surveys irveys Branch, D d Nes. Here are 1gs, everyâ€" [ knocking, putation of a laelper, a 11 the n PWV O coâ€"0peraâ€" governments nt of the Inâ€" .¢ water reâ€" nt we tent. b wh pov 1€ wi of of elk, and in knock ption in the e fifty Prince M tuated Prince n M in Scotia clmaun nave inforâ€" im unâ€" t and ‘esultâ€" 167 0 eneor nore U h.p th n L7 iC 1n Pu it W*

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