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Durham Review (1897), 13 Sep 1923, p. 2

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(Copyrighted Thomas Nelson and Sons, Ltd.) CHAPTER XIHI.â€"(Cont‘d.) | touring in those parts, "What about the Germans here?" 1 was the biggest Germ asked. He was a thin, fox Blenkiron laughed. "It is no sort of cleverish but monstro a happy family. But the Young he was not very popu Turks know that without the German the Germans or tfie 7 boost they‘ll be strung up like Haman, polite to both of us, I an* the Germans can‘t afford to negâ€" to say that I got a b lect any ally. Consider what would I entered the room, fo happen if Turkey got sick of the game I saw was Gaudian. and made a separate peace. The road: 1 doubt if he would would be open for Russia to the me even in the clothes Egean. Ferdy of Bulgaria would Stumm‘s company, fc take his depreciated goods to the other WaSs wretched. _ As it market and not waste a day thinking risk in dressâ€"clothes, about it. You‘d have Roumania comâ€" brushed back and a fir ing in on the Allies side. Things cent. I paid him high would look pretty black for that conâ€" & fellow engineer, and trol of the Near KEast on which Gerâ€" Of a very technical ¢ wany has banked her winnings. Kaiser tween him and Blenk says that‘s got to be prevenled at all "35}" uniform, and . gosts, but how is it going to be done?" of his honest face bet! Blenkiron‘s face had become very‘ But the great event solemn again. "It won‘t be done unâ€" Enver. He was a slin less CGermany‘s got a trump card to ta‘s build, very foppis {lay. Her game‘s mighty near bust, his .d"SS, with a smoo! uc it‘s still got a chance. And that 4 girl‘s, and rather fin chance is a woman and an old man. eyebrows. He spoke j I reckon our landiady has a bicger and had the best ki brain than Enver umy Liman. She‘s neither pert nor overt the real boss of the show. When I & Pleasant trick, too, came here I reported to her, and pres. round the table for c ently you‘ve got to do the same. I am so bringing everybod; curious as to how she‘ll strike you,‘ Not that he spoke a gt for I‘m free to admit that she imâ€" he .s?“d was good sens pressed me considerable." smiling way of sayir "It looks as if our job were a long twice he ran counter way from the end," 1 said. and I could see there "It‘s scarecly begun," said Y!Icnk-}betwfe:l kt_hese tWO-' & For One C.at iron time I‘m stak Then began some varied experiâ€"| ences. 1 used to wake up in the mornâ€"| ing, wondering where I should be at night, and yet quite pleased with the uncertainty. Greenmantle became a sort of myth with me. Somehow I) couldn‘t fix any idea in my head of| what he was like. The nearest I got was a picture of an old man in a turâ€" ban coming out of a bottle in a cloud of smoke, which 1 remembered from a child‘s edition of the Arabian Nights. But if he was dim, the lady was dimmer. Sometimes I thought of her as a fat old German crone, someâ€" times as a barshâ€"featured woman like a schoolmistress with thin lips and eyeglasses. But I had to fit the East into the picture, so I made her youn and gave her a touch of the languis houri in a veil. I was always wanting to pump Blenkiron on the subject, but he shut up like a ratâ€"trap. He was looking for bad trouble in that direcâ€" tion, and was disinclined to speak about it beforehand. _ % "CALADA" Then began some v ences. 1 used to wake u; ing, wondering where I night, and yet quite ple uncertainty. _ Greenmar sort of myth with me. couldn‘t fix any idea i what he was like. The was a picture of an old ban coming out of a bo of smoke, which 1 rem a child‘s edition of Nights. But if he was was dimmer. Sometime Delicious! We led a peaceful existence. . Our. servants were two of Sandy‘s lot, for Blenkiron had very rightly cleared out the Turkish caretakers, and they worked like beavers under Peter‘s eye, till I reflected I had never been so well looked after in my life. 1 walked about the city with Blenkiron, keeping m es open, and speaking very civi{ ?'he third night we were bidden to dinner at Moellendorff‘s, so we put on our best clothes and set out in an anâ€" cient cab. Blenkiron had fetched a dress suit of mine, from which my own tailor‘s label had beeh cut and a New York one substituted. _ _ General Liman and Metternich the Ambassador had gone up the line to Nish to meet the Kaiser, who was That ta L snn la l e t9a * * dsGUE No. 36â€"‘23. hat talk did a lot to cheer my spirâ€" for I realized that it was the bigâ€" of big game we were hunting this . _ I‘m an economical soul, and if going to be hanged I want a good e for my neek. 5 atiw «it ou ons PRA Nce in tvacae monette Y ou feel Lifebuoy‘s healthiness right down into the pores. After â€" Lifebuoy â€" you _ feel cleaner than you bhave ever felt The delight and comfort of using Lifebuoy are famous sround the world. The odour camishes LIFEBUOY weartn SOAP e ""%" 6 A. ® Ask for a trial package today. GREENMANTLE Mr. Manâ€" you :n:y obtain 3 cups of BY JOHN BUCHAN. he said was good sense, and he had a‘ smiling way of saying it. Once or: twice he ran counier to Moellendorff, and I could see there was no love lost between these two. 1 didn‘t think 1, \wanted him as a friendâ€"he was too, ‘coldâ€"blooded and artificial; and I was pretty certain that I didn‘t want those: stcady black eyes as an enemy. But it was no good denying his quality. The little fellow was all cold courage, like i the fine polished blue steel of a sword. 1 I fancy I was rather a success at that dinner. For one thing 1 could: speak German, and so had a pull on | Blenkiron. For another I was in a: good temper, and really enjl?yed putâ€" ting my back into my part. They talkâ€" ed very highâ€"flown stuff about what they had done and were going to do,‘ ‘and Enver was great on Gallipoli. I, remember he said that he could have : destroyed the whole British Army if it hadn‘t been for somebody‘s cold feetâ€" . at which Moellendorff looked daggers. : They were so bitter about Britain and ._all her works that I gathered they . were getting pretty panicky, and that ; made me as jolly as a sandboy. I‘m t afraid 1 was not free from bitterness . myself on that subject. I said things | about my own country that I someâ€" > times wake in the night and sweat to + think of. t L touring in those parts, so Moellendorff £"AN¢ face was the biggest German in the city. That is He was a thin, foxyâ€"faced fellow, Major. It cleverish but monstrously vain, and perience, 1 he was not very popular either with tating juc the Germans or the Turks. He was anged ston polite to both of us, but I am bound COnâ€"Sidered to say that I got a bad fright when MAN,3 mad I entered the room, for the first man}b‘d' I saw was Gaudian. | (‘ I doubt if he would have recognized me even in the clothes I had worn in Power Stumm‘s company, for his eyesight When a was wretched. As it was, I ran no flashes of risk in dressâ€"clothes, with my hair sky and t brushed back and a fine American &Câ€"| our ears, y cent. I paid him high compliments as .,,, end(;us a fellow engineer, and translated part :’ o of a very technical conversation beâ€"‘ If a cat‘s tween him and Blenkiron. Gaudian| Juring hot was in uniform, and I liked the look offen fly : of his honest face better than ever,. | harmless, Tut the great event was the sight of , Enver. He was a slim fellow of Rasâ€"| ta‘s build, very foppish and rrecise in‘ his dress, with a smooth oval face like a girl‘s, and rather fine straight black‘ eyebrows. He spoke perfect German, and had the best kind of manners neither pert nor overbearing. He had a pleasant trick, too, of appealing all round the table for confirmation, and so bringing everybody into the talk. Not that he spoke a great deal, but all| Gaudian got on to the use of water: power in war, and that gave me a) chance. { "In my country," I said, "when we‘ want to get rid of a mountain we wash it away. There‘s nothing on earth that will stand against water.| Now, speaking with all respect,‘ gentlemen, and as an absolute novice‘ in the military art, I sometimes ask why this Godâ€"given weapon isn‘t more used in the present war. I haven‘t been to any of the fronts, but I‘ve studied them some from maps and the‘l newspapers. Take your German poâ€"| sition in Flanders, where you‘ve got the high ground. If I were a British general 1 reckon I would very soon make it no sort of position." | | Moellendorf! asked, "Héw*?" ‘ "Why, I‘d wash it awa{. Wash away the fourteen feet of soil down to the stone. There‘s a heap of coalpits beâ€" hind the British front where they could generate power, and I judge there‘s an ample water supply from rivers and canals. I‘d guarantee to wash you away in twentyâ€"four hours Economical! â€"yes, in spite of all your kig guns. It beats me why the British haven‘s got on to this notion. They used to have some bright engineers." Enver was on the point like a knife, far quicker than Gaudian. He crossâ€" examined me in a way that showed he knew how to approach a technical subject, though he mightn‘t have much technical knowledge. _ He was just flving me a sketch of the flooding in esopotamia when an aideâ€"deâ€"camp brought in a chit which fetched him to his feet. "I have gmsiged long enough," he said. "My kind host, I must leave you. Ge;\lnemen all, my apologtes and fareâ€" wells." * REERE 9 Comtk k b.ll ity.| "That isn‘t my duoâ€"denal dyspepsia, low, Major. It‘s the verdict of a ripe exâ€" and perience, for I have a cool and peneâ€" vith trating judgment, even if I‘ve a derâ€" was anged stomach. And I give it as my und Conâ€"sidered conclusion that that woâ€" v.C man‘s mad and badâ€"but principally man on this ruler in Israel. The next night I got another from Blenkiron on a guur than Enver. ‘ _ He had been out alone and had come lbtck pretty late, with his face grey and drawn with pain. The food we ateâ€"not at all bad of its kindâ€"and the cold east wind played havoe with his dysgepsin. I can see him yet, boilâ€" ing milk on a spirit lamp, while Peter worked at a Primus stove to get him 'u hotâ€"water bottle. He was using horâ€" ‘rid language about his inside. m rid language about his insiGe, "My God, Major, if I were you with a sound stomach I‘d fairly conquer the world. As it is, I‘ve got to do my work with half my mind, while the other half is dwelling in my intestines. I‘m like the child in the Bible that had a fox gnawing at its vitals." He got his milk boiling and began to si}) it. "I‘ve been to see our pretty landâ€" lady," he ssgd. "She sent for me and I hobbled off with a grip full of plans, for she‘s mighty set on Mesopotamy." "Anything about Greenmantle?" I asked eagerly. "Why, no, but I have reached one conclusion. I opine that the hapless })rophet has no sort of time with that ady. I opine that he will soon wish himself in Paradise. For if Almighty God ever created a female devil it‘s Madame von Einem." He sipped a little more milk with a When a great storm is raging, with flashes of lightning illuminating the sky and thunder crashes deafening our ears, we realize something of the stupendous powers of electricity. If a cat‘s back is rubbed in the dark during hot, dry weather, sparks will often fly from it. They are perfectly harmless, though they aro identical with lightning flashes, and the crackâ€" ling that accompanies them is thunder on a small scale. In a thunderstorm the earth repre sents your hand and the clouds are the cat‘s back. The pressure that causes a flash of lightning may be as much as 1,000,000,000 voltsâ€"that is, 5,000,000 times greater than that which is used for household lighting. Could we collect and harness the ; power set free by a single flash of| lightning, we should have at our disâ€"| posal a force greater than anything , that can be produced by man. | In a famous scientist‘s laboratory the experiment was tried of producing a millionâ€"volt spark. It leapt a tenâ€" foot gap with a noise like the exploâ€" sion of a bomb and came near to wrecking the entire building. This is the highest préssure that has so far been produced artificially. Most of the lightning in a thunderâ€" storm does not come near the earth, but flashes from cloud to cloud. Ocâ€" casionally a fork tongue leaps from cloud to earth, and then anything in its path is destroyed. 1- Clerkâ€""Better try ‘em on out here, ‘lady; ‘taint big enough." Power of a Thunderstorm. Evidence Too Strong. "So they convicted your friend of selling bad butter? Was there no way for him to get out of it?" The flavor of tea deteriorates rapidâ€" ly if the tea is exposed to the air. You should never, therefore, accept bulk tea when you can buy "SALADA," which is sealed in airâ€"tight atuminum to preserve its delicious freshness. Customerâ€""I‘d like to try on that pair of shoes in the shoecuo." Why Brag. Jr.â€""Pop, what is an ancestor?" Sr.â€""Well, I‘m one. Jr.â€""Yes, 1 know, but why do peoâ€" ple brag about them?" smmmase \ _ "T‘ll make room!" To make grape gelatine for lunch‘ _ Ten minutes later Julia and Aunt dissolve oneâ€"half box of gelatine in Rebecca were headed for the subway. one cup of cold grape juice, let soften "Aunt Rebe," the girl said to her for five minutes. Put three cups of solemnly, "can you sleep on a couch? the grape juice in a saucepan and add And go to a show toâ€"morrow? Andâ€"" ome cup of sugar, bring to a boil, pour The sudden flooding joy in the old over the softened gelatine. Cool and lady‘s fac:: brought tears to Julia‘s Minard‘s Liniment Heals Cuts. serve with whippeJ cream. â€" Any fruit juice may be used. On Lake Superior, the largest exâ€" panse of fresh water in the world, which has an area of 31,800 square miles, splendidiy appointed passenger steamers of nearly 4,000 tons ply, where only Indian canoes sailed 300 "No; the evidencs was too strong." (To be continued.) Pert Clerk. : "What is it, Maisie? Has benjie \run away? Can‘t I hunt for him?" i "Oh, Benjie‘s all right," Maisie reâ€" | plied. "I*®.idn‘t mean to be rude, Julie. Do come in. You see, I‘ve been exâ€" | pecting Aunt Rebecca for the last two hours. She‘s been gone since ten | o‘clock, and I‘m so worried!" | "Good for Aunt Rebecca!" Julia reâ€" ‘torted. "I hope she‘s having a great | old time. She must need it if you \ watch over her like that." & The laughing welcome on Juli.a’s lips died unspoken at sight of Maisie‘s face. For after a bewildered glance at her Maisie stared past her down the street, and her eyes were sharp with anxie{y. 5 y PPVodt S PPWN OW PICIOIC 5409 "But, Julia, sho‘s seventy!" Maisic‘s voice was full of consternation. _ _ _ "What‘s seventy if it? Aunt Rebe has : and more interest in li people you know. D: Maisie!" "But she may get run over! You don‘t seem to realizeâ€"" | "As far as automobiles are concernâ€" ed, seventy isn‘t half so dangerous an age as seven. I‘ve known at least two old ladies who counted bospital exâ€" periences the great adventures of their lives! Don‘t rob your aunt of any fun that‘s coming to her!" . ayacl®el bedult l Avusmnliedcisan hn hi ts 4 "Julia Durant, you‘re positively flippant!" _ _ "Not: inside, Maisie; truly, I‘m not. I‘m just thinking how I‘d loathe being watched and worried over!" _ "There she comes at last!" cried Maisie, running to the door. Aunt Rebecca came in; her hair was disordered and her hat awry, but her eyes were bright, and there was happy color in her face. And then at Maisie‘s grecting all the happiness fell from her like a garment. _ "Aunt Rebe, where have you been? I‘ve been nearly wild!" _ _ _ "It was such a nice day," Aunt Reâ€" becca pleaded, "I thought I‘d just run out to ‘Liza Saunders. I was so glad I did, for she‘s had such a hard winâ€" But Maisie was not at all interested in ‘Liza Saunders. "You go right upâ€" stairs and lie down till dinner," she ordered. "Be sure to cover yourself _ "But I ain‘t tired a mite," her aunt protested. "I feel freshened up. All tke light had faded from her eyes. up." "Maisie," Julia said abruptly, "I‘m going to take Aunt Rebe home for the night. We‘ll be back sometime! You needn‘t worry; if we die, we‘ll die toâ€" gether!" eyes. "I‘ll never tell her she‘s old," she vowed to herself. "Never, never! Not if she lives to be a hundred!" My three young sons have necessiâ€" tated my obtaining considerable misâ€" eellaneous information concerning a layette. 1 have always preferred a simple, practical outfit, as it is less wearing on the mother to prepare it, and is so quickly outgrown. The money saved this way can be much more advantageously used for a skiliful doctor and nurse, a two weeks‘ complete rest for the mother, and the advice of a food specialist for the baby‘s feeding if the mother is unâ€" able to successfully feed her baby. The baby‘s life and future health are too important to neglect giving him the best possible start. Three of each of the following articles are necessary, four would be Humanityâ€""See, she is sinking! Are you not going to help?" Uncle Samâ€""Don‘t fuss, sisâ€"the body will drift to the shore." â€"From the Sydney Bulletin. "But you haven‘t room," Maisie proâ€" PLANNING THE LAYETTERE Woman‘s Sphere SEVENTY. /-th-.-.- y if you don‘t feel as all her faculties in life than half the Do let her alone, A VIEW FROM AUSTRALIA Has Benjie not. 4442. Linen or ratine, with emâ€" broidery or contrasting material for collar and cuffs, would be good for this style. The closing is at the left side under the plait. This Pattern is cut in 3 Sizes: 12, 14 and 16 years. A 14â€"year size reâ€" quires 4%4 yards of 40â€"inch material. Collar and cuffs of contrasting maâ€" terial require % yard 40 inches wide. : Verandah days are invariably the ‘busiest days on the farm. And lookâ€" ing after verandah furniture is just Pattern mailed to any address on receipt of 15c in silver or stamps, by the Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Allow two weeks for receipt of pattern. safer in case daily washing were deâ€" la laÂ¥q. lannel bands; skirts; pinning blankets; flannel skirts, "Gertrude" style; wrappers or nightgowns butâ€" toning in back; stockings; bootees; warm jackets or sweaters; three dozen diapers, twentyâ€"seven inches square, will be required; so will nainsook skirts and dresses; a cap, cloak; blanâ€" kets; pads, and a small hotâ€"water bottle. Some points in baby‘s care I have been niost watchful of : No pacifiers or soothing syrups. Find the cause of its discomfort; warm water enemas offer wonderful relief for gas pain. F See that baby has at least one good bowel movement each day. The same rule for nursing mothers. 7 Regular feeding hours for baby. No excitement and unnecessary handling. In changing and dressing baby I put him on a softly padded card table,l slipping his skirts and dress up over his feet. | As scrupulous ctzanliness as posâ€" sible in the personal care of the baby; handling utensils for his feeding, and particularly the hands of whoever cares for him.â€"Mrs. G. C. A PRACTICAL ONEâ€"PIECE MODEL FOR THE GROWING GIRL. ONTARIO ARC TORONTO HINGED VERANDAH FURNITURE. RBoviil mokes you feoh tin yeahs young?t* | ‘g" Co., Publishe 1« ol MA -‘ LBAs i EDD â€"| T on c one more task. That is why hinged furnishings, especially for the side or back verandah, prove so converient. They also save space. A table hinged to the wall makes a handy place to do sittingâ€"down kitchen tasks or to hold the sewing materials in the afternoon. It is well to have it large enough to hold Sundayâ€"night lunches. Seats at either end of the verandah that let down are generally handier than stationary benches, as they are out of the way when not needed and shed rain and snow better than benchâ€" n |MINING STVATION _ es. Another advantage of hinged furnishings is that they are always ready for useâ€"no storing away in the fall until spring comes. To can kale or greens for winter end Into use, one should be rather careful with! Favorable “;:‘:::.:. e every detail as a very poisonous buc-‘ efinitely proven teria forms sometimes. To prepare | th:.tt h::an:;)l::igl doonditlo):nsp that the fgli?em; for lsanmng, m:;h t"'emil'mve produced the important mines of carefully in cold water and Wanch a porcupine and Kirkland LAkes 4 to 5 minutes in box‘lmg water. Thxs;"m in Ontario extend over the proâ€" allows them to shrink so that they{v'ncinl boundary into Quebec on a may be packed very easily in the jars.| b;alt rome hundred miles in length and The jars should be well filled, but not‘; several miles in width in the country too firmly packed as they may NOt) of momiskaming. In consequence, a deâ€" be thoroughly sterilized in the centre oyqog push of prospectors has taken of the can if the mass is too firm. To place and upwards of 90,000 acres of each quart Jar add one teaspoon salt | claims have been recorded, as many and what other seasoning desired,! o. 39q naving been staked within eix chipped beef or other meat; then adâ€", wooks. On several of these properties just rubbers in position and take one‘: important development work, backed ?.urn back, Process them'thme houni by both United States and British capiâ€" in hot water bath, or 60 minutes underl tal, will be carried out this season. 10 Ibs. of steam pr'essure. There is every reason to confidently Minard‘s Linimeni fo» Dandruff. 1antk‘1pate that this development work w o â€"dfp nz will disclose possibilities of important Busy Sister. | productive mines on some of these "And how is your little baby sister, | propertios. Assays of samples from Ronald?" asked the vicar, who was | this area are remarkable for the gold | making a call. |\ values which they have disclosed. "Oh, she‘s only fairly well, thanks.‘ In Nova Scotia some interest still You see, she‘s just hatching her attaches to gold prospects and examâ€" teeth." |!n:mon is being conducted by Governâ€" $ annnnnnnnn, m cnaasnmmenemermmrmmenm es ormeremmmmmemmmmrmmmme memee mmmmmmcmem x ment authorities. Coal mining which CAN GREENS FOR WINTER USFE Busy Sister. "And how is your little baby sister, Ronald?" asked the vicar, who was making a call. THE FREEMASON, Toronto. Fortyâ€" third year of publication. Subscripâ€" tion $1. Sample Copies 10c. Cowan & Co., Publishers. Mceal After «oUrp MATCHES East ~West EDDYS Best N THEA* «B FLAVOR LASTS LOOK FOR THE NAME ON THE BOX A universal custom that bonefits everyâ€" Aids digestion, cleanses the teoth, socthes the throat. MINING STUATION IN THE DOMINION Substantial Progress Indicated With Especially Bright Prosâ€" pects for the Near Future. _ , The mining situation in Canada conâ€" tinues bright, and there is left uo vesâ€" tige of doubt that the figures recorded at the end of the year will show & substantially increased produciion of practically all Canadian minerale. This, â€" combined with the yY fair prices prevailing in the genera‘ity of T000 OO Nmowint ~HARE for Fxuns y EOE EmE SUECE TE CS works undertaken this year will not be experienced until 1924 and subseâ€" quently. _ Never before has foreign capital exhibited such an interest in Canadian mining. Not only is Ameriâ€" can money coming into Canada at a very healthy rate to promote this deâ€" velopment, but & large share of Briâ€" tish funds which are beginning to find their way to Canada rgain are being directed to new imining areas. The mining report for the first quarâ€" ter of the year in Ontario shows & very encouraging increase, though there is a decrease in the production of gold and silver, Substantial inâ€" creases are reported in the production of nickel and copper, cobalt, cobaltâ€" oxide, nickelâ€"oxide and nickelâ€"cobalt. Important interests have taken up opâ€" tions in Goudreau, A comparatively new field, and development work on this claim is proceeding. Favorable Conditions Extend Into Quebec. It has now been definitely proven that the geological conditions that have produced the important mines of the Porcupine and Kirkland Lakes rreas in Ontario extend over the proâ€" ‘wal at brisk activity, s temporarily | disorganized from labor troubles. Shipâ€" monts of iron ore from Newfoundland to Germany, temporarily discontinued, have been resumed, and create brightâ€" | er conditions in that area. Prospects are particularly rosy in the Province of British Columbia, where an unusual amount of new deâ€" velopment work is taking place. Mines long closed down are being reopened, and fresh areas being opened up. The amount of American and British capiâ€" tal entering into the mining developâ€" ment of this province is particularly heavy. | In a year that is outstanding in \ many respects in Canada the mining 1sltuallon is gratifying. _ Not only is @there every indication that the end of the present year will show outputs of most minerals with substantial increâ€" | wmenrts cver the immediately precedâ€" ‘ing years, but developments are takâ€" ilng place and expansions being underâ€" i\ taken which will have their effect only in the years to come and augâ€" ‘hent greatly the importance of the ; Canadian mining industry. A greater diversity of activity than usual prevails in the Prairie Provinces, which are receiving a larger share of attention than in prior years. A speâ€" cial investigation of the whiteware clay deposits of Southern Saskatcheâ€" wan is being thade for the benefit of a British syndicate which contemâ€" plates establishing a pottery in the province. In Alberta, experimental work is being continued, taking place on the bituminous sands north of Bdâ€" monton, a campany being engaged at the present time in testing the output of crude products of bitumen for streetâ€"paving and roadâ€"making purâ€" poses. ry you married me?" Georgeâ€""No, dear, of course not. I was only thinking of all the nice girls I can‘t marry." _ Maudâ€"*"Oh, George, how horrid of you! I thought you cared for nobody but me." Georgoâ€"*"No more I do. I wasn‘t thinking of myself, brt of the disap pointment for them." A frowning friend is better than a smiling enemy. When people/speak of a "fond parâ€" ent," they would often be more corâ€" rect if they said, "fool parent." PANSION IN 1923. The Ones Who Suffered. _ â€" Maud (newly married)â€"*"You look ry melancholy, George; are you sorâ€" Activity in Prairie Provinces. EAPOPGRRCC EC000 all Canadian minerale. ined with the Y6°Y fair iling in the genera‘ity of s a prosperous yoar for + and the definite emerâ€" Aanvacaion Oof Canadian SEVENTY FOREH YOKOHAMA, T Cesucity List in Japa Neither Tokio Nor dential Districts | SOLE SURVIVOR FATE OF ARCTH Crawford Expeciti« wh W § i1 ttish P la at Cost ¢ i the Of1 tho n

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