West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 14 Aug 1924, p. 2

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The games and contest: at a picnic mould include not only the old regu- lars. but a lot of mind and body re- Iaxinq bits of fun. Arrange the pro- gram so that everyone u interested/ not only the young people, but nlsof the settled middle-tttted fathers and mothers and the trrandmothers too. I l-have sevehi people in different places throw the peanuts while the children run. This makes the scramble Start with some sort of scramble that will liven things - peanut rash is as clean and good an anything. Buy these by the bushel and they will not be so terribly expensive. If the picnic is Inrtre---for church or school n little more difficult and therefore more interesting. Then try these games and contests: Cookie Chase-String lines between the trees and hang round, hard cook-l its from them by short piece: on string. l Then, with hands behind them and? blindfolded, watch the contestants! “than" their cookies. The atring be-! in: pliable certainly makes the pee jump. and once lost from the teeth it is mighty hard to flnd again. The! one who first succeeds in eating his cookie wins the prize. Pivnie Hopseoteh.-'rhis should be played in pairs-a man and woman,i or girl and boy, taking the hope into the dim-rent squares together, arm in arm. one hopping on the right foot, the other on the left. If it is a beachl picnic. mark out the squares on the! and; if in the woods. outline them! Play it like the old-fnahioned (one, throwing the not pebble first Into num- ber one and hopping after it Ind out of the square again. The flrsst couple to go through all nine without falling or pulling each other down wins, of course . - with small stones on a smooth piece of grass. Bubble Raee--Don't forget the kid- dies. Give them all the hnghter they want in a soap-bubble race, uncouth;- lng them to blow as large one: " possible and giving a prize for the one which blows highest in the air before bursting. Blind and 1Ult Raee-Thu nee must be in pairs also. One is blind- folded, the other must. lean upon the blind. walking only on one foot, drag- ging the other or hopping. Line the couples up, give the word 1 from on; to two tatr1etspoonfuls; don't} and see which couple reaches the goal overdo it. Stop all food, and give first. The poor blind one nFuJiiiFl't'Jf2'y' wnter for twenty-four hours. ttoe" slowly in caution and they do Now and then, I find a very sick baby not make any great hendwtt-anletm who frets himself Into a worse state "ckletmlr-with truch dragging because not allowed to est. In such weight. However, it is their privilege cases, I compromise on tmfiavored to take any ehanees they wish and gelatin, which is usually relished. If they usually do, making the race ex- tht baby is better at the end of one tremely funny. day, you may begin giving a mixture Water Battle-Most Picnics are of barley water and milk. If he is held near some pine where bathing is not markedly better you have waited possible, so there should be some sort long enough. Get the best doctor of water contests. Choose tides 9nd within reach. Water Battle-Most picnics are held near some pl.“ where bathing in possible, so there should be some sort of water contents. Choose sides and line up in the water, knee deep, fac- ing each other. Then give the word and watch the battle. With the hands only, each side splashes the other, try- AERO CUSHION INNER TIREO Composed of Pure Para Rub. ber, Highly Porous. Ridelasy aa_A}r._ Doubles Auto Cushion Inner Tire & Rubber Co., Ltd. [In] LIVELY PICNIC GAMES Ash For - - GREEN TEA m. " is much more delicious than the finest" Jam“:2 fgung Hyson "_"-" ’Milea'ge of Casings. warn FOR PARTICULARS. :vG;;;6w5n: - Sold evaywhere. FIEE “In: of "EEIt TEA "I I‘M". "amt" "m Woman's Sphere IBOUS No. 32--'20. PUNOTUBES BLOW OUTS 'i It is neither necessary nor atltl )iable to maintain an exclusive milk t diet in the second year. The iii)) 'imay have well-cooked cereals; tfd " meal, cornmeal, rice, prepared wheat/ ',) He may have some bread after it isl Il, twenty hours stale, and graham ttr crackers are allowed in reasonable amount. Gravies that are not too ' rich are allowed on bread; and ' chicken, mutton, or beef broth with I" well cooked rice may be served. ing to make it so terrifle that the "'Jn'te's"tal"t't', must turn away from its 'force. If a player falls or turns about, the judge blows a whistle and he is out of the contest. It will dwindle down to two, and as these 'take their last stand it is bound to V be hilarious. I After some tub races for the chil- l dren, a game of prisoner's base and a 3 lollypop hunb--the candy being wrap- lped securely in waxed paper and hid..' _ den in trees for the children to find-- igather your picnic crowd around a fire in the evening and while marsh- imallows toast, hold a Whopper con- I test, a prize going to the one who can ‘tell the biggest story of wild life on {something which has happened on the i farm. PREVENT SUMMER COMPLAINT Young mothers must remember that milk must continue to be the staple article of diet for a child in his sec- ond year; in fact, it remains so for long afterward. No child over , year old should be given the bottle. He should be taught to drink from a cup. But it is just as important to have the milk clean and sweet as when he took it by the nipple route. The pos- sibilities for damage by impure milk are not all put away when the bottle is abolished. In spite of all these precautions your baby may develop symptoms of the dreaded summer complaint. Give (him enough castor oil to clear the lbowela thoroughly. Depending some- what upon conditions this may be 1from one to two tablespoonfuis; don't loverdo it. Stop all food, and give As he reaches the later months of the year, he may be allowed an egg, poached or soft boiled, and a small portion of baked potato. To add to the joy of living, you may give him puddings of cornstarch, custard, ride, tapioca, and he may also eat stewed prunes, apple sauce and sweet oranges. No, I said nothing about candy. I had in my possession several white voile and linen blouses whose style had become obsolete many sea- sons ago. Some were worn around the armholes, some had frayed edges, others had mended collars. However, the fronts, backs, and parts of the pleeveglyere tred. . . Beginning by pulling a thread to get a straight edge, I cut I ten-inch square from each of the fronts. In some cases these had bits of drawn work and in others small fragments of embroidery. . . I bought a spool of No. 80 white thread and six yards each of two patterns of the tiniest lace edging I could buy. I rolled the edges of the squares I had cut from the old- fashioned blouses and whipped m the narrow edges. and found myself the polsessor of several dainty handher. chlefs n. which I am quite proud. Wild Plum Coaaerve--5 lbs. pitted plums, 2 lbs. seeded raisins, 6 lbs. lug“. 3 oranges. juice_ of 2 lemons. Snail, " us IAIBCU' Jun,» v- - --...-..-. Slice the oranges in thin slices. crosswise, removing seeds. Grind raisins in meat chopper. Put fruit, sugar and lemon juice in kettle with just enough water to keep fruit from sticking, bring to boiling point and simmer gently until the fruit is clear and thick and of the consistency of marmalade. Put in hot, sterilized glasses or jars, cool and seal. D Wild Pfum Cattmp--5 t1.ts. “in! The party of Scotch editors, who are making a magma-coast tour ot plums, 4 lbs. ttUttar, 1 pt. Vinegar, 1. Canada to investigate the opportunities here tor immigrants, are shown dur- --------------""""- . . p... to" pupumm'. Unlmom. in; their stay In Toronto on their way to the western provmcu. HANDKERCHIEFS I MADE. USING THE WILD FRUITS, [I] qt. boiled water, 1% tbsp. cinnamon, 1 tbsp. “lupin, 1 tbsp. cloyes. Piare Ue plan- as for sauce, flmt boiling up with soda and then pitting. Boil, vineggf, 1utraf, {nut Ind spices, then add pitted plums,‘ bring to boiling point and simmer‘ gently for about thirty minutes. Puti in hot, sterilized jars or bottles and', High Bush Cro6errietr-In Sep- tember the higbbush cranberries be gin to ripen. These should be picked under-ripe " they then make better jelly. Carefully wash and pick over the berries and put in a kettle with just enough water to cover. Cook gently until the fruit is tender. Strain through jelly bag. Add an equal am- ount of sugar to the strained Juice, bring to the boiling point and sim- mer gently until it jellies. Pour in hot, sterilized glasses and cool and seal. I had in my possession an old 1trown.and-white vase with very good lines, but it had an absolutely impos- sible red rose painted on one side. I knew nothing of china painting, nor was the vase valuable enough to justify spending even a small amount of money. However, I had some blue enamel, bought at the ten-cent store for my oil stove. I mixed a little black paint with it to soften it into a pretty gray and "flowed it onto the surface of the vase. It dried quickly, covered all the inartistic properties of the vase and left an object not unlike the new high-lustre vases sold in art shops. Cheap white crepe paper napkins cut into squares a quarter the size of a napkin and hung on a hook near the stove will save your hands if used to grease Pans. They can 0e burned after using. Rare Variety of Game Fish Being Introduced-into New Brunswick. At the request ot a number of pub. lie bodies ot St. John, New Brunswick, the Department of Marine and Fish.. eries undertook to establish the Euro. pean brown trout in loch Lomond near St. John. The first eggs for this pur-‘ pose were obtained in January, 1921, trom the’ United States Bureau of Fisheries. A small number ot the try! from these eggs have been retained itt, the ponds at the hatchery. and in the autumn of 1923,'when the fish were a little over two years old, a tew of the larger and better developed yielded some 5,000 eggs, which are undergo- ing incubation. The eggs ot the brown trout are not easily obtained in Ameri- ca, and in continuation ot the stocking of loch Lomond, some 200,000 Loch Levon trout eggs, a variety closely re- lated to the brown trout, were obtain- ed through the United States Bureau of Fisheries in exchange for Atlantic ite.,"",', eggs. The Loch Leven trout eggs were secured from wild trout :captured in the streams of Montana le are the result of small distribu- tions of such try made some years ago. An equal number ot Loch Leven trout eggs are undergoing incubation in the Band hatchery, and the result- ant fry will be distributed in selected waters ot the Prairie Provinces. Probably (30an h the Dogs. "When a. man’s exorcise makes him pant It's pmtty pad. isn't It?" "Yes, I would say he was going to the dogs." Mlnard'u Linlment 'Hnl. Cuts. MY ENAMELED VASE SAVE YOUR HANDS ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO l Lewis Elliot was a man of forty- lfive, tall and thin and inclined to 'stoop. He was not a sociable man, (and resented being dragged from his (boots to attend a dinner-party. Like imost people he was quite incapable of saying No to Mrs. Duir-Whalley when that lady desired an answer in the 1il,'i1irj'it'irr:,i, but he had condemned himself roundly to himself as a fool .113 he drove down the glen from Iaverlaw. CHAPTER vm.---(Cont'd.) 1 Mrs. Jowett was a I,re,':,t,1,t.-t,ti'lri woman with soft, white hair and al pink-and-white eomplexion--the sorti of woman one always associates with' old lace. In her youth it was said, that she had played the harp, and one: felt that the "grave, sweet melody" would have well become her. She was dressed in gt; shades of mauve, and had a finely finished look. The In-' dian climate and curries had affected, Mr. JoWett’s liver, and made his tam-1 per fiery, but his heart remained the; sound, childlike thing it had alwagsi been. ‘He quarrelled with_everyboilyl (though never for long). but people in trouble gravitated to him natural- ly, and no one had ever asked him anything in reason and been refused; children loved him. Mr. Jackson, the Episcopalian clergyman, followed hard behind the Jowetts, and was immediatel engag- ed in an argument with Mr. J’owett as to whether or not choral communion, which had recently been started and which Mr. Jowett resented, as he re- sented all new things, should be con- tinned. "Ridiculous!" he tshouted---") ridiculous! You will drive the people from the church, sir." Then Mr. Elliot arrived. Mrs. Duff- Whalley greeted him impressively, and dinner was announced. Mrs. Duff-Whalley ttT gave a long and pretentious mes, and ex- pected everyone to pay for their in- vitation by being excessively bright and chatty. It was not in the power of present guests to be either the one thing or the other. Mrs. Jowett was pensive and sweet, and inclined to be silent; her husband gave loud barks of disagreement at intervals; Mr. Jackson enjoyed his dinner and ans- wered when spoken to, while Lewis Elliot was rendered almost speechless by the flood of talk his hostess poured over him.- "I'm very sorry, Mr. Elliot," she re- marked in a pause, "that the people I wanted to meet you eouldn't came. I asked Sir John and Lady Tweedie, but they were engaged-so unfortun- ate, for they are such an acquisition. Then I asked the Olivers, and they eouldn't come. You would really won- der where the en agements come from in this quiet neighborhood.” She gave a little unbelieving laugh. "I had evi- dently chosen an unfortunate evening for the County." a little unbelieving laugh. 'U had tvi-; "If you'do, Janetta," her husband dently ehosen 'N unfortunate evening warned her, "you must choose between for the County. lthe brute and me. I refuse to live in It was trying for everyone: for Mr. the same house with one of those Elliot, who was left with the impress/pampered, trifring little beasts. If we sion that people were apt to be 1rnrdecide to fill old Rover's place, I sug- ttaged when asked to meet him; for gest that we get a rough-haired Irish the Jowetts, who now knew that they terrier." He rolled the "r's" round had received a "fiddler't, bidding," and his tongue. "Something robust that for Mr. Jackson, who felt that he was can bark and chase eats, and not lie only there because nobody else could all day on a cushion, like one of tho ‘e be got. 'dashed Chinese . . . " His voice died There was a blank silence, whichlaw?y in myytereg ttytrylere. _ There was a blank silence, which Lewis Elliot broke by laughing cheer- fully. "That absurd rhyme came into my head," he explained. "You know: " 'Miss Smarty gave a party, No one came. Her brother gave another, Just the same.' " Then, feeling suddenly that he had not improved _rnatters, hf fgngiXeyt. "Oh," said Mrs. Dufr-Whalley, rearing her head like an affronted hen, "the difficulty, I assure you, is not to find guests but to decide which to seleet." "Qiute so. quite so. naturall -"l murmured Mr. Jackson soothingi'y; he had laughed at the rhyme and felt; apologetic. Then, losing his hisLil completely under the col glance his hostess turned on him, he added, "Go eoiordd." Solemn S; the money." Shaman-H PENNY PLAIN Small Bor--"Pettrtr plain. pleas. It‘s better ”You any have your eholee--penttr plain or two-pone. Copyright by George H. Donn Co. BY 0. DOUGLAS " into the highways and, hedges compel thern_to. cgme i9." ' '"""t"" -..-... -- --""" Mrs. Jowett took a bit of toast and broke it nervously. She was never quite It ease in Mrs. Dutr-Whulley's company. Incapable of an unkind thought or a bitter word, so refined as to be almost inaudible. she felt jarred and bumped in her mind after a talk with that lady, even as her body would have felt after bathing in a rough sea among rocks. Realizing that the conversation had taken an unfortun- ate turn, she tried to divert it into mere pteasing .c-hannels. a an..- ,.-..-..., -.._.....-_,_ Turning to Mr. Jackson, she said:' .3 ACL T - . "Sueh a sad thing happened to-day.’ il la'li'i'iialllliiiiiiiiaiil Our dear old dog, Rover, had to ht) I] - put away. Re was sixtisen, very deaf] and rather cross. and the Vet. said it ===-===-====-"""""', wasn't kind to keep him; and of coursel "You mean the Honourable Pamela after that we felt there was nothing Reston? She is a daughter of the late to be said. The Vet. said he would: Lord Bidborough of Bidborough eome this morning at ten o'elock, and} Manor Surrey, and Mintern Abbas, it quite spoiled my breakfast. for dear 1 Oxfordshire, iid sisulr of the present Rover sat beside me and begged, and;peer- I looked her up in Debrett. I I felt like an executioner; and then helcalled on her, feeilng it my duty to went out for a walk by Nttyretf-.-aie" civil to a stranger, but it seems to thing he hadn’t done since he had he- me a very odd thing that a poet’s come frail-and when the Vet. came daughter would care to live in such a there was no Rover." ihumble way. Mark my words, there’s - - _ . u . ts A M Ill,“ wr "Dear, dean” said Mr. Jackson, helping himself to an entree. "The really dreaful thing about it," continued Mrs. Jowett, refusing the entree, “was that Johnston-the gar- dener, you know-had dug the grave where I had chosen he shoul lie, dear Rover, and-you have heard the expression, Mr. Jackson-ts yawning grave yawned. It was too heart- rending. I simply went to my room and cried, and Tim went in one direc- tion and: Johnson in another, and the maids looked too, and they found the dear tinygie, and the Vet.---" most obliging man called Davidson-came back . . . and dear Rover is at rest." Mrs. Jowett looked sadly round and found that the whole table had been listening to the recital. Few people have not loved a dog and known the small tragedy of part- ing with it, when its all too short day was over, and even the “lamentable comedy” of Mrs. Jowett's telling of the tale made no one smile. Muriel leant forward, enuincly distressed. "Pm so frightfufly sorry, Mrs. Jowett: you’ll miss dear old Rory dreadfully.” _ . "You must get another, Mrs. Jow- ctt," her hostess told her bracingly. "Get a dear little toy Pekinese or one of those Japanese what-do-you-eau 'emst that you can carry in your arm}; they _are_ so smart," _ _ "it's a beastly business putting away a dog," said Lewis Elliot. " always wish they had the same lease nf life as we have. 'rhreeseore and tcn years do sum up'. . . and " none too long for such faithful friends." "Shan't I?" said Mr. Jowett doubt- fully. "Well, I apologize. Nobody .likes to hear their dog miscalled . . . .837 the way, Jackson, that's an abom- inable brute of yours. Bit three milk igirls and devastated the Scot’s hen- ‘house last week, I hear." I "I did." Mr. Jackson owned gloom- |ily, and the topic lasted until the fruit lwas handed round. Again Mrs. Duff-Whalley reared ett "If! her head, but Muriel iri,t,err,rotred,:irTpes I laughing. "You musn't really be sojvers th severe, Mr, Jowett. I happen to pos:%d Ki; sess two of the 'trifling beasts,’ and its----" you must come and apologize to me, But after dinner. You ean't imagine more i enough perfect darlings, and of course theyleuvE c< are called Bing and Toutou. You Mrs J won't be able to resist their little monitio swegg feet=tooItttriarlinej'I [long sl "Yes," said Mr. Jackson. "Four murdered fowls they brought to me, and I had to pay for them; and they didn't give me the corpses, which I felt was too bad." "I wonder," said Mrs. Jowett to her hostess, as she peeled a pear, "if you have met a newcomer in Priortsford- Miss Keaton? She has taken Miss Bathgate’s rooms." "What?" said Mrs. Dutr-Whalley, deeply interested. "Did you actually pay for the damage done and let them keep the fowls?" Ship your Cream to us and ob.. tain the best results with high- est {nice for number one gqality. Dai y returns, cans 'tmt/tit, and express charges paid. 'rite for cans now. BOWES CO., Ltd. - TORONTO CREAM tar / o , ‘1: \ \E l t Elif " /’/ Kr [ I , / / , / R3 \ \\\ l I Higa’thy I I T// fr. -((,i),sih_.i.)' \ l /l / / y _ .t _ 's, Have tiummerHeat / 'ss, T his Witter / :t A Warm househndacool ’ 1 cellar dayand night the win .. ., . ter Iz/ttist")',,',,',':,?,? in - u - yourcoal 'lbdfmmeq‘ltosoz --',, - A KELSEY ‘ Is l - WARM All! GENERATOR : i f "t your cellar will ensure this. = / The Kelsey isthe madman _ I / tgl r"ect'g','t"/g'/ ”as; \\ I I // 'J,','K.g ')'t)),?ii,ii',if,'ir,i,'?,sf, \ _ rot t t WW l ’ 'c,'d,teet,T,t,,t 5.3mm. \\ V I / my wt smo mu muncm Arte? '. I "The Jardines are very unconven-j tional," said Mrs. Duft-Whalley, "i.fd ou call that attractive. Jean tioesn'ti Il',,,',' how to keep her place with peo- .ple at all. I saw her walking beside ’a tinker woman the other day. help-, ing her with her bundle; and I m sure/ ll’ve simply had to give up calling at {The Rigs, for you never know who {on would have to shake hands with. _ 'm sorry for Jenn, lite",'.,', little soul. It (seems, a pity that t ere is no one to idress her and wise her a chance. She's I a plain 1:121 thing at best, but clothes imight do wonders for her." l "There I totally disagree," shouted iMr. Jowett. "Jean, to my mind, is ‘the best-looking girl in Priorsford. EShe walks so wel and has such an -honest, jolly look. I'm glad there's no lone to dress her and make an affected 'doll of her. . . . Bhe's the kind of 3 ‘girl a man would like to have for I , daughter." 7 [Jul-nut Win}. a.-.“ _ “V, - . soemthing shady about it. As like? as not she’s an absconding lady maid-hut a call commits one to no- thing. She was out anyway, so I didn't see hex-[t . _ "Oh, indeed," said Mrs. Jowett, blushing pink, "Miss Reston is no impoetor. When you have seen her you will realize that. I met her yes- terday at the "rdines'. She is the most delightful creature, so charming to look at, so wonderfully trracefulr-" "l think," said Lewis Elliot, "that that must be the Pamela Reston I used to know Did you say she was living in Priorsfordt" "Yes, in a cottage called Hillview, next to The Rigs, you know," Mrs. Jowett explained. "Mhor made friends with her whenever she arrived and took her in to see Jenn. You can im- att how attractive she found the w ole household." "But what," asked Mrs. Duff- Whalley, “can Miss Reston have in common with people like the Jardines? I don't bleieve they have more than 2300 a year, and such a plain little house and one queer old servant. Miss Restart must be accustomed to things so very different. We must ask her here to meet some of the County." "The County?" growled Mr. gow.. ett. "Except for Elliot here, and the Hopes and the Tweedies and the Oli- vers, there are prnotically none of the 91d fNpilies left. I tell you what it But Mrs. DuR-Whalley had had enough for the moment of Mr. Jow.. ett's conversation, so she nodded to Mys. Jowett, and with an arch tur. monition to the men not to stay too long, she swept the ladies before her to the drawing-room. - - CANADA FOUN DRiES a FORGINGS JAMES SMART PLANT BROCKVILLE ONT. Hav.t.sytarpe,r Heat I/ A KELSEY WARM All! GENERATOR A Warm house‘sndawol 'rue daveut nitht thr vi» tor than? :An-d'asavi i,, yourcoal 'i/tif/Crate", (a your mlhr will mum this. s. The Mot-y Min most efficimtt and economical system of _ home Itprtirttrverdevised _ and will heat the smallest \ cottatftorthe largest um N [rowdy and healthfully. N, MAY w: silo mu onumuuas? (Tovbe continued.) LIMH’ED fete Janne cache was known by this name in Mar, but the Brat clue to the meaning ot the name in in "The North- wen Palace " Lend." a book pub liahed in 1865, describing the adven- turous journey of two English Uni- vereity students (Milton and Cheadlw acme Canada to the Paeftie via the Yellowhead pass. The author ot this; book states that Tote Jaune cache was “Io-called trom being the spot chown by " iroquoil trapper, known by tllc .eobriquet of the Tete June or Yellow the“. to hide the furs he obtained UL l the western aide." The only other printed reference ll, l, the origin of the name is in a letter in ',the Montreal Gazette in 1874 from ’Malcolm McLeod, whose father, John lMcLeod, was a "ure of some mm- m Vibe fur trade in the third decade of “he nineteenth century. His alarm I letters and papers were in the {when Eaton of the son. McLeod states tha; lTete Jaune ache commemorates i. lFrench Canadian named Decoigne will {cached his turs here. The statt-mr-m (reads as follows: “Toto June was so (;i'i)"i't from the color or the halrwmxt I infrequent amount French Canadians lot Breton and Nonnun French oripio 'i--of a enterprising French trapper, ot lthe heme ot Decoigne. who used tlib, l!e.ell',e, appropriete locality-an tux» I menee hollow, but comparatively level I ot some 70 square miles in area, amongst the mountains there-tce hi9- ;l“cnche" or entrepot in his line If i: work." In the 18th Report of the Geographic Board ot Come which I. now In the pron. In addition to the decisions or the Board nlnce In .eotnriteatcemcttt, there to given in brtet form the orig'n of the - ruled upon where this is known. tn any ems more damn-.1 Information is In the records or the Board and can be supplied to persons interested in the meaning of any My ticuler name. One of the most interesting plum name- in Yeuowhend Pun. one of the no“ use“ of nil Rocky Mountain we“. The pun takes its name “an a mm. at its western entrance. when- (nt' Robson river coming south from 1iount Robson joins the Fraser. Here “is Tete June cache. or is English, " _ lowhend cache. From being appliei to the ache, the name spread to the plan, the earliest name of which was the Leather pus, so called because supplies ot dressed moose and caribuo Ikina for Wine. ropes, etc., were taken west by the fur-traders through this gateway to New Caledonia, where leather was scarce. l The cult of the mirror is easily one lt! the oldest in the world. We can hardly believe that there was ever " time when I charming face went whulr 1y “mirrored. however primitive the medium at reflection had to be. There is one person named Decowne in fur trade nun-ls. This is F'ratttrote Decolgne, whom John McDonald (one of the early fur traders. called to die- tlncutsh him from others or the name “John McDonold ot Garth") in his autobiography style: " young Cana. dun gentleman trom Berthler, M. De come, a clever young man." He was employed In the fur trade in 1795 and we and htm u a clerk in the North. west Company " Fort George or. Cos North Sukttchewnn river September' lil, 1798, and in the same region in 1799. In 1804 he was in the Athabas, kn Department. In May. th'i4, he was in charge of Jasper House, Brule Lakr, when Ftanchere. the first man to dent eribe In a book the Jasper Park N» glen, came east from the Pacific coast. later Decolgne trausterreo to the ‘Hudaon'a Bay Company but continued ho opente in the some district, name- l ly, the Athahuh. Eye sued entranced " her own lance retieeted in a glossy pool; and we know how, long belore the inven- tion of (has, the women ot old Egypt, Greece, and Rome had their hand-mir- rors ot polished metal-burnished disc: of bronze or silver set In a more or less decorated frame. ORIGIN OF THE NAME "iEuowHEAD PASS" Some of those ancient mirrors. em- played " they were In the service of beauty. wen things ot beauty in them- selves. They Ind a kind of sacred character, too. as symbols of the god- deem of beauty, Venus Aphrodite. to whom their fur owners often dedi» cated them in the native hope that the saddens would impart to the (aces they retieetad something ot her own matchlen loveliness and fadelesl youth. Every old mirror in a thin; of mem- orles. What a throng od shimmy shoals we might see in the metal tnirrorq taken from Egyptian tombs. or In the palace mirrors at Holymod and Versailles, or In thnt curious old looking-(Ian shown in the museum at Bthton and mid to have belonged to Nell Gwynne! We need be in no doubt that the two men of those days valued their person- al charm, and spent as much care on preserving It as ever women do now! Perhaps, the old superstition that it In unlucky to bred: a mirror Is not so very rldiculoua the! all. Bo much of ourselves mm: to put into a mirror. Cable Laid " Van Ago. The lulu ot the timt succeuful Atlantic telegraph able was com. pleted unyieven you: no. The men who huve rendered the greatest service to the world Asked nothing and gun anything. Mirror Magic. 55;: Recipes am many And I thin good plan to make note of r For mph. if a recipe is trk I. think too mwb or too little bu but oellad for, mark it do has due to the inland" (he VIM. forty win of no. Infant mut- fowl are itt the A at. my than“: of dollar: anally to tho poultry keepers ot “do. ' inset-u working 01 aight of (to human eye, their pm It often unsuspected until the Chow unthrifu’nas. loss in '1 lower egg production, and Mum “my. causing the owner to mat "Imitation. " the exnminnth (how. lire are gout-rally foul the (rent majoriu' of Aoekr A may not be serious, but if the crawlers are pmmittrd to incm thousands the eftret on the pot keeping part of the {Arm husim lam clusters l below the vent. mks from an; “bodes sticking feeding thereon Mrmopott pom} preceding. only in the habit the feathers. and deposits i tmtte of the feo Lipcum hrter found on the h darkens. " i deposits its eg about the head Wh his on has should l oeeupati, I mu modem and mm of the , ehinery, proporth experimt dow " fm wh wh th ttM (no high be near Inn'l it ' cream, v give u The One good MI and pound it Although r Infood Chili ing Do not thirds ful be frozen up the " tub with First p coo-whim one-eight‘ putting r In; the a: It in not the bow Mn. and m the In CW3 a the the 3" [of Them-11v Tl o ICE CREAM FOR THE NEED OF ETERNAL VIGlLAN m Ind lnfest . Mesure . in eolm to the nki " " All! it INF If" lh up; IR‘ it

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