West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 2 Jul 1925, p. 2

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. ~» Torget my Wridheys" Hello Daddy â€" dont «2 to Why shouldn‘t . What is ther TY The little leaves and tips from high mountain tea gardens, that are used in SALADA are much finer in flavor than any Gunpowder or Japan. Try it. Always Buy ight f« in on ry "What | nyone € n to be "SALADA" ik wht A GLASS OF MILK _worships you as This farm, for ano ‘m you brought to C2CCC VSC am I, to myâ€" one else? Maybe you to be boosted out onto ‘y morning and lugged night, and sit here all from the waist down! * a dead one while all world goes hustling on sound men are doing‘" meant everything to uldn‘t I wish I was | is there to live for?, \for a ro g.?'“md.wm'“ placed b h;ing m"for, ried to 1 pleasure and benefft, | AP""t ip a pae in fole podet wheit you ?o home to« nitht . upy o WNapolcor every drop )r selfâ€"co his racke ) live for t] minded him. "I hapâ€" t through the kitchen * later_ and I saw you PART I nay uie hu amtur. . fmgnq, «6 ~ _IS VOIce no longer disguised.‘ pay us by giving "She‘s as sick and tired of me as Lafe y and by wishing Heritt is. What in blazes is there |left that cares for me and that doesn‘t *" he countered think I‘d be better out of the way?" se am I, to my-‘ As though in answer to his quesâ€"| se* Maybe you) tions, a tawnyâ€"andâ€"white coliie dog ) ; boosted out onto emerged from under the porch vines | : ming and lugged| where she had been dozing. Stretchâ€"|] , and sit here all| ing her dainty body fore and aft, she| : the waist downt| came mincing up the steps and across |] ad one while all to Tanner‘s armchair. Pausing there, | c goes hustling on she laid one white little forepaw on |t 1 mwen are doing his knee and peered up in troubled t _everything to pity into his face. Instinctively, she, w I wish I was seemed to know her worshipped masâ€"|b re to live for? ter was unhappy and she was seeking ) t to comfort him. Roughly, the man|e vn babyish o'ug.[cnught her classic hedd between his selfâ€"control and | two palms. re racked nerves.| "Nance, you‘ve answered the quesâ€"| go ve for?" she reâ€"| tion!" he told her, a catch in his voice.‘p int was choked| "I was just asking myself if anyone st "There‘s every.| would care if I was out of the game.!pq ‘ur mother, for| And along comes the cnly thing on | pc ips you as only |earth that thinks as much of me now , of rm, for another| that I‘m a crinnla ae .1 _ " UV mt now ,of sed to u give her back the GREEN TEA forward Huffy ear BY ALBERT PAYSoXN TERHUNE ch wa or an at his feet, him and at k. Gil did i‘s tin dish. of it. Does rery glass of drink, Gil? s pallid face 1. ‘Then he th life lucky ingry s emp |iCaVINng to his son the farm, care of his widowed mother, not been a promising herita; |elder Tanner had scorned methods of farming and had ‘at Gil for insisting on tal agricultural college course, ’ "I suppose you‘ll come ba [ and try to teach me how +t as he sarcasm. brei 28 25 "Well, you needn‘t do _ "FOue youll come back hero and try to teach me how to run the place," he had said to the boy in fine gareaem )\ _ 7)id that hasn‘t got the sense to] |know when he‘s down and out or to: |act as if he was something the cat! ha% dragged home fromythe swamp." | | Nance seemed to sense a compliâ€" |ment to herseif in his mumbled words.f For she wagged her plumed tail with ‘much vigor and whimpered de'.ighted-f ly, far down in her throat. Her puppy, . Napoleon, came lumbering up to her ‘ for a romp. Disdaining him, Nance | placed both paws on (Gil‘s knees and _ ried to lick the man‘s sorrowful face. ; Absentâ€"minded‘y, Gil patted her, his‘ | eyes straying across the broad fields ] \he had reclaimed from worthlessness 7 | â€"fields which no longer knew his wise 3 and loving personal care. To his morâ€" ; bid fancy, the farm was beginnin' to 1 lose some of the brightness and prosâ€" q perity to which his tireless work had y brought it. 0 Ten years eariier, Gil had been call.| ed home from the agricultural college | = through which he was working his way. His shiftless father had died, leaving to his son the farm, and the care of his widowed mother. It had not been \a‘ menmibatense K .lte T morn |\ was sound. Thank man‘s dog is the one ten world that hasn |know when he‘s do |act as if he was s (had dransail Bs p uks on o c ol emerged from under the porch vines where she had been dozing. Stretchâ€" |ing her dainty body fore and aft, she |came mincing up the steps and across to Tanner‘s armchair. Pausing there, she laid one white little forepaw on his knee and peered up in troubled‘ pity into his face. lnstinctively, she seemed to know her worshipped masâ€" ter was unhappy and she was seeking to comfort him. Roughly, the man caught her classic head between his two palms. "Nance van‘us susmmerur Ce dss C220 se Cbrebds â€" ~â€" DAE ©*/I had to do something to atone for [?"l’snarling like a sick bear. And you‘ve ce had two glasses of it already toâ€"day, he besides your regular meals. There |was a raw egg whipped up in each of ,,| them too. That‘s grand for a collie's' it Coat. I guess you won‘t starve to ve d«,-attx before supper time." ‘ Ik! He forced a whimsical grin to his‘- es white face, | ce| _ "Doesn‘t that make up a little bit r. for my acting like a cross kid? I hate‘ 1. the measly stuff. 1 hats it worse thanI d 'c-vcr, with those raw egrs beaten in it. |I used to think I liked milk. But since e it‘s been stuck at me, with eggs in it, | a | four times a day, I wish there wasn‘t | g,,'a cow or a hen left on earth, Do I}; t / get forgiven, Kay?" li 1| | He asked the question lightly, but,l y there was a thread of deeper feeling )t ”'in his tired voice. The girl did not| i ; answer. _ She turned away quickly|( |and went indoors, leaving him there. | j | Git could not know she had turned n |aside so hurriedly to hide a hot mist, ;'fthalt had sprung unbidden to her avac| . pain in h “She,s as Heritt is. left that c think I‘d tdsb adiiccdciiidd essayed. Left alone, Gil Tanner st osely after her. at hi and drank it down in of gulps. The puppy, on one side, watched p unkind vanishing of feast. Gil handed bac Kay then stooped aga Nagoleon’s head remor penance. Watch me." _ He lifted the pint glass and drank it down in one of gulps.' The puppy, his er | _ Gil had felt that at last he was out nap pieptnirdiimie~ 6 im n.V?f of the woods. Now he could find tiime vder or JOPCD- T" t. to think of his own happiness. And mt c.mmmmmmmcmmmmâ€"â€" that happiness was centred around es e ie |one womanâ€"Kay Leonard, dauihter en n mmnmmmmmmmmmmmm ommc ‘*of his prosperous next farm neighbor, * a girl who had also been like a daughâ€" ‘ter to Gil‘s own widowed mother. For two years Tanner rad been inâ€" * ‘creasingly deep in love with her. But, until the farm should bed]:’osfpering! 4and his mother well provi or, he| had fellt he had no right to tell herl‘ p aâ€"fere & of his love. YSON TERHUNE. Then at last all obstacles had been ! Icleared away. Gil had told himself =<â€"â€" ifi iaaee es rmmneeammmmemmeniil {he could enter into his reward for the |again when it was sour and wornâ€"out‘ Years of grinding toxl’und worry. He s| ie 4 o "o oo Setiyâ€" There‘s every. o tming t ho i sterm from a meriny s th:,?:f 1(; 'ivf“ U?Js, ;o.u’ll r}ety?,l;urgzggvisit to a school friend and to ask herf‘ / think a minute. * !to'thShl:'re his brightening fortunes‘ _ "Just because you‘ve had a bad set.| Wi 1m. y . bml-‘k, jt’;I no refls%r; why yo%hshouldfh ?(’l‘ ;}Ze»:?'l'(mngt}?f }t‘b&t }:’,flydhe was': talk in that cowar y way. e doe. hard : rk wi 1s hired man, |tor says your best chance to get we";shmglmg his newlyâ€"built hay . bafi!l is to build up your strength and your‘;aci"?» whent he sl{]l)pedf and P‘t‘t'{:e‘:‘ I general health. That‘s why he preâ€" hf’fi t?:eg (;nfo flh pile o stongsl ar|® seribed the four glasses of milk and & n ieft there as materia Of | g °gE a day, along with the rest of the Piers to go under a projected water t diet and the treatment. Yet you won‘t, tank. . i . )c ow‘ NoP dPiiced soanplh, us MoP lc ned Pren cartied senscless into| © you. ou s re, unha ~| SC. T ting yourself get wo:‘ke:fipgn:&n moe,(,fcians hz;d wrought over him until the| D Presh o Stet} f8y. You en athe nfee consoasien of the beain was fiey is.) o resn milk to that puppy andâ€"â€"‘ | ® R P ho "Oh, suppose we take the rest of ;?v':rdthat he was paralyzed from the' & zly sins f(v)r ;!rgnt('d." l}_o br?ke in on]' pWhe?lwr&il emerged from his sick] m er gravely sad reproof. "I‘m sorry 5C ase Sn â€" [ I was so cranky and babyish, Kuy.ib‘:’,d,’ it -WOUI({ have been .har.d to r(cog-: th Forget it, won‘t you? Hereâ€"I‘ll do‘"!"* him as the upstunding vount en anan W i oa l 1C€ and tumbling to decay thing to live for, Gil. there is, if only you think a minute ee‘" he muttered to h in his voice no longer s as sick and tired of 1 t is. .What in blaze Sorry, N tone and tuck at me, with eggs in it, a day, I wish there wasn‘t a hen left on earth, Do I en, Kay?" d the question lightly, but a thread of deeper feeling _and had sneered & on taking the course, at the I Cas working his father had died, e farm, and the mother. 1t had z heritage. The scorned modern _ make up a little bit ke a cross kid? I hate . I hate it worse than F4 _ 4 ) PeC ing of his expectedlhidne‘ ided back the glass to} K ped again and patted big . d remorsefully. r"""“] * he‘gpologized. "But / anfé id between his| my. ".;_ "Arer to his tormented soul. read between his The giant strength in which he had reveled and by whose aid he had dragâ€" swered the quesâ€" ged the farm back from ruin to prosâ€" ‘atch in his voice.,'perityâ€"from the waist down this myself if anyone strength was gone.> His legs were out of the game.|powerless of motion or even of su£ e only thing on ;’porting his hundred and eighty pounds much of me nour| m# ues 30â€" "_~CIUE ANG i it. Because the porch vines dozing. Stretchâ€" ‘ore and aft, she steps and across to himslef, the You feea'-tâ€"}ze..;x‘ir:-; puppy andâ€"â€"" _take the rest of deeper tee!ing,'the > girl did not| well away quick]y‘(‘:il: ng him there. pern e had turned mad de a hot mist Ac m to her eyes and rave smile he| time © peeucasis c onl s on C e meentes s » ORe AHC asog [leen known as one of the strongest ass to his PS / ang most athletic men in the county. one 5“(‘0555“’"{"& face hbad been tanned by sun and his furry head wind to a light mahogany. His mighty ithetically thishands had been as calloused as raw. his expected | hide, < the glass 10| . Kow he was pale and nis eyes stared "n_ and patted Lig and bewildered from above sony ‘“f“,”Y- ’vlam-ks. His hands wore as white and logized. "But‘..s, â€": U§ Dt ared mor e h ,,h,,__ 2000 CSR OvCTIE â€" TOFtune had a bad setâ€"| with him. hy you should!‘. On the morning ofâ€"that day he wa: ray. The doe.|hard at work with his hired man ce to get well Shingling his newlyâ€"built hay bar igth and your r@Acks, when he slipped and pitched why he pre.\headlong onto a pile of stonas thas 8. _ There in each of a collie‘s starve to , |_ â€" C270 enter into his reward for the ind worn.out years of grinding toil and worry, He here‘s every.|planned to go to Kay‘s home on the id you know evening of her return from a month‘s let yourself | Visit to a school friend and to ask her |to ;.Shn."e his brightening fortunes | B s vou.~00 Pmd s1 1 0_ "VZ, mt His nome were zt the mercy of the enemy. True, Gil could have exerted his legal authority and canceled the gr. rangement made by his mother, thus ridding himself of Lafe‘s presence’ and domination. *But that wou‘d have , left the homestead without an efficient : active manager at the busiest time of | year and at the most important period | of the farm‘s new lease of life. , (To be concluded.) } % EP | That had besn for his cousin, Lafe Hewitt. Where had avoided him for years, as he could in so smail a neigh] Now he and his home were mercy of the enemy. Cl eC‘ MV TERUTRBTEE T8 «fMllation with Dellevae and Allie® Hoso. ts New York City offers a thres years Courss «t Training â€" to youn3 â€" women, baving â€" tha requlred education, and derizcus cf becomin; turses. This Mospital has adeptsd the cight. hour «ystem. . The supils rceeive unitorms uf the School, a monthly ailowrnes ang traveiiing «»pensce to and from New Yerk. For Aus bner, Informalion appiy to ins Euperintendent, ho o oE ty _ Gil found himseif i wretched in mind and body bewildered numbness was P the hideous facts of his con ed_g‘aily_clearer to his torn [mave way 30 10 20108 SUtiety, apathy gave way to impotent rage. Kay was fat the Tanner house every day now, helping Mrs. Tanner ard trying to make herself useful to Gil. _'fihus Lafe‘s vigorous if ponde;i ous courtship came hourly under the anguished atâ€" tention of the cripple. | Gil found himseif increasingly . Wretohold in nrin.t aulg u.0. 0C RHtRETL But when he found ith spending all his spare seeking Kay Leonard‘s $0¢ gave way to imnotent »as The IP y es oi C Et Confused, sick, stricken, had no energy nor power to this "disregard. [ Accordingly, Lafe Hewitt and around the house much time. He made no secret of h for the helpless owner of th nor did he mask his contemptu regard for such ord@s or ac Gil gave for the runnin» af +h »’ Lafe‘s farm adjoincd Gil‘s on the |side farthest from that of Kay Leonâ€" -Im‘d’s father. Somewhat to his surâ€" |prise, Gil found on his convalescence ,t}mt Lafe had consented to Mrs. Tanâ€" ‘l)er’s foolish plea that he take over |the working of the Tanner farm, as well as of his own, on shares, until t(‘:il should be well again or until some permanent â€" arrangement â€" could be : made. ht Sastop s Arracbnn is ditc i ach s A 110 _ Mrs. Tanner had sent, post for Lafe when Gil was stricken was the nearest of kin, and she ed to him in her fright, althou and Gil had disliked cach other a growing intensity ever since had fought as children. h soft as a child‘s ; wiin him,. 3 ”‘""", From St. Felicien on the Ashuapmu-! l'h 0(;1 the morning ofâ€"that day he was Chuan river the first step of the jour-, [hard at work with his hired man,| ney was by wagon, 10 miles up the ';shmglmg his newlyâ€"built hay . bar®} river, to avoid the lower falls andl' ;r,adffi’ when he slipped and pitched| rapids. , Entering the river the first | |neadiong onto a pile of stones that camp was made at the Pemonka camp | _had been left there as material for o o | piers to #o under 4 rojeeted water site, 9 miles up stream. A short disâ€" | Fiank, proj * ’ tance above this point is a deep rapid | _ He had been carried senseless into CAlled Pas de Ford or "No Bgotkomu ol |the house. There the two local physi-‘ which can rarely be ascended. It was ‘} fcxans had wrought over him until the necessary, therefore, to detour by the,‘ concussion of the brain was cured. § | Stony River portage which crosses a ’| | Then and only then' did they disâ€" chain of five charming lakelets and reâ€"| cover that he was paralyzed from the‘ gains the Ashuapmuchuan by a swm! hips down 5 %hen dil emerged _from his 5; _Jmountam stream. Next followed stlfl’t > S10) bed, it would have been hard to recogâ€"| poling up the White Spruce rapids to | 1 nize him as the upstanding young|! the foot of Chaudiere falls where camp ‘ t giant of a month before. He had| W48s made. Above the falls the water | | Leen known as one of the strongest is fast to the mouth of the Chigobish | s and most athletic men in the county,| river which was reached on the fi“h‘ His face had been tanned by sun and, day. Turning west up the Chlsobhh.l: wind to a light mahogany. His might)" 15 portages were passed in the 221' [' hands had been as calloused as rawâ€"/ miles to Lake Chigobish, which is an | hide. $OT5 Toronto Hospitat for Irearables NURSES was on a we.lâ€"paying basis. methods, wisely and un weéary plieq, hagl wrought wonders C ce d t EOe ’ The _ ninteenâ€"ycarâ€"old boy had thrown himse‘f zealously into the task of saving the dying farm from utter W =â€"= worthlessness. The attempt had been To . cruelly hard and discouraging. But ture, : bit by bit he had succeeded. The waste 't lands grew rich again. The ramâ€" 8°" !C shackle buildings wer» replaced by and new. The mortgages had been paid throug off. In less than ten years the farm St. Jo was on a we.lâ€"paying basis. Modernfflde & methods, wisely and unwearyingly apâ€" tion. _ wee ind ul Ni d hnd e < > 2 il won‘t listen to you. I know more about farnting than any coilege can teach. I ought to. Haven‘t I worked out three farms in my tim>" And haven‘t I pretty near worked this one ou’t'_'.’L College, hey? Bunk!" T e e oi Hewitt. Wherefore, he us C106 Hewill was in the house much of the ade no secret of his scorn pless owner of the home, rask his contemptuous disâ€" such ord@s or advice as the running of the farm. sick, stricken, Tanner n for years, as far as smail a neighborhood. his newlyâ€"built hay bar: hen he stipped and pitched onto a pile of stones that _left there as material for go under a projected water 1 for his < hulking hada sent, post haste, iil was stricken. He _kin, and she turnâ€" fr‘ig'nt,_althou;:h he society Hewitt w ach other wi‘h at Lafe was minutes in combat “ The total waterâ€"power developed in \C@nada as at February 1. 51825, was x'practlcally 8.570,000 horse-power. and }the capital invested theretn, incuding | trayzsmission â€" and dfslribution. was | $766,158,000. n i910 the investment «tood at $121,000,000, so that the aver.. age annual increase over the 14 years has been nearly ~$646,000 or 14 per [ lcem. per annum. \tie Narrows, Abatagush bay and Big . ~~"Drag" with "he boss if y« || Narrows, the last camp was made ag 4 . more f?r the business. ; place called Pointe des Chasses Sauwâ€". _ ~â€"M®!P in bad times if you h4 | ages du Printemps, in view of the vast | d"”"ffd,“me in good timesi |expanse of the lake. As it was fmâ€" x«rwml;t if you are willing | possible to cross the open lake in , We to make them, | small canoes the trip had to end here.‘ 's-‘"“r(“”‘)' from the comm ! _ The return journey, commencing on | 399 Waste no pity on yourself | the twentyâ€"fourth day, was made by | * omm way of Fileâ€"axe lake (lac l Meule) and | the Riviere du Cheff which joins the SAW Ashuapmuctuan 33 miles above Chay. | a C dferé galis, then down the latter river | f\/(/:{t \Vl"'h é%fi to ‘St Feliclien tha "stunilns" smcn * P they For i"!rst Aidâ€"Minard‘s Linimen: ver, Portage des Peches leads to Whitefish &5 or Long lake. At the head of Long "tllf lake a portage called La Hauteur leads ‘Me/ across the height of land between the be Saguenay and the Nottaway drainage in" systems. From this point onward the the trip gains in piquancy, Obatogamau, rn| the next lake, contains 759 islands and me,! the navigation of the"labyrinth is difâ€" lisâ€" ficult even for experts. The fourth | as portage aftet lake Obatogamau leads M to a very narrow winding creek which ‘®*! is the head of lake Chibougamau. At ’at_ter passing through a succession of ae! bays and narrows the latter lake was as in entered in the afternoon of the fourâ€" hy teenth day, completing 200 miles of the ‘ as trip and coming within sight of the w, distant range of hills beyond which | to lies the great lake Mistassini. Lake | 1s Chibaugamau was crossed to its north # P ned where the Narrows lead to Macâ€" ; t':‘ kenzie bay, which is also called Baie,i Iy.'d“ Jongleur from a flatâ€"topped moun-‘a t tain at its head. From the head of 5 d the bay there is a hard portage to Iake“t â€"| Wakonichi, crossing the watershed beâ€" C 1.| tween the Nottaway and Rupert drainâ€" y d‘ age systems. The rockbound shores of | 3 ~, Wakonichi lake offer but a slight ln-,‘c‘ ~; ducement to land except at one spot :‘valled Pointe des Peches, a granite | _ bluff, which is one of the best of all . ; | the camp sites and was reached on the 1‘ eighteenth day. Descending Wakonicht : * / river, lake Mistassini was entered and , on the twentieth day the historic Hudâ€". *‘ | son‘s Bay Company post on this lake | was reached. Proceeding through Litâ€". * ; tle Narrows, Abatagush bay and Big | °_ | Narrows,.the last camp was made at a | !" i place called Pointe des Chasses Sauyâ€"â€" ,'ages du Printemps, in view of the vast ' de |expanse of the lake. As it was "iy.| which was rea day. Investment in Canadian Waterâ€"Power. | attractive sheet of water with inviting | beaches and surrounded by big, unâ€" {‘bumt timber. Fifteen miles up the |lake, Portage Dur leads to Crooked ‘river, which is the extended foot of / lake Ashuapmuchuan. Nine miles up | this latter lake is a newly eslabllshed!‘ | HMudson‘s Bay Company post of modâ€"| | est pretensions, so hidden among the| l‘ trees that it cannot be sighted beyond | ‘a stone‘s throw,. The first hundred; miles of the trip was completed on the ; ninth day at the head of lake Ashuap-t muchuan and the ascent of the plc-f turesque river Nikabau, with its long rapids, commenced. | Across the Height of Land. l" Next comes a series of lakes beginâ€"|. ning with Little and Great Nikabau, | | followed by Jourdain‘s and terminating | in Branch lake, at the head of which | ; ern| vide a neverâ€"ending source of satisfacâ€" Apâ€", tion. There are trappers and prospectâ€" | ors who are familiar with the route but °4t the outsider making the trip will need ""‘:fi competnet and experienced guides. ing| These may be engaged through local ter| outfitters who make a specialty of supâ€" 0,-,! plying guides and equipment for trips zhâ€"| of this nature. | IILhRLE3d FPILTIL 3 The trip starts from St. Felicien, the wE |terminus of the Quebec and Chicouâ€" d , timi branch of the Canadian National 9 1 Soaks ;Rallways, 206 imiles uorth of Quebec *waumesâ€"ame | city. The round trip has been made in | rrrorgrocooâ€"rspmunmcenren | 84 days, but 6 weeks‘ supplies should | tttttz=====â€"=~â€"mm===â€"m mm mennoommmer omm is hom feidente w pad weages| The Bobâ€"oâ€"Link‘s Oddities. | Tlfe fo]lnc:wlng ;:szr;:';l;lo: has o been‘; Isn‘t it odd that the bobolinks sweep i means x ip | UP from the south in spring to take .E::g:rgg flr)(;m:n\:;ii;;:;.”{,rzfrelsl;i:r;gf possession of a strip 500 miles wide Cory * | lova Scotis Zoology, McQGill University, during the | and r:eaching from Nova Scotia to Briâ€" summer of 1924, | tish Columbia. Felicien, the stérging point To anyone with a desire for advenâ€" ture, a love of outdoor life, and a hunâ€" ger for the unknown, the uncharted, and the hazardous, the canoe trip through northern Quebec from Lake St. John to Lake Mistassini will proâ€" ached on the thh-l'y Canoeing in North Quebec is Thrilling ovestment c the averâ€" e 14 years r 14 per was . and iding was fourth , A recent search in connection with f| titles through some of the old docuâ€" id ments preserved in the records of the * Ordnance, Admiralty, and Railway ‘| Lands Branch of the Department of ‘ ) the Interior, revealed a quaint and / rather curious form of this consideraâ€" ‘| tion. â€" A leagse issued under the autl. / ority of the province of Upper Canada in 1836 contained the following: "for |and during the term of thirty years at | a yearly rental of one barley corn."l 4»The usual item of nominal consideraâ€" tion in the early days was "a pepper’ corn‘" but this is the first case notedl where "barley com" was used. Pos.! ;slbly it was because barley=was morej | common than pépper in this a..2._. | M 9i «o your work well for the first time. â€"Freedom if you break the chains of your own enslaving habits. â€" influence if you wi11 confine your statements to the facts. Sentence Sermons You Can Have Moreâ€" Leisur do your work well far tha g«.. wir| â€"There they take possession of the »wlft} meadows, but they sing at no other stld, than nesting time. The female keeps 8 to“her strawâ€"colored dress that she may mP | hide in the grass, lay. strawâ€"colored Bter"eggfi, and hatch them without being 3183 | seen. The male flaunts his joy wisely iisth , withal, for he does it in such_ a way as 22'4 to direct attention away rather than n toward the nest. | ingl The bobolink is primarily an eastern un.| P‘rd, used not to extend its province so the far west. It lkes meadows, and farmâ€" ceq| &r‘8 Ccreate them. As farms pushed o“'west the bobolink,s went with them., up‘ They followed settlers into the Rockâ€" ed |ies, where they had not formerlyâ€"nestâ€" Dd_!ed, over the Rockies, down to the he | C028t. ndi They still remember, however, that ed|lhey are eastern birds. When late he f summer arrives the broods are reared, ; p.| and when the time for the southern ] Ic-f migration begins they do not: #o ; ig straight south. Instead they start east , \and do not stop unt!! ‘"wy bump up 8 | against the Atlantic. 1 ben t?>y turn b | down the coast in innv mef@ble warms j "*/ follow it to thâ€" !> of .Moftés, hop off ., 4| in the long flis :; to V imesonts # . _ At the present day one miliar with the expressic sum of $1," or some simil: indicate nomingl considera many documents convevin Ei ioaine: Yss Minard‘s Liniment for This is the v&y theq ing hundreds « chew ago, and, althoug‘h it . they stick sto the rou*s When | They have spent the winter as , brown marsh birds in Brazil and Arâ€" g®ntina. Then in February they beâ€" F,’san the drift north, stopping in the ] upper part of South America for the male birds to change to their black, }white and yellow wedding garments. | Then they hopped across the Caribâ€" ‘f bean to Jamaica, Cuba and Florida, or | came through Central America and‘ | across the gulf. They sperad out and ‘ ’set their time clocks to arrive about | the beginning of May,. | TORONTO n Annual Rental Was One Barley Corn. Rinso dissolves completely makes rich soapy solution r _ r soaks dirt out is is the first case noted ‘y com" was used. Pos. because barley=awas more ‘ pepper in this country. 1 lne community if on yourself, aY t*g got starled goâ€" theusands 5 years igh dt ig twWe as far, unt? iy bump up tis. 1b0n t#°y turn innu:ref@ble swarms 2 of Moftés, hop off 0 Vinexrala ay one is quite faâ€" pression "for the : similar phrase to nsideration used in mveying property,. connection with _of the old docuâ€" the records of the 7°r, however, that irds. When late broods are reared, for the southern Leisure if you and Railway Department of a quaint and this consideraâ€" records of the' How To oRrDER and Railway' Write your name a» )epartment of|ly, giving number a a quaint and | patterns as you want, his consideraâ€" stamps or coin (coin . der the autlhâ€"] it carefully) for en Upper Canada | address your order tc lowing: "for | Wilson Publishing Co hirty years at| laide St., Toronto,. P barley corn." , return mail. ~ Backachs you boost hbave been to take | 1 them. e Rockâ€" lyâ€"nestâ€" to the { Thompsonâ€"â€""'(}ood gri | you pack my liniment? ‘i Mrs. Thompson â€"*"No, | It was labeled : ‘Not to | dilics ut A mixed â€"can give you that tavoury zest and tang in your food that you appreciate #o much, Andonly real mustar d â€"â€" freshly mixed with cold wetr â€"furnishes real aid to | digestion, Make a pote now to ""rememâ€" ber Keen‘s Mustaré" when you leave, * een‘s Kll & 5 many styles showing h boys and girls, Simplici for "we\â€"dressad chi‘drer character and individ aa Junior folks are hard to } to make with our patter amounrt of money spent « teria.s, cut on simple lin children the privilege of x able things. Prico of ; conts the copy. Eac» C one coupon good for five purchase of any pattern. to Your Summer Home P U d Dhrons «> the back and has . It takes only 1% yards of 27 inches wido to make th for a child two years old. and 4 years. Price 20 cents Our now Fashion Book many styleés showin»> how Be sure to include one or two tins of KEEN‘3 MUSTARD in the supâ€" plics you take to your Surimer Cottage or Carip. Only reai Mustard â€"freshly button It tak 27 inc Remember â€"the la panning the children little twoâ€"piece romper is a good examp‘> of to laundar Tt Gaoj o4 Take REAL ° NCW Fashion Book contains ‘ styles showiny bow to dress and girls, Simplicity is the rule 2.â€"dressad chi‘drer.. Clothes of cter and individaa‘ity for the F folks are hard to uo 1. _ c * 00. .009 ~nCciose r coin (coin preferred ; lly) for each number rour order to Pattern ublishing Co., 72 Wakt Obeying Orders i00d gracious! ~0, of course not! to be taken.‘ » rd to bU):, l;ut eas patterns. ~A smal spent on good ma R PATTERNS, and addross plainâ€" and size of guch t. Enclose 20¢ in ) preferred; wrap ach number, and to Pattern Dept., 0., 72 West Ade. Patterns sent by ic" copy incl h PY includes cents in the S, Wi.l give aring adorâ€" i2 book 10 Didn‘t | j _ When Sir Herbert was in America he foolishly accepted an invitation to address privately a fashionable audiâ€" ence. He completely forgot bis proâ€" mise until the time had arrived for him to Appear. . Naturally he was totalâ€" ly unprepared. k » He rushed into the large assombly room, which was crowded with expectâ€" ant admirers, and, observing a large mirror hanging on the wal} at the back of the platform from which he was exâ€" pected to give his address, dashed up to, put out his tongue *and surveyed the reflection with dismay, Then he struck an attitude of horror and cried out dramatically: "Good heaven«! I‘m {}1! 1 must see a doctor!t" mall A few weeks ago The Companion printed a stoty about Bir Herbert Tree, the famous English actor. That has reminded a reader of another story, equally characteristic of Tree, which the wellÂ¥nown illustrator, Harry Purâ€" ness,‘tells in his book, Some Victorian Men. _ _ j % ~*C20009 De&BD to set dow t words as fast as he could make »; 5‘ pencil 110Â¥eâ€"â€""corn," "cap" and so on , digging out the shortest words first ‘, because they could be set down more "| quickly than the longer ones. Who 'J’tbe two im‘nutas were up the scores | were examined, and the prize went t« |‘the person who had achieved the largâ€" | est number of words. The good scores franzed along between thirty and fifty | or sixty words. But Mrs. Crane would | Bot allow Her score to be examined ’She was plalnl& doubtful about getting | that prize. But when persuasion falled to avail we chased her‘about the place, captured her and took her score away from her by force. She had achieved ionly one word, and that was "calt," which she haq spelled "caff." Ang she never would have got even that one word honestly; she had to introduce a letter that didn‘t belong in the text word in order to get it. And he vanished from ta~ building. Resourceful Sir Herbert. ! remember tho F had at that game, "California." Wher called everybody be words as fast as he the first letter of tha; during two minutes by t words ort of the text must not use a letter ti the text word, andre. m: ‘etter in the text word the letter oceurred twio word. and each person wroi large letters across the of paper, then sat with ready 10 betin ss sna Miss Victoria Kent, an E has become the first woma: Spain. Her first important place a few days ago, when as defending counsel on & homicide. | young artist, Mr. George Biss | exhibition of drawipngs is at , fern Gallery, London. | _ Mr. Bissell, a quiet, dark y of only twentyâ€"eight, starte 'a Nottingham mine when he teen. Toiling early and lat« few opportunities â€" of exere gifts, but never gave up hope after the war, he came to t« pavement artist, in a brave find recognition. This, it is s to know, has now come in £¢ sure. Ambition v. Circumstances How a man may vangquish . stances and attain his ampi: strikingly shown by the exam» The Game of Verbsriun Peer‘s Daughter Flics pP; Miss Elsie Mackay, daughter and Lady Incheape, who disii» | herself some time ago as a de« the interior of steamships, ha up«fying and recently purch; ,nirplnne for her own use, s granted a pilot‘s license son ago, and has become known ; land‘s most daring woman avia; Most of the steamships contr Lord Incheape, which ply b England and India, were deo rg teriorally after designs conce; Miss Mackay. The suite oceu} Lord and Lady Reading recen their voyage from Bombay to 1 were arranged by her. L. . The Sir Herbert, who has just c~ his fiftyâ€"sixth birthday, is a ke« cate of sunshine as a cure {o il1s, and has an upâ€"toâ€"date plan bome for producing aN|Mcial su _ At least forty thousand pr indebted to Sir Herbert Ba» famous English boneâ€"setter, | health and strength, for t number of cases he has (ro cessfully by his system of » tion. s Jy; she had to lnt;(;;l;xcve & didn‘t belong in the text A Res! Portia Viectoria Kent, an STORIES OF WEiLL. KNOWN PEOPLE A Modern Sun Worsk text word twi« urred twice in (je first bout that @e. The text word 1 When the rame o~ VC e fir "~ up the scores the prize went to achieved the larg The good scores soon W en t w In ) C PC t cl Ipp S1 for ane #lr he re ra p U px th Such is Farming, Dependit Attitude c Produce Infertil 4 wti POVERTY 0

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