The Lucknow Sentinel, 1937-06-03, Page 6v 14. GiNNN-WARD
- •
• Clittata; Townsend meets„Dick
• Whalen at a hockey game in Beattie .
•••• 'one nigbt: Her interest in Dick in-
• fueatis Wallace Hornell; rich young
. ,
luMberman. who wants to Marry her,
To get 'Dia out of the way, "Wallace
gives him a',:jab In, one of his lumber
,
,
,caMp; Dick accidentally discovers that ,
:13,OrneIrta •Inell are working . stolen
'timber lands, Be asks for in explan-
• ation, but 1,3!addech, the bus's,' Puts
him off and next day leaves for 'Seat-
tle., The following day, Claudia
stops • in at ,Bornefirs office and,. by
chance, ' overbears •Bornell • and 'Brad- •
deck plotting tO,do away With pick.
Claudia goes to .the ,camp at Burns
- Lake 'te.*,dra Diek. .At the camp,
she'learnt from ," -Ching, the Chinese
'conk, Athat Braddock,who has arrived'
,firfit, has sent 'Dick , off on s 'Ong.
tip,, eritit,i Man, Moriarty, --who hates
Moriarty :has instructions', to
• "Come back & 'one"
, , - 4
MIAPTER XI •
- What a strano white, world. this
s'sva6,, 'Claudia ..th6ught,„•nothing.'alive
noW 'but she—and a: Chinese Cook! '.
• Was 'prinaltive world—passions
unrestrained, murder; revenge,. love.,,
•Mankiad baelc, again ia oies? Primevalelentettte.:
"I Vink ,yoa one velly clever.' wd-
• naafi, .inieseers said. "Ching presently;
•'....turning With a',chuckle. ::She noticed '
•the'lista of i3O:ohyhis muffler where
•his breath had frozen, :: Put her.
• " hanryita feel the tendrils Of hair 1in,',
•-do'n her s-caP'all• stiff With, ice.; ' •
4",YOu•',think their will :come after
ugi!! eskedj•iinxisously• ,.:
"IgaybeinaYbe not:. :Not SaVvee
Where,. we -„go. No one., t'ink .ole
Ching go with .Misteel,,All husk With:
file!"• •,• • •
• Ittook abeut, half an hour to , 'Cross
• the : take, at thstPeed, they were go-
iag,-ilien Ching' turned to help her
" up .thsbank, They were in the woods
threading their :Way ',thin:ugh'
thin timber where' the geing, was not
btdbut necessarily slower.'. Again,
Ching flashed his light; !hewed her •
' 'the' traeks, • winding e in ; arming •the
go ahead," .told ;her. "You•'• • • ,
She left it to.,•him,:. foljoiving •his
•little figiire, :::among the,
tree., Deed silence; all around, thein,.
no sound ,but :the, Swishing, of • the
:pm)* under: skis: and ,tnewshOet. • .
• Would they' be in time, she ;Iasked,
'With every' hea,rt-heat.. What : might•
be ikpPeping on ,•thead_itbniewhere
T, 'The :thought spurred. her 'en; niade•
••• :her f:orget the.coidi the ;distance they '
• had conie Withottt allelt. • ." . •
•
Fortunately Claudia was in excel-.
'lent -athletic otherwise ` she
. could...not have kept pace with the
' tireleSS little figure :in front of her.
Ci' Le 'went like. !an, automaton;
:haidinfr, ',the 'flashlight pointed at the
en'otv in front 'of „him.' She Wondered!
that. hth' hand did ,not •stiffen, 'eVeri
beCaUie her
•'own fin,rsers; Were bcgliming to 1'(l
•11.7.;i;Th 41:pni holding her Ski -poles.
0fie siAnnbled ',niore • .than; once,,.•drittiag .het old 'point. into, a, :SturiP,
••••,seinetirnes &Susi saving .herself from , a
, klwaYs' Ching •turned to ' hely ,
At' last , the; sPoke; ,f
;a Mind:tett rest. • ' ' •
• 1,1?. t.t yon. I;geti inistee,
• ffeeze. :now sit l for rest t.!•'
• •He wage:lie:11f; the knew, 'Be slack-
• .
ened s • (1):Ancbshe...nioyed after him,
feeirri the -'bit eines:' t
on. with :the.; Sle;wer 'pace, -They!
•••
'Askyour dealef
,the new 'Oeleinan.•
Stoves that make their
,'•own gas, or .writel-, •
VW Coleman Lainp and
Steve Ltd:, DaPt.
• WL, TOtOnte, Ontario. .
had gene riOW, all of six • miles from
the camp. - And "still: the tracks led
••
on. . .
All• at once Ching Lo stopped
dead. He held up his hand.
'-"Ligterii" lie sald'.'in a whisper.
From • far 'off. carne a faint tap-
*.
..•••••-•
-.
- WASHINGTON. 17- The 'U.S.. bureau
of economics rePerta• the:
business upswing has levelled eff,, but
commerce department officiate,said
the industrial pace has quickened in.
itt• snr,-
recent •
‘0-3'17-11fri*rniailR7Vii-sifing
11Q8/3 which 'began lath last simmer
. . • ,
apparently •Is net continuing.,
,
Whether tyadevelopMent will ilrovo..
a:minor Isetback or•:a ,serimis,
lnter-
• riii4ton, in the. "biltineat• •UPtiirn", ' it
Isaid; will:. depend ,on the aminintlrof •
increase •in private ependngfor; cent,?
struction and capital goods..
"Parts of the present business slack
may be this td-expansien of consumer
goods lines at i• faster clip than .con-
struction and :capital goods, , the ur--
eau, said, ,
Commerce • department °Metals ,,
„agreed:the heavy goods have not May;
ed upWard, • as rapidly ,fis Consumer ,
goods. They asserted, however, that •
the 'aggregate "Wetness Is iengthen---,
ing Its ,stride.
Industrial production 'far, the first
1917qua.rter was 21.9, per cent. over
the same 196 period', these officials .
said, and this rate 0 increate;. was
maintained thrmigh April and . early
.,SophistiCated ,Sweets' Improve
May, • •:,this. advance, they, dcic;?• .13
t/W.14§1.4,44irpig4.1xo,.01-tIgt,11.4-•
ot-3.930, .
•
Cost of tilllng t.46. "CA:. henteWiWt
grocery batketls.ths higithet, in six
six
years, reflecting , ,the h tribute "levIe
aiainSt ;the'•,eonsiiler's • Pooketbedli
hir," the, 1935 ":drought, 'a study„ •of food
prices, th• Chicago wholesale and 're-
tail niarirets disclosed. • •
. • ,^dePartinenf.' ef agrimilt4re••
Survey showed the Market basket's
cost is: about 10 Per. cent. higher: than.,
a year ago and 50 per cent."Digher. .
than thslowPoint of early log •
• Mk Aherhart Say's he has no desire
for a,ieneral election , in. Alberta
This is One item in his policy ,which
'we can ' understhrid.-=-Dttavia—Jour:'
nal.
--9 •
Jo, the earlysumnier•seaSenr POme-
thing with a 'dnuit and, even
' should pep UP the dinner menu. , The
, desserts ,auggested here have •a":
:banquet air with their sophisticated
flaVe.r...combitiationsi ,,yet • they are
• veil easy .to, make ri •Ginger ' implies+
sunny lands, lands,' and , fine,. preserved
ginger bring a prosperous ' feeling—
an, emotion .that permits forgetful-
ness of the long rainy 'season we've
, .
•"Axe!" he whispered. . "Quick
new!" ' • •
He :was off again like
shadow among the trees, guided only
by • the direction of the..
Claudia' followed as best she Could,
• her breath coming cnilekly in her ex-
.' citement and 'effort to keep lip with
Ching: She 'felt that he had guessed
; something 'definite from that ‘regular
tap -tap that sounded Monotonously
—nearer now.
What had Ching LQ, sensed? What
Was ,going. nn ,in •the mind of that:
little shade* weaving his way through
,the trees? There were only two men:
in the woods here at this time •••
which et theui tvzas cutting a tree
down? And- what of the other? •
•••'.•
••••,6
dia 'threaded her, way after •Ching.
;Le:: ' The tapping continued, nearer,.
louder. They must, be almost upon
thcm now.
• Ths, Chinese turned,. whipped off
. ,
-his mitten :and. laid. his finger across
his. lips.: Claudia,: nodded. He had
, silenced her atthe very : moment.
When 'she :wanted to scream , -,out!
Ching. Lo had tiSsUped naturally the
position Of leader; Claudia gave 'him
her full truit.,, He had quickened ,hia
, pace;` Claudia knew somehow that '
he felt as she did—they, must get
, there before ',that -tapping stopped!,
Thepough the :treetshe caught
.Crocheted Peret•and.Bag Make Up Laura Wheeler ,
s "Loire Set"...
the red glow of a fire—her f heart ' CROCHETI; ACCESSORIES .,
leaped, and she sped on towards that
-
flickering light.. 'Ching *Le, had van-
...
"-itheil,-•-bul•Shi no longer looked' for .
-,, him., ,She -wanted ' only to .reach ` the
• She, had to skirt a thick group of
• Poplars; and, then there was a great
:fallen log, to ;be -negotiated. As she
,came .up to:it, she 'saw the flickering
•'firein full .view, saw, bk its light the .
figure. of a man twinging an axe,:
• chopping: at aAree. That Man' was ,
'Dick—Dick Whalen!'• „
She stood there, weak with relief,
and 'would have called out but, that
•
her breath was coming too quickly,
and she lett the -tears stinging her
• eyes. Also the Chinese had enjoined
• Silence! Chhag Lo, Where was he?•• She
looked round her among ,the dark.
tte.es47Iooked ,back at ,Dick: swinging
• his axe. Then she „saw, .a sight that.
f.re2e :her stiff witli-lorrOr!
Another figure, 'a Man, who came
Oat Of the shadows just behind Dick
-7,-a' Man, with an axe raised with
both arms above his head --behind'
• .. •
Dick—. -crept ' slowly nearer---nearet.
Claudia'. tried. to scream a" warning,
but no Sound. time. The Man raised
his ake still higher:, The tree- needed
. but -one More 'ttreke Of the. axe'
'to fell it. it was:swayinr, ,and,she
. knewthat the moment' Dick stopped
his axe and let. it -f41.1,, thp
figtire wonld Strike •
- ' (To be concluded), ••
other's Role
Becomin.p.,Harder
,m)
:-$0eiker, Predicts Much Hardhip
'F;or Mother.. in 19$50,...„
ls, going td.'•aSk. a
dee,t-nib1etof,411e-Itiother-of-40-5-0t
, Is asked of mothers In 1937. Mrs.
W. E,-Mathewe. told .4 large .•gather-
ing of :1nOthere, arid daughters here
'It, Is going to be much tallier for
mothers 1..950. to 'bring .her daugh-
ter tip in the fear adinOnition of,
the Lord than' it Is., to .do .sp tOdeY;'",
• Mti.:MatbeTs, fild, She Is the Wife of'
'a 'fernier pastOt of Temple bafifist
Church .and Is a. mother. She now'. 're-
sides with her 'family, in 'Detroit:.
has demanded
',a. greet Moto'.
,Of rrie. than ;; had any •eoneept16n. of
when 1 was.a., young girl but It is
ing to ask great deal :More of' YoU;''
she dedared to the daughters assent -
bled; More and titore,•: ths. World Is
"fbecoming."a PlaCe4fOr the woman who ,
IS 'Prepared, by that -I mess wemUst
-.1.hle"ta do 'aotsethisk,eiiqootidssiiy-
Well. the 'wntlit IS:asking for Special-.
sed Workers. • • ' * .
• " f I had the i'.;ipport y vo.„triy.
lite • ()Vet again, know some
one thlng And.. de it In the
very b.estr.,peas•lble• • Itay, vilifeh It.
could 1)0 done 1 WouldAlga, beveniere.,
interests. ninde fi'om y 01604 e4r..,
• . •
'PATTERN 1181 '
It's- a "Love Set"—this matching 'beret and bait' You'll love
crecheting..it,:.too,r4n a, simple crochet stitch, alternated alternated with Puff
stitches. • Smart in white, or pastels, crocheted in white ' cotton.'
guimpe or yarn! Pattern 1.181 contains •thrections for L making _the
set 'shown; illustrations \ of .it and of all stitches used; Materiar re-
quirements. , s"'"
Send 20Scents in Stamps of coin (coin preferred) .for this pattern
; to Needlecraft Dept.,' Wilson Publishing Co:, 70 West Adelaide :St.,
Toronto..-: Write: plainly 'rATTERN,.NIJMBER, .your, s NAME and
. .
eer.. I. would .have , Vocations •begun
when .I was yOung .sp,' that ; wahld
have :nninerOus thingsto turn to :in •
later 'year*, when suck things are SO, '
much needed:. to ' willistands
knOcka .and bumps.
"
, , , . . • •
'-',For you who "are not trained „for .
special work It. is going to be a rade..
awakening some day to wakenit and
'find 'that Your best just good. en-
ough. There are t a many treacly like '
that. .1:i..03itionts are ' 110)1 waiting for
••• such as thein.. • . •
""There is 'net.•:•an adult •today who
has' 'reaChetl• maturity without some '
handlcap," Mrs. Mathews said, . "some-
thin:g that if ailOwed to • grow from
Youth to old ag; Pale
the individual down ?all through life.s
, some le- just plaIi laziness,
r.so.d. to be ite frank, I tkink.:I' could
onafifY Very, well, in 4that 'class
But if you will take • the 'advice
bit reach into. your •life...1 'Would .give
ElO•filY gray halts if 1 could just be 4
girl of 14 fake sadV,antage.
• of the leisure that was mine. 4. had
ray • tasks 'to do because i Was brought
up on. a 'farnii.'bUt there.t.lrnes
Oen r had sothipt to da but sit 'sit. and
rOCk 'tithe . away , a' eltair,.
"Others there 'are •,who a 'snap- •
py, quick Aemper, ruin , their tives•be-
.eallge they Will'..not Curb their feel- •
ings ,Scores Of other handicand, are
Abe. col -anion lot of all of Os; You all'
know
iiii , , ,
,thete are 'others Vrho',Seein'tdc
thrive amongthe thorns' of:,life: Those'•
.L1VtRHBI.LE7--
Ana. you% Jump Out nt Bea Lit the
. . •
Morning Rana to go •
Tho liver ithoutd pour outpontida of
„ . ,
liquid bile Into,oar. bewele daily. If this' bile
Is net OnWing freely, your food doesn't digest.
' It itist.deettynin,thdbo*els. Gas bleats' Pp .
iMer.atonsiteli. You. get Constipated...flarinful
poisons O. intothe body, and you ,fedl. emir;
tiOnkatid the world looks Ptink.
, A More b�wel inovetaent doesn't always get
• at ttio cause: You peed something th4'worka
on the liver as Well. It takesthose good,, old
••••,Garter'ik,LittletLiVer.,131116.td get theao.tWo
' 'pcunde Of bile ndiVing 'freely andmake' you -
feel "up and Ifitrtniess and gentle;they,
'Make the' bile 116* freely: They do the WOrit
of calornel but h velur caloniel Or MerCiity,in
them. Ask, for "(7 iter`a. Little tiliet Pills by
pinto! Stubbcit 4toutti anything elee. 26e.
'Iscite No. .23— 3/
• •
,•..
who have an unbeatable PhilOsePhi.
Can you find that eeeret? :it
, greatest 'gift -=-• a. philosophy Of life:
that will not let life' beat youeven
In .ita worst moinents,, My Wish for
all, o youis that you may find it."
To Teach Jobless
Domestic Science,
Young Calgary Woman Lawye• r'
Is Advaneingilew Plan
. cALOARY..-.7;-. EstablishMent '' of 'a
crottage school where. unernploYed
girls would be taught domestic
science is ' advocated by Miss miss Mary.,
Duncan/ young sCalgary Woman la*:.
yer. • .".Sernething 'definite, ..besides
'rehishs,. i$ .nedifed for younegitit 'Who
are jobless, she believes. .;
Misa :Duncan expects to Start such.
a school this summer where girls
Would*be,taught•cooking, sewing, de-
signing, interior decorating; 'nrid
how to meet iieoPle and how to
'
• "If ;the„girls . are not working,'!
she said in an interview here, "they
hay iswell he . doing something
worthwhile for :thernselves •• and.'the •
community." '
At..first.
obtained to ,teaoh the girls,, if Miss
Duncan is successful with her plans
tO establish the school, but later she
hopes to interest' the geverninent. in
What she believes Will prove.a worth-
while enterprise, and' secure teach-
ing aid: • .••
* An appeal ,, :for • furniture and
equipmentWill be • ade. "Practical-;
.1Y any old, things do ''to .% begin
withi". she said. " paint them
and fix: them and •pr. .bly learn a
'great deal in .the process.
• „
• ••,,. Not al1. g41rnon spend t eir live
.„'alternateli in fresh aiid It water. •
In Maine, ,Canatiti. and OrWay are
Irodloeked ,t itiJr44 their
entirelives in• fresh •Water. '
, Ginger Minute' TaPiocs, is "flavor-
some and -nutritiOus, •-••• a splendid
finigh for a light dinner Or lunch.
' 1-3 cup quick -cooking. tapioca
1-3 cup. 'sugar : •
1=4 teaspoon telt
; egg
• egg' white, beaten '
'1-4 cup 'orange juice
f 1-3 „tablespoons, ginger syrup '
• 2. tablespoons chopped preserved.
, • • "
• , ginger
, 2 tups,
1-4 cup cream whipped
Combine quick -cooking .tapioca,
sugar, 'salt; , orange Peel, egg yolk,
and .mix in top of 041111)1i boiler and
stir enough to break egg yolk. Place
over •rapidlirboiling water, bring to.
scalding pointt.:(allerW 3 to, 6 minutes)
and cook '5 intrudes, stirring 'fre-
quentlk. Remove from boiling Water'
•,and remove peel:, Add 'prangs juice,
.•
:Fold small amount; into ',egg' :whites,
add remaining tapioca; rnixttire and.'
, ,
„Vend.. Cool—mixture thickens as -it
When cold, fold in cream: Will
'Serve 6. •
` rhubarb' on the Market, now is
,
costly, : but it has a welcorne
•
summery tang. Thissimple: dessert
'gives a delicious fresh .fruit sweet,
most .attractive, in color and flavor.
• 17-2t, cup sugar
1,2 cup Water
11'Pound rhubarb, cut' 'in small •
pieccs
1 pkg.:quick,Setting:„ strawberry
• _
Jelly powder .
Combine sugar and water and heat
Until sugar has dissolved. Add rhu-
barb , and ,siminer . • until tender.,
Measure. add water to make 2 cups:
,bissolve jelly ,liovider in warM .rhu-
barb Mixture Only, quick -setting
jelly
:jelly powder :that dissolves in watin
solution will be satisfactory. Turn
inte'mold., Chill Until *frit:, Un-
ThO14. • Serves
,JeIied Ginger rears ;gives a. One
'finish to a chicken. dinner. :
8 halves canned pears drained .
1, pint -*arm, pear 'Alice and
water
.tachbolepsppoedon ' preserved • ginger,'
2 tablespoens, ginger syrup
1-8 ,teaspoon salt.
pkg.:..qUick-setting. 'lemon j*C115'
Heat ,.PenrS; yggr juice and ginger
syrup t� boiling. ' Reineve pear's.; add
salt.' • •Dissolve quick:Setting ,jelly
powder in 1 pint '
and Water. Pytf-T5f in--nOld and *ar-
range 'pears , jelly mixture, having.
rounded „side up. Chill -until- • fin*
Serve Piain :Or With,. Whipped,. creoin.:.
Serves 8 -
SUPPER pisiq
•:Sausage 'Rarebit
•'1.- pound sausage• •
. 2 tablespoons butter ,
, 1-2'pound soft,-inild cheese, cut in.
• ' Pieces : • - •
L.emp thin cream
1-4 teaspoon -salt •
n ea e'
17,--•
eggs, nit -64ten, '
t ,
•, Cook .sausage Until done in frying
pan., Meltqfbutter; no Cheese. and
seasonings. : As soon as the cheese
add cream gradUally,, and
• slightly beaten,' eggs. When rniXture
is smooth; add' the ';c0oked. sausage
and serve .on toast points. •:
QUICK SALADS ..
Thee inexpensive, yet very
tasty and :aristocratic looking salads
inaY be maae`:,quickly for the bridge
party; or unexpected conapany. ,
Starter" Salad
Crisp lettuce, . watercress, pine-
apple, grapefruit cubes; sliced stuff -
:.ed. olives and :tart French : dr.esiing
fruits and ,greens a* 'salad' beWl '
and toss lightly with dressing shortly ,
• before' serying. , . •
•'Meal-inkme Salad ,
This' salad: calls for shredded cab-
bage, tiny Shrimps; pineapple, sliced:
celery,,,and jerk, French dressing. :plus; •,•
curry powder (1-4 ;teaspoon to f cup
French
French dressing). COmbin'e the first
'named ingredients in a •salad .bowl
and . toss lightly , with the ,dressing
shortly *befOre serVing. •:Be Sure the
cabbage ,
Beautifying The. Job
••ShakesPeate once asked,ironlcally
"What's in .a nanie.r The answer of,
today Seems to be, •''Everything'i. • .
4Samuel Fass1er commissioner of...
Windings in:, Manhatan,' urged the
other day that master plumbers..adopt
for themselves • the new name of
apanitaty ;engine 8e' so as to make a
better impression on the public' 7
' And wisp not? The whole idea, these-
"dakt 7seems to be to beautify your
,•job with a'fatiey title,. We have 'Seen
.the •ptisa' agent blossoming Out as; a..•
.public: relations counsel; *the 'Under,'
taken becomes a mortician, the hait-
dresset becomes' 4 beautician andsthe
movie actress hecothes an artist If
• the plumber, wishes ...ta•becOme
,tarY engineer why shouldn't he?
.•
The' fingerprint is a sure: method
f identifietiVezi and files of the
Eittelif-atliiiieitigatioit.'Of", the • ta-
partnient Of Justice, in 'Washington,
contain more than 4,060,000 sets of
them '
.t
,
"Ho* do youkUelci.,'Your outhouse clean?"
1, use 011.1.,ETVS LYE regukrly. . It keeps
things clean r sanitary" •
U S
e closets kept
clean this easy way!
.40k
outhouseodotswhen
you use Gi11tt's Pure Flake
LYe. regu1ai1y. 311,8 .dprink16•,.
hdli. -lin over ,toiit,eiifs:of
ClOgetotiCe'.4 week. There's
no need to ieni6Veeointetits--.7-
*Gillett's does' it •tOi' yp1,4
/ .Citietei; Lye in
tsaittill-0116:31inTiliti.845stahciena784' att);:k'11:6tE3e4t46• '. Never Afrialvei lie' la hot Water.:
;Tans; ':tratelity KUshert avow"u„,0 The action Of the lye' itself heart
• t011et etrrine. Keep tin handy.. thie'Vdoter. . , • .
FREE ROOKLET—th'e ,6il1etel: Lye booklet, telis lioW to usa th1s
0*er:fill Cleanse* tilt &zoos' of i48kt; Send for ',Feirse copy tO-StOidatit
,neande.Ltd4 krAter Me, itdLibrt t •TOrOiitdo Ont.
1.
he Latchstring
Out in Canada for
'Good Neighbor*?
American Woman Speaks
137 of A Vacation Trig) in the
Maritimes'
'The friendliest of stories is writ- '
,
t.r.'n by, 'Alice ..Booth in the current ,
?..;,•:..1ber ' of sGood Housekeeping, tiii-,
' dc,f. the. t!'Lle, °Let's •Qa, Visiting," in •
n'''''',....±.=-,t1,t-tet•-:--•--:,:-
`the nicest, ne`ghbors anytriTity",ever
.had."' Mrs i' Booth says, we are -
"friendly,, holiest and hospitable"
" sadgoes 'oon"-toa ' of a'..'1/4,aat101.1...
trip' the , and 'her f Mily took; one
• summer in :the ," .. ngehne „ ,coun-
• trYr They put .heir ,C,4r 'on .., the. boat
:ft:41A' Poet,On to yarKnnuth: ix:id, thew '
took what What the deierilies, aa -,a ,"circle
trail" up the west ' shore.: and, -back •
, •by the eastern coast.
, She 'says: .
:"There is a .very special :hotel, at ••
•''Digby and „a 'marVellouslohl fort at
AnnaPolis Royal, to , break the :•trip .
• ta.„Wolttrille, ' where I the: shop: Win-
dows :are crowded with amethysts
and wbence:huses leave every hriin...: •
for,tlae country Evangeline loved. 1
,04.424rt.
church, 'at Grand- Pre and'hr•otight: it "!
'home to My .garden for n' blue Mein-' ,
:ory of pea and sorrow." .
• They. went on to. • where, ,
• the man ,Of the family found a like
with 'delicious •trout and, thoY• had the.,
• thrill, of having their :own fish Or •
breakfast, Mrs. Illmth says she Can
still ta'Ste theM:".with "the. jahroty-1
eak'e• and puffed`•potatoei and. sweet
butter'. and thick :country ,creani• that,
came with thein.',', .
She gees' bri• to "and then,'
when at latt we 'had :torn" onrselye
• awa*t.down the • eaStern • cbist by
kararet Bay; .afici..•the
village Chester, ,settiecl by New
• Englanders, after the ltdvolution
a ds:•W_ere 'O *one&
• -tiniatien. 'Past Liverpdbl, .where .
. grassy: lawns slope gently.. to 'tide-
•,Iyaters, and rowboat' ii''prattic:a!ly
the -back :steps ,of .every bobs°, Past,"
a Wild. ,beach Which io the 'only one 1.
have. ever seen 'that 'Showed abso-
lutely no, trace . Of humanity. 'lies
there sitll and old and tiiibulent , as -
it must.'liave• been in the days of . the
,'Yikings, or in: an infinity-L•if •you
ran-fmagine;that-infinitte '
, Doesn't its, make:. yen went, to, go.
venturing- in. our Sister' provinces?
ourist Trade
Means $175 for -
Each Family
c\c,
-"And'BUtOler;-Bakeri 'Firmer and
• Tradesman All Share in It•
. . .
•-• The tourist trade last Year meant•
an additional' reirerme to Canada Of
.$:26:for every Man. woman and ,child
in the Derifinisen,s Or .ehotits'il?-,-Pei •
family,—,a not unimportant sum.
. •
So far as the District of •Algorna
and the 'city. of Sault ,Ste. Marc is
concerned; the revenue'. per :person
was probably 40' per ' Cent. higher,
than the average for. the Dominion,
which gifts Some idea of the* 011,,.
, pertance• Of •the tourist trade. lo this.
,
And that revenue is fairly widetY
, spread: - The 'C. 0 -Chamber of Com-..
.thetce estimates that of every dollar -
'the American tourist, Spends in: Can-
• ada, 4.1 per, cent goes for hotels and
other lodgings or to restaurants,.:.sa,
that ,„it 'is in turn passed Ofl -to the .
Oociet, '.the butcher. -the ',dairYinan
'and the .farmer And, What thev dso'
With •, -the moncy'. when theY.•,get;'.it
passeS:itsaleng te anothe'r larne e.;-
tion .o.f the popula.tion
,• And- an insduStry, WhiCh a
about 1,1!75"::per-,Taliitly, in .
A rkeitis=.-atid-7-vviiieb,. holds 'potential...,
Ides' • f or • a `jyiiich larger ,i•etui:ti. IS ,
W0rtk ng aftcy. Vir:
,
qur coti
.Seottatik,•which .knoNy.s .geod
when. it .e'es it, i' .buying Wore. Can-%''
'.itdiani timber at 1,Iro,(,,1 1it.s
htoiy
,.r.rhe. year bew.:InIng •
�f ttade. ,lietween.,.that'6uy
ntr_an
Canada ,for. ,Feady,niade dors..'•It .
, began •With'doOrs "rionglas fi but
now includes Sento 'white.' pine, and. '
has grown so rapid*/ that last .'.yesar'
, 'Canada gained' by. fat, , the largest
Sliare,..•Of the Scottish trade in
petted doorg. ,Their 'totals, thrac, gh•
. • Glasga0 and tbith, amounted to
70, 1.6041;11y. sr.u! or Cent.' The'
prnicipal eeniineti.tors were the ljtnt-
ed
"
States 7 and 0Wedeiii.s
There Ilea tilat“,been d_tilarked in
eteaee in „the' ,Seottisq4unsumpfieu
, of Kruttern •Unaditin anknee. it "ittn,,..
,faet, ' heen the . ininotft,..nt. of,
.,Eatefti timbers into the. •Seott.',A
'market, and accounts accounts for tlirec-'e,,tiat.,
tol'e,*.Of the. yeses 'import i .*of 1;:.estdru! •
Can'adtal .8Ptt ;
16 6 1 i 'Lao' Lot., ,
dgr: 4.'alt.dawiestrilto hit beeti
ed Mining the Wotkei'S and alF intot
metits:have been haitedi:It would Lo
iniDi5Sg1h1e tO resghio the tot quit , •
going :t� ant‘,Itittlier.extretne than:
Exptieltor. •
1
r‘•
;