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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1910-10-6, Page 66 Tlftffeinto", ne'renEa fl, 1 51 "BACK TO TME [ARM' 3L—The Farm as a Place to Grow Old. .- By C. V. GRIIMORY. /Copyright. tote by Amertran Prete Asso- ctation .l 'r used to be the awbiuon of the. I - farmer to :mike money enough'so' (bat he could afford to move to town end spend•tthe rest -Of bis days in conifori. Now it is the atm Oltlnn .of ,the city ,dweller to ai•cumu- tate eunugb of tide world's goods to' enable him' to purcbaaie n tattle 'ptaee to the country nnI grow, old ha the • open stir. • - • '!'Ilse chime., :a ty'pierd ot- the change ,1n seotGnt•Iit that. haw taken place in regard (0'••ttttn ry life. This change in 'sentiment 6 dile:In n large rucasure to a change In country life itself. Al first ruwitr, lite writ esseDtielly • ' the life .of the pleinet►r. 1t wax a life 4 to them Met the,conotry maks. uta atrongeat apH.ent. . A house nod ::n acre or more of isle: can be perrhn.ed to rented m..•• cheaply thimootottanee Hoer lot in the city: '1'tte'Iib:l•ton tie suppled with all.' tide coni••nst•u,es that the tents;y were noel' Iu urtica tiry. The trolley and the teleph"ne keep theta in touch wItb'their .ray tie -telt 'foe vitt' mall who is p.I a 'hr days•of'the hard Work deut:ted, d 1:; Iucr-smite estnhlien mens or n L•Iot"ry con sill male a t:::r living fro::, the soli. The returns from an_evennrre or.oto of ground will, go tar tewei•d ;rty :,g the Oiruily's firing expete e. The p1ensure of life In the open. where the alr it pure And there lx tittle_10. il"-ttnlr fol. '-'i te' be ham. will, add :year' to' the !ices of the new made farrper, and his wife. Thu freedom from responsibility calls ttn, 1: the light'.hearteeluees of ,youth. TII, 1yr:nay of ottlee hours is 'done tawny 'With. The luxury of independence .att. fined. No sign of the return to the eounirl' 1s more eneourngjng than -tile tendeucl sof the old farme s end ,eheir wives le - Spend the remainder of their days c, the country. Some of the nod f:lrntvr-, who /!Hove l.! town to end thrid' do., - are Witt/Med perhaps. but most Of • them are uot. The enforces} iitlennek tells 'them.-- Thr.' "Harrow - bn'iTndaries of a elty lot +flee them They mile their 'old fri••ud. Ind aeao iota).• The home farm Is n urn: h bet Ler place than the city for the limier ,pend Ills declluiug yottts ter mire. Seasons. It 1n home to him. rind tv fhmtsnetl. plenstant memorial, chide' around every knoll end true. -'1le rem tarn over to one' of the boys the acne, w'tttk of men:icing the faro, end' sic; hpvn meet' of the pleasure of farming without tbe resrp:.nsitelity. It ;on menu the - eoustruettetn of tttt(tbel berme perhaps: but tit; corp rise wi;1 be lets than the cost of a hotter. lee• iheity. Theft• are alwnys 11(110 tasks to t e done, when he feels like work. yet 1�e 'ran emit when 11 fuels like , gnitting. When ho ire not in n, meted to work Olen• ere nlways twig bora to v1 -It. With ices automobile: his born amt, long y IIe end'his wif can 1)ge a't e•re: •'w1 "'p - " they • piano hat the dill's- p:1.4? pleasantly and smooth. ly, Without.,a,ripple of discontent cr the strain -vf getting -needto d new ♦entironmlerit. The pnere•n years Wale felt r .irk•' en either the farmer or his wife, for this sort of life is not cal - a RVTTR!D P Atilt 11111110174 i1 His Ptoo et biirtl-thlpe, and the—reward was only -a felt' of life's-iitco+sltics: Ilut thew' hardships developed a class of haply. virile men -who have nonquered tier Anwrb'nn continent and brought It un-' dee metes • enteak The days of pioneering on the farm are well nigh past. Now tbnt the rough edges are worn off the !rue plraxure +f 11,1' in the nosed 1s be•ginnitia: hpprte latod. ,at not piemle crowded _together .dn the casts for protection, - later for eent•eultnc•t• in trnnsnetitig- business, The city 'never was Intend-, 'ell,primnrlgy non pixel' to live. in the early day. tl:e•eitit•s were deserted. as •soon Its the' danger which" had forced the 'words together v. -us ot•er•.-<The)• tr scattered out to the`tiirmq,wiser' they"otitis] live In melee and ;lent)•. ' When the des'elopurent of the city As .'t bu :inose center began no pert', u• lar peovIelntt was pude for -the home life. People lived where they could, existing; for Ihcir business rattler than Leaking their, business exist for thein. in ell -the yeass In which the cities of %lima Mates have been develop- : In: the home life alwnyu has Ingged behtn Ttue, some of the men who were' t succesefhl In 'aecmmmlating Wealth IIC- ralatlal homes, Rut there l*,no .in in the city far nwlty IMO) bottles: ' ether tnust people live tiered_- one irbes='nnother, layeupon layer. On all. all) eb,s•e and below, the store In which 1•y are free move at will 1s markie y sMctly'de- tined Melte. No wonder t11nt In such circumstance% ratan has tetrad for a` fourth dimension In which flet could expand • - old are.. • • From the standpoint of the ctommu- ally the retired farmers are a vnhur _'ble asset_ A nnnttter of finch f.tmines r l'e'pte'have endured theta tomtit! Ie'ramse It mild them to do so. a nests'- fell and clothed them, but tend- 0055 demmndeil . that they be JIwnys close at hand.- They. knee( tint enm ' where outside the -web of portend -toe lay on olden country, but they knew f no wily In which they could make a llring then'. 'J'he stories they hetarel tr he cnnotry were stories of poor.' 1,,i1, few plenkurrts and a pre- - old nee. They preferred the dlseomtrts to whleb.ther were acres. toured. The rming of electric tennsportntion veldt tai dl the Intron of the -city. It mroe 11 possible for the beet pas,! la- borers to hale bonne of their •nen• It allowed the; ientarittd man, who 'tint to .fewer hours, to i've almost In the eeuntry. 1WIth n gllnipse of snle:teen alai--oonatr#.- We- asst w • fnit'nnt to .have plenty of roost -1n 'emote), the city dweller began t„ cher• left an nmtt,itton. He began Zo long far an erre of his own, with s garden and few betties . nod some chi—kens. where ire route feat and &Trow•- old. The edvence In the ;Ace of food prodnets mode It not only possible, lent cotuparatively *Rey, for the man who hiss given the best years of hos life to ,the city ,to retire to the coun- try Perhaps I should not use the word retire. The. swirling rash of twentieth eegtury 11f* hat hcttle the th m lht of retiring dIRtaatcftrl. The ambitions man lets go lila work with reluct•14nee. He would rnth•r die In 11)0 hereon than to rust away tris re- 'ma'ntng days in 'dieners. Rut there (comets a tome; when the Rtrnngeet roan i feels his grip weaken and his mind rtatter The' hard knocks of a Ammo-. roes Ilse Iletin to make them*etvs (felt. The long boars grow weary on his shnirjers. Borne men are situated iS0 tortunetely that they ems let go by Alegre**,• working as tbey feel like It I and turning over to ethers the tank* K whlrh they ties Idioms igen, how - weer, meta routine.* to mast tL* asset - taw daenande at bedroom to tae far *bast Detre .w amp oat 'erllr'afy- It t, in the euuimuuity give -permanency to Its social life. With little else to do and plenty. 'of time to do it 1n the • farmer -nod his wife eon go ah.'s4. with fhe management of the club or grnnge. '!`hey can devise picnics and suppers and go abend with lecture courses and celebratiois. '. The.' tisane are of lncalcnlnhi'• benefit to, any resumunity, and yet'too 1 often the young fttrn,ers are too bn,sy to look after ail the details connectt't with deem. In looking after the'bnatness affairs of the townsuip and' county and -set' the farmer wbo is out of active buai- nees finds no outlet for bis samples energles. Township ottice. are- by no ascan hjcrntive. Tet it is essetltial for the- good of the community Mai they be filled by men who will take tine to see that thetownsbip.nffairs are properly cunducte•L A farmer who no longer bas a business of his ow:, to demand Ws _best attention is just the man for such a place. The county smpei'vlsors have chnrge Of a great. amount of businelts. Cisd•I ' ie efficiency of their work depend-) 1 t!t condition of $ie roads and bridges. Thi' 'management of a . eognty Is n.• '• small 'job. yet It Is too often totrust - t '11) sense °dice seeking politician le - ('14115)' there is no oue else who lc. o for the place. Isere is snot h• 0111 " inity ter the retired fanner -011t fee e�y "r•*. W�. 05101, A iticrflb$D TAa.Y66'4 e1D11 01f4a TIIT SIGNAL: { OERT(' ONTA RTO PETE INTERFEREDU He Was Not Returned and Healed the Breach. By CitiARISSA MACKIE. (Copyright. ]alta jay American Ores/ Aaee- clation. l Evelyn, having returned her engage. ment ring to Iti,-hard Hallam, Was col- lectiug her otlt hsame purpose• When It occurred to her that she would like to keep one of them. !What should stie retain?, , Why, Pete. Sbe caressed his brindled coat, and a strnnge letup -!came into her throat as his pink tongue licked her little, ringlesg hand. Then -ehe sat up and blinked back the brlgbtnesa to her eyes and complott'd her tu:.k. ' She wondered .t Richard wottid come tonight. No: be. would sulk one day, and•tbeu touturrow evening be' would come. The -next day Evelyn slumped. and lunched and called with istceeding dil- igence. Late in the afteruoon she slip- ped home to a quiet cup of ten In her own sitting. room. There were no let- ters, no utees:lge's—nothing for her. In the eveniug Mr. Malian was an) nonnced. Evelyn trityl to subdue the wild beating of her heart and dallied over the adjustuwnt ,of'a rose in her hair. It would be. all right after all. Her soul etutg with joy;; but. coquette that she' woe, Evciyn-schooled her face to proper severity as mite entered the drnwing room. . • "Gaol -evening. Miss Lovell." sold Hallam,, with grave polteuess, taking ber hand for -an lustant awl dropping it hastily:. "I received your note lost evening. I here brought Junes ruonnd with toe to help earry the stuff away." ' r'he-the stuff?' she stammered. nonplused at his manner anda;tbe strangeness of the situation. "Why, yes," be replied ttteestnlly: ''"you write. that pithad some trifles yon ;control rue to remove from the premises,, and here .1 am." Evelyn lifted her head haughtily. "Certainly," she *hid with nssnmed 1 9 1 bog your pardon, sir, but Wee Evelyn went out." explained the Men ' "Where did she go?' "She didn't• say, sir. She had the dog. and she said she might not return weight."Ilallam stalled enigntatically. "Just tell my man to call arab and take these packages around tu• my roo sus,". he sold to Martin,•- Then he left the house. It so happened that Richard Hallam Was her vw-a•s•Is at the Lumley din• ner the following night. They greeted one another with frigid politeness, and then Evelyn turned her micelles) w l'erele Goodall. who took her In, while Richard devoted himself to Mary Cameron. 1'ercie was a dog fancier. IIe loved doge, he -melee deos, thought dogs, wrol+t,. dogs and showed dogs: hut, above all. ho talked dogs.' He was talking dogs DOW. "For n good, nil around, companion- able dog; one that la affectionate, in. `telligent alai a genuine sport, cow - mend me to a Boston terrier," he said enthusiastically. ' Evelyn shot nn npprebensive glance across Ilio table. Hallam was discuss Ing an entree with caret! attention. but 'she knew he hail heard Goodall's lout: oris; tones. "Oh,' yea,:' she said carelessly. "dogs are interesting, but I want to hear about that skating rink yon are build- ing at V'nec(iff, Mr. Goodall." • ' "But," expostulated Goodall, "1 thought you wore u dog lover, Miss Lovell. Surely your Pete won a blue ribbon!" "Yes, yes." sho interrupted in ago - tilted haste.. Why should be persist In hiking about horrible dogs? "1 adore them. you know, only I want to hear about the rink now," she added Ina low tone. "Very well," he laughed good Oil - !tiredly, "exit the dog and eater the rink: It's a tank 100 feet sentare glass roof, with an ice plant concenleil In the cellar. i 'hen It it*completed 1 shall have a cArnirnl, and I know you will he queen of the festivities! How's that?" • "That will bo delightful." she said :with a -relieved laugh. Dick one frowning into hie' plate now, and atm L- e Children Often Need a laxative—nut you cannot be too careful what you give them, Hush purgatives Insure the bowels and pave the way for lite -long troubles, The new evacuate In NA -EMU -CO LAXATIVES dors the work most elteclively without Irritating the bowels or caustgg any disdomtoit. The children like them for they taste like candy. One of the moat pcpular of the' NA -DRU -CO pre +rations, 2fe. a boa. It You' d, .tt: n ha net y. -t ata -.e.: them send 25t. old we will mall thm .. 20 ,flakes.' l,rur and Clt,tn. ,.1 e' •,vp.nv of C'an.dn, 1, .ted, • • - Meetreat. • Amaleur Photo Supplies We,eorry evellthingf i14 1'h, tit ti,tpieito hILll'. I ihti Packs. Pietro Develeitie •'r'1',at:ag ,till Fixing rowdies etc. r Ce• ,� •,:.••• I'ne • f CAMERAS THE FAMOUS BUTCHER CAMERAS J. Builand, Druggist The Square, Gs;odr►ch. Massey=Harris Agency A full line ut i''duu ,1lachiary Binder& Mimeo, 'biker, Ha Loader>, Manur ispetet� r creole ' I•tret,n r, eh•., tiro= and ).1011el).1011111 l"bit 1 ]lugtt;i• • . e have el.the Standard \\• i -- 1' c n c e <•011111:tIN -, • t}-Ou and ill. 1ir•intG`rtl \\'incl \1':II,, -ogency.for the Mason & colleted sec mi I•ef• Ir" $i hs' ing abu %;thttig , 11 i ia,„.• Good DenC'.t foe.sae., - Robert Wilson HAMILTON ST. GODERICH Keep Pound:n 1 A breakfast in itself. Try it tomorrow apple. Smother therm in cream, and TOASTED TEN CENTS A PACKAG E 11. 11,11.. d let lard Tho” t t.lurx i4 Itch Ow Shown t..I UI acarol, Toe ularrtai n•, 011 'fel 11 tl:D., daae Bullies, o1 et Ins -0 Royal J. 5 5' w art. of° rofth f nwen. (1 Wetlw. nN w"' the wide a Erni," (15" tall F,vRttan.. rlergtu &fore leas' girth, 11 Dien'4eel , T (t per •t' cud headed aefeet• ita' ., c 1 h.' ti, 1,'r m t1 of 1,14tit PIAi1 eel MI rr•idrn as' 01111 yMt let x Ilia , h of Tar! • u'd at t Wl.T.1' R,•l: Mr. ,ten w ei run ahrl. open mi Ad Tie 41, 1 Os& to tics 11 V. ,r31;11Cts' la in no Souk• rat : IYIa 0 Mar morning with a baked sugar to your taste. that Mr—Hallam was experiencing the The rigrl food for start of • the day. • Kellogg's contains . pangs of jwilousy'•substance of building bone and- making muscle. Atter that they Went teethe play, and Dick Hallam ',till danced attcudhuce.. upon Mary Cameron. "Nice girl, miss,Camercn," veutired• —oSottn1r,r•t he -belpicsf to iaTO-Tier cloak aftcr.tbe curtain had rung down for the last time. . . ''Lovely:" exclaimed Evel;n enthusi- astirallj ' "Engaged to Elaifaw:s. cousin, Lsu't sbe?" trace' GoodalL "1- didn't know," faltered Evelyn. "So they •say. Bob Hallam is In the Philippines, you kuow. The engage- ment, hasn't ,been aDOOuncetlt although It leaked out at the club." ` "Oh:" said Evelyn, and it is not on record what I':velyn thought. Three miserable weeks dragged by. miserable for Evelyn Lovell. Dick she saw occasionally, always the same cool. courteous, distant Dick: Nothing more had been said- about. Pete, and ho reweihoa In Evelyn's possession. • that hostage of ber love. Once in the Solitude other room she had attacked tbe astonished Pete and shaken him , forcibly. "You hateful, -horrible dog! If it hadn't been for you I do 'belleve"—i What she believed I:velyu did not ut- tel. so lila aggrieved Pete never knew. One crisp morning she sallied forth With Pete at her heels. She shopped without enthusiasm, - and then, over- come by a, weariness that was unnat- --ueal to her buoy'hat temperament, she went into n certain smart little tea room nod ordered luncheon- Pete sat on :t chair beside her loftily indiffer- ent to the tempting sights and smells that surrounded bit: - The room was deserted cavo for her- self and n group at another table in a far corner screened with palms. She - dLscnRsed her salad langiidiy. - Sud- denly shd ratsed'her eyes andsaw that it was Richard Hallam wbo_ awns, seat- ed at the opposite table—and of course the Cameron girl. She lifted, her chin 1thotteuteur and 'vowed coldly. • Ile returne&it stiffly. She thought lie -wits looking lin rind tired studs sowewhnt bored. It wa. trange thnt such a. 'busy lawyer as I : m could spend time dangling nfter :t cr 'arc like the Carnerou girl. (1h, everyth was strange and no horrid anyway: Pete sat beside her, bus black noetrlltt {Witching ieu1TLitlging: expectant eyes 1 tautened on Dick Ilallam's face. ills --as by n uttitude of tiny muscles -of steel. Snddet y. as 1f In response to some an- ticlpated signal;•he uttered a loud yelp of joy end bounded across the table, leaving disaster in his wake. . Straight a& a din he shot toward Idallarn, who lose'hastily and endeav- ored to quiet the excited animal. Evelyn had . arisen from. her sent' Iter face wits quite white, and it was evident that he wits 'urinated over the contretemps. Hallam advanced toward her, determination In his manner. "i oma n nT join us, Evelyn," he mid' mlthorltatively. "1 ennnot," she whispered brokenly. "Nonsense!" he laughed. "Come; my cousin frmi the Philippines is con- cealed behind the iinlms. You mot meet him." She went. There was gladness in her heart, in her eyes and in the caress she vouchsafed the faithless Sete. "Diet," sbe wild later when they were making sit things right betwess them, "did yon cell Pete to come to .you?" Hallam laughed happily. "I dull" M admitted, ."and"— • ese,e. "A nd 1 told Atm to get," she 11111. tintwl to rho imp., of hie emit the the sort for Nothing will .the Kellogg • He hag plenty of time to do the work properly send to Inveatlgate any mat - ten that ening tap He is a einholen- tial property holder, an•1 his acts are In the line of eonsatl'ative progress and In Pie main allays right. He tokok tr more Impart it eV* Of 1 Fs th.:n If he were In active hnelaeSR for Ili!!!Pelf. The experience of years helps him to govern justly. For the listener with more ability rend larger nmbitinnhiopoKltlonti In the aunt, legiednture are Apex- Our leg'LI- Intnres nn' espeetally In need of morers IneellIA•ernt ferment In the lawmakt'', onontoThen men are nnimpencltnbly mt beet. rind they know how to strike loge -age between an avage betwn n do nothing poll. ry and ane of reekest extr:ivag inee. ed The routery nes men who have toed long enough to gain wisdom and ex portent*. Tse hemen need tbe cots - try. For the Hest good of themselves Ar,l Mr the heat goof of the natio, the, should grow old 1n the country. "LOOKS LIxg ♦ CIIT.1:0TMAa TPATIVAL,' Ba 8AID.. earcle>ssness; "I had fort'; ten for the moment- I will ring for artin to bring thew." . \ They sat in silence until Mat1ip's fat white cnls•es staggered Into'ibe room under the, weight of on assortment of neatly tied packages. Evelyn stared miserably et the sight. Hallam grin-- neir roi'dly, "Looks like a Christ- mas festal:' he Said, with 111 timed )rtvtty. � Martin deposited- the 'pacNet„es on the floor and departediooDkk Ilallam drew n RIM of pnper front ket. "I have nn Inventory here,” re- marked, with n buelnessli:te air th, was' disconcerting- Evelyn felt that she was the vlctl& of some horrible nightmero. - it could not be possible that DIek IfTallntr Tind leen so mean as to keep an account of the gifts he had giveu on birthdays and at Christ- mastide! Where was the generosity and 'love that bad always character- ized letrnl dick? "Let the nn" tie eontlmsed thnugbt- ft , scanning. the paper In Ila hand. "I will All ufr the items. and you may te11 me if they are all here. 1 am sor- ry to' be obli1ed to trouble yell in the nuttier," he added potttety. "It ire no trouble," sbe amid faintly. "All the things are there." "A jeweled bangle, pcnrl hatpins. lace fan, clock. books, gold parse—er - er—a .picture?" he interrogated h•'r doubtfully. "Yee," she murmured in n low, dis- tressed tone, "n picture." "And one dog," he ended stint-ply, re(Hncing the paper in his letter crew. htn Oh, uo—'sot Peter' Rher-repel, rmr an Invnlontnry gestnre of alarns. •• "Oh. yen, fete, of conrse," be said In a matter of fact tote. I "T cannot let him go," she aped de- fiantly. "I insist that the dog shall be in- cluded among the nrUctes." "1 beg you will leave Tett, with me. "We understand each other. 1 love him eo," she saki, with a lump In ber throat. "i regret the necentity, hat 1 cantor (ware him," he replied retontleasly. "1 will bring him myself," Rho said Twenty minutes passed, and levelytsi did not 1r(urn Ile rine she hell "Place remind Mise T.nvell that i nm smiting," he said to Mar'ttto a,, convince you so quickly -- packagetut be sure "THE SWEETHEART OF THE CORN" as the qualify wrapped '1 it's the Kellogg packag'. Every itew—st very good. snappy, eon .v..n1 advert i...n.nt in alas piper STRENGTHENS 'YOUR BLSIIE Try Year fist at it. W'WrV•r ...w 1 Right in th': Game '4147; e.a. tt�i ria rik ' { , fcr Coal cr Woo,' 'THE Pandeta Range ;sfor thccs who desire to ra,<e a permanent i,-ves:.in-r:z. t. 1-.1i,h qui sty' f 'treee:itsw artdtr -s-upc t 1 it tit re CGi,,.tr J.,.i0a &SS �r�.i:ti.c; re. • The, % (.) of ti; r•-ncnra is'vl heavy. f ,a Pods a',u mo.'s are '01 ' toe. ou'•siue wlisr. tht.yc,u:I,ot-kur's or rust o,it. "II E. Hu,&; ,n Pint' . of the ecoid- 1g ;,r, vise antp.. a,1o'wt' ce fur 0,;{r':t,e exp0.r:;rcn ai ,1 contraction ar•ri tL.A.,/ of,tiie meta; cra(.,<Ir;. The Corking ; p is` P-urn,'she:•d wi::cn tougnt o tht: si.rfacn _of tt'a, -Met ti --arid -increases 'ts strbr.gth.. McC; ir'� Cii Gere is ut,ad ho'Ween ' • -ie 3atir is.--- #i1Gb- Gt140); $Tt irtary- ci3rnent, it ,vii1 not cry e t and need replacing: 'The _ . „ 17 •n.!1 tarn,eh and, is many Lr,:S more durabtg to t the coat of nickel o rdioary ranges. The .-Steel Fire Box. Linings are twen ,per cent. heavier than cast or gray I linings. Sulphur fumes, so det}true, g . to cast iron. cannot penetr e the hard, smooth as glass surface Qf Semi -Stell. The Grates have (Irge Feces, 'which allows the wear tc', be distributed on -- . three sides. insurirg triple durability.. If you want a range of guaranteed quelny get the Pandora. It's built to give you lasting service. For Sole by The Howellillardware Co., Limited MF_Clarys Stands for Guaranteed Quality Vancouver SI. John. MB_ H•m,llen. raliihry That's where' to whim you - are l.,tk • _ •obeeit (:roeerie.. 11 ate not advrrti••i'ne spreiel hergain'•, t'•r eie pmj ern flaw lit w,/ 1 le,ttt,tn for v epialit y., Try •••• Teas Sp:.es Canned Goods Butter and Eggs. We know we run i Cot`ees Sheers Foo Sturdy &- C r TFIE t;itta'1,,k44 On qhs Sleet* i' " Seta Rum o'o ti. Tse nTr � A Its !Slue 1 A he. atrmP .t 11, 11,• I'd 1.•t Acute 'tad :n h iv 4011 1110 10 11.1 Penh Ago at 1 lam AOrir te hmth faro Wa arilel to t atn tt uy a Kodak Don't go on your soh , 'Without a Kodak. The 1, vet y early ell other styles. so, All histrnetiones free. oo genii us your films todevelep and print. SALLOWS Street and Square wee Mrs eine he ket ki