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•
S1CNALS
Chan
g thc Lion's
BY MARY PARK WILLE.
Dick Walters swung across the Lees'
'wide lawn, his muscular arms swaying
loosely from their pivots of sturdy
sheulders. A tender, half -wistful
smile played aroued his generous
meuth. Keen black eyes ,g‘lowett 'be-
neath their shading of heavy brows.
His broad -toed tete-echer nines hurried
over the pale -green grass. Umiotiectl,
the delicate new-born leaves fluttered
ou each side.
Little Janet Lee had just informed
him that her mother and Aunt Nelle
were- sewing in the arbor. Dick was
hoping that Molly Les might soon new motor,"
remember some housewifely duty. neghe semi you
a'?"
bout mcar
Then, alone with Nelle Gralami he Diele asked, "t came on purpose
pose
telmom"
_
to
could tell lier about his new auto. He I
would ask her to -try it to-monmey, and e
l
e s eyes danced mischievously,
maybe—maybe—he'd find the cour- but MoNy interposed. "Toni saw you.
age to ask— taking it home last night and gave
l
9
out here," Dick explained his abrupt
appearance,
"Why, hello, Dick! Here's an extra
cushion. Melly and I are enjoying
the spring."
Dick slumped down into the rustic
seat, giving his knees a muck -needed
rest. Always diffident in Nelle'e com-
pany, he felt worse than usual to -day.
"It's a nice day," Dick volunteered
as he mopped his burning face.
The women agreed that it was. •
"I heard something nice about you,"
said Nelle. "I heard that you had a
And you cant honestly, truly tea
5 s the news."
which one you Eke the best.?" Molly allaere followed some rambling con -
Lee's incredulous tones were borne to versation, with Dick's contributions
him on the breeze. almost nil. Then Molly• gathered up
"No, Molly, I honestly can't," he her lapful of sewing and started for
heard Nelle's voice replying. "I like the door. "You people will please ex -
every one of the three. They are so cuse me," she said. "I must see what
different, and each one is so fine in Janet is up to."
his way. And that old adage, about Left alone with his divinity, Dick
absence making the heart grow fonder sat fumbling with his hat. "Don't yoa
- " d
d
oesn't work bit a with me. I've tried want to try itc he venttired an
it. It's the one that is being nice to cleared his throat.
me now that counts." "What—oh, the car? Yes, I'd love
to go riding in it. When shall we go,
Dick, standing like a statue, frozen
be- Nelle's words felt a burning wave and where?"
• "To -morrow?" Dick's -voice was
of red flooding his face and neck. He,
Diek Walters, was eavesdropping on sager-
"We'll go wherever you say."
s
his beloved! He turned to leave, her Dick made hiadieux as soon as he
words ringing in his. ears: "eve the could, for he had numb to think about.
the way home he tried to sort out
one that is 'being nice to me now that Oh
counts!" I -Ie wanted to be alone to the jumble in his head. He was re -
digest what he had learned. Nelle liable and sturdy—like his clothes and
was fond of three. They world be square -toed shoes. It seemed that he
Fred Blake, Will Glover, and—hina- had real rnailh°°d and was restful, ace
self. As he cautiously turned and cording to Nelle. He couldn't hope to
started to go, he realized that he acquire Will's good looks, but he
might get some of his style: •Wieh
dared not. He must make his presence
he might grow enough like the com-
posite man to cause Nelle to decide
on him. .
He had the devotion, no question of
that, and he'd been giving hew box -es
f candy Candy and, flowers Will's
style and Fred's genial way! He
newould begin to shOW Nelle to-reorrow.
known. Pre.cocious Janet would
be that, and' a genial way (like Fred'e),
sure to mention his visit. He simply
could not advance! The girls would
be embarrassed, won.dering how inuch
he had heard, No telling what' they
had said. before he 'got close enough
to bear.
• ram
go. He felt hot and uncomfortable. He stopped at the Elite shoe store.
No one bet Dick could imagine the de- He usually patronized Brown's. At
licious shivers that thronged leis
Brown's they knew what he wanted.
spine; the pounding of his usually
It was "another pair just like these."
stout heart; the paralysis of his
brain, his lips, his feet; all these he But this was a special occaelon end'
Brown's would never .understand. He
had to subdue and fight. because of
brown•Te-yed Nelle. emerged from the dear of theElite
.,
with a parcel and a satisfied smile.
He shifted his weight to the other Ready-to-wear suits 'were next in
foot, uncertain what to do. Nelle had °reel.. Threre was no thne for tailor -
quoted an old saying, and one Popped mad'es. Here, too, he avoided his fay -
Suddenly into his head. "All is fair °rite arm and entered_ the Fashion
—in love and war." AS he puzzled shop, When he left he was laden
over the ethics he heard Nene eu- with boxes.
That night, behind loeked docs,
"I know it's awful," she was agree- Dick donned' the tout ensemble. "I feel
ing with Molly. "And I know I can't •like a fool," he told the mirrpr, "and
keep three eligibles dangling on the you tell me I look like eve. Maybe
string. I wish I could. They give me this coat is classy; it's too skimpy to
such heavenly times. How am I ever be much else. These narrow shoes
' going to decide? You. wise, exper- sure pinch my feet and they stick
ienced, happily -married matron, ad- away out past my toes. I s'pose the
vise me out of the lore of your own togs are all right—when I get used to
eventful past." them." He sighed and wentron in
, "Why, Tom and I simply fell in tones of regret "1 always did like
love," Molly laughed and hesitated. looms:, comfortable duds that I could
"There was nobody else—for me."
"So easy," sighed the other. "Not
\ a single complication. In my case,
I've thought and thought. I've found
only one solution and- that's an im-
possible .one.
"And that is—" prompted Molly-.
larging on her dilemma.
put on and forget. m afraid .these
new clothes won't be that sort. They'll
weigh heavy on my mind. I mustn't
forget to be genial, ,too. Talk of
cheerful thing and smile. This stunt
shows- how rntic.h I want that girl—
trying to make myself over te Iplea.se
"If I could find a man with Will's nee."
good looks and his splendid. style, Ile took one last anxious survey of
Fred's lovable, genial way, with his the, queer Dick he saw in the mirror.
unselfishness and devotion, and Dick's "I gruess it's all right. I'm hoping it
real menhoocl and reliable qualities, is. That surely doesn't look like me!"
I'd marry him on the spot; but in Dick Walters, in his new roadeter,
that case he'd be so perfect that he'd called for Nelle the next afte-recon.
never look at me." When he appeared at the door in his
"All you want is a sueierman,e new attire, she found it hard to con -
mused _stet e. "You'll never find him.' ceaI her amazement.
"Oh, know that," Nelle readily "Where shall we go?" he asked, as
• agreed. "Thet's evhat makes it all she 'settled herself. "Sweets to the
SO perplexing. When I'm out with sevect," he added, dropping boxes into
Will l're proud of him. His clothes her lap,
always fit just so. He has such won- "Candy—two boxes!" She exclaim-
derful taste in dress and wears his ed, "and a big bunch of violets, too.
clothes so es -ell. Waiters fairly tumble Thank rope, Dick. Where shall we go?
over themselves to get what he wants Oh, let's drive along the Lake Shere
at once, I look .at his flabby shoes, road."
and 1 picture Dick's broad -last, square- "All eight." Try hard as he could,
toed °neer, Dick never' gets cheap be could find nothing "cheerful" to
things; you know, but he has never say,
licaed the word, 'fashion.' Somehow While Dicks attention was held by
hie clothes look just like him, Tellable his car. Nelle studied the man beside
and sturdy, Then, maybe, 111 be out her. 'She drew her brows in a puzzled
with Dick, and he's so substantiaLand !reeve. Dick didn't seem Dick at all!
restful, Then I'll remember that Will Likely it was the new spring suit arid
is qiiicktempered, -variable, and hate -Yes, Mid pointed -toed shoes. She
clened to be jealous. And Fred—he's wondered hove it came that Dick had
always jelly, and everybody lilies him.chosen clothes so lanlike him. ("l'hey're
Re gives me candy Pm sure he cae't quite the sort that Will Glover wears,"
altoril—and 'he's a clear! But he is was the thought that wentthrough
a happysgo-Mcky type and he never her mind. "They suit Will, but they
will really eucceed. 1 think -1 love look feeny on Dick, • You ean't See
r them all." dile man for clothes."
"I think you don't love any of "I think the new car is a dandy,
shoes, the snug -fitting coat atmoyed
him, The bat seemed te be formed
of angqee and,
wSuldn't settle dewn
•ornfortably, And constcintly con-
scious of hie new garb, he was re -
that der inuat be genial. Gn-
indeed! -It was impossible, hi
theae foolish togs, for him to he
natural even: How could he hope to
be buoyant and gay, te charm Nelle
by his, pleasing niarneer?
"I never knew Dick to be mcody
before" mused Nolte in Surprise "It
seeme an effort for him te talk, I
wonder what ails. him!"
The drive came to an end at last,
ahd, Dick eitowly opened the door.
What a miserable failure the day had
been, in spite a all his hopes! He
couldn't go en with the game any
more and: he simply wouldn't try. If
he won her, it should be as Dick.
1 -lis eyes grew grave, hie ehoulders
went back, and the set smile was wip-
ed from his face. He threw the irri-
tating hat from his 'head and fileed
the girl in the ear.
"Say, Nelle, I'm 'through with this
masquerade. I've felt like a fool all
day. And I'm Twilling to bet that you
think leek like one—don't bother to
deny it, I know. ,Onee a man named
AeCop made a fable about- an ass in
a lion's Skit. He crawled under the
hide and then ran around' trying to
scare everYthing in sight. And then
he began to bray, He couldn't be a
lion no 'matter how hard be tried',
Nelle, Pm only a miedrable donkey,.
but I did it because—hecause—."
e"I•do-tilt understand—"
"You will understand," he respond-
ed savagely. "I heard what you said
yesterday. Will's style, Fred's genial
manner, and my stability, think,
were to be the attributes your ideal
man should have. I wanted you to ---
like re b=
estso I thought up this
fool scheme. laought clothes they
said were the latest style and shoes
that pinch my • feet. It only shows
what a perfect dolt a Man in love can
be: I planned to make myself over
inte the sort of man you'd admire.
tried to -have style and be geniel, and
eee what a enix-no I've made, I want-
ed to please you-lanai:is yott Niro. Oh,
laugh if e'ou feel Melined. I can't be
stylish and genial and I don't want te
any more. If yeti ever etre, it will
he for nee, without any fancy fixing:Just IMelt, plain donkey, without his
lion's skin, Of course, since I cut this
caeier, We no use to. ask yell;
but I'm corning to -night for my
answer. I don't went it till l'y - eh d
these. And that'e all there is to. tell,
I euee'S "
He stepped stevey from the door.
Carefully he aided the girl to alight,
then sprang back into the car. With
a .rattle of gears, he whirled away,
-leaving Nelle ,berett ea speech. e
From behind .the „ curtain, ,some
hours la,te.r, Nelle, watched her lover
come. I-1.is arms -swung freely with
his stride, from their pivots of sturdy
shoulders. His left hat eat comfort-
ably on his head with its character-
istic, curves. He wore the accustom-
ecl blue serge, made loose and, un -
hampering. Her face were a tender
smile.. "Reliable restful—a real
man," she breathed. "Lionheaet in
his shaggy, skin!
SHis foot .was on the step. he hur-
ried to the door. ,"I've .come," he said,
"as I told you I would. I'm my own,
Irian again,, you gee,"
"Come ie," she welcomed' with
gloveing eyes. ' "Have nice you look'
to -night. I've been thankless" she
"where
youon with misehievous face, where
you had your' fahleeWrong, You are
King of the Forest without making
believe. • Your shaggy skin belongs,
But 'what was wrong this afternoon?"
Her diniples came and Went. "I
thought itall out shite you were here.
It is so funny, you sally Dick! I know
what the -trouble 'really was. It was
a great Eon I ea*: And would' yrotl'
believe it, this foolieh King was hay-
ing a dreadful time trying to make—
a donkey—of himself!"
alinard's Liniment for Dandruff.
A out t
e 'Jou 5e
The Birthday Cake.
Any good cake recipe will do for
your birthday cake, which should be
made in layers, with a coin, ring and
thimble, wrapped in waxed paper,
placed between the layers. The cake
is covered with frosting, then decorat-
ed with one canclie for each year, tThe
candles to be lighted just before the
guests enter the dining -room. Or the
cake can be kept out of sight until it
is to be served, when' the candles be-
ing lighted, it can be carried: in and
;placed before the person whose birth-
day is being celebrated. When the
time comes to serve the cake, this per-
son should blow out the candles, re-
move them and place them on a plate
provided for the purpose, tThen cut thei
°eke into slices for serving The!
I ces ready
person getting the coin is supposed to
attain wealbh; ehe ring means an early
marriage, and the thimble means
spinsterhood. These trinkets can be
omitted if desired. The small candles
and rosebud -shaped holders are :very
inexpensive and can be bought at most
department, house -furnishing and no-
tion stores.
Cool Dishes for Hot Days.
Caramel tapioca,3 cup brown
sugar, 2 ceps water, 1 cup tapioca, 1
cup water, Ys teaspoon salt, 2 tea-
spoons vanilla. Soak the tapioca_
several hours, or until softened in one
cup of water; add the remaining water
and the sugar. Bake slowly for two
hours in a buttered baking dish. Chill
and serve with cream.
Snow pudding -14 box gelatine, Ye
-cup water, Ye cup lemon juice if un -
flavored gelatine is used, 11/. cups hot
water, 1 eup sugar, 1 teaspoon lemon
extract, We caps hot water, 3 egg
whites. • Soak the gelatine in one-
fourth cup water until softened; add
hot water, stir until dissolved; add
len-ion juice, and one-half the sugar.
When the sugar is dissolved, strain
and set en ice until thick as honey.
Then beat with beater until white and
light. IP,olTd into this the egg whites
and remaining sugar, -which have been
beaten together until light and stiff.
Put into Ia large serving bowl or individual dishes"'as' `desired. Keep in a
cold place until served.
Sauce. for pudding -3 egg yolks, 1
• tablespoon sugar, 1'cup mili, Ye' tea-
spoon lemon extract. Beat three egg
yolks until light, add one tablespoon
of sugar and one cup of milk. Cook
slowly, stirring constantly 'until it
coats the spoon. Flavor with one-lea:1f
teaspoon of lenion extract. Chill be -
f' •ri -
Strawberry ice—Cook rice in plenty
of water (twelve times, amount of rice)
until clone, Dram -and cool. Fold into
whipped crearn (1 cup of whipped
Cream to two cups of 'cooked rice).
Place fresh strawberries in the bot-
tom ef serving "dishes, sprinkle wieli
sugar and Tadd two "tablespoons of the
prepared rice. Put more berries ori
Lop, sprinkle with sugar and serve.
Fruit blanc mange--Dissolvee two
tablespoons corn starch in two cups
of fruit juice. Add sugar to taste.
Gook until thickened and pour into
meulds. Chill and serve with cream.
Fruit sage—ea cup sago, 3 cuPs
water, 8 cup.e 1/2 cup sugar, I4
teaspoon salt. Soak theago foe a
Shoft gate' In -the weeateadcf lhe
e ,
co•ok. until sago is clear and add the
sugar and salts Cool slightly and peer
Over raepbeigies or blackbeimies whieh
have been placed in a serving bowl.
•
Set away to chili. Serve with or without cream
:
tiOatessl pint radii, 4 egg
yolks, 1 egg White, 4 tablespoons
sugar, 3 egg whites. Beet four egg
theta," Molly spoke decidedly. "VI"Then Dick," Nelle bravely cut ,aento, the
you really love A man, emit won't pick silence.
pet Ins faelts, jest forget it rows
ranisi enjoy yourself, Time will settle
I the difficulty'," Do you think this lace
Sheald he fuller?" '
• ' The rtalk, changed now to cloth and
I lace: Dick regained otitamed com-
posure. At last, he told himself, this
was his cue to appear' on the scene.
I He had 1» gd en; because of, Janet, so
hes advanced to 'the arbor.
find: yoU folks
_
"Do you like it? 'Honest? I'm well
satisfied. Anti say, she can hit the
high spots. Shall I let her out a bit?
VV'ouid you like to ride fast?" he
meeried,
"Yes, to all questions," she gaily
'replied and the landscape went whiz-
zing by.
As Dick had feared, his new attire
Wouldn't let itself be forgotten, His
feet ached in their unaccustomed
yolks and .one egg white slightly, add
the milk And cook in a double boiler
until thickened. Pour in a serving
dish and set away to <hill. Beat the
three egg whites and the sugar until
light and Stiff. Fold into this one-
half cup of crushed fruit and spread
on top of the chilled custard.
Raspberryade-1 cup rasperey juice,
2 teaspoons lemon juice, 1 cup water,
4 teaspoons sugar, 8 bruised mint
leaves. Stir until the sugar is dis-
solved and place on ice to ceol.
Raspberry and currantade—1 eup
raspberry- juice, lie, cup currant juice,I
1 cup sugar, 1 teaspoon lemon juice,
2 cups cold water. Stir until the sugar
is dissolved. and chill. Pieeplant juice
may be substituted or currant juice.
Current sherliet-L22, , Cups currant
juice, 3 'came sager, 2 clips water, 1
egg white. Make a heavy syrup of
the sugar andsevater, the currant juice
and enough water to make a quart.
Put it in a freezer, add an unbeaten
egg white and freeze. Pie -plant juice
may be used. If it id used, the flavor
is improvecl by the addition of the
juice of one lemon,
The Clue.
,
"No, Aunt Em, I don'theant to hear
Lucile's last letter. Ain perfectly
aware that I am cutting myself off
from a very interesting quarter hour,
but hearing you read the letter •isn't
worth the price. 1' get too madly
envious of Lucile. I'd give anything
to be a goodletter writer, but letter
writing is as much ,a 'gift ad singing
is, and I, don't .have it, and. that's all
„
there is about it!"
"You're not usually a shirk, Phyl-
lis," Aunt Em replied calmly.
"A shirk!" Phyllis :was too much
astounded to be angry. "If you knew
how I work over letter writing, Aunt
Em! If I could 'show you the pen
handles I've chewed in my -agony! And
then you call he a shirk!" ,
"Maybe I was wroeg: I should have
said, `If you'd only us,e your common
sense.' "
- "Aunt Ern!" Phyllis's voice was
tragic. "Have you no mercy? Don't
you know that it is, spiritual murder
to destroy a fellow being's self-
• esteem? I alwayc knew that I never
could be ornamental,but comforted
myself with the thought that if I did
'have one gift it was, common sense:
"I am inclined to think," Aunt Em
said thoughtfully, that I 'was right an
the first place, for to. have a gift Tand,
to refuse to use it is shirking."
Phyllis's -reply aras a despairing
gesture.
Aunt EM'S voice became more
gentle. "I was thinking of your
mother, child; and of what the betters
from host e mean to her in the hos-
pital." •
"As if I wasn't thinking of her!"
Phyllis cried.
"And," Aunt Em. went on, "of the
joy you can give het If you eeally see
youe mind upon doing it And without
any trouble on your part, either."
"How?" Phyllis cried. "Aunt Em
how?" , _ere .,
"8h'e wants horn e Tnews--the tiny,
everyday things such as veh'at
We had for dinner and what dress
Kathie ie ereTaring rrto school—things
like these. Just supPese you try doing
it once.' '
At dinner. that.Tifight Phyllis wad
unusually {Filet. 'Immediately After -
he had done eating she Went to her
ream. ,An hour later Annt Ern, going
upstairs, ^was summoned by her voice,
• "&e 1 thet i,s abi eight," said
tossing her aunt a piece of paper.
"Deete dear, dearest mother," Aunt
Era read. "I've wanted to write so
Had Yoir Ira Today
A
'woad
NEVER mind the weather ---get
some new vitality; ---speed up
any way, Don't be a. lagge.r.,-
Vital roen resist the heat. Let lit-
tle 'raisins help. 75 per cent pure
fruitrsugar. 145 calories of energiz-
ing, nutriment in every package --
practically predigested so it get s to
work a /in ost imin edzately.
No tax on digestion so it doesn't
heat the blood. Fatigue resisting
food -iron also! All natural and
good.
Try it when you' -re slipping --
When you yawn at 3 P.M.
Stiffens up your backbone and
makes thoughts flow again.
Two packages and a glass 61 milk ferns
greatest mid-day lunch you've ever tried.
Betxv en -Meal
aisins
5e6 Everywhere
—in Little -led Packages
that I thought I'd burst, but I just
can't say things on paper. We're all
well, only terribly loneSonle without
you. Aunt Eel. told Greta to make
blueb.erry pudding for dinner, -which
she hates to do, and we could hear
'her talking. 'to the atmosphere out in
the kitchen. But she is doing beauti-
fully really; the youngsters were wild
over the pudding. There was omelet
before it, and Billy- got a yellow smear
on the southwest corner of his mouth,
and he added purple ones from the
pudding. His face looked like the
rnap of Ontario when he was
through. Kathie is wearing her blue
chambray and a tissue -paper hair
rjb-
bon—tshat the latest fad. She wears
about ten different colors through the
day. It makes you feel cross-eyed.
She—"
'When in Toronto visit the
Royal Ontario Museum
253 Moor St. West, Near Avenue Road
Largest permanent exhibition in Canada.
Archaeology, Geology, mineralogy, Pal-
aeontology*, Zoology. Open daily, 10 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Sunday, 2 to 5 p.m. 'Moor.
deli. Line, Dupont, and Avenue Rd. cars.
• You can
pretect the most
expensive carpets and
floors against damage at the
cost of a few cents by fitting all
your furniture and metal beds with
neNikrae24
SLIDING FIJRNITURESH0E3.
'See that all your new farmture is
equipped with them too. '-
Tell your dealer that 'YOU
I• must have them .
si vsand s(1,1e,s,bth
glass (Ind pnioth
meld bascff •
Made in Canada by
ONWARD MFG: CO.;
Tii 'Kitchener,
Ont.
Aunt Ern, handed back the page
"Bless your heart, child," was all she
said. But Phyllis was content.
Just Waned to Know. .
An old lady attendei a lecture on
physiology. At the close ot his ad-
dress the " lecturer invited questions
from his audience.
The old lady rese
"I should be very much obliged,"
she said, "if the lecturer would tell
me whether the part of the brain that
he called the 'cerebellum' is inside the
head or outside."
MInard's I-tnimeet for surns,
etc. •
Some men spend 'half a day looking
forthe shortest way to AO a piece of
work that .could be done in an hour.
re.01,„
Spp
fee;
Arreensaunr
Beekeepers will find, by looking
up our catalog, everything need-
ed for tho production of honey.
.Ruddy Mfg. Co. Ltd.
f
Brantord, Canada
. • .
Successor s to Ham Eros. Co. Ltd.
Bond for a copy.
The $185 ,Trat;to"i` FO.. Toronto),
Auts the (0t"ir C u tivatin
A'Sprywheel 000 05 rnan ear) do more ''''-:?; ease,
, cultivating than eve Men with vvheof •
r,T\44.1_,IrLoT41:1,,byIr,,q 11506070'0 is half over,
in labor awed. The
It pay e for itseff before the growing
FIVE • ' better crops yoe'll get ere edditionai
reas"5 f°r 31:1ylg.:ihS.,P:rthYwh';e..ell74°7/.'
-Er4't'!"llT'
Aents‘,eetili5c1iirIca: I i'Sl1.1
Ie' C.
555
62 C01-i3ORNEi STRL-7:ET
POP L TORONTO
„
RRINGF.:0
RANKS NEXT TO SALMON
AND COD.
Ogyalue ar4 Pai
abe4erit Greate'Do-,
111VZI; important food lichee ,sin esti-
'cma't,tche ef tIlrith:DII:r.c.s,'1:'114111Y-Ite)aorflY111111%tons
nutotl.itaub
iagiltaeroepc
t thesebuiniflt. nfish Th
ersi fulleet
ccpecie,e, aro Lund, and most;,prolde
!fleetly, in Ncerobli American sine, parti-
reAut,lial4qte".; aetlbeldIesroVaitate,crerree4 ofthiter.iNgiolio'utht
itihoee at -one Tani the srean.e -title, are
eats:els' of slesals any ,e,n:e.
'esauld: go' a long way towards 'sappily-
ing. the whole of man's press:zit day ,
oonsumption of herring. When: o.nie
.crereh5ielerle their high- food value 'Aral
peaterealeillity,' awsi the fact that jilsey
eme Terhberinable in abunclanse ail the
Yeea round, it is erriking that eXceed-
'Deign to be fens -wed h,e vigorous busi-
ness .atetion, For the reason that it
has not yea attained. the popularity
it dess,ervos in 'this—country, adequate
totoll'has never been taken of 'tfie her-
ring fishery.
On the American side of the Sktlantle
'w'here the he-eh:4 catch has...not ei.Ss
seemed the importa,n,oe it has lone; held
in Europe, the fishery is entirely a
.5aleoro fishery. The species , obtains
in as great abundanee off the Amer:I-
ice,n sherree as in the North Sea, but
Canadian fisherrneTn have nearer found
conditions sufaciently inducing to ins
vest bi Edee,orial equipment to fish.. off -
The herring is nevertheless ,an im-
portant fish in Canada and in the fish-
euiee' revenue each year accounts for
-'a UGba:n teal Ta,metinit follinteeing Onr,IS"
•-he :salmon an'd -card. The Tcatch in
1918 .amounted to 1,764,2253 •cnytet valu-
ed at "32295,611s in 1019 it was 1,-
506,961 yeaseth $1,624,730;•and an 1920, ,
2,146;986 .mette. yeltesel ab '82,012,638.
In the twelve months of 1921 841,575
mete. were taken whireh anld for 3632,-
941.
Atlantic a.nd Pacific Fishing; Grounds.
The Canerfilan herring fiehery is
prosecuted off both ..e.tientie and Parc-
ae ceaslts the methods used being by
means of lerusleaveirs, gannets and
torching. The herring fishery en the
Car,,adian Atlantic ccaet extends froms-
Newfoundland to Cape Cod, while the .Te.
eitreach from:the BAY...of Fundyeseuth-
ward is practically a continuous fish -
,ground. 'Approximately two. -
thirds .of the total Dominion catch is
peodateed ,orn the Atlantic waste where
they are Mostly prickled rand smoked.
The latter are known on the m:arlisst as
"Kippered herring" or "Bloaters" if
they are uns,alted and half dried in
the smokeehouse. A comparatively
small quantity is canned.
On the PacifiTe coastarth•e Species of
h.enrin.g is Very similar and prevails in
great abundance' about Vancouver Isl-
ancl. Here the catch:ea are so heavy
that a boat load not infrequently totals
one hundred EtlICI fifty tens and it is
not unueuTal to have to release the end
of the net ante dump one-half of the
catch in the sea in order to 'retrieve
the remainder. • Pacific hereing is -
mostly dry salted and shipped in boxes
to the Orient whe,re an extensive mar-
ket hare been developed for .it. A.
small ,quantity canned but the pro,-
eltartion,..of the .paieli treatedrin this .
way is increasing every, year.
Though the Atlantic catch as a rule
exeeede that of the Pacific, British
Coltunbia is the heaviest'prediuc,er
proportion in 1920, being m este-es-5T ,of
one million cwt. N,ew-li3renseglek ac-
counted for about Thalf a Million cwt.
a,rull Nova. Scotia an:d-Quebee eacinfor
about, half this amount. Theca,tch
df Prince Edward Island was relative-
ly -small.
Large Export Trade.
The Canadian herein,g would .e.piyear
to be more in favor in other countries
than at home , and annually. large
quantities are exported making,- a brisk
ansi steady trade. Th.e fish Isaires
Canada in a. yiteiety of forliess, fresh,
firtszenn
, Teanecis dresr-Saged, picklred.ancl
smoked. In a canted state they go
to the United Kingdom an.d. United
Sbates, Ausemalise , Brazil, British
Guiana, Jamaica and Trim:dad: The
dry -salted in‘delirtiOn go to Hong
Kong, China, and jatpari; the piekleti
to Bereesellos, Dutch Guiana and Porto
'Rico, The tetail ''exp'otts,, in 1918
amounted ,to $2,974,282; in 1919 -be
83,799,105; in 1920. to $3,409,498; and
in 1921 to- approximately the s.airre
amount.
The esetst_te Which the herring pre-
isaaillahir-reetesedeian evatier:s,and the with
flues 'its high 'food value and pala-
tableness haYeTwonrfor ti Urge ,4 great -
or demieste cenesemptiess Arvi. I'esseipe
- ..e•e•
vigorous eiTerisT0 expand the oiraigu:
marlccbs. Thetes,a:ad,s of men find em-
ployment at the presenttimet the
n6eolineb; the
rsveesdi
ct;tilcshnar
iticswri,erlati.v7154"eralEAbiti
i.61.Es
to:-
(Inshore fitters, which116
pocsibslitiee of the eactent .d-i.rhe cat
sd the cintOoyment creaked, Were
eater exploitation justified,
ifts
We put Inc great a value on the
services we render „others and ' toe
small a value ere 'tho sel-"‘"Ic0 "E:Vortt
°there realer Isea