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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1925-2-26, Page 3I!, „..,�=es The crass buttock; duo the. baokhee1, were: frequently hi evidence. Carney; was. reputed `!o' be the eham ,len robSh*'• and=tunibele fighter of,,the river. Leon ttrd wasaeot; anXious to use "the ci'ues- tion alaie `:nX oda, "of ,the 'rough-aud- f. tonin a ca In: daY0:of'Yere, there lilted :upon the 'hi si sties, but air, lie: contented banks of trre: wiucling Pt, Croix Rive , xn elP,witl] using.talr. fighting rneais• �he ',two'.ikien df tne:' yyoedgr 1n the,;su '.tier Ivo. file lxrtve 'been :inoapacitatgd `lit a . t,,.... rery ew;m.untei aster the,.ata4^t,P the h:. , they'g'uided for salm,..on .44nd .trout• fls Strug" i , ing parties,.. In the (all, they guilded o for hunting pat'tiee. . And in the win- .ter they trapped the fur -beating ani- mals, • '': The ,cabins of Dave Carney and Sandy Leonard were separated by two TH'E AWAKENING .63y William x. 71?eliulty. After an hour 4P -give and take, priza cipally take, Carney "weakened, Leon- ard ,:Sawp an opening and whipping over a stiff z.iglit to the body, sent Cat•- ney to the earth, for thelatter"s quiet- nailes sok densely wooded Porest. Anti, us. ` The victor revived the vanquish - for a rade e. of. twenty miles,'the for- ed, gr and each 'went to his cabin to re - est extended. t Was;'one of the most cuperate, 'im the desperate battle. - valuable stretches of timber and pulp- wood lands that one could visualize. Dave and Sandy exercised squatters' rights in settling •on the land. They had cleared away sufficient of the for- est to allow for the building of the cabins an the starting of .gardens, Although the St. ',Croix'. Lumber Coni - patty, •rwhich•owned"the land,` in en- tirety, could have evicted both Car}ley and Leonard, . at ,any ::tune, the ' coni pany. 'realizing the right of any man to earn his livelihood, a.11oived both to continue living on 'the 'company's holdings, • .Came the day when,:forest conserve tion developed into a topic of vital'im •port. Porest fires had 'devastated. tim.: ber hands °in"other. sections .and alarm was expressed for the 'limits alonghe -:St., Croix. Hitherto,- little attention had been paid to fire preventivernea. sures aiong,the'old St. Cioix:• But.the disastrous fires ie'1sewhereai'had awak ened the executive- of the `St, •Croix. Lumber "Company to the necessityt of fire protection.: As a part of Me cam paign that was organized, the two woodsmen were called to ;the wpod lands office of the company at 1VIill town. There, Charlie :•Dickson, the. woodlands manager, impressed on both the need of exercising every pre caution to prevent fires, , Carney and ..Leonard agreed to wok' hand in: hand with tile new policy ;of `the •company and returned "to their abodes in the Woods. • But , no sooner :was Carnew out .off sight of the woodlands office than he expressed his disdain of Dickson .and the St. Croix Lumber Company. He ranted and raved over the capitalistic tendency of the age, and concluded with a threat to do nothing at all that could be -in flee: natare of aiding the fire protection program adopted. by •thecompany. And when remon- strated With by Leonard, all Carney would offer as an excuse for such .talk was that the company was an oppress It was in vain that Leonard,.had pointed out to his companion the need of each, becoming a cog in the fire fighting and prevention machine ' or- ' gauize(bby:ethe company. "Galsrey had• become imbued with Communistic ten- dencies, had been devouring radical literature, and was an apostle of Com- munism. _ As a' symbol of his hatred. for all others who did .nbt agree with his rantings ntz s ravings n and i g n s and his s 'm- ossibl"ti P doctrine, as formulated by Lenin and Trot sky,he started wear- ing a red necktie well learned the words of the Internationale, the Com- munist "irrational anthem. " Not content with becoming a Com- munist himself, Carney- insisted that itis friend join "the cause:" But Leon- ard consistently refused, and ::this seemed to 'add to Carney's bitterness against capitalism as 'represented 'by the St. Croix Lumber Company. He contended that thefire protection pro- gram' adopted byy the company' was just another means of kee in ';..tli rn lo• subjection e e P of the firm in suboby making then' ready -at all 1 times to re- spond to' the call .ofh `.' te company. There was uo need of ,file` protection: It was but camouflage to turn the em- ployees into slaves. And i i addition` to enslaving their 'employees-, theo - c in pany had availed itself of the Oppor- tunity to "use" thetwo sgiia_tter9," at no expense to the company; Xao would. see the company in Hades before he would act as a member of the fire police, - In short he; would, do abselate- ly nothing to lessen the risk of fires. He Would Serie.cis no•tool for the Com• pany, regardless %tif ;what Leonard 'chose to do. . rn the end, although Laonar 'r d a as. at heart a pian. of peace• --a man whiz typified : theho Yp , 'eery spirit of; peace and•, har•xnony as 'exemplified p fled in the` gveaa outdooramid thegigantic . forests of' the -northeast. the friendship that had ex;.sted far. twelve .years between the two.. guides, .turned coil, Not that /� Leonard ,,felt iii witll,toward his. erst- SKIN 'IPIA,F !�_ S. while pal. He wee h I v S really sorz•y for Car- ney, ���� � � �'''� ina.srnuclz as the latter, a rather g si�i, tit Rheum 'decent teilow at heart, .had allowed " RE .1'EVED BY USING himself to he carried away by. Coiu• I,utnist literattue,• • • Ixoonatd •accused .Carney�of being u • tool of the 'eompauyi. Sandy mer el a laughed. This maddened Caineti,.w•ho threatened his old friend with a beat- ' frig. And this caused, Sandy to' latigli 4. even harder. Angered beyond can. tro], Carney essayed to 'fli fltI leis threat. And there. amid -the ,mples, , popiars,,spi!uce, cedars, firs; hen tucks, the two human residents ,bf'the Sr Croix forest battled" for :,rrbysieal Mr's 'S, Arnene1t Be1re .Cote, 19 .S., supe tnacy. wr,tc �Eiaving hoer trot:bled with !i Back and forth over the : turf t1.ie ecze.lua "on any. hani1s, roc°% bvr;r f1vo iueri struggled, b'irst one would !malt! Yeats, ansa trying er•erythi,ng' 1 eoniti the advantage., '.[`lien. the other wciii.i• think of, including „doctors,. bui; wi.th- seize the lead in •the soir•saw Combtit:. out my rel%ef, a,friond advised Mato It was the :mos t vicious rough -anti talcc 73,B,I3,, ttunble battle ever. `seen along the St your rrofter nl rJ"r meaving dicine tic Id two owas re- there e ., Croix. No . rules were violated, .Por bayed of my trouble. That is nosy a there' were to rules to govern stteh year' ago, incl I •have not hatl the lcnook-en-down and drag -em -ens clash: 31.$ga tegts1gfl oI it .s rxeo.'a Ge. P:ino1•iing and ,pickling, gouging g gig, , .r.lira.'I3, is'ziatlu;faetuxoil onl. . y o, tit. tvrestltiig, r•,ltrowitrg,. were all in use; : T. liilhuris. Co. 1'.,r"inif:od,'z'orouto, Ont. - It was soon after midnight, Sandy Leonard intuitivelyr eme danger, Although sore from head foot, he leaped from his bunk, peered through the windows. To east,'•we,s a; red light just topping trees. "It's a forest fire," he shouted. hbused from his :Semi -sleeping :c dition by this startling 'news; he d nee h'is 'clothes . and, ran . from cabin.: Leonard hastened along river: bank,, to the' spot the woodlan manager' had tdld him of ohopsing the first telephone' station'fn the.1 to beconstructed by the company. T -fire was • fast growing in intensi Right in the path of the flames Carney's cabin. Apparently,the _f t had . 'not been started,more than hour. Seizing the telephone, Leona P , explained the , sitieatikn • to:. the 1 Z town -office. '.:•T11.en Leonard boatel through the door of the Carney cab and'feundeCarney asleep. It was" w difficulty that Sandy could induce •C ney to'arise. • life flames had eat part'of the _rear, of the cabin befo the"two men left the little` structu In a, few' minutes the building was. mass of smouldering, ruins. Th went to the - telephone station, a found the flames: had burned the to phone.' and some of the connecti .wire. - Animals Of -all kinds were $cu rying from the woods` and racing in the river, too frightened to 'see't two men on the'river bank. In twenty minutes there arriv from 1Vlilltown, the nucleus of the fi department that was in process of fo mation among the' employees of "th St. Croix .Lumber Company. T1 motor equipment of the company ha been pressed into service. "'Fifte men and each with a fire' extinguishe Carney took ,charge of the' hose an hand pump and conscripted Leerier as his assistant',just as Leonard Ws •rushing for an- axe •to fell" trees th stood 'in -the .path of the flames. Leon ard•-was so,astoni�,hed at the Chang of', heart .on ` the part ,of . Carney, 'h made nq protest when ordered by Ca ney. to help with the pump and hose Water from the river was soon:pour ing on the 'fire. The wind" was no 'strong and' that aided the fire fighter greatly, So, in two hours, just"a ves tige ,of the fire remained._ When .the Work was river; Charll Dickson tlianked the two woodsmen loi;ssaving the company's timber, fo he said there was n ' o doubt a longer start,'the fire would,liave des troyed the bulk of the forest . - After: the. party -had left'for Mill town, Carney turned to Leonard'and, said a'Say, Sandy; a fellow ,can be an awful .fool, can't he? • After what I did to you here you come and save me from sure death. Do' you know what. started that firer Well, against the' aii•ders of the company I started burn- ing some:,:slash.,''-above the cabin. I thought°it was but when I left it. But'. that's what started that. fire. You can say I'M cured, and that in future I'll be as" strong for lire prevention in this forest as you are. Beats how' blind a span can be "at - times: Some e' .ti ` es' . rtr lie doesn't even kn•ow `which side Iris bread is buttered on?': that lied. to• ana. the the on-. Ona the the ds a's ink ho ty. was re, an rd ill ed in ith aa - en ore' re, a ey nd le - ng to he ed re r 0 re d en, d d s at e e, r - r t s e, r with White Topaz.. A white• topaz that' weighs ninety pounds has been placed •' on view in the Field Museum in Chicago. The' head of the department of geology, who led an . expedition to South America, 'brought it from Brazil. Lapidaries es- timate 'that it would make at least a hiuzdred thousand stone,. of one carat each, but the museum natu'i•ally has lie desire to put it on the market. Try being cheerful when your troubles 'are heaviest and ,,,sec how much lighter they wi;1 become. e • SUGGESTIONS FOR 'SOLVING, :CROSS -WORD PUZZLES LES Start out by .filling in the words awhich you feel reasonably asonably sure, These .will give you a clue; Co other words crossing and they in turn them. , to still others, A' letter, belongs' in each wa7ita space, words starting at the nixnibered s uaresand running' y horizontall`or vertically; or botls either - HORIZONTAL 1—Pushed B—Smatl containers for liquids 11—A unit orw eight 12=A''precious. atone 14 -Anger 16-A' small child 16—A note Irt.music 17—Barter , 18 -Blood • 19—Personal pronoun ^'21—To disturb • 24—Product of 'a. tree 27—A singer ' .- 28—East Indian tree 30 --Individual characteristics 32—Portions'of bacon 34—Most unusual 35—A powerful nation 36 --Farming activity (abbr.) 37-A,,lette r 38—Decorative 4,2 -Position in goif 46—Prophets 47--inclinesato; one -side 40—A parent (French) 50—A 50-A leather fastening S2—To be,borne along 53—A ship- 55-fneide 57—To escape 58—Ta beseech ,59—An. Interjection 60-A dog 62—Part of the body 6a—To place, .64 --To fondle 66 -Dried steme "of ,{grain; , . . 66—To wish to'r VERTICAL 1—Scattered 2 -=-Garden implement 3--A preposition 4—An exclamation.: 6 -Takes ,out • - eeaOrder of proceedings a• --At hand 8—A preposition 9—Depressed " 10 -Cut, of beef (pt.) 13—Slightest 14—To disregard' 20—Somethjng insignificant `22 --An article 23—To peep 25-Irimplement on .a boat 26--trnprisonment: 28-More:sparse 29—Part of verb "to be" 31 -in kingly fashion 33—A weapon 38—Metal in native state 39 --Seldom seen 40 -Those who test 41=Regard'' , :,•, .42—Scalawags 43 -With sloping ends 44—Line the roof of 45-Llm,it 46—P.,ertaining to the eyes (pl.) 48—A legislative body 51 -=Sun' god.. - 53 -Cabbage salad 54 -Comparative value 56—Product of a tree 59 -Possessive pronoun 61—A Coitimorr•cai+r#ler.-tabbr.) 64 -Printer's name for mixed type' The First Photographs. In the first attempts to make e, a photograph in the early part of the I eighteenth g teenth century,the st j eeto be photographed sat between the sorprce of light and a sheet of sensitizedpaper fastened" on a board. His shadow blocked off a eertain proportion of the light rays, and as a •eesult his profile in silhouette was Ieft` on the paper, This image,- however, faded in a few minutes. Even fifty years ego, taking a g , g single, picture was often a day's" work, and required such skill and .expert Arnow - ledge and such elaborate, costly, and cumberatone ,equipment that the few who had mastered the art were glad to capitalize their" knowledge by utilizing it professionally. The earliest:sunii ht' is g picture of a human face is u s ° osed° t o . ,. PP be a da- guerrotype of Miss Dorothy Draper, and was -taken .by her brother, Pro- fessor''Draper, in 1840. The subject had to sit motionless In bright sun- .iight for about six minutes: Rain at Para. The port of Para, near the mouth of the ,Amazon,. has a rainy season when rain falls ' continuously, and a "dry eeasenai when it rates every day. "I'll see .You to -morrow morning after the shower," is 'a common way of making an. appointment.. You step into a cool shop to, escape the burning sun, says' a traveler, and while you are quaking a purchase the street outside' is de- luged. : A 'clerk hastily closes the doors, or the place would be flooded. i By the time yeti .have paid your bill the sun `is again shining brightly. But the shower has cooled things off. I Solution of last week's s puzzle, Aiar 101 is ®�®�tt©�� A R AMIGO' MBIE,P Ma42112141321 , ®A P M'' ®O WzreW ' ®G7i% 0Orit R O 0 ®A 163 `'A ®0 U.21012 A,-s71p� •''� O OM MOR ®®D5�' ®AINUM TIMFAZIMM A R 0 O WEI at O 1 • Method of Winding Spring. To wind a spring in a lathe is a sim- ple matter; to wind it` without a: lathe is also a simple matter' if one keo vs z ,• how. Select a bolt haying aging •threads about corresponding tothe pitch de - „sired in the spring. • Hold the head of the bolt firmly in a vise, pinch one end of the wire tight and wind' the other end .:around ,the bolt. : The threads of the'bolt•evill.guide the wire so that an equally spaced spring twill be formed, - Rat Campaign Rat week in London was a bad week for rats. More than three million were killed by professional rat catchers, 'or= dinary householders, and • boys and girls. One vermin -exterminating com- pany alone killed eight hundred thous- and. But London sanitary officers are not yet satisfied; they want the cam•. paign to continue until the city is free from, rats. It is estimated that the whole -ale value of the commercial, crop of ail .fruits in 1923 was $33,169,143. This snap ';•bows a" Muter scene on Lake Joseph, in Muskoka, where many people spend their vacations each yoa,r. Natural Resource5 Bulletin. The Natural l sourees Intelligence Ott Serawaviee'o1says'the:. Dept,, of the Interior at. At the recent meeting of th Can- adian Society of crest P t ' $Engineers p matter of supreme importance ce tUGa Canadian industry wee discussed that of waste'in lumber manufacture, Mr,. Xynoeh, 'Superintendent , Af the ' Foreet Products Laboratories of the Dept. :of the Interior, brought up the subject, and made the statement that the waste, involved it the use and manufacture of forest products is tre- mendous. Waste in production of lumber, in cutting or making various wood goods, and waste through decay were some of the chief .items of wood waste emphasized, In a report by R. D. Craig, on the Forests of British Columbia, the writ- er deals with the waste of, forest pro- ducts •as' follows: foe "The waste in the manufacture of • 1 lumber in this province is .appalling to one acustomed to mere conservative 'tl methods. Huge slabs of absolutely clear wood, 3: to '6, inches thick, 'ale': sent to' the fuel pile, and; ends of e . Automobile 1.1EADLIG'rilT ADJUSTMEN ';• T comes Fro i I t N�� M�''R�•o u, fir, Oi f pre;rt.: 'etts, d57 n . $tu 1. at miltonyx Ont i wiitMd.«- <saAi out,` SIZ ." tit 7:ye:nth ":i1 Ii.ia9InbAtr di'iry In r'busk, and tvliea :'I atoo odor e t " p� f 1. as titot%gJ; could rover stra ighten up . a'gain.., o " X thought the beat thing for rine to do was to' see a dos ' sad. p. shoat waS:'troubred';v ''4.ftez. talsing� hi: treatment fiat some time, I did °,not get rid of nay :polus, in r fact; they here get ting so bad 1 .could; ngt sleep or cries at 1 night. a On January 4th,, 1924, I Wee read- ing one of your Almanaes, and it told e me just what was wrong with me. 1 lost no time in, sending for a box' of '. ' ° .Doan is ", and had only taken them a few days when my rlieuniatite pains be- gan to leave me. I ;'can truthfully say that Dean's Taidaey Pills are seeond to none." Procedure ,for headlight adjuatnie` is -as follows Place. Car On' level; 'surface so tli'. the headlamps are(•tw'e ty- lve:° from the wall or screen.. Examine :bulbs and relieetors. pair or replace if nee•G sary', See.. that the lenses' are installed`s that they cannot turn in the •lain] door, Examine focxising naeclia3xaanl. gee that it° work freely, but will not jai out of adjustnxent,. " Measure the" distance from the o0 to the centres of the lamps. .Subtract the loading allowance and set cross bar or mark the wall at that height, Light the lamps. Cover one at time, and focus the 'other. Always us with' the lenses in place 1f th amps have an outside adjustment. Aim the 'lamps so' +hat t'he top -o f he beam on the wall comes even with the cross -bar or. mark.. boards and timbers .whiell 'could wei be used for some purpose are sent t the refuse burner. The burner is t most conspicuous thing about a British Columbia sawmill. The fire never e goes' out, and it furnishes a pillar p of fixe by -night and a cloud' of smoke by day. Reay saws are necessaryto "break down"the large. logs,' but it is not unusual to see one -inch lumber being `cut with:' a saw'that takes, out a .%- inch to Ye -inch kerf (out). It isesti- mated tx mated that at lieast 2 `per cent, of the tree. is left. in the woods, and another 30 to 35 per cent is wasted in the mill:" e. - Calling attention to wood waste in manufacture, where the consumption of wood is.under control is of first importance. Losses by forest fires, by insect and fungus' destruction, by wind -throwing,, and other causes are ,lalready heavy, and more or less be- yond control, but when the lumbermen and millmen undertake- to coni'ert the tree into lumber' it should be done with the minimum of waste. ' CARBON MONOXIDE 1 During the ensuing cold weather,. P you will be doing work on youz auto he mobile indoo'rs,,wliich you a have lately been :doing out in the open ail'. Re- member, if you haveou. ee in. Y r g e run-. .% r ,1 He—Surely you wouldn't marry a rich manewho'd made his money dis- honestly?" is- honestly?" She—"Sure. If he were rich,. I could. reform him." A Fortune in.a Match Box. The thiya biggest' diamond -in the world has recently been brought to Loudon, and now reposes in the strong -room of a city bank. • This precious stone, formerly called ring in the garage, that the exhaust. contains the•'deadl carbon Y monoxide, a gas, which is poisonous to breathe. flay safe and either have your door open when the engine is running or make -other provision for .the rapid gases. escape of exhaust . Carbon Monoxide- stupefies so -quick- ly and comple ely that its victims se dors have time or .consciousness to save themselves; They drop before they can call for`help and once they drop they're done, Haying Under Fire. Much has been printed about war, but comparatively little ab those stirring, tragic or merely hum episodes,. that passed on; the dist front where Russia and Austria ca to grips. In- the London Times th have recently appeared some inter. ing articles by Gen. Likomsiiy,�y w was Chief' of Staff •of the RussianA during much of the `war. From one them we take this amusing eytract The `"Brusiloff offensive" • occurr on the 'southwestern Russian front the spring of 1916 and ended i n t crushing defeat of the Austro -Hung Ian army. On June 3, the eve el n assault on the fortified positions the enemy, I made a round of t front-line trenches. While going do the line of the Rylsk regiment whe our wire entanglements " were int woven with those of the enemy I sto ped' a moment to study the enemy position through a' periscope. Next ane stood a private. From the expre of his face it was plain that h was anxious to tell me something, S I encouraged raged him to speak P by a - what he thought of the Austrianspos tion, "I dare say pretty strong,^your E celleney," the soldier answered, in th simple speech of the'peasant. "Bu we are going to take it to -morrow ju he same, and then I'll get lots of nic for our horse." "What hay What horse?" 1 aske he queer fellow. "Why,:I:am the company Stableman our Excellency, and in front of th ustrian trenches there is such nice resh grass," I could not help telling him tha was a moledets • (fine bra t h brave fellow or looking after his horse like the nd, although I never thought of talo g his wards seriouly, -I' wished him ood luck in harvesting Austrian ha. At daybreak of June 4 fire opened pY on the appointed•targets by ver ce of artillery _massed alongthe se of my division. After the can onade our division went forward. Our cress was , decisive; the entire Aus- ian fortified line was taken. Watching the attack oP our division the out an. ant, me ere eet- iio Tiny of ed in he, ar-1 ur of he wn re. inte 's to e5- e 0 g x- 0 - t jus t h t d , e , e w) t; A the Excelsior -Jubilee, but knoyvn now f as the Tata -Jubilee, after its owner, Sir Dorabji Tata, came from the fa mous Jagersfo'ntein.mine, • f It originally wei lie a g d 971 /�, carats, a in g but was reduced by cutting to 239 car- ats. "Even so` it has lead the distinc- tion of being the biggest diamond in the world belonging to a private in- dividual, the two Cullinane, which `pie weigh 516e and 309 carats respective- s ly, being the property of the crown. n Valued af a million and a half dollars, su it is easily contained in an ordinary tr match box. th There is . one debt that `a to you can never pay in full—your debt to your ou another. She does not Tisk it or ex- sh pect it. All she asks, all she hopes, is th just that you pay the interest on it. in And you cannot pay even that in in money, but' only in patience and love m and gentleness—the one kind of cur- eta rencythat is ,Ie. al tender i r 'Li g z the place,, I where mothers go. ou rough my field glasses, I had my at- ntion drawn to a figure just behind r advancing lines, where enemy ells were bursting on every hand; e figure appeared to be busy—mow: g•grass! I rubbed my eyes in amaze-. ent, To make sure I asked the corn - ander of the artillery, who was tiding beside me, to take a look foil tnself. - Ne at once confirmed what liad seen yes, there was a solder t there swingiug,a scythe; - On the evening of. the same day the ,stableman of the Rylsk riii lit, happy and unharmed, elated -at' • M LWURN'S saw HEART AND 1E VE PALLS me Are a specific for all diseases and disorders arising from a run-down con- dition of the heart or nerve system. - They correct such troubles as Palpita- tion of the Heart, Shortness of Breath, Smothering turd Sinking Spells, Faint and Dizzy Spells, ,Nervousness, Sleep- lessness, end are especially indicated :for all troubles peculiar to the female cox. P'or:ale by all druggists sand r.ealars, naviu�; tut some nine grass for his horse. • lie soldier never suspected that he had drown' bravery of the highest kind. Rolling Up the Damages. The man who wrote the foliowin g letter, quoted in Punoh, had an origin - . rig in - al way of calculating indebtedness; which must have provedprofitable if he couldt t gel the party' of the second. part to take his view of the matter. He had had a small fire at his house, and the insurance company sent him a check for' on ,pound ten shillings gs ata settlement, Two days laterthey re- ceived this communication; Sir: Please send another cheque for £3 in moneys as ckeques'are no use, the one that was to hand this morning being on mantlepiece and with: draught of door opening was blew in-' to fire and was burnt up before stops could be took to aave it. This is 41' 10s. for loss of property as agreed un- der threats and .£1 lasa for loss of cheque.' Your obedient Servant, Laiic1ilan McSwither, The Deadly Breath, Soakley—"Just think, every time I breathe, somebody dies." She (disgustedly)-"13Thy don't you chew cloves"" London Decries the Razing of Waterloo Bridge After St, Paul's—Waterloo Bridge! Whil.. e the controversy rsy concerning the safety of the dome of famous 51. Paul's Cathedral was still raging, Londoners with a taste of antiquar- ianism were confounded by the reel omm creation of the London County.:. Council committee that Waterloo Bridge, built just over 100 years ago by John Rennie, be completely demol- ished instead of merely being restored. At present there is a temporary span being built to the east of Water- loo Bridge, which it has been planned to repair. As Waterloo Bridge is con- sidered the best architecturally of all across the Thames, the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings "is organizing a strong protest against the .proposal to replace it by another. Horne. Heaps of faith in .one another O'er the years what'er they= bring, Memories and not one biter; Each- for all in everything! Ner5 Children 4 5e ' Attacks ofWIROOP1N This is one of the most dangerous diseases of children, h" ,esreciav those under five yearsI to of arc. It firsts stars cough, sneezing, twith a .fever and f• cretene, Ont, writrst—J‘r.i'vro years ago, last winter, our •v,i3 laid A' coug We wore rocceemicrulod 1 Oar duo: - gist to Ilse Dr. 'Wood "s .N'orway. Pine Syrup, which we did with th.o g.reates„p enceess. It cleared. eta the throat' Cough it ttp, and Q0 'rime I laid wItilhe;11-€",/,,ou't you tray through, life -orrIntotial'0.14:111'"r" Co, Tur.°11/311/ She—"I‘lot on foot." "Sao that Y�ti 'Ott *rho cliellitatatiot •