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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1926-10-21, Page 2Canada from Coast to Coa Melee, N.S.•-=•The Nova Scetxa ds'h McLean & Sons, of Kerwood., Ont,, patch far the month of August totiiiledcarried off the grand Championships 39,221;650 pounds, with a landed value for rain and ewes, and also the pre- of $1728,679. This ie 'tin increase of mer breeder and exhibitor awards. nearly eleven million pounds- as coni- Wirn ipegg, Man. _Splendid progress pared with the landing •torthe rano has been made on the new mill of the month last yea'. Manitoba Pulp and Paper .Co. at Pine Edmunston, N•,B,—It is net expected Palls, on the Winnipeg River, near that definite plans regarding the new Fort Alexander.. The 'egiziptient is 200 -ton newsprint mill of the Fraser nowbeing installed and it is expected Companies will be arranged until next the plant will be ready for operation spring. While the company has al- in December•. The contractors are ready contracted fore supply of pow- now engaged in laying out a model. er from the Grand Falls development, town in connection with this develop-. meet. Regina; Sask.---Production of cream- ery butter in Saskatchewan during the month. of July was 8,034,864 lbs., an increase of 3,7 per cent. over the re- cord for the sante month last year,. according to a statement issued by the Provincial Dairy Commissioner, The eumur'ative output for the first seven months of this year was 11,185,676 lbs., an increase of 1,872,15Q lbs. over the figures for the corresponding per- iod of 1925. Calgary, Alta. --Major Ralph Glyn, member of the British House of Com - upon which work has begua.''by the St. john Power Co., yet this power will not be available until about July, 1928, and, therefore, it will not be necessary to have the mill ready for operation until that date. ' Quebec, Que.—Importance of the tourist traffic in Quebec is one of the main matters referred to in the last issue .of the official bulletin of the Quebec Roads Dept. The traffic conn- sus shows that 77 per Gent. of the automobiles moving along the main highways of the province are of the tourist- nature, either oe this province, other provinces, or of the United wrtates. The traffie of other provinces mons for North Berkshire, is visiting and of the United States aleri'a reprea Western Canada for the purpose of investigating opportunities for British{ boys in this country. He is preparing a report along these lines to be pre- sented to a special conniittee of the Imperial Parliament. Vancouver, B.C.-At least 100,000 cases of sockeye salmon will be put up. by the Skeena. River canneries this season, according to advices received here. The run of salmon in the Skeena has been better this year than in any of the other Pacific coast sal- competition for sheep prizes, A. P. mon rivers, rented more than 25 per cent. of the total traffic. Toronto, Ont. --Canada has been maintaining her reputation for super- ior livestock at the Sesqui-Centennital Exposition at Philadelphia. Benedic- tine Oxford Roy, owned by B, H. Bull & Sons, of Brampton, Ont., grand champion bull at the Royal Winter Fair at Toronto last year, was dealer - ,ed grand champion. Jersey bull of the show. At the same time in the keen John . Ridd's Pear Trees. We think a good deal, in a quiet way—when people ask us about them —of some fine, upstanding pear -trees, grafted by my grandfather, who •had been very greatly respected. And he got those grafts by sheltering a poor! Italien scldicier ,in the time of James the First, a man who never could do enough to show his grateful memories.. How he emcee to our, place is a very difficult story which I neves under- stood rightly, having heard it • from niy mother. At any rate, there the pear -trees were, and there they are • to this very day; and I wish every one could Paste their fruit, old as they are, and rugged. Now thesee fine trees had taken ad- vantage of the west winds, and the moisture, and the promise of the springtime, so as to fill the tips of the spray-gyood and the_rowers all up the branches with a crowd of eager blos- soms . Not that they were yet in bloom, nor even showing whiteness,. only • -that ,some of the cones were opening at the' aid -ef the cap which pinched them; and thele yow count, perhaps, a dozen knobs, like very laittie buttons, but graolked, and lined, and huddling close, to make room fcr one another. And among these buds were gray -green blades, scarce bigger than a hair almost, yetcurving so as, if their purposee was to shield the blossom. Other of the spur -points, standing on the other wood, where the sap was not so eager, had not burst their tun'i'c yet, but were flayed and naked with light; casting off the husk of brawn In three -corned patches,. . . These buds, ata distance, looked as ifthe sky had been raining cream upon them..—E. D. Blackmore, . in "Lorna Doone.' Cake king Messages Patch Love Quarrel Lovers' quarrels are fitequently. patched up by the use of special mes- sages on the icing of cakes. These messages' are sent by one disconsolate lover to the other, often �t*ith happy results, 'especially at Christmas time, say the bakers of London. -- Cake baking to supply the British possessions for next Christmas is now at its height in England,' Tons of cakes are being sent to South Africa, Australia, Singapore and other parts of the world where there are English colonies. „ egeen Princess L,,,puise of Sweden Who narrowly escaped death in Toky'e- when an assassin's knife, thrown toa • wards her, struck Roger Tilley, son. of the British Ambassador, but was de- flected by a cigarette case. Queen Mary Shops in the Limelight When a Queen goes shopping the broad glare of publicity continues to play upon her as it does upon virtually all her activities outside the precincts of the royal palaces, Queen Mary took •occasion while stopping at Goldsborough to make a shopping expedition to. Harrowgate, nearby, and the account of her trite through the curio shops filled a full half column of close print in one of the big provincial papers. Even the purchases she made were enumerated in detail. These included a Chinese jade elephant and a monkey in similar Material, some other Chdnese'anteques, a pair of blue Wedgwood vases and a Sheraton tea-caddy of exquisite work- manship. Her housewifely eye for a bargain, as well as her taste, were especially remarked. During the past twelve years, 7,619 whales have been taken by the British Columbia whaling fleet. The: largest yearly catch in the period was 1,198 and the lowest 187. There are now a number of plants established on Van- couver Island devted to canning whale meat as well as utilizing bones, etc., in the manufacture of various by- products for which there is a con- siderable demand. All in One Poeny. A single peony -May produce 3,500,- 000 grains of pollen. ,,,5 uto���. �� ' ' : • � Natural :,k�e�or�lrgea • 14QIST LEAVES, IN ROAD ADD. TO IVTQ•TQ ,1#`AIA i 'Vote might. oaks from little is more essential to driving in the fall aroma grow, much' 'trouble foe the than at any other season. The autumn Motorists , can spring from dead leaves haze wheuh is .cant over the landseap on the highway at. this time of year, is trying to the beet of eyesight, and The better the road the greater the to those wbo are defective in this re- paril in many cases, and this applies spect it is an additional hazard, ac - especially to those smooth surface carding to experts. One phase of this trai.;5 which wind in alluring stretches subject was taken up • by' Charles A. through avenues of trees. To the Harnett in his recent analyeatian' of cautious drivers these routes will "Should We Test Drivers' Eyesight gladden hearts by : the glories of QtTh S',t�1QN Or EYEstOH.T, autumnal tints, but to the automobilist. "The motorist with the normal vision who is ine'lin+ed to speed a 'bit in the (remember there are only four ,ouch lonely places there i$ an ev,er-present out of every ten) las the,. proper per - danger,: spectiihe, is able to judge distance and Now is the time of heavy deem and can deterniuo speed almost instantan- b thick night fogs, which genrally pre-.. eousl'y,” he said.. "With this equipment cede the storms of�later on in the sea- it. is reasonably safe to trust. him at son. Both dews and fogs. make the ` the wheel of .a ton or two of steel roads slippery enough, but the driver, which is hurled through crowded' is able to see what confronts him on `streets at an average speed of fifteF:n the surface and take proper, measures'' miles an hour, or en open highway's: at to meet the evil. The fallen leaves probably twice that rate. Everything constitute the.hi'ddezz menace, as they ui his path stands out clearly and disc retain, moisture, especially in places tinctly and in proper proportion, tv!here the suin'�s. rays do net. repel'. ! "Too the driver who is near sighted Wheel's often `cannot keep the path' everythingbecomesblurred and indis- whexi the tires encounter these damp , tine To a motorist with astigmatism surfaces, and many skidding accidents objects.become distorted. There are have been directly traced ;to this cause. E two kinds of astigmatism --technically Exit, TO BE .AVOIDED.. i, described as vertical and horizontal. Luckily, most of the leaves which' Sufferers from vertical astigmatism cling to the highways from now on are' cannot •distinguish horizontal 'lines of brilliant coloring and easily dl's- ! clearly, and sometimes cannot see tinguishable to the alert driver. Tii'ey then at all. With horizontal ttstigma- should be avoided with` as great care t tism the reverse is 'true. as one would use in steering around! "The unfortunate part of the prob- broken glass, len is that many persons with poor On the narrow, twisting roads, such I vision are entirely `unaware of their as are encountered in rnanye�ections of ;'defect. The world that they'are ac - the country, the sodden leaves add to .custoreed to is a blurred and distertad: chances taken by the motorist who is world, and they are under the impres- oontstantly spurred onward by the urge, sion that it 'looks the same to every - to pass the car ahead. Under the, body. Experts tell us that most visual best of circumstances this type of I defects that are not hereditary are .T..COMNIANDER RICHARD BYRD • .• traveler 'has the percentage, against due to, eyestrain, which rrsu'_ts ievari- First explorer to fly to the North Pole,, is shown receiviug•the •dis,tinguished him when "weaving" is accomplished .ably when more is required of the eye service medal of Richmond, Va.—the ancestral home of the Dyr family—from ,on a highway of sharp'eurves, and than should be reasonably demanded Mayor J. Fulmer Bright. The value of the mining ixtidu>stry to the Dominion is reflected WILY in s •n6ral manner b the 2tonetar y' tk't' Y Y suns of the total output. (e226,Q00,000 in 1925) or by the variety .of mineral ". R products despite the fact that almost peP p , every commercial type is represented. Perhaps the hest, indication of its Im- portance as a national asset and; as a source of economic strength ie furnish- ed by the fact that the mining iudus 'try is credited with over 85 per Co of the total tonnage carried by Cazi is si i r it s. Tt ,,�,. cant. ' cin a da aw �o note also that, as a resit of the wide distribution of mineral resources, fiver jof the nine provinces of the Dominion share substantia.dy in minim activity, 1 although Ontario leads her sister pro- vizices by a considerable:'margin. The most outstanding mineralized areas in Canada are the Laurentian plateau of central Canada, the Cordii- loran belt of the Pacific coast, and the vast. coal and other non-metallic for- mations of the prairie and maritime provinces. The country extending from Labra- dor on the east, enclosing the Hudson Bay basin, and referred' to as the Laurentian Plateau region, consists of a huge U-shaped area of pre -Cance-• l'rlan rocks, estimated to cover 2,000,1 .000 square mees, or over oos-half of Canada. This region occupies nearly all but the. most southern' portions of the Provinces of, Quebec, Ontario and Manitoba. , The rocks of the pre -Cam- brian arse remarkable for the variety of their useful and valuable mineral deposits. Iran, copper, nickel, cobalt, silver, gold, platinum and palladium, molybdenum, lead, zinc, arsenic, py- rites, mica, apatite, graphite, feldspar, fluorspar, quartz, talc, actinolite, the rare earths,.ornarneetal stones and gems, building materials; -etc, are .all found, and are, or have been, profit- ably mined. Most of the 'ether mater- ials—both common and rare—that are used in the arts, have been found. The Cordi:ieran belt in Sov::h Am erica,.in Mexico, and in the Western States, is recognized as one 9f the greatest mining regions' of the world, noted -principally for its wealth in gold, silver, copper and lead. In Can- ada this belt has a length of 1,300 miles, a width of 400 miles, and its rocks range from the, oldest forma- tions to the youngest. It is net only rich in gold, silver, copper, lead rind zinc, but has enormous resources of coal of excellent quality, varying from lignites` to anthracite. Though mostly unprospeated, it has, already„ been proved' to possess immense coal fields, several of the.greatest copper and 'silver lead mines, one of the greatest zine mines,- and two of. the greatest placer camps in western America. The Dominion's .indicated ;coal seams :have been estimated to contain 1,234, 269,znilliori metric tons of fuel and represent a considerable percentage of the world's deposits. Their develop: went is somewhat retarded at - t - F;- P• time bytheir remoteness resents fro the industrialmarkets in Central Cann; ada. Other outstanding non-metallic resources are gypsum, natural gas or oil formations, sodium sulphate, tar sands, clays, building stone, cement materials, etc. Despite this very„ favorab:e physical - situation, the Natural Resources In- telligence Service of the Dept. of the Interior at Ottawa draws attention to the fact that Canada `figures ' much more prominently in foreign markets • as a buyer than as• a seller of commo- dities of minora: origin. On'the inter , change of such products the Dominion normally incurs a heavy adverse bal- ance. Her mineral resou;'ces' aid'in- dustrdes supeset a large volume of ex- port' -"sales but - several factors have combined to' build up a much greater volume of purchases. Canada's mineral purchases from abroad annually include a wide var- iety of products but the aggregate value is accounted for largely by three items—iron and• steel goods, coal and petroleum. It'is significant to note that, of the total mineral imports of approximately one half billion dollars' annual'l'y;' half is contributed by iron and:.steel products, and cite -third by coal, coke and petroleum. The size. of, Canada's ,annual bill for mineral imports .does not merely native resources the fact that n of coal,: iron ore' and petroleum, have for one reason 'or another fallen short' i s There s tic needs. of meeting domes the further fact that a large portion. of the imports is taken in the,form of highly manufactured products, such Prosperity. The word prosperity means to get what one has hoped for. It is along one of those twisting roads which soon or Iate bend all words, that it has tome to signify material success. alone. To look forward, to admire, and desire, and eventually to arrive• at what the heart has craved, that is c to be prosperous. Even with that much of an emenda- tion, it is obvious that the word start- ed out to mean something more and better than it now imports; for so many prosperities arrive which do not fulfill dedire i3ut oitiy'^torment it. In the sense in which we use it. nowadays the word is tar from satisfactory. It is full of jarring note's—or,rather the thing itself is. No other subject is de- bated with more heat than the ques- tion whether prosperity brings happi- ness or misery, It is quite taken for ranted by the severer sort of moral- ists that' trtie leamileeefeelees at its approach, while the ages have pro -1 nothing more singular than the almost universal fear and suspicion of too much wealth and ease. On the other hand, it is scarcely less to be wondered at that prosperity, has so generally gravitated in thought' and ideal to the abundance of material things and the mere affluence and grace of outward condition and cir- i ounistanee. It seems only natural to say of anybody or any people or na- tion that' they are prosperous•if they have things in great plenty. The ele- ment of desire gratified, of hopes real- ized, of dreams come true, is largely lost out of the question,: To have much of the world's goods seems to fill the world with all that it will hold. A man may be a hopeless' invalid, but ' he has wealth we say he is • prosper- ot_s. He may be a knave or a hypo- crite and yet, in the soying of the Psalmist, prosper or "spread himself like the green bay tree. It is•strange, and on second thought Many attain their objectives in safety of it. They also tell us: that most eye by a matter of seconds. The unsx ect- trouble can be corrected by the use. of ' • ed obstdeee given by wet road •surface _glasses; in fact, that most extreme _ _ glue s Coi_nsei• during the billet of speed includes pos- cases of defective vision have been "Tlfero is sin in the world," seid-the mother wise, "But be you brave and true And never the joy shall quit your eyes Or the sin bring hurt to you. • "There are those fn the world who would betray, But be yos not afraid; If you harken not to what tempters say You shall never be betrayed. `This life knows much that is red with shame; But, daughter of mine, be true z And the words which poison a wo man's fame Shall never bo said of you. "For you may walk where the sinners are If your heart be pure within, And whether the road be short or far, You shall never be touched by -sin." —Edgar A. Guest. unfortunate, that we have no word in the language which without and ad- mixture of dross and in perfect bal- ance expresses whet everybody knows to be a juster and fairer notion of real prosperity. •,.,Fo;.ail , n}•en know; that there is prosperity which is poor and a poverty whirr, is rich, that things with out, wisdom have a mys- terious and fantastic power of disor- der and wretchedness while wisdom with. a very li'tt',•e can, and often does, work an astonishing magic of serenity contentment of spirit. and happy MUTT AND JEFF—By Bud. Fisher. sibilities of shocking results. corrected through the proper equip- Statistics indicate that clear vision spent of eyeglasses. IRhythms in Manual Work. i _ A common 'characteristic of most forma of simple work is their rhythm. This is perhaps especially observable ill a blacksmith's . forge, but hardly less s+a in milking, scrubbing, and various other co_nunon employments.lit is a feature which- early attracted 1 the notice of man, and, as it is much ' easier to move rhythmically than "as - rhythmically, he early hit on the 'no- tion of accompanying his labors by some rhythmical. noise, generally though not always song: Under mod- ern conditions this has almost disap- peared, the sailors' shanties, now fast vanishing with the'esailing-vessel, be- ing a ,past remnant, It is therefore in= terestingto know : that songs djd ac- company- some kinds of work in Greece. We have for instance a reapers' song, and, more elaborate and note- worthy, whether for anthropologist or metrician, the mill -song of the Lcsbian women, preserved by Plutarch•and to be found, apart from his works, in-the- appenix of popular songs in Bergk's Poetae Lyrici Graeci. It runs thus: . . "Grind, quern, grind; far P• it- takes grinds, that is lord of great Mity. lene." The upright strokes in the Greek text do not indicate; division in- to feet, for it • is in no recognized metre, but turns of the mil. If any- one nyone cares to try it on a coffee.mill (as Wilamo vi'tz-Moilenorf hes done) or a rotary churn (as I have many times i done), holding the Icing syllables to • two; or if necessary three, times. the 'length of the short ones, he will find i that it fits perfectly. -H. J. Rose, in E "Primitive Culture in Greene." She—"You knew the saying, 'In: ' Spring a young man's fancy, ete." He—"Yes. I guesa It's always t Racing in Japan. spring with lie then. 1 Horse racing in Japan is under the control of the government. The Woman Knew "Did you behave iurchurch?" asked an interested relative, when Billy re-. unmet[ from tue service. • "Course I did," replied Billy: "I beard the lady hacic'of us say she 'never saw a child behave• so. • iron, in Switzerland. Iron 'ore dei osits amounting to 26,- 000,000 tons are reported to have been found in Switzerlad n , ,The Governor-General erect Lord Willitgdon, has expressed to the President of the Wofld's Poultry Ccn- _gress, Mr. Edward Brown, his very keen interest in the Congress. On as- suming office Lord .Wil::ingdon will be- come chief patron to the Congress, and will welcome the •internatilonal dele- gates when 'they assemble at Ottawa, 1 July 27, 1927, • Dr. H. Nash of ` Hamilton, who carried. anti -toxin by airpiaeo front Srratoga to Miami for tate benefit of hurricane victims. • 'October Good Minth For Observing Mars Chicago.-Seerets of -Mars may be learned before the end of this month, according to E. B. Frost of the Yerkes Observatory at the University of Chicago. During the latter part of October, he said, the planet will come within approximate:y 42,000,000 miles ,of the earth, and with .the sun appo- j site, conditions will be; most favorable 1oe- observation. ominiozl Pt od51 ces Best i . Apples. g App:es may be grown over a rest part of Canada, so great in fact that if it were all planted the crop would be sufficient to supply the markets of the world. In point of flavor, high. coloring and long -keeping qualities, the Dominion produces the -best grades and the demand for. Canadian apples from other countries is steadily grow - 1 ing as they become better known. Luck Was Against Mutt, ` That's Al • as machinery, implements and auto- mobiles. Thus the monetary sum of the Dominion's mineral purchases ' is _ perhaps less due to'lnrnitations in basic mineral resources and industries than 'to the neceeeerily moderate rate at which a young and ,sparsely settled 1 country'"Wal_strengthen its facilities i for ;specialid ma'tIefaci•ure, ('' __-.gi { Dearman y#or Canadian Fur. In 1850 Canadian muskrat skins eats adh • at eight , sold in London a id but the demand for this fur ]las lap. • ly grown and to -day the pelts fet A: One reasonthat aSe n that 3.0 from , 1.50 to rapid - , i $ p muskrat fur is so popular with the "trade" is the fact that, in addition rd its natural beauty of appearance, it can be treated ,to look like several other rare and expensive furs, so that no metter'what the vogue the muskrat.. Pelt, continues in demand. :Discipline inculcates, in the British boy a certain pride in being kept in order. Frons that he passes to keep- ing hirese f in order and later to keep- others in order. --tan { kz l:T fa H 8A at Ie; o1 Br ni in le Or er in vs eb th in ru CO _1i•E k�'l 5,l WE sic ea Z11.1 eu ar pr th, ve nu by mi set Ye•. we pit ter th+ int tw n+! ad Se su; fro to roc he. Ur( du wY vin 1 th I'M IN MG• A f(tlS Cl otlem 8055 CADDY RlGtlt r Ey � a.:".•' eL- , :1 +.�y,F.•v � f !• 1 , ., ,_.. (\, " wet<. Si site Gque GU[ -ST GAt24D 1'D '. r •4lI� VC3. Z Go' To -r•vt GADtY AND GET A GOOD : AAA) START OUT! ,: - • :'1 • � % f i- •'� •�- i2 :� L� •ir. ... ., G i.. • k �...v L�. . ' ps>r;-. t:'i.; �.• .- .� .-.• .' � i .-• � . WESTC({ J ,,, Q IL '. CbuaiTP ... r. • ./ ••-m _ � 1; `� - EStp• �,. ; •F' �.._ `ti rt ,:.%'�-'f" � - r,-'�8-' -, •-^� ✓J --'.ice >. i .�. T. .' •a is , . �:cta: p G '_. n <, )1 `. t IFF P rr v (4.BOSS y v:.;i i it .... `-s � , h - 'In Q ' ♦'I� I; I i �of�- carates !! oav I I r ii itw ;tl,I!I 6Y. ie •: I ( ! . _ I LiSTEN, L M antt.Y h Guest. t3UT r tuAtuT t.. .. To C-NtER A COMPLAtNr • ' AGA, 'ST' YovIL CADDY -� BASS SuGI•l• �I�OLEIJCGi Cq AND Such i.�A9Coi1A6�� .. A n�i '.'",. l� l`_.`- P` YA rte otb DEPAtt TI-IERG'S ccpss . - r _, = .:_ _ , is ME wow. rye JUST Jewett, = e, -RlaHzu• L MGotNG up Now AND PLAN A ROUND:.>:'D .. �� ", . 'tel VESZ`1 EXCt.USIUE GaLfr GW13. - = musk �fCV 1'b J6tN'ME Dui _ - �•::• .::• .,'0 A O --:, , �•-•;�.�:, .. '• ttlAT 7 TICULP'1 nb � ay . ABOtIC TtiE GUCSI 5 .ONE � , r A A51 1N4tiES. IATA. Y I.a • /1L 1�9 •'. �}.- ,,kit �..'' -®•� ��Iit - .i } /./ /, , 1 fj I• y<••% A 1 s1 < : . (�. ,•.. v..•".<. . fir.. . ,.n. . "� r .e ,y, 4� �4:' Ji..c,i,1 .• I .. -7. , s" .. o''�`''r {�:• lar O}.. _.• ..... 1r\ \ y...,, . --:., � r ' ' + r .k'�H �. `S ,P.... r �� .t -'<S. . '. I!tI .I IMI b. _ p•..'.:.�,�•,� c°':5: II �- - . �.,.;t.'---t._. _ -� 1 • ?7, �t J b :,•,,,..___,__ .0t,',!••.Y ._ r"� � �•y,, 9'r� If' '# • '' i w = Ys+w es li •�. ,a d .'• i . " J L .. 3 r IIr �� . y -!I' 1ti .. :^- - ' r ,.. .,, 1/{ �\ :✓ t :, w , t x.,'�,: • `r• ,, ,,• - ;;ice /I V ' - _ f i WI ••.._� '1 11 :% 1 111 /i -titl'. _� �( i II (fir s' I ..`•"..."4., -mater Il]- 't ;^•�„-, 4..,.... --- .... =:.. _ , , '�• jl'I•. ..---,.....=0..---,.-,..-... - ..; �i`.",. �; -. .... Jr _f i�,vl fill ��. i( :. is j .r, IIJ' � / nS�t .'�• • . r -.,,, ,i=5 ,� , , . .. -r ...a .... • as machinery, implements and auto- mobiles. Thus the monetary sum of the Dominion's mineral purchases ' is _ perhaps less due to'lnrnitations in basic mineral resources and industries than 'to the neceeeerily moderate rate at which a young and ,sparsely settled 1 country'"Wal_strengthen its facilities i for ;specialid ma'tIefaci•ure, ('' __-.gi { Dearman y#or Canadian Fur. In 1850 Canadian muskrat skins eats adh • at eight , sold in London a id but the demand for this fur ]las lap. • ly grown and to -day the pelts fet A: One reasonthat aSe n that 3.0 from , 1.50 to rapid - , i $ p muskrat fur is so popular with the "trade" is the fact that, in addition rd its natural beauty of appearance, it can be treated ,to look like several other rare and expensive furs, so that no metter'what the vogue the muskrat.. Pelt, continues in demand. :Discipline inculcates, in the British boy a certain pride in being kept in order. Frons that he passes to keep- ing hirese f in order and later to keep- others in order. --tan { kz l:T fa H 8A at Ie; o1 Br ni in le Or er in vs eb th in ru CO _1i•E k�'l 5,l WE sic ea Z11.1 eu ar pr th, ve nu by mi set Ye•. we pit ter th+ int tw n+! ad Se su; fro to roc he. Ur( du wY vin 1 th