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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1924-10-16, Page 6`GREEN ` TEA 111474 row ve a standard by which to judge other teas. Salada is the. finest prcduced in the world. - Try it. FREE SAMPLE of GREEN; TEA WON REQUEST. "SALM," ," TORONTO About the House ID ALONG PART II The visitor end the trader engaged in small talk for a while, and IA ater pian satin silence. He did not care to talk to this man, for some reason He disliked him, that was the long and short of it. Landon turned to the sergeant after a bit. "You're in the Mounted, ain't -you?" he asked, and Waterman nodded. "Nearly got into the force myself, wunst, Glad r didn't, though. -My idea of a rotten 'ob, I'll tell the world. Poor pay and hard, dangerous work. Too ninny easier ways of makin' 13Y LYON l4IBARSSON, Promised him anythinghe wanted 'i f` he would let me have the gal. Things wuz pretty strict around here' at that time, an' it lked as if I would have , to marry her if I wuc to get her at all. But I wuz 'MUM' to do that- anything, in fact, just so as to get her. "But although T got, the of maul so he was' satisfied' to have me. get her, 1 ,he seem to bring the gal around an' although she wouldn't marry iio body without the old man Iet her, yet she wanted to wait an' see; maybe he, would change his mind about the In -I:.' jun buck she wanted. But we got around that all right, all right. "Her Injun went off on a three weeks' trip, an' no sooner does, he get away when the old man says: 'She's yourn if you can make her go with you.' I says she'llgo with me, one I way or the other." He paused a while again, •while the others eat in quiet, waiting for him to go on. "Did she go! `°Pll say she did, She didn't want to, an' put up an awful fight, but there ain't none of them can get away with that stuff with your Uncle W. L. when he makes up his mind he wants a thing bad enough She went with me down the river, an' I made her be good.you can put that in your pipe, I showed her what was what, an 'believe me, I knocked a few crazy notions outta her head while I had her. I learned her how to sit upan' say, 'papa.' "Say, but u t she was one sweet jane, at first! Tried to run away, wunst or twicet, but I got her back agen an' learned her proper. Never tried it no more. After that she knowed who wuz the boss, an' she stuck to me until I got good an' tired of her -five or six money, P1 say.' How for instance?" asked. Water ' man, dryly, looking him in the: eye. THE1 The plan .laughed, "Come,` now* BETTER WAY: !but before she could be seated in the' sergeant --expect me to tell you that-- `� I. an you n mQmber of the. tinted?" Adella rose every morning at seven. rocker it had to be Mo gcleared of one silk He 1 d She ate a hurried breakfast, made her! kepteere evily for an instant. Then workbox that Adella on the win- he laughed, but' Waterman said no - bed hastily, flung on her coat and dow sill, one silk bag that after it had thing.At planted a kiss on her mother's face been shaken was to be hung had eft the point Sanderson, who, g over a e company for a brief per - that slid along the cheek and landed just in front of the ear. Adella was. off to school! The session closed at three o'clock, but Adella was not at home until four: She liked to loiter, for she had "best friends" to see and many of them: oor-knob, one box of chocolates, a iod, came back with' a bottle of whis- silk kimona that Adella always, hungkey and several glasses, over the foot of her bed because Now you're talkin', friend;' said the "touch. of color" it gaveof the newcomer, . jovially. "Fill • it u to the fox` the sergeant, too." room and three books. an „ "When I first. entered a C gaits, no, said Waterman, Chinese not d 'n "- house," said' Aunt Addie "I ii long quietly. thou ht ' The other.looked"What's • g at him. it dreadfully the matter -teetotaler?" what s She used the next hour for tennis or Y Plain, The wallstivere skating,according bare, there were no silkdrapes"No-I'm" din to the season, Then.just not � o as we ha such drnl>ing now. came a few moments' at the iano, eve over here, everything was With a shrug of Jus shoulders Landon P Y g turned e u ed. i n sit to nv the i e 1,tad. clam, er. Dinner q an r i was followedY but bare. a bya studyperiod , re. Then I c that lasted until bedtime, Obviously caught sight .of something on a small s e Darn peticular some; people is, table two- rooms beyond seems t me, bout who, they drinks there was only one day in the weeky d so beautiful i h " w t h grumbled toS in which Adella could tidy up her that I fairly held my breath. It was said' e grurn e Sanderson, who nothing. room, and: the "rush and bang" habit a vase of wonderful color and work- "Curious thin manslii and almost thing, :ethat, about the Ine marked the flash of broom and, duster P, the only. bit of dian who committed suicide by'u t adornment in the house, I learned making u his mind he was going to in her room, every Saturday." p th •" en a cost f First she swept. Then she dusted custom o the Chinese. They le, commented Waterman turning the class mottoes, es, the school and col- lege pennants, the racket, the fish net, the trophies of vacations and college sports tacked to the wall. On a shelf over the door she had eleven v n fancb O have many treasures like the vase but to the trader and speaking to him as y oxes. nce- upon a time every box had held candy. It was the thing for girls of Adella's age to save such boxes as an Indian saves the scalps of his victims. The eleven boxes represented eleven dif- ferent boys who had sent her candy last St, Valentine's Day, No other girl had more. But the boxes had to be dusted. they usually put them out only one atthough no one else was there. It was a time,as. though their conversation had been When they` tire of one they continued without a break: put it away and set another in its "Yes, only case ;of the kind I ever place. The simplicity of it enchanted heard of; replied Sanderson. " me. It seemed much more beautiful to me that if-" Seems "Why, that's funny," broke in the visitor. "Imagine you mentioning a thing like that! It just happens II knew of such a case right in this sec- i tion. Happened about twenty years:, ago," The other two regarded each, other in silence, "Yah; just st about twentyear _ uess. years ago, , g I was young, then, an'wuz tradin' around here' promiscuous like.• There wuz an Ojibway village `arou g nd than our over -adorned homes. I' grew to love it. "Now, if a girl from China had this room she would put those candy boxes away; she would take down those dust -catching college and vacation' trophies, for,' really, my dear, they are not artistic: She would sweep those. I lace and ribbon, glove and handker- chief boxes into the dresser drawer; There were silk and ribbon powder she would -- boxes, glove boxes and handkerchief "What ex uisit q e workmanship in boxes on the dresser: "Too pretty to that silver frame that holds you be put away," said Adella, "I want mother's picture! Do you know, them in sight." And they : be dusted.b too had to didn't notice .it when I stood in On the writing desk were photo- graphs graphs with'fram frames and photographs without frames, two- pink candles in , yyears, in all. I sold her to some half- breeds over on thePlate ethat,' afterat,' an' ain't never` heard of her since - guess she's dead by now. "But what I started to say wuz about that Injun buck. You see, he get back till about three weeks' after I had skipped; d there wuz b chanst of ' findin' PP n us' then, an'he know - ed !didn't ow ed it, though I don't'know what he would have did if he had found us - though, you can't_ never tell what an Injun is goin'• to pull on you. Anyway, her father tells him that. Wind Along the Waste has- gone with me of her own volition -that she"told him she loved me, an' all that there kind 'a rot, an' he believed it. 'ere then -don't suppose it's here any { more, an' there wuz an Injun gal ri there that I can honestly say wuz ithe finest lookinspecimen I ever seen. I -ail' I've seen some; you can bet your brass holders, a fancy calendar, a doll in pink silk that Adella had won at a fair and a miniature Goddess of Liberty in silver to be used as aP P a er e life on that. Say, that gal wuz about; doorway, There!" She swept every-theprettiest lookin'. y � thing I ever lamp-: thing else off the dresser andut the, ed -thin and supple faroP strong. as a reed, small, � picture there alone, "How beautiful,'ong, the blackest hair an' the black- s it looks now. est eyes you ever seen an' the most I golug our mother and I areHad some eddication t t it motoring over to -Ivy Hill. Sorry you can't go with us, but give her w 'WindJ s g wuz Along the - Waste weight ht when there re were any papers' changed� P P g your. clothes it will be too shortened it to Windy after a while, to be weighted. All had � i _ off while the surface of the desk was all those t _ l little ahead . gettin' a f things when you have so cad of the yarn. wiped; all had to be carefully dusted much dusting "Her old man c I to-do. was a re ular In'un "There," declared Ade regular features, oo-go in a convent. The name the In'un by the time you have bathed and' -ain't the .t a scream for gnome?- I g to be lifted Iate But ofthat's , course you have to miss of course, and but tt and _out back again. In the open writingdesk:were e boxes of fancy writing paper, a pencil hold- er, an ink stand with. a little' vase holding a -pen with a pink quill hold- er; a china box for r stamps and an- other for pens,; each of which had a fancy shepherdess on top of it. All had to be dusted, and the little shep- herdess had occasionally to have a soap -and -water bath: Adella looked at the` pigeonholes and sighed. She knew that the dust was accumulating there, but, "Oh, well, let it wait an- other week!" It was eleven o'clock one Saturday morning when she sank exhausted in her chair. Glancing through the open window-, she' saw a group of her g P friends: going by to play:tennis. She was hot' and tired, and somehow all those little cluttering adornments of her room` did not appear so attractive: "The Chinese," said a voice! from the doorway, "have a better way," "Well," answered Adella in tired tones, "I wish I lived in China, Come In, Aunt Addie, and tell me. about it. I want to hear something to take my mind off that group that; just went by to play tennis," Aunt Addle entered with a -smile, Chew it after gvery_meal hit saiiseaulates appetite and aids digestion.. lit makesi yonz ip0d do You is good. Note how H roiit.eves that stalky reeding after hearty eating. 'Whitens- teeth. ,n- swaetena,. breath and ft's she seedy slant 1 Fi i3 t,1 E filo. 41-'24. ii For every g. wash -day method INS° is ideal for any wash -day I. method you use. You do not have to. change any of your usual steps—just use Rinso where ,du used to use ordinary soap. Y If you like to boil your white cot- tons, in • R S .O will give ve: you just the safe cleansingsuds you need in boiler.the I" you •y use '. a washing machine, follow the advice of the big washing - machine manufacturers— use Rinso. Just soakinwith this s new kind of soap loosens' all the dirt until a single rinsing leaves ', the clothes clean and spotless. However` you do your wash, make it easy by' using Rinso. Rinso 'is sold by all grocers and department stores rl If you use a Washing Machine, soak your clothes in the Rinse suds as usual. In the g o' m rain add m Rinse solution and work the machine. Then rinse and dry - you will have a clean sweet snow - white wash. LEVER BROTHERS OTHE[Zg LIMITED TORONTO R-4-27 GIVE CHILDREN "BOTTLED" SUNSHINE. Children make their greats "What doesgrowth when they can get the bene ,he do but say that hes of direct sunshine: going toSecondary, g g pass in'. his checks -commit "bottled", suicide; he does it too. Goes to his Lsunshine, in the form bunk, lies down, turns his face to the l carrot, comes 'next. wall, The un _• and in two days he wuz dead. sun, it does not;chi d'ya what. d ya liirik, of that? Shows: upon your. child, has, nevertheles power of mind over .inatter. I alwuz'i made provision for his' well-being, thought it wuz a kinda curious thin has stored its e. .. f ,� g, vital energy lir the pr you know what I -mean. ducts of the v He finished in a dead silence, his vegetable kingdom, al small black eyes gleaming has placed the vitamines, more pre y g ming unpleasant- has than within ly and lustfully at .the reminiscence. gold, the reach Shortly after he' took his leave and the human family. It only rein -un plodded on his way, for you ;to. select wisely the diet Sergeant! W atermariYour child g sat ini .the Y and he cannot ' der el Ignition. The force was out to lulieh-leaving.. st the bookkeeper alone in the store. A Be handsome young chap strode% in. "Do. or they keep automobile accessories of here?" he he asked,,, The ,little ' bookkeeper smiled ed her' ' ne sweetest. "Only me," she replied. s' ]t SALESMEN. ' , We offer steady .employment and pa .y weeklyto sell _our completeP Y id andWeaclu- sive lii'cc o;I guaranteed quality, whole root, fresh -dug -to -order trees ,and of „plants. Attractive illustrated samples s and full co-operation, a money -making of opportunity, LUKE BROTHERS' op NURSERIES,' MONTREAL. - "Well, dear, I Must bey room, quietly, without saying a word, rickets. and so did Sanderson. They gazed Fruit and vegetables grimly out of the window at the figure g es stand first as e-1 :vitamins bearers. Among the vege- -the kind that believed v d �iis gat a half hour later, "I like m room Y much better now!" She threw. her dustarag into the air:" "Next Saturday s paddling its way onward, placing the tables,, the once lowly carr t snowshoes carefully and accurately in l o stand . the ;>beaten path, until it had.passed?n the front rank. It is sunshine itsel out ` of sight'ithe pines. ' . little brought to your table- There is n later Waterman roseth- kind of vitamine,'so far discovered Sergeant and an- - v d nounced that he would go on his that the carrot does not possess. e rounds. He drew on his fur coat and It took:. his snowshoes from the wall.' For Sroe. Feet -Mina rd's Liniment d "Guess I'll travel along with you a e way -need the exercise," Mackintosh for -His Daughter. son. ' Waterman said Sander- g , at nodded, and waited Sonic few years ago an English ✓ for the older man to dress. Four miles down the trail, in the lee d of , a big, grim rock they found the ✓ man who had called himself• Landon. His body was still warm, but all • life 1 had departed. Spread flat on his back, s his sightless eyes -staring up at the e{brazen heavens reproachfully, he had e that in his face that indicated he had seen something that usually comes in 'nightmare black night -a shade out of a nightmare that' had come': to horrify him in daylight. The surprise mingled with the horror in his' staring orbs. His revolver was in his hand, but it [had' not been fired. A great, jagged hole had been: 1 smashed in his skull, such, as might have been made by a sharp -pointed You stone, and next to him, where it had fallen, lay a tomahawk: The head of it was a long, sharp,.heavy piece of flint, bound to the haft with rawhide thong crisscrossed over the hard stone. t' They examined the body briefly, still in silence, and then faced each other. j "She got him -after twenty years,". remarked the trader, and the other. nodded. "The law -your law, doesn't recog-. inize any crime In what this man did," said Sanderson. "Yet it will recognize a crime in what this squaw did -and she will hang for it. Well;" with a 'shrug of his shoulders, "I suppose it must be, so." I "Who said she'll hang for it?" aske3 ;the representative of the law evenly. .,`Ht nging is for murder. ' This was t murder." The other looked at him gravely. It wse-" • . "Can't you seg-' what it was. It was se mit!e, of course. `A man's liab e to o any -I -I in - on `a lonely tr til dike Adella to herself o lighter mind him in - everything that's the way they are, among the njuns. I found that.out when I' go o I began to hang around Win I will have time to -enjoy the day. The A. idea," she went on in' tones of disgust, d "of dusting off atrocious decorations t that immediately begin to gather more s dust to cheat me out of more joys on m other Saturdays!" w aw long the Waste. Say -ain't that th arnedest name? -I think`they give o her because she wuz. so slim an upple and light, looked as though sh ight be picked up on any wind tha along and carried' away -o ebbe it wuz account of her<'voice hich sometimes „sounded like a win whispering soft like in the' pines,,fa ay-y'know what I mean? "Anyway, she wuz some looker, I'l say, though I' suppose by now -if she' OLE s Water tube type, 125'h.p., in good con• £ dition, also a large amount of plumb- ° ng, lighting and heating equipment: d, `Will sell , entire or' in part ,at great sacrifice because of: alterations to our property, Real, Estates • Corporation, Limited, Top Floor, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. Telephone Elgin 3101. 1 d DISPOSING OF -TRASH. A handy way to dispose of trash is to hang a stout paper' bag, such as a flour or meal sack, or an old gunny of sack which is too ragged for further usefulness, in a convenient place. Drop into it waste papers and burn- i able odds and ends until it is full, to when it may be tossed upon the hon- t fire and burned, sack and all: It is 8 always a wise precaution, however, to ° keep all cloths and papers which have b been used in connection with oil out of such refuse sacks and baskets; burn them at once. live, she probably looks more like'th d squaw what I passed corrin' her tkan anything else. As I say, I hung around a while and tried to make' an mpression on her. I'd take her down the post wunst in a while,' blow her o a piece of ribbon now and then, and o on- but it didn't seem to be much f a- go. "You see, there wuz a young Injun ack in the game -these two had it al framed up to marry each other when I utted in an' `jazzed up the works: on't usually hear' much about, love among the Injuns-that is, the, real nes,: not the comic opera kind -at east they don't think of it the same way we civilized people do; but I mus ay that this gal an' that there Injun uck had a bad case` of it, an' if it adn't been for the old man's havin' rung her up to mind him, they would o went an' got hitched up ;. before I ver got there. "After I got there it wuz all off. because I made up my mind that I'd have that gal whatever happened," He paused for, a moment, and moisten- ed his gross, -sensual lips with a thick, darting tongue. His eyes leered lust- fully., "I give the old man presents an' b OLD TURKISH: TOWELS. i Worn' Turkish towels seem to many housekeepers a hopeless proposition. s Yet the less worn parts may made h to serve several excellent uses. Same b of mine I make into , wash cloths. I , f cut away the ragged parts, and from e the rest shape square or oblong cloths: I fold themonce, usually; but if the pieces are worn thin, they are folded twice, making four thicknesses. The raw edges are turned in and a few basting stitches hold them in place for the machine. With a long stitch and rather Ioose tension I run around the edges and also stitch diagonally from corner to corner. The stitching crosses in the middle and keeps the cloth firm for the hand when in use. These. cloths are convenien and last a long time. Several.can be made in a few minutes. If old towels are saved until a large number have accumulated, ex- cellent rugs may be made from them. Most of the worn towels are still good along the edges and ends, I cut from these strips about an. inch and a half wide and sew them together, lapping end over end as for ordinaryl carpet rags. They are then wound into balls of about one pound each' and carried to the' carpet weaver who converts them. into bathroom rugs of any de sired sire. They are fine for this rise because they are thick and soft and easily laundered. If a few color - white, ono for striping the ends, the rugs are prettier, and can be made to har- monize with the dolor scheme of thel i this; vhen 7,'ou're alone ou t i. Y get o see t room_• BORDEAUX SAUCE. My winter larder would. not be com-) plate unless I had several jars of this ,i-, sauce, which is excellent to serve with I , meats. so Bordeaux Sauce --1 gal, green to- matoes, 1 head cabbage, 5 green pep -r pers, 6 onions, 1 bunch celery, 3 qts, vinegar, 4 cups sugar.. Chop- green tomatoes and cabbagee fine and let stand one hour_ in salt t water. Drain and add the remaining; i vegetables, chopped fns, along with 'tin the vinegar and sugar. Boil this tore for two hours and pack in steal-. chow useless life is -=and,; yet colli;cit icide, Let's bury Quietly the men faced ac_n other. -It as Sanderson Who eliolte. at 1asf; "I think you're right. He comariitted icide twenty years- ago.,, (The End.) • Housefly Quick' i`hinker, The housefly is said eb he the clever st of ili,sect , its intelligence surpass-, ng.'' -of the ant nail the bee. One lilliori,y sasserts tlrat ft can t e:It 100 ries faster th'ana`iiiani,` ized jars. --'Mrs. A. ID, IPI, ed strips are sewed and sent With the he !nerd's LinimentHcars Gut& Two ii rcnch scientists have devised an instrumen I which will' take a firm of the beating „of the heart, Turns --A Poor Farmer But a Good Poet Some wise person once made the mark that."a great man is like' other people -only more so""-ethe idea bein • that ordinary folks do. both 'geed:deeds and bad deed,s�, and ere sometimes:; clever and sometimes make fools of themselves, , whereas the great man does sensible deeds on a large scala and iiralces a fool, . of himself on a large scale 'too: The story of Robert Burns, the great farmer -poet, told` in "Robert .Burns, His Life and Genius,'- by Andrew Deicers, is, very largely the'story' ,,of a man who made a fool of himself, on a:' very, very great: scale. He - could not resist a drink or- the eyes of a pretty girl, says Mr. D'akers, and because of these two weaknesses he was in trou- ble of, some kind' or ether mrrt of his life. But the author of this' book is a pretty' canny Seotchnian himself, and, after granting that Bobby Burns did act like a fool a good deal of the time, Ile asks how many men there were in Burns' country in his own time who lived more soberly, and also how- many ow many men there. are who are worth their salt: who haven't made fools of themselves in ,sone way or other at some time' or other. Robert Burns'��,life, ' after he : had reached the age of twenty-three was crowded with one love affair after an- other -one of them very unhappy, an- other other -as, beautiful as anything in his own poetry, And still another one just plain funny. There- were plenty of gosh sips; around ti. turn them ell : inte, scan_ 'dal; but,Burns lived to turn them into the greatest love poems in the lang- uage, and to silence the gossips. Handsome, unusually 'strong - he could lift a plow: and toss it on the back of a- wagon without seeming to exert himself -and' with "an easy way about him," Bobby Burns was just..as attractive to the opposite, sex as they were to him. That �was. how, when one morning his dog ran over a sheet that had been stretched on a lawn to; clrY in the sun, and lie„ went up to' apolo- gize to the• girl who had put it there, a few: minutes later he had conquered, and • had been conquered. by, Jean Armour, the "lovely Jean" who later became his , wife. But Jean's father disapproved of Burr,,s,-not. because he was 'penniless -and tore upthe mar- riage riage paper -he' had given to her. Down on his luck an 1 generally dis- gusted with life, `'Burns decided' to leave Scotland for good and go to the Indies -and he prepared to publish. his book of poems now, for no other reason Than to get the money to pay for his passage. In the meantime his is plans were changed by his nreeting the pretty' Mary Campbell and becom- ing engaged to her; but his "I-iighland Mary became'suddenlyill and died. It was after this, that the poet lost his balance a•little, and began' a ridiculous high -brow kind of:Philandering - though innocent enough -wit a Mrs. M'I,ehose. But Bobby' Burns soon got kits feet on the.ground again, in spite'of the fact that at the age of twenty-seven h Y e found himself Lemons. and the lion of the social world of Edinburgh. g *He married Jean Armour, whose -father's. attitude haddchanged once Bobby's pockets were jingling with coin, set - led down on a farm- at Ellisland, and took a position as 'exciseman for the istrict. This time he learned a les - on that a great many man before and after him have had to learn -that Baking a living 'o it of farming is`a ob that doesn't leave time for many. ther occupations. He died"a poor an, and one of his last letters on re- ord was a plea to a friend fen ten ounds to save him from a debtor's ail. family rented a place in the Highlands ' s for a few months. t s. It was.' near` sloth W9>�, and one morning the party engaged a I boat to take them across:,The weath- FULL RIGGED I er had become unsettled, and', the fatlyI 0 er'said to the boatman,'" I } r`` ' By the way, _..•.- . �, A .- i m can outell x Y me wheret I could,. "c geta mackintosh for any •daughter''.. The r boatman rested on his ;oars for a me- $end description and full particulars to i meat or two, and then said, "There's• not ferry many Mackintoshes heer- about,s but there's, a fine young Mac- donald, a bachelor, who lives at the I loch, and he might be suiting the 1 young lady. ' "DIAMOND 'DYE" IT - A BEAUTIFUL' COLOR Perfect home",dye- ing and tinting is guaranteed with Dia- mond Dyes. Just dip in cold water to tint soft, -delicate shades, or boil to dye rich, permanent colors. Each 15 -cent pack- age .contains direc sreeea tions so simple any --•-•f . woman can dye or tint lingerie, silks, ribbons, skirts, waists, dresses, coats,; stockings, sweaters; draperies, coverings, -hang- iags, everything new, Buyi,"Diamond Dyes" -no other kind -and tell your dr:uggistwhether, the material you wish to color is wool or silk, or whether it is linen, cotton, or mixed goods. L. CASTELLO 73 W. Adelaide St. Burns' tribute to his wife, given in a letter to another friend, is- worth Toronto quoting: - Olivivg 421-4 Axe.-Hardened,toutahened and empered by men Oto know how' hy build dOviltle life arid double value into every eago they make "The most placid good- nature and sweetness of disposition; a warm heart, gatefially devoted with all its' powes to love me; vigorous health end sprightly cheerfulness, set off to the best advantage by a more then com- mon handsome figure -these, I think, in a woman, may nialre..a good wife, , though she shouad never have read a page but the Scriptures of the ola and . New Testament, nor have danced in ae, brighter assembly than a penny pay A Memory. The sun, a crimson -flaming disk, Is slipping 'neath the low-browed Over the pond's bright surface still ' An elm -tree leans, aud,swallows dip And skim with thin cries, plaintive, ASK YOUR HARDWARE MAN FOR ,41/4`4.414" Wiztihg::vgienrging itilini°.otulgi°11 railg-foeinde_ien'trEutZ Lir-Immo (pt. ineenIse day to evenin,g yieldS. JAMES SMART PLANT -- AIROCKVILLE. ONT. This picture, viewed in childish hour-- 'Poild, elm -tree, midges, swallows .The distant hill, dim fields dew - The sun set o'er a ttily 'street. ,,,Lead is produced mostly from the ,. - mines af. East and West Kootenay And other areas inBritiali Columbia; froP.