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Zurich Herald, 1929-03-28, Page 2La: cc continued to a point where soon his The Story 'o Biro v. end would have been the usual one of dogs not considered worth their feed, a 10 :Qg of t o e Only a fortunate mix-up in the 1, With DQg Derbys Over the Tale of Bimbo Will be En- joyed By All Who Love a Dog SAGACIOUS CANINE • ar- messing d the team saved hiin. A driver borrowed the dogs, a masher unfamiliar with their position in the team, • By chance, he placed Bimbo in : the lead! Immediately Bimbo's right to lead- ership was apparent; and from that time he- retained it. This honor en- titled him to the freedom of the camps, and thereafter he was .eldokit chained, winter or summer. A new dog in a team is always a problem, we learn, but Bimbo was al- ways equal to such occasions, Contin wing: A dog accustomed to taking orders on'y from some shouting driver soon learned, when placed in my team, that the real erda'tis came from the lead - dog. When the rest of the team were straining at their collars to get the heavily loaded sled up the steep grade, and the Blusher had his hands full at the gee -pole, was no time for any dog to shirk. At such a time, a quick, backward glance from the panting Binibo night be of no special portent to the shirker if he were a newcomer; perhaps the' laggard might even re- turn the look insolently, as if to say, "Well, what ya goin' to do about it?" A little more of this lagging and .he would get Bimbos answer—at the next stop for rest, or even at the end of the day. For a moment he would imagine, probably., that the whole team had jumpedhint, as Bitnbo set upon him and gave him the neatest trim- ming he had ever experienced in so short a time. Usually one such lesson was suffi- cient to make a "good soldier" of the newest acquisition to the team. But once Kobuck and Notack, dogs new to the team, decided to "gang up" on Bimbo to revenge initiatory troune- ings each had previously received. We had just completed a six -hundred -mile trail journey, and were enjoying the last few miles on a train of the partly - completed government railroad. Half a dozen other teams were crowded into the box -car, and the cramped quar- ters gave these two newcomers the op- portunity, they thought, for retalia- tion. • The two Siwash dugs were chained to the sled next to Bimbo. Soon they began to edge into him, forcing him to move over. • Not satisfies:, they crowded him still farther until he was at the end of his chain. Again they pressed him. It was too much! Bimbo struck! In a moment half a hundred dogs were at it, although in quarters too confined for a' good free-for-all. Bimbo handled himself in, a most masterly 'atyle, and the pair thrust have thought they had been set upon by half -a -dozen Bimbos, so quickly did he turn from throat to leg or tail, or whatever part of their furry hides presented itself. By .the time I got a grip on Bimbo's hind legs, the two bullies had been soundly thrashed. Needlers to say, Bimbo secured plenty of room, which he made use of by stretching out full. length and going to sleep. A small lead -dog, however intelli- gent, is sure to cut a sorry figure in a team of powerful brutes if he has not the weight and strength to hold them in check. It is practically impos'hible for oneman to harness and put in line a large team of high-spirited dogs without first lashing the towline and sled to trees or stumps. A good leader, first to be harnessed, will help con- siderably in keeping the team in place by lying down in the snow and digging in his toes as the harnessing proceeds. Even then he may he dragged about By the other ogs. When his ha=rness was soaped into place, Bimbo would drop immediately into the snow, face to the front. A tug or two on the tow -line he would ignore, refusing to look back.. A dog plight .give a pull that would move him a foot or so, which would be met with a turn of the head. But a violent tug that jerked him to his feet brought swift retaliation from Bimbo, and for the next few days the offender would be too much occupied licking his wounds to disturb his leader on a harnessing or any other occasion. The feet of the Northern malamute and the husky are exceptionally tough, and better adapted to hard going than the feet of the "outside" dog of fine breeding, yet they require the same attention that the driver gives Itis own. When the trail is gritty, and marks on the snow indicate bleeding feet, the The icy Alaskan river, plunging through its snow -clad gorge, was not frozen entirely over. Tn the middle the channel was free, At this par- ticular articular place the gap was only three or four feet across—an easy jump for 'the malamute dogs pulling the sled, and negotiable by the sledge itself. But Bimbo, the lead -dog, ordered to cross the ice and make the jump, re- fuse -id to leave the shore. Three tithes the driver, Merle Howard Guise, who tells Bimbo's stpry in "Bey's Life," urged Bimbo across to the opening, and three times the canny canine re- fused to budge, Then "on the third attempt, as •we reached the channel, he turned sharply up -stream and drag- ged the disorganized team along the glare. ice,. in :spite of the :act that I dug in the brake. A short distance up -stream he again turned, leapt the gap and, when the entire outfit had cleared the opening, dropped down upon the ice and put his head between his paws to receive his whipping.' And Mr. Guise admits that he was sorely tempted to punish his lead -dog, but he remembered Bimbo's intelli- genee, bravely and devotion. So, in- stead, he went back to the place where Bimbo had refused to cross. With a stick he struck the ice, and to his con- sternation it broke. It was only a thin sheet, not several feet thick as he had supposed. Bimbo had saved them all from an icy death in the water, and he had his reward in increased affec- tion. Bimbo showed his devotion in many ways. As lead -dog he was a stern disciplinarian to his fellows, and guarded jealously his own privileges. An instance or this is related by Mr. Guise: A low grow ... a snarl ... a yelp e pain ... a heavy object rolling down the rocky hillside! The disturbance woke me, and I raised myself to one elbow. A slight brushing against the screen doer, then silence, and I dropped back into bed. Bimbo had gained his objective! The post of lenor, the gunnysack that served as welcome doormat in front of my little log cabin, was his, nay leader's, by right of might, and for the rest of the night he would guard my slumbers even if he had to slash the throat of : every contending malamute in the team to do it. Poor Moose, undoubtedly it was his one hundred and fifty pounds that had tumbled down the slope, and he al- ways took his dispossessing hard. In harness, at the "wheel," he was a veritable Red Grange. Dragging sled and dogs, he fairly waded through unfriendly teams that we chanced to meet upon the trail. But to Bimbo size meant nothing, for he had the knack of upsetting his opponent at the first onslaught. Though a splendid fighter, Bimbo was not a quarrelsome dog. In fact, he avoided a fight when he could, and many a bully would display his teeth and utter contemptuous, low -throated insults, without seething to arouse the slightest interest. In the natter of guarding my person against any ani- mals, predatory or friendly, Bimbo probably considered that, because of his position in the team, he was en- titled to this special privilege, and, fortunately far him, he possessed the fighting prowess to support him i this contention. No two dog mushers agree upon the extent of the qualities that night rea- sonably constitute the perfect lead dog,' says the writer, adding, "but all agree that, as with hien, pedigree is not necessarily the measure of capac- ity for real leadership. Many poten- tial leaders are bred from selected, pink -eyed Siberian wolf -hounds, or from pedigreed setters trained to ser- vice in the North, and a chosen few tight set up speed and endurance records in the great Nome Sweep- stakes." Reading on: Yet a Mackenzie River husky, born in the humble environments of a squalid Indian camp, and maintaining an existence in spite of starvation ra- tions and native abuse, might possess the very qualities necessary to lead his careful driver halts and puts tnoc- teani over the most perilous trails. s casins on the furred pads to protect To me, Bitnbo was the ideal lead - them from the sharp particles of ice. British Boys Welcomed to Canada W�. Fifty British boys, arriving at Montreal over Canadian National Rail-' ways to commence farm work in Canada, were given a hearty reception and' were entertained at a luncheon by Dr. W. J. Black, Director of Agriculture and Colonization for the Canadian National 'System, The boys are going to Lindsay, Ont., where they will be placed on farms under the jurisdiction of the Rotary Club of that city, which already has succeeded in its efforts to place British boys' with Canadian farmers and give them a chance to establish themselves in tate new country. bo of the other dogse-bars cfiy= could I Henley in the Middle make out the handle -bars of the sled .l I get . ed,Then,three whichabout g r pEighteen Hundreds 1 o'clock, as we passed out of e storm. zone just before night settled down, there stood the government tripod three sticks 'narking the summit of the dangerous pass! As.I made my way forward and rewarded Bimbo by rub- bing the ice from his face; it was with a feeling of e. under at an instinct that to rhe seemed inspired. The World Wat separated Mr. Guise and Bimbo in this way: It was at Seward that Bimbo had been purchased, as a common work dog, for that first long trip to the Yu- kon. After many years c f trailing throughout the vast interior of the North • with hips, the war finally brought me out. I was now on my way to the Outside, and from Seward paddling along among the rushes and I sent the team back to the Yukon— weeds, and cattle browsing in • the all save Bimbo. Bimbo, now in his deep green; and farther on, some high - twelfth year, had served me faithfully. lying stretches of rye-grass struck into The thought of separating from him long and silvery waves by the morning was unbearable, so I took hint out wind. with rte, to live the, rest of his life on All the stir and motion of the new a well-earned pension. ' day have conte upon us; and Henley, At Settle, I installed Bimbo on the clean, white, and red, with its town - spacious back porch of a friend's home hall shining brightly down its chief on Capital Hill. I was certain that street and all its high clusters of old his view of the down -town section of fashioned houses slacked by a fringe - the city would be more appreciated than the sight of Elliot Bay beyond, for Bimbo had suffered much from seasickness,. Frequently I took Bim1Tykon'long walks about the residential sections, and observed his keen interest in city life. Moreover, he thrived on his new diet of beef scraps and other delicacies, and did not seem to pine for his sal- mon, tallow, and rice. In the North, Bimbo had never play- ed with other malamutes, for he al- ways had held himself apart from them, as he had been rejected by dogs of breeding. Here, though, he seemed to enjoy meeting the city -bred dogs who dashed out at him from ack yards, but refrained, fortunately for them, from anything more bellicose than bristling back and threatening growls. Indian Hospitality CuriouslY enough, the North Ameri- can mer i- can Indians have always been highly advanced in the art of hospitality. While they were yet in . a state of savagery they had customs of hospi- tality which were an inspiration 'to the white people who first cane among them. . . Pew people were so open-hearted and generous as they. Their unaffected kindness and their willingness to share a last morsel astonished, the early white settlers who came in contact with therm. Some of the tales of English and Indian intercourse, as recorded by these early white people, are touch- ing. In the summer of 1584 an,expedi- tion under the auspices of Sir Walter-. Raleigh . landed on the Island of Wococken, off Albeinarie Sound. They invaded the land of the Algonquin tribes and made themselves comfort- able. Yet "there came down from all parts great stores of people" bringing ducks, hares, fish, ,fruits, nuts, and many good things for the new -comers. The wife of the chief, Granganimeo, carie personally :aid invited the two leaders of the expedition (Philip Amidas and Arthur Barlow) into the house. She washed them, and 'gave 'them every . comfort, • "and served roasted fish,' and venison on a board of the that stood along the side house."... CaptaiClark, of the famous Lewis and Clark expedition, wrote with en- thusiasm of the hospitality which he encountered. He told how the Indians of the Columbis Valley boiled salmon and served• it on' a platter of rushes, neatly made. "It is the custom of all the nations on the Missouri to offer every white man food and refresh- ments when- he first . enters their tents." .. . We have borrowed many things from our Indian brothers, but noth- ing more valuable than their custom of generous hospitality. They paved the way for the hospitality which has become so peculiarly associated with this country. We owe them, as we owe all peoples of the world from whose manners and customs we have borrowed, a debt of gratitude.... The early pages in the history of our country, darkened by the pathetic struggles of the colonists to master the conditions in which they found themselves, are brightened here and there by tales of jolly entertainments and generous hospitality. We read with quickening heart-beat of a pathetic little wedding feast in Plymouth. We read with a sudden warmth of tenderness of a Thanks- giving dinner in the wilderness. We follow a train of covered wagons westward and rejoice with the pio- neers when they reach at last their destination and every man? Woman, and child gladly helps in clearing the grounds for the great celebration..... There were kind to one another, generous, hospitable. They shared alike the hardships and the pleasures of their experiences. And they built strong because they built together. We have never wholly lost that heritage bequeathed us by the early colonists—a love of simple kindliness and hospitality, a love of sharing with our neighbors and having them share with us.—Lillian Eichler, in "The Customs of Mankind." Early morning in Henley! From over the wooded hills in the east there comes a great flood of sunshine that lies warmly on the ruddy side of the old inn, on its evergreens ,and on the slopes of sweet -scented mignonette, and sweetbrier and various blossoms that adorn the bank of the river. The river itself, lying apparently inotion- less between level and green mea- dows, has, its blue surface marred here and there by a white ripply of wind; the poplars that stand on its banks are rustling in the breeze; there are swallows dipping and skim- ming about the old bridge, and ducks log; to others, perhaps, he was merely u, splendid leader, With his uncanny frail sense, he was easily the best that had ever known. He was the kind of dog that stood in one's mind for ancestry, pedigree, blue bloody as if bred from registered stock, antrain sd from puppyhood to wear the jingle - bells of a leader. And yet he was limply ;one of the litter whelped in a Siwash fish -camp on the coast .of Alaska,and turned' loose as a puppy to reach Maturity as best he might. When Bimbo was about one year old he bad been picked up 55 a common young. work -dog for fifteen dollars, and for weeks thereafter was thought to be worth just fifteen dollars less than the sura paid for him! He had been bought at Seward to fill out a team on the long mush north, to the Yukon. At that time he answered to some other name, It would be more Correct to say that he responded to no name at all and, placed in the These moccasins, or, canvas sacks, if not ripped off by the fangs of the wearer, usually last for one or more days' travel, Bimbo, because of 'his strong, steady pulling was unusually hard on shoes, an inspection at the noon rest some- times revealing his moccasins, espe- cially those on his hind legs, worn through the bottom. He wore out twice as many moccasins as any other dog in the teem, attesting to his con- scientious work. He put his best into the tow -line until a word from the driver or a slowing down of the sled, indicated that the other dogs must have time out for a "blow." A sledge -dog, should be a good trail.' er, and Bimbo 'was.- One of the best pieces of trailing he ever did was to lead Mrfl uise over Rainy Pass, on the ridge of the high Alaska Range, in a'. driving blizzard. This is hew Bimbo handled the 'situation When the store broke we were toe "run," sulked the entire journey. This far up the mountain; ide to turn back, stubbornness persisted in spite of fre- There was nothing to do but stagger gt,ciit lashings by the Jap who drove blindly ahead—and leave the outcome the team. e to Bimbo. E ou the Yukon this ; ullenness . 1 Cenlelglut see Elia- Even ,Por three hotti � � ... of dark -wooded hills, shows as much life and briskness as are usually seen in a quaint, small, old-fashioned Eng- lish town. But where the silence and the stillness of the morning=dwell is away up the reach of the river. Stand- ing on the bridge, you see the dark blue stream, reflecting a thousand bright colors underneath the town, gradually becoming greyer in hue until it gets out amid the meadows and •the woods; and then, with a bold white curve that is glimmering like silver in the north, it sweeps under the line of low, soft green hills that have grown pearly and grey in the tender morning mist. Bell is standing on the bridge, too. The Lieutenant has brought out his sketch -book, and has placd it on a stone parapet before her. But some- how, she seems disinclined to begin Trout Fishin' HOW a withered old man who n;s ; It have been the very shade of Izaak Walton explained the peuliarities of "procrastinating" trout is told by Ray Bergman in the April. issue, Of "Field and Stream", ¶?his old fellow ambled up to a fisherman who hadn't been having the best of luck and casually, said, a twinkle in his faded blue eyes: "Guess ye ain't had inuah'spea'ience wi' these liege 'ch'astinatirh' trout, have ye? Tain't nothin' unus'al. They ofteu git that -a -way, an! ye must have had some 'sperieece wi' 'em, for ye cert'nly 'ply do a lot o' trout fishin'. Yer shoes is all worn f'om the rocks, them wadin' pants o' yourn Is all patches, yer rod is 'hand-trade—Olh, everythin' ye got shows 'sperience an' use. But say d" ye ever. study the game like ye orta? I mean the way trout feel 'bout it. They's a lot like ourselves. "They's three things does it," con- tinues this sage old angler. "Trout as are slightly willin', continual castin' over the same spot and these here bivisible flies. See how they's made? Good stiff hackles, a stiff tail to make 'em ride high, without the hook point penetratin' the water, an' white on the top so's ye know where yerself. An' say, don't get so peevish an' disgruntled 'cause ye .ain't gettin' fish.. Chances is, it's yer own fault, an' ye'll never learn that -a -way. Try an' think like a trout does, an'• ye'll get better flshin'. S'Iong." Soon Now "Skunk cabbages poking their noses upthrough the' earth, restless anglers fumbling among flies books and lines are all signs of approaching spring. In the same paper Seth Briggs starts the season with a few suggestions to fishermen. "The best wayto catch fish," he says, "is to keep your Iine wet and not think too much about the lure you are using or going to use. It is seldom possible to take trout on a dry; By during a snow storm or when tate water freezes on your line, but the man who fishes consistently, con- scientiously and intelligently with any lure with in reason, usually' comes borne with a good catch of fish. "Here is a suggestion to those who in the past have twiddled .their thumbs until the first of May. Get out this year on the opening day with a good selecjon of wet flies and try your luck. Take a few each, of Hare's Bar, Coachman, Cahill, Cowdung, March Brown and Queen of the Waters. Put on one or at most two different flies of the above assortment on your leader and fish them hard for a while before you change to a• different fly." Particularly was he amused at a little work thus early ,on our journey; and, puff -ball lap aristocrat that conte spilt - and her eyes are looking blankly sniffling and wistfully at the r_ch, green mead tering out from a parlor and, and snarling feebly, strutted around ows, and the red cows; and the long him and under his belly, as though white reach,ofthe river shining' palely daring him to knock the blue-ribbon beneath the faint green heights in' the bow off its neck. When a young woman north. in maid's apron and cap came to the "Is Henley the prettiest town in the door and stamped for "Wiki-Wik's" return. Bimbo seemed hurt at the little fellow's being taken away. world, I wonder?" she said. "Yes, if you think so, Mademoiselle," replied von Rosen, gently.—From "The Strange Adventures of a Phaeton," by William Black. A Texas man says it's his ambition ��— to have a suit of clothes for each day. The public always fall for a man Most of us hate that now, but it's the who can make crime spectacular.— same one. Professor Raymond C. Moley. Famous Father Has Lovely Daughter COINN!S MACK'S DAUGHTEFR POLI-OW3 H13 LE p Mary Mack,daughter of the "Athletics' " fatuous 'manager, Connie Mack, 14 a loader tit sporting events at Mt. St. Joseph's Academy in Philadelphia. The Old Way of Warmth Manchester Guardian (Lib.) It is interesting to notice that in these days of frigid travel some passengers are calling out for old tin foot -warners which used to be the most comforting of railway companions. There are two nmai'n •schools of thought about the proper strategy in campaigning against cold—the European and the. American. The American practice is not to heat the person but to heat the room, and this method is often carried to what English taste finds intolerable stuffiness.... Perhaps, if the cold continues, the American habit of tak- ing iced drinks as a defenet against the hot dryness of steam -heated rooms will give way to the consumption of mulled wines and the neguses which Englishmen drank before the days of the cocktail and central heating. The real argument for supplying local heat by means of a fire or foot -warmer was that you could keep your feet warns and your head cool; in a cen- trally heated room or carriage it is possible to have only a stuffy head while one's extremities grow unpleas- 1 aptly chilly. Jamaica's Red On exchanging Kingston for the country, one soon 'realizes that the color of Jamaica is red. Green, of course, prevails—the green patches of the mountains, the green covering of the hills, the green of the great leaves of the bananas, the green of palms and ferns and grass. And yet it is red that remains on the retina: the red of the hibiscus, the red of the poinsettia; the red of the Flame of the Forest, the red and purple red of the bougainvillea, and, iiy no means least; the red of the clothes: the old wom- en's handkerchief turbans, the young women's dresses—So many of them crude crimsons conflicting with every, natural bloom. There seems•to be nq sense of prismatic: harmony in the negro temperament. The green you take for granted; the red is the surprise; and if I, were :o be asked what color came next l should say white; the white of teeth usually smiling,- the white os eyes turned lazily upon the passer-by. For every one is looked at in Jamaica, not with the insolent Latin stare, of even inquisitively, but with , mild and en- gaging and genial curiosity; and the spectacle of the passer-by is, next to gossip, the island's principal amuse - 'tent, for you see no games,—E. V. Lucas, in "A Fronded Isle." Love Old as the ages, Bright. as the clay Love is immortal, 'IIappy and gay.. Rare as red roses In a deep shade Blooming forever Never to fade! • Old as dim Egypt, Love's in her prune! Stronger than Troy, Outlasting time! Pearls for a princess, All in a sea! Gold for a ruler- Love still, for me! —p'; Howell Wobdring in the finder., Path - do not deprecate fora moment the value of the spirit of self-sacrifice. ---Will 1Y. Hags. 1vents may follow a sinuous course; but in the Marxist school I learned to; foot• at hlstdry,--•Leoa Trotsky. "The average tourist ' IS not 50 much interested du the bridge of size,, but the average dentist is." Probably when ulud twanged one, in the direction of Lindy . he palled, that old one about "the higher the;, fly the harder they fall." I noticed your wife sitting by the window sewing this morning. ); thought you told me she was ill?" "So she was; but to day ele's on the mend;" -'