The Wingham Advance, 1918-03-07, Page 5Thurscta?, Mar. 7th 1918
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Now is the time to get busy and benefit in both price and completeness of selections
by carefully going through our largo stock of eugs, Carpets, Linolemns, Oilcloths, on
goleum and Matting Rugs Wholesale prices are advancing daily but we are fortunate
in having a large stock on hand,.
`arrikias,
Wilton, Axminster and Velvet Rugs in great variety of beautiful designs in -
eluding Oriental and Floral patterns. All sizes ranging in price from $20 to $50.
Brussels and Tapestry Rugs are greatly in demand. 'We have a full assort-
ment of all sizes in good combination cf colors. At prices that cannot be repeat-
ed $8.50 to $35,00.
Just arrived a range of Congoleum Rugs. If you want something inexpen-
sive for bedrooms or living rooms, these are just the rugs. Good pattern and
easily cleaned and very :durable, at all the popular prices. Also Matting Rugs,
Mats and Runners, etc. An inspection awaits you.
Zknokamsa& (3\kkok\as
We carry a large stock of Nairn's and Lancastor Scotch Linalcums in
Block and Floral designs in 2 an'1 4 yd widths. Also Oilcloths and Surrounds in
all widths. As there is a great scarcity in these lines we would advise you to
buy early while the selections are good. '
NOTICE -All RCMP, Feeds and Seeds are Strictly Cash.
Produce Wanted
Ameameelsg=azaaingavesedazadeemewricsara.grazfaaszaaccamemonow‘ aalasaan‘
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••,
Phone 89
Grey
Auction sales are the order of the day.
We are glad to hear the sound of the
crows again,
A number of our young folk have been
enjoying the skating on the large ponds
of ice.
Mr. Wm. Baker, sr., passed away after
a long illness. He was buried at Mt.
Pleasant cemetery,
Mr. and Mrs. Lonzo Heath are =yin
to their farin on 10 con.
Graham Campbell of 1st line of Morris,
visited at j. D. RicEwen's and Iviaxwell
Abram' 0.
It. Krauter o !nth con. bas rented the
• 100 -acre farm of W../VicInnis.
Mr, John Byers has bought a farm in
Eltna, and is preparing to move,
Russell and Mrs. Robertson are getting
nicely setted in their new home on 16th
eon.
Wm, Whitefield of the 12th con has
sold his farm to H Speiran Mr. and
Mrs. Whitfield will move to Gorrie.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm Schnook are pre-
paring to move to their farm on the 14th
eon.
Garfield Baker was in Toronto last
week on business.
Mayme Denman had the misfortune to
1 fall and break her wrist. We hope she
will soon be 9 k.
oft,
Old False Teeth
Bought in any condition $1.00 per set
or seven cents per tooth. Cash by return
mail. R. A Copeman, 2579a Esplanade
Avenue, Montreal, P. Q.
Wroxeter
Mrs. Elson Cardiff of Brusssls spent
the week -end with her parents here,
Miss Pearl Kaake of Shelborne, visited
a lew days under the parental roof
Mrs Richard Rann is at present visit
ing her mother Mrs. Hastings of Wing -
ham
Miss Della Rutherford of Toronto', is et
present visiting her parents here
J .R Gfbson intends starting his saw-
mill this week, as he has enough choice
logs to keep the saw buzzing for some
months to come.
Mr. A. Houze left for the West last
week. •
.The Ladies Aid will meet at the home
of Mrs. John Brethauer next Wednesday
afternoon.
The sewing circle will meet at the
home of Mrs. R Miller on Friday after-
noon a good attendance is expected. •
We are pleased to see Mr Robinson
able to resume his duties in the post
office after a few weeks illness.
are fully matured. A fully -matured
potato, contrary to the general opinion,
has not the vitality nor the productive-
ness of the immature one. For eating
purposes a potato needs to be fully ripe,
but for seed purposes it is better to plant
so late that the frost will nip the vines be-
fore the potato has fully ripened Mr'
L. D. Sweet of Colorado, recognized au
one of the foremost potato growers of the
continent, who claims sometimes a yield
of 500 bushels to the acre, declares. that
he follows the method described by Prof.
App, and by careful selection from seed
thus secured. he secures the best possible
seed potatoes. Some of us didn't knowthis before,. and some of us won't believe
it now; but surely it is worth testing:-
Girardian,
Bluevale
Mr Jos. McKinney of Bluevale, pur-
chased the prizewinning ten month old
Durham Bull from Ur. Maitland Henry.
The animal took first prize at the
Wmgham Spring Stock Show on Thurs-
day Joe sure knows a good thing when
he sees it.
SEED POTATOES
In view of the fact that every farmer,
end every city man with a spade, and
a back yard the size of a quilt, Will try to
raise a few potatoes this year, it will be of
interest to note a few facts about seed
potatoes The idea hasgone abroad that
northern grown seed is more virile and
much more successful than southern
grown, and Prof F. 3. App, of the New
Jersey College of Agriculture, explains
why this isso. He says that the reason
lies in the fact that in the northern section
the frost kills the vines before the tubers
.•••••••orocaagfc.......V.01""
A Lament
My Tuesdays are meatless,
My Wednesdays are wheatless,
I'm getting more eatless each day;
My home it is heatless,
My bed it is eheetless:
They're all sent to the Y.M.C.A.
The barrooms are treatless,
My coffee is sweetiess,
Each day 1 am poorer and wiser;
My stockings are feetiess,
My trousers are seatless,
Great Scott! How I do hate the Kaiser.
A Truck for the Farmer
FARM equipment which will effect a time and labor.;
saving, and therefore a money-sa,ving, must be careo
fully considered by every good farmer now -a -days.
The farm wagon, which for years was the most useful
of all farm equipment, is now being replaced on the best
farms by a sturdy, dependable motor truck. The truck
will haul any farm product -fruit, grain, vegetables,
stock, fertilizer, or wood -around the farm, or to the
town or city many miles distant/. in half the time, and,
at a much lower cost.
The Ford One -Ton truck is a rapid, economical and
very serviceable means of transport. One of these on
your farm will save you weeks of time in a single season
and will enable you to pass through a crisis of labor short!
age with less difficulty.
The Ford truck is supplied /A a chassis only. Thispere.
rnits you to select any of the many body styles especially
designed for the Ford truck and already on the market.
Thusyou can mount the one which suits your individual
requirements.
Price $750 Lau Ford, Onto
A. M. Crawford Dealer Wingham
1
THE WINGRAM ADVANCE
WROXETER RED CROSS
The financial surnmarY of the Wroxeter
Branch of the Canadian Red Cross Sod-
ety, from Jan. 1st to Feby 25th 191$ as
presented by their Secretary, Rev. Chas.
P. Malcolm is a follows: -
Bunk Balance Jan 151; 133 30.
Personal Contribution (as per list 15$ 50.
-Social (A Casemore) t. 26 30
Prayer Service Jan Oth (P) ...... 4 55
" " "
Bal from Union add -week prayer
meetings 7.68
County grant per Wroxeter 35 35
County grout per Turaberry... „ 50.0()
Total 416.97
Materials purchased since Jan ist,
$103 00.
Supplies shipped to Toronto: -81 suits
Pyjamas, 12 grey flannel shirts, 36 Pillow
cases, 222 pair sox.
Contributions received by the Rd
Cross Suclety...Wroxeter from Jan. 1st to
Feb. 25111, 1918, •
Geo Alien • $3.00, J Al len 2,00, Ms
Brown 50e, J Brethauer 50c, R Baker
5.00, I., Brown 1.00, le Bolt, 3,00, T Bolt
1.00, W Ball 1.00, R Black 1.00, J Bush
1.00, 0 Bennett 3.00, Mi sti Cline 1.00,
John Douglas 1 00', A Douglas 50c, las
Douglas 50c, F Davey 50c, J Davidson
1.00, R Earls 5 00, Mrs Fisher e0c,
Gibson 1,00, A Gibson 1.00, Ms s Harris.
50c, R llupfer 50c, Misses Howe 1.00,
W Inazelwood 1.00, Mrs T Higgins 50c,
E Higgins 1.00, J Hamilton 1.00, Jas
Harris 5.00, S King 50c, F Kitchen 1.00,
Knox Bros 2.00, Mrs Lovell 5.00, Miss
Lovell 5.00, J Lovell 5 00, C Malcolm
1 00, T Musgrove 50c, W Mines 1 00, J
Morrison 50c, Mrs Munro 50c, W Mit.'
ellen 1.00, H Muir 1.00, R MiLehcIl 1 00,
E Malone 50c, 0 Muir 50e, Alex Miller
50c, Andrew Miller 5.00, Mrs 3 Miller
50c, C13 Moffatt 1.00. A McLean 25c D
McKercher 50c, Miet McTavish 25c, W
'I' McLean 1 00; R McKersie 1 00, T Mc-
Michael 1.00, R McMichael 60c, A Me -
Michael 2 00, Mrs P MeEwen3,00, 3Mc-
Ewen 5.00, Miss E McEwen 5.00, 0Mc-
Ewen 5.00, W S McKercher 5elineenV Pat-
terson 30c, Miss Powell 1 00, D W Rae
50c, Win Robinson 23c Mrs A W Rob-
inson 1.00, 1 J Rann 1:00, Mrs Raun
1.00, F Stride 2 00, Miss Sanderson 25c,
M Sanderson 1.00, Alis Shipley 50c, C r)
Simpson 1.00, j Stint 1.00, C Stafford
5.00, H Timm 1.00, 5 Taylor 30c, R Tay -
torn 00, 3 Underwood 5.00, W VanVelsor
1.00, G Wearring 1.00, Miss Wyman 1.00,
J Wray 1 00, Mrs 'Wilson 1.00, j Wendt
5 00, J Wylie 1 00, Mrs. Wylie 1.00, J
Willits 1.00, N Willits3 00, W Yeo 5.00,
J Young 1.00. Total 138.30.
LEMON JUICE IS •
FRECKLE REMOVER
Giris! Make this cheap beauty lotiot"Tro
clear and whiten your skin
•
Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a
bottle containing three ounces of orchard
white, shake well, and you have a quarter
pint of the best freckle and tan lotion, and
complexion beautifier, at very, very small
cost.
Your grocer has the lemons, anti any •
drug store or toilet runnier will supply
three ounces orchard white for0 few
cents. Massage this sweetly tragrant
lotion into the face. neck, .art -ns and tem&
each day and see how freckles and
rhes disappear and how cleean, soft and
white the skin becomes. Yes! it is harm
less.
ENLISTMENTS IN ONTARIO
Reverend Provost Macklem of Trinity
College, Toronto, addressing the annnal
meeting of his college corporation, refer_
ed to the heavy enlistment of Trinity
College men for the war and the conse-
quent shrinkage of the college roll, and
his statement has been published and
widely circulated. Itis in part is follows:
In this connection Trinity College (in
proportion to its numbers) has probably
suffered more -or shall we not rather say
has achieved greater honors -than any
other university in the province One ex-
planation of this may readily be deduced
from the statistics of "enlistments of
creeds compiled recently by the Newman
Club, a Roman Catholic organization in
Toronto, These statistics, which cover
enlistments in the Province of Ontario uP
to ist of October 1010, undertake to show
the ratio of enlistments to population, as
based ort the census of 1011, in respect of
each of the leading religious denomina-
tions. It is shown that in the period
stated the Church of England provided
more recruits than all the other religious
bodies added together The ratio of such
enlistments to the total Church of Eng-
land population in Ontario reached 15 per
cent., being more than three times as
great as the ratio of the Presbyterian en-
listmetits, which comes next in order with
5.82 per cent. The complete figures are
as follows:
Religion
Church of England bean 1 74,827 13.00
Presbyterian 521,603 25,221 482
Roman Catholic 451,007 14,198 2.02 ,
Methodist 971,727 15,070 2 60,
Jews 20,V2 .130 • 1i33
All others 232,9,11 5,152 1.58
Tilts Aattment -compiled by a Roman
Catholic institution, supplies nn
iilumin-
ating comment on Theban Itallon's state-
ment that Roman Catholics had colleted
a higher pere.entue uf nice than the larg-
e;.1 Protestant denomination in Ontar-
io.
The Church of England figure.* 64,527)
are more than fivetimes that of the Rom.
an Catholics (1.1,19) in the above table
both in number and per Tentage.
Rev. A. A. BICE,
:e.e.c'y Anglican Clerical Association,
le Axiom
Loom AT IT LP,OALLY
IC:oaYrIght, nil, by the iidodhira tioiropkw
por ifyinlioete.)
swum you imagine that Mise Piers
enee Gale, eighteen nue old, was the
first girl that ever fell in love with a
dancing Master because he was a 444.
Clag meter, then you are Mistaken.
They have been doing it ever slime
there was a 03104 ninater to fall la.
love with.
Miss 'Morellee was the daughter of a
merchant, and ranked well up In the
social eleeles of her town. There had
been a private dancing class made up
nf„ half a 'dozen girls and young men,
and Professor Paul Itevillion had been
engaged as direetor at a nigh honor.
Mune -
Mind you, he had not been hlred, but
"engeged," He was not a teacher, but
e "director." He wasn't on a salary,
like a bookkeeper, but on a honorar-
ium, if you. please. His /tame was not
• Jim Scott, nor nee Saunders, but Paul
And the professor was nice - very
Ince. Ile was nice all over, like a rare,
ripe peach. It was noticed even before
the first dance was held that he bad
white teeth and long eyelashes.
The six young men who were to pay
their good money for learning the art
of• (lancing looked the professor over,
and each and every one determined to
kill him as soon as the term of lessons
WaS thilShed,
The six young women cast sheep's -
eyes at him and mentally vowed to fall •
in love almost at once. It is to the
reedit of On sex. that they kept their
word. Yes, within a fortnight it was
apparent to themselves and others that
they were learning to love as well as
to dance. The young men read the
signs aright and gritted their teeth.
They could and did "spat" with VA
Moneti damsels, hut they coulan't kill
the professor until they had had the
worth of their money.
So far as having. •a very serious
flirtation every girl won out, Each
"ne had reasons to believe that' she
was the chosen one. Each one under
ate impulse of romance and girlhood
elliness, wrote little pink or violet
totes, and they were replied to with
An outpouring of the heart, The little
mice and replies were pretty much
ilikce but it happened that Miss Gale •
easeriore industrious than the others,
-Pie wrote two notes to their one.
It therefore logically followed that-
alien- the end of the term drew near
'ad Professor Ilevillion was ready for •
ensinese, lie pozsessed a package of
.ink notes signed "Florence" that
.iumberod way up above the half-cein
Itree mark. It did his heart good as he
.ounted them. It (11(1 his heart good
Is .lie counted the number' written to
lem by the other maidens.
One day Miss FIorenceeGale received
a note from the professor that set her
heart to thumping as it hadn't thump -
el yet. Some fiend in human form
had broken open his trunk _at his
boarding-house, and among- other
things stolen was -the package of her
love notes. The thief lin (1 had the au-
dacity to write that he had them, and
that he would return, thein for $200,
and not a cent less. If the professor
refused to pay the money the letters
were to be offered to Mr. Gale at the
same price. Mr. Gale was a stern
parent.
It was most unfortunate that the pro-
fessor didn't happen to have $200 inhis
Vest pockdt. ele could never forgive
himself for his carelessness. What
would "Dear Florenee" do about it? ,
Would sheeratse the each or take the
consequences? She would be granted
three days' grace, and then she was to
°meet the daucing master at a certain
spot at a certain hour and let him
know her decision.
"Believe me, my dear one," he *wound
up with; "I tun thinking of suicide as I
pen this. If I was not almost •sure
that you could, get the money of your
father I should say farewell to you and
send a bullet crashing through my
b
r
a
in
.
s"
Mie'Florence promptly fainted
away, or was going to when her moth-
er asked her who the letter was from.
She therefore decided. to lie instead of
faint, Her first feeling after mastering
the contents of the letter was one of
pity for the profeesor. Ile was think-
ing of blowing his head off ! Her next
feeling was of hernelf. She could no
more rano $200 than she could raise
$2,000,000. Had slie asked her father
for 75 cents he would have wanted an
explanation a rod long.
Poor Miss Florence erled alt -one
night :out got up in the morning to lie
again. She said' lt was the toothache.
She had gone back to bed to cry again
elton - she didn't cry. A sudden
thought made her sit up. What sort
of a man was Professor Itevillion to
leave a girl to Pace such a situation
alone? He must have n clew to the
thief, as he said he had received a let-
ter, but he had not added that he had
set the law at work. lie had a dia-
mond ring and t diamond pin worth
together far more than the $200, but
he had not said anything of selling
them to get her letters back.
"He 4'an't be what 1 thought Lim,"
Iteenudasthseat;iLig; :and five rainties late
"1 don't belleve he was rolled at
all:"
/1 she didn't, then what conelusion
must she arrive at? No need of sPend-
big much time over the question. Love
and romance kind been :waive nway,
and =mon cense: bad taken their
place,
"Why, be Wraith to held those letters
over inc to extort money 1" was her
exclamation.
If there hied been no robbery -if the
professor hall the lettene-if lie meant
extortion, then he bed 4-t 41'ettt advtue
tnge and meant to nee it. What could
be clone to stop him?
Beverly' Dare was a young men of
twenty-ilve, who had' graduated as at
lawyer and hung out his Mule In
the town. Up to date he had had but
few elients and created no stir. 110
was spoken er u n Mee young man
who would make his way, but was Ulet
butch teven to society. Mks riMaell
Ogle had never met him to be tithe
dneed. But 5110 went to him for holp.
"/ want legal advice," 4110 quit
rirpl n I nett
"Meese strife your ease."
MR bad been a *Ply tern Mee luta
Km! won unit ttifi• toVilt
•
lean had found herself at the mercy of
a blackmailer. Sha told all there was
to tell, and then banned over the pro«
festtor's letter.
"Do you want advice as to whether
YOU shall pay the $200 or not?" was
asked when. the letter had been rend.
"I couldn't pay It if I wanted to, and
rin sure I non't want to," She replied,
"Looking at it legally, Professor Re.
villion can be arrested and punished
for extortion:*
"And I can be held Up to ridicule
and scandal,"
"Well, your letters would have to be
read in court,"
"Weyer!"
"Looking at •it legall again, Miss
Gale, I might try to scare the fellow
into giving up your letters. Not too
much scare, but just enough."
"I want something worse than a
Mare
"I fall to get your idea."
4'I want to meet bine 1 Want to be
firmly satisfied that he is what I be-
lieve him to be, Then I want you to
give nim a good whaling and take the
letters away."
The lawyer turned away to smile,
and then turned back to say:
"Miss Gale, looking at itnegally,
can't assault and batter a Man In the
interest of a client."
"Then why not look at it some other
way?" she asked.
"As for instance?"
"As Mr. Beverly Dare."
"Ii'ne1 I think I could do that, I
cannot cite a precedent, but we can
make one."
Then came details that were not
(Arlene according to Blackstone, but
very intereeene, nevertheless, and that
night Miss Florence didn't surfer for a
moment with the toothache. It was
two nights later that she went to her
tryst with the professor. Ile had been
awaiting her a quarter of an bour. His
anxious inquiry as he ran 'forward and
seized both her hands was:
"For the love of Heaven, have you
got the money?"
"Have you got the
asked.
"Yes -yes !"
"Professor, I cannot get the money!"
"What! Blit you must 1 Think
what it means to you!"
"But you have the letters and can
hand them to me right here."
"But ray honor is pledged."
"To a robber!"
"See here, you silly kitten, it's $200
for this package or 1 raise a scandal 1"
Miss Florence turned her back on
the scoundrel Just as something lit on
him, It rolled him to the ground and
toyed and dallied with him. It punch-
ed him and it slugged him. It applied
epithets to him, and then applied the
boot.
It was months and months later
when Mr. Beverly Dare said to Miss
Inorence Gale:
'Looking at it legally, my dear
client, I think we ought to be =Anted
on Thanksgiving."
And he also won that cese. 7,1itoic
4.
letters?" she
tentieti
To Give and Take. 3
Very' often one's efforts and good in-
tentions are not apprectated, but even
se we should not lose faith In those
around us. The human heart craves
company and a few good friends are
golden treasures, especially to the
woman alone, or getting along in year%
but she must respect their rights and
privileges, says the New York Evening
Telegram. She should not make her-
self unobtrusive or over -familiar, for
even those nearest and dearest to us
soon demonstrate the irritation they
feel if we infringe upon their interests
or good nature. •
Keep at a safe distance the woman
who does not see lots of redeeming fea-
tures in others. Over -familiar persons
bore their closest friends, and these
tactless"people are the very cams wh(
declare that all humankind is heart
less.
Page rive
:7)
r
TO TM. GIRL fiE LEFT BEHIND:
insure Your unniiiiary man"
against thirst and faague.
Keep him supplied with
EarlY in the War the great value
of MAGLETS v„ias discovered
the Allied Armies. Books on the
War, magazine articles and corre-
spondence to the press, tell of its
use by the allied forces -the com-
fort and refreshment it affords -
the *'Pp" it inspires.
FOUR PERTINENT QUESTIONS
Editor, Advance.
Dear Sir:
Would you kindly allow me a little spate
in your newsy columns, just to ask a ques_
tion or two, which I hope some of your
many readers may be able to answer:
1. Who invited Mr. Bryan to speak at
the great Temperance Convention, held
in Toronto last week?
2. If asked by the Temperance leaders,'
does it not cast a reflection upon that
august body?
3. Again; there is much talk about
spending a cool million this coming sum-
mer, upon giving Ontario perfect roads;
it would be a splendid thing to have good
roads for our autos and rubber -tired bug-
gies, but, sir, in this titne of tremendous
pressure, when labour is woefully scarce,
and everything we eat and wear so ex-
tremely high; is it wise to take labour
from the farm, factory, and the freet, in
order -to satisfy a longing, which could
easily wait until after the war? Farm
labour being so scarce, let us help all we
can to till the largest Wheat field • in tint'
world. * ' 4 te'
4. And lastly, who will 'elentlenr. Muee '
grove's successor in our ProvincialLegis.
!attire? Will a few of the poWers that lee,
call a caucas meeting, anti in the- "
dark shades of camera, elect' the 'Man? •
Will there be a public meeting of the elec. n •
torate called, to decide the one who i to' e
wave our banner in Toronto? At present
we know nothing; it may be George thee
geeat, or one of our prominent lawyers, or
perchance it might be one of our medicef
inen; we know not. It is notasir, an ab- , .
solute necessity to look only at the pro.
fessional man, and forget ear well-postetin
merchants, who would be just as able to
uphold the dignity of our riding, if .61.7.
elected.
Now thanking yominanticipation, Mr.
editor. I would respectfully remain
Truly veers, .
- .J081.1
Try the "Advance"
for your next job.
The Governmenes Wolverine
" Y'r
.• • 4 •
A
J
OE SMITH has been the population gloomed. With good food, and the i the wail and little was left but the
at Castle Mountain, Alberta, everjloss of pain from his leg he regained i string, his flour sacks were ripped
since the rein of the population his strength and put on flesh. His I open and the contents scattered every-
!
moved out with C. P. R. eon• cage, strong, galvanized iron wire , where, his sugar and tea and coffee
struction in the early eighties of the a one -inch mesh, was floored with 1 were paired in an awful mess on the
last century. He makes his living by concrete, and had proven sufficient to i floor. His dog growled with brist-
hunting, trapping and prospecting. hold grey waive.;, half-grown bears, i ling mane, and then, dashed under
Three winters ago, bothered by the and full-grown badgers. He was con• 1 the bed, There came the sound or
depredations of a wolverine he set stared located for life. But one • snarls and worrIna. and then there
traps with a cunning which was part-
ly natural and partly aequired, the
result being that he aught a lusty
young but somewhat incautious woe
morning there was excitement. The rollea from beneath the plate of ret
keeper found the cage empty, and in 'a furry bundle which anoped. It
the wire, three feet. up from the was the dog and a wolverine, a fat
ground, a naat holte, the stiff wireenvolverIne, who fought with vigor:
thrust outward as though an eight. l'rhe trapper, at an opportune monaent
Joe, who has found that live ani. inth shell bas paned through. On ; crunched its skull with the back of
male of the wild often brought more the ground was the broken half of a an axe, and the badly torn canine
money from the government officials tusk, aliewing that the animal had • limped away to treat his jagged
at the zoological gardens in Banff, bitten and torn at the wires until he wounds.
twenty miles away, than the dead had it broken enough to force hitn.lthaltity tesh:iagvapetiounteboat tthb:wmoia:eirierthhad'
ones did from the fur dealers, decid- self through.
ed, to take his prize to the govern- This was in the fall. That winter !caused Its downfall Lean and hurt.
ment park, So, after painful adveu- a trapper was camped on the head- gry it must have come prowling
tures he boxed the muscular young waters of the Kootenay, near the ntrouud the house and found the'ven.
fury and delivered It before the su- point where tea Bann.Windermere etilation hole through which It tra.wl.
perintendent of the park. Ito was motor trail tros.ses the Kootenay ed. Then it found food. Now a won
greeted with warm words of commen- River. ire had a snug, rftud-roofed ,veviree has another name, and it is a*
dation, for the park had now
a live PlIelininty °off mfetag%8Alloongge, atnIdtlt hCIllithttSitd• reeTiziglii. 1(131;1: riblin' ot h at st ,14111:torlitit
wolverine in its cages. The fact that
the animal had broken a front leg matt time he decided he teould trail whenever Possible it lives up VI
did not mitigate at all against, the out to Golden for the Chrietmae hole it. That is what Otte enthral did. It
price Jos asked,
days, en be locked his plate and start, ate so much that it could not get
4
Joe put hig web in the strongly "ed with hls dog and such runt as he back through the hole and had curl.
wired cage, took bis money rind went ,Imel caught. Ile NVILS a raretul trap ed up to itleep off Its satiety and size
per, and he loft a small ventilatior ibeneath the bed. Beton( this hem.
name.
hie paw. Ite snarled and growled !door ea' eut through the aft( ond toe many another creature in hightnn
and glowered at the neeper, whoof his -cabin. He knew that no peek- walks tNi lite it e carrel appetit* We
stroll bard to win hia liking 4 ith !rats anuid kerne in beaten* a %easel been the littl!tA (ft its death.
name feeds. Two weeks mete, the had takcu up it$ abode In it at11111* The trapper turned it aver. Itle
broken bona* of the ford. g kuit.---but inearty ant del trod of his hunting bloodeitalned jaws snarled in deaten;
e
eetteeketly, the limb flaring ou‘ward. On and aroand tir.,h building. onlong fang showing broken ani!
neve lverine so far adt an
ced1 A week later be returned, Weaned ragged. Ito right femme" flared ent.
the oaptIvity that he delgnod tel *at e ith his irin and pleased to -g* t back ward where it had been 111 -hall anon
wowas
a rim bus, but he always f He opened ids door and stood agheet, a fracture,
IMIII 'NT dark to de on The beam wee enetve from Its 12/41 on ,
tite dee' tee emoted u41 5/1
'
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LA- 4 dal',ULM ...am a.ata. - •
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