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The Wingham Advance, 1918-11-28, Page 5Thursday, Nov. 28th. 1918 11 JI 1111,/1111 IP 11111I� ■TI11111 VIII 111111 II II V II 1I 1,1111 If l_ II I I I 1, 11 II II I 11 ""Jhe VAMSZ (4 �%'t' REAL VALUE IN DRESS GOODSAND COATINGS I 1 1 I Notwithstanding the scarcity of materials, we have a complete stock of t)i'ess Goods, Suitings and Coat- ings, including Serges, Vicunas, Worsteds, etc, in all the leading shades at prices that are right. It . will payryou to call and see them, LADIES' U ITI NG Somas, A beautiful rauge of Ladies' Suitings in all wool materials of Sees, i3road- cloaths and Vicunas, Navys, Browns, New Greys, Khaki, Bnrgundy, etc., for suits and seperate skirts, Having bought early wee re able to salt these cloths at exceptionally low prices $2.00 to $5,00 per yd, SWEATER COATS Sweater Coats are a. real necessity for they give comfort and satisfaction to the wearer. We are show ing a large range for every member of the family. New styles and colors in great variety. Also Scarfs, Caps and Sets. SILK HABITAU BLOUSES AT x$2'.75 Silk Blouses neatly made* of 'extra quality Habitau in White. Pink, :Flesh, Maixe, Peach and Navy, fast colors. Regular $3,50 and $4.00, Special $2 75, JUST A. #,R TUVED—A shipment of Monarch Knit Yarn! for knitting Sweater Coats, Pull -ever, Scarfs, etc, Produce Wanted 1 1 il1 111 IliI 1.11 * ME:Aii\k‘i% Canada Food Board License No 8-13535. Although far from the battle front,. the changes which are taking place in Australia, at the present time are remarkable indeed and indicate how a continent can fight heroically and at the same time labor constructively for a larger life in the coming years of peace. One great lesson which the commonwealth has learned Is that it, cannot afford to be so largely de- pendent on outside means for com- thercial intercourse with the rest ot the world. With enormous surplus - ages of wheat, wool, sugar, beef, and fruits, the people of this far -away country have been .unable to furnish: them to the. Mother Country, which. needs them sorely. With the co-oper- ation of the Government great ship- building enterprises have been launched and ports are being improv- ed, The output of the Australian metal industry for the -next ten years already has been contracted for. facilities ter t a ze being sought for marketing the enormous quantity of wool grown in -this sparsely populated country. The Government is aiding in extending the export business in butter, beef and cheese. A conference has been held at which plans were -made effectively to co-ordinate ale these efforts at expansion.—Popular Mechanics. - A Gift to the Nation, Stonehenge, the world-fatnotrs ii:,.id monument, which has always been in the halide of private owners, hi;., been peesented to the British na- tion i,y Ce IL ie. Chubb, who pur- d'. f,r a it on Sept, 21, 1915, The G ; t.r:.incnt has accepted the gift and imeeeforth will be responsible for its pi eertiation. The aneounecwent has been re- eeir'.,i with the greatest satisfaction, fee it -allays the fear that the monu- ment some day might come into eon, snicfn of an u.:appreeietivet ()%.14.i. wine would allow it to be de- stroyed or removed. _ Ask for Investigation, The non on Ministerial Associa- tion in ask! ;he Govicennl:;nt to in- vestigate the food wastage by hoard- ing disclosed through hundreds of barrels of eggs being spread as fertilizer on Elgin County fields, L NOTICE TO CREDITORS Notieeis hereby given, riureuaut to Section to,Chap.121 of the 'Revised Statutes of Ontario, i bob all persona having claims against :tire Estate of David Calloway, deceased, who died 1918; at thetTowr& of seventh enOctober, o z.ty of Huron. in the Provicoe of Ontario, are re quired to send by post, prepaid, ar tg deliver to 1 . Vanstone, Wingham, Oatarlo, Solicitor for the Executors; on or before the Tenth day of Deoegther, A. L. 1918, their nameslland ad- dresses, with trill particulars of tbeir,olatms in writing, and the nature ot the securities (if any) held by them duly verified by a Statutory Declaration. AND fur,,her take notice that afterthe'said Tenth daroe December, 1918, the:assets of;;the Said estate will be distributed by the Execu- tors among the parties entitled thereto, hav- ing regard only to the claims of which thoy shall then have notice. and the estate:will not. be liable for:any claims not flled•at the time of the said distribution.: Dated atiWingham„thes Sixth day of Novem- ber,A. LK, 1918 R. VANBTONE, Wingham P.. 0., Solicitor f or the Executors, THE CHANCE OF At LIFETIME A farmer'sNindependent life combined 'with all the - comforts and conveniences of town. Forty acres of land ad- joining Winglaarlx together with a dwelling with all modern conveniences and Marge barn. This is just what inaiiy. inen are looking for and - will not hold long. Ritchie & Wens Insurance and Real 'Estate Wingham, - Ontario Phone 89 = .1laitriaurs.%/ PREFEI'i TO GO BAREFOOT. Native African Troops ('at,ry '.Their Boots When on the Mord.. Among native African men living near mission stations boots are oft.. worn on Sundays to go church in. or rather with, for the footwear is al. most invariably carried slung over an arm or shoulder, this being mors - comfortable for the feet and less wearing oe the boots! Still, on near, ing the church, they are put on with Much seriousness and ' importance; the more the better, and should a pair creak badly the joy of the•wearer and envy of his friends are beyond all description. "This naturalantipathy to wearing bottis," says' Prof. Holloway in the Wide World, "does not only apply to the south. In some colonies .where native troops are supplied with boots when on the march, they will beg officer's t eir h permission to °walk barefoot, and in comfort. I remem- ber a coal -black Soudanese, a fine old soldier well over six •'feet, who was doorkeeper at a friend's house in Khartoum, Whenever 1 called, after saluting he would solemnly put on his boot before taking my card, and on his return immediately take them • off again with a grunt of at- tention, and .in his deep voice rum- bling out whether or not his master was at home. He was quite under the impression that this was the cor- rect thing to do." A Common Decoration. The Victoria Cross has just been awarded for the 1,000th time. Though the Order of the British Em- pire was instituted much later, it has long ago passed the more venerable decoration in the number of those who hold it. In tact, the 0.13.E. is about as highly pr;#zed by those who haven't it as Is the "LC." by the jun- ior bar of Ontario. The following poem from the pen of Arthur Nor, man, which appeared fit the London Times, indicates the estimation In which the comparatively new honer* is held: Naturally. "1 say, Smith, under what head do lyou charge your dental egenses7" "Incidentals, of courses.' N.61t fip M=1 e 3 3st. • : 47:101, -A.-1717 • -,sc JI .1 .11 1 a : I l .191 I. / t.:1 SRR, '. � cm: , ,6Nda[lll..i e Buy a Better attery Enjoy the abundant power, greater endurance and longer life of the Pr'est-O-Lite Battery. Feel its responsiveness to your• touch on the starting button—its absolute dependability for good lights and quick starts. There is a Prest-O-Lite Battery of the correct size foe_ your car --a battery that insures the utmost in satisfaction and service. We carry a complete stock of new P'rest-O-Lite Batteries and battery parts, We inspect, repsi.r and recharge batteries of all makes—expert work at reasonable prices. Your battery will wear out before its tittle if you neglect it. Drive around today and let us take hydrometer readings to determine its condition and add distilled water if needed, This service is yours for the asking, no matter what car you drive or what niake of battery you troy use. The Overland 1ringh$In# We liaoe a servier. battery for you to nae While yours i3 left with us for repair ar rediarging. • ORALE BAT1. ERLY Service (Station 'ill 3 l R:ti .aft `ilih! $40 ,elf 17 LI L QR4M ADV 14 0 0400 etefl t: 4^14 44 µR1» O+4 R Sinn Fein Contentions Answered by Unionists Who Represent Ulster HE world has stud astounded bf; the fl'iendly stand taken by Mr, de Valera towards German victory, The Sinn Fein party, 111 shoat, le perfectly con- tent to win a 'republic in Ireland through the triumph of kulture, with- out the sinalleat regard to what would happen to 13elgium, to Serbia, to Roumania, or any other small na- tion, through Irish treachery to the Allies, and without political acumen enough to discern what would hap- pen to the Irish republic with kultur dominant from Antwerp to Vladivos- tok, and frost Hamburg to the 1;'er Sian Gulf. • The Ulster Unionist Council has recently replied to a few at Mr, 4e Valera assertions that he makes at every opportunity regarding the sit- uation in Ireland. Now it is the con- tention of Mr. de Valera and the Sinn Pein party that, in the phrase of ,a famous ballad, "the shamrock is by law forbid to grow an Irish ground," But then Mr. de 'Valera le a political Rip Van Winkle, and shares with Father McMahon the innocent int, pression that these little eccentrics; ties are wrought by statute, As a matter of fact, as the Unionist Coun- cil points out, two-thirds of the en- tire soil of Ireland has passed into the bands of peasant proprietors, so that at least two-thirds .is still epen to the growth, ,of the shamrock, a fact which that desperately ener- getic agriculturist, the Irish peasant, is not unmindful of. Now the pur- chase money for this land revolution was supplied by what Lord Rosebery calls the "predominant partner" and, Mr, de Valera, "the brutal Saxon,' and supplied upon terms of the ut- most liberality. No doubt Mr. de Valera could draw z moral from this, for Mr. de Valera, when It comes to finance, is about as practical as Mr. Micawber, only it is to be doubted 1f he ever would have that penny on the credit side which meant freedom from care to Wilkins of that ilk. An example of what might be achieved by an Irish exchequer, presided over by Mr. de Valera, may be seen in his declaration that the present income of Ireland is sufficient to support it- self unaided, and to maintain an army and a navy. The only thing that Mr. de Valera omits to point out Is that this calculation is based on the income of Ireland during the present war, on a basis of taxation` that would successfully bankrupt the. country, if anyone were ' foolish enough to attempt to maintain it as a normal .condition. .As it is, the great mass of Ireland's income comes from Ulster, and this explains why it is that the south is so virtuously determined that the Home Rule bill shall include liner. Well, the reasons are very .simple, and they may be stated in terns sterling. Ulster pays customs and revenue rather more that. twice as much as the whole of the rest of Ire- land. Belfast itself is the third. port in the whole United Kingdom, and does one-eighth of the entire coast trade of the United Kingdom, Ulster owns three and a half .times,,niore shipping than all the rest 'of Ireland combined, It produces.. forty-eight per cent. of Irlsh oats, forty-one per cent. of Irish potatoes, fifty-three per cent. of Irish fruit, ninety-nine per cent. of Irish flax, and this might go on indefinitely. Therefore, when Mr. de Valera talks of the down- trodden and overtaxed Irish peasant, he is perhaps wise in omittingto mention that the bulk of the taxation is borne by Ulster, and that part of Ulster, in particular, which Is ada- mantine in its adherence to the union. And then again, Ulster has another excellent reason for not be- ing ambitious of entering the Home Rule parliament, and it is this, that Ulster does not particularly wish to pay' the poor rates for the rest of Ireland, and that for the all -sufficient, reason that the rate of pauperism in Belfast Is 82 per 10,000, in Dub- lin 270 per 10,000, and, as the line inclines further south, 284 per 10,000 in Cork and Waterford. But perhaps the most delightful example 01 over- taxed Ireland may be found in the fact that in Belfast, which is . the stronghold of Unionism and Protes- tantism, the Roman Catholic Nation- alists contribute £18,000 a year in rates and receive £53,789 in salaries. re it any wonder then that Mr. de Valera should himself have announc- ed, at Ballaghadereen, only a year ago, that."Ulster must be coerced if she stands in the way," and a little later, at Cootehill, that if she per- sisted in being a ' Britishgarrison, she would have to be kicked out. It is not surprising, then, that When the Ulster Council is told that he Orange bodies are intolerant, and hat they have nothing to fear from the tolerant brothers of the south, hey do not take the trouble to argue so much as to' quote figures, The ltolnan Catholic population of ljlster is 690,134 and it has 112 represen- attires on County Councils, The Protestant population is 886,363 and t has 12$ representatil'es, whieh means that the percentage 01 Roman Catholic representatives is greater hon that of Protestants, though the alanee of population is heavily On he side of the Protestants. Now turn o Connaught: there are 228 County Councillors in Connaught, not one of whom is a Unionist. In Munster here are 228 County Councillors, my one of Whom is a unionist. Whilst in Leinster otit of 336 County aunty Councillors, 12 are Unionists, rawn from one particular quarter where Unionists predominate, 18 it any particular wonder, then, that the Uleterites regard an Trish epublic, presided over by a gentle- man of Mr. de Valera's .politidal fore- ight and financial acumen, ae a trifle azardous, as, indeed, something wWeft might very easily mature int* glorified Dennybrook7 Pogo itivd t t t t t t b t t D C d r 1 British Dyers, Opening a British industries tor * dye industries and gloves at GlasgO*, Sir Arthur Steel -Maitland, the exhibition showed the great pre- gross already made in Great Britain. These exhibitions were laying the foundations of trade for years to come, he said. The treat fah* at Lyons and London. and Glasgow Were meant as a meane of preparation Salk the future,. Not E flective. Militant Suff..--•-If you wend tide %r ja11 1'II refuse to ewtl Mrigistrate----Food will wile MI War. `hi,rl • •i Ra ids 1w :. Wea. kr es of Hun r.�,.�,f.�.,, �ryt q•M�N�M�.�M� e�,.�„�M ' ,'• R,�yN�_.. .fol, Information front variotz sectors of the British front tell of the h. en satleft:btiue of the Ann that the "ole Kuri" is at least shotring uni:;;tatc.. ablo sigz s of dirt.t.s. "He it dead stere azu the run rice" is Lite burd'e of the hulk of sol ice..' (U1.Im41.t, Atte tris and Turkey :are exeleeted to fol• low Bulgaria out of the war sooner or later ----probably oeoner. it is even doubted whether ti.e empire thvtz Bismarck welded together ttith blood and iron will emerge tiitli its lutes» rity complete. "Meanwhile we are having any atnount of excitement all along the line," said Capt. R. I', W. Rees. "1 will give you an illustration, The Brandenburg'ers and Prussians are opposite us. We want to know which of these actually bolds the village of C. To find out such things we use ilei• old friend tho trer:eh raid. Now a trench raid agaipst 13randenburgeze and Prussians is no child's play. It • is work for full grown men, who know their job. We like these raids all the more for theil• difficulty, Solid killing is not half so attractive, for after all we are not butchers. "On this night, which was aston- ishingly dark, our enterprise was en - belated toe one company, B, which drew the longest straw from the bat. Of course -the whole company°could not go for it showed a, strength of 150 rifles, We asked for volunteers and 161 responded. We found that the extra man was a spare cook. Sixty was all we could take and we selected them according to enlistment. Ab usual we practiced the raid behind Our lines a few days. "Then came the night, At' 8,10 We went out into the gloom, march- ing on compass bearing. The wire had been but. for us and the barrage was -to tall at 8.45. At 8.40 we were in position. In five minutes' time the first gus barked and 'instantly there ensued a shell hell of noises. Close over our heads whined shells, shrieking death -dealing things `that seemed to miss us by inches. Their flashes and the torrent of Very lights tram the German trenches made no man's land as light as day. An enemy wiring party scuttled for safety over the top towards the support lines. "We could see the men frantically using their rapid firers over the para- pet. Machine guns bigaan to hiccough and spit, Then we went in. They were ready for us. Point, jab and short point we went at them driving the steel .home into their white faces, Down into; the trench we went and fought our way traverse by traverse towards their dugouts. Our fellows had the terrible music of the barrage in their brains and all hell could not have stopped them. We passed back prisoners as we advanced. Arrived at the dugouts we cleared them in no time. Just a smoke bomb as a warn- ing and up came the Germans in pairs with hands above their heads and the sweat of death fear on their fore- heads. "They expected the bayonet but we tied their hands and hustled them back. Discovering that they were to live they became happy Germans. We set fire to the empty dugouts and a bugle sounded , 'all clear,' That journey back to our trenches was a nightmare. A counter -barrage had fallen and it seemed as if there was an impenetrable curtain of shells be- tween us and home. Huge minen- weerfers made chasms at our feet. Sharpriel burst around us like a giant hailstorm. High explosives tore the air until we could hardly breathe. In our nostrils was an overpowering stench of picric acid. It took an hour to get in, When a nian was knocked out we waited to succor him. Once we got on a roadway that was sim- ply plastered with Shrapnel; 'The gap in our wire had been taped and the enemy shells were thick there, However, by that time we bad got our shell sense and by judicious rushes between the bursts we got past without casualty. "Our prisoners numbered forty. Our casualties were fifteen wounded, all of whom we brought in with us. _ 'Forty' of 'em!" seurted the sentry, There ye are. If we'd gone we'd got an 'undred if not more'.", MUNICIPAL REVENUE (Continued from pagee1) ;26,000. `i his premium 011 idleness, re - nail in the boosting of land values be- yond the ability of labor and capitol to pay the tribute. Wingham requires about $47,000 this year for all purposes, Your land area is 600 acres and allowing for streets, there are therefore. about 7200 lots, 26x100. An average tax of $7 per lot would yield $50,400. And this with- out taking one cent of private property, nor adding one cent to the cost of living. This tax would grade in apportionment between your dearest lot said to be worth $1000 or more --and your cheapest lot worth about $75 or, if you were to abolish all taxes on improvements and personal property and levy a 6 per cent tax upon your land values, the dear lot would pay $60 improved or unimproved, and the cheapest lot would pay $3,75 improved or unimproved, Users of land would benefit non-users would have to became workers and producers, If you allow in this town Slots to each family, for all purposes you will need only 2500 Lots, leaving some 4700 lots idle and vacant, all of which are entitled to and get more or less social service and advan- tage, but do . not pay full cost thereof. What they -do not pay is unjustly loaded on to improvements, The single tox is the only tax that does not violate the rights of private property. The only tax that lakes public value for public use. The only tax that does not create on the one hand unjust burdens and on the other hand privileges. Public value for public use, private pro- perty for private enjoyment, is the true basis of honest taxation. • Belmore Mre. Coutts of Mildmay, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. A. H Lowry.. Mrs. Geo Bremner left an Friday last for Wingham, where she will spend a few days with friends before going to spend the winter with. friends at North Bay. Mrs, R, E Jackson, Wingham, visited her,parents, Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Irwin last week. Mre. Wm Lowry is visiting her daugh- ter, Mrs, W. Nichol of Trenton. The Presbyterian Sunday School is pre- paring for a Xmas tree in the near future, Mr. Wm. Tremble has sold his 100 acres on the 17th con. to Mr. Wm. Ed- wards.. We do not know where Mr. Tremble intends going. The Presbyterian Manse le about com- pleted. It is a fine structure and we eepe Rev. Mr, Sinclair and family wilt enjoy the comforts in the cold winter." THE EDITOR An editor is not a matt Who lies upon a rosy bed, For many a steep and stony path This fellow mortal has to tread. His parish is both long and wide, With folk of every race and creed, Who cannot join with one accord'' About the things they like to read. Some folks would lie all things in print, While others claim it should not be; There's not a point in anything Upon which readers all agree, When one would have the man to frown; The other would have him applaud. ' And if he takes the middle course They join to beat him with a rod. Some think he favors certain folk In lodge, religion,`tu in state, And men of every sort and shade To him their tales of woe relate, The women folk have trouble too, About their parties great and small, And think the Editor's the man To hearken to each beck and call. In all the days of former years The Editor has had his grief, And higher cost of all his needs. Has not provided sweet relief. You Would not like to have his job, And drive his pen, or wear his coat, For tho' he does his very best, There's folks who'd like to get his goat. • ISARO' 8 SALE OF NEW WINTER (0*1 THIS W E*,E K we place on Sal e Manufacturer's Clearing Lines of Ladies' and Children's Winter Coats. These are new models and have all the latest touches of style. Here is your chance to buy an up-to-date Winter Coat at a great Saving Women's Plush Coats In all the leading colors and the most desirable styles. All are lined with fancy silk Brocade fining, Colors are Black, Brown, Grey, Blue, Green, Fawn end Burgundy. See our Specials at $25. $35. $40. $43.75 Baby Lamb Colts Lined throughout, pretty style, a serviceable coat, Comes in Black trimmed with plain plush A few to sell at • $29.00, $35.000 VI/omen's Zebiline Coats Fashionable and good wearing coats in Black only. Bargains at $15.00, $18.00, $20.00 Fancy Tweed Coats - New modets, These are good warm coati. Prices $15.00, $17.00, $19.00, $20.00 Sweater Coats Just opened up a large shipment of women's and girls' sweater coats, pretty styles and colorings, Prices range $2,75, $3.50, $5.00,48.001 $7.00, $8.50 20 Coats Special to Clear At half price carried over from last seasonNot far gut in style." •" Made of excellent cloth. Every garment will cost you less than the cloth by the yard today. $10,00 coat for $5 00, 812.00 for $8 OU, $15.00 Lor $7.60, $20,00 for $10,00. Come Quick for Test Choke 16 Girls' Coats to Clear Plain cloths and tweed effects. Sizes are for 8 years. 8 years. 10 years, 12 years. On sale while they last c $4.95 Before buying your Furs be Sure and See our Large Stock of the Latest and Most Desirable Styles H. E. ISARD & CO. Ladies' Wear and Men's Wear. mAriffommmtmeommikwortmtimm THE ADVANCE till Dec. 31st, 1919, tor $1.50 • Di Trout i the pray' BORNj SOMAYn—At 13elmore, on Thursday, Nov. 14th, 1918, to Rev. and Mrs. N. R. D. Sinclair, *daughter. DIED AYLESWOItTH--In Fordwich, on Thurs,, Nov. l4th, 1918, Peter P. Aylesworth, aged 78. years. M1r)�—in Howick, on. Thursday, Nov. i 14th, 1918, Geo. Mee, Oth con., in his 83rd year. MARRIED ZzetMitfrMAN--SoTl rete --in Gorrie, on e Wednesday, November 20th, 1918,• by the Rev. P. G. Powell, Tessie V., daugh- - ter of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. T. Sothern, 4th con., Howick, to Mr. W. Sanford' Zimmerman, soh of Mr. and Mrs. Heti- ry Zimmerman of Gorrie. nolo .FIRES BURNING BRIGHT Keep the home fires brightly burning To support the boys o'er there, For our hearts for them are yearning, And they are our love end are Let us do some seif denying— Saving food and thrift -stamps buying, Warfare sinews thus supplying -- Saving everywhere. Keels the home tires brightly burning, Por the now and for the then; Ror the time of their returning..... boys no more but manly .then; tet us in these days, forsaking Selfish ends, 1* truly making toter thing* --our seine awaking, E'er they conte aftalo .Fran Scott Shepard. WO and ifree•quarter dozen not. ing fish, speckled and gleaming from the ice-cold waters of the Spray River, near 13anfl. and none under eight ounces 10 weight. They were heavy on the line when they flret took the hook and surged and charged and sulked and Dually carne in to be landed, and they grew mar- vellously heavier, by the tim< they had all been caught and then arrlod four miles back to the buggy which we had loft by the falls *here the first fish art the string had twin be heath the great rocks that scorned the green eddies of the roaring river and would only coine forth when drawn by Stout silk and trusty gut. Ariii the whole trip was not long one, as fishing goes. We tier' our horse at the new brides below the falls and left him placidly teneehtnr. Otte While we crossed the river rind took to the precariously narrow perk• trail that twisted and climbed and dropped and went higher heroes and around the great lower ramparts of Mount Rundle, We dallied at a pro- mietmg eddy and drew forth three it rib, We Climbed three hundred feet ie it half -nolle walk and paused at the Wr"a a of t4 Steep, moth golly pf 'granite which led to a trelaendene pool of crystal water peat whie': the foam -flecked currant dashed, in its thousand feet of length the gully would take from us the altltudireus advantage of our climb, but we slid demi to the tempting water, trust. ing to good luck ane. strong eptkee to get us back to the trail. A Black Ant and a Conutton Coach. man hit the Water simultant ouely. A Nipigon trout, the product of trans. Pleated roe, slid up from the bettorte of eleven feet of water like a streak of silvery steel and struck the Ant I with a vigorous alixiety that brought I, toy to the angler and angry restate ante from the fish. A hungry rut. throat !sliced a path front his shelter- ing boulder and 'listened the e.e,olt man In the bono of hie upper jaw, I thus pleasing another fisherman who checked his whirring reel and 'reek. ed the bending rot. with gleeful care, If you know how the flak lie it the waters of the mount -Ma paradise of Ilanif Peek you need lege little time in vain eaetirig. Th.he tete waits at the upper or :.ower enda of bt lraolt sheltered behind soaks; or it coil. reale Itself behind sante Preteotheil atone that lut,I Mt, q' 'tri l ter the bank sold there, in the retain) eddy welts and watohes the oases. dashing past, reedy to flash out alit any delicate Morsel of food that to brought Siong with. the food. h, irate needs only fat the pools and the ehouidera, and if there is not * strike after a done dusts tt le gee. judamaext to brow on fes the 'IOW have moved on. We fellewed theme direaetiene *a fished guitar a stretch of river. We had left our horst at.__. We Were at the drat Lumber *vita — two o'clock, ftlrtd we had flaked thO big holes In the canyon by thrall o'clock, At that time, morally cote* thet we herd better unit Asking DS gelarespeot hemient Me kart ought as honest day's atrtng we o>ted tit Prises, tad fouled thirty-three w beauties. So hafc*ry and tired and fully eontent we walked Istek the breed highway on the Wait tide set the sires anti rejeitke!d our Steed feu* 'riles array. Tie*, 1* amain. *anti We part is the great aliaieerg reettc oll the C. P. it, betel art site er.+rtaeuf>Yyl of delieioua ti'.Ut, The oily elate that safe. $$i ll 1141iitrt intotlk*r o**,' -V, v,,