The Exeter Times, 1923-10-25, Page 6• Canallians I aye -Planted .50,000 Acres of Trees
By Dr. C. D. Howe, President, Canadian ForeStrY Associatibil.
Vat the Ontario Forestry Station. at , programs, the. leader lis this week be -
St, Williams, earoat 500 acres aro itow ' Ing the Latirenticle,OompapY at Grand
Wader • pleatatiens and the nursery Mere, Quebec. The foreetor of this
contains eewarde of 15,040,000 yeuagicompany eetablisliecl a nursery in
trees- Ther,e are about 5,000,000 more 11912. In the elevea years thenna•sery
tie,edlings at the two subsidiary nur- ',has grown. train a. few square ,rods to
ses, one at Orono, Durham County, ',. 20 acres in extent and it now eonteins
and the other at Midhurst, in Sinacoo :, 15,000,000 seedlings and. trenSplants.,
County, established last year, The l• The , compaY lias -planted. 2,500 aeree.
tuotb:er mire•ery in Norfolk 0ounty Practically all'the work has been done
since its eetablesliment has diets -I -Ion` purchased.' lands, not cm lands,
baited arciund • 6,000,000 seed1Mgs, I leased under timber limit regulations.
chiefly to farmers, for the planting, up 1 The Riordan ,Company establish.ed a
of waste places, or at the rate at 350,- forest nursery and has reforested
000 seedlings a yeer. • about 200 aorete. The Abitibi Com
-
At the present time it supplies a Daily and the Spanisa River Company
great deal at material tor planting ia haVo forest nurszeies and are initiat-
ing refore,station•programs:
I can find no statements in the vari-
ous official repeats as to the extent of
*the area Linde/. fares.' plaistatione in
Canada. /t, however, we take the num-
ber of seedlings known to have been
distributed by the Dominion. and Pro-
viucial organizations, and the areas
planted by private conapanies during
thepast 20 years, and suppose that
they were planted at the rate of 1200.
per acre, and allow a 20 per cent- loss,.
we find that in the neighborhood ot
50,000 acres have •been planted to
trees, or at the rate of 2,500 acres a
year for the ,past twenty years, It is
only fair to point out, however, that.
only . a small portion of this area is•
what would be *strictly called threat
plantation. Much the grea.tcar portion
consists of shelter belts and small
patches of waate land on farms. So
Tar as I am able to ascertain, there are
about 6,000 acres' of actual forest plan-
tations, for the purpose of timber pro-
duction alone, in Eastern Canada.
• A Profitable Investment.
Forest planting for purposes ot tim-
ber production will without doubt re-
• the co-operative arrangements be-
tween the Counties and IViunicipalitlea
aS well as etook for fixing 700 acres ot
shafting eand in Prince EdWard.
County; in all over a million seedlings
and cuttings- were distributed last
year, •
May Restock White Pine.
production of 20,00e,000 see -
lings in the oatarto Proyincial nurser -
ie is preparatory to the Government's
plan of reforesting 10,000 acres of
waste land in Old Ontai•io, each year
for at yeast 60 years. The Provincial
rarester estimatethat 600,000 plant-
ed acres, all within 100 miles of the
principal markets, eventually would
yield more sawlog material than is
now gleaned from over eleven million
acres of timber limits under license
scattered from one end of the Pro-
vince to the other.
A farest mareery was esta.blished in
the Province ot Quebec at Berthier-
ville itt. 1908, and since that teeffie about
four million seedlings have been dis-
tributed for private planting and in
a*dditiou more than 300 acres of shift-
ing sand areas have beee reclaimed.
The latter is the beginning of the For- suit in profitable investment in the
est service program .of re -threat -lag as older portions of the country where
ranch as 15b.s.srib1e of the three million
acres of waste land within. the Pro-
Vinc,e. Quebec has also under eon-
sideratian the establisament of coin-
- munal forests:
What the Companies Are Doing.
The planting of forests in Canada
is not confined to Government organi-
zations. 3t is a notable and significant
fact that certain pulp and paper cornpaniee are carrying on refo-restation
markets are near and adequate lire
protection is assured, but neither of
the two later condlions applies on
much the greater portion of our for-
ested area. Here in most cases arti-
ficial reforestation is not indicated,
The function of forest planting is Co
supplement our main forestry effort,
which is the guidance of Nature's
creative and regenerative forces in
the forest.
-AND THE WORST IS Y T TO COME
wftrawaseavrotmapor.,,n,trdra....w• ••••••••*,..
efining Canada's Bouudaries
e Important Work of the International Boundary Corn:.
raisSion—How the Line is 1)eterrnined and Marked.
The prime iraportauce of having- the ary line between the Wilted Stetca
boundaries ot an intlividuers real pro- and Canada extends eolith 645 miles
perty accurately surveye,c1 and defined along the 141st Meridaa t Mount St.
both by marks on the ground and by Elias and parallelthe Pacific Ocean 19 a keen studocr at human_ nature as
description on paper, and a record of
the same property registered and ac-
knowledged is everywhere recegnized,
As with the individual so, but in a cor-
respondleglY greeter degree, with tire
nation. The duty 'of delimiting and
marking the boundaries between Can
placed upon the International Bound,'
dry CommissiOn composed of two
eemmissioners, one representing each
couTxhitirsy.work is undertaken tinder the
—•-•,••••••-••••••••••-••••••••—••-----.,
•'STORIES OF WE
KNOWN PEOP1..F.,
Law School Principal Has His
Droll Joke. '
Dr. Newton Wright:Uoyies, re-
tired principal of Osgeade Law Schoo1,
a hest of the legal talent of Ontario
can testify.
Inecent effort on the •part at a Toronto, freaaaeaper man to InterVieNV Dr,
"1
0 0
0 a 444 fr-
----. --,_
••••-. •-...,,...---,
•'-:,''',.......
"".... --....,,
---niesa. •
(an_
0 ree'
k.
Upland Meadow.
Are the sweet airs always blowing in
the balsam and the oak trees?
I Is the eky with clouds dappled, and
the grasses all astir?
Do the berry vines bold clamber on
the wall that's old and. crumb -
The Weaver of Rugs.
The Weaver of Rugs h,as dreamed a
are=
And brooded. the -eummer through;
With tender love he's pletted his
theme
Andeaew His dream's come true.
ens
1.Te's spread His. carpet ever the hills,
Soft is its silken sheen
Of red and the color of daffodils,
Of rose and. orange and green..
And a patch of blue reflecting there
The color of autumn. skies;
The pattern vague, but beyond com-
pare
Are these clear, raysterious dyes.
Ite blotted warp in the ground below
Holds close its shimmering pile.
The Weaver of Rugs has dreamed it so,
Anel this is its aIaker's smile.
The Weaver of Ruga has di eamed
dream
And brooded the summer through,
(aver the forest, field and stream
And now His clream'a come true!
—Beatrix Reynolds.
Mountain Aerials.
Killjoys.
Among the most practical and easy
methods at mending one's relations
with ether persons is,praise. Unimag-
inative persons don't praise their fel-
lows because they can't find anything
to peaise. They are literalists, and
--- -ass
Just Borrowed It.
The doctor called on a man who was
ill, and told the wife that she must put
him into a recumbent position.
"A. what, doctor?"
"A recumbent position," said the
doctor,
As soon as he had gone, she went to
a neighbor and sa.id: "Mrs. Brown,
could you lend me a recumbent -pesi-
tion?" -
But Mrs. Brown was determined not
to show her ignorance, and answered:
"I'm very sorry, my dear, but I've just
lent rains to Mrs. Smitb.."
As they did, each flowed -al summer
in 'the happy days that were?
Like a water color splendid, glowing
rich in gold and arure
Hung on memory's wall for ever,
safe from time and care -full
years, , -
Is the upland meadow stretching,
broad, serene a haunt of child-
hood.,
And the thought of all its treasures
fills ray eyes with sudden tears.
--Mix Thorn.
'41 "san
na-A •
Customer—"I'd like to try on that
pair of shoes tire showcase, if you
please."
Smart Clerk—"But you'd be much
more comfortable out here, madam, in
Outside.
A dog and gun and the open fields,
The tang of the autumn air;
The savage thrill ,as the setter steals
To the bob -white's grassy lair.
Tho open road, a motorcar,
The khaki clothes and all,
A camping kit, a journey far,
.A.• primal gypsy call.
•
The campfire's glow, the open. sky,
. A. bed beneath the trees,
The solitude when einbera die,
The forest -scented breeze.
A wooded lake, a towering crag,
A hunter'skit and boat, •
The drinking place of the lordly stag,
Wild geese and•clucks afloat.
The deep dark -woods, where woadfolk
dwell, •
Where rivers dash and foam—
'rhe outdoors holds me in its spell. -
And there I feel at home!
—Cecil D Basham.
a Short dikstance inland and through
the Portland canal fee, a distance of
862 miles. Then from the entieece
to the straits of Juan de Fuca, the
boundary extends eastward 3,900 miles I-loyles on a controversial topic ot the
across the continent. to the mouth of day, illusstrates thiSl •
Passamaquoddy Bay on the Atlantic Ha,vine failed. to -drew the head of
add and the United States is hoiv coast. The first stretch ot this ex-
tends along the 40th Parallel from, the
Pacific Ocean to the Lake ot the
Woods and thence to Lake Superier,,a,
distance of 1,608 milea, then through
tile 'Great itnices and the St. LaWretice
tile law 'school into an interview the' '
yoling jounialiet a•as leaving the plan- a,
cipal's office. '
"By the -way," called Ti, 1-loyles
the scribe was. malting his departure.'
",Where -do you come from?",
authority of certain trea.tles and con- to the Bay Of Fundy, a distance of 775 • "Newfoundland," replied the scribe,
ventions entered into by Great 13rita.ia miles. Of dee 1;500 miles of the Alas- at the same time edging his ev.ey over, ,
-and the 'United. States. The defining has boundary, 180 miles are -water and, towards Dr.1-loyles, Mole hofeful now
of the Adaskan coast boundary was so are 2,100 suites of the 3,9,00 milee of getting the story he was atter.
• At t' °Coen "What sort of a place is thae?"
-Well, its a good sized island, off
the east coast of Canada."
"What sok ot a climate nave they
there?"
1906; and that on the boun.dary from 1 between the two coun e "Oh, yretty, equeble, on .the
the Atlantic Ocean , to the Pacific .operations consist '01 reconnaissanec, I Much like they have in langlain't•g"-kreee'"-
Ocean under the Treaty of 1908. secondary, and tertiary schemes of "And what sort of people live,
triangulat.ion to locate the monuments there?"
Niarked by tYlonurnents...
Selling the Ocean.
done under the Cenvention of 1903; I from the
the work on the 141st Meridian from The surveys were executed through-.
the ;Aretia Ocean 'MOunt,St.. MtP.s, ':01.1t with a scientific accuraey'befitting
(tha boundary between Alaska and Ithe bohnder3r . between soveishigne
the Yukon) under the Convention of states. The expense. is divided equal-
'
"I am a sainple, sir."
The principal requirements oe-t-fiese and to centre' the toPograpllY•
able -monuments at,frequent intervals; tered on. the line, much of this- \voile 'falling language there?" •
that the water boundary shall be re- being very arduous, Wing' to the ‘`English."
ferenced by monlimente on the shore; rough, mounta,lnous c.har:ecter ef the Tho rePerter, thanked by his inter -
was about to withdraw, Ivilen
by the Commissioners on accurate, marked bl permanen d
modern maps, and that a joint report metal monuments and permanent
describing the boundary line, menu- marks have been set at triangulation
ro,ents, and operations shall be sub- points.
mitted at theclose of the work. The work of this Commission fur -
As no maps were in existence of nishes three long, accurately mea, -
treaties or conventions are,t'net the , A twenty -foot,' ski -line' was opened "Y would pase--for a native of 0 -
land boundary shall be merited by dur-, through the time r wherever 'onconn. .tario easily enough. What is. the pre-
• that the boundary line -shall be drawn -country. • The line proper has been rogater' for 'the lufermatlea imparted,"
Hoyles laughed heartily, and exclahn-
"Good subject for a.story, eh? The ''
principal of the Law School didn't
know where and what Newfoundland
bases -is! My boy, I was born there too.
sufficient accuracy for the laying down sured, and permanently marked
, _
of the International Boundary line, it which iii 'sere, to control future sur- Some weeks later the scribe who to
s •
was necessary to make them, involv- Tays. and -to co-ardinate exiatifig sur-
thiday wonders howthe genial dean
Mg the extenSion of a belt of triangu- veys.• The sections across the con. of the Law School knew at first sight
lation along the boundary lint- to de- tinent ars,tied to and controlle& by the that he was a native of Terra Nova--
termine the geographic positions of work of -the Canadian and united learned that Dr. Hoyies was the an
of a former Chief Justice of Newfound -
the monuments and to control the States Geodetic Sii-r-feys: Part of the
topographic work. The work Included record of the work consists of J
the precise measurement of. base lines, topographical maps, the preparation,
A lady living tar Inland was advised
by her Physician. 'be get salt -water
bathing. With her husband she went
to the seashore. In the evening, when
it happened the tide was in, he went
down to the beach with aepail. See-
ing a man at work, he asked if he
would sell him some water. The mean
recovering himself, said he would.
"How much?" "Fifty cents." The
next morning the inlander carne again,
when the tide was out. After Ws pur-
chase he remarked with •commercial
zest, "By George, what a business you
dol"
Levels had th be run te fix elevations engraving, and printingeot these being
land, Hon, Sir Hugh W. I-loyles.
itt
Law's Medical Adviser is Profountily
Witty. „
and a belt was accurately mapped ex- not the least formidable "Sir Thomas Herder, Mr. Bonar
tending from halt a mile to miles on mission's tasks, The geographic posf, Law's medicad adviser, is one of the
either side of the boundary line for its tionsof all monuments and trianga- ,personalities of the medical world,"
entire length. It was also necessary lation stations are computed, and in says the 'Weekly Dispatch, "Very
in places to make soundings in the termationis supplied on request to youngnoekrtiagaa-though he as 52—with
water areas traversed, by the line. many federal and provincal govern black
of the Boundary. ment departments, az well aeto many
black hair,' and eyes always alert, he
i,
From the Arctic Ocean, the bound- organizationa outside of these.
One of the best things ever said by
a witness to a counsel was the reply
given to Missing, the, barrister, who
was at the time leader of his circuit.
Ile was defending a prisoner
charged with .stealing a donkey. The
prosecutor had left the animal tied to
a gate. 'When he returned it has van-
ished.
Missing was very severe InliItt ex-
amination.
"Do you mean to say, witness, that
the donkey was stolen from that
gate ?"
"I mean to say, sir," giving the
judge and jury a sly look, "the a.SG was
Missing."
•
they see all the errors. Far them one
error spoils au otherwise perfect page.
Poor Chick
Chick --"My, what a nice large red
worm!"
Clemenceau lived. :in the United
States for a short time when a child
with -his father, exiled by Napoleon
A large wireless station le being fit-
ted up in Bavaria, which will have the
distinction of being the only one of its
kind in the world. Iiistea.d of having
ateel towers for aerials, this unique
station will employ two high adjacent
naountain peaks for the purpose. As
the sides of the peaks are almost per-
pendicular they shotild prove ideal for
broadcasting messages,
Owing to the great height and length
ef the aerial, itS ends will be attached
to heavy, wagon -like appliances on the
grourid, these serving to balance the
affect of wind pressure,
Many long-distance records are ex-
pected to be broken when the statical
is camplete and the mountain aerial
gate into action.
Someane has said that no smile is
so beatielful as the one that struggles
through tears. if we only nee our
• cifflietierie attti troubles aright 'we can
soften' atid enrich our natures by our
sufferings, our dIaappoinementa, or we
can. turn them into .nstruments of tor-
•On the Road
rs ik '';'''.1. -ill
t
, 4, -
, , li :,
rt r.
Scenes of the Gulf of Georgia—By ,Bonnycastle Dale.
My little expedition was slowlY red below the waterline right down to birds sprang alottAn a frenzy of rage I ran about and found many Of thee -fiesta
working itseway.up along the wild. Pa- tho keel—I saw it all. After thirty and fear and circled high above the l with broken, eggs in them or empty
eine coast, walking abont, all the cleeP miles of this hard_ struggle with her island. Again they settled on the still 1 of all eggs, and we hastened and
intruding fiords and "canals," and put- 'warm eggs, and again silence fell on
ting forth to sea to examine the mat- the Mittlenatch.
For just a week the Kanaka, and I
noted and counted and located and
photographed the eggs -of that nesting
host. We found well over 2,000. One
night I heard. the regular. splash,
splash! of paddles and, craning my
head out af the tent, I saw a great,
long, high-powered canoe go silently
by, a ghost of former Kwakiutl ridees.
We were up betere daylight and Kan
pointed to the high crest of the uplift.
There stood a klootchman with, child
on back and egg basket on arm. We eggs when the wild onion (garlic) was
bluntships, we neared the Ilittlenatch,
an uninhabited island 'six miles below
Seymour Narrows, which were roar-
ing like bulls at the full running tide.
Directly ahead of us was "The meet-
ing of the waters," where the two
great tides that run up and down the
Gulf meet—a line of mad, white, danc-
ing wares cutting the sea in twain.
Don rattled the anchor in a beauti-
ful bay, and I bade that strange M.A.
farewell. He told me as he rang,for
steam ---"Indians will visit you is a
bit,—treat them well,—bad lot—" and
off plunged Mrs. Flatbottom,
They had landed us in the sma,11
lug grounds of the sea fowl on the far-
off reefs and uplifts. MY assistant
was -a Ke.naka frora the Sauth Sea Is-
lands. Not only could he climb well,
but he, had prehensile toes, else he
would have been hurled to his ,death
from every precipitous
"Don't go through Segineur Nar-
rows," the old man said, "but char is
an, island just below it full of cormor-
a.nte awl sea pigeons and oyster
catchers -and.
•Weachanked him, I verbally, and my,
man wi•th a grunt, and off we set to
find a boat big enough to crose the boat and promised to call in thirty
Gulf of Georgia. I finally made an ar- days' time. The long wide island was
ra.ngement with a man one would not an uplift that had broken. from.bff the
expect to find on that rude sh.ore. He mainland in scene- convulsion of nature,
was a Trinity r.A., Dublin, witl a and all its, strata of rocks poieted sky-
goidee beard and aface that r.eminded ward. A host of sea fowl and guile
tire strongly of. the face in the photo- r0Sg, crearning before us, "Han" and I
graph taken from the painting, done, I carried the duffle up and put up the
It was said, while He was on earth, of tent. Fully a hundred gulls were sit -
the Master, (This was exhibited in Ling On the nests right across from
the window of the Y.M.C.A. in New the tent door, and an the rocks cover-
' h '111 t sea pigeons) „ or
York, 1877-80. He bad a house on the ed wit gui ino
shore but he lived in. the big fiat bot- oyster catchers, or big black cormor-
Joined boat I was trying to hire. ants sereaming and •ntlapping wildly
He bade me take the wbeel afier we overhead. I estimated, betore the suo.
bad gone lip the narrow waters, and set, that there Were a thousand. birds
IVIittl nateli a large proportion
headed oat over the sanclbeads for the on the e
.open gulf, The steamer Wa.rs ninety of, which had eggs, the gulls four, the
fest long, fiat below as the proverbial guillimots two, the oyster catchers]
paecaite, and as she failed to her three, the cormorants three or four.
twin S C.'re'a when laanched, the, coce-n- So that here were fl111-7 2,500 eggs
tide owner trimpl7i laid beds rietnent there for 11 a to guard (as 1 had re -
on her inside bottom tlic screws eeived a trust from the bead of the
were covered. . goVerninent to try and preserve ihe
There was a tall etool. in the wheel eggs on 1111 the breeding isles I visit -
batiste end I was promptly thrown ad).
from tliat the moment we entered the* There was a ailvary moon that
groat soniaet swell that was running night with a lames of racing, lacy
in the Gulf. Every time that awful Olotais between, and the nesting birds
were late In sleeping. 'Until ten o'clock
various whlrepoi•ing nets Caine from
the dark ledges ledges wbere -the nests lay,
then all was still as though the island
Were deserted, Suddenly across the
face Of the ninon 'lest/ a great. Oavl----
"Who-Who-00" arid all the' aestitig
caught up with the oldest man of the
raiders. -
"Kla-how-ya!" I called. "Kla-how-
yen" he answered. "(How are you)"
in Chinook. This is a dialect of the
entire coast formed of English, French
Spanish, Indian."
"Iktah mika mainook?" I cried.
"Kahtah mike" he called. "What wild cauntry tripod, for my
only weapon it, any drew up the rules and regulations, and
appointed 'a committee, loya.11y nomin-
powerless. My
"(What do you do?)" .•..
ails you)." I told him in broken Chi- camera and there Were twenty of them ating the King as the principal patron.
nook and English that the eggs muat Ito two of us, so they despoiled the is- Not until the following November
not be taken. He told me his father land. • was the famous hous,e at No. 5 Tender -
and his father before him gathered Not only do they gather the eggs in toll Street taken for tie now sell°°1
conveys at first glance the impression
of a s,oldier rather than a doctor. •
"He contrives, -when teaching, • to convey a, profound piece of knowledge -
in a single sentence: • 'A careful prae- • a
phing of the- rubber of his stetho-
titioner detects thesfirst sign, of any. '<; •ie.,.
erisit
scopes, and remedies it; by • their 1, '
stethoscopes. we shall know them,' •
'The most importaut thing is diag-
nosis; the next most important, is diag-
up. I asked- him how Many: "Many
times what they get now," he replied.
Then I -told, lifiu `that if ,they did take
these eggs every year the little ones
among them would not have any eggs,
,left to gather when they grew up, and
then he said: "Yalta hyas• sollelto"
("we are very hutigry)" and off they
,went, 'their baskets and break-
ing the oldest eggs so that new ones
would be laid: Of course we were
nosis; and the third egrarsT-franorlaut
_
thing is diagnosis': Tho great doCtor, •.
Ike the great detective, possesses au
infinite capacity fer taking pains.' " .
Fa.. -nous British School Will
• Hold Celebration.
The Royal Academy ot Music in Lan-
don, perhaps the oldest music school
in the English speaking world, Intends •
next July to celebrate the hundredth
year of its existence. The original
plan for this, institution' was proposed
by Lord Westmorland. (then Lord • •
Burghersh), at,a meeting of noblemen
and gentlemen held at tile Thatched
House Tavern, on 5, 1822. The
purpeee was to -admit forty boys and
'girls between the ages of ten and fif-
teen, all to be boarded at the estab-
lishraent and', Musically educatetl.
Cha.mpiens, 01 the equality of the sexes
may look upon this as an early tat -
tempt at co-eduCation. The noblemian
and gentlemen • seem to. have been
filled wit'a. an . enthusiasm for ',which
perhaps the 'cellars of, the Thatched
Rause Tavern were in part respons-
ible,. for they met again a week later,
craft slid down 9, feough alie plumped
„ •
Minnt.or (citrely)-1 want. satis- her bluTit bow deeply let° the retreat-
fy as te the tiontents. of that t leg sea and liarevr geysers aver ti-te
bet,11314 wheelhouse. I steered a druhicen
aa"Cover
ori.-. Ti' s' long as ter I COn2 up that unknown Water. Once,
SattstY ireraelf with the contents', on the Way up, we :net a gasoline.
tnia-bott,te, eitestea, ali , heat fer.ite Alaeltai )ene Was Delliie
04
• • A1.4.1.3'
r
\i‘/P.,`N"
60-1' -0t-J
r.SV
yea •
asa
,
tiI 1!
'CROktIPEtt,i et, icyte tteir,t4aciRRoot,"
•
opening deferred until March,
late May, if any, and all of June and' and the
part of July, but thy set fir o the
dry vegetation on the top of, the great
uplift, "so that onioes• grow next
year," they told me, and then any
young in the n•este unable to fly are
burned; to death. If they rob, as we
• f
a t ti 1823, when the first lesson was given
saw them In June the full clutch o In
four eggs ot the Glacous winged gulls
then the next clutch would be but two easily °I1e of the lal.gest and ella"t fa-
mous institutions of magical lealeiing
a.nd it that was taken the third but
in tile world, and a4music lovers in
one. No wonder there are only a ie --,v ,_
htliiiellsdereai rg-oufifitIbiaseneddisnega ft)gir1O-lul0idn's .alrY'Thoef ofanit4sa:liewceelElell-conc7owne co).7-e1J400nWo,, not
ea$ tnatInlil
li t17:tidrietIleipshoowfti
i sl'indt.11"?ovPearttaifcILls'"re'rielr.ieiler lt11(.1°11strIrblu'entilaeriliea.kt Corder.Pr°Ce5'-
(Irs °I' c°1114)c)8i-
ost
.
1'(boiling up of Waters dram the wild in- ----"--
-
rush of the tick,- into narrowing ahem- •Frienu.Iship
nels) are rarely -visited by White men,
()lie 1110 coratart---th ri, in-expressitile
hut are regula.rlY robbed by the Ea- of felin,, sale with a
, diens Tile whites do eat the eggs of
thelights nor measure words, but pour-
ing tliem all right out, just as they are
by Cipriani Potter, to an aspiring
Youngeter rejoicing 'in the .edible
sounding name of 'Ketllow laye: The
venture suffered finan.cial straits at
the tart, but eventually the difilcul-
•
ties were ironed outs so that to -day in
its neW quartersi Keneington, it le
g n ei th'e r 'we I
the ulls; the yolki are very e red and
the egg tastes strong.
I mado lily last visit there . sotto
years ago (1311) and the Indians gath-
elia,ff and grain tugether--certata
that, a faithful hand 'will sift them--
erecl eggs' and garlia stil. I asked the keop what in, worth keE.pingt_and with
°
old chief: "HaVe you seen Chid Chaco
of the Naas?" I had been there lately'
and had the photograph of the old
Id-
citau with the derill fish he had taken
to eat. 1 pulled the picture from my
pocket end held it thveards
ya.Kla-how-yal" "(Goodday!
G.doddray t) he muttered, retreating'
rapidy. His halfbreed ' eon -Inn -law
told me that he came home and eald,
the breath of kindness blase tim reat
away.
A very interesting report coulee
from Japan. It, says that, front.'all
sehool histories in that cnntrY all • •
i • • '
militeristie deas have been cut out.
LeaSonS are given to teach Children to
Undestand in a friendly way the other
"Tell man got Chief Chace' in hie flaelene of the ,wrld. That itt W)salf
• peitet—AIII ' We call real progrew,
114