The Clinton News Record, 1927-11-10, Page 2CLINTON
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G;. E. HALL, M. R. CLARK,
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Mn DoMCT �u A. CART
BANKER
A' general -Banking Business' transact,,
ed. Notes Discounted, Drafts Issued.
. Interest Allowed on Deposits. Sale
Notes Purchased.
H. -T. RANCE
Y Notary Public, Conveyancer.
Financial, Real' Estate and Fire 1nq
surance Agent. Representing 14 Fire
Insurance. Companies;
Division Court Office, Clinton.
W. BRY'DONE'
Barrister,'Solicitor, Notary Public, etc.
-
Office:
SLOAN,BLOCK CLINTON
DR. J. C: GANDIER
Office 'Hours: --1.30 to 3.30 p.m., 6.30
to 8.00-p.m.,'Sundays, ' 12.30 to 1.30.p.m.
Other hours by appointment only..
Office and Resident, Victoria St.
DR. FRED G. THOMPSON
Office and Residence:
Ontario Street - Clinton. Ont.
One door west of Anglican Church.
° Phone 172.
Eyes examined and glasses fitted.,
DR. PERCIVAL HEARN
Office and Itesldence:,
Huron Street / Clinton, Ont.
Phone69.
,(Formerly occupied by the late Dr.
C. W. Thompson).
Eyea Examined. and Giessen Fitted,
DR. H. A MCINTYR
DENTIST
'Office hours 9 to 12 A.M. and 1' to
5 P.M., except' Tuesdays and Wednes-
days. Office over Canadian National
Express, ,Clinton, Ont.
Phone 21.
ORANGE
PEKOE
v`
Why be content with infetr jci to
b7 wits&n diarshc W
Released by NEA Seavice, Ines
CopYriaht 1923 by Little, Maven SZ Co.
CHAPTER I.
TIIE R79MITTANOit MAN. 'f
Te idea cane to Big Chris, as he
stood on the beach' gazing out through.-
the
hrough'the narrow, darkened harbor_.tnouth
into the night and the storm, that this
world of his was an outcast world, a
land that God --had' cursed and for-
saken; a pariah land .outlawed from
the kindly,, sun -kissed world where
the races moved and teemed. Because
it has has home, because its 6ni'nl,
strange spirit of desolation' and death
had long ago got 'hold of shins, it was
as if he were a pariah, too, God -
cursed and God -forsaken, scarcely
less so than the Remittance Man, with
whom he had just become acquainted
and who now lay in a drunken stupor
in one of the tumble-down shacks in.
the native village behind him. a
Such ideas did not haunt' himooften,
Ile was huge and blond and rugged—
not a dreamer jn :any'sense-except as
all men of the northern races, know-
ing life to its cruel depths, are given
to dreams—and his last name was
Larson. His job, that of a web fore-
man in connection with the fishing
that was the one industry in these
far, forsaken waters, kept hini too
busy for such moods as this. But the
North was showing its teeth tonight.
Besides he was inwardly RI at :ease
from purely material considerations
out of the dark sea. ' "Yas"—he said,
and only the droll flattening of .the a
—always marked among men. of Scan-
dinavian birth—saved froral`°eublimity
that full, mysterious sound. ,-
"Did you' see'dat light?"
"Den look. East by nort'east—"
They watched, and the rocket made:
a long, yellow path through the darlr-
ness:' There was no immediate change
pushed; between them, Tho two mein ' �qr
trio -to probe the dusk to see his i'ac... tY fis tap
ltro you scl eft?" the man from. the Quirk, safe, sure relief from
Juputer' asked ed bitly 'sinful callousoe on tho feet..
Not entirely," was the answer. ltt'all crux and sham stare,
Sober as 1 ever, am., I'll' be asdol ei otTe ski. '
a a saint by tho time we get Jut to
"Then pile in. Push off; baron T,
Ina moment More o all three were --
aboard,tht upitcr, the powerful, rug-
ged enines Ina begun to>r amble', and dilki 16 0
the launch was si u1 cling out to sea,
Taking Care of
Housela,il-1d L ne
Every wornan homolreeper take:, a
u ora o --rho - delight .in her luno., but too often
geiniuragha' 'treats it badly by lack or realisation
Captain Jim,. at the wheel, steered Pauline Iiei'r Thomas:
straight out until he was compare- To -day Joanne rushed into the
s
Lively our of. (angor of cies tying kfouse crying, "Mother, -,Nod and DoI1y
reefs and shills, them turned east. threw my ring toss game into a tree"
, Ile was a ,northern man, and the And y'osterday,' "Mother, Billy ran over
love of .the seas was in the fibre of 'my new teapot with his scooter'."
`his being; but there was' no joy to- Still another. time, "'Motiser, tlioy'vo
night in this battle 'under the star used up ' all ;my Water cokor•e and
studded welin. He found himself wish- smashed the box."-
ing that he was like that unexpected "But, dear, why don't Billy and Ned
passenger, the Remittance Man, too and 'Dolly play with their own play-
neai• drunk really to understand. Ile things?" I asked one
had. a -deep feeling against going on "011, they have, no toys, Mother.
--not `fear, but rather a secret knowl- They always smash them as soon os
edge that he could not trace—and yet they got them," was the reply. ,.
he could not turn back, It Was not in - After a little investigation, I touncl
him to tcirn the. vitheel and. steer back that she was right. In fact,
to the harboir alien those,.yellow rock- the :remains of some of them—a' train
ets signaled for help. The laws of /of 'ears, a scooter, a doll-carriage'and
the sea are few and old} but they hold i fragments quite unrecognizable scat-
Iilce iron shackles. It we's not that h"el.terel on the cellar floor when I had,
went on ggainst;lus will; that'he could occasion to be thele. 1 found, more -
not, if he had so desired, find excuses l over, that the cellar floor is the only
to turn back. Men obey the sea laws place the mother has 'ever been will -
through love; not through hate; and Iing to spare thein for their toys;' they
it was simply partof iib.,, and part have nevem ?mown the tidying M-
ot all the sea breed' that he, represent -1 fluence of a cupboard. cd, shelves, nor
ed to push on in answer -to that signal the desire •to heap them there, that a
in the darkness. `But he' wondered place all the own instills. What
that theRemittance Man should vol- could be the advantage of oaring for
untarily choose to come. the scooter or the carriage at play
Ile' turned to Big'. Chris Larson— only .to have it he 00 the 51001 after -
mostly a strangerto him but yet one wards at the mercy of brother and sis-
,y me?
i
1 tho care; and protoctivo measures
regah'es.
Many people blame the fabric when
E begins to show'sighs o1 earlY wear,
Generally speaking, the cause is to
rc'sought In the laundering and prob-
ably it will be found that strong soap;
otle, no'.soap powder have been use:l.
Soda has tlae effect of dissolving the
gum which :binds together ,tile' fibers
of the iiaf� and naturally, the linen
wears badly. Rinsing, too, is of the
utmost importance, 'Pot+••if soap is left
n after washing, for if soap ,le left
ing. causes a chemical action between
the, soaCand the gain, and a change
in...color takes place which no amount
of boiling will afterward :repair.
From a fainous " Irish linen Mill-
.
comes the statement that the follow—
ing mixture for "stiffening linen is'
much to be preferred to starch: Dis-
solve 1 ounce of gum arable in half a
pint of warm water. For use, add. 1
tablespoonful of this solution' to a
quart of water. This mixture may be
kept in stock, 11 the. household tloap
is suspected of containing free alkali
whioh will spo11 the, color ot the linen,
give it a',test with litmus paper,.'*Dis-
selye the soap in water and in,it dip
a piece 61, red litmus paper. If the --
paper changes .to blue, then free al-
kali is there,' '
Careful laundering, however; is not
enough. The linen: cupboard must be
beyond reproach, too. Extremes 'are
bad 'for, linen. A damp atmosphere
will surely bring mildew, while the
heat of a cupboard that contains a
a!•
hot-water tank will turn -rt yellow and
give it a tendency. to become dryand,
.brittle. Chooeg, the. happy mean and
store linen in a .cool room and in a
chest or cupboaril to which no ray of
light can penetrate. Only so will -'ft
keep its snowy color, If linen is used
only occasionally, It is a mistake to
put it away with starch In it, tor this
will rot it
The treatment of stains needs.;veYy
careful consideration, for strong
rC Jim'sHe
e ed ata hand expression.
g of his o rhard-sailing breed, "Are ter, who Irick it out of their ws,y?
reached a and sounded a gong Wile Mother out
apologies for
that told his chief engineer to stand you' a sailor?' he riles(.
g sTho man stood: up from the bunk .the co dition of the cellar floor, Billy
by. Then he gave certain other ord-
ers—brnsquely, bawlingly, as .was his
habit,
"Before you take in dirt skiff come
in and put me aboard!" Big Chris
called fro mthe darkened shore. It
whet° he had been bracing. "Yes,
air," he answered with instinctive.
respect. "I sail in win'-yammex"s for
ten -year—"
"There's no reason we shouldn't
was not that he lead any delusions in spread her canvas. The wind's fair,
to
regard to this cruise of the Jupiter.
gold nd thatsteady_littlemalnsail Get out on thewill aelp decks
Take launch would not head toward its ill give You Ez'iksen to help"
home port; nor would there be any (To be continued.)
great thrill in battling these angry'
waves, If Big Chris had kept silent,
the captain might have pushed out""
erefl 1sA.al o
and forgotten him; they had met only „
a few days before, andthere ore a
came running in with the frame of a
lampshade lie had found:
"What's that you havelnow?" de
mantled his mother. "Peat. bring
any more trash in here. Look at this
floor!"
"Asa, Mother, `l want to cover this
shade to put in that house I made.
Give, Inc soine stuff' to cover. it with,
please!"
:`Wel, • I: guess I'll Shot waste' any
:good material, on that old, thing. What
would It look like if you made it? It
woull look about as well as that house
SOFTENS WATE
Use it for all
Ail",!I
WASHING WASHINis
')Milson ,Publishing Corrapany
ft 'A.lrrt"," rS
• A MODISH COAT.
chemicals destroy the material. It is The woman who desires an up-
as well to remind women that many usually smart coat ,:will find this a
of the big linen firms have research. most 'graceful and becoming style.
departments, ' and if statue have The shaped rectiers and long shawl
f had you've been .tinkering at for weeks! collar_ give the much-de:area slender -
proved obstinate and immovable, ad-
no instinct to turn to each other in a The Christian Science Monitor You never Huish anything ,anyway. vice may be obtained from these de. izinig lines, and the est in two -pi ee
crisis. However, it did not so much as Next time i look the fiouae and lamp .*i s " p
tai partments upon application.. An- Jeeves are finished with shaped cuffs.
occur to him that he could:ref n
from answering personally that dis-
tress call from the deep; or that he
was entitled to 'any special credit for
t Points the Following
,..?erenziia1 Joke
Edmonton, Alta, — S. Cunningham
di of south Cooping Lake received a para the house to pieces in his disgust.
—he had caught the cannery launch doing so, cel of 'wheat ill. 1926 that had been Jeanne's complaints,w as syell as
-. i ' brainmoved, delib- , - those of other nelghbore' children,
Jupiter ti g w with with the idea Captain , T m staken from the tomb of Kam Tut i
of connecting up' the mail boat at y and slow, but. certain as, yoked ankh -Amen in 1922. MI:'Cunningham about. the destruction done by • 1 i11y,
Squaw Harbor, the Jupiter's home oxen. It was true, he knew, 'tact no planted this wheat on his Alberta Ned and Dolly are'iikelyy to cont nue.
port, in a race to the Outaide, but seconds were to be wasted in reaching farm last year and harveat'ed a small l Such destructive habits are the na-
the aunchrinto a - storm had forced that. sinking ship. Yet every avail- crop 'frons the Egyptian seed. This 1 tural outgrowth of the conditions ' in
the faunae into a miniature cove Sar able man would bestteeded in the work., was reseeded in the spring of 1927 their •' home life—conditions which
up in one of the most desolate and o£ rescue; and partieu1rtg * great-
stormy stretches of 4veacotlst in the
entire North, there's o remain for an -
uncertain time.'
0f. course 'it was. only a squall in
the tradition 'of seafarers. Captain ,
Jim of the Jupiter -on the way home
from a scouting trip for a new trap
site—had driven his staunch little
ship through seas twice as high. But
Captain Jim did not care to take a
theme when a mere passenger's haste
was the only consideration. Shiels, at
Belinghatn, and Bradford at Squaw
Harbor, had given definite instruc-
tions against that very thing, need
less risk of the lives of his brew.
Yet, Chris had to admit that. -this was
no night for land}ubbers.
Ili all his travels he had never
known a land quite like this narrow,
treeless, storm -blasted peninsula that
was the fence between the Pacific
Ocean and Bering Sea. Perhaps that
was why he hated it, and by a gro-
tesque paradox that no mind such as 7 hen he saw the yellow flare again. ! Dealer — "Well, silence Is
his could ever explain, loved it, too. iau'ealer
Tho hill behind him sheltered him muscled, "scone ,' fellows, such as
i �.
that odd dryness in his head that al- his command one of his"meager crew
ways marks zero weather, and the pushed off in the skiff and, standing
icy touch of the frost, as a'hand crept bent in the boat, rotted in swift, stile
under his heavy shirt. He wished'lle strokes to the shore.
had his heavy sea -coat -that he had' Big Chris was standing ready. to
left in a cabin in the village,.�Thence .jump in, 'but he paused for one in
his thought turned to the Remittange stant, "Is dar nobody else in dis vil-
Man, wondering how he was making lage wort' taking?" ho asked. •
out. It is not wise, on the Peninsula, "No. The storekeeper's a cripple',
to soak oneself in distilleli sour dough but Lord, he'll be .tad. There's only
and then:lie in the cold. This was one other white'man in the village,
November; ho made a bet with hint- and that's the Remittance Mans Get
it."• -•
will be in pieces on this floor"
Of course,. Billy hastened' to fulflfill
Mother's bit of• prophecy by kicking
DR.' F. A. AXON
DENTIST
Clinton, Ont.
Graduate of C.O.ID.S., Chicago, and
R,C.DA., Toronto,
Crown And Plate work ,a tpeeialty
'D. H. McINNES
Chiropractor—Electrical Treatment.
01 Wfiigham, will be at the Locomen
oma a'Inn, Clinton, on Monday, Wednes
day and Friday forenoons of each
week.
Diseases of. ell kinds suceesatullyw
handled,
GEORGE ELLIOTT
iLlceneed Auctioneer for the County
of Huron.
Correspoifdence promptl:- answered.
Immediate arrangements can be made
for- Sales Date r.t The News -Record;
Clinton, or by calling Phone 203.
Charges Moderate? and Satisfactlo0
Guaranteed. ,
OSCAR KLOPP
Honor Graduate Carey Junes' National
School ot Auotloneering, Chicago, Spa
tial course taken in Pure Bred Live
Stock, Beal Estate, Merchandise and
Farm Sales. Bates 'in keeping with
prevailing market: Satisfaction se.
eared. Write or wire, Zurich, Ont.
Phone 18-93.
B. R. HIGGINS
Clinton, Ont.
General Fire and.Llfe lnsurance.'Agent
for Hartford Windstorm, Live Stock,
Automobile and Stcknear and Accident
Insurance, Huron and Erie and Cana -
de Trust fonds. Appelnturents made
to meet parties at Brucelieid; Varna
end Beyfleld. 'Phone 57,
eANADI%� �1'I'N� "HAi`
TIME TABLE
Trains will arrive at and depabt from
Clinton as follows:
Buffalo and Goderlch Div.
Going hast, depart 6.44 a.m.
„ " n 2.62 pan.
Going West, ar. 11.50 a.m.
ar. 6,08r• dp. 6,53 pan.
ar. 10.04 p.m.
London, Huron & Bruce Div,
6ioing South, ai`;""7.56 dp. 7.56 a.m.
" 4.10 p.m.
Going North. depart -'6,60 p.m.
ar: 11.40`", 11.61 a.m.
7TheMcKillop
Fire InsuranceCompany
•
Head Office, Seaforth, Ont.
DIRECTORY:
President, Jo -acs• Connolly, ;Goderlch;
Vice, James Evans, Beechwood; Sec,:
Treasurer, Thos. E. Hays, Seaforth.
irectori: George McCartney, `Sea.
Orth; D. 1'. McGregor, Seaforth; .T. G.
Grieve, "Walton; Wm. Ring, Seaforth;
' 25. McEwen, "Clinton; Robert'Ferries,
Harlock; John Benneweir, Brodbageu;
gas. Connolly, Goderlch. •
Agents: Alex. Leitch, Clinton; J. W.
'leo, Ioderflch; Ed. Ilincbray, Sea -
forth; IW. Chesney, Egmondville; R.
J. Jarmuth, Brodiiagen.
Any moray to he paid la may be
!paid to Moorish ,Clothing Co., Clinton,
'ler at Ctttt's Grocery, Goderlch., •
-Parties desiring to affect Insurance
Cr transact other business will be
promptly attended' to on application to.
any of tbo above officers addressed to
their respective post office. ' Lorena'
inspected by .the Director who 11'es
earesl the esgne,
and has yielded a heavy crop• The
wheat produced is quite unlike the
wheatgrown in this country, as each
stock had about' 12 separate heads
whicrh branch out in atfaudtke forma-
tion from the tip. of the stalk.
The yield of .this wheat from seed
more than 3000' years old,, is very
heavy, as Mr. Cunningham. counted
1144 grains on one stalk.. This wheat
from the tomb in the 'Valley of Mugs
is a bearded. variety and similar hi
some respects to Durum. It would be
tlieirntother has it in her, power to
alter. •
-
A safe place all their own for their
toys, a few words of encouragement
when they attempt to make new ones
—what pride she,could. awaken by
providing these! Enough, indeed, to
lessen the destruction of their own
Wine and effectually to awaken a
new regard for the property of others,
Intelligent Anticipation.
Check—"A -man tried to pick my
more suitable for macaroon than for" pockets in the street, but my wife
.milling as it ie a soft wheat, and the prevented blur "r
leaves are mucic broader than the or- Bock—"Did she grapple with -him
ciinery leaf. Dr. P. Marren, of 111d- or just (cream?"
Egypt SOMO eight mouton, planted Seed received from Check -' "Neither -she wasn't
years ago and from there:'
au acre plot ryested 87 bushels. Beck—"Then how could she pre-
'
re -
vent him?"
Silence Is Golden. Check—"She had been through my
Lady—"You• said ofhis parrot- was Pockets first." ,.:_, ata 1.�
worth •110 weight in gold, and Ira Soon To Be Attained
hasn't said a words"
golden, The obiective in the Chinese war
,appears to be the Vanishing point.
from the lash of the w nd, vet he felthe had observed Big Chris to be At
self that the Remittance. Man—grant-
ing that he sustained' the drinking
pace .he had set and which, because it
surpassed all records in this hard -
drinking land, was already famous
clear to Nushagak—would not par-
ticipate in the Russian festival With
which all far -western Alaska ;cele-
brates the Christmas season.
As Chris watched, the storm- seems"
ed to increase; the beat of the waves
on the rocks had a deeper, more sing
istea sound. He had the sensible no-
tion to follow the Remittance Man's
example and forget his predicament,
the storm, and all the moods it had
brought, in sleep. -
Yet it was not to be that he should
lie hi his bunk, or, that the Jupiter
should he in safety in the barber.
The darkness without the harbor was
suddenly split by a queer, upward-
dartirpg flare of light.
The signal came from far away,
evidently from off the, µrock-ribbed
shore miles farther up the Peninsula,
Mit the clear,
u tair enabled him' to
icy1
distinguish it with entire plainness.
'IIe stood almost; motionless, peering.
There was only a short wait. Then
he saw the yellow' flare again.
The Jupiter's course was decided
for her. She was not to die in the
snug cove, nor yet to carry her eager
passenger to the home ".shelter of
Squaw Harbor. - Big Chris ,stepped to
the water line. -
"Captain Yard" he called,
His voice,' inging andlow, carried
easily tothe launch in the little har-
bor. Captain Jim stepped to the door
of his pilot house, and his reply rolled
back out of the darknesslike a wave
ACCOUNTANTS AND AUDITORS
W. MacW1illatn and Coiripany>•
Union. Bank Building, Galt, Phone 568
Also Toronto and Kitchener
W. MACMILLAN, L.A. ,
F-28
BsBUE...No, 46—'27
It did not occur to either of them
that they should take natives on this
rescue trip.' This was a white man's
job, and it would take the white man's
steel, of heart. And they,would not
oven go to see about the Remittance
Man. Surety he was too lost to man-
hood and self-respect to be of any
aid in this .night's work.
But they were suddenly brought tip
sharp in their work of pushing off by
a voice in the darkness. behind'them•
"Wait a second, you fellows,' the
voice said, It was abrupt; ablest cams
mending in tone, and'thero was, the;
sound .of hurrying feet in the snow.
"I avant to go."
Even his irremediable disgrace -a
disgrace that the northern men guess-
ed at, but never knew in full—had not
destroyed` a certain quality of charm
in the 'Remittance Man's voice. It
• A
other aerated not too well known is No. 1670 is ho sizes 36, 38, 40, 42 and
the needlework laundry, which is in. 44 inches bust. Side 38 regulate 43a
tended for the first washing.of elabor- yards 54 -inch material, and 4% yards
ate handwork. It is handled by an X36 -inch liming. Price 20 cents the
expert at very reasonable cost, and pattern,
of
the result Is well worth the bother
dispatch.
Business., Women's Needs
In clothes are. being met by such
creations as this navy blue. cloth of
supple qualities. The gored skirt
achieves the blared motif that is ultra.
smart,
Throw No Stones•
School With Glass Walls
Will Be Built in Berlin
Berlin,=The Steglltz District of the
German capital:is,o have an snot -
a
Indian Chief Treasured Perpetual Pass
An 'interesting incident is,,recalled the railway company's lines. This
by the reeeht celebrations in honor pass beca'me Crete Foot's most. tree-
o ftlw memory of Chief Crow; I'oot sured possession and he . exhibited it
was r:ch, full baritone, and it iia d whose ,,,_,4 m and farsighteclnoss with pride among his tribesmen.
an irrepressible boyish quality, le possible. To carry rho cheerful -
an
and -open -heatedness that itis `of the famous Treaty Number '1 Is proof of the old chief' gratitude. uess.s si e. ,To, the yew-scchel 'tul- .
acts as fol
appealed instinctively even to 'these which brew opou a ytevv empire in A letter to VaulIdrno rte ,� be surrounded by a`beauitiful mark,
hard -fisted Men of the. North. The the west for settlement: lows:
"thein the ''80 6' afta.•r` the 'Great Chief of tiro Rahway visible aroma every section of 'the
Stateranee lila. was from It was Uacic building, even the inside rooms. ' If
States" and the partleularly scation treaty with the Blaelrfeet Indians had "1 salute you 0` Chief, 0 Creat. I the experiment fa Successful all new
of which he was"native couid usually been signed and about the time the amu pleased with railway key, .opening
Canadian. Pacific Railway was push- the road free to me. Tho chains anti schools here 'will be built along tiro .
be recogni2ed by' Lis accent; a soft
1a
t a was largely reiponsiblo for the sign- "In some old records of 111 Company
mous new pulslic .school constructed.
-
practically entire', of glass.
According to the plans, the building
will consist of •a frame of steel acid
concrete, •with outside walls of heavy
'plate glees.-The.partittions separate,
ing the classrooms will also consist
of glass.
Tho. idea is to bring as much sun-
light cheer to the teachers and pupils
- HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS.
Write your name and>addrass plain-
ly, giving number and size of such
patterns as you want, Enclose 20c in
stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap
it carefully) for each' number and
address stpur order to Pattern Dept.,
Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade-
laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by
return mail.
The New Negro
Ile scans the world with calm and
fearless eyes,
Conscious within of powers long
since forgot;
At every step, now, man-made barriers
rise
To bar his progress but he heeds
them not.
•
He stands erect, though tempests
round him. crash,
Though thunder bursts and billows
surge and toll;
He laughs and forges on, while light
nings flash,.
Along the rocky pathway to itis
goal. •
Impassive as a Sphinx, he stares
ahead—
Forosooa new umpires rise and old
ones fall;
While castle -mad nations lust for
blood to shed,
He sees God's finger writing ou the
Wali.
With soul awakened, wise and strong
he stands,
Holding bis destiny withal his hands.
J. E. McCaCil in Opportunity.
Missing the Market.
Salesman --"I can highly.. aeeom-
mend this car, sir. It glides along the
road so quietly that no one notices
it."
Mr. Newly Rich—".1h? 13ave you
any other make?"
ening of hard eonsonant;s and mellow-
ing of vowels that is indigenous to
the congtry south of the Meaen-Dixon
line, The two' mew in the boat, heard
no thick speech to show his drunken -
nese, .
In an :mutant his great breadth
Ameasotsys
ing its pries of steep into the west. rich povealng ,01'youur inane, :its soon-. same lines.
Chief Crow Foot 'had 'become, known der'fu1 power to open the load, show,
Willing! Van 1-lorne,. then general t11e, greatn0ss of .your Chicaness, I Too Ladylike.
to `'SVl .
er of the Canadian, Pacific and have done: - "Nonsense, Freddy, of course you'll,
ma aag
as a token of the esteem held tor the '"lits have your hair cut:"
famous chief ,by the whites, lie was "Crow C Foot ,Freddy—"I won't! , -It's too much
presented with a parpetual crass over Manic." Mae beiu'.a girl,"
DOUBL.: MINT— easy to
remember -and hard to for.
get, once you've tried it.
Keeps teeth white,
breath sweet, aids appetite
and digestion
circ
titter
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