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The Clinton News Record, 1925-04-09, Page 75Its 1uscos freshess ricb strenth.5 '2447' .IP.2$0411007*.01*rir. 0,4pitt,r$o Youn Uyson ;014* f,'071,i,027**, SE IN SACREI) STORY The decease the everidia lYbeathere'.1clag, sent a 'magnificently leauored • and' 'areatly 'Mama ardenale mounted.' mead with hbm. tae, •aonad-bliaphica inpacreelbesterer clure- torie messier, Thie ,Idng With elettla iug the fitaidate in Egypt 'vratan Joseph :cult name. lend' et" big heaet ,eact. good, ,Wasananager„ Of the national .ernaniis- horiee.- . • ,peryee, We 1.crea told by the .writer Almeneruee, the ribb. ara-powerfill Gene,Sle,that with the prolonged 'al:beta. Icini who ruled Prom India te eadafamine -there Was, a Seareity of oWried faverite.diaager and • MoneY, -. so the people- Waded . their :Mined. the; ramuited•Postnien through.- , . • - • horses; -alcmg .withe live 'stack, for out ,his reaela. ,Cienetationealater • bread. woe ti very severe tetra otter gentleman ffom, read' for the iigyptIgios laeae-great 19Vers:gt )51..1119. .Ori: 411a, actual -1.1)7 „leri- beaatetue benees, • , • • . ereete, enariet from Sereasaleih and.whea In later years 'Soseelies: father died, iastineted by felloW-traVeler fetid • and in keeping "with. the tether% last -a new way andre, new Master. • aleguestalds body was carried to Can- aan fOr Medea The add JoulmeY,baoh to the home country and t.0 the awes- , trail buryeag graana ivietniede In great , state. In fact It wars a notecyltineral aiid it Was disitinghished funeral party which traveled' by chariots, as. zemipanied by a great- boner guard of borseinda. "Pima that oceeerion to this. good ;clay. the. horse has played an ina , portant liart ines;tate'funerals. • When .1aeoees. Was .s;reeleing the re - ease, Of the Israelites from Egyptian bondage great afflictions ca.me Upon the country because of the wickedness and stubborness of Pliemoh, She ruler. Along with the many plagues was a fatal disease which destroyed" all the horses in the country.' At last the en- slaved people were Bet tree and they, started towards 'the land of Canaan, but the army 01 Pharaoh soon follow- ed in hot pursuit. The, geeing people led by Moses., got safely over tlilted Sea, but the mighty; army of Omelets and horsemen was totally destroyed In the aea. Atter this evident inter- vention of divine Prowidence In ing the Isaelites from -the wrath of the " king, we hear Miriam, the sister of 1VIoses, leading a great chorus in this famous aong or victory; "Sing ye to the Lord, For he. hath triumphed gloriously.' The horse and his rider Huth he thrown into the sea." Thus early we fled tlee 'home in war, and aa we sketch his su.bserment his- • tory we will andehimineding that place with honor down through the cen- turies. And In taking his; place in. war and In national eveate he establishes himself in the song and story of all nations. • laitig Saul was fighting regeinst a • well mounted army waen he met his untimely 'death. When King Solomon was gathering the riches: and honore at the earth into his kingdem he seat horse bayers to Egypt where they par. chased the beat horses for 150 shekels each, and rainy of the most b'eautital animals were presented to lam by the rulers. of 'other mutiorie. He supplied his entire official family, including all the provinces of his, kIngdotta with e these salenclid Hischoraemen numbered 12,000, mid kit/ magnificent otablee numfbered 40,000 fine horsee. King Ahab was a great lover of his horses and -chariots. During the three • years 'drouth predicted by the prophet Ellijah we end the king averting out along the vale -ens water •ceureei seek- ing grass for tis Itoreea, and drove his beet span to 140 ()harlot over the :•••• 440* eailtataal‘ „ 4",l'iitl) t on,4,-iten,ae-aeheeeelleee•eatnef. 1 Oaat n'dlealIi4lig;'14,::,al*nikii."4;%111;44a1:).11:•11--9.Y-4..':"' mrlievv*,ppPti.:1,4 ix*, 1;1''.V3c!.;i'''''ile4.g./,.'44.,';:coll'ii,i' laa..4:041.1a..157.44tiee-eala: egegelaaeate ,. ,, ,,,,,v4/.1, 1,ft,,,,r, ' ., Pi4,,,),,.41.4:tC1,,,,yrl'i;h,;"4,•.:fetiellh:1tivalt;nti,b,..,11,1% , • dli4P'' 'X'' ' Ititill: °'liPja'7,'Zi;U::::•100t,'.',17-44;lt Ite,.-'-ilit'' ),iO4c..,:if?.LI.'?-:.t.i.4,'.*4,iiooil,,k,-; ..4.,,c.,,. To Palle weolea',Nta,-4 ao..ragt.2x.,.,,, . trill,_,..a: ", -- .,., e• -• •• ' • , . e e". eeaa• , e'eftee • Ull : ,e, ..trt ,:titaaeofrakeeeeilee.t e b'°"*"":"'": 19' ' '.. '. ' '... !' 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'ft"leitit "'rever' 18" -Pa' '' • '-' '4' Vail°--'' ' .! d '''`Pleetabe;steeacid elle 4, A :7,7 1', ''•••t •,,6.,:: to-, sow.: 'grsty,,..'..Sliadows , f 41 ther.; 7ra.:_s L:lo-'7,--1,,,it..,,,,,;:itiol4•tull ;91742 heard..i'dd: aabsbout -1150de •- a :he if ' ,a,.. and, , li -.'. - a. -tee aeoene e• the „ , alredaY bele-1'111;e: go ,• ao3ioied, ceaere • 0.166;, ot. ly,1,,.., , ,..0- tIgh.'the'aireThea, el!'i:telte:3dW,ali-ledePeg. '''.01: . Tii'ef":.6,aea:Itf--;110'W"till 1119 9 ,l'''''PlIelu'rene•—e?tfid7.ell - lihniem 'aline; saatiag.'fswlfu..AY.:.,..1.11,..%.,„ 6w.fe,;',ewdei4ng cud--,:. ritit,:r. 4anio!,-.0,t,'344: . ... 1....ri,:gle64.,(1,:ii.' 9. d1.66.' iiit, li'Ota13°'144''''-i'Inl, W6.1t;'•iirlOtb61,7',8: vvPre,'.40...1)41g.,N7g'atl.,-..,tiin; ,6..0.-jli 11.4..tli.er-a '.rollet1';',#P.,..Follitea..° w s that allis.leeau I . -,- . ' • ,dowlaita...are , , . .. ' • . actoiliicio...,,,op ,m.y.ii rd._ ...,:rr,ifivtioriP,:g$11,.•:',Ahr,-. 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' e f" qt il li ' a ed;bloode 1 1, • 1:10 .74 oozed bone nie 144 ve.,_',.1),11.,,b. i;1.•i-o.irti. iiip :ear Was stiff, ,Where_ ' 6 aeshati little:PIP 0.- 61i.1 .f'-lt"'*'''. 4'!'l buried nose,. he rel. a thing Were 13°sS1.11)1e' 'ele , hair d nedatind : when he -uveitaiadase thail he fectices; ts was Job, the good man who lived -1e, the land of IN, giveri •thiS fine plature of the horse:,• • 'Thouhoet given the horse strength, and bast clothed -hie neck with thun- dee. The gime, pf kis nestrils- Is ter- rible: He et/joie:0.th in bie etreneth. He' goetth out to meet armed men.' He =death at fear, neither, turneth .he bade' at the sword. He sinelleth' the battle afar off." ' , Isaiah ,evidently had' great adailra. Mon for the liorseetor 'he gives large plaae to the horse and; b.% ritlek in ale visions and aroplieele.e. When fore- telling the invasion, of Jewry by the toed Perelane Seed' the valley would be full et chariots and horsemen would stand at the gates. , He writes of feeding =data/messing the horses M the morning;e01 th.eir neighing, snort- ing and swiftness,. ' • Ezekiel, the prophet, tells at Trus trading in horses with the Syrians at the state fairs, a,nd he said the armies of NebuChaanezzar wodld' shake, the cities of the Jews with the rushing, clieriot wheels and the noise of horses' hoofs. The prophet Habakkuk men- tione the swiftness of the home and the gellantry of the •liorsemen of the Chaldean -9. In the wonderful -visions. 01 the prophet, Zechariah, the 'horse plays a prominent mut: In the elos- ing scene of his Via10118 we behold the people turning to 'ate Lord, aad the curtain falle vrite the beautiful \verde; ela that day shall there be upon the belle of the hoes.es., Holiness; unto the Lord." - St. Paul, a prisoner, was sent home - back and guarded by mounted soldiers to Felix, the governor at Caesarea. St, John, a prisoner and an exile 00 the %load of Peamos, bad a great revela- tion and in prophetic ais,lon he behbla O eonqueror wearing a crown and rid- ing upon a white horse. He beheld power mounted upon a red horse; jus- tice oat on a black horse, Mal death WaS• riding upon a pale horse. The sem of Patmos closes tbis.Wonderful scene in these strange and beautiful words; "And Iesaw heaven opened, and behold a white horse, and he that sat upon him was called Faithful and True, aud righteceisaesa he cloth ittdge, . , on hie head were matey crowns, . , and he wan clothed with a vesture dipped in blood; and his name in called ehe Word of God. . . And the armies which were in heaven followed him. upon. four white horses, clothed in fine linen, White and clean." The dlgnity, beauty, honor- and fame a°1114 "thing • of g"aa'a last; Ter WaPoes, the -rabbit, merciless vengeance, qf the wonderful wae, not Ge.ey aataatala years see their mat/el-mod, of their wit eeteta men abeelye • Instinct...Low tee their etrange ftelventiaxes in the her teat in these.Terestiteere wag no great Danedian wildernees—it equld kreat danger yo3 Bgree eadapa make hien ,only son of- 'Comm. hands' �f inala ',lit his veits rall the And then came that Wonderful cit4 weed; of the wolf. • He wee a. hurder. When the egreenisheballs ;Of -fire' that, a alt ()thee ereoures,, but no, were Kazan ()Yea ealne nearer ar?,a other creature, either wined or -nearer, a little at .a time, and ,Very' • cautiously: Heretofore ,GraY Wolf- In a, way Bare -e- sensed 'this, • Ile had warned him becic.' To bo 1110 was not ,afraid of. theeeveleaeHe. during, motheeingetiam. Mar Meta • Was ,the flest Mae of her wild breed nuenteaficifeidd. tetife7'41,1:6irisn.td%ii.nigt,b bthleeed...betracik-1 /fern her throat, and Kazan 'had al- spruce -tops. But once fear entered Wsnairsi•edtiepd pneticl.t. aamBeu.t- oxeen tGhrisayclawyatifie: eintdv,haessewm.h...reileidcbileed.,,o.tfethhies throat it died away'in low, whimper- winged hunters of-tlie Mt' sweoped ing sound, A note •of loneliness,. of gladnesks, of a great yearning. "It is all right now," she wee eaying to Kazan:. and -Itazam—pauding for n ZnOMOnt to make sure—replied with an answering note deep, in his throat. Stiul slowly, as if not finite MVO of 'what he would find, Kazan MT:1(3 to them, ands Baree snuggled closer'. to his 'mother. He heard Kai -an as lee dropped down heavily on leis belly close to Gray Wolf. He was -unafraid. --and mightily eurioui, And Kazan, too, was curious. He sniffed. In the gloom his ears were alert. After a little Baree began to Move. An inch at a time he dragged 'himself away from Gray Wolf's side. Every muscle In her little body tensed. Again her wolf bleed was warning her. There was danger for )3aree. Her lips drew back, barnig_her fangs,„, Her throat trembled, but the note in ie never came, Qut of the darkness two 'yards a -way came -a soft, puppyish whine, and the caressing sound of Kazat's tongue. Berea had felt the thrill of his first great adventure. He had discovered his father. • , This all happened in the third week of Bareels life. He waa just eighteen days old when Gray Waif allowed Kazan to make -the acquaintance of his son. If it had not been for Gray Wolf's blindness and the memory of that clay on the Sun Rock when the lynx had destroyed her eyes, she would have given birth. tc Baree in the open, and his legs would have been quite strong. He would have known the sun and the moon and the strata; he would have -realized what the thunder meant, and would have seen the light- ning flashing in the sky. But .as 11 was, there had been nothing for him to do -in that black cavern under the windfall but stumble about a little in the darkness, and lick with his tiny red tongue the raw bones that were strewn about them. The aun was straight above the forest when, an hour or two after ICazan's visit, Gray Wolf slipped away: Between Baree's .neSt and the top of the windfall were forty feet of jammed anci breken timber through which not a ray of light could break. This blackness did not frighten him, for he had yet to learn the meaning of light. Day,. and not night, was to fill him with his first great terror. So quite fearlessly, with a yelp for his, mother to wait for him, he began to follow. If Gray Wolf heard him, she paid no attention to his call, nn a the serape of her claws on the dead timber died swiftly away. This time Baree did not stop at the eight -inch log which had always shut in his world in that particular direction. He clambered to the top of it'and rolled over on the other side. Beyond this WaS vast adventure, and he plunged into it, courageously. ,It took him a long time to make the first twenty yards. Then he came to O log worn smooth by the feet of Gray Wolf and Kazan, and stopping eveey few feet to Sella out a whimpering • call .for his mother, he made his Way farther and fattber along, it. AS he went, there grew slowly a Curioue change this world of hie. lie had knewn nothing- but blacknerm. .And now this, blackness seemed breaking itself up into strange shapes and shadows. Once he caught the flash of a -fiery etreak, above lim—a gleam of sunshine --and it startled hint so that he flattened himself down upon the -log arid did not move for half a minute.. Than he_went on. An ermine , oil NM (Oil to fifteen miles et mountainous road from of the house runs aa a beautiful atorY tarough the sacred pages rata weeds Carluel to the roYel estate at Perereel. after hie humiliating :defeat In the des- its way devrn th.rottgh the centuries. traction of thie false prophets. In later • years hie cruel queen Jezebel met a tragic death when sliew-aa thrown from an uPper window mid tiampled to ileath in, the .streets by achu's horses as the mounted array Invaded, theeeity. When the ectuntle,sa teljah esceatled to heaven, "There appeared a chariot of lire and horses of Are and • parted them both aeiteder, and Elijah v,'ent up like a whiter/Mdinto heaven!' • King Karurtan driving his finest span sought the Meet/et ef God. ,an•d the In the Park. place of healing, and when told to She --"Ob, nee the :duck! Why does warsh in the river Jordan was greatly opine out of tee water and sit In the enraged, pui the whip to hie apirked • ststi?'' , span of bwys• and left in it-furY, but he He—"For eundry reasons, I, think." ilnallyreturned to follow the prophet's '•• enstruetions • end-- was healed. Ile. .doubtless dreve•-those 'splendid ant. "Bebs" That •Rob. • squeaked undee ham He heard the mals • with greatee Iciadneres on bie A, wornan having set her feet along e• sweiintrilottliNPvghttlwaliStah-wirfle:tg tfhealtt,•tl'vilads • hotnewaad joarney, • ••. • the "bobbed" or "shingled" way, win not at all like any sound his . mother •'When Hehemlah sought and obtain. •be finding. in the very near future that had ever made. •He WAS off the, trail, ed permission to return to the land of it is going. to cost hee a good deal - A new terror held Baree recited . . hie fathers to rebuild Jerusalem, the...mare to iteep fel the fashion, than she there. In an instant the whole world 4:itional capital, 'Attaxe,ries, the kind- sallTasede had' Changed: ' It wits a ;flood of., sun- •, • The ,heArdreesere Inc booming lihiht. Illyerywhere lie looked lie could • feel a slump, consemient imen.inost.of • - •• •the women who intentleetti adopt the abd 11 • lirelloDaigig,dota short hair mode having'. token the 14:tdal rot 4oPe gthkrt, He s,,,,,A;la have •plunge. ,'But new the latest groin Paris elunkeimak into the -friendly gleam • °442- '"'• %the "petaled beee,m eeheeh. Is expect- of the windfall, alit at .this moment Gray Wolf came arwind the 'end of a great log, followed by Kazan. ,,She mutzleci Baree'joyeesly, and ICazamin a ,most doglike 'failtion wagged, his tail. This „merle of the • dog :was to be part of. Baree.. Half -wolf, ,he would always wag 'his.tail. ..ge tried tO Wag it now. ,Perhaps tia* the effeet, 'far, he , emitted ex muffled yelp. of apProhation- ' he, eat back °HilellYiaBhd naPrieTtesell'iaada;,'b'at'eae tele: a.; ' iiii;aealia. da%yd.'' the...world.; t-, CH,APTEB, ' And itwas4 ,woneletful. word of vastaelletiem, 'empty efeevera- thing but :the. ;creatures. 'of tee -Wild. Tile nearest eatalsorae.,,,BetY Past Waa hundred litit toWn -of wits O. Straight -three handr,ect to the seatle TWO eais before, Ttisso, the, Oteeatrapper, bad ,called this domain... It heel :come down. to 411,61,.., as was , the 'law of the forests throtiall genaeatieas levee had dried in muddy p c dirt-steined areal ea: ,tobeeenadp; itiamnicl) where yesterday he neat down on a snowshoe rabbit, and t- and' 81911Y' he Was now as thin avid wee -Scher]. as iniefortune could possibly make him. And he was hungry. He had never before known what it meant to be really hungry. (To be continued.) ecamahng agony of the doomed mese tura. set his heaet then/ping jam a little hammer. He felt in those cries the mearaess of that olio ever-present tragedy of the wild—death. This eabbib was the climax in the first chapter of Baree's education, ,It was as if Gray:Wolf and Kazan had planned it all out, so that he alight receive his first instruction in the art of killing. . • The fact that 0ohoornisew, the big Snow -owl, had made her nest in a broken stub net far from the -wind- fall was destined to change the whole colirse of Baree's life, just as the blinding of Gray Wolf had changed her, and a rnen's club had changed . Kazan's. The creek ran close past the stub, which had been shriven by lightning; and this stub stood in a still, dark place in the forest, sur- rounded hy tall, black spruce and en- I veloped in gleam evert in broad day. Meny times Berea had gone to the I edge of this inyeteribus bit of forest, and had peered in cutiously, and 1Seit1s o growing .desire. I He was fully three hundred yards from the windfall when he passed Oohoomisew's stub and into a the* growth of young balsams. And there —directly in his path—crouched the monater. With a space of two feet between thorn, the pup and the owlet eyed each other. In that moment, if Gray Wolf could have seen, she might have said to' Bane; "Use your legs—and run!" And Oohoomisew, the old owl, might have said to Papayuchisew: "You little fool—use your wings and fly!" They did neither --and the fight began. Papayuchisew started it, and,with a single wild yelp. Baree went back in a heap, the owlet's beak fastened like a A Junior Party -frock, a red-hot nd of his visean the soft flesh at the a, season the styles for children enose, That one yelp of sur- prise and pain was Bane's ant and grow snore fascinating. Designs and last cry in the fight. The wolf surged materials aro chosen as thoughtfully In him; rage and desire to kill pos- as for grown-ups; ancl while the sessed ben. As Papayuchisew hong signs are more anti moresimple, they on, lib • mede a curious hissing souna; and as Baree rolled and gnashed his teeth and fought to free hiinself from that amazing 'grip on his nose, fierce little Snarls rose oat of his throat. 21 SBp a:rgiek •ed,to he ell the rage for sinart yourpocket eni •Man op 425.. This.. "bob" ends in a Yo.n,„„toliPinela-1) poliitexectly le the centre; of tlia,baelt '114een•ea • ' of the•iteck ordera to get the aaeagatere " rept eiaeca. 'every either beer will have IbletwItelesomulone- ' to be eXactli Its pheee, necessitating • lastlrig sore,et - fbr mucli tWisting cual cerliag „jeet the p1easure- labia ' right angle. • , Ears, arta to 1)0 '00VOtOd_ 111.5. and the hair drawn _well, back, off tho. forehead, so that we shall -probably tee tee •lakst Of the Write Ler a while. The, hair- dressere of.Paria rata that, they'ean kitS'escV in launching' this fralthea' sue- •ceesfelly ' among entart Parlsiennes, they will benefit to the ex,toet et over $250,000, . • ' like ii you,...tr-afte i ism,oiting or what, ,rriorkdrugg.• ia.a Orotlitiletrohmier oroiViiitteaer Oe.ions Without ''reere. • " • . A eteerle.se' 'Onion -damper 51'dee. 'bribed, the,..Mancliester Guradiea ,Inc alt ing,ealoits meatteiner . with a dwelling devbce•.tn Use genera.. The oObois is ime,risoned:lis ute glass aea-- tai(ler p.na dvoDued!ftuider; 1510011 to the, 000)1011.af the ,T • • • •-$thalIPPXY•• 'an0 1111 Wife..and his an ler • e-8aYs (13Vfl, resh.nexcP6ento',isenccd e, sp,akititg use of soap. always IteeP a ood supply of,Sunlight Soap on • the shelf because fin that Sunlight icttlally Improves • with age.. It becomes harder and so goes much further. thissddecl economyof lasting .ong4er, I ve learned that Sunlight is bylar -the 'most economic:al 60aR, 1 can buy. • The reason is that every particle of Sunlight isiaure, dleansing etoap—S. little' of it does a lot of work: Sunlight, you knoW, is • , guaranteed to contairi no injurious chemicals or harsh frilirig: materials to make the barlarge and hard. These filling meter- ia.ls, of course, are.. just so much waste as far as cleaning goes. "To any weenan who wants to get Zeal cleaningvalue' out valuout of a soap for her money, I decidedly say, Ilse Sunlight,' and keep a good supply on the shelf." Sunliglii is made by Lever Brothers Limited, largest soap -makers in the world. - S-54 A Poem You Ought to Know. True Marriage. When Shakespeare was a young wan, he wrote a .serles of one hundred and fifty-four sonnets, which are the' finest M any language. The -following • is an example:— Let mmleoivnuads o t to the marriage of true Admit impediments. Love is net Which alters when it alteration finds, Or bends with the remover to re- move; 0 no; it its au ever -fixed mark, Tbat looks on tempests, and is never sllasitcernIto It is theaevery wandering bark, • e Whose evorlhes unknowu, although his height be taken. Love's not Tim's fool, taough rosy lips and cheeke 1032. With:Ile/1;s bending sialcle's compass Love alters net with his brief loam and weeks, But bears it out even to the edge of doom. If this be error, and upon me prov'd, I never writ, not no man ever lov'd. • • What is a Snail's Pace? "He moves at a enalas pace," is a have egained in charm and itubvititiale remark frequently liearca espeCially ity. Every little girl loves a party- when the eubject Is a- youngster going froek, and No. 1032, of fine French to school or an office -boy who has been voile, which comes in the most odor- sent on an errand. able colorings, and looks as light and But even of the slowest of the young - filmy as chiffon, is sure to please her. er geusratiou the statement is, to say The frock illustrated is a two-piece dress closing at the centre back with short kimono sleeves tucked and seam- ed on shoulders, and three slightly circular flounces. It may have squeee or bateau neck, and is trinnaed with lace edging Or inSeTtiOn, The pattern is cut in sizes 8 to 14 years, the 1.2 - year size requiring 3%. yards of 36 - inch material and 2% yards of 5 -inch ribbon for sash. Pattern mailed to any address on receipt of 20e in silver, by the Wilson Pablishiag Co., 73 West Adelaide St, Toeoete. • Order filled same day as received. ' The thoughtful are always thankful, For fully a minute BErree had no use of his jaws. Then, by accident, he wedged Papayuchisew in a crotch of a low ground -shrub, and a bit of hia nose gave way. Ile might have run then, hut instead of that he was back at the owlet like a flash, Flop went Papauchisew on his back, and Bette buried his nmlle-like -teeth. in the bird's breast. It was like trying to bite through a pillow, the feathers were so close and thick. Deeper and deeper Baree sank his fangs, and jusl; as they were beginning to prick the owlet's skin, Papayuchisew—jabbing ti little blindly with a beak that snap- ped sharply every time it closed— got hill by -the ear. ' The pain ott that hold was excru- ciating to Baree and he made a more deeperaM effort to eat his teeth through his enenijas thick armor of feathers. Itt the struggle they rolled under the low balsams to the edge of the ravine through which Tan the creek. Over the steep edge they plunged, and as they rolled nnd buthp- ed to the bottern, Beebe loosed his'hold. Papeyuchisew hong valiantly on, fled vehen they reached the bottom his still had his grip on Baree's ear. At this critical point, -when the understanding, of defeat was forining itself swiftly in Barce's mind, chance saved him. His fangs b: osod on ,one of the. owlet's tender feet. Papayuchie sew gave a sudden squeak. • The ear Vette free at last --and with a snarl -if triumph Barer; gave le vicious tug at Pipayuchisew's leg. Iii the' exsitement of battle lie had not heard the ruehinje ttimelt 'of the creelc close under,them, and over the e'dge of, a /rock Papayuehisew ancl, he Went together, the chill waMr of the rain -swollen etream muffling a snarl and a final hiss of the two little. fight - GI-SAPTER SIL To Papsynclusew„, after his first Moutlifal, tif watet, the -4-tree/I/Jima. al - Mate as ale; ...fob he want Withtlie.liglitades Of a gUlle..evandeting eir :Ilia elowethihking aig ltead ,Why.'he Was moving e 66;sWft iy":(a6;(1: '66 ,Iii,66.Salit4i'.*ith614 :014',6t.• fort oflile own. • e To ,I3aree it as a'•cliffei,,etit :IIe,Vitent :(101701', elmoSt.„' lISe a, .A 'mighty. rorteing..filled, Ins-,eark; it i.WaS ,darle,,„SoffoCating, teetibliejn.ehe sWift current he wda teviatea• Oyer" naca Fbe:tweety..feet -he Witeeimelee ;water: ' ;Then 'lie rose 10• the - at/a-feat,. arid' deiperatelY•liegalei'aeieg Isia iegg. ,Suddaiili liaree,..4eand,r.htingsx .theeddIee;64. the water layitiel'areeileertel leseereart,' ,nearlY, jumped ..etit, of hss body Wheri e:greele, g:esit; ohiiusiig cregtak.e..gprang. ,ont ,from ndes- bbs nose ,, and, 'landed with'a:.treinendaue snlaSh in: ••!' Juvenile hinnigration Endorsement Once more it has been clearly shown that Canadian cOnditiou has but to be experienced to he appreelatedand that Personal visits and investigation can clear away clouds of misapprelienaion, an maw edmees of Doininlon life, which may .otherwiee continue to dark- en the healer& and inadvertently do a experience. of one British and Immi- exprelenoe of. one Britiah child Immi- grant out of the hundreds of thous- ands that have been 'successfully as- setralated, instigated an inveetigation by the British Labor Government, this being •carried out by a ,dolegatten head. ed by 1411ss -Mergaret tot:10101d; Parlia• • mentary Secretary to the Ministry of. Labor in teat Governmeut. Bond - fields, report Is an endoreation of the syetem cifajuvenile bnmigration, as it has existed' per years., and in addition, makoa certaiii suggestions for the ex- pansion of the moVement of juveniles front the Isles to Canada. . The delegation, according to the re- port, vatited many chlideen in homes and conversed with them individually aud privately, and in no case was the visit of the officials exPected, In many eases, the report goes, on, the children were regarded aa members of the the least, slightly exaggerated A re- family and te real interest taken in emit experiment proved that a'siutil their future, Only, in a very few in - progresses at the rate of one mile ln stances did the delegation come across evidences of ttuhappiness, due possibly O fortnight. If you. place a snail on a sheet orl to the child proving enaaaptable to its. surroundings. ,Almost invariably the elithiren stated they were thoroughly haPPY in Canada and w,buld on no ac- count return to the Old Country. A number of the children interviewed anticipated their relatives joining them, The delegation found Mat few child-. Ten were suffering from physical de. fecte and that the existitig system of If you have apit castles in the air, medical -examination was adequate. It your work need not be Met. That is found that the' demand in Canada for where they Should be; now put faith- chielrert trom Great Britain is due in datione under therm—Thoreau- it tea' cases to the genuine desire of , childless pereoes• to have rt child as member of iete, family, hut in the ni0. lority of oases the child Is requiree in the capacity oi' Ilea/. 'It further found that arrangements for the voyage of the :children to Canada were sattsfae- tory and that the receiving bontee, ie- . volving a heavy charge on the soeie- ' ties sending Out Me citrate:1, left noth- ing to De desired. • iilb"°11rticist I;oatitnlit!slileycleUriragbialle,"tatiltIael/tIell • port 551015 up. eeVe. have 110(Multi that' the proSpeetS bis Canada:Toe' Lhe 'average boy or girl, are better than ne the United Kingdom: ' Many firms in the Dominion eve oventil by Jaen wile were originally :Child eehere is no prejnaice in canaiia egainet the liomp children. FarmerS' sans aro not ,reinctani in selecting home girls tor their' wives.i. In cOnehision .the 'report noted nal three elmea as many boys as gees were being ,setxt to the nominion and be !loved that every effort should be ntade to %grease the' Proportion. of, girls.TI Urged that eldedeen should enligaate to Canada ete eon res they have finished glass and Watch the under -side, you will see a series of ripples along the animal's foot, This footeie a network of muscles; anclthe rippling is pro- duced bythese modes lengthenteg the foot in front sad shortening it be- hind, which is the snall's mode,of pro. gression. tlieeeeetre,..e.teLite.„."It.:eyees — lierea.net;heard 131s106,•da : • ea ea, . a - Walkers' Trafflo Lights, , 5. London newspaper reports that, fO. grea,t has hesonie ihe automobile peril • , bn that erativiiile iand et quiet lanes end remote byways; that veanlo sval1F- vng at, night 'en' besy 'highways Wear bier their esbeuldere entail red gla,50,, E5115 that reflect- ate "list% -of anth' niONIOS ti.TEt),VO'OCILing frora behind, thee latheatiag to the drivene iimt sc. petlee. triaa is al:erica oil „tile road. Money for -aport.• • Some of the Worsen athletic directors in,. England, are ,na 1d au Mace es, $`..r611t 005,