ij/ggbgzg "run.- UHAKLUYFPIIUWN GUARDIAN SEPTEMBER Z8. 1937 "Iil-Iii-Zii-Z (In: I————~~-~- -—-~- ~- ANNABELLA Star 0f “Win88 0f the =5 II I PRINICE EDWIN‘ “Tm” 8‘ w“ I Morning” Ba ck at Prince in New Hit STORE CLOSED. u " Th Tholnlrllvo ol ll¢h°""' | . -- . . - - ‘ v The premises of The Robert S‘ _ _- 11' "'1- *="",,',"";",;1",',1..l Thrilling Romantic Days Live Again =1 .... 1.1.1., Charlottetown. 11am beiTisfilafii-QL ....“'"hd" owmflh". W “ H II by fire, the store will be closed until further Ill UIIIIGI’ lIIG RBII lltlllt! 1-; notice. The office will be open m receiving *1 , ,1 payments after 10.30 a. n1., Monday, wauh for All the thrills of those adventur- As the radiant and charming Lady I further important announcements. ous days when men dared all for Marguerite, rapturously 111 10%‘ and’ iov- live again in “Under the Red unaware that her ardor can destroyl ‘ "- SIMPSQNWW‘ Robe." an exciting, swash-buckling a throne, Annabella more than ful- aowu umm mmance starring Conrad Veidt and fills the promise 0f her 6811161‘ F. A. STEWART JONES Annabella, which opened yesterday screen appearance. The exciting ‘III SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE "T 1<1 ‘ 5 ...111111tg111n1.11 rider llz¢ll¢dllob¢ will IiAYMOND MASSEY’ O ROMNEY BRENT SOPHIE STEWARTv LAWRENCE GRANT at the Prince Edward Theatre. new star you thrilled to in "Wings I . ' of the Momtng‘ ‘ls even more excit- ing and thrilling in “Under the Red Robe." The mle of Richelieu, the hatett. the revered, the courted, the feared. who conspired with the hearts and lives of lovers to become the power A colorful and epic photoplay. the Twentieth Century-FOR release ls‘ based on the unforgettable story by Stanley J. Weyman. s best-ache: for many years, and on the stage play by Edward Rose. In its current screen incamatlon. it stands out as S C I A l 1*11"1‘t‘!u1:s or T1115 BA. TYZE FOR SHANGY-IAI "Hill. SHORT 0F THE YEAR 3i‘. ; l‘ l‘? \l The VIVITIIIIICIIIIHII‘ l‘icllu'izution of ">'<‘Ill'1">I§Il'l"S SICIHTNADE" ‘1-.1.1-.- 1'..»_»1-11.< "(11111-11» _\1171’-‘.11~11’11:111min“; m; 'I'IIF.GIRI.S" ll at regular Prices I1 i.’ i‘) s. * i. ~ Hi ‘n i121’ l_i.\'.\\\‘ll.fl\' LUNljLRJAcKs F l"t‘.1l.'11 I 1111 llit‘ nvimuh 1)I' the National Ilrozulcust- i111 t11111p.111» 111111 the (wnudlun Broadcasting Corpor- r 1111111 I-c 111.1111 ;111n11;1lly hy the Sp0rtsmc11‘s Shows - 111 11 11.1. .13, l31r;wl't)\ .1114 x1211" r0111; t I » o AW“ “\d\ <1 91°“ ' l‘ A Paramount Picture with - WARREN WILLIAM Mody Correll - Kitty CIoMY ' m 1st cf-.1.~s (lining car. Reached Edward Ellis e Robert Boldwifl l An Emonucl Cohen Production 1\IL‘SICAL “who? ' l tfllfill-jl) Y and :1. . I Isiah” tor sport Ltd. llcw Fall Bus Schedule Effective Monday," Sept. 27th. v . 11-.1-.1--- l luirlulli-tuun 1“ hill-s Restaurant.) I ()1; st .\l.\lI£l(\lIll-l l\'i:\ Kvlhlllglflll] I31..- Ildth i-xvrpt Sumiicv 7.31) .\. I". 1.00 l’. DI. 3J5 l’. M. bu. 111":.1y Night only IIMIU I’. )1. {.1..11.1_. 1u11y IJII) '51“. I i-mt llt)l;l)l-'..\‘ will SWNIYIVINIKIP) 1 (1)11111-1t1111; 111th Alninkuul 5.31. 1'. Bus Service l).11l_v1-1.1~pl buzuluy 1J0 1\. I“. TOR SIIFRIS AND NORTH Bully vim-cpl. aumlny LIN) l’. M. LAKE If!“ 'll(;.\'l:~ll I( onm-i-ting ht Summers-lilo) £1.11); 1lvvpt Sunilmv 3.1.") I’. .\l. l1)!‘ iurlliri- itiiuriuniioii null flu.- Ilus Slatirm-Z-IB. I T011- mqMeMlflLTeueber -.».v*ttlcmvut at a sulphur sprln: - '- - " j I. I 7' I"“(-\111)1<;.\x new AND!‘ Georgetown -— ,-,,.,_\_,.,., v n . . . . (Ldrzm I°I‘_*“" All.» .-\:.11;1~ _\1.~.-\;:11;1-. Cnrdizm jug Rory/Kw I 11 .111. ~ .11 1-1.~1..1~ to the Clly uu FT'l"i‘i.\'(i .u1)\.'n.\v. .\l.‘.\ 111111 -\1"1‘-'~ Lrmi- (i-wvrlu-tnvvn -- - r1111) A .\l “ '”"" j __ I“ (Zirdugnu — - - all!) 1\..tl _ ‘summlhm ‘ 4): Smtivn - - 11 111 .\..\1. 11411" HI-‘MI 0*‘ Ht. flu-routs — - X51) .\..\l. Pcnkz-s - -- -- - 9.1m ,\..\l -“" p" _ Plsqulri - - — !)lI) _-\.‘.l wtjoy-wbfo cvcnutg With Fort Augustus - Flilll .\ M home 0f Francis Mc- ‘\lf‘ll\l"f'fi l inner U15 .»\ .‘\l Vn Ir-y‘, on Tlxc-rlav. tr-lve ('l:.|rIull|"n\I'I\ - IWH) -\..\l ~1.1 £!l‘.'1 11 in honor have (‘h:1r'11ft1-tr.1-t1 - 11H) l'..\l. hlclxovl who 1.. Pfllkl‘! — - — - 5.1m P.7d. on a visit to mnrgah - -_ - r- m 12.’)! ,-\1'r-1\"FWlivmgrlnvin — — IIIIII l5.“ I - 511411-1113: 11122115 l1 n11- (iorzrgp- m1 Brruhors, Carrfignu. tam“ 8.11) l’. .\l. o AI 1.112110 on Wednes- |.».1».1- xnhana Tm lhwlns at H.011 l’ \l. _- l‘.1~~1 "s or!‘ 111")’ P1'"l“\‘\‘1| I)‘ 0w: ' 1 x yum» from Cavdizun 1...“. m any ai-pju-pnt that may », .111 1,. \v1|l1 Ihvu" l1“<lL crs attend- nupyvcn while llrlving In lllh I'm. m, ,I|_ (WHWIU SHIN“ r. 1,. hem M 5w!" "l I (l;;)t'I11lIv"lo'~\‘n on iday. NURANA TEA ROOSLQ _____ ALLISON PIUEQFIS 17y _1\1_))11_1. 11 l)ruti\Id.C(1l‘(Iig-"in. firm! George St. 1111).: d to the Cliy on Thurs- v ~— - 1i". C. " I‘ --_-nv I _ 1|‘. __. i- D=rect Bus Set-Vic. t To Hanfax I w1.|1~'11;11 s ronsttn srnoot, . 1 --~~ -— 11111. :" lulu for Scpicrnbc". . s‘ s‘ Ilmhlh f‘ . Vile-l, Flmer simth. 1 I C e lV--1. Viola Heron. ' Q“ 91' ( 1 IIIY-l. Earle Smith, 2. l, ’ L‘, J Brady $111111. ~ |,._.-..-. r1.1.-1<11i11i1-1v.. 4. P. M. Grad" l1 I Adrlfln 311M111 2- 5 \r1 ~ . l'-l-f.n l’ "10 mifl- (Lvhv-rlil) Mwrlmuald. I nlglii llnouuh tickets sold ut Grade 1 I.II---KOI'III('III Smith. d _ . , . (iflldfi I-l. Lnurenrq- MacDonnl . l 2, Albert Mr-Eachern. 3. Roi-a '-) p") " " Ilulrd. I , 1 k.\.\.s1 OR 1 Ll D. Perm ALWHWCQI V,“ n, I Tum ARM" Kenneth Smith. Albert Mc- 71;). ing To a.1.-.1.; Peace River .‘\'l('H()l..\S ROCKIES IN JULY. I "PIIIHLLS .\.\'11 FXCITEBIENT Exmcniicxcnr) m’; ‘mam “ Md‘ 111101-11 o1» vonouvo novs w mix-Anni‘, 11().1*.\'1)1<:n(‘o1%.~."rI YISYFEI) c.\.\'.\1)1.-1.\11 Mr» J E. B. .\fiCi'cndy' has re- cciuti lll“ 11111111111; uiwresting 11111.1 ~ 11.1- g ‘ , gun of Mr. and Mrs. A.. .11 l. no, o. Toronto, des-I c1-1b11.-; 11.5 rt-ccut western holiday; tr1p;— I "W9 5c; out from Toronto OBI July 2111i uurl not ourselves PhQI-I)" gfallilfii -.1t the Uuiou StnuonI ‘There wvrc about ‘.20 boys from Tor- - onto, uuricr Count Nicholas Igna-I ief 1.1 muster a: school) and we‘ jOIIK-(i a party of tcn from Mon- 11-1-11, at wuuupvsz. and coutiuurdI H011», the iiiulrirs a.» 0110 1111")’- Pm 1;. vr-i-y‘ purl-lied, — clouds of 1111s". ill the air. Train accom- llHXIiillOll good and excellent meals‘. 1 Edxuoutcu v morning JulyfithI Wttshcd ‘Ii()‘.\ govd that. felt!) andI I)l'Il.~Il4‘(I up 111 Aluctkuiald Hotel. Lunciu-c-n gin-u us there by Pro- fessor Ku- nf University of Al- br-rlu. lmft thut afternoon l0!‘ Wc-mbly I small tovm 24 hours north t). Ifitlmonion. lNorihern Al- bovta Ilzulway reminds one of our party 0t 111s dog-it stopped at every [cit-phone pole). At Womble)’ wc viewed the Dominion Experi- mcntkt Farm also visited Her- 1111111 'l"11-1lr1_\'s IThe Canadian I. aaucisnn, Alztster often sat up until The problem o.‘ c011kiug pi-os-‘nt- ed difficulty i0 our Iuuc cook who 2 o'clock 1n the,‘ morning baking bJllllOCk! Iflouimi water and sugar and baking pow- I dot-good too). That mountain‘ air certainly stimulates an appct-I ite. We could not take czumcd goods-too ll(‘il\'_\'. llou-cvr-r, we always hud flesh meat 11nd some- times fish; good sport for fishermen and hunters-bear. caribou, moose 11nd deer varied the menu. Game! trails (espcciall moose) very abun-' danh we continued through ihc foot hills for about five days during) which time 1 managed to break a‘ wrist (not seriously) not much‘ handicap and also Commander De‘ Marbois (master at school) man- aged to Wflllllfl a horse in the leg with a bow and nt-i-mv. which hcI took with him for shooting at‘ grlzzlics and mountain goat. I I 1 I had some RIZIFUPIOUS fishing tlioseI first few days in tho foothills - Imountnin greyling trout nnd bull IITOUI. (Grcvlings huvc rt huge I dorsal fin like a sailfish). We tried to cnmnuinlcate with Grands Pfhlfln with our radio — silence-despite all our twitldlipg with dials and digestive nrunus tit \’\"-11.11 King) estate. 'I‘hnt xiiglit flu) 11;)1.1iziI.~.1-.1s gave use a dance Fjvcry- »1:". 1ru<* \\'I‘.~’f(‘l'l"l sty-lc. I . body derlzvrl out in their bright- cst coiou Coffcc brought in in buck We slept at. Osborne's l('lll(‘f uu o and outfitter) that lllfllll) mid sfufli-(l on the trail BI; 110011 1hr 111m do)? A g1-1n1i 111.111y of the boys TIMI never 1-111111 11 before and those first fcw days 11-01-11 pretty hectic. 0111‘ 11-11111 on ahead lcav- I IPFS (cowboys) t0 the horses. Well. a were grccn and -1s 50011 crossed the 1st fiver ti11~_\ siumpz-ded. threw their packs and swam back across the 11111: 111g -t cnvnlry- rvclmcut. That- first night. wr ramped on the frlnire of ugh! We had supper at 11.30 af- lcr they caught most of the horses and so to bod. No mosquifcs. From 1111111 r111 we proceeded through sir-all timber to the lr-tv- m- fcuviulls oi the Rockies. We rctichorl the foothills in about three dun-s. doing at an average of l8 milm pr-r clay. START BIOFNTAIN CLIMBING 'I‘l111n h -:1 :1 111v climbing. and 11f the 1_~,':l1r11- nlivudes we encoun- lnrcrl 11~11~i.-1&v.1o1- Su/nliifly P“tI'I“'-°' which tl1~ luv-in. loathed bcvuu-“P tiftcu flu-v would sink two or Ihri-P fact. Sumll jzvk-pme forests and 111m i111g1~ 0111mm of poplar vnricrl the sceiu-rv of the unlimited putt‘ and hemlock forwst. Now and thcii W1‘ sturtvrl out with niuIfIY Iiorsos and about 48 DCBIIIP~Q11VLH was a 11011111-111111111 rnrlih), Heavy equipment so we le"1 it 1n chat-gt- of a Crcc Indian to be picked up on the return trip. The Indian wrote: ‘Don't touch: Wiil rxplocle’ I on the box in Crco sign IGIIQIIFIIZG, to caution mulling fiugcrs. Ran into hcavy timber. trliuibitig all the while until we got above the 1.1m- iber lino on top of 111v mouulxiin. There we saw about l6 diffvrcut I varieties of very largo and colour- ful WilCIfl0\\'Cl‘S~ll0 scout. Could see for miles all around. At Inst we had reachml the smnv cupped tnountainiv. It scvmnd funny to sce the green grass gicwviug above the snow. This snow in some places is over 500“ thick in sum- mer time! Wc saw 111111111tuin gout nt a distance 21ml :1 caubou silllnuv- ted against tho snow. My. they are proud beasts. Will send you some pictures of thr- trip lute-r. when 1 have traded mine with the other boys. CAMP AT KAK“’.-\ Well we fmnlly- reached Kakwa Lake, where we camped for 2 dnjrs 1 and rested. Knkwn ls right In thel heart of the mountains at thcj foot. of Mount Sir AIPXHHIIPI‘ treflI mnp-- 212d snlnliost mountain inI the rnncc). It. is as bcauli ul as 141k» Lnuisr-I and Jnspm- put together and would Xl‘flfl(‘l a great many tnu-‘isfs were it not. fn1- the lack of civilization and transport. The first day we rvwtcd nucl the‘) second day we split up Intel groups. hunting, mountain climb-l we woukl rmrc’. to the crest 01' a 1nrgo'hiii. and look down on R small rivcv winding through m1- turnl meadows nvd f0l'“Sf.—— with ‘he snow copper! ntountains in tht‘ background Whvn the sun sank to“; the shnrlruvs would lengthen and tho landscape would kePP (‘hahglflfl colour. As fo1- our party the boys and mastnvs were all grand. U1111.<.11nl in so large a From Kakwa Lake we decided We drove by truck to Summit par“. our doctor, an excellent! to cut a trail of our own through Lake, which is the main summer surgeon from Toronto Sick Chll-I the bush to the Jnvvts Trail and, resort of Prince George. There (Irons Hospital was very ftmny and never rnn out of jokr-s and wisorracks. Two or threw- nf the other hnvs exceptionally funny ton. and between them all there was never a (11111 momfnl- Inna, mail. n sntmsl - - lhs but trosllint t of Mlno d‘: at one. l Q0 soorhol. Ills and damn. Drawn out ltio pollen! _ t a day. lug. photographing wild gum-x otmI I and set out in dlfferrnt dlrec-I tlons - some to climb a mountain and sleep on the crest nvernlrrht to photograph the sum-isc. That last party was frlghtiuicd bv a huge tlmbor wolf at dawn. Those timber wolves Imountnln variety) are much blggcr than a Great Dane and can kill a moose. the railroad. By our map: ttnkrhl from the air. ns this country- to the Jarvis Trail was still un-I surveyed or mapped from thej ground) this should have taken usI about 4 or 4 days. It actuallyI took us nbout eleven dnvs and no food 1m at the @1111. This eleven,‘ day journey Wits prv-tly tiring MI , often we would only mnke 4 miles‘ We crossed one i-lvrr HI times in one alto-moon trying to: follow 1h)» path of least resistant-ex, I ‘The axemr-n working CHHHHIIOIBIY 1 gnd the puck horses having to ' stand still on nn tipilrflfle 0f t1 hill for an hour. were‘ ospeclnllvI tired. How good that rvchlng mvnlI seemed. When we crossed into British Columbia. we were mntlrvl tmlly dwsrfler In fwr-sts of BrltlshI Columbia and Dnuglne firs. AfterI riding through one of these forests) you m1 about 2 inches hleh. wen! we finally mods the Jarvis Ti-sllt ..,_.._...[I..__....,.._.,.........c .. v .... g the doctor, three other boys and ‘ about. Scarlet Pimpemel," and the adven- ture of “The Three Musketeers," the picture tells a tale of scarlet rn-, trigue that threatens a throne, with 1 Conrad Veldt, acclaimed as one o! the greatest actors Europe‘ ever pro- ' duced. as the dashing, audacious adventurer, Gil de Berault. whose sum-d strikes terror Into the hearts of men. and whose smle brings love to the hearts of women. EndYcmlng out into the open bank of the Jarvis river we fright- ened a moose and a huge grizzly boar which both swam the river and disappeared. These rivers are rushing torrents of green, ice-cold glacier water and a great deal o! care is needed in choosing and A FOREST STORM Our last day on the horse trip was most exciting. We ate the re- mainder of the food for breakfast and decided to ‘make’ the rall- vond that night — a distance of 2O miles so we thought. By this time the horses were mere skele- tons (too much hard going and lack of meadows). I stayed behind with the packers and some other boys and the doctor and we broke camp about 2 hours after the great majority had left. All went well until about 4 o'clock that af- ternoon, when a huge pack-horse fell into some deadly qulcksand. We cut off its pack (it was half submerged by this time) and cut dow-n trees and brush which we used as levers to pry it up. then we tied a cinch-rope around its neck and tied the other end to another horse's saddle pummel. We broke three cinch ropes and one fair sized lever this way -to say nothing of the pom- creature's neck which was stretched consid- erably. It was so tired it didn't try to hclp itself and it took us two hours to get It out of this mess. We were a good four hours behind the rest of the partyflsv this time. We expected to reach the railroad any minute - having done a very good 20 miles — but no railroad. Instead the trail grew worse and the horses wearier (imagine a wet trail after 90 pack horses have gone through it). 'I‘hcn It grmv dark and began to cloud up for a storm and then. darn it all but ciidivt the trail lead up an- other mountain. By now ft was pitch dark. going through heavy cedar forest (some of them 8 feet in diameter) and then the storm broke. Oh boy what fun. We couldn't see the trial, or the horse ahead and even let the reins go to give the horse a free hand. We lost two of our party In the woods and when we later went back for them they were preparing to go to sleep for the night and their feet were still on the trail. We spent the night (what there was of it) in a hospitable guides hay loft. They gave us n marvelous meal at 12.30 that night and it was a wonderful experience for us all. I didn't slt down very much as I had been thrown from my horse (at night) when it jumped a fallen tree. We stayed that night at this guides‘ hay loft about 1 1-2 miles from the railroad, having done 31 miles in over eleven hours. The others had taken the train with the exception of ‘Nic‘ who turned up next morning looking very r9- llcved to see us. ‘There were onlv ihrr-o WTRIHIIFTS in that little ex- tw-Irncc and n11 what fun? F1 om Bend we took the railroad Prince Georgm- n town of l5 thousand —- and there we slept, in rcnl beds and ate 11nd nu- real meals. On that. horse trlp thorn “'11s a great. shortage nf t0- hnrco and one cigarette sold for 25c. The boys didn't make this mistake a sncond time and when we left. Prince George to go on the river part of the trlp we were loaded to the teeth with fishing tackle. chocolate bars n‘ things. RIVER. TRIP STARTS we spent the evening fishing and ed squnw fish. Had some enommus I “bites" that evening bu), w. couldn't hook the-m for long. 8pc nt 1 the night in a boat house. Very, early in the momlmz MacLean. r Montreal boy. and s keen veteran: fly fishermen and l wore roused, by it ‘resident’ who took us to a1 small adjacent lake whore we flnh- 1 0d for rainbow trout~ thrlllsl1 These rainbow. although not vr-rv big, gave a terrific scrap. jumping a foot out of water. and would; keep shaking their heads from slde 1 m side. making 1t dlficult to,‘ knr-n them hooked. We caught: nine between us. and returned to Summit Lake to find everybody ready to leave. There were 37 of‘ us on the river trip and we were divided Into four groups. and ln1 as manv boats. There were five guide; including s cool, and uch rence Grant. behind an empire. is played by Ray- dier, and to save himself from Rich- elieus edict of death for dueli sts, he agrees to undertake a. hazardous mission, the arrest of a dangerous enemy of the Cardinal, the Duke of Foix. Featured in the strong cast sup- porting Conrad Veidt and Anna- bella are Raymond Massey, Romney Brent. Sophie Stewart and Law- of them was a’ trapper and knew the rivers well and where treach- erous sand banks, etc., were Inca‘.- ed. The boats we travelled in were made especially for us at a low cost, and were flat bottomed river boats, 32 feet. long and point- ed at each end. The would carry four tons only drew four feet of water. On this river trip as we had no horses to attend we were each given a job tin each boat) - such as cook. secretary, (to wrhe an account of trip). pcojile who looked after and were responsible for paddles. fires, luggage and washing dishes, etc. Each boat carried its own cook hox 1s-itn separate dishes and utensils. We started out from Summit Lake (about. July 25) down the Crooked River — which was a shallow and in some places s1v!‘t running creek. about l0 yards to 25 yards wide and very crooked. This joined the Pack River and continued as the Pack River. By the way these rivers are the only way of transportation in this dis- trict and it pays to knmv the channels and idiosyncrasies every creek just as you know the streets in a city. One day we came to a large lake and we stopped at a (rapper's cabin on an island. This man was very cordlnl and invited us ashore. He lead us along a path until we came to house which was gunrrl- ed by two ‘huge masliffs (we ivnn- dered why?) 'I‘hr~n procecdlnz further along the trail we came upon a very prosperous lookinz mink fat-m. He hnd over 2W1’) minks housed in long Inc cabins with very small wired-in rimzi11-vvs lending dmvn to the lake. He had some fisher; caged also. Those are verv. curious-looking animals about. the size ofn smnil hcnr -~lnn1: bushy tall. brruvn fuv $l0O a pelt) with two brown and silver streaks running the length of the body. We camped thut flight beside that lake and had th" only really comfortable swim of the whole ti-1p_- (water almost warm). A FISHERIIIANKQ PARADISE After this the trip box-um» a fisher-man's parndlsc. for as we passed into I119 Arctic Slope. wc "lift" the cold waters of the Pat's- nip River. which aboundcd in a species of trout called Arctic may", ling, also the rainbow trout. and a1 huge sluggish kind of mountain trout called a Dolly Vnrdcn. Whrn we reached fhls Parsnip River. we followed the some water route as Sir Alexander Mackenzie did a couple of himdred years alto. We were In the best trapping coun- try in Canada. for lynx and mar- ten, beaver, fisher. covnln, ivolf. fox, wolves, muskrat. were plentiful especially marten. beaver, grid coyote. Our guides were trappers. and although hardy people, they knmv 110w to make themselves comfortable on their trap lines-cg. ruhbm- nblowtn-up) mattresses, - very expensive slot-p- ing equipment and clothes and radios 1n their log Ffil)lllS-——I\\'l\lf)l‘l they can build In a dnv). Whore do they get the money? 'I'hr1y buv a trap line-fin, good one for $11100 -—ful'ly equipped with sworn] m- blns and about. 300 traps. If they are lucky and thev work hard. fhcy can catch $3000 worth of fur. in s winter. A few spars ago the low- est-denomfnnttnn of currcncv was the quarter !'15(‘)--.<n you so!‘ how good n trnppru-‘s credit i-. These trappors are a hospitable Int. for although they won't stnnr! for poaching on their own lines. thvv leave thr-lr cabins fully stocked with fond and furniuu-e. r112. 011d their doors uhlockrrl—nll for the comfort of some fatigued wanderer to use. We saw a grvnt deal more game on the rive-r trlp than on the up cnuzht a few sucker-like fish cnll- I horse trlp bcmtm- “'0 51.1111 ma“ the noise In the bows. The tnoos" files would drive the deer and moose right into the rivers ll’l'lf‘l‘(‘ they would submerge thcmselvrs and feed on llly parls. Coming around a bend in the river we would catch them imawares. and although we didn't shoot them um the river trlp) we not quite nenr them. Coming around one) such bend In the river we come arm's n cow innosc on the shot-r- of a bank. ‘Instead of making of! into the brush she started tn swim across the river. right in front nf our boat. to when- her two bohv calves were padrlllmz. (‘l-n this vlver trlp we sflW a greet mam" wlld duck and geese wnddlinp nu wand bars in mid-stream. also‘ bald headed uncles and ospreysl ‘IIIRIIJVTNG SPORT The mat. thrill on the river of- (worth ovov 1 I I , 1 in your chores. Good work deserves a reward. Reward 1 yourself with a comforting ' chew of l-llCKEYts N trlp was the "shooting of rapids." First we would land recon- noltrc the probable channels; then we would draw lots to see who would be the lucky members of each boat. Had to make boats I as light fir; Possible, and then, with tho other boys on the bank tak- Iing pictures, we would paddle as I hard as possible 1m maintain stem‘- ‘ 111g speed) while the guide in the bnvk steered 11nd the man in the ‘front stood rcndy with a pole ‘.0 slnvc off oncoming rocks. The spray and waves broke all over us, but the 1111~sngc was very swift. I and wp "stint" three rapids In this I wow-safely‘! Just below Oilt" of these | we saw quite a few fossils I dIhO somr- tinosaur and Ichth- y-osnurus bones-fossilized (black) ~Wcll, from the Parsnip River still following Sir A. Mackenzie: rmuc. we paddled down the Peace River to the Pence River Canyon -+ all the while passing through unbelievably beautiful mountain scenery also saw the odd grizzled prospector panning gold on one of the many gravel bars. The Peace River Canyon held great interest for us and having k-ft 0111' boats at the portage we tramps-d nine miles through brush. etc., to the main part of the can- yon. IThe Peace River Canyon ls 32 tuik-s long and in the shape of :1 curve. As _vet nobody has come Ulmufilt this (by wntcr) alive, It was ncccssm-y to carry the boats overland rby means of Bennett \\'-‘\H<)n.=) tn the other end of the Canyon which ls at a small trad- wug vufnvv 1.11mi Hudson's Hope _.<ii1e first village onmute). In clnmberlnp down the swap cliffs (there was a pathway) 4110 51"" lllkh to the rushing and lil- erally seething tori-mt, we could well imagine the chances (h0g9 poor unfnrtunntns had who grim to run the canyon. Nobody over cnme out. The sides of this can- yon an» very precipitous and are lined with the best anthracite scams of coal in Canada. This nn- thracite has br-"n tested by the government and found to be the best quality in Canada. The great t-roilbic Is the luck of transporta- 1 tlon and civilization and as a re- sult- only n few bnygtils (curried by I humans) are taken out in the win- ter. We all took some marvelous I pictures at the bottom of this can- ;yon and Inspected the very small I mine (about 4 foot by 4 feet by 20 _ feet) In the cliff and then began ~ the trlp up the cliff. This was no , joke as a great mnnv stones were 1‘ dinlodged by the climbers and this tnade it necessary for the party to climb 11p In single file. in groups ' stud in zigzag ‘ormatlon. I was ncnr the last of the party and was fnrcrd by a small avalanche to rt orf the trail. All went fairly well until about 4-5 of the way up. when I encountered a trlckv spot vr-ry crumbly and bad footing. and helow me a very precipitous part of the cliff: above me somg out- luttlng rocks making it necessary to crouch and no sideways along the cuff. catching hold of a rock rapids and “ BLACK TWIST" CHEWING .-fr;r. " *; 1-:-1.."..‘f.:rf. tfiiziiziz‘..i'.l:"::'..?;::':::: i3315$3§°ii15°§33‘"i° 1311153133? 1111111 Me-v- we“ v o- -= 56-58 Grafton St- Phone e02 j=-.= .1 -:.- WONG rm... "1..."- bv m» Century ra- rygfimméce that set a million hearts ni-Agbtttheflggagsfljfigagafiéiilgeer. Gil d8 1'.’ B . _ v -_ _‘ ~ Combining the intrigue no! Berault, conéadl V321; becomes in- - . -~ ' " '* ' 1 ' o so - . ALL.“ IAIVFILMII. N E “- h. R E E L A N n Richelieu, the romance o e vened Ln a ue w a y ung ICI-IOLSON'S ' e ' “Z ways and reaching up for another rock, I dislodged It and 1" tumbled down on me knocking me six feel down the slope knocked my comer! from underneath my grenfeli jac- ket down into the void below amidst a great clattm-iixg of rflckl and stones. The camera disap- pcnrcd forever and I WilS vol‘! lucky to gain the top. WESTERSEITS IIOSPITALITY Below the canyon the Penot River flowed very fast 11nd after portaging the boats 114 miles) w Hudson Hope we made the rest of the trlp in under 6 hours 17f miles). We rested a dag,» m Hiid- son‘s Hope and bought boar. .315, etc., and played baseball with tIiF- local boys. Met some 111111111: char- acters there, among whom ivns | lad who had his arm withered. as a result of a gun fight. Those W115- tcrnex-‘s although they have Heel! petty feuds among themselves .111 very courteous to strangers and 11l- -ways did their best to entertain us We finished our river trlp at T1131- lor flats on the Ponce River. “Fill is the beginning of the grent Pvwt River farming district and 1316 crops looked very wcll In this p-u-t of the country. From Taylor Flats. which is PHI- 1y a fertile plateau divided Iufid homestcnrls and forming lots “'0 went 46 miles by truck to 11,111- son Crock and the end of sir-i 11H the roalrond). That bus Ir-o ‘M! Quite eventful tr-o for as 151! weather was Itir-Ycmrut we 111d to bush the darn lol-i-‘cs up the 111N111‘ taln slopes part o.’ the wnv. 'l"--*n we ran into n milcl lmllstm-m Inter the truck became 1-» stuck in the mud rm- gumbo, it! they call m. Dreadful stufi m horses around and we had to 111"" lt out our selves in thr- min. A5 a mattcr of fncr v.“ dug it cu: wit" shovels. Ono hasty meal at Damon fr“? then or the train 111111 .111 chow-rd for the Ens-t and the comforts of home. As s mnttcr n! fact. 1w all enjnvnd mitt-selves vcrv much 811d would 111111 to go on the Iiflp nod year and n great rlenl of rrodlt I5 due to Nic Ignntlcf and the n” and all those who were responsmle for us. 1 think 11 little thanks "WI much of course) is due to those financiers. e‘c., who were nblo t0 send us on such 11. trip." nusunvdl-rifiim or v. s rnmwtrl) HALIFAX. Sent. 214cm — A message intercepted hy East CM“ Radio sum Service 11m Inst night said a United States cons! guard vessel was rmhing to "19 assistance of the American traw- lcr Patrick .1. O'Hara off Cod. No gubsrqumt messages u"? picked up by cast coast. TUNING UP An Oriental attended one "I I‘ series of concerts given by a ffl"1' ous London orchestra. Asked in!" how he enjoyed the music he 511m "1 liked most of 1111 the part 1"" before the mm with the 5"" above ms I made ll) n) alde- QUINN." (Pipe ’