‘contempt by many persons. shall be shall not "touch, taste or handle," from vendors who have no personal 1‘? Notes by‘ ‘the Way There ll s controversy In the British press over the question. should women teach daoys? _'l‘he controversy originated with a de- claration -by the President of the "National Association of Teachers that women should not teach DOW lmpracucahlllly o! the present law who are above the age of eight or - nine years. it woil known has been demonstrated and is ‘ud- that cwlducatlon is not law 111111811; 1119 Kreau" priwucahimy oured in ‘England as it is in of the proposed law is apparolli- ‘America. Girls and young women More than that, it has been de- are not less intelligent or apt in monstmled that m Premlel, Slewwocquiring knowledge than are boys h pm ‘nee and you-tug men. in their studies “"- “nd M” ‘mneagiies’! 9 v ‘they frequen-tly excel ‘their Ibroth- has a government that will perforni‘el_s_ m“ when ll mm“ ,0 tench its promises and carry out its pro- h“; Olhel- qhesilhh. “m, A moih. er may exercise excellent control over her own boys in thc home, but if is quite another thing to exercise such control over boysoi’ other par- OME on“, llrollluhle lines or hg-‘cixtage in the school. And many riculture have been abandonedihmd 1111M 111° “'°m“_"_ iéach?" "a" ,rurall_\ lacks ihc abzlitl tonmpari or, in sonic cases, reduced, l1cca_i|sr'l,.nlmlllnoSS" m lwr my “Imus. it was found more profitable to. import than to produce. Wheat, for example, was K1'111\‘11l many years Isl-us. Ylso-Psosldsfl-I. I. Burnett. , n, 4.2mm»- n. s. o. ‘ Associate Editor-D. I. Currie. . FRIDAY, MAY 13, 1927 -WOMEN'8 PLACE IN POLITICS EN and women live and work together better than they do apart from each other. "it is not good for man to live alone," and women, generally, are happier. more contented and more useful to themselves and others when accom- panied in their homes by men. As civilization advances the co- operation of men and women is the more ncedful and the more advan- tageous to each other, and their equality of service-to the com- munity and the Slate is the more The woman is more posals. ._i-—<£O)————- PROFITABLE LIN ES. pronounced. than ever “Queen of the }iome." As education and refinement fill-l Vance her inilucncc increases and_ , ., . .. . . _ _ ’ ‘ l1“? “u“'e“‘sf"ni 1°‘ "lBillilliilG. We have many excellent She then becomes llltLalnlost all l 11111113 P"°‘1“°1"g'an<l well qualifier] women engaged leader i“ sock“ “"‘11vi"ies‘ Sheleuotigh in supply the home wiill in leaching in our public schools, ‘hen 1111195 he” 1m“ ‘V1111 "w" millour and often a surplus. lnset-tllvliose weak points are a national the various branches of literaiureipesls’ hllghl’ ms, and other (llsenslllzick of‘ aluih-oility in Snlforlcii-nglop. _ , , . , 1 _ , _(er ‘ant nscipme, an in eve op- fiidggfiirfilillgushfugieaii-Fhgdnz011:1Us m" 111111111] ‘new, was, men 11011112 11111111111918 111 111811‘ 110v pupils- _ 1513111151111 mladed ‘hands-ivy of them are very .\'0il-ilg‘ in 11113111511911 1119111119“ 0f 11"’ 1111' “ehlwheut fields, and ii became more l-eaiz. and quite without experience have W0]! reputation and honorslevmmmlcal m lmpon lloul. and llelin one exercise qf gijgh authority as throughout the civilized \\'oi'_ld.j,,0,e m, when, hem, h, Ohhh-‘a teacher s110111(1 possess. 1r seems . m be a weak point in our educa- Now they all take part in ilieliiisi-.l,,.ops_ “(Hm “stem . - 11995 911119 11111111“ ln recent years those diseases . . . i Referring to the use in \\'llll'll he have been largely Ovel-conlel lhahhs lived; the great Dr. Johnson re-llo me research work ol- llle agl-hl marked that “Nature 1111-“ 1111"" “Wlcultural colleges and experts, and l“ lhe perilous nlglll across me Ab mcn so much power that the lawlvery mum. of mmlarmem lollay laml“ They were due lo ulllve l“ 111111 V91!’ ‘H5913’ @119" 111cm 11111e-"lgrmv their own wheat and find it ‘NPW Yflrk 0nlM011l18y. 11.1191119011- But in spite oi‘ thc law, the iuiiu qmllcll mm‘, ecwlonllcal than lmylnglddie White Bird had but a single ‘ H ' l-ISO horse power motor and carried . . . o wireless equipment, this bciui: (‘1111151611 1'1'1»‘1' 1111"?" 1111" '11P“ “llinany liuudrctis of thousands of dot-l . _ (lroppod in order to reduce iveiglit which fir. Johnson llourislioil. lu h,“ Saved l" ihh pmvlhhh h‘ hi] hlh- mm ‘m, reslslancu _Wll.ll llle Shh", tliemourts, in thc legislature, in fhrhlehs grow iheh- hwh when; it cnd in vi w_ they dropped their the administration oi" the schools, would nlea“ also llml we lwmlhl landing-gear ten minutes after they 111 11111111’ 011191‘ 11991111111911“ of 111‘? have very much more wliolesoincvgg? mm 11w air’ when 1'1“ seen higher service of the country, shclllnhl. “ml lmwl ma“ we gel rmmlotl the lHSil cease near the mouth ,_ _ of the River Shannon they were lakes 1181‘ D1111 1111 1111 810111111)’ wlilllilie grouud-to-death flour we import; going h, h hhrll, wehlerly ,lll.e,.llun_ 1118 111811; 111111 1191' 1111111911111‘ 1-‘1 111'liron1 Ontario and the Prairie PTO-Id. course which would take them . considerably to the north of the ocean lane frequented by steam- lships. ’l‘l_iis would account. for the lu/nnc liird not being seen or hav- The subject it not without inter- est here where so large a propor- tion of our school teachers are widens. our remedy, There is at this writing no new: from the "While Bird," or the tWO brave airmen who were guiding her once oi‘ womcu has constantly in-ilmpm.l,,,l film". would "ma" ways inwards the attainment ofivlhcelh Y social, justice and improvement. The hl-eedlhg hi‘ horses wag [hp Throughout the grizaicr part tifihcllhhhy years h llmhlahle husihellh‘ Brmsh Empiwt 11 w“ mistake imhjilllll-UW‘ 11191/11199 “'11! 191110115 1111' ing the best. chance of being ros- W0111911 110W, 111111519“ 1110 11km. ‘Wilts splendid horses. For one rea-1cued hail-theylbeeu forced downulas vote at elections for members nfisol, m. ahmllel. we home lmyel-llhs it is now believed to have lbeeu the the Lesislaturc- They arc llilwlgonc out ot business. We now int-mm‘ , 1 equally responsible with thc menllioi-i mhhy poi-lieu 1'01‘ 1114‘ rrllflrflvlftl‘ 01' 1111‘ iflwiliF-riiCanatia, where they are fed in lheialive has not been quite abandoned. open throughout the u-intcr anti-Their 011111 was capable of keeping consequently at a. much lower frost “float 11m‘ 50m‘) 1mm“ i“ a mm“ 0 , , oven a moderate sen. They may service is no! economically and than they can be reared here. To well conducted, ii‘ rcrtain lliolfced a horse from (‘Ollllfiflil until he‘ laws of the land arc disobr-ycd, ii"is saleable or useful, housing him half the year, is certainly an 024-11111)’ 116W? 110911 forced to descend pensive process considering the wile" 1114"“ “V” Home f“ 1mm“! representatives, and for thc con-i duct of public affairs. Ii‘ the publici "1 lug vessel of which there are many the morals of thc people are not‘ maintained, it. is the duly 0t‘ thc women, as it, is that of the men, lfllprice obtainable and the price for inquire into the matter whaievcrifwhich Western horses can be im- may be, and use their votes andlportefl. Nevertheless, horses to briugigood quality, either for draft 01" about a reform. iroad purposes will always pay, and 1n many respects the women areiwe hope there shall be no more more practical than the men. Theirlshortening of our stock of native judgment in matters of social con- horses. We should make a. big ef- cern is better than that of many fort to recover our former reputa- the sterner and physically tlon as horse breeders. Once this It is now, more than has been established the horse buy- er will again be a welcome visitor. in the growing oi oats also we have strohg competition the Western Provinces, but we can still bank on the quality of our oats, es- pecially i‘or seed purposes. Oats of good quality, free from weeds and disease, will always find agood market and command a good price. We have everything in our favor in growing seed grains oi‘ all kinds. in the West with a sweep of hun- dreds of miles for weed seeds to blow over, there is no protection seed grains cannot compete with ours. With necessary regard for quality we can compete successfully with any part 0t’ Canada in the growing of independence l," 17.76 and l5 only seed grains. We 1181/8 1119111 1111 a little more than the population of beaten in the growing of seed pota- the lDomiulon in 1867. in i118 V9111‘ tocs and can do it ~with grain. The 4300- llvellily-fvuii" yeztalls after‘ [litre] famous dec arst on, e -popu a o one thing to watch is quality. of the Repulbuc was 5308.483‘ l“ i810 it was 7,230,881 and in 1820'. E i1’ - . D ORML NOTEs it had reached 9,638,453. That was 44 years after ihe declaration of independence and 'he 90111111111011 was not fur different from that: of ICaflada today. . land-province. ‘Every 011011 been made and isjieilig 0011111111941 "1 '.o rescue the brave airmen if they are still alive, or H1101 11111118 11° find out where, when and how they met their fate: influence in an effort Lord Rosebery, the last surviving Prime Minister who filled that p0- slt-ion during Ithejrelgn of Queen Victoria, celebrated his ‘birthday on Saturday last. He was borilt on iliiay 7th, 11847. He held under Mr. Gladstone the post of Secretary of Foreign Affairs and on the resigna- tion of rtlia‘ great leader in 1.894 succeeded to the Premiership which he carried On with a consid- erable measure of ability and suc- cess urn-til July, ‘I895. Lord ‘Rose- bery formerly kept an excellent racing stud and was winner oi ‘he Derby Iboth in 1804 and 1895. of stronger sex. ever before, felt that women are to be respected as well as loved. At a juncture, such as there is now in this Province, the ladies have a. rare opportunity to correct conditions which have lately “gone. from bad to worse." They have seen that the Liquor Evil, together with other evils, is increasing de- spite the law now on the statute book; and-they are called upon. equally with the men, to use their discretion, their good judgment, in ‘respect to these two proposalsthat have been submitted to the elect- orate of the Province for considera- tion and decision. 0n tho one hand it is proposed that thc exist- ing Prohibitory Law, treated with in it is given out that the present population at Canada is 0,089,300- Thls is the estimate otthe ‘Bureau of Statistics. Quits naturally some lCanadians would like to know how our growth in population comlmfe! with that of the United States in the earls‘ days of its national life. The population of the ‘Republic in 1787 was 3,929,814. That was elev- eu years after ‘the ‘Declaration 0f and as u result their made “more workable,” whatever that may mean. On the other hand it is proposed that n. law which is "workable" shall be en- acted: that the buyer‘ and the sell- er of liquor shnll be punished for breaches of the law; that youths, under twenty-one years of age, Prohibition has undoubtedly done much good by the abolition of the open bar in this Province. The open bar has gone and will not ro- turn, but the ProhibitionnAct ‘has led to many evils and much injus- tice-bootlegging and moonshine» brewing-and a startling increase of periury and disrespect of low. The time has now arrived to more effectively prevent and limit not only the evils of iniemperancs but also the evils which Prohibition hss ~lostcred and developed. Forty years bones Canada’ will celebrate her Gontonnlsl fisuniverfi; ary, as the United“ Slates did ‘in 1.876. The iRepulflic had then some- thing over forty millions of people after receiving a vast host of immi- grants from Europe. This great stream of immigration is - w much reduced in volume by the limita- tions imposed rand a diminished rate of the increase of population in the iRepublic may be anticipated. that only adults who are not vic- tims o! the Liquor Evil, and wish to, gxarcise their liberty and Judg- ment in the use of intoxicants, shall be permitted to buy liquor interest whatever in business. The queationlflslons for the wo- men themseIveIF-to. decide; v Tho the liquor \ l ./ 110111 11/951111“ 1 Hope that the filers may be yet lhave been picked u-p by somp fish- ofi‘ the coast of Newfoundland, or and uninbaibluid portion of that is- has ‘as subjects of muchnnorc or less lurid description. By 1. c. s, Jlli-CREADY. 1 __ l Dealing ivilh the time ‘(Uhfll telegrdph drspatchcs zvcre drar l and scorn, bu! other: big men in journalirm tcerc plrntiful. ' \ .‘ It would be, perhaps, within thc mark to say that whfn 111C Dominion was formed, no dailymewspaper within its borders had a xirculaiiou "of . i 5,000 copies. When "Hiolpas lTAlrcy McGee prcpaijftl hislctturc 0fffilfdlflilfll1ollylfif of thr Nczi1‘_1)oniini'on, rffinlllipg thc lnllillzbcr oil-colleges, institutionslof learningand ncws- papers with ivhich thc lcountry was equipped, ilicrc were but féw more ilian a score 0f daily newspapers in“ British America. Of these Ontaridqiosscsséd‘ztilvclvc and Quebec cight. Daily uclvs- papers in the Maritime Provinces,- exccptihg :1 fcw spasmodic and temporary ventures, may.‘ be said to date from Confederation, or to owc tlicir existence to the Confederation movement. But iii thc first scvcu ycdrs after ihc union, thc number of dailies in Canada had doubled, the biaritiiuc Provinces lacing supplied with eight in i874. Today ilic (lziilv ncwspapcrs of Canada number over one hundred, while their aggregate circulation has (lotibilcss iucrcasctl fiftceufold since I867. 1 Ilut Canadian journal-ism at thc date of thc union, (lcspitc the limited number and circulation of newspapers as comparcci Vililll thc present time, was a great power in thc land. At n0 period since have thei/c been more forceful writers 0r mcn of wider iufitiencc at the editorial desks of the leading journals than during the Confederation era. 1n Ontario, George Brown, William Mc- Dougall, John Cameron, jams-s licaity and Thomas White (Mr. White was first of the Hamilton SflT/(IIOY and aftcrwartls of thc Moutrczil Gnbrtlv) have since had no successors of greater ability, and few equals as editorial writers. in Quebec, Edward Goff Penny, D'Arcy McGee and john Dougall wicldcd trenchaut pens in English journalism, to say nothing of many vigorous writers in thc French language. Nova Scoiia had hcr William Annand, E. M. McDonald, and a galaxy 0f younger journalists in \\’|illian1 F». Fielding inow hlinister of Finance), _i0illl‘ (I. (afterwards Sir john) Bouriuot, George Johnson, Martin jiiirififin and others. New Brunswick, with John Livingston, William lildcr and Timo— thy lYarrcn Anglia, as editors of hcr leading papers, and a number of younger mcn sincc of some notc. under their tutelage, was cn- joyiiug thc golden zigc of ncwspapcr activity in that Province; whilc in Prince Edward island, lidivard Whciau, David Laird and ilcury Lawson wielded thc editorial pcn with skill and ability. A numbcr of those. I have named figured at one time or another in thc Ifcdcral or Provincial Parliamcnts, or Legislatures or Cabinets, of thc sixties and scvcntics 0f last century. Thc list is far from complete, but it may be (loubtf d whether tlic largcr number 0f editorial writcrs in Canada todb embraces so many names of cm- iucncc and distinction in thc pjrofcssion. Newspapers havcbbccu greatly enlarged and improved in iuany ways, wiiilc relatively the status of thc leader-writer has (lcclincil. Thcrc is much lcss of ilic one-man powcr in journalism throughout Amcrica today than in thc aciivc days of lioracc (irccl-ry, Joseph llowc and Gcorgc Brown. s‘. _/\t Confederation thc le%ling journals of Canada wcrc all strongly partisan: thc hidepend _ t newspaper had hardly yct conic inio being. The leading journ s of (Jntario and Quebec coufiucil ilicir parliameuiap‘ reports mainly io ilic sihviugs and "doings of their party lcailcrs and favoriics. Political opponents were report- ed, if at all, with marked brevity. 'l'hcrc was no lldmsrirn‘ in iliosc (lays and thc scrap-book rcporis in thc Parliament Library which afford thc licst record of thc speeches, were each clipped from zrjournal favorable i0 thc public man wliosc speech was rc- cordctl, "flic iclcgrziph service was limited’ and costly, and vcry much less of thc parliamentary reports was scut to thc press over thc wires than now. - Press messages from Ottawa to St. jolm and Halifax cost one cent a word for trans- mission, and the newspapers were less able topay for extended reports than they are today, especially at such rates. I remember well trying to condense into one or two hundred words an outline of some field night in the Commons in which Canada's greatest men discussed the weighty questions of the time. ‘These telegrams were of necessity condensed to the last limit, and when they appeared in print, aft-er being somewhat am- plified by the night editor, thc result was sometimes amusing, and at other times almost tragic. The names would often g0 wrong, for the rank and file of the Ontario and Quebec members were names of the members of the Parliament of the Australian Com- monwealth today. In the eastern newspapers, especially, letters supplemented or took the place 0f the present full telegraphic rc- liorts, while pen portraits of the leading Canadian statesmen auti- cipatcd th-E- life-like plate pictures which have since made their faccs familiar in cvcry household. There were many letter writ- crs in the press gallery. To those from Ontario and Quebec, thc newly arrival hiaritime Province statesmenqsat unconsciously for their pen portraits. The Maritime mcn in the gallery in their turn sketched thc Ontario and Quebec notables. It was a eort of general introduction all around.‘ And when the four new men from the breezy prairies camc in I871, and the six members from beyond the Great Divide, thc letter-writers had also to introduce them to newspaper readers. Th-cy were luilccd objects of no small degree of curiosity. Don- ald A. Smith and John C. Schultz, destined later for titular dis- tinction; Omor De Cosmos, “lover of the universe"; big, burly Iiunstcr, and-long-haircd, picturesque Thomson, of ‘Caribou, served They had come so farYhy thccircuitous routes ofthose days, thatio some of the Ofiniario members, Simpson, of Algoma, was ‘forced to travel hundrcdsl-Efijniiles on snowshoes to reach-a’ pointwherc he could find the nicbng of l-‘onvleyancc by team.’ These far-westemers came not only front-yin:- country, butt-from a-tihinly settledone. Therm-sure few voters, indeed, bcyoudfthe Grsabliakcs, in I87I. lminftlobahjgé-st four mclnbers, at their election, polled an aggregati- ofTonTy f, ' votes. Of the first six members from British Col- umbia two were ycturned by acclamation, and the four who went to the polls received altogether but 497 votes, not ouc of them get- ting 20o. Contrast this with the last election to thc Commons in Winnipeg, when Mr. Bole was returned with the support of 4,308 votes, while his unsuccessful opponent had more than 4,000. To read again one of those forty-year-old letters from Ottawa is to see portrayed many stately and commanding figures and some that (Continued on page‘ ti)" I lliliiiillillililli zilmost as unknown in the Maritime newspaper offices as are the’ of their number the mileage exceedecbthe indemnity. Eves one . 110M0- ‘ab? l. A of s _ 00$! ‘1 B; Isms IV. Icllliu-D- MIDDLE soap routs l when we read- tlmi. in 111B 11151 twenty years, the _ general death rate has fallen 32 per cent. 111B 111' rant death rate i>y=46 aflervflnl» 1111* tuberculosis peat}: 131.911}! 33, P" cent, some ope "M8111 1181i 1111111 1P going to QWPPQIYWhQW 111911" 11"’ 1161115 nressrveduia 59011.11" "xiii"? will it moon's; ‘tremendous uumg hai-‘ofold folkifih the homes, and the affairs of tibia-world? " l zDr. Leonard. Hill tells us 111111 “There i5 pg (problem of what Wt‘ are is us" with out. grandfathers- they are living scarcely 1111)’ 1°1111°rl thah they dld-150 years um" Why? ‘ _ Bggnuge heart ailments and, cancer have increased tremendous-l ly in the past few years. 81111 11111“, of! our middle aged and older folks,- Aud yet never was there 1111 11111111 thought expended; upon tnesc con- ditions as at present. l‘ Heart associations have be911l formed throughout -the world, and‘ tho family doctor now advises i111?" ents regarding the ("Inge-PS 111mb simple ailments of childhood, sucill us scarlet fever, and that. :onsiii-, tis may at any time be followed byl an inflammatory condition oi the‘ heart,‘ and permanent (lamagc done- Thhs by care in attending cbiui- ren with the usual contagion‘; 1115" sees and not 11511111111115 11'9"‘ i”; get out of ‘bed too .=1°011- Heart. ail-- meuts will be prevent-ed 01‘ sYcaiLvl lessened in number. _l l 11H regard to cancer the uuwllfili and llehml orgahimtioils, and llicl daily papers, are carrying; all that‘ l5 now known dibolli- cancel. 10 1111111 readers. . And the advice is that cancel is not hereditary. 1E 1191 °°111‘1'-'1°1"‘1 that it usually takes a uzimbci‘ o1 years to develop, and that if recou- uized early it can b‘: \‘lll‘l‘il liY 1W1‘ mm, x my, or surgical tiseatmtnt. Sir Berkeley Moyuilinn says that‘ ii everybody talks about care-r, the public generally are 3111111! 1'1 1111°wl about cancel‘, and to icar ("P11111- l-ie says "Cancer is an ziuforuivius; enemy and once tie has Stziilétl 111111111 his victim lie never for a six-Pic,- moment ceases t0 grow. 111111 1119 sooner you confront your the. the better for you, and the worsi- tor him." ' Cancer can Ibe removed if dis- covered eaily, and thc only 1*" We should ‘have is the fear m‘ dclayfl the tear that a. simifl“ ‘u m‘) 11111)‘ become cancerous, thc that a1 local cancer should inc "_ . untiE it] becomes generalized and incur-l able." | Having lessened thc ilcitth mic in’ children, the next work is to lesson iihe death rate from cancci- and heart ailments, and ilion thc human c nod . Q-O-OQO-ffififi-Qfifi 0' Household Scrapbook By ROBERTA LEE KOO-Qt‘ -O-§O§ I 3.14m», \ Weighlnd the Baby I A simplified method of weighing the baby, the next. time one 806$ shopping, ls to step on the scales with the baiby in the arms, then again without holding the baby. former. m Stain On Wall Paper 35' It is always well to save a few remnants of wall paper when paper- ing. Should there he a stain that will not yield to other methods, tear off a. piece in an irregular shape, paste it on to match the de- sign and it is difficult to detect the mend. Hiocouqhs To stop ih-iocoughs, lake a, small sup oi! hot water, hold it in the mouth until it is felt that the hiccough is " ‘approaching, then swallow quickly. span of life will be £10111)’ 11113111- _ Subtract the latter weight from the 4 take a remnant oi‘ the paper and - . 1I silk-ore $9.98 ~ m ‘ :14 $9.98‘ Regular Prices nuns-bison to $22.00. » They arlfiveddieifle __ ing by express.‘ ing-at l. u... ‘All up-to-‘d makeflj‘ We advise our custoincrdito ta " h. _ v 811151" etW-lmstaialanai; even- Ffidfly mprn. 1 t, "l? l. i. .. a n advantage of this special offering‘. 1 \ Bargain ‘Basement 1000 Ladies‘ Vesta at Mcflfhebvesre‘ s mills sub-stand. ards offered us It this remarkable price. price; are 50c th\7fvc for frhs average . 88c Each s. A. awash.» I Good Fishing Rods If you have‘ never used a nlcs jointed fad you have missed one of the greatest pleasursyfil" flflllnm. I If you want a dura ble and handsome rid. thi; nigh‘. No matter whether you lid ' the mo» 9x. place to get it. pensive or the cheaper kind, you'll be proud 1f any rod you _ get here. Our stock of fishing tackle for fishing- expensive. The White. ‘Store .I. o. ismissou, "Druggist ‘ Includes everything needed Our prices will make your outfit quite in- Acadia ‘Sugarikefining. Company, Limited a modern sugar refinery, Eastern, Central and is also export South America. T tion since 1879. ;.,_. The balance sheet of iihe approximately twice,tbe interest on Firs standing. v Montreal Toronto Winnipq compatlydshiiDecember 31, 1926 shows propel-tin of a value equivalent 1° gage Bonds outstanding; depreciation, for the six months; _ ' were $220,207, or nearly 3 timers half-yea" t: Mortgage Bonds now out- , 6% l-‘irstjMortgagefBorids Due July ‘b11946 "" The Company, incorporated in June, 1926, owns with a‘ daily- capacityof 1,250,000 pounds, advantageously situated on Halifax harbour. Its product is sold throughout vMiadle-Westsm CW“- to Great Britain, Europe and he business has been in opera- gof First: Mort- elf earnings, after Gd that dltfi "In . ‘xi-i s.r“t"~'3- w= recommend these ma» fdt-flliréitzheat, at . 08 and accrued in i T?» 6"." _ Write for "descriptive l circular. Royal remain equally grhat wherever I‘ am. ' ‘My master keeps me warm when =1 lie ‘behind him in his chair. lit is ‘ becahse ‘he is a giod. In front of‘ fire-place is ‘a hot stone. Th 1g divine. FOR THE SCRAP BOOK 1 A same: or LITERARY - » -. OUOTATIONa son IVQOK: Levine ‘ ' sassy, May 1am hslhylds I Talks- , /_ s yvlll iuroly coins, -iAnon. DOG PHILOGOPHY: "I10 eat ii; good. To have eaten is better. For the enemy "who lieth la wait, Ito take your food is quick andcrafty. iMen possess the divine power of only alliio to open a few. Doors are great ‘fetishes which do not readily (they dogs. ‘ iMen. beasts, and gtones grow‘ great as they‘c‘ome near, and loom enormous when they are upon» mo. ' " iir ‘friend's dotbrelis 1 opening all doors. .i by myself am .~ l speak wlien- 1i please. From my master's mouth proceed likewise sounds which make sense. lBut his meaning is not so dlear as that ex- pressed by the sounds of my voice. Every sound that I utter has a. meaning‘. From my master's lips come forth many" idle hdlggt 11¢ is difficult but necessary io-divia the 11mm ..111.1f“11111stsr... le to know w other well to rd; msn, dl-n-m-i .\\l no aim CKlillNEY ‘i. m Onefiiiust worship them u‘ seeking to understand them. 1111' wisdom is mysterious. ' I api the centre of all thi the men, ‘ibedatfbltand things, fries at SLOHQ and adverse, are ranged about 111 aAll isilupqudlsjollux. 1 510110 sin. “ M... , 4 tlBioliloreT ‘ --Anatois Fri"