_ somehow or other what I need f0? an 32': m wv-VVVVVV of?" i}; FOR ‘PEfiTF. SLEEP Eno relieves indigestion The HOUSE WIFE and ,_VHER ACTIVITIES, beauty routine. That isn't to say. of coilrse, that __i soap and water alone will accom- rm 80mg out; I'm tired of tables, plish the best results for all. It HOUSE WEARY chairs; should used however in conjunc- rm “red or wans that, hedge me lion wit whatever other prepar- an abom; ations your own skin requires; and used regularly, For instance, when you're ready to give your face the nightly cleans- ing, lather it with bland soap suds. Then really wash your skin, using either a wash cloth or a soft com- Are- skies afid birds that c3fQJ.,p1@XIOn-bru5h. Rinse several times, 'wmd5 that shout; |flrst with tvarln water and iiien I want Dame Nature's friendship. ‘ _\\'iIh 001d. dry lhmmllghly flhd- 11$- Thul I say; uig upwards and outward strokes, smooth on a layer o: cleansing “Goodbye-I'm goth: out!" _cream. when cream was melted, its just house-tiredness. wipe it off with soft tissues and pat hum-drum strain! on skin tonic. followed by either Monotony! But when I've climbed mild astringent or tissue cream. de- I'm tired of moms and ceilings, carpets. stairs. lmd‘ 5Q_I'm going out! \ day Trivial the hill {pending on the texture of your My heart refreshed will laugh and 5km, ' "sing On awakening in the morning 535m. home! I'll 10W if Still! you should go through the same —IAN DRAG cleansing routine, omitting the last " step when you're in a hurry or feel WOOL XS EXTREMELY that you don't need tissue cream on SMART FOR. SUMMER that particular day. . Deli? __._. , ______ Without overdolng it in this bus-l ALPACA RETURN§ To lness of matching aocegsorleshMcilgé | FOLD OF FASHION heux uses red and w lte c ec -___- taffeta for the crown and brim (on The return of alpaca to the the upperslde) 0f a hat. the very fashion fold of materials is amus- iihy tum-Over collar on the navy-trig. enlightening and historical. wool dress, a piping Of it hmlmd) In i500 it was a heavy, superbly the edsw of the cape that avwmqwoven warm textile, clothing the panics the dress. and for a pair of», Peruvian proletariat, and used when gloves with gauntlet Cllff-i- ‘from an all-white animal. to weave I1: would spoil the whole efiertimdntles for the nobles of the ‘irthedpitikrlse were iii-isomer Iltatffga- lsun. In the days of the clippe; ' Otm e dwwn 0 B h l1 shi , 65 years ago, it was carrie ‘Wide blind 01 "WY W°°1 m“ mil-fro {he manufacturing centres of the dress, and the underside of the brim, vl-ol-ld and 501d to make fine dress- ll also covered with the wool. May-‘es, but so difficult was it then to be you think lihis ‘wasn't “undlobtain real alpaca that coarse sub- wery summery. but you're all WrOhz-jsiitiites. containing not a hair of ,‘Wo0l ls a5 500d f0!‘ 8111111291‘ 35 h1g5 5 the Andean animal. slyly replaced i r lnter—it is the wei t and t e! ~ket an an admirable {Teal}: of the material tTiat counts. fggrrllctfiijfilily lost ggteem, becom- Some of the new summer wools are ‘m; l“ the mlslod pqpular view Infinitely cooler than linen or pique.‘ something hard and shiny, w be . Another conservatively mflichedfused for linings, umbrellas and of- let of accessories for mid-Aufzust me coals, eal n1 Else", I said softly; "I'm not a wife you are. battered for. done a bit better \ '21 .9“! AMorningSmila Crank Needed When the clock struck midnight, and there was still no evidence of departure from the parlor, father came to the head of the stairs. "I think you should give the young man his coat," he called to his daughter. "Your father is just a crank," said the boy friend. "Perhaps so." replied the father, who had overheard the remark. “but when there is no self-starter one is necessary." THEIR NAMES "What a big family you have. Mrs. Jones,” said the visitor. "Yesm. And the funny thing is that all the names begin with a haitch. There's ‘Oi-ace, ‘Erbert, 'Enry, ‘Ugh. ‘Ubert. ‘Arold, ‘Arriet and ‘Etty-all except the last one, and we ‘ad ‘er named Hallace." fi-O-O C nfessions Of A Debutante By RUTH a. ABELING What Tfpl Every‘ ~ o 0R ;..:*.-:.-.-.::.. Dorothy Dvr No Man Should be Allowed to Marry Until He Has Memorized the Whole Lltany of Bills; Then He’l] Know That a Wife and Baby and a Yacht Cost About the Same, and His Wife Will be Spared His Howls 0f Anguish 0n the First of the Month Here are some o! the things that every husband should know: That before a man takes a woman for better or worse he should make up his mind to accept her faults along with her virtues and like them. lvIar- riage ls like every other show on earth. It never comes up to the boily-hoo. Every wife is a surprise package and she is never the pin- featheled angel that a man thought he was getting. Most men are sentimental and idealistic. They picture marriage as an Elysium filled with love and adulation and in which no harsh wind blows and when they discover that it ls oftener a scrapping match than a peace conference they are likely to quit, or turn sour. Also, they expect their brides to be a com- bination of Ladylove, business executive, savings bank and chef, and they feel that they have been stung when they find themselves (Copyright) “A FLUTTERING BUTTERFLY" It all came to me in a fiash—"de- I fled conventions!" And then: "I didn't know that I've done the better way, little sister-I'm not sure that it's been the right way!" I said. “But you've been so sure and so safe all along while I—I've been in terror every hour that he's not been here with mel Itsiawful." She went on with difficulty. "So sure and so safe!" The words mocked me! Visions of that bonded surety and safety rose before me. Restrictions! Limitations! Threats! Fear. constant fear lest a. mist-move on m part should crash the whole frail thing into nothlngriess. ‘Phat was my surety, that my saf- ety! How little Else knew of it! And I was glad that she didn't know. Finally I found my voice again. “He has been good to you, though, hasn't he?" I asked, vowing to my- self that he should say if Else ans- wered negatively. She looked up the ghost of a smile in her frank eyes. “Wonderful? she said, with all of the glow which had accompanied that word on the day I found her and her little red geranium. "He's been good—but I've been so afraid all of the time. It——-it hasn't been his faulv-mine. You-——you haven't had any such fear." "But I have had to pay a price in spirit-perhaps not as much as I'm something which was I don't -know that I've or more rightly out Just as quickly, they want to go places and do things just as badly. consists of a neatly wot en largely- brlmmed hat of natural colored raffia, purse of the same fiber and sandals also of this cool sweet- emelling straw. Hat. purse and san- dals may all three be trimmed with bright beads, buckles-or better ‘igtill if you are seasiding-shell- lhaped trinkets in gold or silver. l; FOR THE INVALID ‘lng to invalids and may be beaten lightly and added to many foods without the invalid suspecting it. Oatmeal and other hot ceieals may easily disguise white of egg. 80A? 1s INDISPENSABLE BEAUTY PREPARATION Soap is the one indispensable beauty preparation. A woman with lolly skin may eliminate tissue cream lfrom her list oi‘ necessities while a ay do without masks and asring- tents. But whether dry or oily, fine Dr coarse. there's not a person tvho should exclude soap from the daily lrliovllicz or PRIN WARNING TO It has come to our attention for sale in this Province, contrary At resent extremely dangerous heaters, and are of two types: 110C Shot," “Major? "VIIICO." (2! Collowlng names: .. _-_.~_.a. -- _ . -_. nsw li Meal Inspector. ‘Mention to Rule 4 of the Rules impaction Act 1932: l. laboratories 0f the Hydro-Electric Obvornment Laborawfy- ""5 h" been approved?’ Act ioaz. umalleatlon to this Dopflrlmlfflf- ‘a... Iwflfifl-‘I-S-ll Wlhite of egg is very sirengthenf irl with dry skin of a fine textilre. ELECTRICAL INSPECTION DEPARTMENT THE GENERAL PUBLIC ltandard types of electrical appliances and equipment are being Offered being sold. These are included in the following list of undpproveu i1) Faucet type, with portable cord. manufactured under the fol- lowing names: "Tom Thumb Senior." “Tom Thumb Junior," "Alladln," Immersion type. with portable cord. manufzwlured under the "Lux-Viscl" or “Wagir Wonder," "Jiffy." "Bcsilever," “Kwlk." “Comer? “Hot Donut." Persons having purchased any of these types of heaters are requesled to advise the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, m- thc Provinchl Elec- lTo the sellers nf unapproved appliances and equipment we draw “All electrical equipment used in electrical installations or of- fered for sole in this Pmvlncc shall be "approved" w-ithimthe meaning of the Code. it being understood that such word “aprpi-ovcd‘ means that gush equipment has been submitled for (Pxaminallon and test to the Lhbllnderwrifers‘ Laboratories of Chicago, or to a recognized Canadian lid Illa. Notwithstanding such approval any electrical equipment may “Ii-eluded u! any time by an Inspector If in his opinion such [bglmv standard, or not used for the specific purpose for which it ha! f I I tin to comply with the provisions of this Rule u‘ lxIigmgI-‘gnalrzrlirdfallgcwm lfrivsecution under The Electrical Insfpectlmr mfommflon rgsnfllln‘ approved appliances will be furnished upon No creature on earth is less Par- isian and soigne. nor more prepos- terous in appearance than an alpaca. ,Their hair is so thick and long ,ihat when they stand still they look like solid wooden toys. When they gallop across their desolate fdomain and swing their weight of wool from side to side, they look- lzke Havraiian dancers swlshing their thick grass skirts. Alpacas begin where the range of the hardiest sheep ends. and they do not thrive below 7.000 feet. yet here they are in Paris. their pelts parading on the world's best dressed women. Cout- uriers describe it as "soft, lustrous. idrapable fabric made of silk and 5 wool." than you." Else looked at me and shook her head slowly. She half sat up: “But you've been good!" She said at length, self-accuslngly. “Notj-geod!" I felt ashamed of the weakness which let me sob when I should have been the comforter. Presently Jimmie came back. He looked at me anxiously as he cross- ed the room to where Else lay. Else made a restless movement t0- wards him. He answered it by taking her in his arms and settling her cozily against his shoulder. She nestled there, seemingly content. I turned to the window where the geranium still blossomed and watch- ed the street. A merry-go-round in luiniitture. on a horse drawn wagon, stood near. It's diminutive organ squeaked crazily while children paid their pennies and climbed abroad for a mad gallup on a small wooden horse held to a. miraculously minute circuit. A flower vendor passed, calling his uinres. Great brawny ani- mals strained by with loads of coal, their drivers sitting stolidly aloft. Suddenly the anorama of the street lost its interest. I turned back to the room and saw Jimmie looking toward me his lips moving, but no sound issuing from them. I crossed the room. The light fell across the figure of Else. Her skin seemed transarent. Her lips were parted ln a slight smile. Her eyes closed as I looked at her. She seemed to nestle clos- cr in the arms that held her. I stood motionless, staring. Jimmie was looking down It fire figure which seemed momentarily to shrink into his arms. His eyes were shadowed by days and nights of watching. At length I felt, rather than saw, a movement and was conscious of Jlmmies eyes upon me. His beckon was barely perceptible. He had laid Else back on the pil- lows. And then I understood. The gay little butterfly who had been beating her wings against life had flilttered out into the Unknown. Else! My little sister gonel. Gone! We stood there, silently, her hus- band and I. The thing was beyond tears. And somehow weeping just then. beside that form which lay so sweetly, restfully, those lips. almost smiling still, would have been out of place. At length the bells of the Method- ist church across the way tolled I l Engaged l0 years before marriage a couple in White Plains, N.Y., ended their wedded status 38 days after it began. The wife charged lthat during their 10-year courtship her husband had been patient and kind bilt she discovciecl after mar- riage he had a violent temper. The judge reserved decision, expressing the hope that the couple might be reconciled. CE EDWARD ISLAND that several unapproved and sub- i to the Iraw. I types of Electric Waior Heaters are Disc," “Mysiosolf “Alladln." and Regulations of The Electrical and his luncheon projected itself even into that hour. I could feel the tempest of his impatience. I glanced at Jimmie. He was lost in reverie, standing there beside the still form of the little butterfly girl. I crept out and left him so. Power Commission of Ontario nr in been approved as suitable for sale ulpmeni. TWO MOURNERS It; seemed almost beyond belief that I could go from that scene to the luncheon table of my own home, sit across from my husband and say nothing of the events of the morn- lng. It was fir“ ' E. S. CHANDLER. Provincial Electrical Inspector. A say. “What's the use. you can't pleas than deeds, and that as long as grows more beautiful eve can kiss his wife's e the one member of whom I was fond, had died, a few hours before and yet, I sat there. dry eyed dabbling with my salad, Pretending to carry on a conversa- side the white casket in the chapel‘ today while the clergyman rem the burial Bervlw. Just the man who had played so important a part in tho lives of two sisters, and I. people stood around the hung hotly about us as we cllmbgd into my motor to follow the hearse to the burial place. a night of revelry been thrust apart by circumstances. were now together again riding as mourners. husband and sister — to. gethcr but never more widely separ- nocm. And the thought of Jonathan ‘ted’ green we planted the led geranilun. the brilliant little bloom which had been such a faithful spot of color all summer. W pease. its dinners to order; for him, for him-what? front of those stone steps which a blazing geranium had once hired me to climb, I held out my hand. “I'd like to know - sometimes- l ' is can run a budget with one hand and do magic with Augdfifiségvgfrbudvwho are hard on the eyes when they get their make-up gm or when they have acquired a living picture who is good for nothing in the world but a parlor ornament. Hence every man should balance hLs matrimonial accounts as he does his business ones, setting off the profits against the losses, and be satisfied if he gets a reasonable return on his investments. For many a ivife who is a charming and loving companion is a poor house-keeper. and many a nagger is a blue-ribbon cook. , Every husband should know that you cannot run a house on air. No woman is magician enough to conjure light and. heat and food and clothes and automobiles out of nowhere, or pluck them out of her sleeves, though the young lovers who sit down before marriage and figure 01‘ that two can live as cheaply as one seem w expect. some such miracle to happen to them. It takes money to pay the rent. Nothing but good hard cash will sat- isfy the butcher and baker and candlestick maker. After marriage peo- ple are just as hungry as they were before marriage, their clothes wear and it is when a man finds out that he can't have the things and do the things as a married man that he did as a single one that he begins to repent of his bargain. No man should be granted a license to marry until he has memorized the whole litany of bills. Grocery bills, coal bills, milk bills, shoe bills. drug bills, doctors‘ bills, dental bills, beauty-shop bills, hat bills, glove bills and so on ad infinitum. Then he will know whet-her he would rather set up a yacht or a wife and baby. They cost about the same. Every husband should know that it takes two to make a. marriage a success. Most men wish that job off on. their wives and expect them to monopolize it, but it is too big a. contract for any one woman to fill, no matter if she is at patient as Griselda and as much of a cheer leader as Pollyanna. No woman can ma/ke a. happy home if there is a man in the background who is a perpetual wet blanket. No woman can keep up a lively, animated conversation of an evening with a husband who only grunts when he is spoken to. No woman is going to keep on loving a man who ls tyrannical or stingy or grouchy. So the man who wants to keep out of the divorce court must keep his wife from wanting a divorce. Every husband should know that just being married to him isn't picnic enough to satisfy any woman. A lot of men seem to think that a wedding ring is everything in life that a woman can possibly crave, and that if they give her a nice little gold band she is perfectly satisfied. She can get all the excitement and amusement and diversion she desires Just by lookinghat that and thinking how good and kind. John or Tom was to give it to er. So they never take Friend Wife out of an evening to any place of amusement. They never give her any little treats. They never do a single thing to make life interesting to her because they are sure she gets all the excitement she wants in watching the baby sleep, and that she puts in a perfectly hilarious evening when they are off at a night club by tell- ing Junior bedtime stories and catching up with their darning. And they don't see why wife gets dull and peevish and dowdy and so unlike the gay ladies they step out wtih. Above all. a husband should know how u.) manage his wife, He should know that you can lead a woman amrwhere, but you can't drive her an inch, and. that she is open to suggestion, but closed to criticism and fault-finding. They Just make her put her baok up and gay to her- self that she will be darned if she will change. If, for instance, a hus- band wants his wife to be a good housekeeper, he should novel- knogk hel- cooking. He should praise her pies and cakes and she will make a burnt offering of herself on the kitchen range trying ot live up m his stand. ards. If he wants her to be economical, he should Qglgbrgte he; thy-m m the market place, and she will pinch eve n1 k l til sh . falo howl in anguish. w c e u“ ° Mk” N“ b“: But if a husband is forever complaining of the cooking, hi5 wife will e him." and let it go at that. And if he accuses her of extravagance she W111 think that there will be a row over the bills, anyway, and that she had as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb. so she will buy what she pleases. --____ And husbands should know that women put more stress on Wm; h husband will tell his wife that she Yy day he may do as he pleases. Any husband, yes blind and her l‘ d b his faults or nag him about them. 1P5 um so m“ she Wm never see -____. And that is the most important thing that any husband can know_ DOROTHY DIX. My sister. my little butterfly sister, "I'll le t you know - sometimes." my family of he said And then I watched his solitary figure mount the stairs and disap- Pelr behind the heavy door. A terrible sense of loneliness seiz- ed me. I realized then, more than Slltllrdfly. September 8. lever, before, that Else was really The"! We"? lust the two of us be- gone and henceforth my life should be lived entirely within myself. l In the evening paper I mud me obl. tuarles. I had never turned to that column before. After reading one of the notices it came to me that I had just read that of my own sister. That pitiful little paragraph was all that was left of a bittersweet dream. This house, with its splendid hangings and its luxurious fumish- inks is like a great enlpty shall. Tuesday, October 23. My life has become a procession of 879$’ days. I rotate spirltlessly be- tween my home and my mother's flflf. like a. shuttle weaving in and m" and 193M118 l fabric of drab stuff touched with color only when I hear the voice of Jimmie.-My Stranger, over the telephone (for he does call me occasionally) or meet him by chance in some crowded way. And now he seems gggln Stranger! It is hard in spite of hi; constant reserve, to attach him to the life at West Fourth Street. It is difficult to think of him as a part of any particular scheme, or be- longing In any particular pldco, no I5 IUBir-My Stranger who came to goeurolit 0 "he hlilhf- in an exotic tlon. A little crowd of curiously staring door and It W“ a strange JOumey. We two, who had dome together 50 gslly on and then had At the foot of the little mound of And then turned back to the world iLh, for me its Jonathan to ap- I wondered. As I let him out of the car in "Don't slip away entirely." I said. My tha first to discover North America. Personal -:- Fashions i i halite I KEEP ON agree on Palmolive for ' young-looking . . . well, that feel it getting down into your OPEII “If, IUP ca’ PALMOLIVE! Sometimes It's hard for agirl to know jultwhat to believe . . . But when 20,000 beauty experts t‘ g skin lovely and real thing to me. Don't you think so too? I'm not fooling myself either, when I insist that Palmolive’: lather in diffcrenb-aorc of creamy and velvety-feeling. You can actually and truly cleansing. You'll love It for baths Join/juice I THAT'S WHY usmo sounds like the pore: and really PALMOLIVI lEA-UTY IOX THEATRE Listen to lovely Gladys Swarthout celebrated Metropolitan ned by John Barclay and I cut of over 100 including Nat. hilkret’! orchestra. A full hour of glorious melody. N.B.C. Network-Coast to Coast-Every Tuesday-IO to ll pmi- E-D-T- I like Palmolive’: soft olive-green color be- cause, I guess, it reminds me that Palmolive is made only from pure vegetable oils . ..a secret blend of olive and palm oils. You really couldn't buy a better soap at any price. LARA‘ re rq tyre Same 011111114 Same Size THE COOK'S CORNER Apple Sauce Pie i 2 cups apple sauce 3 beaten eggs l lemon grated rln dand Juice 1 1-3 cups condensed milk ‘>4. cup zwleback crumbs 1 'ple crust made of zwieback Mix apple sauce, beaten eggs, grated rind and Juice of lemon; add condensed milk and stir well. Pour this mixture into the crust carefully, cover with the zwieback crumbs and bake for forty-five minutes in a moderate oven i350 degrees F.) or until set. This filling is enough for one large pie. Strawberry Crca m Pie 2-3 cup sugar 3% tablespoons cornstarch ‘A teaspoon salt 2 cups scalded milk 2 egg yolks 1.5 teaspoon vanilla. 1 cup hulled strawberries l large baked pie shell Mix dry ingredients. Add scolded milk gradually. Cook fifteen minu- tes in double boiler, stirring con- stantly until mixture thickens, and afterward occasionally. Add beaten yolks and cook a minute or two longer. Add vanilla. Place in baked pie shell and set aside to cool. When cooled add the strawberries andl cover with meringue made as fol- lows: 2 egg WIIILCS l cup hulled strawberries 1 cup powdered sugar " Place all three ingredients in elec- tric mixer and beat for ten minutes. fiuffy. Pile on top of pic and allow to set for a half hour in refrigerator before cutting. (This beating may be done by the aid of a Dover egg-beat- er, but it requires fifteen to twenty minutes of constant beating.) , When cut, the individual pieces of‘ pie are beautiful in npticarance. IIONEY-MOONERS SET OUT ON STRANGE QUE ST JOHN'S. NIFLDH July 2. rCPl: -—Junius Bird, a 26-year old New York archaeologist and his bride of a few weeks plan an unusual honey- moon this summer. , They will hunt for remains of an ancient Eskimo civilization in the vic'nity of Hopedalc. Labrador, with the IlOpe of imearthih! m0"? evidence that the Nor-semen were Both are accustomed u; visiting far-off places. Mr. Bin! has been a. member of several expeditions under bhe auspices of the Amer can Museum of Nntirnl History and the Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation. Mrs Bird last iyear was a voluntary worker with the Gmnfell expedition. (To Be Continued.) ______________ -. l.“ youim domg_hoy you 5m;- Un liflnnnl’: for Stiff Jollh "Wihile we hope to come upon traces of the Nor-semen. that is h rather remote possibility" started Mlr. l ’I'he mixture will become light andi decolletage back. frou-frou shoulder trim There's a tily, while the hip area. dress. Chiffon prints, pastel Price of PATTERN Wrap coin carefully. Revolt Spreads In '(A. P. B! ANTYA South Mulchen» Carabineros. $11956 FEW?“ “Id- were defeated by revolters in encounter in the heiflhmifhwd M Lonquimmay last night. mimy casualties. The reports stated that low shaped flounce to make the hemlim swish about pret- Multi-colored flowered on white ground is another delight- ful scheme for this easily made batiste, chiffon cotton voile, etc., are other attractive suggestions. Style No. 422 is designed for sizes ll, l3, 15 and l7 years. quires 4% yards of 39-inch material with ‘it yard of 35-inch contrasting. stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Street Address Gun-din‘: liIwi-al Wire) S GO. Chile. July 2—Des- pet-ate fighting, in which at least 40 peasants were slain. has broken out in the revolt spreadlhfi ihfmlilh southern Chile, according ports reaching here tonight from FA CINA TING SUMMER STYLES Illustrated Dressmaking Lessons Furnished With Each Pattern Itoanbehlghorcxtremelyluw And isn't the fascinating ‘P is very snug. organdie satin, eyelet Size l5 re- I5 cents in Chile to re- 42? STRING HOLDER i!!! There W81‘? Balls of string, if not kept in a thous- special box or holder. are liable t0 ands of rebellion; Chileans were be mislaid. or wasted through un- marching toward viucura. killlhll-olling and tanging. It is ligood peasants who would not join the pan to use an aluminum funnel of revolutionary movemflnt- P795‘ Ye“ suitable size as a holder. The fun- pnrtg stated 40 Deflfiflflifl W"! be?" nel is hung in a convenient place killed by miditfternoon. At Mulchen the Republican mil-‘end 0f itia- has been mobilized order in the absence of The rebels are aeeklnil W and the ball is kept inside it. The the string is led down to maintain ,through the furmel. and the ball carflblflflfbfl- unrolls without becoming loose or take tangled. If a more ornamental possession of the vllliiki‘ 0f CRIIH- holder is preferred a plain funnel quln and its wharfh. A force of may be lacquered ill any suitablv about 50 carabineros was ililflrdlh! shade. Attractively wmrdd had"! the place. 13ml. "we dnknow. of this kind. complete with balls of colored strig to match. may be sold however that at reasonably low prices at 5818i me ogunpry near Hopi-dale abounds oi’ work. in the ‘remains of Eskimo habitat- ions. we hope i0 enough material with York to peoe toge-ther bring back Each ycnr approximately $5300 us to New ran-gr; lambs go ink) tho feed lot in heretofore the provinces of Saskflbtihi-‘Wm unknown cluipiem in the history of Alberta. and British Columbia. M the Eskimo races". The expedition. and the o0 main in Labrador until American Museum Natural History is supporting the pounds and when time of sale from the mime, these of lambs average npproximately i! fin-oiled for owlll re- ma-rkethhey webh HQIIIWWI!‘ her. III