' "_ Journ in the city will be pleasant to ~ p: ciuiiifoirovf culnniil ‘.. on your (In oduncr) mulled In Canada 15d flgllgfl "u" jfotnfnl bully (founded um um m- you (In ‘nlvoaool dolfvorol- President-W. Cheater B. lloLnn. \- Secretary Ildlfol and Munich-J. B. Bin-null. Vlco-Prooldono-i. l. luv-Mt. ‘lent. Co]. I). l. lllclxlnnon, I). I. 0 Anoelafe Editor-II, MONDAY, MARCH 18, 1929 TEE LEGISLATIVE SESSION. Tomorrow we shall have the pleas- e of welcoming our representatives 4 m all over the Province to their eglslatlve duties. We are informed y the Premier that the session will e short, and that no important ensures are likely to come up for onsideration. Be that as it may. i e annual opening of the Legisla- ure by His Honor the Lieutenant- ‘ overnor with his military escort, is lways" a colorful event, and tomor- ‘- w's proceedings will be no excep- ‘ on to this historic rule. There is every reason to expect _ at the financial showing for the ear should bc satisfactory. No eaiy expenditures have been incur- d since the lust session of the Leg- lature apart from those budgeted for, and iviih the greatly increased V‘ revenue at the disposal of the Gov- ‘ ernment from interim subsidies and railway grant, amounting in all to $165,000, there should be a substan- tial surplus cn hand with which to meet coming emergencies. l“ re things iii the air, such as a Sani- .+ rium, increase of teachers‘ salaries, ' creased grants to public health’, etc. 1f, elf-ls thorough discussion it, is deemed EClVlSEbFJ to increase expend- itures on thcse or any other matters hich may arise, there should be no i difficulty in ‘providing the ways and means. Apart from the increased revenues at the disposal of the Gov- ernment, the Premier has indicated his expectation of receiving very generous treatment from Ottawa in the matter of increased provincial subsidies, so that the present session - seems to be a favorable one for pro- iding, without additional taxation, for such adjustments as are neces- sary in the public interest. We extend a cordial welcome to our EpYESEIltHtlVCS, Liberal and Conser- Arativc, and trust tifat their brief so- lantlc Provinces. the time. representatives. thank. it again. . l l- causes are many. unity in Mexico. themselves and profitable to the Pro- . fnce. ' LITERARY STYLE. Everyone will recall, says an Eng- lish writer on "Studies in Literature," ‘the amusing scene in the Pickwick Papers, where Sam Wcllcr reads over ‘ to his father the valentine that he has laboriously composed, and dis- cusses with him the relative merits of two impressive words. ‘No, it lln‘t that,‘ said Sam, 'circumscribcd— tack. loot. troubled. ‘Think not?‘ ‘Nothing like it,’ replied ‘But don‘t you think it. means more?‘ inquired Sam. ‘Veil. pkhaps it 4's a. more tenderer word,’ I ‘ d Mr. Weller, after a few moments’ reflection. ‘Go on, Sammy.’ -i‘ Now the elder Mr. Weller, in those ofound remarks. managed to sum- ‘_~~ almost the whole philosophy 1'- style. He had discovered the im- portont principle that one word is 0t as good as another word. Al- .ost all that can be said about style l. involved ‘in that-one word is ingtcn. Mr. Guthrie true also that the Conservatives in the House of Commons at ‘the time opposed. not the appointment of a Commission but the delay in effect- ing adjustments. It was fortunate as well as unexpected at the time that such a. man as Sir Andrew Rae Duncan was recommended .by the Canadian Trade Commissioner in London, and that the King Govern- ment accepted him as chairman. .The findings of this commission, though only partially implemented, have lift- ed some of the burdens which lay so heavy and so long upon the At- Anotlier instance may be cited in the protest of Premier Baxter of New Brunswick and the Federal represent- atives of that Province against a manifest injustice to the Meritinies by freight concessions for the bene- fit of potato producers in Quebec. These concessions were cancelled ow- ing to the energetic action taken at Prince Edward Island was equally interested with New Brunswick in this case, but it is Pre- Therc i micr Baxter and his colleagues, and not our own Premier or our Liberal whom we -: ‘i REVOLT IN MEXICO Mexico, which is in a more or less chronic state of civil warfare, is at There has been a rebellion and a considerable amount of mili- tary manoeuvering to and fro, with what amount of bloodshed it is im- possible to ascertain. that the revolt has been long in pro- cess of organization and that the The religious ‘con- troversy under the Calles govern- ment divided the population. over, there is nothing like political The agrarlans and the aristocrats are consistently oppos- ed en masse to the policies of econ- omic democratization which Obregon. Calles, Gil and the party they re- present have been seeking to prom- ulgate under the protection of what is in effect o. military dictatorship. Organized labor and a. percentage of the intellectual class are the chief bulwarks of the regime now under at- Anotlier complicated factor is the Indian population, which is ready to fight savagely for its own pecul- iar and isolated causes or for a little Mexico's government is not alone Trouble in Mexico means trouble for the government at Wash- President Hoover seems to be running into “hard luck" early in his administration. it may be farm reuef, can prove more annoying to the president of the Uni- ted States than political eruptions be- low the Rio Grande. Nothing. unless A COSTLY BUFFER. Among the points scored by Hon. during his excellent speech on the budget was his refer- ence to the extravagance of the Tar- iff Advisory Board. This board, he Notes By The Way __. Jack nllneryll right when be ad- vised Omldilm to see Canada first before going abroad. Had so- many thousands of our people who have gone abroad within the past twenty years noted on this advice, Canada would now have a much larger pop- ulation than it has. Yet Mr. Miner fldmfts fie he had been receiving invltatio _n glowing numbers dur- in: ten yelrl before be came this way. When he ems and IIW the Maritimes he was dol hted with our people and with the t 'ee_ Provinces in whlcu the "big-hearted real Canadian Mari- timerl dwell. He praised both the People and the country without stint and affirmed that no man couldvtsit us as he had done "without becoming a bigger and a better man." Jack Miner praised no other of the three Provinces as he did Prince Ed- ward Island; "the most beautifully rolling and finely cultivated piece of country I ever beheld," he said. He spoke of coming again. Our Tourist Association should write him, strongly urclnarlilm to visit the Island dur- ing the coming summer. This cannot be done too soon in order to antici- pate the possibility of his making plans to go elsewhere. Another visit from this famous nature lover would be worth more than that of} score of ordinary tourists in spreading the fame of the Garden of the Gulf. Senator F. B. Black of Sackvllle in H recent visit to Quebec said a good word for the Chignecto Canal as a word of national importance to the Dominion. He affirmed that bene- fits to be derived from the construc- lion of this work would be as impor- tant to Ontario and Quebec as to the Maritime Provinces. It would save all shipping coming down’ the St. Law- rence that; is bound for Atlantic or Welt India ports a long run of hun- "dlm of mflerwmf m frmry TIEIBGB Around the coast of Nova Scotia, It would also bring all points in Prince Edward Island and northern Nova Sootia. 500 miles nearer their natural nilfkets, he said. > Well. it wistalked about in Eng- land and these provinces a hundred years ago and its early construction was promised by the‘ Fathers sixty years ago as a. bait to lure us into union with Canada. We went in but another generation is still waiting for the canal. President Hoover, like Premier King vijunts to make‘ the St. Lawrence Waterway a matter of joint construc- tion and ownership by the National Government! of the two countries. ‘But there ore obstacles in the way. The policy of the “big stick" "what we want we anew-ha. been to often exemplified in Washingtonian deal- ings with otller nations that Canad- ians are by no means sure that Uncle Sam is a desirable business partener. And now o. Washington despatch tells meta gentle flint has been given them that the increased tariff on farm products to which theTresldent is committed may block the waterway negotiations. Thb Presidents "from relief" programme is not regarded as relief of any sci-t for anybody this side of the border. The Rhodes Government in NOW sooth; the other day defeated an 0P- posltlorl amendment to the second reading of its redistribution billnThe amendment called for delay of the second reading iiutil the public ac- counts and the budget are tabled. It was really a want of confidence motion but it was defeated by 2c to l0. Pre- mier Rhodek mnlcrltv is small W‘ he has lot along well during the ses- sion thus far. Whether the"! "T9 more critical time; in store for him andlhis "government before preroga- tion remains to b6 seen. Manufacturing industries in tho Maritime Provinces are discussed at length in the New York Times, which takes in optimistic survey of the situ- ation. hint John is awarded the place of honor as the leading indust- i , What £01m of l , Quilts 5,1...“ W. Berton. MD. YOUR MARGIN 0F SAFETY. You are not feeling very well and discover that your heart is beating foster than usual, and the clinical thermometer shows ii rise in temper- aturc. Now this is not comforting in one sense and yet Nature's method of fighting trouble is to increase your heart beat and raise the tempera- ture. It is the fight Nature is put- ting up for you that causes the heat. There is an immediate increase in the number of white corpuscles in the blood to fight off the harmful organisms that havegot into your body. In fact your doctor knows how severe the trouble is by the amount of increase in the number of white corpuscles in your blood. Now although Nature does this for‘ you when you are not well, it is real- ly only what she is doing for you all the time even when you are well. You have two eyes. two nostrils, two lungs, two kidneys. You have not two stomachs (for- tunately.) Although you only have one heart and one liver they are both capable of doing many times the ordinary work required of them when an em- ergency arises. Dr. Harvey Kellogg reminds us that the organs of internal secretion, Such "-5 ‘he thyroid, can do fifteen times more work than they are do- ing, should it be necessary. The kidneys can do ten times as .......:. i623; T?‘ ordinary work of the skin causes a perspiration that you ‘do not even notice because the skin may not appear to be even moist, and yet an ounce of sweat or perspiration is being manufactured every hour. During ‘hard ‘work on a hot day or in a heated atmosphere the amount of perspiration may be increased by thirty to forty times. Nature's care for us by giving us this “margin of safety" is not to en- courage us to be extravagant or care- less with our vital energypbul; to en. able us to overcome emergencies that may arise. . The lihflllzht then is that you were given a body capable of doing extra work when necessity arises. You have only three things. and three only, to watch, to preserve the mar. gin of safety. These three things are food, rest, and exercise, Your meals five to six hours apart. with fruit and veg- etables every day and eggs if they agree with you. Meat if you work hard. Meat and eggs are the best builders of tisue when tissue has been used up by work or exercise. gfioetmf RETICENCE We do not know how deep The seas we sail, And souls around us weep Aild smile unknown, We walk like oue asleep Through life's dark vale, , Yes, side by side we keep, Yct walk alone. His wife, so fair of face, Was yet more fair, And liod a coul of grace He never knew. She lived o life‘ apart He did not share, . Yet all the while his heart Wes dreaming, too. He prayed. loved beauty, yet _ Aooiuzss 01v AIVGLING Dellveredreoently before the Gyr o Club by Mr. L ll. Molxhou. England and the older countries of Europe long ago, found it necessary to adopt means to preserve their wild game and fish from total ex- tinction. Tile ‘rapid increase of pop- ula/tion and the spread of settlements not only depopulated the forests and streams, but denuded the land of its timber, so that eventually all plans for restocking and reproduction be- came objects of most serious consid- eration and earnest and practical ap- plication on the part of scientific and thoughtful men. ' Fishes in ponds. lakes and streams are quickly exterminated unless the young be protected, the spawning season undisturbed and uholdsale methods of capture prohibited. Our Island though orginnally teem- ing with fish has already suffered so much from reckless and indiscrimin- ate slaughter that measures equally stringent to those of Europe have be- come necessary to prevent their total extinction here. We have seen how nearly the noble salmon came to an- nihilation in all the rivers of this Island. We have heard the oft told story of his early history. We know that there are men now living who caught salmon with pitch-forks, etc., at Bonsliaw and other rivers. We have read "of their wanton slaughter in season and outof season, and not- ed the rapid progress ofthelr exclu- sion from the rivers one after anoth- er, by the construction of dams that barred their ascent Ito their spawning grounds. Arid the beautiful trout. they too, are disappearing. Once they inhabited every brook andstrearn. but sawdust and pot-hunters hB-W gh-mgo mp’! than out bee. mod- at their old haunts, and if this is allow- ed to continue, nothing will remain of these delicious fish but the record of their former abundance. The pro- tection of fish by law is what legis- lators have been trying to effect f0!‘ centuries, and the success of their ef- forts, as far as trout in this province is concerned, must be admitted to be very slight indeed, It‘ is not the wan- ton destruction of fish’ life by impro- per means alone that exterminator. but the dams and sawdust that rot and pollutes the water and prevents the natural increase by excludin! the breeders from their spill/Bill! grounds. On nothing does the flav- om- am; general appEBTBYIOB of atrout depend so men as the character of the water in which he lives, there is no flesh of fish so rank and repulsive to the taste, as that of a. trout inhab- ita/ting a. muddy pond, where slinly eels do congregate and whose food are the slugs and decayed animal and vegetable deposits on the bottom. Even in water which fiows through cedar and Juniper swamps, or boggy meadows, the flavour of the trout is much impaired. No matter in what locality no may abide, unless ft has the gravelly bottom and clear cold water, the trout will become deken- crate, and bear the marks of the evil company he keeps and the unhappy place he calls his home. Up to a period not many VH1" past, when our knowledge of the breeding and life history of salmon and trout was based entirely on del- ultory observation of the fish in their natural conditions, there existed l. great deal of uncertainty and divers- ity of opinion on the subject. with- in the last sixty years the extensive practise of salmon culture has re- movcd nearly all obscurity from the phenomena, and the history of sal- mon and trout is now more accurate- ly known than that of most fishes. Fish culture in Canada. at first o. private enterprise on I. small scale, received a kind of semi-official sanc- tion, and in i868 it became distinctly a branch of the Dominion Govern- mt-nt service. , Artificially hatched fry, unlike watch these flflbWhflQ in fresh water. but when they go to lea. it f: a tot- auy different matter. The complete change in the appearance of salmon. front and chari- which cause him to become silvery in the fee is account- ed for by the food supply and change of environment flanges in color and markings, are generally attributed to environment. A trout for example living ‘inn deep hole of a brook or pond with a muddy bottom is found to lose his bright spots and to be- come a dull colour, wbwfeas the‘ some flail living in a rapid flowing stream with a gravelly bottom be- comes br/lglit and covered with num- cfous bright spots. Though envir- onment hu a material effect upon the coloration of the nah, food is an equally important factor in bringing about the oolorychangee, and both color changes and silvery iridescense may result from food and food alone. Until recently the brown trout. the loch leven trout, the great lake trout, the rainbow trout, and other; have been described as a different species of the salmon family, but these fish- es are merely varieties of the com- mon brown trout. The variation in size and appearance are due to alter- ation in environment and feeding habits. The chart is a near relative of the brown trout of America. It is found in all the rivers and ponds of this Island, and was probably the only trout found here. Trout is to be found in waiters of very varied description. They may have to dart after every particle of food, or they-may be able to pick and choose food in ponds teeming with "meet rim wnmmn If the can. When autumn arrives instinct teus them there are other duties in life besides feeding, and so they gradual- ly make their way to the spawning beds, upon which the eggs are depos- ited. Here the male and female fish carefully select a suitable spot. The female then deposits her eggs, which are fertilized by the mule and left buried three to six inches under the gravel. The process of spawning consists of three different motions which are practically continuous. The ‘female fish turning on her side first scoops out with a fanning movement of ller tail B. hollow, into this hollow she sheds her eggs. She then moves forward, and continues to throw up gravel with the fanning movement of posited. The question has been asked: Do salmon return to the river in which they were hatched. Do they feed while in fresh water, lf not why do they take a fly? The examination of marked fish points to the fact that n: a rule they do return to the river in which they were hatched. . With regard to the question as to whether salmon feed in fresh waiter, the evidence in support of the fact that they do not make. a habit of feeding, though they may occasio l- ly seine food,- is overwhelming. Thou- llillds. of fish have been examined in fresh water and have been found to contain no food in their stomachs, whereas in the sen, salmon have been taken containing five orsix herring: inside them. Further, lftor a salmon has been in fresh water for some time the lining of the stomach fa in a crinkled, contracted state. showing conclusively that food his not been taken for ‘some time. The fact that salmon has come up into fresh water to spawn does notvappelr to be the main reason why they do not feed in fresh water. Every spring m}; com- fng up into fresh water ton months before they spawn, do not feed dur- ing the whole of the time, and yet a salmon that remains in the sea until late fn the autumn feeds freely until about a month before spawning and then only ceases f0 feed in fresh wat- her tail covers the eggs already de- THE BANK 0F Capital $10,000,000 Q 4 ll D8 110 ‘E5 " is. wearers: 192.7 _m_w=lm 1.- ~$ dl o F‘ uccess Should include provision for regular saving of a percentage of your income... ‘Uhetherthe amount is large or small, how- evu, regular depositing important. 17d; Bank Invites Your Savings Account. Interest Half Yearly. ismoe: NOVA scoru l-lSTrmLlSfllflb 1832 Reserve $20,000,000 Total Assets over 370999.000 Wlfh fhl obloct of giving (he bolt poulbla mm‘- lo our Ilrltlmo “Hum,” ‘h, Egggqpu sugars-inure"Irv-pertinent ll located In Bafut John, N. B. In addition w marking, the fact that the age of many fish can be read by the formation of their scales has been made use of. The scales consist of plates and they overlap one another. As the fish grows in size to cover the skin entirely. The in- crease in the size of the scales by means of rings of growth which are added around the edgesln a similar mariner to the rings of growth in a tree. Salmon seldom spawn more twice in their lives, and they have not been found to return after eight or nine years of age. Either salmon do not spawn after this age, and therefore do not return to fresh wat- er, or eight or nine years ls their natural span of life. The art ofangling or catching fish by a rod and line is of very ancient derivation. The earliest treatise was printed in 1496Jl3etween that time Ind the present there has been near- ly a thousand books or parts of books written and published upon the sub- hot. The salmon is one of the noblest and strongest fish‘ on which the angler tries his alt, and fish from forty to fifty pounds in weight, and sometimes even more are occasional- ly taken by the rod and line, though for the ordinary purposes of sport fish from seven ro eight pounds up to twenty pounds are far more gen- erally taken. when a salmon in good condition is first hooked he makes a strong and violent resistance, lashing through the water frequently for ai dbl-NICO Of fifty ‘i0 sixty yards or more at mtime, and compelling the angler to let too much line off the reel, springing out of the water often to a height of several feet, several, the line or withdraw the hook he will often have recourse to cunning and ’ out the line or rub the hook out 0g his nose against some rock, or hiding himself at the bottom behind big stones and boulders, he will sulk and ~ remain unmovable for some time. ‘ Occasionally will run up qr down rapids or falls in terror and rage. To control all those vagaries. to combat his cunning, iihe angler with his bent rod and practised skill, lets him take out line when his struggles ore dan- KQPOW. continually winding it back main when he is able to do so safely, and thus keeping a certain strain up- on tiic fish, he gradually tires him times during the struggle, and find-H: _ ing that force is unavailable to break ; ' from Charles Halloclve book (The {fishing Tourist). I will give it in his own words: "Xi-have had more pool- tive continuous enjoyment with a three pound trout on a one handed, split bamboo rod than I experienced ‘--- -“‘,...; -.‘.-'.,::..-.! cab“;- 1 61* fr! he lulu gnu Iiiiwiitkfi: aP-A-Jpbfiflv in the Restigouflo. It was ‘in the East River. near Chester, Nova Bootle." Doubtlcss there is an excellent pulse- compelling pride in landing a mons- ter salmon of indefinite weight which does not pertain to tho ordinary or extraordinary trout fishing, but as to the comparative merits of the two species, it is a queatfonwhfoh should be voted the nohbler game. ‘Illofr hob- lts, haunts and characteristics are identical in many respects and ex- cepting in size one may be‘ justly re- garded the peer of the other. This single difference may be adjusted as I have shown by mpropor adaption of - the taglllg __fuiployod to’ capture them. It is certainly rougher work in’ u kill a salmon and vastly more fatigu- ing. and at time the sport is positive- ly dangerous. It is stated by Francis Francis’ that a good trout fisher will easily become all expert at salmon fishing. but a very respectable practi- tioner with the salmon rod, will often have all his acllolling to do afresh. should he descend to trout fishing before he can rank as master of the art. Borne gentlemen, by no means pre- . J tenuous or opinionated, delight to u- scrt that since they became rewf‘ nlzied anglers, gthey have never taken a trout or salmon, except with a fly- I doff my hat in reverence to the wéiitihuek on page s- C. M. Lampson C’! C0,, ummo. 64 Queen ltroof London, n. o. o, mun Public Auction Sales . or Raw Furs Bhlnvlnc bu: wlu be tumbli- ell without charge by applylpl to B. '1'. Holman, 146-. lun- IIIBPINO. P. I. I. »leproaontod by Alfred Fraser, Inc. ' Ill If!!! Afilllll New York, N. I. f. pointed out, appeared in the esti- mates at $120,000,000 a year, and according to the public accounts there was paid last year the sum of $71,000 for advisers on the tariff board. What they were doing he those hatched naturally on the spawning beds, are less at the mercy of enemies u they are always some day: old, frequently several weeks old, before being planted, and should be more sturdy and robust -~- e tender, more dignified, more usical, more vigorous, than another, l d therefore there is one word . ich is better fitted than any other 7 or the subtle, sensitive, exact expres- mi city of the Mafitimes, with $32.- lnimo ilivelteil in its ms lndusffles which have a productive value of $29,310,202 yearly. Grouping the three provinces as a single unit, The er. It is believed the main reason for non-feeding of salmon in fresh water is that the chmge of environmmg from the lee to‘ the river and from mt‘ wmr. cameo u» fish u» be of: 5°|°1'- Walmfifbm tltb flsodllll hab- He said no word; He spoke not. when they mot, i 0f these to her. Though each the things could hear 'I‘he other helm, . ' out, ;‘.l!'_l wears his strength down and at last when unable fo resist any longer lzc is at lost led in towards the; chore. wlierc the attendant gaff-man btlnds ivltii sharp pointed steel hook ATTENTION Truss Wearers ‘ .... of a particular thought. 1'1‘ PAYS T0 PROTEST _,1t has been learned more than. g ~ that it pays to protest. In the ' of the Maritime Provinces this - ~ has been verified in several in- ~- ~. of comparatively recent oc- v Since the early years of '- cdmtlon these provinces leni- i- Accepted such treatment at the “ A of their bigger limi- provinces lie mm- chme to hand out w After patience hid long cell- le 8 virtue the clalnour against 1 fnfulticu became irresistible. did not know; but he had heard it said that there was one pal use for tho tariff board, namely, that it acts u a buffer between the Minister of Finance and some of his supporters who are always pulling hll coat tail to have changes made in the fiscal policy. 8120.000 a. year, as Mr. Guth- rie pertinently remarked. is too much to pay, even for the repose of the Minister of Finance. zonoanu. none Having discovered that large quan- tities of American newspaper] are be- ing sent into Canada u" Vpdflflhll “m” hm”. ‘l; my cflmmm p“. ‘Times will! that indusfies large and mill lilve incl-cum since I025 in number. capital and hands employed. Saint John it followed, in second place by Dlflfilouth, n. s, with lo major indflltlfils. capitalized at $17,- 085,000 and turning out a production mus of 411mm. Following in the order of production are Sydney, Halifax. Mdndton, Blthurat, Edmon- ton, Fredericton. New Glasgow and Clilrlottotowfl. ‘ incident lllpvei-‘l inaugural Id- areu lemon the immediate neces- sity of ohfofbilll the dry law and re- pressing crime. And lie realizes flat’ the tut will be difficult. "There would so imfa mmo in illegal li- ", Royal Oemmfulon under so , ‘Rae nimwi was the ruuit. baggage, Ottawa nu lulled that such importation must by order rained it. m: um fliil patronage mm large , ,0 must awake to the They never knew how 1oar They really were. , —Now York Sun. promises to appoint e commission fol‘ a searching investigation. ' “In the meantime it is essential." he says, "that a large pert of the enforcement activities be transferred from the Treasury Department m the Dgpgfl- merit of Justice u a beginhing of more effective o. onisatlon." * The pedestrian, pertinently ro- marks an exchange. has u much claim to the right of way u the mot- orist. The time has not yet arrived when everybody goes on whooll; there are null people old-fashioned enough to prefer walking. and plenty who cannot afford the luxury of an than the fry exposed immediately af- tor hatching on the natural lpawn- lng beds. The eggs are all taken from wild fish and fhoyoung inherit the instincts of their parents. Hence watched at m; time of pilutlomhay have been noticed to not witlralsrt- nose and intelligence, and at one! dart of! f0 shelwr. It in plain that lf we can secure the eggs from the patent fish. fertilize them and hatch thorn under tbs care of new» u» mum must iuhnmiy surpass thole under natural condi- boexpeoted-to surmount alftbe dongorlonddfflouitfelofthefron- vhonmmt. Wliatvnr maylbhfd fcritlltullttbonrtiflolalhotollfnl of full. no flfr-lllndld orftlo can when the fry have been c|refully_ tiomwbel-oaamallpnrtfononlyoen ifafn u» an the natural food of salmon in fi-uli water liioula be ‘Milt minnows. m. but tum mil anointed their conoaalfn: methods l" ,. "n ’ l a? hi! dllfnclinniiou to ma mo v h-not on the look- out for boil. millil- lmutloil u mama ti: not mum hymn»; fun: mom mqnuimmmhcuot- MHMHW alumina manila:- new llllounlllll a ma mm _ lmtbl water. (vow u. inoounp m: mlmatiicmh. 11m. w whfohfloou- lttlohed a a short staff 'called a hfl. rs. ‘ in his opportunity, ‘and mikes a _sh rt, sharp stroke with it, thallium; the hook into the side or the salmon, pulls it out of the water _ the land. A up on the head from _l stick or stone terminates the sol. Mon’; ufe. The moat favorite plan of fiahingl or salmon and trout Ls with the fly, will in mI-nv ways they will also his both worm and minnow freely, lnd are thus fished for. ‘_ The salmon fly lo a most wonderful ‘Wltlornerntlon of feathers. silk and final and oftentlmen f; o; b.1111“; 5' Fl" ‘PM Illmrin: humming m. who: the salmon zlinuuiu it for is a" M my w n: foi- mm ll hauling like It in rapture. what hll already blmllfdofulmonfllllflfgappllu i ‘u’ t“ "m" 3111111181 The quality of. To those of yolPwllo Ale-w- - fortunate mun 1o. have w perfect ntflng, u-am on. from ofyln and at everybody. 0on0 ll moichuelaeolmimfiilnnuufm page: cue quuilitfuofyoung floh mitt m: benefited-mar water! numbers of ‘fly-abiding eftiuno in supplying fltlflwlrdl and stimulat- llllrtflini-atloofthedslicaoyoftnc automobile. ‘H1010 are deserving of to ulo strength and play of the more consideration than they get, mail or express. An exception might ,5: true loot fir mum of - i ' ' be lnldo of the Sunday editions. They '"»'-=- Iillfifldotlllln m the ad- o!’ " ' grievances; ‘MIN. QrObuIkymWIhtObQcIaMOQQI lug crime: fie comment "un- doubted V have new» up under M mummy. "alga? 114'“ and itfonallynurprfofng howplt- ,..- tolnfloololflbllflfillh " "h-Afwrwmlwmaumlou ‘Mllfifualtoallpounliumgyym y.