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The Gazette from Montreal, Quebec, Canada • 3

Publication:
The Gazettei
Location:
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE fJAZE'lTE. MONTI. A L. SATURDAY, JUNE 22, 1035. VOL.

CLXIV. No. cation of these discoveries In the lican Cathedral In Auckland. N. opinion that "the future evolution of man and mind depends largely on his response to the new knowledge, and on his intelligent appli near and distant Construction of a permanent Ang- I i is assured by the bequest of about 1300,000 provided in the will of Miss Mini Horton.

BOOKS OF THE DAY THE RACONTEUR lit CIA irvrklMOMTnFAl Gil ROBERT LIMITED particular photograph In question 1 began to tell him ths story. Before I was half way through he interrupted me, and spoke the name of the man I was telling him about up to that moment 1 had carefully refrained from mentioning it I said "Do you know him?" He replied "Wait a' minute" and left the room. Then he returned with a snapshot of his own in his hand, taken somewhere in the wilds of the Island of Vancouver. It was my friend, and also the doctor's. I would cheerfully have laid any odds that there wasn't a man within hundreds of miles who had ever heard of the affair.

The doctor wrote to him, they had been intimate friends In the West, and told him about me. An answer came begging to be remembered to me, etc. I might mention that the frog in the photograph Is prehistoric, judging from his size. There was something weird about my meeting him. He and I were in a boat together in the river I have B.V.D.

Swim Suits are Hollywood sponsored See Jean Harlow Wear Them in Her Latest Picture "Reckless" Now Showing at the Palace Theatre I vorite of His Majesty. The prelate reminded him of hia high position and that It entailed on him the obligation to set a good example to his subjects, and so on, and so on. The King shrugged his shoulders and replied, "You should have heard the Martyr." A new and refreshing aspect of that Sainted Stuart. Captain LIddell Hart. In his foreword to "The British Way in Warfare," which, by the way, is dedicated to John Buchan, says that rational pacifism must be based on a new maxim, "If you wish for peace, understand war." Ignorance means the disarmament of the peace lover, rendering him impotent either to check war or to control its course.

There is a pacifism which is of the proverbial ostrich variety and leads to tragedy. The military reasons, so called, which paralyze again and again ail efforts to preserve peace, or to restore it, he defines as no more than a rationalization of unreasonable impulses. A friend, in a digression in one of his interesting letters, mentions that Rothenstein, in his youth, used to go and live at Oxford and paint the celebrities, among them Walter Pater whom he represented as looking like a rather ugly butcher, which Pater didn't like a bit. It reminds one of the Chinese photographer who produced an unflattering likeness of a lady sitter, and, when she complained, defended himself by saying "If handsome face no have got, handsome face how can do?" Sargent, says my correspondent, knew, loved, and practised the game of exaggerating the worst points in some of his sitters, if he didn't like them. He has been suspected of anti-Semitism for this reason In one of his most noted portraits, that of the Wertheimer family.

And there is the story of the lady who was asked if she were going to sit to him for her portrait, and replied: "No, I have no wish 'to anticipate the Day of Judgment." there was dancing in the kitchen to the music of a gramophone. The Brinleys were understanding guests and were duly appreciated by the humblest of the folks they met. They give descriptions of the wild flowers, the birds and fish. The male member went out with fishermen after cod and haddock, and also trout, of which latter there is a tale to tell of a can of lost bait. For camping privileges sometimes they paid 50 cents, and at other times nothing at all.

They were even brought wild berries, cream and such delicacies by kindly dwellers, who refused remuneration. They gathered trilobites on the beach at Perce and they were sold some agates by a small boy who acted as though he had received a fortune when Mr. Brinley produced a quarter from his pants pocket, which pants were of corduroy. Altogether the two campers had a pleasant holiday and enjoyed themselves hugely in Gaspe. This is the impression their most readable book conveys.

"Away to the Gaspe" is a tribute to the country and its people, as well as a description of the countryside. The illustrations, some of them colored, add greatly to the book's attractiveness. Science Made Easy HEREDITY AND THE ASCENT OF MAN. By C. C.

Hurst, Ph.D., Sc.D., Sometime Fellow Commoner and Research Student of Trinity' College, Cambridge, Fellow of The LInnean Society of London, Author of the Experiments in Genetics, and The Mechanism of Creative Evolution. Toronto: The Mac-millan Company of Canada. There are plenty of people who rather fight shy of books on scientific subjects and who harbor hazy ideas concerning such things as hormones, chromosomes, bacteriophages and kindred of that ilk. To such folk, as well as to others, this little book can be cordially recommended. It is indeed a multum in parvo, for in less than 150 pages there is a great deal of information, delightfully set forth in a way that it can bo easily assimilated and understood.

The object of the book, as stated in the preface, is "to provide the general' reader with a popular epitome of recent search In genetics is so far as it is concerned with the origin, evolution and ascent of man." The author has achieved his desire admirably. Scientific research has brought freedom, power and responsibility to man, nnd it Is Professor Hurst's 9 'S2 1 Maine. A t' B-V-D- cation of sotm' "sf jTT woven with LASTEX style in white, SM'c block, JZSS? '4 jima No need'to sigh offer the glamour iC-C fir your favourite movie stars when Simpsons has the exact bath- hf jt p. 7r ing suits that me chosen to appear in thefj smartest pictures. Jean 1 jf Harlow wears some of the most i Jp 2 -r Tl i popular B.V.D.

styles in her latest XLJ 4 I AboveT Picture "Reckless''-ond Simpsons I I reMonhane H' presents them in a wide colour and I Ml 77 range. Priced ot i AAV 5.95 to 19.50 J'ffA iewel-l95Q I 1 Simpsons Fourth Floor 0 jy gr f. -f- A correspondent writes: "Dear Kaconteur Thomas Chatterton has a verse that might be of interest to you and those of your correspondents who are in quest of the word nesh: The boddynge flourettes bloshes atte the lyghte; The mees be sprenged wyth the yellowe hue; Tn daiseyd mantels ys the moua- tayne dyghte. The nesh yonge cowslepe bendethe WJ'th the dewe. In liis own notes, Chatterton renders the meaning of "nesh" (in his passage) as tender.

The word is not uncommon in our older English literature. Most frequently, I think, it occurs in the forms "nesch" and "nasche," e.g. For the gentyl Cheuentayn is no chyche; Quethersoever he dele nesch other harde. The Pearl. 11.605-606.

The eorthe of that lond ys copious of metayl oor and of salt welles; of quareres of marbel of dyuers manere stones, of reed, of whyt, of nasche, of hard, of chalk (John of Trevisa's translation of Higden's Poly-chronicon. Book chapter 41). There is also a substantive, "nesshede" meaning "tenderness, delicateness." and of alle zofthede and nesshede clothinge habbeth an." Dan Michel of Northgate in his Sermon on Matthew XXIV. 43. The Old English (Anglo-Saxon) original of both words is, probably, "hnaesc" meaning "soft." The Yorkshire usage, instanced in your column of June 8th, is obviously legitimate on every ground.

Thanking you, my dear Raconteur, for many pleasant hours, I am yours sincerely, M. Maxwell MacOdrum." Another friend encloses a letter received by him in which the writer begs him to tell me how much he enjoys reading the "Raconteur." He goes on to say that he has otten been tempted to write to me himself and has also wanted to quote to me from Montaigne's Essays, but he is sure they are familiar to me. As a matter of fact I haven't read Montaigne's Essays since I was at school, and then I didn't read them as lessons, but I had the privilege, when in the sixth form, of using a library not accessible to boys under that rank. There I used to Tead them with much interest when, It may be the authorities imagined that I was studying the Greek Drama. On the subject of "Si vis pacem, para bellum" the same writer adds: "This undoubtedly is an abbreviation of "Qui desiderat pacem, praeparat bellum," which appears in the Roman (author's) Visetius' Epitome rei militaris! It also occurs in St Augustinus' motto: "Pacem volo, bellum Again, Publius Syrus says: 'Diu appar-andum est bellum, ut vincas The quotation 'si vis pacem, para bellum' is generally considered "kitchen Latin' used by the monks in their refectory, and far from classic Latin." The same stigma attaches to the other quotations, for that matter.

It may be that in classical days the Romans thought more of preparing for war than of any pious aspirations after peace. In the tame letter is enclosed a long excerpt from the Life ot Bismarck, in the course of which Lassalle says: "Beyond question Bismarck has a very accurate knowledge of constitutional matters. His views harmonize fully with my own theory. He is perfectly aware that the real constitution of a country is not to be found in the sheet of paper on which it is written, but in the actual objective of circumstances." In view of the action taken recently by the Supreme Court of the U.S.A. I should like to draw the attention of the writer of the letter to a chapter headed "Nine Old Men" in "More Washington Roundabouts," a book written, I understand, by a number of Washington Journalists, with more than the usual insight into the tortuous ways of American politics.

I fancy their views on the final authority of the Supreme Court in constitutional matters at this crisis are read with sympathetic interest by President Roosevelt The same writer, in his letter, asks for enlightenment as to "the derivation of a phrase which is much used by many without giving a thought of its nonsensical meaning: "Right as I have searched high and low to find its origin, but failed to do so. The alliteration seemed to te sufficient to emphasize the 'right' I have puzzled more than once myself over that phrase, without finding any other solution than mere alliteration, but possibly some reader may have a better one to suggest. I can see some point In "as fresh as paint," although paint Is not necessarily fresh. To wine-drinkers "As cold as claret" is reasonable, though a meteorologist in a country ot total abstainers might be sorely worried to explain It. Yet another friend, writing from Boston, says that he is Immensely pleased to be able to read me again, after having had difficulty In getting hold of The Gazette In some of the Southern States, "although I welK remember reading your notes in Buenos Aires and at Lima, Peru." Speaking of the almost uncanny skill acquired by an Intelligent person who concentrates on one particular specialty, he tells me an Incident he heard from the late John Dundas J-lavelle, brother to the Toronto baronet.

He visited Atlantic City some years ago, when, on the famous boardwalk, there was an especially bright man In charge of a news stand. He claimed If a stranger asked for "My home town paper" he could, from the customer's appearance, dress, speech, Immediately locate him, "nnd he actually could," adds my friend. "Now, Flavelle" he says, "was a big ruddy, Teutonic type of man and when he said: "Give me my home town paper" the newsdealer took a sharp look at him and said: "You look so well fed that I should liave judged you came from Cincinnati (a much more Germanic city, by the way, than either Milwaukee or Bt Louis), "But now I hear your voice, sir, here you are!" And he promptly handed him the Toronto Mull and Kinplre! My friend, with characteristic modesty, says that In his esse the man must have been thinking of his future destination because he handed him The Christian Herald, In a pot ecrlpt he quotes Shane Leslie who, (peaking of our amazing Empire, ssys: "It has made Quebec safe for the Pope and Epsom Downs sufe for the Aaa Khan." I am deeply grateful Im' that story. And another very old friend from Vancouver, with taste for histories! research, tells that Kins; Charles II. most witty of our monarch, was much Ion addicted tn profanity, a ha Hit for which he wis rebuked by food Bishop Kin, fa- A Canadian Encyclopedia ENCYCLOPEDIA OF CANADA.

General Editor, W. Stewart Wallace, A. (Oxon), F.R.S.C., Librarian, University of Toronto; assisted by leading Canadian Specialists and Authorities in every Branch of Knowledge. Six Volumes. Illustrated.

Volume 1, Aaltanhash--Cartlerville. University Associates of Canada, Limited, 170 Bay Street, Toronto. An encyclopedia of Canada worthy of the country has all along been lacking, despite the great need. Accordingly, this new and comprehensive work by the University Associates of Canada should be greeted with widespread approval. There are to be six volumes in all, including facts and subjects of the progress of Canada from its discovery down to the present day, the promise being made that every line of thought and activity will be covered.

This is a large claim, but the first volume lends justification to if. Each book is to contain 400 pages, with colored plates and maps, full-page plates in black and white, and tables showing populations, areas, industries, and other information. The editor and advisory council have taken care that each subject is given scope for proper and adequate explanation, and the contributors are recognized specialists, scholars and publicists. Various departments of government, both federal and provincial, have actively aided in the production of this work, so it will be seen that the facts presented are authoritative and thoroughly reliable. The editorial advisory board includes such names as Dr.

A. II. U. Colquhoun, Dr. A.

G. Doughty; Professor H. A. Innis, of the University of Toronto; W. J.

Healy, Librarian of the Legislative Library of Manitoba; Dr. Henry F. Munro, Superintendent of Education, Nova Scotia; Hon. F. W.

Iloway, New Westminster, B.C.; Hon. Justice E. Fabre Surveyer, Montreal; Dr. J. Clarence Webster, C.M.G., Shediac, N.B.; H.

N. Lang-ton, formerly Librarian of the' University of Toronto, and Newton MacTavlsh, M.A., D.Litt, formerly editor of the Canadian Magazine. The long list of contributors is equally impressive. The fields which they cover embrace history, geography, travel, adventure, exploration, commerce, nature study, biography and a host of other subjects. Vol.

1 of the Encyclopedia to hand is a handsome book in red leather binding with a beaver on a maple leaf, in gold, on the cover. The printing is clear and very easy to read and the paper has been specially manufactured for the Encyclopedia. The illustrations, colored and otherwise, are well-produced, and altogether the book is well made. The set starts oft with the word Aaltanhash, which is a river that flows south into the head of the inlet of that name on the east shoje of Graham Reach, in Range 4. Coast District, British Columbia.

The final name In Volume 1 is Cartierville, the well-known residential town on the Island of Montreal on the banke of the Riviere des Prairies. In between these two are thousands of other names ot places and things, all of sufficient importance to warrant Inclusion In such an encyclopedia. For Instance, thre Is the text of the British North America Act, which is attracting so much political and popular atten tion these days. Names or tne contributors of special articles ore given and there is a key to abbreviations. "The Encyclopedia of Canada" bears evidence of very careful preparation and should be widely appreciated in the Dominion.

Holiday Trip to Gaspe AWAY TO THE GASPE. By Gordon Brinley. Illustrated by Putnam Bnnley. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart. $2.50.

Mr. Brinley and his wife left their home in Connecticut with ia'nt atnvi find Writing and sketching materials for a mile Journey down to ana arounu the Gaspe Peninsula and back, nio-inoiiv thpv had contemplated a holiday In France, but in the New France they had an outings oi several months that more than satisfied them. This book is a record of the adventures, which were happy all the way through, ineir worst alarm was when they noticed a sign to beware of the wild horse that was In a field next to the one in which they had erected their tent. There really was a horse and the animal prowled about in the night, pawed the ground, snorted, kicked the wire fence with hiH heels and then pranced oft In the darkness. Next morning he consented to be fed over the fence, of course.

There was also a little apprehension when some of the Gaspe hills were being negotiated; the descent was wisely made on first gear, as per warning sign. Outside of these Incidents there waa nothing to mar the long and picturesque Journey, for the Brin-leys are nice people who overlook such things as rain and mist and strong winds, even when they are perched on top of giant cliffs. The tale Is told In a chatty way by the author, while here and there are notes from the wife's diary, each of which tells a whole lot. In fact, the meaning Is conveyed so Intelligently that the reader fancies himself In the car that Is meandering at a reasonable rate through the countryside. The Inhabitants of the Gaspe Peninsula all acted kindly towards the tourists.

Farm houses and fishermen's homes were visited and best-dressed people In the world. They look down on the best-dressed Westerners "with patient, meek disdain." Their silks and their furs are the finest and most valuable obtainable anywhere. Before the revolution the Imprrlul Russian sables could only be In the possession ot the Imperial family; they rims from Siberia, I believe. I know only one woman who has any, and they were presented to her husband, at that time In the British Kmbsssy, by the then Tsnr. I remember that when LI Hung Chang wits In this country, 1 wis talking tn a member ot his suits.

They were ill In silk robes at the time, and 1 thought, when I looked at them, that I had never seen silk before. I may add that I have never seen It since. Even to my untutored eye ths material wss a superior to the best we see is Is the coat of a well-groomed thoroughbred to that of an Ireland pony, And they were In their travelling clothes. Mrs. Long-worth's broi-ada wis the gift of the terrlbl Empress Dowager, who also sent her two rings, a pair of earrings, some white Jnde, a white fox rnst.

and an ermine coat, Fhe thinks the Chinese have a very proper Ides of gifts. Among the hundreds of presents shs received from nil over the Slates were numbers of freak presents, ranging frum mouse-traps to balvs of hay, RESORTS referred to, and I had been trying to get a snap of a jumping salmon in mid-air. Suddenly right out in midstream, there fell all around us in the boat a shower of what we afterwards described as manna from Heaven. It looked like crumbs of bread, about the size of a lump of sugar if you know what I mean. None fell actually into the boat but some so near the stern where I was seated at the time, that I reached out to grab it, if possible.

I failed to do this, but I noticed that the pieces began to dissolve in the water as they gradually sank. The sky was ab solutely cloudless and we could see nothing overhead to account for the phenomenon in any way. He suggested the possibility of there being an aeroplane so high up as to be invisible to the human eye and of the occupants having thrown over perhaps the remainder of their lunch! That will give you an idea of the straits to which we were reduced to find any reason able explanation of the occurrence. I am no wiser today and I am assured that he is not either. Between his frog and his manna, I still feel there is something uncanny about him.

In England they talk about "Sillv Suffolk." Rival counties are uncomplimentaty to one anoth.fr at times. Gosse has a story in connection with this epithet told to him by Rider Haggard, himself a Suffolk man. It was In the days when certain adventurous peoplo used to go up in balloons, and one of these found himself drifting slowly over some fields not more than thirty or forty feet above the ground. He had not the slightest idea where he was, so seeing some laborers at work in a field below him, he hung over the side of the basket and called down, "Hi there, can you tell me where I am?" After a moment or two of silence one of the men shouted back in broad Suffolk. "You be up In a balloon, lad." However, other counties besides Suffolk can produce answers as foolish as that.

I waa once in Cheshire in search ot a huge country house; it was a strange part of the world to me and I had merely had verbal directions to reach it. I was In a village, not half a mile from the house, after a drive of a dozen miles or so. I asked a villager where to find A Gourt. He gazed at me blankly, and then said: "Which way do you want to go?" It would be hard to beat that for sheer imbecility. I found the house not long afterwards; it had a hundred yards frontage, and that man must have seen It every day of his life.

The only men I know who pan answer offhand, when asked the way. are London policemen. They seem to be prepared for every question of the kind, and rattle off the directions as though they had the answer printed in front of their eyes. Philip Gosse saw most of his war service in the Medical Corps and some of his experiences leave a hospital patient lost in admiration of the pluck exhibited by the wounded. I should have liked to know little John Bishop, who belonged to the Irish Rifles; although he was English and came from Guildford.

Gosse found htm, a pale-faced bov, covered with mud, soaked with rain and blood, obviously in desperate plight, and asked him while gently examining his wound, "Does It hurt you very much?" The answer came: "No, sir, only when I laugh." That is worth remembering. One Job which Gosse had at the front was to examine the possibility ot rats carrying disease germs. This, and a request from the authorities of the British Museum for specimens ot the smaller mammals In Flanders, led to his collecting mice and such small deer. One day his Colonel accompanied him on one of his expeditions when they came upon the scattered fragments of a hollow apple tree which hart received a direct from a shell. Among them they found a small, tat, fluffy dormouse, fast asleep.

The Colonel, a kindly man, gently picked it up and stroked its soft fur. The dormouse woke up, bit him severely In the thumb, curled up, and went to sleep again. It is extraordinary how on an emergency the sergeant-major can always find in the ranks men who, In civil life, have been experts in all sorts of professions. Gosse didn't know how to use mole traps so as to catch moles; the regimental sergeant-major found him a mole catcher In less than half an hour. In similar fashion he supplied a hatcher, who made thatched roofs for the horse lines which kept the horses In good condition all through the winter.

I remember General Wilkinson who commanded the cavalry at Tel KI Keblr, telling me that on the taking of the place by our troops they found a number of Arabs attempting to escape by the railway. They had a train with steam up. and crowded with men; a pile of rubbish, old saddles, stores of all kinds was heaped on the track to stop the train, but the engine was pushing It along and out of the way. He had just made up his mind, much against his will, as a ravHlryman, to shoot a horse, so that the blood should render the rails slippery, when he caught sight of a camel lumbering along. They shot him and n.anaged tn stop the train's progress, but didn't know how to shut off steam.

The previous night he had been accompanied by a couple of orderlies on a tour of Inspection. One ot these mn ram up and asked him If he wanted an engine driver, because ha had been one In civil life, Wilkinson said he didn't know which he was thankful for. the camrl or the engine driver; both h.d turned up at exactly the right moment. Mrs. Alice Longwnrth, nee Roosevelt, mentions among ths most valuable of her wedding presents, eight rolls of brocade of different colors broended In a gold thnt never tarnishes, Hhs says shs hfl used some of It for dresses which" never wear out, so when they have seen a few yesrs' service, shs puts them swsy and after an Intrrvsl brings them out again and has them mads over.

This la evldenra of the fact that th (wealthy) Chlnoso are ths Maine. OLD ORCHARD BEACH MAINE Most Popular Ocean Resort for Canadians Over 150 High-Class Hotels, Tourist Homes, Overnight Comps ot Prices Within the Range of All. Delightful Climate. World's Finest ond Safest Beach. Famed os a Health Resort.

Gaiety, Life, Action or Restful Quiet Whichever One Prefers. For Complete Information, Hotel Rates, Travel Routes, Address old Orchard Beach Publicity Bureau, Old Orchard Beach, Maine. Or: See four Local Railroad. Motor, or Tourist Bureau. Philip Gosse, In his "Memoirs of a speaking of Poona and his experiences there, says: "Many pleasant hours were spent not wasted hanging over the low walls of the wide, deep wells.

Far down in the twilight could be made out a big frog or a toad floating on the surface, a prisoner undergoing a life of solitary confinement. In the words of Elia 'the live-long day it is doomed to float on the surface of the water, vacantly gazing at heaven, with supplicating palms outstretched and fat thighs helplessly pendulous in the clear water'." One of the hospital nurses was in my room at the time and I gave her the passage to read. Then 1 asked her to get me a photograph album from my dressing table. It contained a number of snaps taken by me and enlarged on different occasions in the Rockies and on the Pacific Coast. It is a remarkably good camera, and the snaps in no way suggest enlargement One of them represents a tall man In flannels standing against a back ground of what might be a sea-fog.

This mist is not the fault of the photograph; It shows the steam rising from a hot spring not very many miles from Prince Rupert. At the knees of the man is an enormous frog in precisely the attitude described by Elia, "with supplicating palms outstretched" gazing in adoration at the man in flannels. I showed it to the nurse who, without any prompting from me, said "That's a frog in front of him." I have shown the picture to other people who have noticed the frog immediately, before having their attention drawn to It. It will bear close inspection, you can even see its eyes. Exactly what It is 1 know not; it was not until the negative was developed that I ever saw it.

I had been advised to go and see the hot spring, which, by the way, is so hot that somebody bet a man ten dollars once he wouldn't keep his hand in It for a whole minute. The bet was accepted and lost. I spent three days there nnd bathed every day, not in the spring itself but in the water therefrom conducted by a flume to a sort of bungalow nearby, erected for the benefit of visitors by the owners of the spring and Its surroundings. One of these days it is going to be a summer and winter resort. There is another lake close by, full of fish, with a river running out of it, wherein the salmon were "leppin" like grasshoppers.

Up to that time I had never met my companion. I am not sure to this day to whom I am Indebted for that privilege, but he waa at the station when I arrived and took me In charge. He motored me out to the spring In the only car within miles and miles, and spent a couple of days with me in the bungalow. He was evidently a gentleman and had served In the War, and further had been wounded more than once, because I saw the scars where his sleeves were rolled tip and his shirt open at the neck. He puzzled, me a lot; he was civil enough, and we naturally were together all the time, but there was a curious constraint about him and I gave up any hopes of breaking the Ice until my last day.

Then he accompanied me back to the railway. The train was not due for an hour or so, after our arrival at the station, and we walked up and down the track together. Then the Ice broke up and he became genial and cheerful and we parted on the most friendly terms. Later I heard the explanation. In time ot war especially there arise situation when a man In command of others has to act on his own Judgment His decision In these cases Is sometimes a bit of a fluke, most, of us can remember such occasions: the Amritaar incident for example.

My friend was the victim of one of them, I may mention here that a church dignitary who knew the circumstances remarked to me here In this hospital that, hud he been one of the Judges In the matter, he would have awarded, the hero of the story a medal and a pension, but politics were mixed tip In the business and he was sacrificed. Ho felt It terribly; more, there was reason to believe that there were others concerned who would most cheerfully have assassinated him. given the chance. I sm- convinced that he, knowing nothing of me personally, waa not quits sure that 1 might got have been mixed up In some such plot. It was not until the day of my departure that he was convinced of his error and then, as I say.

he thawed out Ilk a river In e.irinr. There Is curious sequel to ths rase, Titers was a doctor la this hospllal on night dny some tlm ago, I liked him mud and he often used to rome to my room at night, not professionally, merely as a friend; I was not sleeping well II thnt tlm and we talked and swapped yarns for in hour or mure, If ha were not busy, One tilght 1 happened to show h'm my album of snips, and when 1 cam to tin RESORTS Massachusetts IFF HOTEL 'AND COTTAGSS OPEN JUNE Nerth genual, aeaen Put OSJce. Mint, Mm. Hiltnw between Bolton end Cipa Cod "On the Oceon Front" r.uiit Half Hurt Bathirtfl. Saddle Htrtes, Musii.

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Riles from $6 American plan, $3.50 European plan. DOES GOLF FIGURE IN YOUR VACATION Cbimplain Country Club course is a tournament layout that attract! annually uch outst aiding events Ticstion spot. It will belp you plan a delightful vacation. OPIN JUNE 28TH HOTEL CHARIPLAIN FRANK V. REGAN.

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Rout 4, alcmQ Hivtr and stiff Cuar'iu Uvll SuiMirlnr IS-llnl flolf Cnuras dills llnrara Tennla Booklrl Arthur 1) Wllilrr, Manager EJwIu Orecowood, At, Mgr. Drs. DURAND DENTISTS 12M MenifisleJ HA. lit dual Btlow at Cslhtrlns St. Orar Bank at Montreal Cotl.n rMshte, Toronto A CHURCH OF ENGLAND RESIDENTIAL AND DAY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS Kindergarten to Junior and Senior Matriculation Hounehold Srience, Art.

Music, Physical Educition with indoor and out. door sports. tr'meiptti Mies E. M. Low, B.A.

Vut-Principtti Mill RoiMtet, Cbtltenhara and Froebel Itutilutt Far Cmlemitt atev It tiiritr r'jjHlitti, it i i o.e 11th. New Boarders Enter Ttiriuiajr. Bpt. 10th. Boardnrs Rrturn Wednesday, Sept.

School Ko-opens Thursdsjr, Kept. 13th. EWMARKET, ONTARIO A Residential School (or Boys EDUCATION FOR MODERN LIFE Ws lire In period of npld rhmge soclil, economic ind ri'llirlnua. To aolve today's prolilcuia requires is education that la mors than academic. In nldltlnn tn rcstilor Matriculation courses, Plrkcrltip Cn-Hogs meets today's educational ncctla by providing I ltualneas AilmlnlBtrstion lur a culturnl and apeclallacil traliilnsr fur nova ettterlnir liimlncns llfff Departments of Crentlr and Manual Arts, Internal Cliihs, Mhrary Hcrvlce snd Vncstlonsl Ouldancs to provide (or students' Individual development.

For full details of -curriculum and methods, please write Itie Mfitdmanter. McCullty, 11. A. Autumu term epena Hehlcntlier Iflth..

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Pages Available:
2,183,063
Years Available:
1857-2024