Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 10 Nov 1923, p. 18

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* THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. Honars he Ham Dwellers in the City and Country Gather for the Feast of Thanksgiving. What Turkey Wouldn't Willingly Be "Hand-Fed" if the Hand Were Gee round the garnerings of field and forest, barnyard and That of Pretty garden, in whitely-lighted restaurants and the dining-rooms of kes Hele A the city, do the celebrants of the Harvest Festival give a thought elen Lyne to the reason lying far back of their merry-making? of Hollywood, Do even the holiday-makers, come together in the broad farmhouse ¥ California. dining-rooms East and West, North and South throughout this American continent remember why they have cause for joy and so cast retrospec- tive eyes to the hour of the first seed-planting of the year? ' For Harvest Festival belongs to no nation and no country and no time. It is the world's and eternal as the instinct of mankind to give thanks for the good things which Mother Earth nurtures and brings to rich fruition for her children. Ever and ever so long ago the day flamed with the picturesqueness of pagan rites. There were two of the festivals then, since Ceres, the goddess of corn and eT JN EA a

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