A ded: - t(_)duy~ the tn an \(-ii .C0!1](`S You iir re; 0T.1:_ nts. they g Solid 5 :2 The 111:; in A to. We :Whnt' Quii`L`d Miss Jus baby, She He there Pilfil` Sn Ii" lie glit she's She c sure! conm be psi open 7`l\L.` 5,; e_ Idiot-id ; But lluntlnrouhd. i `Americans come over here by thou- -lands at dier.ent,eeasons,`ot,,the yiearg p ixor a` few cieysf .spor,.t .wit.h sutwnd:;- I 1, _!.0d. ` Neyv `Brunswick boasts 'th`e4inost ffifggristocratic fishing.--,. clubs F-ihthe ~.world,,_ the membershiplee o1.;_one_,q!,g. _ ` .which';'~laxf1'ounts",to sefvyeralf t_h6usa'nd ,,_dollars..: Most of the lakes in `a*ll .th`e V i :7J.ea.ste1_'n_provinces swarmv with bass,: ggaid `to be" the gamest as l in "the ` `iyvorld, with theexception of the sal- Qgon trout. Quail is found in the ' if}. estern peninsula, and partridge is common` in `nearly every county.-,in, `the country. -The range.{o!' the .;red `deer and the black bear is equally Wilde. while moose, thanks to a;.1'ong,-. close season. elk and cariboo are*re- _.ported plentiful at the outposts of - `civilization. With Manitoba and the '._Perrito_ris the home of the- prairie (chicken, geese, ducks, and eandhill icrane, with grizzly and silver tip, "mountain sheep, and the grey wolf in the Rockies and the foothills, with sea salmon in British Columbia, hm {sides ott`er,. mink, heaven, and other animals valued for their pelts alone, Canada may assuredly claim to be ,3,co'nsidered the happy hunting _ sounds of this world.. ' `Buffalo and Pigeons. . k `T 7~'l`he great game family lacks .two `member--the lordly butlalo and the n pigeon. Forty years agony. the "`_'b'ua1o roamed the 'W_:Ste1.`.I\ l3.1`9T'i`39:. Iw the tens of thpusaride.<!::.3Ihil.e` the`- ;tlights of blue rocks literally darken- ' ;.ed~ the-' sun. ` To-day there is not a ' "Vipecinien 0! either in the country out : is V -gide 0:. a. zoo--except, as" toil buffalo,` {the herd at Banfl._V They have been lrwiped` from the face of the `earth, No ysyord vbut T`i:rimef' can` be applied: to*-`. `Mae externiination oiitho bufiaio by;_. white. "sportsmen." At the same time, though nothing can 'compen`- E `at. for their 1088. the wholesale de- i atructlon of one great species has Mlbrved as the most powerful argu- ggjent for the preservation of others. :f'1'bls is thesprecedent cited when a ` close season is desired51qr nn y_:bi,rd I or beast. Some years ago it was s lound imperatives-to m'or6~riorously " `protect the hecr in Canada. The `shooting of moose was prohibited al- together tor a, time. :a1`li1'.th0 090'! `season for cariboo, elk, and red deer i-'.1wa,_s limited to a very few days. The "desired end was achieved and the laser increased in a most` gratiiying him couu fwere sheuv FFBIN Jeisu V'n pityi ' rn- into ` the `rst ii oor "K` 1:9 thro "M _ woic the eph II` the ten- ._,V'U.I.VI7B ullu Lxguatupnuuu Ill Ulav lvuanav `:.VpfIf'oport.ion, according to the laws of tiihkture; and now they are more num- : Terous than for many yeg:.;ffs`._,,AV,__'Wo1v_as "Sb ` ?i'Ii'mfi`r `plasaiit hom?$55Snli:a.%i`on`S' 1 Wiith` 'h.ir pr -ey occupy v r``i`fiu'cH" the A same` `lation to freight. , V_ ing motto for both seems to _bbe`_v,'{`{_.All the"`!1`ri_'g\Vill Bea;1":a" .4 The `der_'ii|3,ra cast. {or t,,l`i_.usW()`t'11p Wh8,::t 't3_t.e.nuous hole _- of irtiomc. It might appear at first sight that when thedeer are no:.long- ~ or. .. SQ . jealously preserved- and the .'mor tulity. is higher among them, the wolves `will decx'eas'e abco1`dingly. This is` not so, for it must be borne in mind that wolf is far more'ten- aoidus of life than a deer, and isvone of-L:`,_.tqi':'i?.xi'1ost _difcult of animals ; to hun i._ `Besides, a. timber wolf, when rei V r'c__c-.dC,'by his immediate family an1;.ja :i-lw . neighbors, is~ somethinglot ah huntenhimself. He is not on`lya I\uu4- n vs-xxaruunn `I'1\ 9|` (fulll _...t.... .4... position` as irailwa y""1&ts' in` "rel ' A popula1;._\vprk-T trn tro nuance; r ILUIIUUI llamas);-. gav a noun: V ., - J .. _n1;i;an;e,_ b1_1`t.a rpqpace t_9_'. all gpxge, V , -.c`a]t_.tle,' and ijeven '-t,o.;; man h)111self.'._;*~x'~,, . 1..." .. . 1; ., ` . . "'-'~ ~ 8.10? `ilodd `:for' Wdwbs. Qntmiio `realizes `th.is.%..tm=...;and.them N `S `a bount of $10 for -thevhead of --A- 1:` -1 J.LA.uA (\Ir`:I`Ir\.u 5:`: :l:.]|nvvn 4\. `?,V. "L*.'-?.+._~;- .'.`.`9??.7?`:?` Mvhich 1s pald fthe gnimal is )3) _- am ..,`:":2... -wvhich is paid by me county wnene. -.-`Q39 gnirrial is.-`kl. ed, and fo\h_""-,:dol-` .',o1a.)',-W .:7fI3af"pro\'i `ce. Quebec ays :}nof"_)61in_t;S{, L'thou'g`h me `Wolves jihero `*a`55muh`- more` num`i5rou's.= Prtxigf }Paront, it is. said, wishes to place ., "f]a.W_o1_'1 she statute books offering a ,`:-mjvxfd _ to .encourag"'. their extrgpi ' '5- ' ~.;at.1on, and the Game Protective A V'fbociation'appointcd a committee to jwait on _. h_i_._m and `urge the_. mgttei`; V . ,-,3; _` ;u_`son_. _`l_iy' the I"1e`_11.`_iVie1)`n-; ":(,'.),uoA-` `!3!'II3'$e?rie`e(i's` his"h%1nds sL"t"c*nx_q`tl1'r3t is Q; 7 9`anost Iiurprising one. .H~is colleaguqg ":a1'e: ; `opposed to ,a.,, bopnty ecgusb J -Yt.hv:i'_O; "are so many wolves .tY1`a-t"` gt V ;1wmi;.1d . wmmmt to on-1arze.8um;-s-a. `gig `.to say, wolves are so ra-venous- 5 that they` are almost indispensable." This state of affairs, satisfactory as it may be to someof Mr. Parent : . vcoll.eagues, V cannot continue , - much Hanger, for the depredations-of the" dreaded grey. wolf are_ beooxning in- f % -' tolerable. M T Iow Vlolvcl $gornpugc. V. Q` g._,wo1ves also 'multip1iedin`'the same .............&i..-. anon:-rl-inn in tho lama nf A-s.1~\4 \JA lb D Uuulsvy val `:9 -Av sun `van. ::9m9i Hmoanlmwaz M %e.1-aw. M fgyhich 51:8 paiq t.heco1;1.y w Eng . . -- -v-___, .-_..__....._-..-- Lumbermen have been] att.a, cked, and thousands of dollars worth of live stock_ destroyed. A bounty will . not make farmers any "more. anxious ga,ve+their property from the -Wolf, : ,but ;w,ill,.have the effect of en_cour_a.g-1_- 5; .In'g; huntegs to address {their .profe_az,-{ ` s_ibnal atbtent,ions'_,to hjm. _I;__x,,,tt.l1o`[. .. m'eantime2the` farmers have bn ex-1.. pgrirmgntingv. with friejw `methods iforg `` ,ting?`these' brutes. `.%-':A:;,.sat.'.-.-,I v U,,ppe1'.~ Mattaw . '.` HA` Costly Expoflmint. 1 , ytolvu jgoropugd. Q 10 m\'1lt_ip1ied in`the mama V 7011;, +'I`ho owpwvahtahad and _,d"`,hq,.: anlaI1y;;.dis_gs,vegdl vthntwg, this}; won 113'" had`-'~giveii've`1i1a*-'11berty'=1ieed` the '_ hell up as A decoy for\"heep",'f'{ ~ flzhtf.*e1!3z3:`!ii5iiibfii5W.7 `i xi` "thi.`ti<:uiicr.ii" ' I `aihd *a;`s`6`6idt1"n..,`i :.`wieli.i, one of th-it > i kind, actually -pursued the wolf into the woods, with What painful. resu"l't_s_M `-mp:y"ve;.`rea.dily~imagihed`. ' . ,9 i The Wolf as `lg Karo; b Tho boldx1e.1'.of thofwolves in peeks, .may; ,be.:the.i`r un_doing,..:fo_r then they g;ca.,r'|`. be"-traced more lfeatlily, though *.this is -rather` a zdangerous undertak- `ing. 5` They expose themselves openly, "and will even stand gun re. Cun- ningv.co1nea=-with ` `aVdver.:it.y-; V the tiawerl wolves the -`greater intelligence. " For , this reason it will. be almost ,im- ! possible `to completely: exterminate. them, and, indeed, we do not thirst for the last drop of blood of the last timber wolf. Alone and famish- ing, with the hand otevery. man against him, hunted byvdoga, his path beset with tr&ps...-.- and his lair with pitfalls," the wolf willestill _do ..battle. There `is a streak of the hero in the gaunt, grey. robber, after all. .5 IIIDFIIGLIUII U1_ ll4ll`y OKIIOJIUILIIL vvu gunnu -- , I so b l-indly? Surely there is nothing 5 so dea'dening,-`so calculated to still. ll.` the best that is in the human soul, e-e indifference, .Oan'the Society for ""`A1`ts and Crafts stir up the public to [take unintelligent interest in the gthought, 'and.;vi1_:tue which are ` ex- i "pressed in the handmade article, they will bring closer to the massfo! pur- chasers in the Dominion the problem! which? face; the men. and women who design and `execute the work they L lpropoee to encourage. Those great .1 factories hide so much. from us that , 5 is beautiful and worthy in human- _ ! lives and the struggles of the work- l aerate beautify their own lives by . `contact with beautiful things. Can *we but encourage work which will I not separate men and women, from n 9 r we but raise` the taste of the richer classes in the_Do1_ninion `so that they will take into consideration all that D _ .........a I.......A.n...-in nu-ti:-In ranracanffn their homee and --their children, .`>H:vIk`IlI`A at iaindinddo 6o$d Will Culti- ` M vats It In Canadians.` " ' In 'Cahada,~ above all other ..coun-.4 tries, we have g'r(,-a.t- need to -eneouxw age` individuali ty; " for `- our `system of public education; however` excellent, takes but little countjof the individ- ue`.l .j_-andi` `from a ..c.er.tai`n . standpoint` we` are educatirfg on is,` system which tends to destroy anything like strong Yindividuality. In fact, it you take- ; the spirit. gwhich prevails in our ` smaller towns and villages you will `nd a positive resentment against the men or woman who dares to. strike out in any line `of his own. Go into our large stores and you will find one huge table covered with the same form of hat, reproduced a thou- sand times. Pass into the mantle deu- partment, and on great trees ' hang coats and jackets of the exact .cut and make and color; and all this in inuencing our people and their view of indi-viduality and its right to `as-. sert itself in any line in life. With all our boasted lreedom, as compar-, ed to the past, we fall into line like i mild-eyed heep and follow the mass; _ In the old days we might have been 1e_apby,, individuals; to-day _is the unthinking` crowd that takes the lead. How many people think or `care what` has been the origin "or I inspiration of_ any fashion. we follow. 9.... Ll:..._A|u-) Quvnln l|nrn in nnfhina \VA._|l, _|!'.l\U uiuu \ouuauux;uu_u.uu_;; u,;o u..'.y a_ good handmade article represents and be willing to pay for that ideal quality of humah individuality, as well as ;.-1,01?-t,he him; and labor.~~ex- " pended 6x1-?it'I cohstrdction. ..;we .shall` have much toathank the Society .01. Arts and Crafts In Canada for. -, Lally Bernard, in The G`Iobe; bSoul".h ,Kirl oII Contingent" Coil: Csnidl! Almost O3,000,000,snd mu n_on. Theqsen-ding ofthe Canadian` di'v-io- ion` South African Consta.bulary,=the 2nd, 3rd, 4th,: 5thva.nd 6th Canadian the 3rd .R.C. R. `to Halifax ' cost Canada f$2,I`82V8,954. A V .`Cl`he total of all ranks . was 8.372.` Q! these 7,- 368 tegphod South, `A1;-ica. where there ` were 476 c`nst':altie_s,A (224 deaths ab`-nd 252`;A`wounded. r`;[lhose `ge- tually 1;;;,11ea nprfubenfd 63;7;.'B1:diedjo1 w'uunds.*'g- .127} Succu1ribedi"7t3{klises1se. one was` accidental1y'd1'*ow1id, and two were reported missing -and be- rlicyed Ito` be deqd. _ Ninevty-t_hxjeo pe_I_i \ cent; 'n f t'1'1`"'<'iEY1'ths`s" ri=8:`i{"' due to fever, Btilvatm 0. J. Weaver, Mounted Ries to South Africa. and ` (`..M.1'{., and WC Winyard,_R_o_yjp`.l (Ign- adiah Draigoonb, . are" missing. " l_ L]... ...uno.In-ungnnhnunv v-Asnthrf A -`HA uuxuu llllljguvuu, nu: uxIDuAaa.o In the supplement.-a.ry` report of the Militia Dcpagtment, _wh_i_ch contain: these facts, there arelpo somee,.a.p- preciative .comment.Vs_ by the .Earl,,-pf D1m'donal'd hpon tlj_ soldierlj 'i1'q'ali- ties and valotu` of `the 2nd""'Mounted Ries," innderol. Evans,:'the apha- did equipment and. behaviour 0`! '-thb 10th Field H'ospi ta.l, under"Liout..-' Col. .Wor4th_i:ngton,.-and the patriotic spirit` of the-qfcers an_d men_o1 1 the thi_Ifd, .fourth, fifth and sixth regi- `mt.-n_ts. whfo had no oppbrtunity, o_f ibeangnnaer are. neat. R'.{H,,Rya,'i1 -- Kemp at Dornscombg J mm` 15," .1902". 312 me'n,: one corporal -and: 'o_ne ofcer ` 61" the `L-Stadta Artillemjm ? zonly 12 of the Yrks, f:o_rr'nerly a.-Tmnagnifl lcent V regiment. a_nmd only % .o`ne_ Ioicer; tells of the 9*ui`rehder' of I)6la.1fe'y"g,n<`i ` and six men pf D :1p.roy's signaling corps remaihd; " " - I T I " I T11; `Cpl-`rec! Q'uoI.:ntl`oI. , I! you mi,1 s't. quote, do Iqufotq doi- rectly. Is thepen mightier than the _.sword? _'l`}iousu.nds any -or `print :- ,The ' pen is mightii` than the -swo_rd. _ L ,1,t:m.&..V betrue, -but if it`ia' mea.nt"tc_>`r";i;; qI1`0t.Sttio'n it .is 11ot`!'a.ir-y ':1y g'i've'.' V'1`he1orig`lna1 lir1_es_in t,h Tptlay gro: .: .. . .. ` ` - F e earth ll } D h T!Lu`sAp9n= is miFght.le_1f.t,hp'n thgdwq This error has been corrected over 1 and over again. But, those who mis`.- quctq seldom.roa.d ..w_hat t_hoy- are ) prtnding to qu o'te.L but quote` ._from` . a- mum `Who q!1.<>;*ed.f;r0!11A'atnothirfIimfri who- -,o.ud} to` on: * Ijn i;n`_a;ny,.b6 bksYwi1\w rr:e*roima' 16112`-1Iats`, ot q.ea{Apreya1enrVo M W: w<>\~- }bv`}A-1!%yw-tton- aw ta; -.l".II~ cosnv `GAME 9? Wm. % ~ lND|\1.I.ll)UiAl;|T Y. % B; A. staph, I`. zi:;s .`o.`, oabioq china `on 3IItiQl'I`nOWtI1'bI_)'I Ul{ and xamuo.` - ` 9Q I0I`lE-3 -_T!IIIlQy, Into; T_.`l`r\'1blu: ; jl -r'At -the Canadian Insinte rooms Toronto -on a recent" Saturday night, an .addr9sa_ IW98 reed ,-bx. ..R.1A. Stu- part,` F.`.R.'.S.C`.,` oh astronomical thit- ters. Mr, stupart said the worid wa_s awaking to `the importance of 8.0-, lat` "physics. ' n1qt.eorology, seismo-` graphy and `terrestrial magnetism. .Much~ good work :ha.d; `been done by `the Toronto `Observatory, and "he was glad to say that Canadians gen- erally were beginning to apreciate it. - I `A . , , ,\ I ,__-_n,, LI. _ _-:.._ u;I`he lecturer utrdced briey the rise and growth of meteorological I magnetic science`, and stated tha.t't_lie British Association in 1834 ordered a magnetic survey to be emaade ohe pl`,i11L"ip.a.l le,nds*` of theggtwo hemis- p_her`es.i In .1887 M a- report 'wa.8'-p_ub- .lisi1ed,. and 111.1838 an expedition, partly subsidized by Queen Victoria`, vestig'ation. ` was organized under Sir John Ross and sailed for the Antarctic on" .a_ voydge of ' discovery `end magnetic` 'r_i\- l`|....-al.. ' Anna!` `'45- 1\`nnnnvu'n T.n-I'll` V CDVI` \'I\ I_I u .Cane.da.~'. and Van-vD9iemen's Lend were selected as. being nearest the. magneticlpolesj and St. Helena, be-` A cause it was in .t_he_ sphere of least magnetic djsturbaxlce, and in these three places ob'sen ra.tories were or- dered to be `elected. LI,_ _..__A' iIII?lI7\-I vu_ uv vnvuvuu. ._ Toronto was gchoeenas the most suitable point in Canada, and King's College granted a site, -In ~S.ePt<.%m- be:-, 1840, the rst magneto were suspended in on. wooden ' structure, and from then. until 1892 constant and careful ` observations A 0! diurnal changes in? magnetic .declination and dip were made. but in 1892 the mag- nets" were ruined, as were those of other observatories in Potsdam, Greenwich, .Kew and Waehjngton the advent of-' the trot-lay car, the - ectro-magnetic orce utilized being do strong as to let up local attractions which destroyed` the inuence otearth magnetism; Dunn. ,qIov-\4|-` `B31: Ann `C Ilia IIV Vlulllu e , Prof. Stupart then dealt with light, noting` that light exerts pres- sure, as is proved by:-theoradiometer. He gave a lengthy and. lucid descrip- tion of_ the Aurora. Boreulie, and ex. plafnodit according to the theory of primordial matter, with which Dr. ' Osborne Reynolds of Owen s Collee, lllanchesterlately startled the scien-_ tic world. 1v,._m' 'Il :_. c1`A._..___A 4..__.I...I __ LI.` IIIIIU W U] IU- Nexf Mi`; Stupart touched on tho __superhea.ted steam theory of Taeismic: and volcanic Vdiisturban'ce,. mferring; of course, to Pelee-. n-11.- -.__I ..__4 ,_. `l--_:'A._.. 4.1.- 17-`--- \ll vuvlo Du,` vu 4 us`-V The l;ed spot. on Jupiter, the Neva.- Persoii, and `the desirability of in- creased membership` `of the society ea_ch had a place in the ptfolessorb rergarks. - ' ' Ono of tho Toront; G1;pbo i But spouts; This forut ot ap`ort,. while not no attractive to the .spectator us run- j lung, is nevertheless a very im-port- ' ant event` on every` uthietic pro- gram.` whether at the big national championships or the small country fairs. * L -. - A- pvqL-,., 1- -_, ,u,-_u 4 4|, 4 2, _.n,,,_' There is no doubt that jumping 3 would be mom populm-__t.ho_,n. it is ` if provision were -made so that ovary spectator could `get g, good view of the oontestanAtsA,.bpt,\ up a -rule. there is alwa`ys`; gfeat nuniber of ioiciols and hangers-on standing around. thus spoiling any chance of _ seeing the `snort. Until` this in .rmed}'9 don't think. it.` will _'u!rir,e1;' `-a`m_o.u,nt much 98 is drawing` cart at7ari'y 'i`'et..` en. `u..'--`".. ...n`x.a-I-KM.-.a.n-.-A`:-' ' nnnnzc-3- '- I. VQTUWIIIE UILTLI 5`: [any IJICUU. ' To `be -" a. g`Obd"`j`urnp'e r' mquiro a lot of hard `work. and a` certain amount of cat.-like spring.` Not one ou't,of ten who go in for Jumping make anyt.hing._1_iko a success out of ; A it for the reason that it is so. hard W I and violent an exercise. Let:any per- son go _out,some evening and .try the A running broad 3 jump several times. 5 They will n-d next day they are. sore in every joint-and no doubt would not try- it again {or any amount; An athlete - Who - follows jumping must keep continually "in 4 training-pfor it he does .not*' he will nd he cannot do as good work-when ` it` comes to-av-contest". VA ' - rnl..- ---_..J... ......`.....I"l-_ 4.. .. ` .._- U UUMIUD I-U In vuuuwauo ' " The events vgen'era.II'y `on 0; ;pro- 1 `gram are -the rrunningwiliroud jump, standing jump, runn'irig`hi`gh, Vstand-` ing high and hop, stJep7 a.nd jump, the last one, I'th'1'-nk,:bj!ing'the hard; st tb g"e't procient at." ` ` ' ` (`C nan`:-an 3` 3` v\4-gnu-macaw 5-` lh'aI`v USU lav Eva Pnvuvsvusv :9: Of cou_rse_ it is necessary.` to h_a.'vo "oi" 'gobi`,:pi1ir,` of ',iump"in"g ' shoes, _ with oak t`an`s;o1e;s tted vgitp '$t.>e1A,s'1;i'l' six in f,!jgrit'.i3nf1 >t1v vA<>.;.be1ain 'rhay sh9u1'd...be,,,_ gxdp 61 .0a,l$l1n gnd laqq to th to`es".` - .(, . \ ,, ,_,.____. AL, -A ._,11,,~) ", `to we I.oes.- ` _ . \ ._In pg-actisingvfor the._sj.and1n( jpinp `it.is:u tz<'>o..d.1dea t9 I,1s..e..wei.xh%t:-Int rst,.,a,y, abqut vp pounds, }_e_a`.ch, toe the ..mark gnde , swing the .._ arms ' several times,- throwing the weights behind--.y6.u-aa..you _.leave, the mark. You canx gradually decrease the weight till you can jump without them altogether. ' In?m'a._king-. the jump bring the knees well up toward the chin and` do not:-drop them till you have to. T Inthis manner you cover more ground.` Ten feet is u- , "goo'd` ijump. `z._A1so"try;a"nd- bring bbth heels to ethe 9' "If onnis;;eix- inches` ahead` t e` jtidgeis 'et1re to` mark/the 1 buck pne. I ' ` III`- ` __-___.__3L,"_, .1..-` .j' '40 ;;;u.;nuIb' xnpxu |\l`lG-`U Jvu uucp, U1].- The standing high and running high ha.veV_no regular method to go by, as` any way to_gc>t_, o\:erfth e Vbs.-.rA,wi1'_.hout vknoicking it _o_'_._count3, a.nd__I have ` seen jumpers _, light` on,thei.1_v ' hands, 1 and .sidv.a3.. { On ,the_ whole, jmnping is ` 3., hard game. and requixjes .9. _lot_ of j %A Thomas, in .Tha;;.G.`10.b9a- . 4 plixck and ?ondurance'.---Wm. Devine. _|JKOvl) IJIIUO The running broasd a.n~ d`hop-atepro- quire `that `the athlete" possess` some I _.spri'nt,i1gg"ability,` as it) is neces'sa\ 1 ti) run` a short way to gt, a_._' gdgg ; send-o . jllfere, is no reg'ulm-"mark 7 for Vthis `event, the - judge merely marking A from whe. efyou step," `off. A t\1'nn`| a-sung` `..`........x.y.... In3..L Russia hiis decidifto found _an archz_wl0gica,l museum in Se}/astop_ol. `The bimding is _to' he _e e`ted in the stylg {pf tin` Qltl7;`Ch1jistiLan. basilica and` V t,o be _.am.m_gbd*"fur t-.1_`11"%e*.`aP!1rtn`1er'1ts, one`, gmvot.cd. `*fr>.f--?1'.hia` Greek; oiie to "the ,.n n.;.>.35r"r'Annd =i9e.;f2?3it?d& `itohtll-.IB$1@+nn-. I :h~t.vhrb.1etA%.hsa been? 1 1i;*;V';;;a. u:pLAR_f,_|:;YsIqs; xpnncn. Nev} Arhmolojzicql Naines. JUMPING. 1 The station agent smiled and point- -ed to a red pump in an adjacent field when asked about Evangelineip 5 well. The pump looks sadly modern jand utilitarian. But for the bone- . {it of those who preler truth in such matters, it is. known that the well was dug, for convenience, by reopen- ing a caved-in well that had served {the Acadian village of Grand Pro. The: willows, too, are there, eight massive trunks, gnarled, twisted and almost. l falling apart with age, `though the tops are still vigorous. "l`hey=mark the margin where the long arm from -the `Basin of Mines once spread over the brown polished mud date at high tide. But the basin does not reach within two miles of ` them now, for the dykes built by the Acadians and maintained by the pre- sent owners have reclaimed and still !preserve a broad expanse of about 2,500 acres, through which the wind- . ing grooves of the tidal streams are 1 ' aimlessly threaded, their sloping" . `aides, once of sea-washed mud, now. covered with a modern crop of oats and hay. 1' The stile at the fence sur- rounding the denuded village site is worn with the feet ,0! pilgrims, and { the pump has been saved from de- . molitiqn only by an inconvenient .' `barricade- The willow at the end of ., 9 the row, the veryrtreo. under which , Evangeline sat, is_acax`.cely more than I I 'halt the size of the others, its stunt- Ied deterioration being due to the lconstant breaking oi! oi twigs and small branches by visiting tourists. Such is human reverence for an ima- ginary tiragment 0! our common `hu- ; manity. intowwhoae breast the genius .1 . of a poet has breathed the breath of 1 3life. ` ' ' ' ` A 4 ,- , Explsilltdli Jnstlnad. Longfellow has made it incumbent on us to explain and justify the ex- pul`sion'ol- the` Aca-dians; `If it had been only Acadians in the` "abstract who `had been expelled the aair ,woti1_d have been idrgottn long ago. Nobody ` has , any sympathy with,` `T the Acadians in `the a b$t~fa no- b0.dy has evir memgfem or. as'8ociat- ed with~g.then1"in that rpm. Expelling .. the .,Abadia11sa"would scarcely ._awa',l&en p. a Pwsinz scomment-`slant XP.e111ns-two- 1-.- Aowdia_ns_ Wis, a_,set_ious_ ..matter in! p, must be iualile.-.~:,:lpngfe1low has 1; shown us twp ' Apadians, real, living ', l>00,l3le llke"O1'1!'l'e lVc,' `people who were .. not abstracti'dns,` `people with; `life. h l| 0l5O. ueftion, -`revue arid` `constancy. s; i . l .`I-.~v;rI*.:t.-..`r.;-:-i.-l-l- ; R iv` It is;on1y uywg. xfegaril _r :.,111ow., _=_Q mortals as abstractions th8t.~iW9 can . k_i_.11.. wetter. .I'.nJ'.tu'o..:s>_r: shank; eV.il';o ID them. So l,nsx,a.s we.i.rs`m.~d;i them A it as human beings. like ~our891_Ves,_only h_-. npt,-i-quite so; -.,good`...'with,; . affections 1! and sympat_.hi6_S,: I.vith.,;iee1ings,:: .,with,<, ts nfrien-ds and ;_rela~ti.vaeIL , "- iapiflviont-awith `joys and : 4-sorrows,` 18 wg{canno_t~ ..do a'ny.oi- these things. at Thmsoldior kills---the enemy Iabecauso he the `enemy: is an But: he Pd` will sharet-he contents` of? his >w.,t*_e;-.= ill` bottle 'wi_th' the"sa`mo= weuudm m` `on the-ne1d,='= beeaus thatinelny-.hu tribe` ain*,'abstracti'ei1"'and lab _beco'1iiej*a"niaii;",The"'man = to -whom. es 'workin'gfmen-5 Tare` abstraction, 'c'b, 59 lock 'tl_3i`em* font. s_.f_:`.`a,i`-Va jthem into: sub-"-n ? `n'1is5s_i6_n; -jzp` 'theiF ho;nest'or rum P9: .Pi1?t0n6. .t}.9hi1i?{iiiI.,f11i3d:T t16wn;l I-'l"e3 ria i9+11` I11939.`?74ll `gt;i>fI,1iu`.vszt`;x;x.~.-;. . gg A is..*.'.n6.r1rin`li "` r.. rk workmma~' * >13; .,human-bi6._i1.18`.i i-iwitli` ~ , . .. and _.....-.. , _- ; A Visit :6 the sun. 01 1.ong`1e11o{v'a `rosin _ ; e-'.l`_ho Abstract :3 Oppougl to the . Concrete: Ag_uuns_._ - A visitor` to" the hpmeo of -tho great men and".-'-women who have been, done and. suffered in their sev- eral Ipheres gengerally nds that tbs supgrveriing inhabitants know noth- .-..... .-r a.I..- ...n-1:... nnrvnnnnfn and A11 lllllullcuh UI IJIIU IUNI; VI-(UV the ground about them is historic. But the heroine of the Aca.di'a_1'1~ `ex- pulsion has' not bcen consignedv to hlocal oblivion. -Everyone in . and about the neighborhood can point to LL- _.._n n..-... ...I-.::-In dhn lift-Ad water. HEIKIIUUIIIUUU Uoll klvnolv use the well from which she lifted wa.ter,_1 `to the willow trees `beneath which 1 she milked the favorite` heifer, to the ; plece where:Basil e` forge stood: to j the site of the church, of the home 3 of Father f`elicie'.n", and of everything . woven into the poem. The chief of a threshing-m'achine` steal showed me her'footpr_ints {near-.th'e well." I tried \ 1ny"boot,s in them, writes S. T.` Wood in The Globe. Evangeline mustphave been a, very large women. l*.`oo.s 0. `the Expulsion. 4 ,.Grand Pre has never really recov- ered from the effects of the expul- sion. -It consists of a. small station, which the operator looks up between trains. The Flying Bluenose ignore! it," but it is honored by `calls trom three expresses each way, daily ex- cept Sunday.` It has, or is, on how! from which a. man drivel down to: meet the trains, and there arecsever-e al houses which may be included in :1. 1- __6 8-.1-A-nnri.-sfarl nd BuI.)_UJ'\BIllllK 1111-Au-Ulvnnxvw I-uv 'l' /.--_v'v" mg -of the e_e_u'11er occupants, and are comfortably mnocent of the fact that LL- .... -_J ll`-\4\II" `harm `H 8.! nausea wuusu um; uv Iaszvluuou has it. as it is not incorporated, `and the bounds are consequently elastic. Wolfvibllc, three miles along the line, has a.ppropriated`Evange1ix'ue and all the traditions of Grand Pre. and the inquiring visitor is _advi2-ed, ` if he wants to go to Grand Pre, totgo to Woltville. There is e. town there with hotels, an academy, a Vmanual. training school and a. young ladies seminary.` There. are liverymen there who drive you to Grand Pre, to Blo- midon Head, themouth of the - Gas- lrperean, Maine! Basin, the dykes and fall the points of interest. This ad- jvice was so persistent and universal I that I got 0!! at Grand Pre. l ' 4 Evangeline : Well. vAesbvi9:.<=a~oPR5 F`. ;.,:u`::'::1:,**;a:*:,::d+;a,.m.. 1,;-~n-__._.i LI...-n vnnnfia 0"VD __ .4 _p at .._._a-1|...`..I. Dnnun I we could` expel the Acadianugain, the "abstract Acadians, but we would take abundant ca.re""that an exception was made" in the 'cq.se at Evangeline atnd Gabriel, For; of _th'a,t crowd of_ sensitive, pulsating lgife hurried to" the ships these" two .stqnd out as tha, only humap beluga. frh,` expulsion qf.,th;`e ; Acddiaxis has been, `iustmea ._by_ Mr. .%;Parkman. And. 2 : :tenLdor and. itisoubled ;<=9I!?9*9n9I,w111,b1ees :h.1m.V tor.` ..:.9P.t1.!il?8 % .jiPaar~>e$ --he. :;ha.nr. j-brpusht` .5 ,.;Th_;e :. :xpu1Fi9n was: `i _ris!1$4i)':A.::It:' W945:-.IJ9at:- .3-Buns; j;9:9t~ rs! V. J:V :;1 '3 :V$- opfuil V "LIV" lllln |p5Iv\n- -u----=.__.- radio` 'a_nd`toun`d them wanting gives the following accountof their peculiar- ities. Their true name, he says. is `fshank: high." and he pronounces them rlghtlynnamed. -nu-- mm... M; may at all. and when A ugnuy, uuu_1_eu. They have no7 at ail. andwhen thehead is cut off the legs come right `apart. I don t see how they can sit on their eggs. My jackknife can sit as __well as they can. t .1-__n. -14. A... oh- s-nnuf fhn larng wen Ill Lucy van. They don't sit on the roost the name an other chickens do; not a bit of it. When they attempt to sit as other chickens do. they fall o backward. __ _n. _..I..... `has: nnf I lrnnur fnr cnlcxeua UV. tuca --u v- ---v----- -- 'r`t:ey= unit when they eat. I know, for !'ve seen 'em do It. And I've seen 'em `:tryto: ent fgtandxng. but they couldn't {etch it. for when they peek at a grain `of corn on the ground they don't more n halt teach it, but their head bobs right between their legs and makes 'em turn `.3 complete sqmerset. we.` __ ..-....' -:\4c n unlit Al fnnoa A 3 Iivlllyuvsv us`:--we-v-u I'd as soon see a pair of tongs or compasses" walking about my yard as , these shank highs.` ~+- A--- _ I_.._ 4.1.... kn`l\ll tutu: DIBEIIJD ulauwo` '1`hey'_ crow. too, a long time before canny. when it isn't (day, probably be- cagge their legs are so long that they can see dayllght long before a common A chicken can. The Beat lids. ~ 1 Cholty Masher (to the photographer) I-Be sure and show the collar and eye- ` glass, and don't forget to give the cause the correct pose. ` `Photographer- Certainly not.A `Now , hold steady. All vizht! It :-`done: air. <).IikACO kinds in stock or mad` %<'=<`r lichen. vrapoand `&11,FnneraLl`Requisites furnished- mended t~ .v S :ott s Bookstore a-msx1'%'ro mm: or commence .faAviAi$A i'H:' A:.3R'.A'1;E`i"`|:l.Q "woiiLo:l` - A Eon GAME. ` 5 DOORS WEST REMOVED ti _lt;reah_es, Simone cminty People, best Lagaialzygjnp STROUD. Aron ADVERTISING IN muum-3 frnmr on: `At the V Rtrecntv convention or `tti'o;` `Z/3;;;=}Nu1'th American Fish and Game Pro- `--:";}'j`t'e< ;"ti\'e. Assor i`atio'n`-`-`w t ot-tavva; Cali, -`:.'_`1n`eT Turner; the United States Con- :`3"au}' at the` capital, declared` that tho`_ Dominion is the greatest country in,_v fthe World for game, This is g` `jttatement which may sunprise non- jporting citizens, put which, never- 'A,tbelesS.. is quite true; . ' to`. .0 many geherations the lordship .' the new world and enabled her by th. I 1` History Uukittg 1`:-Ila. 1t_w,aa but gtrie that gave 3% 1 wealth which she derived from nut .l i source tofbecome the most powmm nation in Europe. It is well known ; that Columbus, di8\11'88d With an 7.1. "refusals which he met at so man, ugtg_ dispatched his brother Banal, . meo to. ask aid trom Henry V11. 0, a;`,; A mhgland. But on the way the meg Sij } ger fell into the hands of pirates, gm by the_t1me- he reached London wa, . destitute that he had to try ` tn `. * the money to clothe himself in prom. style before he could be presented at ` court. But.by that time it was too , late. Even the fact that Ferdinand am 4` ' Isabella furnished the funds to equip '; the expedition was mainly due to th, accident that Juan Perez de .\iarchena_ _he s contessor, happened to 1,, passing when the weary mariner wt. knocking at the door or La Rabid, 4' monastery to beg a little breadnnd wt. 1-1.. I.L...- mff and run... 2- u-`Una,-"V<'-J `V "'0 - - - - - - - - V _ % _._ "W ter for his` Diego and was my pressed'yvitb the noble face of the dust, traveler. `Had Bartolomeo feacheq London in tlgne, had Columbus been , 2 little later or earlier at the monastery ` door. the fate of Europe might hm l been. changed and the destiny of 9,, Anglo-Saxon race altered. 1. it? Are 4Ph'otogra" ' pher-QT uite sure, 31;. l _ tne outsme. `Ni sure you have taken the 1) "1" my head? "W I v ;;!a`. "tfxnuur 19, I903 12nn--jj .7e'rs. ;,W||0 '.Q'..;IIul[z.Gl'~OIIlI on Earth-'-Lacks `5 ~' In 1`wo- Members ot_tho Great Gaunt ` -n uny,. lgggagp Ina` vjgua 13x_;oo_9'o-3-. lbw Wolgufu Inc!-and-A Coui'{ly2lv1`fx~fA _ 1 3 1; A .p_orljmont-W/olf is a Homo ` `. `t 1