.1 Al'ways Buy n II SAUM GREEN TEA The little leaves atnd tips from HI|(H ntountain tea gardens, tnat are tised in SALADA. are much ftner in flavor than nny Gunpowder or Japan. Try it. I won't listen to you. I know nior« •bout farming than any col!«ge can t«ach. I ought to. Haven't I worlied out three farms in my time? And haven't I pretty near worked this one out? College, hey? Bunk!" The iiinteen-year-ol<J boy had thrown himsc'.f zealously into the task of bavin^ thi' dying farm from utter worthle.ss.neKs. The attempt had Iteen cruelly hard and discouraging. But Lit by bit he had buccted;'d. The waste lands .grew* rich again. The ram- shackle buildings w;r--' replaced by n«w. Canoeinff in North Quebec U Thrilling . ;\ To anyone with a dealre for adven- ture, a love of outdoor life, and a hun- ger for the unknown, the uncharted, and the hazardous, the canoe trip Tbe"';i;^rtgage»"had'WnV'd"''«"8h northern Quebec from Lake A GLASS OF MILK BV ALBKRT PAY.SON TKRHUNE. off. In less than t«n years the farm St. John to Lake MUtassIni will pro- was on a well-paying basis. Modern ! Wde a never-ending source of satlsfac- methods, wisely and unvvearyingly ap-!tlon. Thereoire trappers and prospect- p'.ied, had wrought wonders. !ors who are familiar with the route but Gil had felt that at laat he was out the outsider making tlu* trip will need of the woods. Now he could find ti..v competnet and experienced guides, to think of his own happiness. And .j.^^^^ ^^ engaged through local 'ot' JZr-Ka;?.,.Sr'da':.gh.:^j outntter. who make a »P-'->ty «' -P" of his prosperous next farm neighbor, Plylng guides and equipment for trips a girl who had abo beer, like a daugh-. of this nature. ter to Gil's own widowed mother. The trip starts from St. Fellclen, the For two years Tanner rad been in- ' terminus of the Quebec and Chlcou- arensingiy deep in !ovc> with her. But, | timl branch of the Canadian National until the farm should be prospering i Railways, 206 miles north of Quebec and his mother w-U provided for, he' g„y rj.^'^ ^j,y„j ^^^^ j,a8 been made In •^ â- ' •' he had no right to te.l heri ^^ ^^^.^ ^^ g ^.^^^g, guppHes should =y ai had felt "^^hen'aTlast all obstacles had been I be t^^^h «a a precaution agal^t de- lays from accidents or bad weiitner. following description has been cleared away. Gil had told himself | he could enter into his ieward for the, The again when it wa.s sour and worn-out Vfars of grinding toil and worry. He; prepared from an itinerary of the trip , and tumbling to decay. There's every- planned to go to Kays home on the made by Dr. A. Wllley, Professor of <.il Tanner sat eyeinjc the .ong R.ass i^^^g t^ live for, Gil. And ydu know evening of her return from a month's | Zoology, .McGlll University, during the froiih miiW wi»h s/imt> siiph !nnk as there is if only vou'l'l let yoursclf ^''*''- ^ a school friend and to_ask herl^^^^j^gf ^j 1924 PART I. Rinso dissolves completely makes rich soapy solution t f soaks dirt out «/ 1 f I I to share his brightening fortunes of fresh milk with some such look as "he might have been expected to ca.st, think a minute. • .• u i,- on the same quantity of rat poison. I ".lust because you've had a bad set-!*''" "â- '"• * , . j t. Then he blinked up drearily at the back, it's no reason why you should' On the morning of that day he was wBStap«,ned girl who had just hand- 1 talk in that cowardly way. The doc- ^"'* .?^„^°rk «'th his hired man, ed it to^.im «*>• says your best chance to get well shingung his newly bmlt hay bar- -^l . • u- is to build UP your strength ami your â- »'='"'• wh»n he slipped and pitched There was «r«t. .nqu.ryin h.s/^^^'.'^''^. »P,,i«',j,^^^,.^ why he pre- headlong onto a pile of .stones thnt eyes as we.l as glumti^sg^^-Murtl ne ^j.,.j,,j,j jj,^ f^^^^ glasses of milk and had been left there as material for desired to know whether or not shc'^j^g g j^y^ along with the rest of the P'ers to go under a^ projected water despi-sed him as thoroufjhly as he de- diet and the treatment* Yet you won't ,*»"•'• ^ ^ ^ ' , Bpised him.self and n.-: I.afc Hewitt oven help yourself or help us help I ,^"« had been carried senseless into openly despised him. But in Kay you. You sit there, •ihappy and let- i 'he house. There the two local physi- Leonard's level gray eyes there was ' ting your.self get weaker and more cmn« had youghtoYuh^^ no exDicssion that he could rAd be- Ko'-o"! I'very day. You feed the nice eon«"ss'on «' the bra.n v^as cured. no expitssion mat ne couia r?jiu, oe-i,_ _^ _.,^ ^.^ ^^^^^ _, „ | ^jj^^ ^^^j ^^j^ jj,^,, ^,ji ^y^^y j,^. yond a drink -the .'lass, •'A'l right," he said presently. From St. Fellclen on the Ashuapmu chuan river the first step of the Jour ney was by wagon, 10 miles up the | river, to avoid the lower falls and rapids. Entering the river the first camp was made at the Pemonka camp site, 9 miles up otrcam. \ short dis- tance above this point Is a deep rapia called Pas de Ford or "No Bottom," i whlch..ca0 rarely be ascended. It was I necessary, therefore, to detour by the I Stony River portage which crosses a chain of five charming lakelets and re- _ .^ „ . .'zed from the! gains the Ashuapmuchuan by a swift ,„ . - - . .„, u I iJiipH dowii. I mountain sTreaifl. Next followed stiff my sins for granted, he broke in on, ''^^ q;, ^^erged from his si..-k!po„„g „„ tue White Spruce rapid, to •I'll ' !?^Lfr:.!'-Lnt J7.TL J.-;: -Z? . bed. it wouW have been hard to reco^- 1 ZlL of Chaudlere falls where camp Kay. nize him giant of as the upstanding young i a month before. He had was made. Above the falls the water ,-- â- c ,\. 4. » is fast to the mouth of the Chlgoblsh ,c«p known as one of the strongest, '^ '"*'• ]", '"" muuiu , , „„ ,,,„ „„y, â- ^ .; .. ... 9. 'river which was reached on the fifth just sip it slowly, and when it's empty: Forget it, won't you? Hereâ€" I'll do I'll set it down here beside me. Don't penance. Watch me." bother to wait for the glass. I'll He lifted the pint glajs to his lips 'and" most athVetiJmon in the county. ^^. . , . bring it in when I come." and drank it down in one succession | His face had been tanned by sun and! day. Turning west up the Chigoblsh, "That's what you said this morn-, of gulps. The puppy, his furry head wind to a light mahogany. His mighty' 15 portages were passed in the 22 Ing," the girl reminded him. "1 hap-, on one side, watched pathetically thls'),ands had been as calloused as raw-! miles to Lake Chlgoblsh, which is an pened to Uok out through the kitchen unkind vanishing of his expected hide. . ' attractive sheet of water with inviting window a miitute later and I saw you (:?'"*'•,/''' handed back the g.ass to. Now he was pale and his eyes stared beaches and surrounded by big, un- pourinR it into Napoleon's tin dish, i ^"j; .''•^I'l, '^'^^P^l "^e"'^^^^^^^ Patted i j^. „nd bewildered from above -oiy j ^yrnt timber. Fifteen miles up the ge lapped up every 'drop of it. Does! ^^CiT'^'a^p," h:TpoTogiSd. "But'S^'as a^^hild's'-^ ""' "' ""^" ''""l >«^«' ^^^^^^^ ""f '^^ ^^ ^ ^ f be ap up every drop of < very glass of J had to do something to atone forf He had been able to take a standing! river, w-liich is the extended foot of inuk you're suppo.sed to drink, Gil?"; .snarling like a sick be.nr. And you've jurrp from the ground clear over the 'ake Ashuapmuchuan. Nine miles up For a moment the man's pallid face had two gla.sses of it already to-duy, hp^\(, of his tallest work horse. Now! this latter lake Is a newly established reddened, and he scow.cd. Then he l>esides your regular meals. There his legt. dragged help!.'>s, and he was; Hudson's Bay Company post of mod- broke into a rueful grin. , was a raw egg whipped iip-in each of | helped out onto his porch armchair' est pretensions, so hidden among the "" ' That's pr.Tnd for a collie's Jietwten his ' ' " " "1 might have known it was too I was a raw I them too. ' coat. I lis grieving hired ma;i and trees that It cannot be sighted beyond tg last." he giumb'cd. "If it "j^at- ' guess you won't starve to his brawny cousin, Lafo Hewitt. L fir Naprlron liore I'd have '''"at" Iwfore supper time. | Mrs. Tanner had .sent, po.st haste, :,j. a whimsical grin to his for Lafe when Gil wa.s stricken. He; ; ^^ day ^the head of lake Asjjuap- Iwas the nearest of kin, .ind she turn-' tr. oil w;i«;ii't for Naprlron, lioie died from a surfeit of glasses of milkj H« forced a week ago. I hate it. And he loves , white face. it. Every dfop of it lu-lps to makel "Doesn't that make up a little bit ed to him in her fright, althouijh he him bigger and falter and stronger. ' for niv acting like a cross kid? I hate and Gil had disliked each other wi'h He neds strength. I don't. Tho soon- j the measly stuff. 1 hate it worse than 'a growing intensity ever sinco they er I drop out of life the l>eUer pleased ' ever, with those law eggs beaten in it. ; had fought as children The Bob-o-Link's Oddities. Isn't It odd that the bobolinks sweep up from the south In spring to take possession of a strip DC3 miles wide and reaching from Nova Scotia to Bri- tish Columbia. They have spent the winter as brown marsh birds la Brazil and Ar- gentina. Then In February they be- |;an the drift north, stopping In the ' upper part of South America for the | male birds to change to their black, ' white and yellow wedding garments. ' Then they hopped across the Carib- bean 10 JauialCit, CubA and Florida, or ' came through Central America and across the gulf. They sperad out and [ set their time clocks to arrive about the beginning of May. | There they take possession of the meadows, but they alng at no other ' than nesting time. The female keeps her straw-colored dress that she may hide In the grass, lay straw-colored eggs, and hatch them withrfut being ' seen. The male flaunts his joy wisely ! withal, for he does It in such a way as to direct attention away rather than toward the nest. j The bobolink Is primarily an eastern bird, used not to extend Its province so far west. It likes meadows, and farm- ers create them. As farms pu.shed west the bobolinks went with them. They followed settlers into the Rock- ies, where they had not formerly nest- ed, over the Rockies, down to ^he coast. ! They still remember, however, that they, are eastern birds. When late summer arrives the broods are reared. ' CUP^P lAmm 1146 -â- - â- ^- ' ^' ' 4^ My mm/ I'll be." He I? I used to think I liked milk. But since Laft's farm adjoined Gil's on the stooped painfully fcward as he , 't's bt'^'n stuck at mo, with eggs in it, side farthest from thpt of Kay I,eon- spoke and rumpled the riuffy cans of a i four t'mes a day, 1 wish there wa.sn't ' ard's father. .Somewhat to his sur- plump collie pup that lay ;it his feet, j ** cow or a hen left on eiuth. Do I 'pri.se, Gil found on his convalescence looking expectantly up Ji"t him and at K^t forgiven, Kay?" that l,.-ife had consented to Mrs. Tan- He asked the question lightly, but ner's foolish pica thnc he take over \hs brimming glass of miik. Gil did) not meet Kay'."-, eyes. Which was lucky for his self-respect. For an angry j Bcorn leaped from '.heir cool gray; depths. { "Yoii have no right to say such stones throw. The first hundred llesof thejrip wasTOrapletedonthej;;-^" when the time for the southern migration begins they ~do not go straight south. Instead they start east and do not stop until t'lcy bump up against the Atlantic. Ibcn Ui^y turn down the coast in iuni'jnerable r.warms follow it to the Lip of £*lail4a. hop off In the long'fliF U to \'«neza<ltt. This Is the - ay i6oy got etarled go- ing hundreds i . tlMro»aiidg of years tw^^o as far, muchuan and the ascent of the plc- ture'Sque river Nikabau, with its long r.TFii'ji, commenced. Across the Height of Land. Next comes a series of lakes begin- ning with Little and Great Nikabau. followed by Jourdaln's and terminating in Branch lake, at the head of which answer. She turned and wcTit indoors, leaving him there, i Gil could not know she had turned made. Minard's Liniment for dackache. Portage ries Peches leads to Whitefish j ago. and. althouf It la there was a thread of deeper fee!lng|the working of the Tanner farm, as' or Long lake. At the head ot Long j they slick to the roi.^^. in his tired voice. TIio girl did not; well as of his own, on shares, until I lake a portage called.La Hauteur leads . â- :• away quickly ! Gil should be well again or until some across the height of land between the permanent arrangement could he' ggg^^ngy .^n,, ,he Nottaway drainage i d . l 117 systems. From ih'.s point onward the. When Annual Kental Wa« drop out of life the â- lK:.tteri;iea's;d that hud sprung unbidden to her eyes| and uroir<T 'tl^house much of the '"•'P eains in piquancy._ Obatogamau j One Barley Corn. I'm ashamed 'of you, Gil! at his tone and at the brave smile he time. He'made no se.Tet of his scorn 'h*" next lake, contains ...u ibianus ana, j^^ t^e present day one ia quite fa- essayed, for the helpks.s owner of the home,: the navigation of the labyrinth is dir-l^jii„ ^-mi ,i,e expression "for the Left alone, Gil Tanner stared mor-'nor did he mask his ciiiiimptuous dis- ficult even for exports. The fourth ' ^y^ ^f jj_.. ^^. gome similar phrase to osely after her. "Gee!" he muttered to hiinslef, pain in his voice no longer disguised. | Confu.sed, sick, stricken. Tanner ,5 ,i,p i,ead of lake Chibouganiau. At- thingsl" she blazed. "The sooner you • aside so hurriedly to bide a hot misti Accordinglv,.Lafe Hewitt w.ts in «. . * ,-.. ., I .. , "^ . tl,..* U...I «.- ....i.;.i J...- 4.- 1 I 1 \i-r^i i_ .e i ,. _ you'll be? I'm ashauied 'of you Honestly I am. Hen- your mother end all the rei#t of us are doing every- thing we ran to build up your health and make things pleasant for you and help you forget what you've been through. .-Xnd you p;iy us by giving the milk to the nuppy and by wishing you were dead I" "Why shouldn't 1?" he countered miserably. "What u.se am I, to my- self or to anyone el.Hc? Maybe you AN EASY-TO-MAKE ROMPER. Remember the laundering when planning the children'.s clothes. The little two-piece romper pictured above is a good exarnple of a garment easy to launder. It is cut with kimono sleeves, which may be long or short, buttons up the back and has drop seat. It takes only IT^i yards of matarial 27 inches wide to ma.ke the romper for a child two years old. Sizes 1, 2 .ind 4 years. Price 20 rents. Our new Fashion Book contains many styles showing bow to dress boys and girls. Simplicity is the rule for well-dressed children. Clothes of character and indiviriuaiity for the junior folks are hard to buy, but easy to make with our patterns. A small amount of money spent on good ma- terials, cut on simple lines, wrill give children the privilege of wearing ador- able things. I regard for such orders or' advice as portage after lake Obatogamau leads I ,„^j.j,te nominal consideration used In r^Z<,'fh^'^l'^,^f^^v.,n<! }^Z,^,°°} J''^ the Gil gave for the running of the farm, to a very narrow winding creek which I „^„,, ^,ocument.s conveying Property. '^"''Jf_^J*r-d ^"'^ '""^^ '"'^^"''^ .„^1 r.^fn..^ C.I, «f,.,.L-»n T„nn». ,^ j,,^ ,,^^^ ^f ,„ng ^-hibougamau. At- 1 _^ ,g,3„t gearch in connection ^-m, °"® ^""P°" ^*'°'^ 'She's as sick and tired of me as Lafe! had no energy nor power to combat Heritt is. What in blazes is there this disregard, left that carts for me and that doesn't I But when he found that Lafe was of: Iter pa.ssing Ihrougli a succession oi , jjjjgg through some of the old docu- ' bays and narrows the latter lake was j ^pms preserved in the records of the think I'd be better out of the way?" i spending all his spare minutes i„ . entered In the afternoon of the four- , ordnance. Admiralty, and Railway â- -^ ' "^ -- - - â- â- day, completing 200 miles of the. i^^,^,,g Bri As though in answer to his ques- 1 seeking Kay Ijeonard''s society, apathy 'eenih _ tions, a tawny-nnd-white collie dog gave way to impotent rage. Kay was' trip and coming within sight of the think it's fun'to be boosted out onto | cncgeri from under the porch vineslat the Tanner hou.se every day now, distant range ot IiIIIh beyond which this porch every mornin$r and lugged ! where she had lies-n dozing. Stretch- helping Mrs. Tannc and trying to lies the great lake Miatassini. Lake in again every night, and sit here all 'ng her dainty body fore and aft, she make her.self useful to Gil. Thus chil)angainau was crosoed to Its north day, paralyzed from the waist down! j came mincing up the stops and across Lafe's vigorous if pondeious courtship' „gj where the Narrows lead to Mao- To Fit h.Mo like a de.-.d one while all 1 to Tanner's jirmchair. Pausing there, came hourly under the anguished at- .^ , j^ .. viiilch is 'I'so called Bale the rest of the world SOPS huvtling on ' ^ he laid one white little forepaw on tention of the cripple. ' , , ,'"'„,,.,,„ nV. .n.,no,i mnnn around me and .sound men are doing his knee and peered up in troubled 1 Gil found himself increasingly i ''" Jonsleur troiu a nai-toppeu moun- the woik that meant everything tolpity into his face. Instinctively, she wretclied in mind and body. The first tain at lU head, from the neaa 01 me! Why shouldn't I wish I was i seemed to know her worshipped ma.s-' bewildered numbness was passing, and the bay there Is a hard portage to lake dead? What is there to live for? j ter was unhappy and she was seeking! the hideous facts of his condition wax- Wakonlchi. crossing the watershed be- I â€" -â€" " I to comfort him. Roughly, the man ed daily clearer to his tormented soul. â- tween the Nottaway and Rupert drain- Ashamed of his own babyish out- 1 caught her classic head between his The gian't strength in which he had age systems. The rockbound shores of burst, he fought for self-control and .two palms. reveled and by whose aid he had drag-', Wakonlchl lake offer but a slight in- fer fresh grip on his racked nerves.' "Nance, you've answered the ques- ged the farm back from ruin to pros-^^pg^^gn^ [„ land except at one spot "V/hat i" there to liv" for?" she re- i tloni" he told her, a catch in his voice. ' perity â€" from the waist down this' peated, as his romplnint was choked | "I was juat asking myself if anyone strength was gone. His legs were into surlv silence. "There's every- ' would care if I was out of the game. ' powerless of motion or even of sup-, . w j .1, thing to live for. Your mother, for And along conn's the only thing on ' porting hi»+undred and eighty pounds tl>e <^aâ„¢P s'tes and was reached on the one tbir.g. Sh" worships you as only earth that thinks as much of mo now of muscular weight. What profited ' eighteenth day. Descending Wakonlchl Ti.:.. t for another i that I'm a cripple as she did when I him the trained energy of his upper river was sound. "Thank the good Lord, a body, if paralyzed legs were to fetur man's dog i.s the one thing in this rot- 'him forever to a chair? ten world that hasn't got the sense to! 'The farm had been his life ambi- know when he's down and out or to tion. Another was in charge of It act as if he was something the cat now and was more and more openly had dragged home from the swamp. "flouting its owner's wishes in regard a mother can. This farm thing. This farm you brought t^) life ii> Betto Daddy -dorit called Polute des Peches, a granite bluff, which is one ot the best ot all lake .Miftassiui was entered and on the twentieth day the historic Hud- son's Bar ^'.-Lcpany post on this lake was reached. Proceeding through Lit- tle Narrows, ADatagush bay and Big Narrows, the last camp was U'ade at a Brajich of the Department of the Interior, revealed a quaint and rather curious form of this considera- tion. A lease Issued under the auth- ority of the province ot Upper Canada In 1836 contained the following: "for and during the term ot thirty years at a .yearly rental of one barley corn." The usual item ot nominal considera- tion In the early days was "a pepper corn" but this Is the first case noted where "barley corn" was used. Pos- sibly It was because barley was more common than pepper In this country. upon good for five cents in th« purcha.se of any pattern. now TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your nam,j and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. I'lnclo.se 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Pattern Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., ?.â- ? West Ade- laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by return mail. Sentence Sermons. You Can Have Mo*i-e â€" Leisure It you do your work well (or the first time. â€"Freedom If you break the chains ot your own enslaving habits. â€" Influence It you will confine your atitteinents to the facts â€" "Drag" with the boss If you boost more tor the business. Help In bad times It you have been Obeying Orders. Thompson "Good gracious! Didn't you pack my liniment?" Mrs. Thompson- "No, of course notl U was labeled: 'Not to be taken.' " Slip a pmckiide In your pocket nneit you bo home lo* Olvtthe Tonndtlcc* IhUwKolcMMihiiit- lasting snivel -for plfMorcaJlsBCat Nance seemed to sense a compH-'to its "management. In his peaceful • P^ace called Polntft de« Chasaes SauT- • ^^ ^^^^^j^ j^^ ^j^j^^^ ment to herself in his mumbled word.s. and friendly career, Gil had known ages du Prlntemps. In view ot the vast I " „ ^, .. ages For f-hc wagged her jilumed tail with but one hati-ed. ^ j expanse ot the lake. As It was Im- much vigor and wbinipi-re<l delighted- j "That had been for his hulking possible to cross the open lake iu I ly, far down in h?r thtoat. Her puppy, cousin, Lafe Hewitt. Wherefore, he| small canoeis the trip had to end here. Napoleon, came Iiimhrt ing up to her had avoided him for years, as far asi The return Journey, commeuciug on Priendii It you are willing to take i time to make them. I â€"Sympathy from the community If I you waste no pity on yourself. I the twenty-fourth day, -was made by way ot File-axe lake (lac le Meule) and i the Riviere du <"heffl which joins the j UtellyoarMtfaner «nokln^ or when Workdra4*- THa i for a romp. Disdaining him, Nance ho could in so small u neighborhood. | â- placed both _paws on iJil'a knees and Now he and his home were at the: tried to lick the man'.-. ..iorrowful face, merry of the enemy. Absent-mindedly, Gil patted her, his True, Gil could h.i>(e exerted hia' . „-,,,, ^, 1 eyts straying across the broad fields legal authority and cancelled the ar- |A«huapmuchaan 33 milts above Chau- I he bad riH-laim^d from worthlessness rangement made by his mother, tjius \ diere galls, then down the latter river 1 ; â€" ficldswhichnolongerknowhiRwi.se ridding himself of Lafe's presence to St. Fellcien. the starting point, j i and loving (>erHonal caie. To his mor- and domination. But that would have I which was reached on the thirty-fourth • , bid fancy, the farm was beginning to left the homestead without an efficient day. , ln.«f som-,' of the brightness and pros- active manager at the busiest time of; « j ^lill!''*,''*''^'' *"'' "'â- *'''â- ''•"' *"'â- '' *""' J«a';a"d at the most important period . Ald-Mlnard. Linlmen: brought It. of the farm 8 new lease of life. tSSUS NO. 26 â€" '23. Ten years earlier, Gil had been call- ed home from the agricultural rollege through which he was working his way. lli-i shiftless father had died, leaving to his son th-.' farm, and the care of his widowed mother. It had not be»n n promising heritage. The ! elder Tanner had scorned modern ' methods of farming and had sneered ; at Gil for inslRting on taking the , agricultural college course. "I suppoR? you'll coirte back here and try to teach me how to run the ' place," he had said to the boy \t\ fine I fearrasm. "Well, you needn't do It. Because (To be concluded.) NURSES Th< Tkmi* HottlUI tH iMiirtMn. i* •f«llltl«K vim Oilltnii in* AHIe* lli>«lt>)L lii<i YwH Cit» •t«l • nir«« »l>ri' CMrM It Triimilt !• (MM MKtti. Kxinl U> tc«air»4 ttfaeatlan. tnd tfttlravt •! kec9«lltfl fuiwi. ikii Hoitilai *n taouii ia« diki. I »vi tylltiB. VM »u»t>a r««»lvt untlsriht (.1 int tdlMl. • (•••IWf Utaiwn^' MU lri««lil' » .ilwntM It •n* H»« *m tcrk. Fm laiMar l<.t«lulM> ••»> >.> <*• aiitOTlntK^tiiL Investment in Canadian | Water-Powcr. | The total water-power developed In .Canada as at Ftbruary 1, 1^25. was! 'practically S.BTtvOOO horsepower, and | the capltiil iiivestel therein. Inc!u:lingl trnns mission and di.slribaiion. was! $766,758,000. In 1910 the inve.ttment | *tcnd at $U'1.000,(K)0, so that the aver- ' age annual Increase over the 14 years has been nearly $646,000 or 14 perl cent, per annum. , i SAW. (i wifh a SiMONDS' SAW Stays sharp longer. eiUONOS CANADA CAW CO. LTD. 1««0 »VMDA» »T. >... TONOMTO KIONTRCAt iVANCOUVr.l ST. JOHN. M.n.i K»,-.«.TW.»>-;W»JI.T»T»»5T.-^.^ - - <3l,- - â- ; Cord Wood Saw Users Write .-^imunds Canada Saw Co., LImilcJ. 1!.G0 Dundas St. West. Torr.nlo, Ontario, for prices on SImonds Special Circular Cord Wood Saw ' Take REAL Mustard to Tour Summer Home Be sure to include one or two tins of KEEN'S MUSTARD in the sup- plies you take to your Summer Cottage or * Camp. Only real Mustardâ€" /rea/i^y mixvii â€" can give jou th9t savoury zest and tanj in y c..ir food that you nppreciatc so niucH. And only real must ird â€" freshly mixed with cold wttn' • - furnishes real aid '.a. digestion. Make a note now to"remetn- ber Keen's Muatard" when you leave. KsenSs ffiistahi MO m Ji.>{J. MA^m^itm, «Ms«^cstloQ / ^i ~1 â- 6 6 /