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Newspaper Page Text
4 1 &' 2 4t 1 -o,i 1 *Vf' *^1* |W£S^ T,p?* DEER FOR BRITISH COLUMBIA Uw to B* Brought Prom English Estate and Turned LOOM In the Rockies. After completing, a hunting tour vhlch occupied the greater part of .wo yean and which has been con lucted In the wllda of three contln mta, C. XL Lucas, an English hunter ind naturalist who Is visiting Van* sourer, will make arrangements be lor* his departure with the British Columbia government" and game gardens of the province for the accom nodatlon of several'hundred red deer phlch will be brought from his father's estate at Warnham, Surfer, land, early in September next ear. These animals have been given to the government of the province by C. H. Lucas, Sr.. the Intention being to turn them loose in the wilds of the Rockies and allow them to Increase sntil their numbers warrant the pass lug of a game ordinance allowing ttta be shot in limited numbers. Mr. Lucaa said that it was originally itended to send the deer out this fear, but nnhappily the outbreak of Boot and mouth disease among Eng lish cattle had prevented the export* Ion of any live stock from the old coun« nr. Consequently the animals wen Stained. About fifteen years ago his ither had made a similar gift to the government of New Zealand and since that time they have multiplied so qapldly that they were now shot every the Orient wine and water are still rried and stored in bags made of usually goatskin with .the hair mv During -a recent visit to the Wanda he had been able to secure ftrar magnificent specimens. WADE USE OF NATURE'S GIFTS Some of the Make-Shifts Which Have to Be Employed In Varloua Parts of the £arth. W In is ha so an W»di of cheap palls, cans, boxes and aptables of ail sorts ready to our id that it is hard to realise what traits the people in cruder lands are lit to for such things. In a large part I Have Just Received A CARLOAD OF SM0KELE55 COAL BRIQUETS And would like to sell you a trial order. Remember that I always carry a full line of nut and stove sizes in hard coal, Pocahontas coal and West Virginia splint and the best grade of soft coal and wood. H. M. Christenson Phone 111L1 Yard 314 3rd Street 5 per cent Paid on All Time Deposits Cft X- I -*p' :\-fr OF WAHPETON, N. D. W. & side inside, Just as in Bible days. Even now the same rule applies against 'putting new wine into old bottles," for the dampness soon rote the leather and makes it weak. 1 In Asia and (iirica bamboo Jolnta are utilized for making receptactes in great variety. The bamboo in favored places grows to a diameter of six Inches or more and a "Joint" from a foot to two feet or more long, makes an ideal bottle or Jug, for nature pro* vides it with a partition at each Joint which makes it water tight Bamboo is very light and very strong.—The Pathfinder. Tennyson and Tobacco, Tennyson's devotion to hia pipe Is well known, but the following story of it will probably be fresh to most readers. A friend had driven him from Plymouth to visit an old lady who stood in no awe of the poet The visitors were invited to remain for the night, but on Mr. TenAyson's stipulating that tf he did he should be allowed to smoke in his bedroom the old lady bridled up That she could not allow. Bedroom smoking was not only objectionable but dangerous, and for no one would she relax her prohibition rule. Mr Tennyson prov* ing equally obdurate the hostess's ?wn carriage was ordered out and he was sent in it back to his hotel at Ply mouth, whence, however, he returned the next morning to breakfast—From Mrs. Walford's Reoollectlons. Tfelk In The fearful ones may take ce more. The telephone la not leadly menace some of its pat think. There are women who will use the reoeiver of a telephone out wiping out the mouthpleoa with disinfectant, so sure are they thai la a transmitter of Now an eminent bacteriologist, Dr, Harold ppltts of London, haa mad extensive experiments and declare* the telehpone cannot spread Infeo Lion, public opinion to the oontrary. Therefore, ye fearful ones, wipe oul rour mouthpiece it you think 11 daintier, but talk In peace you __ J. PATT£RSOLV. Pres. W.F.ECKES, Cashier. P. A.PESCHEL, A. Cashier ,"iS 1 cr\ -sruV+'A .^•S*^-^,',''*''/• ,' '-"v win not catch tuberculosis or other dread llseases from your predecessor at tlu "phone." ,v -n^n 'i -~i:ffh 'J K&'y'i jfM-J /, ,. .' A •. Vi -V. J5 i' •-.•?- v.,,,^.,,^^ X. i^r, *^i!" 'j^s-s.M £10&"&r*» "fc&Vfe tfS More land and. Then why not ~L rtL,, It is a question that is worth over, one that is of vital inportance to vou and your family. Drudgery on a farm! That's one great, big, sensible reason why you should have a car. Long hours, hard work, worry and little or no re laxation---what kind of a life is that? Can you see anything cheerful about it? And what do you get out of it all? A place to sleep—your meals—some lawj and some money—and work, Work, WORK! Your wife and children get the same-and don't forget the Work. Just because certain people live and work on farms, they don't forfeit their rights as humans. They have within them the ability selves, to have some relaxation. You get a little money ahead and then—"let's get that northeast forty from Jones." mote work. Sensible, isn't it? Possibly so. But the life of the average former isn't so sensible. Merely because of work, hard work, with no let-up, no change, no chance to mingle with others. Such surroundings, such a viewpoint, leave their mark on the best disposition in the world. We believe in work, but there is an extreme be yond which any man or worttaft is fixffish'Kfgd: You farmers like the rest of us, live lxrfonce. live! ", Why not shake off the chains of drudgery and enjoy a certain amount of well-earned recreation? Your family-you, yourself—can still enjoy themselves you all haven't gotten by the time when a good time, recreation, change of scene can be appreciated. A good automobile will let you do this. Besides the many times it saves you money, it opens up to you all a new world—a worla of sociability, of visiting, if mingling with your neighbors and friends, of relaxa tion ana enjoyment. We venture the opinion that half the farmers who say they cannot afford a car, can afford it if they real ly wanted it. A Mitehell car comes to you frdin along line of good breeding. Mltchdl wa^rns for 78 yews, won the confidence of American farmers. They have that: confidence still, Mitchell cars enjoy this same confidence, because they deserve it. Mitchell cars —they cost $1500, $1850 and $2500, according to size and power—sustain this reputation. vi You farmers who have lots of work, some money and but one life, had better see a Mitchell car. Minneapolis z. fp *j.*y KW i--sx, »r "t, v» iE*i ?*v.r •».-. Lc-f-rs-, V- thinking to play, to enjoy them •S- $ vi j, rv*4.v -'(.Af 7r- ?£rr **v l\ f\ 4 ,1 p- v?,