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HOME PAGE ay, June &, 1919 ; WE Evening cclarl The Men Who Tooklinnzct Vo : - Belleau Wood Next Year! Srerennoaen rors By Rev. Thomas B. Gregory Coprright, 1819, by The Pres Publishing Co, (The New Tork Brening World), "Taiss tor meu ive sat a elanon” us i wor, satactry potare ail By Maurice Retten| T he Evening World : —<—$———Kiddie Klub Korner Conducted by Eleanor Schores~ ~ ‘Coprrignt, 1919, by The Press Pubitshing Co. (The New York Bvenins World). ible for me to give “at a glance,” as it were, # satisfactory picture of thé kind of men the young Americans were who, at the immortal Bellean Wood, stopped the victorious German advance on Paris. Bvery true American is immensely proud of the boys who threw the “monkey wrench” into the big German machine at the Bois de Bellesu; but not every one is able to make @ correct mental photograph of those incomparable soldiers. : ‘Who were they, those young chaps who, a year ago right about now, made such glorious history over in Northern France? ‘Well, thanks to Gen. Catlin’s little book, “With the Help of God and & few Marines,” we know just how to answer the interesting question. Says the General: “If we had had time ahd opportunity to pick our . men individually from the whole of the United States I doubt whether we should have done much better. ‘They were as fine a brinch of upstanding American athletes as you would care to meet, and they had brains as well as brawn.” Bixty per cent. of those now tmmortal Marines were college men. Two- thirds of one entire company came straight from the University of Minne- sota. The regiment represented the very best blood, brains and culture of America, from North, South, East and West. In the light of this information regarding the Marines, their exploits, Billie in the Wildwood By Uncle Bill Bob Bumblebee’s Band. 66[QU%-Z-Z, boom-m-m, soom,) see ‘the pollen pantaloons?” and he commander well says, “will seem less unbelievable.” fsoom!” ducked his head deep into: the fowaim, athe can easily imagine that commander’s pride in his boys while he Res Billy Boy ducked his head | for honey and stuck his two bind lagi wrote: “The Turk will fight like a fiend; the Moro's trade is slaying; it squinted his eyes hard. ap high to show the atest page i “Zoom, zoom,” said Bob Bumblebee, | yellow pollen. ow “you needn't be scared. I never sting “What are they for?” aslpd Bully.” any one unless he pinches me, or| “My goodness,” Bumble bag wd . was Furry Wuzzy who broke the British Square; the Boche will move im mass formation into the face of death like a ferry boat entering its slip; but when the final show-down comes, when the last ounce of strength tries to rob my comb.” “how awfully ignorant these a @nd nerve is called for, when mind and hand most act together like light- Billy opened hia eyes again. ‘There|be That,” he said, poten gear Be ming, I will take my, chances with a free-born American with a trained Mr. ombletoe spd birne.. 66. ied Line, >. $7, eke bee Deane Saas . mind.” friends were busy digging deep into | babloe.” 1 ase 7 Re some pink wild flowers. Now a| “Make honey?” oeiaa! a ‘The fact must not be overlooked that the Marines, up to the day on which they had to face the best of the disciplined soldiers of Germany, had never been in a battle. They were absolutely unused to war, and yet, Dumblebee is quite a gay little fellow | “Why, of course we do, We getoo with bis black and yellow suit and | honey from the deep cups where those his boom that is @ lot bigger than | fussy little honey bees can't reach iL” green as they were in the actual experience of battle, they beat the best ‘he ts, “{ Nike honey,” Billy said _ 4 of the Katser’s veterans, and did {t alone, unsupported by any outside help. “Well,” said Bity, hitching @ Uttte cian Vieould give you ‘wistfully, + Wy Between Paris and the onrushing Germans was nothing but the further away, “who are yout i a ag in aa ie b Marines in Belleau Wood, young fellows who, with such awfal respons!- oe stopped Juni Tong enough | pabice,” ‘ Loe ne resting upon them, were thus having their FIRST erience on my “Why, where on earth have ah,” amsented Billy, a D e pettiedalal et you lived that you don't know me? |chap’ M™hqiey LOU,omething, Miele To prove that that experience was no child's play we have but to ere bios i NEXT "YEAR . hadhaesd Series sence eo Save th keene. re, clover because teeta a recall the statement from Gen. Catlin, that ont of the 8,000 Marines who Ma Nprtnepe THE GARAGE “The boom of the bumblebees’ horn. | #22, aoom. No heuoy bee eves Ete be from first to last took part in thg struggle for Belleau Wood, 6,200 were ON D> ON TOP oF THe “Pollen pantalooned from the fields | GoP.,°f honey from @ pretty red ‘4 hit by ballet or shell fragment, and that half of the men and officers who . House of corn,” quoted Billy, remembering ty not = a i were not killed were at one time or another rey out of action, one of the rhymes from his Mother i eor- ? orfous* Americans, who had create their tactics Moon rhyme book. I ‘the : ‘These si vane bet “Dxactly,” grinned Bumblebee. ined away? ‘hey fought, had minds and hands that were able to “act together like ightning.” They proved to’ Generalissimo Foch that the German line ‘could be broken, and joining him in the great counter offensive they stood by him to the last step in the grim push to victory! i “Now you remember me. Want to My Dearest Cousins: much space this ‘would take? Tt °™ would I always try with all my might to| sand lines if we (ue cgnared thou = o everything you ask of me. Butleach line, it bt ae sometimes you ask too much, A day} hundred bolumne oF pnd oleae - of 80 ago one of our Cousins asked/ Six hundred columns equal seventy?” smothing that yee quite pte jad ful pages. Sevunty-five n oug! eure in make verage. rm S did not know it at the time. he will /Bewapapers, kris he realize how very unreasoi je it wag it I thems when he has read thia letter. The Evening World to wae ‘names This was the request: Will you of all our klubmates. Think of iti plerze pybiien the names of all tae Without news, or advertising or head. Glimpses Into New York Shops \ yrsrTORS coming to town are|the long popular sweater. They Lave often at @ lose what to buy in collars of Angora in contrasting colors the New York shops for the}or fur. They are being shown in all Dome folks. In the jowelry depart- the brillant sport shades. .'Onb 7 ment are those Spanish combs which that is much admired ig cw ~ are going to have a strong revival. A-quarter length cape ! eter frandsome one will cost you only $1.49, pockets. It is in rose colof atid has a or $193. And then there are those | deep nutria collar, bend girdles which ts a decidedly new taf. These are made up of large, bright colored beads attached to silk | cord in matching or contrasting | shades, They. look very pretty around the waist and banging at the wides tn two long ends. Among them are the present popular red and then there is the fashionable jade color. Hi > . . a Ses —— ee ree take six edi names = > —_—— rite - of all our Kiddie kaw hae! , I, too, wish that all our klubmates* } - names might be published, and in large = type, at that. Every member of out by JAMES OtiveR CuRWOOD: : ~ would fill ‘+ 4 them trom Cousin Willner Inglis eat iddie Klub members in the paper? jn, wit Kiddie, Kiddie! Do you know how Kio Bane nites nate bn: klub’ would swell with pride ta 5 how many newspapers our names ™ & a. —_ mouth full of berries, he was bowled smiffed the air of frosty mornings, and With the day he went to the slit in siinct sent him quickly into deeper | Cousin Edithe C Story of the Woods i = ae onklin, who were our . One over like an overfilled bag under tne sovked their traps in fish-oll and the face of the rock, and in his as- Umber, Here he crawled in first two memb ¢ ‘Thove in navy blue ope ress A » in Which the force of Neewa's charge. So complete beaver-grease, and made their moc- tonishment he made no sound, but windfall of tangled trunks and tree- | present day—-over one uneree thoes pe olar wiN buy any one em, Adventures of aP d B A Cc b was his discomfiture for the moment casins, and mended snow-shoe and stared forth upon a world that was tops, and during the three days he | sand in all, If you will start and ‘ i other exquisite gift would be one of up and a bear Uu that Miki, watching the affair with a sledge, for the cry of the loon said no longer the world he had left last aia not move. Ge day | £2,204Rt UD to one hundred ‘nomad, he t scarfs that have . yearning interest, could not keep back that winter was creoping down out night. Everywhere it was white—a n the morning of the fourth day | perhal 1 D C2 aad hg ante Page Are Entwined About the Romance Anvoncited ‘yap of approbation. Buc of the North, And the awafups grew daszling, eye-biinding white, ‘The sun he came out trom/under the wind-| what n greet nod atin ae Oe 1 Just come out. y f M : ; fore Pete could understand what had silent. The cow moose no longer had risen, It shot a thousand flash- |, his ribs were showing and there | dear Cousins we Kiddie Klub mem. ** s prevailing colors and have striped a an and a Beautiful Girl happened, and while the berries weré mooed to her young. In place of it, ing shafts of radiant light into Miki's Was @ reddish film over his eyes. bers have. " joee r onizing shades or —— ——— — — = still oozing from his mouth, Neewa from the open plain and “burn” rose eyes. So far as his vision could reach | Cold and hungry, thinned by his * ‘ % ends either in harm p Ce Elean: lighter tones, howe in overseas blue Gherstak Hit: Wf tasibaadon, Hens a ts, * was at his throat—and the fym began. the defiant challenge of bull to bull bd bere was C4 it sovered h iyo * fore, Sod inate fasting, and with ousin or. a xg + Page In another ingtant Miki had Pete and the deadly clash of horn against robe of diamonds. rom rock an last hopa of comradeship cirentle ‘ 4 are popular as are also the rose. ‘They SYNOPSIS OF PRECKVING CHAPTERS, by the car, It was a grim and terri- horn under the stars of night, The tree and shrub blazed the fire of the tered by the “pitiless mountal of] JUNE RI are $10. One if a rich dark blue shade | guy Afer Miling 4 Wack bear, Challoner, w new anpelnied ‘actor of the Mudson Bay Consany, cap. lo hold. Old” Soominitik himself wolf no longer howled. to Shear his #Un; it quivered In the tree tops, bent snow, Miki turned back over his trail. agree i ANSWER) ow : bas several stripes of red and is $12.49, Sears, tales, we rtp, Wit Miki and Neewa togeier and pulling then 1 ne tow Ske would have bawled lustily in the voice. In travel af padded feet theae low with their burden of snow; it was There was nothing left for him now Ten prises of f * as ; Je in monotones | together to “ind food, end’ ruu’tuts s weab beste where. thay 't ‘aching shore "they "aart out circumstances. Pete raised his voice came to be a slinking, hunting cau- like a #ea in the valley, @o vivid that but the old windfall, and his heart our ‘Theitt at , ‘The cerise and purple | fetwat® ‘hat"niaht ‘Keewn, Siews'in two ‘the ‘ons thai"tiss tnan® wecstiag Hut manage, 2.08," In a howl of agony. He forgot every- tion, In all the forest world blood {he unfrozen stream running through Was no longer the heart of the joyous valent of $1) will bo award- 5 4 with wide striped ends are beautiful. Features ues remain together pases until (hey rach the middle of summer, when we thing but the terror and the was running red again. the heart of it was black. Never had comrade d brother of Neewa, the of e TEN Kiddie > fiven over to te wild | pain of this new something that ‘And then—November. Miki soen a day 90 magnificent. Never feet were sore and bleed- Seqnreny one as to fifteen inetusive, “" a For along time the black vell has cn the 8h AOS ei eaters in Nementalens thet fine, davietan ta aw oe en cs k panded new, saltewer . the vient wale ¢ ontly | #wars, pig's: hat pin g hela full sway. Occasionally one APTER VL the Shamattawa country, Big 8% Doured in an unbroken spaam of At ‘first he thought. all the winged bad bis blood burned with a wilder white in their pale fire; and it wis), The riddiee and their answers mut" would venture to wear brown or (Contiaued.) bintoat to the bursting point ith lus. 0Und from hie throat. Neewa knew things in the world were shodding exultation, cold—terribly cold, Tho trees began | be went at the same time and in the ~ taupe, or even navy blue, but now | WN this world Neewa and Miki cious juice, they ung in glusters ao that Miki was in action. thik Walia fohtnate, “Then he oe pee ammuned and ran back to Neewa, to map. Now and ‘then there came same envelope. ese i Sea . F these are all fashionable and sev~ found a vast and unonding con- thick that Neewa could gather them Sivan tiareern waiaa cae bd oe ine ene 1e% a Mae bins and gave hie comrade a, nuage with snapped NM the heart of timber It AGE, ADDRESS and CERTIFICA’ 4 eral new shades have been added this tentment. They lay, on this Au- by the mouthful, Nothing in all the Second too soon, Down the couler, fumhinn’ liken now “hind ot are i# Hose. Neewa grunted sleopily, wag thirty degrees below xeru. And |NUMBER. ve He stretched himself, raised his head it was growing colder. With the| | Address .ousin Eleanor, Evening: ad eeason, These are copper, bronze Sust afternoon, on a sun-bathed Miidernose is quite so good as one cf charging like @ mad bull, camo Pete's through his body; a wild and thrill- Ls for an Instant, and then curied him- windfall as his ofly. inspiration | World Kiddie Ktub, No, 63 Park Row, these dead-ripe black currants, and Mother. - | Shelf of rock that overlooked a won- in; joy-—th Ttati that 1 ‘and benna, and these veilings are re- | 8! this coulee wherein they grew 89 Mi not . ing joy je exul jon. at leaps seit into a ball again, Vainly Miki Miki drove himself on, Never had he| New York City, ceiving ready acceptance, derful valley, Neewa, stuffed with lus- richly Neewa had preempted as his nite Qitick Fiyls Bighy onan’ roe voing of the wolf when protested that it was day, and time tested his stregeth or his endurance — ral — cious blueberries, was asleep. Miki's one perneme) property, Miki, too, had currant thicket tearing down the With jc Jeomiape efrect was ditrer- *OF them to be moving. Neewa made ed Hom now, Older dogs |MAY CONTEST AWARD WINNER, «© (Tho shops are showing extensive | cyes were only partly closed as he \arned to eat the cufranta: eo to the litte gulch after Neowa. They came ont—no different that even Miki felt Noyranponae, and after a while Miki would fallen in the trail or) “What! Would Do if | Were Riek” om a Mines ‘of batiste lingerie, Even the | looked down into the soft haze of the such currents as those one cant eat out on the plain together, and for ® ine opprossion of lt, and waited eechel bank Okan Perce ie hak nt shelter or rest. But) tr would buy a Liberty Bond, some ab ‘ exclusive models are of this delicate | valley, Up to him came the rippling even when one 1s already full. Be- their fight long enousls to look back, Y2suely and anxiously for what Was following him. Thon, disappointed, giant Mackenzie hound father, and | Art Stamps. a new dress and new fr i . I hoes. 1 would go to New York 4 it bids fair to super- | Music of the stream runping between sides, the coulee was fruitful for Miki When they did the to come, And then, on this day of he went out into the snow. For an he would have continued ti he | * mo to New York. ¢ bee LI atk garments that became [thé Fock and over the pebbly bars be- in other ways. There were many away, They sat aoa mena. Mex: the first snow, he saw his comrade hour he did not move farther than triumphed—or dieds Would give some ot my money to the wede ents that became |iow, and with it the soft and languor- young partridges and rabbits In It— wa'er'red tongue was ‘hanging out im %©, © stTango and ‘unaocountable ton fect away from the den. ‘Three "But a strange thing happened. He| POOF heople. I would give some of so popular when the cost of cotton! ous’ drone of tho valley itself, He “fool hens" of tender flesh and de- his exhaustion, ‘He wae seratchea thing. He began to eat things that times ho returned to Neewa and had traveled twenty miles, to the| iy ,clothes to the poor children. ge napped uneasily for half an hour,and liclous favor which he caught quite and bleeding; loose fait hung ail oves he hud never touched us food before. urged him to Ket up and come out ridge and fifteen of the twenty miles| LY SDA BOHLER, aged seven years, pale g then his eyes opened and he was wide easily, and any number of gophers him. As he looked’ ar Mikiethere He lapped up soft pine needles, and where it was light. In that far cor- hack, when a shelf of snow gave way | ve" York City. J The sodden hot wave has created |4wake. Ho took w sharp look over and squirrels. was something in the dolorous ex. swallowed them, He ate of the dry, ner of the cavern It was dark, and under his feet and he was pitched ‘ike aclowen Those | {8° Valley. Then ho looked at Neowa, ‘To-day they had scarcely taken pression of Neewa's face which was PUlpy substance of rotted logs, And it was as if he were trying to tell suddenly downward. When he xath- MAY CONTEST HONORABLE demand for silk 5 who, fat and lazy, would havo slept thelr first mouthful of the big Juicy a confession of the fact that he rcaj- ‘ben he went into # great cleft Neewa that he. was a dunce to lle cred his dused wits and stood up on MENTIONS. ‘With the colored bands across the|untii dark, It was always Miki who currants when an unmistakable sound ized Pete had licked him. broken into the heart of a rocky there atill thinking it was night when hiy half frozen legs he found himself (Conetuded,) wrist are having @ ready sale, The|Kept him on the move. And now camo to them. Unmistakable _ be- ridge, and found at last the thing for the sun was up outside, But he in a curious place. He had rolled Twelve-Y Miki barked at him gruffly two oF cause each recognized instantly what which he had been seeking. It was failed. Neewa was in the edge of his , r vam-shaped ‘welve-Year Gousing. » ‘ gray gloves with black bands ®re|iircy times, and nipped at one of it meant, It was the tearing down of CHAPTER VIL Nolet od mpruce BOUEhE ai icia! | Anna Tower, Frank MoCornell, Ruth a &@ cavern—doep, and dark, and warm. Long Sleep—the beginning of Uske- shelter of spruce boughs ani sticks, Attractive, as are also the black With |iis cars, currant bushes twenty or thifty yards FTER the fight in the coulee Nature works in strange ways, Bhs POW-a-mew, the dreamland of the and strong in Rishop, Marion Kubn, Jacob Mesosr, his nostrils was the | Midred Aron ite and vice versa, “Wake up!” he might have said. higher up the coulee. Some robber there was no longer a thought gives to the birds of the air eyes bears t ound ¢ 4 Florence Mime, " mreitt af “What's the sense of sleeping on & had invaded their treasure house, and On the pert ot) Neeta wad which Wen may Bever have, and ave _Neewa did not know when Miki nit 'more they mr foot ome Tid an] | Pearl Sutten, Ruth Welders: Le : Bt $e do not Ike the appenrance |day lke thie? Let's go Gown slong instantly Mik bared Bis faage walle Miki of returning to the Gar- #veA to the beaata of the earth an in- Went away from the den for the last of his none, It was a chunk of frozen Thirteen- Year Cousin, ~ i - _ | the creek and hunt something.” eewa wri. up his nose in an * stinct which men mi ow, time, And ye may be that even om Henrietta of rubber heels why not wear the In- |" Noowa roused himself, stretched ominous snarl. Soft-footed they ad- dem of Eden, in which the black cur- jror Neewa had come ane dane cd in his slumber the Beneficent Spirit reves leery Peper fhe manne: | Abraham epg tg ey - : aide rubber heels? ‘They givo the /nis fat body and yawned, Sleepily vanced toward the sound until they rant® grew #0 lusclously, From the first Long Sleep in the place of his Ay have whispered that Miki was of ite presence he «awed at it raven-|Milton Rich, May Larsen, es te game comfort and need merely be| his little eyes took in the valley, came to the edge of a small open Pt is tall to the end of his nose birth—tho cavern in which Noomak, his £008, for there were restlessness and ously. Only Jacques Le Beau, who|Fest, Nettie Starinskt, of slipped into place inside the hoa A| Miki got up and gave the low and space which was as flat as a tabfe. = adventurer, and like the mother, had brought him into the “#aulet In Neewa's dreamland for jived eight or ten miles to the east, Fourteen-Year Cousi al ry alr, anxious whine which always told his In the centre of this space was a nomadic rovers of old ‘he was baD- word, many days thereafter. could have explained the aituation.}| Anna R . rage | quarter will buy a pair. companion that he wanted to be on chump of currant bushes not more Plest whem on the move His okt bed was sti there, the wal- _"B@ quiet—and sleep!” the Spirit Miki had rolled into one of his trap. | Schmeab tors Oana ee Dover us om the move, Neewa responded, and than a yard in girth, and black with — Through six glorious and sun-filled jow in the woft sand, the blanket of MAY have whispered, “The Winter 1s houses, and it was the bait he was sohinlat ya Cin He phy ae, ‘The window boxes of wicker with|they began making their way down fruit; and squatted on his haunches Weeks of late summer and early A long. The rivers are black and chill, eating. Aptaker, James Wynm the removable inside metal box are| the green slope into the rich bot- there, gathering the laden bushes In autumn—until the middle of Beptem- Nelr Noosik had shed; but the smell the iakes are covered with floors ot ““There was not much of it, but it | °u# Welnwurm, . . Quite decorative, They come in brown | tom, between the two ridges, te hia arma, was # youne, black bear pce Pp soneye an hore be was bere’ Weewe lap done, Oh and the Waterfalls are frozen like fired Miki's blood with new life. Fifteen-Year Cousins, ‘ 4 ey were now almost six mont about r six 7 than Neewa. r + great white gian! cop! For Miki There ¥ ‘ : i 7 F and green tones, Those with side| of age, and in the matter of size had In that moment of consternation Ward the sotting sun, the country of And for the last time he grunted softly must go his way, just as the waters sed we beeen noite Int teatekew: (mater Dorothy eon et Tae handles are $4.29 and the plain vari-| nearly ceased to be a cub and a and rage Neewa did not take size Jackson's Knee, of the Touchwood {9 MIMI. | It was 4s if he felt upon bim of the streams must go thelr way tO Aftee A little his teeth atruck some- \Bubcck, Leola Chan, i. ety are $3.65. pup, They were almost dog and into consideration. He wag much in 2nd the Clearwater, and God's Lake. ee ot 8 nd, gentle but inev- the sea For he is Dog. And you thime hard and cold. It was wtelee . Shan, escheat & bear, Miki's angular legs were the frame of mind of a man returning 1” this country they saw many things, itable, which he could no longer refurs gre Bear, Sleep!" a fisher trap. Ho dragged it up from Ax ectaees sandal 4 to | xetting their shape; hie chest had home to discover his domicile, and all 1t Was region a hundred miles t» obey, aud to, Mik! was suying, for enema Under a foot of snow, and ‘with it}, HOW TO JOIN THE KLUB AN attractive in voile! filed out; his neck had grown until it contained, in full possession of an- Square which the handiwork of Na- the last time; “Good night! CHAPTER VIII. came a huge rabbit, The snow had | OBT, bd has a deep tuck headed by four| it no longer seemed too small for his other. At the same time here was his ture had made into a veritable king- e e N MANY years there had not been #0 protected the rubbit that, althou, h| ‘AIN YOUR PIN, spaced ‘hemstitchings. Worn with a| big head and jaws, and his body had ambition easily to be achieved—his dom of the wild. That night the pipoo kestin—the first beavers! Gaye dead, it war hot frome | dior oh hade, increased in girth and length until ambition to lick the daylight out of a Then Neewa turned back to the east, storin of winter-—came like an ava- suoh a storm tn all the North~- ie, Mot wari the Pt aoe i louse in a matching shade, you have| ne was twice a8 big a3 most ordinary member of his own kind. Miki seemed drawn by the instinct of his fore- lanche from out of t b land ag that which followed Was gone did Miki's feast end. He h @ charming dress. ‘The skirt sella at| dogs of his age. to sense this fact. Under ortinary fathers; back toward the country of it came @ wind that swiftly in the trail of the frst even devoured the head. Then he} ron s yy! 9% A nice line of white wagh| Neewa had lost his round, ball- conditions he would have lod in the Noozak, bis mother, and of Soomin- ing of a thousand bulla, and over ell snows that had driven Neewa into went on to the windfall, and in his|} Sexe A Bs Gabardine skirts ave only $298 and| ke eubbishness, though he @illl be. fray, and before Neowa had fairly got Itik, his father; and Miki followed. the land of the wild there was nothing his den—the late November storm of warm nest slept until ancthor day, | whieh oo, a ‘e trayed far more than Miki the fact started, would have been at the im- The nights grew more chill. The that moved. Even in the depth of the that year which will long be remem- That day Jacques Le Reau—whom | Ade aN vee ‘Will give excellent service. that he was not many months lost pudent interloper’s throat. But now stars seemed farther away, and no cavern Miki heard the beat and tl 0 from his mother, Something held him back, and it wes longer was tho forest moon red like wail of it and tho swishing of the Your), the year‘ ol creat Sd sudden (the One mith ‘an Evil, Hew ei ; S Tanaea. Capes have invaded the knit goods| , A duarter of a mile along the foot Neewa who first shot out—like a blood. The re the loon had a “like snow beyond the on cold, of starvation and of over his rebuilt * . devariaerit, Beautitul capes ana! of the ridge, tes stony coniee piaek kag _squarety, th ie mcetind atte a Sy & pote, of tries which they had comme, aad ning of snow. A ‘ leew: in brush wool promise to rival grew the finest wild currants’ in ail Peet surprise, with hie tapeen the fopent "they had found shsltan, wef a theo