The canadian magazine of politics, science, art and literature, November 1910-April 1911 . een postponed. About Brussels there was somethingtliat appealed to us. Perhaps it wasbecause we saw in it a miniatureParis, or it may have had somethingdistinctive, like the arm-rests in afirst-class railway carriage, which dis-tinguish it from the third-class. Bet-ter yet, it may have been the methodof rnuzzling dogs. Instead of put-ting a wire cage over their jaws, asthe style demands in Ontario, theyuse a leather bridle and hitch thedogs beneath carts, where they aretrained to haul. Who knows ? Orit m

The canadian magazine of politics, science, art and literature, November 1910-April 1911 . een postponed. About Brussels there was somethingtliat appealed to us. Perhaps it wasbecause we saw in it a miniatureParis, or it may have had somethingdistinctive, like the arm-rests in afirst-class railway carriage, which dis-tinguish it from the third-class. Bet-ter yet, it may have been the methodof rnuzzling dogs. Instead of put-ting a wire cage over their jaws, asthe style demands in Ontario, theyuse a leather bridle and hitch thedogs beneath carts, where they aretrained to haul. Who knows ? Orit m Stock Photo
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The Reading Room / Alamy Stock Photo

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2AX6JD9

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1799 x 1389 px | 30.5 x 23.5 cm | 12 x 9.3 inches | 150dpi

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The canadian magazine of politics, science, art and literature, November 1910-April 1911 . een postponed. About Brussels there was somethingtliat appealed to us. Perhaps it wasbecause we saw in it a miniatureParis, or it may have had somethingdistinctive, like the arm-rests in afirst-class railway carriage, which dis-tinguish it from the third-class. Bet-ter yet, it may have been the methodof rnuzzling dogs. Instead of put-ting a wire cage over their jaws, asthe style demands in Ontario, theyuse a leather bridle and hitch thedogs beneath carts, where they aretrained to haul. Who knows ? Orit may have been the fine, manly ap-pearance of the mounted ofi&cers andcivilians we passed in the park at theoutset of a drive to the plain of Wat-erloo. ]Iost of us had heard rumoursof a decisive battle having beenfought there, but somehow it hadnot occurred to us that the placewould be growing grain and pasturingcattle and supporting other foi-ms ofhusbandry; and were it not for ahuge mound of earth that serves as asupport for a monument and as aneminence comniandinsr a ^iew of the. K.NTKltlNi; THE ClUKCll AT ETON