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ing up Montreal. "Hullo, Montreal! Is that Montreal? Well, say, I've just received an offer here for two whisky and sodas at sixty cents, shall I close with it? All right, gentlemen, Montreal has effected the sale. There you are." "Dreadful, isn't it?" said Mr. Narrowpath. "The sunken, depraved condition of your City of Montreal; actually _selling_ whisky. Deplorable!" and with that he buried his face in the bubbles of the whisky and soda. "Mr. Narrowpath," I said, "would you mind telling me something? I fear I am a little confused, after what I have seen here, as to what your new legislation has been. You have not then, I understand, prohibited the making of whisky?" "Oh, no, we see no harm in that." "Nor the sale of it?" "Certainly not," said Mr. Narrowpath, "not if sold _properly_." "Nor the drinking of it?" "Oh, no, that least of all. We attach no harm whatever, under our law, to the mere drinking of whisky." "Would you tell me then," I asked, "since you have not forbidden the making, nor the selling, nor the buying, nor the drinking of whisky, just what it is that you have prohibited? What is the difference between Montreal and Toronto?" Mr. Narrowpath put down his glass on the "desk" in front of him. He gazed at me with open-mouthed astonishment. "Toronto?" he gasped. "Montreal and Toronto! The difference between Montreal and Toronto! My dear sir--Toronto--Toronto--" I stood waiting for him to explain. But as I did so I seemed to become aware that a voice, not Mr. Narrowpath's but a voice close at my ear, was repeating "Toronto--Toronto--Toronto--" I sat up with a start--still in my berth in the Pullman car--with the voice of the porter calling through the curtains "Toronto! Toronto!" So! It had only been a dream. I pulled up the blind and looked out of the window and there was the good old city, with the bright sun sparkling on its church spires and on the bay spread out at its feet. It looked quite unchanged: just the same pleasant old place, as cheerful, as self-conceited, as kindly, as hospitable, as quarrelsome, as wholesome, as moral and as loyal and as disagreeable as it always was. "Porter," I said, "is it true that there is prohibition here now?" The porter shook his head. "I ain't heard of it," he said. XVIII. Merry Christmas "My Dear Young Friend," said Father Time, as he laid his hand gently upon my shoulder, "you are entirely wrong." Then I looked up o
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