HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1932-06-02, Page 6,t
Re Largest Stock in. Ca/Mtda'•?nd tlMer !Boat. Seieotbon
Rose Bushes, F towating •Shl bs, !ergreei
lunbing Vines, Gladiolus.Bulbs,, Boxwo s.
E.verYthlng. to Eeautify Your ssaT ".—Sole _Now ,,Gong - on
D.
• ULOOR $T. Ctolr i0
'TORONTO
Reminiscences
Gertrude. Atherton tells aa amusing
story about her first meeting with
Joaquin Miller;. the poet of •the Sierras
—who used to dress the part. •
"It helps sell the poems; ,boys!'. he
once confided. to friends at'•the Savage
a ed 4a
bee he. t
n n where „Created Club in Lo .
do
•sensation by .his picturesque appear-
ince,""arid;"`h:e--•added; t'itatiekles.••¢the,
duchesses.'• ' • • - '
This •in reference to tlao to th,hit he had .
made''in Londe a .drawing rooms..'•
_ „ Te •get ori with Mrs Atherton's ex
perience--related ' in •herreminiscen
tea "Adventures of a: Novelist ' One
• day, Milier called cat her' hi Sea Flan..
cisco.' '' , e
"He wore, a black broadcloth ' suit,
• the trouserstucked into..boots-with
high '-eels!-that, reached '•almost '-.to.
;the waist,' she recalls. "Hie shirt had
• .nocoilar 'but' 'his neck'was encircled,
bv• a--lace.-scarf -•On-has=head-.was -a
eoioibrero, which he removed with' a
'_sw.eeping_baw:aa...i entered,_and 1 saw
:that his long hair; touching.'his should=
era, was gray on toe,: and ended, in a
series of stifi'`'rat tails' thatt .were dyed
a .bright orange."
• i ate_, ,,,,.. ,� .-.___
The:pact; strtl.:, an attitude said
not:,a, woi d but ,gazed„at Mrs:' Atherton.
he .told. him how . glad she was to
• ` meet him. •Stil1 be: uttered not a• word;
She rattled en; growing disconcerted
by hie ' persistent ' silence and his.
:"round unwinking stare.” .Finally, she
.said: tartly; a' '
."Have you; lost your voice? Suppose
you.• say something for a' change."
fetched' a sigh the: might have
come from,' the soles of his -boots."
• chuckles Mrs. Atherton "and then, his
voice rumbled forth heavy. laden with
ed. �_ - --
-•- trig y
'"'What a pity!;' lie groaned What
a pityw:e ate both •blondes'.;"
Five'mfautes. later he 'shot outwith
-
• ' out a word Of farewell:.
' •
•
Joaquin Miller was notthe only+alter-
aryl%nreduced-to•-siience-on Meeting
Gertrude. Atherton. Later at a"'recep-:
!%n „ixn.•. London, she met `Thomas.
"the exciting subject of Cable • cars is
San .Francisco, -
o• •: •* •
Later• still, Mrs. Atherton met Sur:
gent, the portrait painter., at luncheon
at the Duchess of Marlborough's,
•
y: HA, ,r ,149•$4' IfAIL,Er.
3
' SYNOPSIS.
Old Mrs. Jupiter, wife of a million-.
aire automobile manufacturer, gives
an erlgageinent ,danne for her" secre-
tary and protege, Mary H'arkness,:
'",lie did not get Amy name nor I his who is to •marry `Dirk Ruyther, society
and we sat beside each .other and.were ;man.
obliged'to talk.'. 'we floundered about Mary's .scapegrace brother, isaato ;
for some •time.trying to find -a theme calls saying he is in trouble and must;
to ar ad
of common . interest. '.Finally, how,' see her. The 'bot ri:e is, c sel dingu:�d
w.e-hi� -.0 n•x a fib ect. _as Mrs. Ju 'ter'. is wearing her f aano s
Zieaaen-knows, t Ilo h, s. .,? � ..
a is .`:arran'es fo solicit a
of plumbing in Parisi. Then he -grew 'pe Tt'�`'1t1 3! g h
- secri• I; . •. • e fi
quire animated!"
* * CSAPTER.L—(Confd'
r
Juan after the Armistice, Kra.: Ather-„ , hh ' to iaintitese11
ton- ran 'into Lord Northcliffe,' an old
need; in Paris; anWdiiting"a Saik"`with"
him,'—'I had christened him Warwick,:
as; he certainly bad a -great deal to do
with the making , and ninitakieffs. of ° e o
•Prime Ministers,”=she. asked him if the side dooshe would Ieave Ward
ld
' ted . He u
toadmit co,
liewas a
.that be
l with
he "were hav:ink any trouble x�ight: up to her 'room, and she,.
Lloyd. George.'• '
la "`Oh;" he .replied- gravely, •`I' have to
Weald. go later and see what was up.
per-
:keepm ..hand on him.. He . wobbles!
That she had done Wrong in
y renting him to' • c me here, to seek
He: woi►bles -•sah�nary inwthe:•Ju iter': Ouse; ith
By the way, Mrs. Atherton describes'u •
out asking their. coilseit, not occ it
Northcliffe as "altogether one of -the to .her -at.•the •momept.- •It• was -only
most; aritiag-nmen:I have ever -.met;" - •
,afterward as.'she sat thinking -it over,.
and ia1-ye that he • was "the 'most popu-
lar of all Britons in the. 'United States."
_Maas, wife of. John A_, ;Logan,, - epu
lican::nominee for. the Vice -Presidency
of the United , States in 1884, .was a
beautiful woman with great poise; and
by rights. a `raven's -wing_ brunette. ' ; l,ar hit ht .. Qttav, .and d. te11.
. �a .�,�- 4111%�� 3'tg... •a n
asasteaeaseassagsaaa
Mr. Jupiter would be ssomew'here•
about—he would be better able to tell
her what to do than his wife would.
Mr. Jupiter absented himself from the
social- scene as ' much as possible; she
knew she, would:.find :him.outside some-
where, roaming around the grounds,
•Smoking, listening to the music as it'.
filtered, out •to. him,' mercifully mellow:-.
ed by 'distance' ,She would- go. out. ay
way of the -ter -race•,• and look.alI !round..
the; house.- ,
As she moved cautiously' along the
oval 1, avoiding- the ""heels and 'elbows'i
I lI: }tie t xe, in n , r 'of the'swooping: couples as. best s'he.
•t c uld, • she: had to pause once to rub
.tlie:.dostrraazi, izn, com,�n.S",, and t(t le� Q , , -
me i ,':, id Eddie; •' Well, what eonid` r;tende:y ori ankle o which had'been
o;• ? told the target' or somebody's •French he31.
she �iq . She had to_d him ;to trims - .,,
cornea : a ead but to Caine 'paned ,, mAs' she looked , up she, saw just ahead
otn h . -..
Hardy
'fie sat down beside• Me; dropped
his hands on his ,kueeps,.and stated „in -'her' when she fainted. •
to space' . . I'•floundered about, Yet indeed (adds Mrs_ Fo`raker), she
broaching one subject after another,
but he nester even:Sla-iced'at me, Much
less.:made' any response. to my Mahar -
/eased efforts: He appeared to'have
.fallen late a reverie, quite oblivious •to
his surroundings.'
• i 0•.
"Then, heaved knows bow; • I lighted.
Upon cable cars in San Francisco. Ab-
straction .fled'. His face lit up He
turned to me eagerly. He asked me a
hundred questions. In answered them
As best L could, for it may be imagined
7iow much I know of'engineering and
meohariics:'
• But the day' was sav'e'd:' A fortnight.
later when Mrs. -•Atherton again met
• Hardy . at another reception, he no
sooner caught sight et her than• he was
•at her 'side, and plunged at once' into
that ' sh•e 'thought ' _about , that, Bust,
where else could her brother. Eddieage,
-if-he' were do trouble:. They had no
.home, -,the two:of-tient.;-sheep the
shame of; that.
• She , got. up and anent , back, ;to • the
•ballroom. She must find Mrs. Jupiter,
but she went through' some sudden, !them •whatt'she •had done. She did not
'severe shock connected with :tire death really; believethat either of theft
of her . father.. .When: slip returned would, mind.
home her husband met her at the Afterward, `there seemed to be no
train.—i elate:. Mrs, Julia B. Foraker,
reason 'for what she did during the
in "I' Would Like It Again Memoirs of neat,, few minutes—Or• for w%iat, she
a Vivid Life." failed to do. Even to herself, wild
"Goodness; Mary!" be .gasped.,
wi: .
"What has happened?" th regretand self-accusation,:it
seemed' as if she might have. told some-
•. # : ,.
body -=-found someone' .to •share' with
She didn't know what he meant and her the awful responsibility for what
he was_ -too -..,petrified o-m-tain.-__,Ar -maleafter; But at the--ti-me-her r -en' -
rived home, the door was opened by ions • seemed excellent. What she did
an old servant. Atthe sight of Mrs:' seethed the only thing to . do.
Logan she threw up her hands, gave' 'The n
, floor had cleared during. a
an .Irish shriek, and $ed'. Beginning interval in the dancing and across the
now to be •a little irritated, Mae. Logan 'room she caught sighb'of.Mrs. Jupiter,
sought ,a mirror. There. it was; her
magnificent in gold lace and far
a a urns "i- an siugle-liYs= any jewels, seated on ami
of :;her, in•`the corner, Dirk:- atid,.Cor-
nelia dancing if • they were dancing.
They seemed a�rdly: to move at sal.
at o lia
' But was .dd was that C me
was crying. Mary could see it even
though Dirk's back was toward her.
•-shielding the-'girl-#-loin--curious 'eyes:-
Once
•eyes:
Once he looked about 'worriedly: and
_eke_ saw that he • 'looked . white and
strained.. • '
Well! That was a surprise. She.
hadn't thought Qornelia cared' ' that-
much, enough to. make a spectacle pf
-ham f.:
What in the world should she do --
go forward . and', •let them :know she
had
had seen? Her' first . impulse was to
rescuer Dirk there rid then. Let .tor
nelia' go and 'cry on somebody ease;,
there were dozens of riven present -who.
• would •gladly - dry the tears .of. -the
heiress tat :so many millions., Dirk
must. feel an awfiil,briute. And, that
wasn't fair. • -
'On second thought, that 'would
merely make Cornelia hate her. But,
Cornelia' hated her anyhow a, it was -
As she ,hesitated, Dirk . evidetrtiy
resolved to get Cornelra away'befire.
_l rs-'11-.
she made--a-compieterfool-of - e e �-
holding her arm firnly,•hemoved 'with
'her:toward the wide door. opening 'on
the terrace; She reached the dooy just -
in time to see 'them. step outside the
circle of light -from the doorway and
too di to thedark grounds
•
"Fresh from' the Gardens
Act1Ve 1
-Ramblings
•
bee t
• ':fours P
t
\elf-
t0
\ Y
takes
•
It
up
serovide asnoitgh-gut at s_> ring,pne flFst+ •
class-1awn�tenn1s racket,
University has. 103
One American
to
n
i
a
x i ..
nto c
different slang vroi"ds for i
,although the'�Untted States,is""dry" byl
law :s
•
T""',eaflie flowers .alititi`tatta b : as vs;
\vo.• , r � .
' as .etas -niece; attached•to, the ends, • , -'
a,. 1?tp . Y .....
'shoe's es; area : 'fasliiois noveltyt
foto P.arit• 1
London bas seventy-seven ancient`
t ne
tit
City, guilds,-., of whom only h y -o :..,
have halls of their Owe, . the' ether
forty-six baiting to borrow or.' hire.
Many priceless rccerds Of the Great
War are beginning to ' fade- so badly;
that they may 'soon become unread
.abieaasT.hie. isaue stath_4 . use.. otr„the , _.
typewriter. • . ,..J
The smallest workable engine:•in the
World has been constructed by•a' Ger-
man clockmaker No bigger than a
coffee=bean, it.reprT
- - esent�s gear-a-ot ;
tient work. '
There are , now, about .200- women
licensed as air -pilots -in England, five
of whom hr -..B certiflcates,'*hlch en
-
food
them to -take •-fare-paYing Passes=
sera.'
he food consumed by the anlinals •
in he London ZOO last year included
cwt; of monkey -nuts. 2,194 pints of
shrimps, 4;600 bunches of carrots, and
•224,904 bananas.. „
Girls- "of to -day are extraordinarily
good and much more ; alert and alive
than their' mothers \, ere,, in ' the
1
NormaEn Fairish of ' the' 'Los opinion of the�pa3ncipai o: , London's
,. _ ->. - , . - _ _oldest: college -ox. women, Queen's:
e Athletic Cub ores
� leS
g.
• � � Trinidad,
: of
rope
climb, `
. Wien en,the inhabitants
worl'd's record for the'
-.� the British. island, in' the West•indica.,
thea • pops 'up the rope -again • With were. recently Oven_ the right'to di
a pal on his. back: Good •exercise. - vorce,' they. stunt a d9elegaaionLte Lon
Mr. Ju' iter was sitting on the run-' don to protest against • having this
P,privilege.. ,-
sapl?ear into ring board 'of a, limousine, surround- nequins--emg1oyed- by big Lon-
van, ed^' •b 'a. group of "his boys:' Some. ,
� Y don ores �wakers." rangein age from• <' :
of them looked as •if they would like six to sixty. The' youngest.,may receive
to break away and start a crapi,gatne, . 'much as $5.25 fo: a "parade" last-
hut
ast
but were 'afraid to suggest" it, •• ase
could hear his••voice droning on 'andSt, ins a quarter of an hour.
on. He was having a good time. ole to ays'iz} British vessels are
A big, foreign -looking limousine liable to a maxi um penalty under the '
a second under the.portico, Merehaanppt Shipping Act of a lino not
*topped •
ex6eedi�hg $100' or tour weeks' impris-
then shot 'around the: circular drive cement with or without hard labor.
and out again, at a high rate of speed. The record non-stop freight ;train
The uniformed drivers all looked 'up run on British railways is stated to
ifiterestedly, as it circled, then went belong . to the. L.M.S. Rail\i ay; who'
en listening in respectful silence to have .a goods train 'which travels 191'
the old man's wards.' • miles between- London and Liverpool'
"`Lorimer. Special body," one re= without a stop,
marked to anot`:ar quietly. Although aliens entering.or leaving
"`Junk," said Mr. Jupiter, pricking
Ge Britain are carefully checked, last
up his ears. Lorimors •Were his spe-
tial antipathy. year twenty-one foreigners out of • a
Mary'turned and went -into the total of 11,739 came in on excursion
tickets without passports and failed to a
house: Mrs. Jupiter was not in the leave again.
ballroom any longer; someone said she No•scholars under seventeen will
hid gone upstairs. to'change. Mrs. 'take--part-in tugs of- war,- stria under
Mary .:could have 'stamped her.: foot
with annoyance --if• it.had' :not already
-hurt. She could not follow .them out
there, even if her errand was looking
for .Mr. Jupiter. It would be too much,
like 'spying. People would see; and
what would they think? She knew:
what, Cornelia• would think, .if' she
bumped .into them accidentally—that
she, was jealous. She ;wouldn't give
her' the. satisfaction. No, indeed! They
could - have the terrace all to them-
selves. •
Swiftly she turned into the flagged
corridor which ran along the side of
the house to the conservatory, and led.
into the back hall. ' She hadn't too
mud'time. Better malie•her arrange-
ments first, and tell. the ' Jupiters
afterward. She was so sure 'of their
understanding ,that it hardly seemed
necessary anyhow. Sd she, intercept-
ed one of the maids—Bessie, the come-
liest,, and therefore assigned' to parlor
dutyi—And told her a man would he
coming to the side• door presently,; and
to be Sure to let him in. Bessie sal -1,
"Yes, 'Miss . Mary," and scurried . en.
She ,was Carrying drinks out to the
chauffeurs, who -were• clustered about
a big car in the back driveway, talk-
... • •
Mary smiled—she knew with cer-
ta y p It
was one of the favorite• occupations. of
-the old automobile manufacturer,
talking with the men who drove cars.
Other officials of the Jupiter Motor
Coinpany,Incorporated; were only too
well aware :of it. Whenever. they -put
forward ideas `about the Jupiter mo-
tor which did - not coincide with his
sentiments, he was wont to stop all
argument by yelling, "And wh:re-did
*on get your information? I'll tell
you where l' got mine—from the men
themselves!"
Wandering' Housewives
He had been an, automobile me- -American passport statistics show.
'Charlie once'' and it was his boast that that more housentives take- trips -
he was still one—just that, and no- abroadbthan ccu-
women in any other o
thin more. - They might know about tion. In :a list of 31 classified occur
stock issues, and the like of that, but pations, ';housewives" received 13.09
he knew carburetors. When he was per cent. of all the .passports issued in
i that mood, there was nothing more 1931. Travel writers • foot the list,
to be said. with only 0:83 per. cent. of passports
His interest :n rioters and- in the. credited to them'. ••
men tubo drovL there was genuine --
e:iough; their talk was his talk,• But One frequently hears the expres-
his wife,-arn'ong others, thought' he sion that a certain object "moves• at
--sometimes darried it too far. - He- a snail's pace.", It' is only recent-
judged
ecent
judged a man by the Way he treated ly, however, 'that this, pace has been
a car, for .eicanhple. Many a friend's chartered. 'The average snail
chauffeur, and even'some taxi-drivers travels about three _inches a minute
he had taken a liking to, were ROW —a mile in fifteen .days. '
holding. geed jobs in iiia plant.' On they
came basis, he had never really Warne-
ed, up to Eddie,. Mary remembered. l
Eddie was known as 'a "wild driver,"
and that was enough for Mr. J. If
it was that agar;' that bad gotten
Eddie into trouble--=
Mary paused, pinching her lovas.
lip thoughtfully iiet'4ecn thumb 'rind
finger'.
Site resolved, presently that this \\ r
a,famii inatte�r; and why bother :,ny-
one with it except her;•�if? It: really
seemed' the kindest th ng to everyone
con, ernec1—just to say statins•' abort
it. Later, it might s eni i'cl l different
to other peoplct •hut Rhe could not ;
;,know that then.
tenons •moment.'.-3ust the. - way the watching the dancing' with a listless
thing happened in: novels. eye. At her side, Mary, nojwed just
"Like it John?" sbe.Said, carelessly, in time to check; her forwardprogres3,
to' Logan; Who had followed •to catch was Dirk's mother; a. pale ;woman in
gray chiffon who: seerned'to be think-
ing "Rather' a nice party—but hor-
ribly overdone!", •
;It would have ,been .easy to go at
once to Mrs. Jupiter and' tell her her
troubles, :if it had not been for Mrs.
Rliyther. She was, Mary had to ad -
Mit Us herself, a congenital Snob,. and.
a priggish one. With Dirk.fer a son,
she would never be able to understand
Eddie's• peccedilos, ;or condone .thein.
And Maryyielt miserably that she had
little enough• to •bring• to her'•union
with • the impeccable Ruyther family•.
—just herself . and a name that had
never been brought -to shame. • .If that.
scant dowry was in danger • Mrs. Buy -
titer must' not know.
- . Mrs. Jupiter -did not look any too
happy;' she looked tired and uncom-
fortable. The strain of being, nice to
Mrs. Ruyther was, telling on ,her na-
turally jolly. disposition. From the.
grimaces she made from time to tithe,
Mary judged' with amusement that her
shoes hurt; into the bargain. •
No, she would not add . her, own
trouble to those from which that: peon
OId woman was alrerdy - suffering.
,For- Baby's LA*
More than that of any oth
member- of • the family, .baby
terrier• delicate skin ..needs the
greatest care and attention. Th
soft 'soothing oils in Baby's Ow
Soap malice it specially suitable
for babies, and its 'clinging fra-
grance reminds one of the vas
of France which •help' to • in
#pire ><t
bestfor.' Kofi cTtid- E'aby loo"
er
's
The
Own
a-
cs
• Only one oil is good •
encu for household .
equipment, says chemist
Chemists, mechanics and lubrica-
tion experts -say: only one kind of oil
is good enough' for your expensive , •
• -Mechanical devices -the best. To
get best results from your sewing
chine, vacuum cleaner, lawn
ower, . washer, electric fan, ° re-
oterhos
household ap
and u 1}
` orator h
g
iliances, you should use an On tliat '
iaot only lubricates; blit also cleans
and protects.
3 -in -One Oil is different from all
others, because it • is a scientf e
. blend of. animal, mineral anis Ole- ;
table oils. It gives you the best fro-
pettiest of each. It dissolves and
works out dirt, protects against •
fust and wear _and gives the most
efficient lubrication, thins eliminate-
ing unneeessary repairs and re-
piacemests. ,
Naturally such oil costs more to
make, but it really costs less to use.
Play safe; insist on 3.11.One Oil. At
good stores 'everywhere. For your
protection, look fo'r the trade mark
"3-in•One";printed in lied an every
package.
A•
ISSUE INO••• 2
Must have been startled .when she saw
herself the glass
* *
As a girl of twenty, Mrs. Foraker
heard Dickens give one of his readings
`during his last visit here in 1868—
sixty-fear 'years ago! ,
"I cannot think..anyone ever heard
a , person read with such inimitable
realism and charm- as this 'foreigner'
(they called him that) in, a black• vel
veteen jacket," she says, "I remember
the jacket and the. charm; though of
what the author read. only the unfor-
gettable • death l of Little: 'Nell, which'
provoked sobs."
• , * • *
Mrs. Foraker—widow-of the late
Senator, Foraker oG Qhio—has, at the
age of eighty-four, written as lively a
book of signed reminiscences' as has
come out of Washington in many , a
day. One of her stories has Chauncey
Depew, at a dinner, describing an even-
ing spent with King Edward VII., to
whom he told the story of the spinster.
taking her flrst.ride on a railroad train.
There was a collision; . the dear, old
thing found herself.'sitting la splinters.
She straightened her "bunnit," looked
'round for' her reticule; then . asked• in-
nocently if the train always stopped
like that? , ' ••
• *
Depew happened• to mention to -King
was stopping
Ed�vai`d neat Mark Twain s pIn g
•at -bis hetet. Thereupon -the-16,'rig-.asked
Depew to come back for q ner next'
night and bring Mark with im.
"And what do you think that Man
Clemens started on with " said De -
pew. "My story! My identical story
of the old lady in a railroad wreck!
Said he wag there, trio! And of course
I had said I was there! -How the King
laughed!!!"
* , * *
A'mong the treasures of Bob Sher-
wood, the "last of Barnum's clowns,"
is an autographed .photograph 01 b1n-
and Chang, 'the "original Siamese
Twins," who,. with Bab, 'were star at-
tractions of the Barnum Shaw for
years.
"On the back of it," says Sherwood
(in "Hold Y'er. Hosses! ") "Eng wrote,.
expressing bis congratulations -to me
that I' aould live my life alone. Below
Chang wrote: 'Tbem's my sentifnents
too'.
•"TRUTH IN. ADVERTISING, '.
'well; madam," .said the. Easter
boarder, as he was about to leave.
cern testify that yon. are one of
the most 'honest persons I have ever'
•met." -
The landlady rubbed ' her bawl.
hhpply. -
"That is very nice •of .'you;" she
said. "I always try to please."
"Yes,". he tient nn. "your hone:�t.
is conspicuous on 'tire very front• of
your house. Your sign rays. Board-'
era taken. in'!"
•
P
arvelous
4avOiI
(TRIPLE Pius)
What richmellow flavor of fine
old Cheddar cheese you get in
eandwichesnnd cooked dishes
made with Kraft Velveetat-
'Digestible as. milk itself.
With a -nutritional rating of
plus, plus, plus! "
- 'A delicious treat .for,abl-.tile -
famii'y=•-approved by theFood
Committee of the American '
Medical Association. (et n
1iaeiiage from your grocer •
today.
Mcde'in Canada
KRAFT
e veet
The Delicious Cheese se Food
had complained- that. her feet hurt and
Ruyther had gone' home
Mary looked,at her wrist -watch,
and hurried upstairs. 'Mrs. Jupiter's
sitting room was•at the head of the
stairs, Banked `by her' bedroom and
her; husband's. Mary's room was at
the farther end of the' hall. As she
paused on the• top' step to catch ler
breath befere turning back along the.
int now where Mr. Jupiter pas: corridor, she heard sounds issuing
fr • Mrs. ;Jupiter's sitting-room=an
an ry, snarling voice, a womhn's loud
scream, and then two shots 'in rapid
succession. There • was the thud of
something heavy falling. Then sil-
• ence. '
Mary stood frozen to the. newel -post,
too terrified to move. •• • -
rSddie,*s siteer ei to , tike closed
door. "Eddie, is that you?"
• (To be continued.)
4
0.
,.
eighteen will be banned from the long '
jump, and cross-country' runs for boys
under seventeen will be limited to
three miles, if. the, recommendations of
the recent. London conference on atlf:
letics for school children are carried • ,
.out.
Me.. P1nitea4 '•They • say, men of -
brains ,live long." • ,
Mise Cutting—"Well, don't be dis- '
ccouraged, all rules ha'ie their ex-
ceptions, you know:"
Bowling, enthusiasts in Florida have
discovered that grapefruit make an ex-
cellent Substitute on the greens for
wooden - bowling bails, and several!
tournaments have been held: Well,
many a breakfaster'will testify to- the
uncanny alai df the grapefrniL—The'
Christian Science Monitor.
1
Easy To Play!
•- That is why •
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help• you make quicker progress. '
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Conn teetly Musical ''Instruments Ltd.
10 Shuter Street Torb'hto
r