Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-01-02, Page 2a Jud, but watne4.44• 4.44CjiteeilAigeli. not over, .and they - go north, We 41Wit'*40' to 40-00 clearly M our mnd tkO geogl'aPbY ef Pales - 011 tine, whieh h divided into three St I, Childhood of 2. 11/.23. s Golder, alts call his armee 4- shall save hie 'people ins.—Matthew 1: 21. 'AUKS. • pp•THE WISE Mei% '10-12. GIIT.INTO EGYPT, -13-15.. ' 9,1•XTO NngaltEvii 16.29. Ji3019,11740 beginning these, rom the first.gospelaPite May:. a',relleath. made hy a ,distin- !emit eeholar, ,Renae, who , pal according to St ss meet remarkable beek paek been.Written," .It pro- s Well •a woaderfulpicture of eeelahs ehowshow Jesus 6. fe/Ahneat et the .POPiceia$ ,Old 'reatament. Writer es: i. Clear, that the thriatiea is eie Of all the promieek he'trueinteriPreter isfeeriptures- tthiT OF tata iiisg link; 1042: ' There are two. accounts of ,Irth of Jesus; one in Matthew and other in Luke, and these together Pag 0161te afeW of this Mast Mare 1,eient iii ii10 'history of the •MhO., aetnal date is uncertain. s probable that Jesus was hnrit years before A.D. 1. This to follow , from the fad that aa•still living when Jesus was dkit *Ould appear that Herod `.CY.,t.. Some think that the Of the stars may also help e date, but this is not: at all must-altio read the account u1ay'2.; 2 Where the events are ected..aiith the , Movementein hhe an Empire. • , • ' 1,1.. The Wise Men or Magi, were an tribe, who devoted meth time h'antudY.of the .stars. They War- - the heavenly 'Obects, and t they could tell from the, pro- of the statethpw 'things were to ,TheMsit of these Men repre- the •first fruiti of the. universal ion ,of...„..Christianity, and it is. ne,:tribute Paid to Jesus an the Mer Of the World: • Bethlehem is 11`tirer. south of Jerusalem, and jnetO.Matthew, there Were'lere.: iethat the promieed. Messiah Came out of this place. Luke •the..place..ef birth, Mit omits. eey.,'There. IS now a fantote illtkiVerthe spot where to have been bore; 'Called The :ch of the-Boly Nativity. 2„; Herod, who is eadntioned here, lbp Called Herod the , Great, end -ing'irrer the Whole of Judea; but _ asnet complete ruler, smee he • 'aaeknoWledge the Sovereignty ,irae'He --He must be distinguished Herod ,AntiPas his son. He was aimless, but unscrupulous and • o EGYPT 13-415.'. 1 ' always had close-ageo- Palestine, and it Wee not Israelites in time of peril - for help.•• The recent awe how. close the connection ..Egint, was a, „Mach richer ore civilized at this ,•thre was,a large number of jeWS e, .espeeially. in Alexandria; which sald to have one,fiftk.a it* popu fon,.,',Chneist.cit.jews.. We do not lean rom. any other'sourco'of the 'visit. of 14,0; the l'itrict,et the Nile.• 14. Th iS story of the flight has n mad -3 familiar.hy 'many .pletures. , es...verse' 'leitires the .impression of i."stc. nd:conceaIment. The pa'- - ain in.fireeland of Egypt till llerod On* •" AV 15, One of- the main. 'features of ,M44e* is ,the use, Of the. Old. Testa- ment. • He was Writing for Chrietian who were in need Of Bible proof iphold their beliefs When attacked by the , One Of the oft -repeated . sentences is, "That it might he fah, which as spoken of the Lord - by, the prophet," • The passage here .Anoted is froin'll,cisea 11: 21 • Ift:•niiiiii14.:*;r6 NAZARET1, 16-23. At, — V:16. The massacre of the innotents Laliaieetteireottayed by the art - and sts, and it is -detibtful if these are al - Treys, historieally accurate. Probably , the eattriber Of children murdered Was • .sinall,a-de there would net be very • Many younger than two years in a• tirtiall town like Bethlehem. However, -Amite a Very cruel deed, and quite in keeping With what is known ftoni • etiler'n§gree's ef the character of this *an. 'We do litit read it the goepels that Attie ever came back to Bethle, lei% but it is liOresting to wonder Ithether he ever returned to 'see the • inn in which he had been born, Aphr we note the tendency to 011 attention to the fulfillment of the propheciesof scripture. Barash has been sometimes identified With a small iillage-Er-Barna, about hve miles .• north of Jertisalent. V. 22, On, their return to Palestine; sense of * the perenta remained in the south', in Shaw. " ••Mint .AND JEFF.- By BUD Judea With; •StariarieAV& an • . 'iree north... The kingdom had ileeh dividod ;Liter uero..0:41eatb among his 00.14‘ .41TCheltinfil received Judea and Sam:vita n11411110 so badly that after eight y4'4114 he as sent into eine, and ROM0 nano* 'direct control. However, reitiained ander -Hered AntipaS On after the death of Jesus. . a V. 23. Nazeretlia where Jesus was brought up, wae, an important town• and It lay on tlea.roate of the travel from Egypt to the East.- Here Jesue *mid sge the'regiaients of soldiers peesiag, and he. iivotild hear • of the OVA* happening in the world. The. scenery elar was beautiful. . • Markets Tor Alberta Coal • Ednienten, Jeuenal (Ind. Cons.): Neete; of the • Dominion Ful Board, 'Warns: Alberta coal 'producers that it is heeertnale? ;Platte operators to be Pu their guard „against aesing •ground ' in the Minato. hi •rearket. through their 'anxiety to supply the province further east.) The compe- tition of the American mines in Mani- toba has not been pf a fair character, They have Persistently dumped• their product there. Repeated 'efforts' have been made within the ,past five years to have the Canadian anti-dumping eat amended so as to prevent the pree- ticeof importing American supfdies . • . at set prices which pore, little • relation to those at the mines. When the Minister Of Finance introduced bis 1920 udget he announcedthat the de- sired :changes *mild be Made; ,, But short-sighted criticishe offeeed by. Pro- gressive and some other Western mem- bers led him to -withdraw the resolu- tion Of which he gave notice. 'Singe then, though the Government has had its attention drawn frequently .to the injuatiee that was being done the Al beta industry; no action has been taken. The situation demand. Correa - tion immediately. ---7-4*-----' An Old MytkEiploded. Manitoba Free Press (Lib)"•: Fig- ures are now available which bring to a' defithee Conclusion the long -drawn - Mit diecussionregarding the existing Kele, of railway • freight' rates oh grain.. As ii :well known, theee rates yere set under the crows Nest Pass agreeoneat• in the teeth of the tail - 'snag which have always insisted that th carriage of grain ori Such terms bereaved then in loss. . a . Thi, -fall, however; there eame a Odhance. Spegial k.,. circumstances, the e 1:,. f' whieh svas the short western 'crop, ought about a sharp and alarming deetease in rail- wey eaanings. Sir. Henry Thornton and .1iii, E. W. Beaty both issued statements on the situation, and -it be.. 'came at once apparent tha. ah 'rail- ways Were depending upon g-rein''for, a large pat of their net Profits. Nei- ther railway has yet issueda'atate- ment explaining how they could at one and the same time carry grain at a loss and Make their profits eat of thee Carriage, , ' cius o e 13eautifu! By PEP93i O'NE,11, "MY heauty h heeti my rein," ,a 'won. of $5 said to; me the ,etter, afternoon. "If I .4011 been aeauta tul I woaldn't Rave :heen. sp' eoeltsure. that anotaeramen, .weeld Came along after I turned the last one (leen. "Like many other beeutifttaghls 1 played fast end leefie with tae aftec- t.iOnO-, of my admirets, confident that 1 vibeld never tick ;for a fresh ones I did 00 think there iqiuld. ever he •a time when 1: would be left on th.e, shelf,. lonely Woman: •••••• , "ef -hadiat:zbeen beetitiful I snight, luxe paid More *entice' to cfiltivete nig iny saladEven' ritow tita•ta'hisr'' . • , . looks "'have, aeded a Might:stilt Ie :dui -rasing • ,oa • desirable companion: . , 'fcir sepe Man.: 'But 1 ablei. my Oppeiehaieieese Cenfideiffs' that iseenaj. • wee. eveea- Pliars „•• • Thatis what this Woman told nte'in burst of, frank. selarevelatioe. ' Test of txperience. ' Today it is the fashion to rate femiaine beeety ai one ef the. ,most highly -prized ceminoclities. A really. beautiful- girl is seid to have , the world • at , ber ,feet. There is scarce- ly any door that' is .closell to her. • busineas, and in hive it itts the popular belief that she starts with tfie. 'dice heaeili leedeal in her fairer. ' , But to*.falia frons truth this iie• is proved by 'aetual , experience. " You have only to. look rourid at you own - circles :of frieads. Ho* 'ineny ,beauti- fulsgiels:do Yon know, Who are success - fella anil hapelly married? : a•allen court them. and •pay them at- tention;--yes,lbut it is the other sort, the homely One'that they mostly marry. i% •, El And how any, beautiful girls do you know. ase. holding. -down big business and professional ,pesitiolia? I know a good many woraen.4he have been partieularly .successful in clone inertial ,careeilsa They are earahlei. attractive7Wen, but few ' could be .c'alled ,beautiftil.. • ..". •.Ruined Her Life •1 rethember meeting 'a airl some time ego who s•hatl . wee a. prize in a b.earity competition, 1 yer . th•ere was a gui -liIo.' wal. ruined by her . ata looks, it was, lee •.. . • ' • • . • Formerly •sh whs a sot, unpre teetious girl :Wire a gentle disposition. The public recegnitien •of her beauty, . sone. changed ,ell .tihie, and she beoante arrogant, • selacentree, and impossibly • 1"7(` I • trate(' Dressmaking Limon Furnished with Every Pattern By Annpbelle Worthington • • .1.,901044 . slender. is •eg,sy •when '. seance, take • Style No; "2935 ever"' ••.• detail aerry. out • vertical :' Hee is ' • • ta Vainly •empitasized. ' • ' The surplice' closing breaks the .. • • •Width."throughsthe .boilice; while the cellar. that Teaches. to wastlipe at • leteside ,carries. the eye' dewriatoalte, • , vertical -ia's,kirt in jabot 'deep% • ., • that :fititters only wben ....wearer -. inov.ess Plata .,••ia„. clatter. 'effects at right 'side provide ' safaCient hiltless" • . tetn; ' The ,Icers'hed• • girdle .huge,' , hips, mul ihide sap)* ,..." fnlness. -- The softeeed ;be- inset'''. s•=veStee and pin ...ttiked.• Shoeliter.". • ,. , 'Sleeves' are gathered into .tiarroW • ,' ' 'miff bands..', Note. the beck. is 'sline • • • and straight. , • The mediata chosen foraaiiattrac-- . •tive dress is • canton 'crepe in novel print in. burgundy tangs. The girdle .• ' is sheet velvet in burgumie Shade with metal. b.uckla 'Vestee egg- ••.. . shell shade silk treed With, lace ..in • , ;snatching shade. , ..• . • • It designed' iri sizes 16; 18' years,. -.36, 331.,40, 42, 44. and 46' inches bast. ' • It - very • smart in black' 'crepe'. ' satin with ecru lace shawl collar with vettee cut of the reverse of Crepe.' , • , • '•Canton crepe. in • rich wine.' red " shade ;With yestee beige. crepe • , • 'Silk with shawl',collar self -fabric,. is effective. • . • " , Crepe., Elizabeth, ',georgette. , crepe. ' .plain silk • crepe • printed' ,crepe . crepe .de chine ..and crepe'rearoca•in_ " . chic. •••, • • 'HOW TO 0.4.Dgit.-•PATTER.NS... . Write your riaine and address plain- ly, giving :nuinber. and s•ize of • sueli wearine. the correct attire. For in- Britain Plains lg. Docs It Ever Building Program • Rain Fish COnstruetion Viork Amount- M I ' ." nue musette the pr&i ing. to $100,000,000 tellers .of ",big4tories,',' mover tfiltin • a rain of fishes. 13ut a eertala,.. AIII10.1411Ccui . Itert.firi0 ,F3g4gs, .feeling tha.t .• . an. Over:Ant, wrote. such , an Le,„ HELP UNEMPLOYED • . air hail ander the subhead ...t • , . l' Adventures." Bangs gays th MUIliCipOntieS,„•Railways, ca. ;-ilarroor-hevo' whep. a bey see4 . •..iarge quantity a gannoivdeit • • nri:i W.ater.',P.. r, ojpets ' . ' .. .-. ... .e.. , . . plgaitod it ',in. a Athpond, - MIA , ., involved •• .._. • .- . .'.W.a.ge totto4ed. 9.ff the viol's pold blown aigh, in. air anr, after,:sogng:dayat, London, •`,--• Construction Work ' hi $mo,000,000-hati been. apnro.ved by the ' Gt.eml. Britojn gm:panting ,te' more than-, ratnaeu,yellistehndt 'r(?aliat114.(131o71,t; 1,t5m4. 4144011)Z, plane to alienate mien -410.04a, raid I.. with its to11164.ed: 990Pies • • • . a ---. -.."• Now„ the interestia ;thing 4s::.'i .0overnment in •-e-o.nnectioa • s the Cloierenient will, Make a .teta 414 : jAhafale:ed.' reia of Ishes s 4o1 Contribution" 'to• 'this • Work of about :°•ice9sal•T esesioesesea., ahisaaas eeseeelea • thee. title eerfiehis 14'g1,11P&11•Ititilgtli'ei.1;gt.; . vat :by *t: 9(4cyn,:antpciy:oyjura't411. ;ai,iierselli7c.onalleteutra. 'Paoinasa .Seal end., istol of,Eibpjoym61,1f;, and ' tiled alittay;accciunte" :of raina,76 r44,ahlwiasy,e,..z.empiaanalaezes,gams.a.acao.i4ipapiaineiseese fishes.- When I eame. to publish them -and' water supply companies. generally. reqqired that • all materials, needed for the stateassisted..yoyits' shall, .so far as .is practicable, be of • Pelted Kingdom • ofigin, Red a. all :nianefactuies will he United Kingdom inanufateuree!, the statemeat etephas- Sized. This stinulation is- subject to sitch eiceptions. as the • Goiernment 9epartmen t ceueereeel maa ' find •to be necessary ey -desirable" in enY earesese looked•references and, giving•personal • lar case, having regard. to all the air. experience, The ee •accoents I ,Iiroeght .eusesteneea i‘eaeallea • esseyearatia•e. toeether : another articir,'.'larere, • prices.of British and foreign .articles.' were 26 of them but taink that there' 'wee If ehe necessarY supplieS are not are duplicetes arid that have estale purchased ••in the United; kingdom., iished only 23 :pew. falls. , 1, found - had 48 abconnts ratigiag 'from A:D.. 390 to 1901, and in spec° from America (eight accceints); preat Britaia (ten), Germany France and'" Greece - „One . ea'cli).• 'through India (ten), Ceyloh ' (three); thIalayele (two).a..ead the South Seas one). The aublicetiaii of this , article arahsed . much interest and lettets came calling. My. attention to over - a. • they are to, he secered•fromthe over.... . Thete ar'e thus put onyecord about . seas part of the EMpire Wherever posa .7.1 a:ceiants. (more Or. less :well , aue 'sible" the statethent-declares: ' ',"4 . • thenticated). of rains of ;'•flehes, These •. , ' • • , accotinta,,In range of :time. arid' space . ROad Schemes . , . . make ' for .sure' tes•Ontony. as to the .The Covernuieet ••'has further • an 'actuality. of the occurrence , of this . patterns as you went Enclose 20e :in proved, limier the trtink..raad Pre- •phenorpenon. I have Pers never , stamPS or coin (Coin preferred a wrap grain, toad schemes costiag 0,000. tiffiler the .a/hOie five. ennther been so -fortunate; as to ex4' or 2935 it •• carefully) each nutaber, and $45,00 oven witness such a rziier; carthet .ei ed.dre,ss ,syou.r. order to WrilsOn• Pettern.Service, 73- WestAtlelaide'.$t,,,Tel'onto.: ' -, „. ' • ' ' . - i';'rtigard .the,evidenee , recorded . by - Pettern's :sent by. an early :Mali. . .. .- ,-,' • .."tii•i'PlItiBe ...men. . . .. year'. program ef reed work ..tho schemes!. :proved• total *75,000,00: The 5.,road liebility, Jn Seespect of these apheines. As estimated at $0,- .009,09,6 and ,-employinent,'will in Bile respect be afforded eqnivalent. to are . atithentieated that it ehieloYmeht• of 100,090 men. for one yea. Seems • Woi•th' while to put them on re- . • At the sante. time "the. ellnister an- nounced aid to •• form. a .eolontel de velopnient, ened, ,which .t?;ould enable. the carrying' out ;of great cothitruction projectslethe .colonial ,Empite lying outside the Dominions. ThisaWeni•ld directly. bnefit British labor the: deniaudfoe ilia:feria:a Lam the Brf, tish inantrActurers. • - .• . • • The" ' -Goveriiment:s employment • plane . therefore call:: air ex'penditure of upwards of $180,000,000 within Meat Britain; and the chnstrnction of costly devehipment works.: in the col. onieea. hotably Africa,- henejlting 'Bri- tain by employMent equal to. the •em-• °playment of 'about 199,000_ men a year. • a • A WIND ' Since the puhlicatioa of • in • it . No, I think that the average. the mederately.,attractive girl—very eaten even the downright plain girl—has a better, chance. 'of ,happleess .than her beautiful nietelel• ' • alook"deound me arid I see the p -lain. irls wilming. all -along the line. They have husbands Children.. They are •pia.cid arid '.eomfOrtable • . instead " painfully living ep to their goodlealts. 'What Really Counts ' . After all wlibn a ma Marries' he Coriceiteta . , .. . .., , , n . . .. does not want to be always Woking at .. . She 'lest.' 'a er;j'ob iiecause 'she. con- a beauty adiertiserne.nt 'ef, a fashion centrated more on her leeks' than: an • plat. It is very nice to be seen out her emploYera 'business a she j.i.ted ' with a beautiful girl at the theatre' or her flange becauae she thOugat he wee aedaece.• But when • one comes not ,good emanate fox her she aiinoet dean,. to the . stern. practicalities ..of broke ' her mother's •heart. with her . , .donle.sticity •the 'aveyege man, wants a -uareasoning vanity: „ ' To -day- this .04 is working as a oe'd .deal more.. . . . No girl,' however idain she -is, need packer in a factory: Illness has• de. ever despair of getting a husband. •A prived her of her looks. ' She -has no - dozen times a. day when I. see married thing left ' . ' -, " ' . . eouplea...fogether •I say to'. , meselt. • Another' girl I know •Whesa fature "Now, what, on 'earth did he see .111 has been ruined:by her looks is on the stage.. ,•If she had applied herself.' to her art She might to -day, be •recogniz- ed •-as • one , of our leading actresses, for she has genaine talent' . . • instead she has cheeen to .pin. her faith in her pretty. face, and has got nowhere at all.- . . I met a girl notaloeg ago who' told me frankly that she ,wished she leere plain. : , . • , ' . •!4Deeon know," • she said, "I dont believe trust a reallY pretty girl, I have 'known heaps of men. Some I , thought, were certain tb propose, to me, but nearly ever* one hae Once gone off and Married• sameone else with not lialf My share of good leeks." There vas one man on whom this I girl was particularly keen, He" took eer out 'for nearty• six- months, and. iu the end Married her'. plain sister.' TOG' Easy At the Start . "I .got a •job in an office,%the girl said, .."but as darnissed because it was cimaidered lay -good looks were a disturbing influence; and net co.ncite dye' to oilite discipline." . . But I. could enumerate, the\:,Ese ex- amples alniost without end. '. .very tiOdY must know 'of others in their. oeri experience. • :. That is the tragedy of the beautiful girl. life is ' tao easy or her in the beginning.. Unless she is Partieule,„ arly sensible and leveeheaded she is. •your Yaffe. Haye they' no 1 chivalry left?—Mr,, Bernard spoiled by. flattery and admiration. And then when she. weltee up • from • 1 her drealna it is erten too late. . "the leife of a grouch bits to take everything for granted." : „ • It is less important for the stook market,' to be on the up -grade than 'en the level.—Virginian-Pilot, What "are yOu felloftre going to de now 'that atfressen hate • taken te that Woman?"• • One sees .smart men married tO the. dowdiest and most 1.111' interesting 'creatures imaginable. But one hoes not need. to seek far to.finil the reasoe.: The plain girls , have made it their business to cultivate •eliarm, . • And that, after all, is what really • counte.—aloktreal. Standard. ' e Dad (assisting little Alice with her. lierneeork)-yaf- I, gave you five oranges and you had one, how. many oranges would . you have?" • • • Alice -,-"I dunnoa We always do our. eu,ms•12i apples." You Were made for enjoyment, ,and theworld was filled with things which you will enjoy, unless you.. are too proud to .be 'saleased, i?3t them et: toe grasping ,to,care for what yon cannot turn to other account than mere de- light.—.1elia Ruskin. • . Fragrance •You. Walked th.reugh gart'4-- . . . yeti iemembera- ,• • • But that Wasain june.. :And t•ilis. -is Noveniber. • And yo. did •not. notice, .• • Me 'at 'alb," For I was•a• tulip ,.. Be:side. wall, . . • But. 'Iny'.ashes still breathe. - Of 'a lady fair,. . '• Who' plucked me, and teeked nie , 'niter *heir, • • „,;, ' lad sr •Who wept,' ' ' Thet you did ,not remember " You kissed her iii June -L. as; Whe.n it came ,NOVenilesis . --Judy Shea -An Chicago Tribune. ' . • , • , The National Debt .• Torol.to• Globe, (Lib.) : Xeterans ill • or, disabled sbonld ,Accerded 'hospital treatment or :peniion aSsisten,ee with inaxininin . of geriero.sitY and .a ini- mute �fred tape. Ex -soldiers who are. 'actually, sick shoal be instantly 'ens "titled. hospital treatment Jaime the. mete .evidence.. of the illnesd :itself. If there is to be .leaggliegand quibbling. ever when the disease:first -stai.ted, let 'the doctors do the :arguing among themselVei after the sick man is safely inside. . Those who offered' their *lives in tile days Of national' .crislis should het • need to apply hitheit and yen and be. pased about .from pillar to Peat- in their .ewn .hoar • of need4 repay as best can. . Th,e, y served the nation. Let the., na- tion . Wheat Poo land 'Protection '•Raskatoor .Stat-Phdenix • (Lih.):. European. countries, once heavy buyers . and Canadian' Wheat, have sought to fight , the pool and . encourage • home production by. puttieg, liigh tariffs on initiorted Wheat. •, In 1925 Preece charged a 'day 01 15 Cents_ a bushel, on foreing.wheat • Germany and Italy admitted it free, Today the sluties are; France 63' cents; Oernsany, 4814 cents; France, 731efi cents. 'Euro- pean protectionists and Mut-twice to pay the price asked for 'Canadian wheat implied a severe '.test on the pool during the 1928-29 selling sea - stile . • . • It's our' guess • that even if long skirts do succeed in corning Ina they wont stea Free Press. . • • Y e- • vieus'erticles, there 'have dome to me ' two. ai;rotints 01 falls of fishea 'which . eaPtain:' of a trawler in the Eng- liSh Channel 0,4 told the Bishop of Oxford thatnine and agate ween the' cateh was in, and they seemedahea calmed, thete,often Was a wind higher tip, unfelt ,on deck. He kept his ,sail's peak up,. and headed for .the hayen,, and, when morning camel fbahd hint - Self near home. So•-withus In the monotony of daily task's the: Wind of God's •b•pirit• up: above vall, slowly bring' us home„—Joan.A. flatten. . : , Pn,THS • The best path througb• life is, the highread, which • initiates us .at 'tbe tight moment into all experience. Da ceptional itinerarieS are , 611SPiehme, Doughtie, a„nd from iii114,3a.:Wife and matter for anxieM .ty; "ails nor -'1 ,havagotten the .fella .ing )t, ' 1.41211. • mal Is at once• most corivenientamostl 'heavy ,dowepour of :rel.i camp on this • day. There. Wasvery little wind bet .there 'were 'fishes,' hundked•s of No one -Was out lfi the? rain,' but lee' mediately after the shower' the child--; yen went oue'au4 began „wading about in ..the Muldles •Where they found manylittle fishes, solife of them aliVe and swimming.. The fish were 'prettY ithiform .in size, about otte and a half to .two inches long. , •Mr. Doughtie es- thriates that theta were . several hun- dreds; of these little' fishes scartered ,over tveo or three a^VOS Of ground. This snot. is seitte three (pinatas ef a. mile from • tbe nearese, ''s O111 'whirti AT- not Ifnowe 'number' Of 'fishes: • Now for the expiate's ord. • The .first, .•a• -PerS•oaal. exoeri- Once,' Wiis related to rite by Mr, Ri•cia a rd Headley TipgleY,' o.f Porttlieters ' New 'Tait, whom I..haveknown pere • sonallY for a nunibei. oi .years.* This „ 111 O( 11110(1 on May l 100; On the Outskirts. of 'Rhode' Island. „set'..ere• thundel•-starm • with' a high,: Wind .brought • a heavy doinieeur•,, Lin and with it. . living SO rth tag pe at ahd bun:pout a 'from twe • to,, fun - and ehalf inches- lona whiele fell •(.-1t,.• • .. yards and streetsevering about a quarter ,of anacre.. f4y4t 'that lie Was out in; the•storm, and .” pelted ..not only with raindrops • but witii'fish as Well. " The'boys collect* ..these • fishes: by. the .pallfuI ead sob thent, weile a teporter on the l'"Y tleece . Journal :gatiserea a ..bueltaft of them 'and theee' werediaplayed yatious 'step windows on. 'One 01 *' , 1iincipal .besines,s etreets of.the .. In July; .1928, 1, heard of. a sfal fishes.. riear Tarboro in ,my na state of North Caroline: I have .6 s•ome timesin •getting -the .partictt 'and even 'mere effeht in getting sco roboratorY evidence.; , and jam snaded that full; credence is tcaabs given to the .aoeoene and to.':-MY:40 •formants. Here follows 'the stotylk". this. fall of fishes, as commenicateille Me. On May 18, 19„28, a rain, of hal* fell ori - the farm ,of, Mr. S. N. clah as, This 'farm is operated by Mr. W. L. holies. and most wholesome. .C1.9AF roadi4ay tempt us for sine reaeon or anther, hut it :isailery seldom that we do not come to regret having, taken them. • • • Aeeerding to London Opinion, 13 inns in Surrey aro called "The Jolly F'armer' ahe suggestion seems to be that a , jelly farmer is , one who sells, his farmand opens 'an inta-a- , .Detroit News. I • While bathine at a French eeaside fesort, an am:me-tee tollector was 'attacked by a shoal' of jellyfish, Some jellyhish evidently ' have more hack bone than, taxpayers—The Heitiorist. and ell other raffle' of 1is ivirels, Particularly witiel up Water, fishes and alit them inland whore, W • Of the' air And clouds that,- lowered; the/fish Can anyone who, has a Spout donht that cot .4 • carry •off fishes.? ' No one, • who hes experienced at even proillgiOus effects and carrYi of a land tornado can hone , of the ability of a Waterspoii. tornado, to bring about a Vishes" E. Guclge grapher and Assoriatein Tel American Mzeten apf 'Nat tory, .in-Sidenti Monthly. • All mot are guests Where bold the feasta-Gascoigne. Hopp, then muse of stna plow -1%o a rte., . ••• Sis A 4efflikAN fi.ewIM A' ROtKel- • AIRPLANQ • "ilAkt.,'S A DARN. 4,00D ibtA: A01 ITAA i Ges4 Y01116tT, Aiwa) OF FISHER Dt 44 mOveus,101). /HIS ROCISET • WILL 51-100t *YOQ set Ci PAIL(LS t Atte • MERE'S PULL blittcTIONS. ON eveoy • PACkAe. I.V1Vd‘tou Gtir A MATO? titoNdAG ALL Wet : Love Sends a Gift of Wet Matthes. No) An WA -roo BAD. 0,1HERg (tuovIA°11111f 4 4 / acees ' " aaaaelt: • 14 • • •. • • HARD Spet id. spsoch ljetwe • have loved is tioeotls 1 lihe no sight of greatit .$311111t lido Vice affd. rags. ., .