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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1923-10-25, Page 2nr` • athat varied. in shade from *hat Don- with,which to more closely confine th • aid calieclaa!pale dirt" to irpn gray. collar of. his play coat. • a :gach -1104Se...had a yard, hilt. most Of "Why, ' what a . deer,' .thelightftd the yards Were., bare, and the 'chief Child;" exclaimed an acquaintance. use of -the fences .seemed-te, be to hold think you, have the most helpful ChB.; all the torn papers that blew- dieWn the aren I ever Sew:. Almost :any •boy street - twice Herbert's age would expect • '."So•far ai I can judge," Donald de,' 1,,fiether to get the pia, 'herself." . clared, "this' neighborhood needs 'moth- "Well," admitted,: Mrs. triggs,.. "it eras garden about fite-Much •rie- any was seeing just hew helpless many piece yea* well. could."• ,• "Mother's garden!" Evelyn echoed.. :mellaildderenine-daelltderinined't6 try and teach adults as welh=are.that "You don't plea!' mothers -going to MY Children to be self,reliant. •have• a. gardezi-in -thielphicef"a ' "a 13egan with Lands' as peon as She "What s moreathegarne of Mother` and ,terie and We Will ,go ' for a walk.' 'thother'stagarden will be Worth' watch- 'Bring 'your Warm coat and we will, tag: Better fall* frith Evelyn; take, 4 ypti'll:nliPP'holit tuft af.yeu don't," "One day Linda etuna to 'Me: with 4!Faizil" Evelyn retorted.. sCornfully. her blittonless little Oki:, Jaelcet- tit didn't seem,t at anyone could g 'B'elce,' she announced. here s the In and ..Jr6iit a'YardeSeYeral times -a batten?' I, inquired. aGa, get mother lu it; yet:EvelYn went in and otit and saw nothing neer.; °Flee twice,aohe again.'In a Moment she WaS back with the button. , ' • children cou d reach it and they be - Went by quickly without7sPeciallY. re- gab 'hanging me necessary rePaft, . , , marking -what he was 'doing. Oric," or twiee too •alle caught her inother talk- e hhre.11.41, blunt, scissors, needlecase, and ike they quickly learned where ink over the fence to 'One of the neigh:. to get' .i,,,,i.appirg -paper, twine' and straight into the house.' • _ believe this training is teaching *e Strike,one playing the biggest kind ow rny . One Saturday when she Was down - here, but each ,time . EvelYn ' went to paper vaga: the children to be more' patient ' a busieess of Idea.' Consequently, when and of man's game we ean't place her. we ,the sight to his men, if he believed in oirobly thin I wondered 1h ur is • friend. behind Would explain town shopping ' she, returned earlier thoughtful- Maria' times T have- - „a great victory. They had not the air than she had expected At the corner L watCli,; aren't, used to regarding them as any-Oling'eiceat angels and children. . 1 :!,,i?:e: backwash .1 ef a ,e,ei,l'tin,erin:F seemed ,to.„.eateh at her heart. ji .article of clothing gave out. Instead of, the street. she 'stepped; aomethiiig ed them when to broke o ' some R Y • e r wieh I had had you, boys' upbringing" ''''''e la enkirore WhO WaS no Seldier, • ,T04;161.1.0W.; • IP! wee goang te he all that• a ;gerbil should'be . TfeinorroW. . No one should be kinder .'or ,than • - A 'universal oust , 0 After that,bonefits every.. bodyey. Aids digestion, limoleansot the, teethe ,soothesabeibroa ay joHN ao-6-HAN. A Mend ig-he waS trotibled. and WearY R774falatetlaThomaealsaeleeepeatitaioeareteoaa: (bb ermlittaidawiitaariande . , , ,itnew " - 'af 4eltfOri U500 - TileatlY we emeiced 'and yaraed, "Get; e er and a too it ilia' at Pi-equ'W 4 -g7) out of tht V8V ') reiardmt Each .inpraifig ...hre'stacked• 'up' the lea • a tors he'd write. ,• Tomorrow. , , • 'And thought of the folks. he :would fill with delight • ' -w,ea ded; he 'wris'Autek And haan't ,ti Minute, to Stop onahie e way; t More:,• •givo otitmh;r8;hhee,47:aly:c1„ t,t), : a " Tomorrow. • -, a• -a - The' ,greatest of workers • this Man would have been • Toenorrow. The, world would have known hinaliad a -he ,over seen - To -morrow, But the fact ls he died and he faded • from view. ''• , ' And 'Owl was atthrhoetiilheft,he7 :Hoak Was a mountain of things he intended • .„' To-nierrow., to do , -From "A Heap o' Living," by ,Edger , 'A. Chiest, ting.-...awa,y -from that :infernaln,city had qiillif. 'P'1044.4r4g, ghla6r: bye L.W.4.7.41'e,14.etaul l•.et , iirOot.,*04,- StiOnit scitilbatql* • cheered us up vvonderfully. ,Now we . nations. ,..***,;.,00Aci: today. :,,lipi:,' " Try it.. wtheereso9unnt.cieonf tthhepeeulindr. road, ilithooviwnie 'rtsot tahalc7.1rfowaehmeroestinit .swYas'nP,r alolioetseiatYt;et,...iele's; .."' We should not perish like rata in a th9 four 0.1.1u.and a era'zY:wnnian, and *."..."....."N Sewer. We would be ell together, too; .thin personal antag_uTlis•TUinade the and 'thatwaease.cemfort.-1.thinkawa strife -ef,. 'Pales -onlY.-,a .dirillY.: felt ,felt __the .reliee-_whieh' ii,,, -than who has bachgroUnd;.:`;-;''sa',',7 .alititen -oze:aalenelYaeirtiaastafeele-whenahe. -...•'•-•Weeleptathatainght 'like- logs'-eii..athe ;lie brought back to his battalion. ' Be., floor of a dirty khan, and started neat 'sides, the thing had gone clean beyond inerning ha re powder of snow. . W our power to direct; It was no good Were getting very, high bp now; and i ;planning and schemang;., for none, of was perishing told. The Com anion-- •• . , .. uS,' had -a. nethin avliat; the *rivet -step hze Parrie Pounded like -Litiasin-had . • , --. , . , .nualit be. We were fatalists: now, be-. traveled the road befere and 'told the , OTAg4.; AND'Pl-1 STREET. .leheirs' were .still uncomfortably high. lieving in Kismet, and that is a coin- what the places were, but they conveY "I can never, never ask - , , . . Bumpers proved. th to raise e kiea• tables fortable faith. •,. . ed , nothing to ' me. All morning we stayone' to, , come and see me here," Evelyn de. -and chairs to just a suitable height : All but Blenkiron. ' The coming of wriggled through a big lot of troops, or the youngsters, .•Hilda von Einem in to the business a brigade at least, Who swung along at iclared' cholurigii,. ,. . oit a great pace with, a fine free stride had put a very ugly corniilekiciii rs Ponald.lbaked, queerly •at his sister.; . : .'. for him It was curious to see hoar that. -I- .den't 'think' li have 6Ter seen .thea, heglaneed down the street and "HERE'S -THE PIN."bettered: I must say I took a fa •ncy ' to. . I she affected the different members of • Whistled under his breath. It was r.ot .the Turkish fighting man: I remerrie "Mother," said little Herbert,ill' our 'gang. Peter did reef care a rush. ., ,net, p ifl ea they onifetvl:tal, ch. it, Ilibeeehno uesteueeldo Ofkoerd; were • the ehered Yon please pin my collar tight? 21.$ e's I men,. woniala and hiPPogriff : him .as a clean fighter, and I felt very the testimonial our fellows geve .,Noarbr,..:,all had, ',eheap ince' curtains the 't S /. 'h pin7 , u e enoug , Ina his: alli as11'ho him;we he km.et , to d re nutking plans round it all 'as , calmly aed he grasped it large safet ini •igi:;ietdtehrlitnhtilitita this dirty business., Their Germany should have lug- upY an old lion, in a patch .of bush , tak- ing the. facts as they. came and work- ing at • them as lf they, were a sum. in arithnaetie. . Sandy and I were im- pressed -it's no good denying it: hor- ribly- iinpressed-but we were too in- terested to be scared, and we weren't • 71; "Sha certainly replied Donal& could toddle. 'Bring mother your mit- day and net. see what was happening the button, and we will ,pew :it on sure, she noticed Donald •digging up . "I placed a workbasket where the border or seeding bare spots, biz halted for a meal, and we stopped to and lunched off some brown bread and dried 'figs and a flask of very emir wine. I had a..few words with one of the officers who spoke a little German: He told me ,they were marchin a bit fascinated. We hated her too bstereanigah.tgrIc'eariRTuusrsk'aiLhsivnie:t0"-trhye,*ien ha he Much 'for that. •But she fairly struck • • • •Blenkiron, dumb. • He said hunself it was just like ,a rattlesnake, ad a bird. I made him talk about her, for if he sat and broocledlie would get Worse. Caucasus, 'We have beaten the French and the British, and now it is Russia's turn," he ,said. stolidly, as if repeating a lesson. But he added that . It. was a strange. thing that this man' he was mortally sick of war. about the most courageous I have ever the most imperturbable and think .....In.„„the-afternOon we cleareda-the column and had an open road for some met, ehould be paralyzed by., a slim hours. The land now had a tilt east - woman. There no doubt about it. ward, as if we were moving thwards The thought of her made the future to the valley of a 'great river'. Soon we him .as black as • a thunder cloud. It began to . meet took the power out Of his joints, and coming from the east with a new look, little Parties of men if she was going to be 'much 'around, in their faces. The firat lots of wound - looked as if Bienkiron 'might. be ed had been the -Ordinary thing. u , yo ' see on every front, and there had been some pretence at organization. But these new lets were very weary and NO, sir; I haven't got no 'sort of broken; they were often barefoot, and they seemed to have lest their' trans - that she puts me out of countenance; find a group stretched' by the 'roadside and I can't fit in as an antagonist. I in the, last stages of exhaustion. Then guess ,'c vp 'Americans haven't' got the right Poise for dealing with that kind would come a party lirnping along, so women- tired that they never turned their heads to look at us, ,Almoat all were of fenalile. We've exalted our folk into little tin gods, and at the same thne left them out of the real wounded, some badly, and most were • X suggested that he was in love with her, but this he vehemently denied. of casting it impatiently aside or run - there been an accident? The yard, in Angor -a was my notion of some matided it. • . ring to me' for help, they almost place such as Amiens in the retreat "These lsoya look mighti:bad," he When , she becanie..calmer •she.. saw that varalil lo I it over thou htfully. an4 transport -the neat of the bottle, if we're going to get seats foal the last front of.her'hoase was full of people. . from Maus. It Was one mass of ,trOoPs observed: '"We've gotth' hustle, Major, they were nearlYail children,,and that • e'll 113'7a,e, t°ochave harm.ber, augd-Trialls, for More arrived every hour, and the act." each was holding a purple' or yellow PausY- . ..."`Chestnut Street Dooryard Associa- tion! Notice any difference, ski?" 'Slie turned at 'the sound of her brother's voice. Donald put his hand under her elbow. "It's time this blind streak passed, young woman. Now walk up - NEW USES FOR DOOR BUMPERS: ' Those Woodendoor bumpers that • ,iscrew !rite the Wall back of the deer extanding”,,outa”threereora,four'ainclies With 'a hard rubber tip.,itt„the end are useful for ether- .than their original purpose.•• , . „ hiterthe bottom of thelegs of an Ordinary dining chair trans-. trans - forma it into a very acceptable. high aliair, for ':•the--thild"-•na- Tet large' enough -to use ,a chair of usual height. • Some house -wives prefer such an ar- rangement to the usual ,high stool for • -working at table or sink since the 'hack of the chair offers extra ' .rt a........Inatheasameawaya.a.-16Vervioakatable and down the block and tellme what At heart EVelyn-Was'--a:-good -sport. 'She admitted what she might have ad.... • ,Mitted days 'before ': alrric*..a1I'ot the yara$, had been raked ilik,soirie had the begieningEi: of garden, And here and there clean white curtains were 'hanging behind freshly waslied-Wir `dows. . "Thai's after three .months of living • ;near. "1 think," Evelyn said slowli, have Lizia„ Craig come ,and • See *tee " can be 'stiCcessfully' raised • so, aS ' • prevent unnecessary stooping, If the : buroner?s,.are stained or painted to eor- Linda,' Herbert will announce. ll 'I' That was my own feeling. The sight only outlet was the . single eastern Teed. The town Was ,pandernonium into ,which distracted German officers were trying to introduce some order.. They didn't worra, Much about us, for the heart Of Anatolia Wasn't a likely hunting -ground for ,suepicious char- acters. We took ,our passports' tp the. third of the .weiy.,,,,Tapressed.eaareeke get- them.' Or, 'Mother can sew that shoestring together if .she, had linen thread 1,11 get it, Herbert.' ' • "Just now this, is a great help to me. , But I believe that in the future it will be the children who will reap the reward." • , ' made' me mad to get on faster, for I sew that big things weie happening in the East. I had reckoned. that four days would- take' Us .irom•*Arigera to Erzerum, but here Was a the ,secorid, -nearly' over '.and We Were ' not ,yet a comtriantlaint, who Vised -them readily SIMPLE, PRACTICAL' HOUSE FROCIC. dateld-us-lie4dado-hisabeatatoaget-Ais transport. We 'spent the eight in a sort of hotel, where all four crowded into one littlobedroom;and next morn- ing I had my Work cut out getting a motor car: It took four hours, and ;thee-use:of; 'e,very--great',name. in- the, Turkish Enipire, to. raise a dingy sort of Studebaker, and another two to -get the petrol and apate tires: As for a aeselyi and 'that :hurry was eater un- doing.a I' have said that the Stnclebakei was .6. rotten old Car. •Its steering -gear Was pretty dicky,' and tbe bad surface and Continual 'hairpin bends'i. of the road didn't.improve it. a Sean' We came we 'Snow, 'tying fairly deep, :hard and rutted -by:the-lig tiaesport Waglaail. We bumped and bounced . and were ahaken, about like peas .chauffeue;eloveaoremerfeYadoindret-nikElii-a' lilaildet-7'1-13-egiiii-TO-13-e -a-cutely' ham, and I was compelled to drive the anxious' about the old henershaker,,the thing niyaelf. •, more as we, seemece; long way ,aheat „ _left , 'after • mid -:.day and of the -village -I had-peoposed*sp-end' sw.4.m..g. out in -t -o -i --bare- h.lealc -doWns:41M-rright--in:-Twillgift was falling. an'd patchedWithaecrubey woodlands. There we were still in an unfeatured, waste; was aa .anaw..•here, but a Wind was crossing ' the shallow glen of a 1s:tree:ma 'Weaving, I"! he.easewhich'searched There was a bridge at the bottom Of a tile. rnaraaW. Presently we elimbed'np; elope -ea bridge of loge and earth" the hills, and the road, though not Which had 'apparently hen 'I, freshly adly engineered to begin, with; grew strengthened-forhpavy teaffic. As we as rough as the channeLof..a. stream' 1 ,aproached-4-4t-aLgood- pace' the. ' Car No wonder, wonder, for the traffic was like ' ceased to answer 16 the wheel. i, ., . . wliat.,prie saw onthat aWfill .stretch! I, .struggled desperately, to keep . it . between Caseer:'and,Llapees, and there ....Straight, but it swerved to the left and• were no gangs of Belgian roadinakera we plunged 'over a bank into. aanarshy.. _to in eattlaiteu,pa Weafparridtroopa-hy the.'.- hollOW77. .Th -eke -Was.., -iii 'sickening.' hirm p.'.. -f1latiiiar4s,, -stridind . along:with their ' as we •'struck the lower greuird,' and impassive 'Turkish faces, ex convoys, the whole patty were shot out -into the male , e,onvoys, wagons draWa/.by. frozen slush. .I. don't yet know 'how .• 'sturdy little Anatolian horses, arid,' I escaped, for the car turned over and coming in , the contrary -;,direction, , by rights-I_shourd-have-had”-inys--back- many shabby Red Crescent cars ,and broken,. But 'noone- was hurt.... Peter vvagons of, the wotindefr ,W.e. hadto.,avai„.liteghing,•aand Blenkiroia;• after, ersAVIfer hours on end; till .we got :shakirig_the snovi out of his_hair,,,jciiri, past--aableale:al-Ulltabefteladathaeadaaiken- 76-d'hif-n-.7.-For myself. I. was feaerishly, hig We li 'erilcd to .outstrip., the"first' examining the maehin`e. it Wail about presa, and had a Clear run for about as - ugly as it could he, for the front ten miles ovee.a loW paik in the hills. axle was brOken . , 1' ' • I began to get,ankious about.•the (alai , ' , • . (•To be continued:), 'for it was a poor •One at the htt, and ' • •• ' .. '' _ • ' .„,... ---reepand-With'•theaerifele , Witha". . --' '' .A.:' S-TITCII 114 -.TIAI. , . - -1" --gna.refite=W9tolie''..4" • -:__ . goOd, Po 'at a aasual ' 1 e • . v' 'ter, r*kt6; intotf,d, at,. t.kict joining , of setap Iron: . . . : . . ,, ... , I When you •warit in ttexhtra Bin,tt., lib-s,,,,i . • might ;likely stippOse that „they- had, - " -8 1 - . ' ' g 4n" a 181 waist .' ' A' lett.' The lines. 'a're f.siniple„,. 1, ..A,_!.!...t.lie..liatne: It ..Waii. glor. Iona to ,-be rental.' a •garinent,.. do yo aye 1 ou 0 ..hen . ut " I- '' ' li ' th h. . ,arid the st`yie is eagy no develop., c re_ out in the open mg un „Peter'n. fue . in pndipg tops and bottoms. that fl.t? . a• ,P : lu P 4r. -'t . en (: c atr or . • . ., i . • a . .. , wore a new iook, and be mired the A . friend of ,ihine. luta,' an,aidea.'”iaat• . torme 'ana 'unmearnea muslin are here ,tablifeir.r.,...,„. %Vas- ink a_de....... r, ' .,': „ . 1, . , ,',' ,omb-bret-,,,,,' (.;,..r.,,pf.,t "iwt.•'w•-6...,--,-!•-o-i-o-T," g,--•4,,,'-ou../4-q-tilrL-'a. irlgtiiktr.a' "31111C;;.' ''rr,hel70flaiitk",,r; sa yea.' "-nincliatrouble.-When she . • • ,,;• .. ... ..- ... • .: .aas,0 •oe attrae . •,”• ,. . • , At, $11t: 4$ hf:f 0,,,,W, a$ f.,6 ,r0, iricori, , • .,-.• ,„, • , ' . . • ,, . up ram 4 e wayside.eamps the ocirir 4, stray -snap she does' net' throW it .. .Vellierit feJTgisrlwastnnrias,:ten /our or ..,11.0., ,,f,,,att!.,,..,.. ,..r.,' „ut.' ..n.i , 4 .filiet: arid.the nuriout. acrid •wiritor mmail et,,, . to a drawer lothie. She hes' a small the bumpers tO .'s, . aklua k e' tiitme or ' 14 94,9t -Of Wend -smoke and dungfires. ,That, in :platform *ait a'starid ,uport• which tai. ---a''' ".' ' 41 r di U.1 A; . ':f 8,'4 0; Large; greht Wind-blown spa(:es, will alwilys card' about the eize,... of , a post crard Plaee th diebfiaai ThIS, -Makes -a '3.2;44r; Pi,' ...' ., „area; A.,-,481, insh.,,e)5 bySt.corae to anyinerra.ory as I thiek oia_that; tha'rengh whieh she "(1'6' a h 1.. .' i ' .ttrong ateady four j, t., 4 1.;.., t ..„ e',Itsuri. . . , r'',Iilltil "61,ze-reqiiiires da-k•-Piery•-hOur,brOtight me ewe eia a ear( Ptrile'ho Allette, or enathing • . j" "" a" i a acc 'y.,'. of ,i6‘; .4b.firk41' if? inches Wide nand 'awl 1."°1414011' 1 ft.;.4.' as I had' handY. Then' she We the kuatt°tnh'' e.' of: lei , eriaaeapa...ea.• ty a .1, }. el. 4., '. 7, ..„.,plain material for the •• . : ' d ' that Wili. appeal strongly 6 ,i,11,.„.,,,.; ro,, , , , ; , . . ‘ . , . folt When the battalion first ,t iii •the anal). Oranne aide' of the ,eard end ....a , 10 II» -Jras. W4 . W.0 . , .. iron' Aire .taW,afarf, t..)? 'f,, a' i ',',C the top. on the other and:slier:0i not mar tbe ehatriel sink,, " „ . a. c.,...• • e ' an 3 4'"ef kind of keying2uP: aria .wiLd 0$1)eel•a•-. tOgether;.• Whenever she needs. esirair 'when the kindergarten set 7I 477 'i,,Oe.) Yet.another • etc. fda them -was fonlier,. ,,,,,,,,, -- • . , .< • al he. Width ' ata the:Ilan", . 'aen, not wo.d i0 cities,.and lou rig: ,of an size ahe chief; not* heed toripcivi' , kw foi the children- to work at: 'ii - ''., •?;:t tille.ili. try; ar,y addrss en ed illy ,rih„ e xow, ...a the 8harp. whid ot..601-113 n/i."-U.t "arCillg erourid • • Mg aliou, (!,onstanti,n.dpie had. slacco- . , !..', ,e' fp' silver or Statrins bY bliffeted*4 l'f(;)1. /1.1, /1,..ed to tiny, la, a a rawer trying to, Match , up pnrts, comfort while the adult -size f•tillo ati.o • • • - .... - , • , . ' , - . • a • , , at 1, , , , . . . ,. ' • ' -, • 1.• . :a, I h,,ori Publidri rig Co„ 73 Weit of; i isk. tWe ,W••,''., 441, ithe gre;t:,, 7' 41 • -----,7---0.----,-, • .1 .. . .. • • , , • , ,1,,I, eeet A llow tvo. weeloi for to 274. 'a.• cal. t and, Lb . ',,,rder biro., „ ..nA ' A ftee'being used for years as it'ebil. , ,,. AUTOMOBILE 'SCUIOOL ' ' ' 'Pt ' ". r''''. r..; .1. lest batt3e-frorli .otho war,., This' was 'on Ham Cornmen, Surrey, . i,P now ,E,cor We 0.10fild 'r upon. Ihe' faim h,,.. dr'cn's playground, a lai.ge While stone One Of Ha hest MittiPPed le °wattle,'•"--'..." -' ''''. - '',,,' , no ,( ommonPIntert „1..,..w nce..,14, 'That, stAied to he a itamari •altar efamt 2,000 Make 'you a Real eliceart, Weaa : - :wee We have First.Cleisa, lastru6tors to .. l'ho, Vnited -tau 14 enrinallY gives wa., ela owe-, at.d ;are a e're geinaatte , yaara•oae. .. .... . ... • ' W. 0. Paton 661 eateen Ot, lb.. `.; Or f - , d. fl . • aWaY 65 thillion Packages. of vegetaide the iiring4.1tn., gt,in.4 t, take part In ' ', 0 , , ' ',.... . ' • ' ' -.. ' ' • 'in OWer seeds. •• • • i waat miebtane Oft- fioWnfall, 'of mit,' • ., ,, ... ,". ;:,' . , ' . . • .• mous' No. 42,--J2.3.• ' J'allnai•d'o.. Liniment H.041 • Clitit , . . t'hO:li .. . - • , ” . 1 wth,f, 'f,„ Or (.1, that %ra Minaeti e , Liniment. lac Dandrup .0! ' 4454, ' Thle moeti has, convenient. later lo Ithock cven a Rolla -Royce into I ' they .are used their appearance,' • to. Blood in the Race Dr Christian P. Neeer, Of Onderate. Peelle' Small Africa; declares he has. • found a,,,way,to determine the endur- ance of a racehorse more 'spieritifically than has. hitherto ',men possible. --.11-fi-flads that ' the red bleed cor- Puseles in the animal Increase lis ability to Stand' hard. rtrain Increases, so that, Other things being equal, the - horse 'With the •highest blood cOunt has 'the beat Chance Of. winning. Horses used in ordinary work; states . Dr. Neser, have ealy. 23. per ;Cent. .Of red POrmiscles in *their blood; while horses trained , for the Course' often have as reizea, as .5; 'per cent.' ' • • 'ed. porpuseles .are Oxygen carriers, arid when.,,k.horse has many of thein' ,can ,run longer and faster, because 'his muscles can ,draw .a large. re- serve Of. oxygen, and he therefore does •,. not tiro so -quickie. • • Wpman's Tool Engine -Driver. -"The 'reason we are kept waiting here, my le because the engiiie has breken down., 1 have eicaanirteal and it i only bad the .proPer.: tank. 1 'could .fix It in an ...i.164.1r(Lfi.il- .01-0 Lady-"Here's• a hairpin. • Z• Weighing '36' Atone,- and 5,17 feet in • Width, the Wprld's, fattest .rnan conies from Zaitchae, in CzechotSlevakia..To. make hiar•a snit cane fair 16 feet Of cloth. '• 'Lluaips of deal; With 'holes bored to take flowers and varniehed te.protect the..Clotk,:were:msed,es: table- Amore-. ticeas_atateaSentia. A faicanabanquetare- centlY . a good thing to remember Sealed in -PaCkag0 FLAVOR LASTS It's a. good safe rale to sojourn in every place as if you, pacimt„ to spend. your life there -never, emitting, an op- portunity of:doing a kiedness,, speak- ing_ituasi,tirhu.word er'.nia,ki,ng. f,riend• „ • am.. we awn e imorm. •ff WWI ip,is• To supply the. steadily Increas1 dem4ncl for 9 MATCHES. - Eddy's make 120 M I LLION ' matches a clay . WOO ''• '444' -Feel the perfeet balance and the, hand cornfini of The Smart made' '..--Aite:--Hardetted,toufhened amf. tempered bymen who .knewhow' • to build: dottble life and double ,value•into eyeryaxe theythake AS YOUR HAROwARE'MAN FOR A44447 • slinkle Bit=Pcy,.Ne bit CANADA F2111(14 -1P. r"'"Gs -JAI4ES-SMART,PLANT • BROOKVILLE. ONT. • IT'S the careful systematic seeing of email ilium, each 1 month.* that enables men and women to becolne ,buyer*of good7Bonds-arid so establish..thernselVet,..on".2the road to financial independence. •• Our Partial Payment Plan for Buying Bonds fia. been devised .paiticularly for those who -Wish to draw 'up a conservative, Workable plan of saving and investing it portion of their income; rhe Plan •ie quite simple ar;i1 ,„„..wilLappeaLtoothoae, who wish to sec4re,,the'..maximinn. incomereturn, consittent^with-safety: , Buying' Sonde on the Partial Payment "Plan is .fully described in a special booklet. ,Use the coupon helow, to obtain a tory and full particulars as to how you can -,becothe the owrier of a safe $500 or 11,00a bond during the cxt few mon _ _„ , ,lEmilms /93 Pay Street Toronto Limincit) __ Kindly fiend me a 'copy of "Buying .alonds tel the ' Pertial Payment:Plan." . . __,..........,-,. . . . . . ..„ .. ,,, .. ..,........: . -...z. - • Address ...... .. . ....... •., ..•,... . .. . .416,...,644.....1 y I . .. . r ,,..o ......r.d..r."1. 'Offices : Toionlo,'Aiveir1,, Ottawa, t pedon, New 'York, Landonf:kiii, . . . • . . • Hilt Born. 1 .have grown WIParY Of this languid laed; • . • , Slek'nt the IOW hPri4ell line that dews' Like a great sombre rleer; sick to deeth , Of TOSO arid laurel, eucalyptus, Palm; Prooding. in javish sweetness; 1 em mad otrefs„. — bere; TThey do nut imave sunrfse or 8Uflbet aff& -qaY slinks Coieera- • pv.o. grey waSte . Waters and grey ' ,•• laud, -Under watunted,:arnelanclaolyasaYa,„ . And, neverdeeeatabilea'away:ln°•entr SW,Ift, • splendid. biirst`•':OrPliiial.Thne. As, day eaCeitlida but: stairibles..graylypast • • finder 'the:Mantle:of-the leper. fog, To „the! difll''Stupor. of :starless.nlght at:Code:1'6r Spleedid. • pace lo thIa . • . cfawn--. • • ,- • For glipunering.. vastness -, for -1,hei. • that‘swings TunuiltnouslY in,froni starry.horizen---, Tor. the temPestuouS'inagic of a Torn 'into shreds of fire -and far tlie • •• hush , • Of aspen leaves black on an amber. • , heaVen,-- Per alt the mighty. ph6eantrlee of:clay • That made life epic large I fun athirst.: 1.'hey haVo been.Musid in my Memory; . They will go :eChoing :With me 011,1 ' come ' • lionfe to - • Feet that have trodden granite Can never be cbatent • with Milder Eye s that have held ,' high converse with the stars ' Cannot be tamed. to blinking servitude , In molelike• burroes, Ilea-rtr-ahat a „have followeduthe Wind - Beat with a -Winged •-insurgence tili , they spur • , The • thnorous flesh' to skyWard, trails again," And mine to-iright is wild virith, all re- aellion - ' •Sliirif• to all' 'other beauty -,-hungering • ,only' Tor:hill horizons anda-CoYote rpoou:-. Sage in My .niaVe” zick starg-=-.' %And then the, flame clad 'riders of the dawn ' • Loping across , the skY with 'abets ..of ' -Ted Okn The. Great . Disillusion al;er'.6Onnee to all of us My 'first :disillusion, ,says Mr .• Arthur: - Periatt tae Beet, Renienitier, eagle. -when i• was,abey of nihe-eearaa•and every detail is -burned upein .-my, meras• At .my. day school town . the boys had mad craze one year for a particular forne,of'.sWeetsa 11 our peeketinoney went 'ea' a 'Bart of sherbet, which we ate, dry wall a spoon, and„whiah we called akeliaa• *tire sold, in little .fiat wooden heies; and: there were seVellil varletiesalena. on, „ortinge,atiineaattle, eeafarth. , • oninionS, 'Varied 'sharply. as to_the-- - rtterlts of tha..VariOns Itindif:. One, boy . praised leinen kelt; •another eared, for nothing, except .oraege;, and a third, , vowed that all 'other ' varieties. of the sweet " were simply 'Uneatable conm , "relied 'and. almost ,canageet,koelhil.obweya's7,1:17_ the relative nierit.'s Of the flavors,' ;Aare 'f.fetlirtnin6iattfgirildyiPt7OWIrdratnhe earowed, chana- 'pions ,..of • iennin and pineapple'kall In aact,. we ..boys_blinaly, elevated the *.. -kiillia-lifia-rear Peril iksues. Newa•the. aunoter holidays Caine • while our, difference§ Of 'opinion were at a height, •and I went tci, visit rela-. - tiVei in .an leadt Lancialiire • town., While. there had ti teine o of ng ..takeo,over.• the factory Where the ,keilis were, Made, on lily round. I entered' a ateari ' where font gide in. White eyeralk Were -11111/1g the 'faitiliar, -11.at-ettoptleirboxea,-Whieli -Were -filreadiT'',. labeled : 'there., Was a,haountainolia eiiraader-eii-n ' round table...1.. looked 4t the boxes :they bore Colciredalabels, el1ow for lemon kali, 'red for..,, orange' hall and Jrreen,.:,for:,pineapPle-kali---.Butattliathe: ,boites 'were being filled froin.lhe smile p1)01,., ,Aghagt, I: asked the 41?.1a' niade"Aren't. ,you • putting orange'' kali into .4 lemen hall boa?". I asked in•elorie, that Must have sounded lior- 'r.(1..°1'.4:08till.,4.sk.O.,''' s atiaffefetee ; only in the labels' on the boxes," left the factorya s,adli ilIslIIusion ed boY. .•• , a.. If otie pats his •very best into every little th'lig he does --puts 11.1s heart and conaelence !into it,.and•tries to see, hOW'much;'„and not how fftile,b,e can _. gli4his ein-Ployeir- lie will, not be ilice- ly."to be underpaid very long, for he ' will be acrvaneed.,. Good work -cilts its own channel, iind does 'its own taiying. , What Mattel' if you do tweety;five'dola- Jere' Werth of ,work for five, dollars/ It k the, best advertisemen' t of. Your • worth You can posAlblio-gto., Batt ;work, hc.lt,doria Wrk,..slinsbed wcirk eieti with a good salary,' *Mild' 'soon ruin you • No, 'the way to get on' le' the .‘vcrld 'hi not to see how little you 'can give fer Your :eatery,' but how Woce your employee ashamed ef the he• glVeS by ith t' meagt e a ry e g ea aisproportion between wait you do and'. what -Fin]. •,' tc`•