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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1923-11-29, Page 21 }. . • E * A VARIETY' OF COOKIES. 4. Now that: the: task' of fixingschool luaehes ie ' in full, swing, the ildren # 'e lnsietirxg ori home innde cookies:` There are, it',hundred and'one diflere:it 'varieties • .of cookies, crackers an a'#'fors to bo. bought at the grocer # torcs these days, and at, first though y +would neon. oolish 'for the: bus OM:woman' to use. her' precious ti Make the crisp borne-made..dain, tie let there . is. a difference:14 the . taste end tit this difference lies the. charm the "cookies 'like Mother•used ake.!' The• school lunch seems. in- onnplete without�.them,, and nothing rite. .takes: the, place of them. They e easy« to ;make and convonient to rve� for light refreshments when:' the to ntcets. ..know that •' i -the S4 ' J u Of (IQ Yeu do when' Yo'a SR • to. Seii: 1add '!" , "I' look: after the flowepe, .14Y see."'' Atfirst sight :this looks ridicuious, but it le not really so, Many .,men ,r/pend the best part 'of their livesat BY JOHN BUCHANsea looking after••piaRts, and; their z YriBhtcd Thomad Nelson' an , Number !s ategdilren the •increase; (C ,, .. d. ,Sons Ltd,) Everyone .does :not -realize how large' ,- CIfAPTER XVIII.--(Cont'd.)� t ,; But. as we watched' we, saw some- to a do w1 ir°seacrett loN,owadays evenry It was a 'bad step for Blenkiron, and' thing More:. _ we •only got''hi t tt �, r The wavering lanterns large, liner. oa.rries;.gardenersy as,� am esu m. pas 'b .Peter and; were naw threucor foux:hundi:G'd. yards 'ammo part' orits-crew." I},+ - ra. o,nat s aa�d _ 1 ' ourUtrrq, '.n ' i�nY•q—,:t i�ho la ti t. ort°a1wiiwp'k-in ota;P pn'a r y�?�ipy�,�1� ��`'�0i{ .aF3 fit+;, y �d *`"G .. y"art a 1 -u),.• (. �+f,.'�{� {��� �§. �+ t '-r1 j,�!, c+. -r i���'i °�S •i',�'� j}�� �Q¢ p1�'�t.w-�"r. z ? ,Y+,e.•i; R�i ,:,'4Wry,- r. 44 .�.i:i. .S'.4,4 6� �:.:Y:F '14.1 • L1 -„r rZW:.: OLie'.' k ill :ett �'U. kith ,al .e. �. cr-'',.045# +� 41!)It .: e te'V orcId us.. ?We had no -.ratans : ii xo. •1 thought `tt was arse• Coln of to;riay t carry Vin'' pvitiidut B grip, anti he hsndIn ,bled we rid 'law the hu then, and .we all crouched them, • . .. riil •thrce'''havc 1106 s I;Here . s it h u Bet we got it over, and, dropped.'1 recognized , _ e lean uch a t e Tuts •Yetanla ' soft! as as agility of ., ",. Ho .must have, Aquitanla; and 1114ajedtfc are; very much ., i Y possible on to the roof 'of the goubled •back, keeping in the dusk td, garden Cities" in parts, and banks of r.noxt house. Hussin had his finger to the left of the pursuit, and taking big i flowers, evergreen shrubs'and trees 1n hie 'lips►. and; I soon saw h Fop risk `there was .a lighted window in the .he, , w in the open places. But there; trod,: and boxes, •hanging .baskets of Wall welled descended and separated exlg by in iniont of. vs; $rowing things, small table plants and omp t _n Some lm pr on Y y the width or. the P 1 ted me: o wait he arrovcv Street. ,.: hind -and 'expo The_others-follow e -took a•step backward;- gathered -.ee ussin and' were soon: cit. -the far himself for a sl ring,.and.leaped.elean end of the roof, wher a:khid of wooden over the gap. Like a Gat be lighted """'" :►.::pavilion broke the line, while. tried on the Parapet bov R Truth;° M. tell, there is.greatto get a look inside. The window,tried bled•forward . with theus, and a rightt no • gulf' curtained,. 'and had 't �W impetus laxed between ; us.: and.. the �. chtXdren,,: which' leaped they .. ch clay ed i ' --*".We y are tnen,an . wom p n thewmiddle., Thf sashes on our heeds. d en tn vof y small a , ough are safe for the, moment," " he_ ;edttious, and'what we en o —KaR In the.<eur-fain I saw :a :ltitlo -whispered.._„but __ s L Y or dislike lam lit roo r when they miss me a huge quantft of .Y Gut Rowers 1n vases- are u'secicor-decorative .parpoaes Sur= fug every voyage that is taken,. IC does: not .require Muck imagination•• to realize, that,1ooking atter and arras g� Ing all these -garden bits ,aboard is wholertime job • forgone man 'Heng ,thegardener-sailor;,:..• ;.�__:_... �• p- m and a'bIg man sttini;'at they will returns We mu The 'tea-garden and grand •loungeon is apt to affect the children 3rl' the n table tittered with a hastew .. must make good a great liner take• scores o samo way. I f. we do not enjoy orders, I watched him, f cepeiz, T make th ni f planta to we'ca riot reasonably ex t the chip s aced, as he he next half hour was. a maze of a leok. pretty,; and there is. poet • turned_to.-Consult-some-document-a ld--twists-and-turns; el'ipp g: doh Vic- hO tother-rooms, to sa rio dren o do so. made a h}a $in' y of private suites, Y thing n m, en he sudden! stacks.. to lance at the and from div.. ��., ,�.,.._-- - Plvery a e chimney - t` g on the map before roofs andclimbing Let u fes, to be kept furnished a erase la you can the holds ' ! hi Th a ore icer Y a ch 11 d s' 'himself, Y rose, stretred The stir of the city had go e. wi. d w the bl coat a net with plants. during. the voyage. Ke u an opportunity m show off that is almost, invar}ably In” the room, . making a y ick streets below came, and wont but o n o ' dcaq spend. But always the d, great clatter in descending' the wooden great. tattoo of cePted. cheerfully by' little folks. And staircase. He left the' door ajar and ' Gtandual•1 descendedfitidei o: a seat.. ' fiery fvtheir motive f the eoehildren'the lam burning, , Y we rgthe top. lower whatever' p level t a co emerged on of a to _ �' bedience. I.'&ukased he had gone to have:a s ed' in a courtyard: ,;,Kussin gave an that is ofdao tl"fief willlook' at his„prisoners, in which' case the', odd' sort. of cry, like a demented owl, great value. ' aRoip • tido, you, show was up.. But what'. filled' my and something began to stir below us please?" haa a note ofcompanion'ship mind was an" insane desire to get 'a' :.It was a big covered wagon,, full of wholly Jacking in an order to name sight; of his map. h•If was one of .those bundles of forage,. and drawn by four Instantly td do his work."for ' •"If ^we r right reason, thing independent oa mules. As we ' descended from the ri ' g' p f ,shed into the frozen litter .of the; yard, _ Y plan, a crazy lean ;,, +z.,, .a__.,. A .nn„ ,....w_ ___. .. coolies "are much oug#►; is thoroughly chilled befog: aitigi''this 'leaves. thee butters ha• rd'and; " ' •s does: not requite so nuch=:flour The lash flour used, to •better cockles', a as re. The oven.,mntistr;be,watched"c ire. Hilly, especraiiy for molasses coo lea.' `bo,:following. ipes,�a ;e.'tried rad tru , e sy to tn•�nite,• and A tfetc ens e. oo s cream Atte--•euMp of. ' . b tter,� .ado'" ore anti one self ,:cups 3 ' q augar•� cies-hal! cti of ]k egg, "four Ie+ei teaspoons Off baking,'powder, i hue teaspoon aflgreted futmeg and we'll have to hu tie and t thi tO. i task , that is made latef1,11 'by a,•if need -be, .to 'get ,to •that table... . ') scrambled 'in .beside Mtn, and I. never markable skill 18 ahowii in .achleving ed 131enktron -into the cart; -and or .the af•tual plants' might be. ' Re - "Put everY One of those toys ,. There was no need, for' the fliinsY.' felt anything more blessed than the good. decorative . results, 'and on' 'ape- . sterling for eteps'cin the stai s' ten all ab q . a .e pu ng from' ,,y_ tch, t.lind_Aolga,imEa, -copying:. 1.11,A ° ell' Blenkiron began to laugh, a Of vaaas for dinner and other tables Wave to .be supplied with fieshly-cut Weems. Someisf the latter are taken aboard reedy cut nnd kept in Cold storage still required, but very many are 'obtained from flower-. "The gardener aboard must combine artistry with horticultural prolici for he Would soon lose his 'job if the liner's garden bits looked ugly. and "thrown together," howevor well the. warmth and softness of that place cial occasi 1 d'be quick about olasP geve at the first pull,' and akne ,s the gardener' .manages to 94t znY hunger,- 'and °11,1Y ma hi flowers tti y „ es, the payer mdoved out of the_ courtyard It Is the gardener -sailor too who Match the gener I 11:re, t ey eo. sashes swang•erm. 'I scrambled in after the frosty roofs. had forgot- m 'd -it it means all the .difference 'lbetween my entry, brusheLlaway-athe-sno..1 . . • . doW. Still there" was no sound of his hysterics, the relief r-P,M, the tension learn , a lot about plants which no I found th in s iverin ' t there was never anything the matter! sailors Ba -trees as I tetras and p,intaanaLr.urnhie-aahiehasiaor -sergers are anxious .to haire arrive on eheerful-mrchreluetatirabrdience.' from the boards pulled back the our:I vio ent ParMa roug t down a heap of: e o er s de in good.Oonditten. " tain,. got opt anil refastened the win -1 forage on hrklitV4,4 thought it was Incidentally,' gardeners' aboard ship A labor-saving built-in fixtare' that the °tiers- - . b y g out of training, but -esnoaailly regarding their qualities a; WHY NOT A DIJMH re I started off to.catch up, of the pest hour, {But it wear __P. amount of land life would teach th should be found in many homed is the ip; dumb -waiter If the cellar i ool a dumb-wa operating between the iter lers and so are chrysanthemums and kitchen and cellar is not only a great ' y f carnations but -roses do not like the y in ent, so a .men, u somehow I didn't cotton to life on board ship. ce ox. prey eaven we soon strike bette Colonel Stumm. But now .I almost! many' sorts of ferns- are good travel- Suoh a wait b 1.1t i • ' ' r love him. Yoti hit his jew,very. bad in he a reedy befit.. Censtruct it in. uch. a menner that when the Waiter E.Intar ' pace from one roof to. another, p,riVate file, and I, guess it's important s lowered into' the cellar the bur or ere tho were all 'of the -sable ,or he wouldn't .have loeen so mighty orner posts, attached te the bottom' heig 11 est n the• screens divided them. We oever , and, only lew parapets, and set on' stePle-Chasing ever those.roofs. u ,the.tvhoTe four cups, will beneed- dunib'-waiter will The fevv 'feet up housetop. kept the'eotikieallave been placed front the 11 .? waiter reaches 'the kitchen floor and ft Th h bo broke irito neighbor Brown's woodshed sou , or a winter's night is not the ce oor. us t e ttom of the time you choose to saunter on our to steal his tame 'posstnn, and that's the'pan, press a rejoin 'into the top • a r. The top of the I rt y ars open for 0 Y Years back. It's the first p 'trouble behind us; and in ttbout five cocoantat cookies—Beat one cup of SPrinkle the top of -each cookie with. ogether, add one beaten egg, orie level iX 'As soft' ao, pOSSible; and .roll out. astption of soda and flour enough •to 'TBilte in; %lick 'oven. These cookies 'shredded. cocoanut and press lightly. should he, rolled •nbeut -half ari inek cUp of butter, aiitl one cup of sugar; .,:and one-half.cup Of sour milk. Stir in one:-hnlf of a level teaspoon of soda', •.• One egg, a little nutnieg end as litt! Pantry flour tie can be used and rol 1 Yi s ould be finished 'the 'same as the kitchen floor." Thus' when the waiter is in the cellar the top fills the kitchen floor opening, ' • TWQ of the waiter should be screened, so foods Areprotected from pests; and at the same time it provides If the -cellar is not cool enough a pit may be dug four to six feet below cellar floor level 'and cemented on the With this device the heusewife will be spared many trips up and down the ' A POPULAR STYLE FOR' THE ,"LITTLE MAN" broke out, with one louder than the and found 'the tricks of the thief. then •hurr ed us on at a break -neck Hussin fave one -glance behind and Pace, Withsold Blezikiron gasping- and stuinbling. The shouts behind us giii-ew louder, as if some. eye quicker t an the rest had 'caught our move - The ,Economical 'Production of a rhent in the starlit darkness. --It was Have a packet in vour pocket aiteplatk. - Allays 'Hardt. Soothes the. throat. • For Quality, Flavor and the Sealed Package, got • Even ,deep-seated rust on steel or iron can be removed by' applying a coat of unsalted lard,, then dusting ever this very fine powdered lime and letting it remain until rust disappear& If you 'want a happy home, see to it that your Wife's husband helps to- ward the happiness. • • Find. what you like to' work with, and stick to it' 'Success lies in the. man and not in ,his materials. s. FARMERS' BOOKLETS Sent Free Publications nch Department 'of Agri hare How Should Canada E rt Beef Cattle ?. Winter Egg Production. Wintering Beo in. Canada. ' Crate Feeding Dairying, , New Zealand antkd Dressing and Cutting Lamb Car - Finishing Lambs for the Block. Simple Methods for the„Stgrage Is Cow Testing Worth While ? The Maple Sukar -Industry. nterim Report of the Dominion . Animal Husbandman. ' iece Report of the Dominion Field • Husbandman. Cleaning Seed. ream Cheeie. The Feeding Of Dairy Cattle. 1 The All -Year Hog Cabin. ' gem:some amosement I've struck since old Jim Masker told the tale of, 1Coesin Sally Dillard' when we were' henting ducks in .Michigan and his wife's brother had. an apoplexy in 'the night and died of it, To the accoinpaniment' of Blenk- iron's chucklee I- did what Peter had, done in the first :Minute, end fell asleep. , When I awoke It was still dark..The wagon had' stopped in a courtyard which• -seemed -to be shaded. by, great trees. ;The snew.lay'deeper here, and by:- the -feel Of -the air we 'had left the city- behind and climbed to higher ground.. There were big 'buildings on Traffic' Opp—"Didn't you see me wave to you? Why didn't you stop?" didn't -see you at all, officer! Now Germans I -lave Eclipse Data. extremity of the ,Northumberlank str4its in the Province of Nova .Pech. friiM .tbe• 'errival of the -"Hector". front little band of Scottish immigrants, in- augurated the first real and perma, 'tient settleteept .of the Province . first-- settlers liaVe -lib Cited there !rem the teot'eltvHerected foe their aceoni-... !imitation, And "generally' evidencing. whiCh prevalis in' the hearts 6i sons . •sa;T'nch:.--edi'ralivsLIF.f:le:i•trin'cgill*H9h1:or[n;:ltdiQdr". P'ilv.r?laravt'afe9ts.17:11.r °ea; .the arrivals oxt :the "Heatoi" are de- • scrilied na being Mere. severe than those undergOtie by any otyer set- tlers. , Eighteen died' on ,the passage sod others reached the shore .9f...the new world onlY to find a• grave upon the beach. Those who eurvived were utterly destitute. They iittd on/y rude, getnps to . shelter , themselves and families during -the winter, and; precure food, had to.prOceetil•to'Trurci through a-, trackless forest and' in deep two of ootittoeo, and. sometimes a lit- tle flour, had to return, carrying their small .inpplies on:their backs, or dreg' theM in .,:hand .sleighs over. the deen , The descendants of these hardY Scottish . immigrants *he pioneered'. British settlement in Nov 'S ti)eewtirs, itil.TAT117; et bel:dile:;Sn°etueanclide !lawn" n:adnvilt63;triliSTesheCeteaelytni:aladnial a7:tit West, and still la aerations, pro-, ng ,frorn the' fruits. of 'their fore- bears, 11a,,ve attained eminence in many phases of the • life' th tweet. This was 'clep.ily.,eVidenced. in the,- .notable .aggregatipn which that first hardy band 'cit pioneere'; .which played. a not .enimportant part • in 'the early deieloPment Of Caenda. Nova Scotia hag .an intinzate and most vita" connection "With the 'earlY. history •of paoaati, and es sugh la of parainount interest .to visitors ' and student's!' it. IS; veritable :flung:iv( rob:lance and history,. English, French:, in Annapolis Royal," the eldest town ' in' .Canada. . Here Artie Wan. censtrtica ed' and, launChed • the... first.. 'vessel-. --here was built the 'firat inill in ng to . the.. 'diseriminating More and ',More -aitOittionists. e'aea eer are', discovering it:and the ;great'. eiet.. About 46,000,000 is lett an visitors' .to the Annapolii" ailey and Weitern Nove Scotia fro*. T. been- developed. with practically • ci .effoit on Nova Part. Many.," he Self -Feeder for Hogs. eed Racks and Troughs • for Sheep. The Sheep Barn.. very evident that -if they kept up the chase we should- be -caught; for Biel -1k: List of Publications. v iron wee about as tzseful on a roof as t 'beauty et, the Marititne provinge is with a kind 'of ladder down it, and at s e, an on the other what looked like the lift -of a hill. No lights -were the foot a shallow ledge running to 'shown. The place was in profound the left into a pit of darkness. Hussin I glopm, but I felt the presence near me gripped my arm and pointed down it. I of others besides Itussin nild the "Follow it," he ' whispered; "and you ; driver. . ,. wilLreach a. roof which spans a street: I We were hurriedr.-Blenkiron only --Cross-iti. and on the other side is a I half awake, into" an outbuilding, end mosque. Turn to the right there and I then' down some steps to a roomy col- yoti will find easy gding for fifty , lar. There Husain lit -a lantern, which metres, well screened from -the hig-hei' showed what had, once been a store - roofs. . For 'Allah's . sake keep in the [house for fruit. Old husks still strew - shelter of the screen. Somewhere ! ed the, floor and the, place smelt of there I will 'join you.", :apples: Straw had been piled in cor- He hurried Ua along the ledge for 'brit for beds, and there was a rude a bit -and then went back, and with table, and a divan of beards covered snow from the corners covered our with sheepskins. . -the .1eceat ealipse .ot the sun from at point Sa Mexico. feel sure their photo:a graphi:are the best taken and s:re has- tening tO the observatory. at Pots.dain. „to-develop-tbe plates and, work-nu7the tioned. San Diog-o.•'Cal., Were badly. ltnndicapped by .Clouds' at. the moment' prof. .Hans Ludendorff; brother:,of- the Gertnan.Gefieral;• Wee In charge Of, the German astronoiners, and, he will be assisted iiy°Prof. Einstein, who has left Holland for.Berliniff'determining jastt what the caniervitioni prove, 'It will take, months, however, far • the data t� be worked up. and. full: conclu- sions drawn. An American expeditien and Ane- from .France, Also 'ebServicl. the eclipse' under good conditions in.. the Mexican mountains,. aad" tae 1' these. visitors ara the .desOendants f the 'Original •pielopers of• the pro, ment 'to the ola:. home and Wander: .back periodically,; as.' On the.. ocCasion of the anniversery' ot the arrival •saf :Of !relapse& 'one-half :Cup hutter,-onea ••-lalf-cupAicit-avater-lii7Whielf-One le- -el ;• teaspoon et wide has been diesolveci., MIX .with ooe rounding teaspoon: Of :ginger and cnbugh flour tO make.' a dough that•cen be rolled out half an. „Grandnueo Mon. _oirghly, one, cur') of inolasses with twot• %thirds Can of lard, one egg, One cop „ of sugar, 'three level teaspoonnothoda, three rounding teaspoens Of one of cloves ard Ono' Of' cinnamon. • ,Add flour enough' to toll. ,Roll piece • 4 putt two inchee 'apart- Care' must be taken not to get.tod mach neer., ' OBEDIENCE, • ecirrati the ever -alert -"ears of Ian a• whine week or lai•Ing corislattra ng: Or ern, one -bit; aed•yon order JO -and. too 'tots end Tether; Vrtily. 'how it feels` to, lie brought up like this by.tho f10/1 W' daughter, and if we are wise w i Poit office ., on himself; taking strange shortisteps • ed to lead our pursuers af.ter him; and Setae ;days' one teephoso-lightly : he ' lad„..to,„anuittplyathe-Articks, --and. : 'AS Seitglilis tough the foam '. that • they all were fna.de la bile man: ,31, l p-.."3, inot l'o, to, corne; . ' -* in getting 'Blenkiron along ,alt ledge; ' ' - ' - ' He Was. pretty nearly foundered, he pown d nn forgotten, ways th 4600. • One could have this in jersey ,weaves, flannel orserge..._ Itaisaalso-en Ili goad mac) for linen, seersudker alicl he The Pti,ttern is cut lit '2 Si;esi 2, t'd TI . , 'lettere mailed to any addreaft on 'It Publishing Co., 73 Weld of Adelaide St., -.Toronto, twa. rou ebiggest risks of his life; for we had or ,b.urted' yesterdays. ItITI1WrinleTEYilled Holy mike. -nut On etir,rent8 stilong end free .Nefftured gallantly, and we got te as those. tuft 6tutts Oeeati` c• roof which. tan, item:is the street..r • his day has .aorn me ' °ugh,' but it ayes no joke Skirting' ' rope and 1118 neck depended on him- I , weeks for rereipt of Pattern.' t • let Ws sees ferifet . Liniment foil Dandruff. FURS ANTED Pfigheat Prices Paid for. Sktillki C0011, FOX, Deer. Skins, 'Hide's, ,Ca•lfskins, Canadian tilde 84 14attlier rs..Ordinary 'Sunsets 14r, faavitualor had- been a great tre, litttf• V01,11(401 )(pee e it fot flask 'sob Ilwstakley, "'„Voit 'should. like to,'" said "The too Or the coital -nil 'sled; ..litsa.frieed f "A mind content be'th' drowil and 0(1, aii(I thirty yards off, tidross' the t. Btt am kin to neither:. 'For. Me, dote neUght Save Wide gray seas or teeter', No, day.,hes been. save this one, . 1 All else will-tonch Tile burst Witt3 pro'eeeding along the roofs' parallel to the one WO Were I lanterns,: waved and down as 'the bearera slipped in the• snow, and 'I Iteutki t,heir cries like hounds .on be lied not. ithe shape for that sort of tinned to our left, now hid by njut-.! against thc:sicy line., The roofs they; were on we.u.e.rusrlutils six feet higher'. thaw Ours, so orce 66,11 our shelter., tiro it 11;1,1' lotsk,orit •,180 for hadn't ,,T‘f., i4;rp'tiiest (lotion where. we Thl,te is- no, Such•things EN a born criiniriai, And it is impoesible to Main - tale that crimInaliity as, such la in, crime is, as h rule, simPly an over. abundance or constritetive energy, blocked or misttirected. ! " Make it easy to do right bard to do youisqy and everybody. The wife was 'greatly pleased -with 'her succOlis at the womee's meeting. On her return home she said tto her ,spoken at the meating•this eftertiden." Her husband Jooked •Incredulons, "U•ctin hardly 'believe it, my dear," (NO stamP' required); YVolVIEN1 DYE FADED THINGS NEW AGAIN Dye or Tint Any VVom, Shab- by Garment or Drapery. tamond Each 15 -cent package of "Diamond Dyes" contains reetions simple that,any wo an ca dye or tint any old,oworn faded thin CW. Veil if she has never dyed before, dhoose any color at drug store. MY:GOODS .SALE Every artIlle in this% Here Iowa be told: Privet. hare ,beatt mit down practical!: To mac .547 Pecen Street to Toronto. • • EVERYWHERE CANADA silent - but eloctuint- MATCHES render the ma5cilnurri roe EDDY'S MATCHES' 4.1 • A' Fallen Plitnet? Astronomers have long knovial that betWeen the orbits Of Mare and .7up17 tot a large..nutnber of tiny planetary bodies revolve rotind. the sun. Sem* :of these have a efirenniferenCe-rof,-but:. In addition there ,are cduntletts .b1.1;• • lions 'of what might be 'called meteoric) • ' siOnes hurtling rouod the sun., These are bonstantly entering the earth's at. moiiphere and being burnt up bY the friction'. ranch' More' completely' than . the nioth . that tlies.,into the candle ''rlIiii---one-orthAliiiiiiIrpitinets ever I entered our atmosphere and -landed on the earth 'without being entirely con- pmed? If it ever 'did, It wee, long . ages before man apPeared upon the earth; for the Inspect ef. site)) eti out - elder would cense itti.,..eartleatialte-ain: Howevet, la Arizona inere is a curia fens eminence called Coon Butte Which rlse.s.about 150ft. above the Plain. ' At ft. wale end •abou't IN) ft. deep, Seat - ;tered tar iied wide Intend this hill aro : fragments resembling mete&rie IrOn which' eentain ,inicrodeople diamonds • it hl suggested . that this hill Wit body: trent the Mashie, and -reining', .1 operations, are to be., started," with at, view to , discovering Whether. ,the ' • :negative:is better than an ' Meitner, 1, There age timee when it ourfeont led atilt motive,. • we dare to- take'on. netV. and inifireited •