Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1921-6-2, Page 6So m daily t 9 .5 atz(i 10 -Th. tirzs s it is seeVed in soul:, forin at every meal, and keeps indefinitely, rnany tlarift,y hOtisetvives order several -Cane oZ CroyM Brand at 'a time. Thus they alWare have a supply on hand,. Bow pleased they are to find that no emergency callingfor cookring, baking or candy -making findS thein unprePared. tit is econreinical; c etaina straRdEt Co., nntorzo, zacm-r-rtEAr.. n (dze Gr a Sweetener 46.163 By The 'Law of Toot:h [1.9134.0...41AVOZGECA.S.1=1{19.1.1Cip3=1 7.214•39.411.91•1401. By MERLIN E1001? (Copyrighted). ,t Spet *lento he had seen Charlton last. 1 But the Government man had an- , ticiptated him by -the fraction of a Iseeond eued had softly elyanied hi$ po- sitiei, but u:ot far enouen. He felt a seeing pain across the aide of his , head and with the thought that -Leg bruire'e bullet had found its mark and ihat this was the last flicker of life, he elk' to the floor. But not before he hacl heard a shout from alive: "Charlton, I'm coming. Alfred Crab -and" and the sound of two'sbeta almost simultaneously. Then he epee- 3ed to know anything. badge aced with the ,ottlier tugged at the tweagen in its holster heneei.b. his .coatt, But he. twar.s 'tee lated Lehruire, peeping where the light listel directed 1i gaze, had seer.. "You ----- detective." he eit.63inied and fired peint.bleinit. 'ett Synapsis of Preceding Chapters. o under his -clothing Charitten did have Louie Vogel, a notor.eue ermined, a weapon, a vicieus little automatic, is offered $5,000 by Lebrun to kidnap but he did not admit it. Judge Graham, tergor of evil -doers. "I have but one fistol," said Le - As Lebrun leavcs "Silver Danny's" -brune disappointedly. He produced it, saloon, he is observed by Ralph «iwisai 1 had imown sooner that you Charlton of the Department of Just- . . did no3t have a weapon watn nu for ti ce who has dubbrd him "The Gray Vogel takes the $i,000 given I have others in my rooms." . . him to hind the compact to Stella "It is not lakely any will be needed, him miss for a minute and that e ied the Government inan, "Lead had killed me the next. By the way, where is he?" Graham shrugged his -shoulders. "Probably a thousand miles away from here by now, at the rate he - was trave.ling when I last saw him,' he said. "When I heard him yell out his disco -very of the fact that you were an officer and followed it with asthot, I was lying -with my head poked over the edge of the tra.ucloor up there. The next thing I knew I had tumbled down the 'steps on- top of him as het tried to come -up, and we had a nice little tussle down here in the dark. I lost my- revolver in the jamboree and he must have known it,- for he shook himself threatenedt to kill me if I followed him and backed up the steps. I heard hint run._ out of the house. I felt around, got my hands on the flashlight, fourycl.mY revolver ancl chased out after him. He ,was turning his car around by the time I got to the road and -I wars too late- to stop him. But I let hien have a couple of shots for goodrneas.ure and they only made hire travel the faster." "Thanks- , Gnabani, y-o-tf saved iny life, I believe," said Charlton; 'grate- fully. He heticl out his hand and they shook. "I won't say anything more about it, old man, but I pledge my- self to clear up this thiryg and find your father if it takes the rest of my days. That was a brave thing to do, to drop down into this plate and face an 'armed man. CI-IAPTER XI, On the Trail Again. Charlten- came bach to conscious- ness with a realization that iris head pained him slightly, that a wet cloth was about it, but that lie did not feel in the least as if he .were badly hurt. For a mentent he lay with his eyes closed, then opened slowly. He was strill in the basement of the shack, he judged, and lying upon the' cot. OVer- 'head he heard the creaking of a loose board, then, within range of his vision a pair of sturdy legs began descend- ing the stairway into the basement and, a -moment later, he discoveited that his visitor was Lieutenant Gran ham. • • • "Hello old top hailed the aviator's voice. "You've came to, I see. IIow are you feeling?" "Fine." Charlton struggled to a sitting position arid felt gingerly of the bantdaga about has head.. .• "Oh, that isn't serious," staid Young Graham, cheerfully. "Just- a deep scratch where the tbullet deprived you of a few locks of hair. YOU Won't IlOtliee it alter a day OT -,,"Lebrune didn't make a bad .gu'ess as to where I was,". replied the Gov- ernment man. "I thought I had made Lathrop, a country girl he -had found starving in the city and befriended. Stella is now earning- honest wages in a. factory and refuses to marry Vogel brine, and Charlton thought of the unless he gives up his evil ways. She old Bible quotation about men whose has, however, fallen a convert to, Bdeeds ,S are evil preferring the night. eislievis,m. Vogel carries out his pa.ct. In, dead silence they went forward, Ridge G-raharn lies bound in a shack Charlton Lebrune's heels, until ;Gene miles out of the city. "The Gray even in the gloom of the heavy trees -Waif" demands that the Judge should! let certain prisoners cif with m er el y ithe Government man eould detect the a fine. Threats of death for himself sthadowY outlines of a building. "The and torture for his son have no weight" Gray Wolf" seized him by the arm. "There it is," he whispered. "It doesn't with the just Judge. Charlton becomes" and 'look as if any one were about" auspicious of "The Gray Wolf" Vogel. Stella Lathrop joins the Inner I "No," re:plied Charlton shortly. Council. Charlton visited Stella to "Come on." He took the lead and ap- find out if she knew al Vogel's where- ,proached the shack cautiously. ,Not about's, and when leaving the hotel a sound greeted them They advanced saw Lebrune break into her room and Ito the rotting front perch, ascended Vogel rush to her rescue. Lebrune got, the broken steps and stood just ant- th: worst of the fight and Pursue" side the- doorway. Charlton did not Vogel and Stella in a motor run to place any too much faith in the fact the hut where Judge Graham is inge that they had not been challenged. It prisoned, but was frightened into re-mightbe that in the house' itself turning to the city. Stella. insisted -eregei, -revolver in hand, merely wait - upon taking the tmeonscions judge ed for a fair sight at them to sheet with them In their flight to safety. them down., Charlton invades the Inner Council Suddenly the thought crossed the u nder guise of a messengei from head- Ge.verameut man's mind that he quartets, and afterwards Lerbrune re- might be the fool and. the dupe after veeled the secret of the Graham plot. all. Suppose that Lebriane knew who he was, after all, and had. merely C011- coeted a pretty story for the purpose of luring him here to this lenely place and killing him at his leisure? Who would ever know it? Hadn't Judge Graham been held here for almost a -week without the fact beeoming known, that is, if Lebrune had told the truth ill even that particular? But cold reason reasserted itself over his fears. The story told by "The Gray Wolf" coincided in many particulars with things which Charlton had rea- 5.'011 to Imaw were true. No, the man was unsusipisieru.s. Still, he might test • feoling comfort in the fact that h.e . wo-uld have help near at hand in case "Have you a fla.slilight?" whisper - Labial -le should grow suspicious and ed the Government man. turn ugly. Confident that the detec- "Yes." Lebrune funilbled in his 'ayes assigned to shadowing Lebrune pocket, 'had again pieked up the trail, he put "Give it to ordered Charlton, ritimeelf out to keep his companion so and waked anxiously. -If Lebrune intent upon other tidings that he would surrendered the light to 1-elen it would not notice the car at their heels. be because be teeataa him. Even if Charlton took o-ne quick baeldwand he were unarmed, as 'dale Gray Wolf" glsance when Lebrune turned off the believed, 'and had, the light he would well traveled read into an unpaved, have the advantage of Lebrune ,and rough one. He sa-w the beams of light his pi,sttca. Lebrune, dazzled. ,by the from the other car for a moment Jusit' rays ,of the light, would be blinded for at the crossroads, then they then-, several minutes after it was switched neared- loff and be tunable to tell in which dui - "They -must have been just joy-II-et:Lion to s3h,eot. rider:, or if they were the police they To Charlton's relit he felt the aid. not see us turn," thought Cheri- iaaehaighe shoved into his hand. Re_ ton; then he resigned himse3lf PlaY, assured, he turned toward the door, 011. It's getting late." "The later the better," said Le - CHAPTER X.--(Cent'd.) In, less than ten minutes they were Lebrune's roadster fairly eating up file road to the shack. 'The Gray Wolf," his attention centred upon Foaling the road at their terrific speed, and to keep up a broken. con- ✓ ersation with Charlton, had no eyes or ears for anything else, but Charl- ton, looking back through the glass the hack curtain, saw two bright beams of light that seemed to main- tain the same speed as their'owri oar. "The police," thought Ctharlton, eat the game alone. He heel gone too prestsed the button of the fia,sh lamp far to turn back now. and turned a flood of light into. the Lelartine drew to a stop at the edge interior of the shack. Lebrune, at his ef a growth of heavy timber. "The side, weapon held forward in res,di- house is back there? he said, "It nes,s to fire at any enemy, sighed would be best if we left the car here, aloud wit'n relief. - and wal,ked so as to give no warning "They are gone," he said in MS of our approach if that &ginned thug natural voice. "Turn the light over , in that corner toward the steps. The te i!Judge was in the cellar towhich they He turned all the gnition and the lead." - Tights and the engine died away." harlton, holding the light so that °Ilax1;thn ecal-ld- have sworn- that he their steps wonlcl he within its range heard the soft swish of a high-power- d -baking ears that tbe °lama should 1 ed car corning up the road they had walk beside erad net td,etkieod, hirer, just traversed tinder 13ow speed, tlateri started for the stairway to the base- - ment. - mistaken and turned into the woods "YoU've got the'gun. Go first," he after Lebrune. suggested, casting the r3ays down into "You are armed?" whisjPerecl- "lbs the ba.sernent. Lebrune did so. Ger - Gray V74/41*" Theked hi a hel'ger I twin that they might net expect to find any one in -the shack now, Charl- ton followed. Up and down, all around the floor ,arnd the ceilintg ancl the walls he played the light. "They have taken Judge Graham. What "sha,11 I do?" asked Lelaruare anxiously. It was tlhe second time Oat night be hatl tlirnecl to Charlton for advice. 33 Charlton, bending °Vest the cot which the other had pointecl eat, sought traces of blued vrhich he .be - Keyed would be there if Judge Gra.- taint' had met witit foul, play. He found none, 'Certetinly the old jurist had been uninjured who -i he left this pl'ace., either freed by Vogel as reven3ge upon Talairtin,e or a pitieen,ee of the gamine -ea who might secic to collect the rewards for his return,. In that moment hafere Charlton's slid from his vest pocket; and lad horrified, eyes, his Government Ira,Cige shining brightly in the beams of the iflasitlight, in plain view on the 'cot. I Instantly he can,appecl off the light, re:toiled ottt, one hand to snatch iihec and his men should • happen to etda convinced himself that he had been tirritatsotiOi4lo" 4tT COMPA ILLE'r Y N TonatzTo CANADA .091T Nee 13, "Oh, forget it," said the flier, vis-! it hardens Stir in two 'teaspoonfuls! tlti,e9t„,konin'(t)titee erushine' cliglit.eratel,ettc—telexlelnhi;df,10-ttseiliontvgleY; the ,clatek and feel for y,our heaf't to rati1A.X.1311- tat:la/VI; 1.151eDi , one- a -easpoen u dee ,if rvreu rwt ,trm „live fdit .dae, o repolc,ng Mizz tlic 'whole tiler- care .ot typ9e; all ears aold. outs. coornge to come beick to this hole -el and the thurnb h jL f SDLLS cold miles, orteet reetede; up my epine. I've et101Y-,:.POin'elt luto hituttered yo ,steA4,. pereor is concerned -and you in, bars, Making,tha FA) acep that ll'I'ArCrircrieetce%afruO or ),-our ewn choice's e s • alwaYs be,en acereamieli -where wIl(Mt it Is PactlY cool mark lt off. gocel Odor as nyreliasod. Porc4a" cqtainly lay Mice 3og. I Seuad• out ihe h.aits may he' reedily broken apart. to leek them over, -.or askus too tYip°11o\ivietriele' cOt, tpouillnetdY \e?tl-r1 The' "I‘ravell'ing” -Farm i:t4'11:PecatniQyll'ol4V' etio.Y °IiatYrger4Ptr:esiecnaltawttaTYE)11rwl ater to mop off your wound, tied it A fanu volnan—We have tide story. heao:dyBelirles.alakesY.:aa'saljased Carr allatiCTIa,a'a,e0I anti got enough water out of the eadi- up :aid then there wasn't anything to direct; and it -1,s true—who waS gragr- 1, a. do but to ataea enema aiid wading weary with the twalichig She was daylight and you to tome to again," forced to do because 'of the ineonven- "What time ,is it?" asked Charlthu. int arr.angemerit of her "About 4.30 in the Moraing. 'D'3 kitchen, ,c0/111,:r1ad othpv VniThlS Ygl.Pe.1 light - comes 'early this tinno the ealled 'far her nreetenco' 'Most of 'the, man just out of the A-13.1nY, but I'.fn tihrdt ef, everY, .daY: °44' year. I's a trifle eaely even fOr fairly varyeno.us, so ite.yda, erre guide pediment, Itewas eertatialy t,11001." ready, we'll make it out ta the ear mighly up-to-date and seientific 0Oet, and hunt up a place to eat, Doubt She Fore for a length of time a pedo- if there is •any place nearer than towa meter which would give her •ahse- and I want a big meal, too." lute redOrd of the distOnce walked perch • '"BIA you, haven't told me how you dey. The results were amazing. We happened to be in on the party Just should doubt' their' had we no proof. in the nick of time,". said Charlton This wnidah, dein., ordinary hetiso_, when they were seated in Graham"). s machine,, anal its powerful engine *as drawing. swiftly toward the city. They had stopped to examine the tracks left by two motor cars front of the building, and Chaadbon had guessed that they, were those driven thy Vogel and Lebrime. In the hard read. their tracks had been lost. • "Just accident, pure and ' sirnple, dear • ho," Graiha,m answered the questioaa "I took your advice, went home, had a good sleep and felt bet- ter. , Then got the car, thinking to run downtown and s3ee-if I could not be of service th you. On the way s&dv you and a strange man in a roar -lister which tansever-eci the deserption of "The Gray Wolf's"' car as you describ- ed it to Inspector Griffin in my pres- euce, so I turned around and followed. I couldn't iniatgine how you two, the hunter and the hunted, happened, to be on such apparently intitnate tennis, but I put two -and two together and took a elyanee that you were playing the game -wittli him. Was I right?" "Go to the head of the class," re- plied Charlton with a grin. "I was playing a -game all right, but my badge fell out of my pocket when I leaned: direr the cot, and the beans vrere spilled. Go ahead with your yarn." • • "Well I had an idea from the speed you were making that you were on.a hurry call and: thought it might be something to with my father and I hung along." • "You havenft aske,c1 after your father," chided Charlton. "I heard. what you and Lebrune Said bout, it before he took the pot shot at you, So I ,naturally supposed, he hadn't been,found. Lebrune seemed worried. ailieut it, too, so I deduced that if he wasn't happy father - must have gotten_ the best of him some- where." He paused for confirm,ation. "Still at tha,head of the clates,d said Charlton. "Yaw ktIONV almost as much as I do ss to `your father's present whe.reabouts. But I believe he iar un- harmedebut still a prisoner; probably in the hands of Louis Vogel I would- . • n't be surprised 'if we fa:ma a demand for the rewards- awaiting you when we get back.. But Pll tell. you nay story in:cletail later. 'it is a long 'one, and make one telling do for you, too,' when I make my report to the &ie. That is, if you can stand it." (To be continued.) iiillnard's Liniment 'Relieves Colds. ete. -----•,- 3 For Your Strawberry Time. Have you ever eaten frosted' straiv- berries? To make them, 'beat the white of an egg until fairly stiff. Dip the etrawSrries one by one into the white, roll in powdered sugar, and let Strawberry marshmallow cream - 4 slices white cake, 12 marshmallows, 1 cup whipped cream, 2 cupi straw: berries. Place a piece of angel or any white cake in a sherbet glass, mix the marshmallows, which are cut very fine, with the whipped erearn and pile on the cake. De-corate with straw- berries. •' Strawberry fluff -1 clip instant tapioca, 4 cupS water, 114 cups sugar, 2 cups mashed. strawberries, 2 egg whites. Put the tapioca and hot water into a double boiler, and cook until clear; add sugar: strawberries, and the stiffly beaten whites of two eggs, and set aside to chill. Strawberry sponge -7-2 tablespoons gelatin, 11/2 cups water, 4 cups berries, 1 cup sugar; 3 tablespoons lemon juice,. 4 egg whites. Soak the gelatin in one- half cup. of cold water; mash theber- ries and add one-half the sugar to them. Boil the remainder of the sugar and the cup of water gently twenty minutes. Rub the berries through a fine sieve; add gelatin to boiling syrup; take from the fire, and add the berry and lemon juices. Place the bowl in a pan of ice Water, and beat with an egg -beater five minutes. A.dd the, whites of eggs beaten stiff, ,rand beat until the mixture begins to thicken. Glorified strawberry pie -2 cups strawberries, 1 cup sugar, 1 package strawberry gelatin. Fill a tool, open pie crust with the sugared berrieS. Prepare the gelatin, and when it be- gins to jell Or thicken pour over the berries. Set aside to chill. A.tt,serving time spread whipped ereara Over the top, and decorate with a few choice berries, if desired. Strawberries Frenchstvle--2 cups , " etiawbeiries, 2 tablespoons orange juice, 4 tab espoolis pewee -red sugar Wash and 'stem berries and putethein in slices Put in tell sherbet glasses work on a farm, walked twelve MileS a day when he -was doing only her average daily stunt of lionsomork;00 days when there were extras orthand, such as Thankegivieg, Christmas, oft threshing:, the pace climbed up to be- tween fifteen and eighteen miles. To- taled up, she covered an average of 400 miles in a inenth and in five years —hold your breath—eiremustrihed the globe, right in her own home! We move the installment of a lot of.pedo- meters. Or, betted., a' general Improve- ment of 'household. equipment, -Engaging a Coek. • "Tell me, did yciu engage 'asked one a cook she had lady recently of another, to dormerly ern- automobile; but it was no use. You had sent her in your automobile last summer, and she wasn't going to ar- rive in any less elegant manner thisfarmer prepares the ground for the 'She 'said that if we hadn't an auto- reception of the little trees and keeI117, mobile we could buy one; she should 'the land cultivated till the trees have think we'd be ashamed not to have grown sufficiently to shade tpe ground one, anyhow, and us calling ourselves and thus keep down grass and weeds. gentlefolk." The species of trees sent out are Mani - "We were -three miles out, ,ancl the taba maple, asb, poplar, and willow, trolley didn't 'run by," explained her and the tree -like, shrub caragana. This friend. "I'm sorry if I spoiled her. It -work- has been going on.noW for about seemed the only decent thing to do." twenty years with the result that "Oh, it was; you behaved -as a lady thousands of prairie homes are sur - and_ a Cjiristian ought," conceded the rounded and s-heltered belts of other sadly. "I hope Im h Christian, trees, Except for the war years the too—even your •cook hasn't told me work has shown steady increase from that I'm not! But without an auto- year to year, and the plan has proved mobile it scenes I'm not a lady." so successful that it has been adopted Cooks are 'certainly independent by several of the provinces and by nowadays, but occasionally they show- the United States Department of Agri - ed a tendency to argue with prospec- culture- tive employers even in the tranquil Victorian times and in conservative; England. In the diary of Mrs. Glad - The SpiciOusFirmarnent t: High. The spaeloue firroanient.enligin With all the Iflue,ethereolskY, Ana spangledeheavens a shiniag frame Their gre,et original proclaim, he Tunwearied sun, from day to day, DOCS his Creator's eoWor disPlaY, 3 And publishes to every land The woriCof an Almighty hand. Seen as. the eyeniug shades prevail The moon takes .up. thene wondrotale; And nightly to the 'liatening eayth Repeata the stoTY of her birthe Whilst all .the stars 'that round her . . burn„ Alia all the planet's. in their turn, Confirm the tidings' as they . And sPrean the truth' froin pole to pole. What though In solemn silence all.. IVfove round the dark terresteial ball; What theugh no real voice nor sound Amidstetheir radiant orbs be fouad; ' 10 reason's eer they all rejoice And utter forth a glorious voice; Forever singing, as they shine, - "The hand that madeus is Divino:" —3 o s eph Add i 8011. Shett',er-Belts for Prairie Farins. Several million seedling trees and Pamphlet fore an address by George Dominion Forest Nursery Stations at Indian Read and Sutherland, Sas. by prairie farmers ' shelter -belts about their premises. The trees are sent out free on condition that' the It has been clearly established that. installation of lightniag -rods eonsti-• tutes an efficient protection against fires. The Canadian Fire Under- writers' Association and farmers' • mutual fiee insuranceeoinpanies have had the aclyantagee „et lightning 'rodS so' impressed upon them by actual re - salts that most of them grant a pre- ference in rates to rodded,risks., Unfortunately for the lightning rod - industry, some thirty or more years ago many farmers were swindled by niiscrupulous agents, and: the experi- ence is still remembered in a mny farrn homes, to ihe disaclvantage_ey: representativeS of the,companiee nok in. the field. It would 'seem the pert. of ' Wisdm. ofer 'an educational campaign e to he initiated by the farmens them- selves, to impress upon the rural popu-• lation, in an unbiased manner, 'the al- most absolute protection to their lives. . end property which can be secured. through. the installa.tion of an efficient. ployed had applied for a position. and thoroughly inspected system. ot whom "Almost," was the reply, "but 31,0t lightning rods. , The Ontario Fire quite. She insisted on being sent to Marshal has' recentlY Pnblished in. Church every Sunday in an autoobile, cattings are being sent out from the m because ITT6 are a mile from the vii- P. Lewis on Lightninw • Its Origin and lage. I -told her that the tr.olley- cars Control. which will be sent 1113011 ran right by, and that we had no katchewan, this spring, for planting ROdded ne to Lightning. • "We have not had a leaded building' burned for years, ad the damage to them. is veity small *vVe' make a differenee in rates -in favor oft roddea buildings, and over licilf` are rodded."- ---;1\anagor, Altitual Piro Ins-uranee'Co. ,-In.31919, Ontario alone had 1,104, fires caused by ligbining, in all elasSe CS of buildings, the greater portion or which were farni barns andresit ,id$)4e0.01itiled,e7i glsaonabiseo'illoingiltesfd2a4r8tno:.: 390 and on, contents 31,$3,321, lance provided. for $223,144,while the farmers in whose property the fires occurred had to/stand, tie, loss of t,'?,-' Fill the glasses two-thirds full of ber- ries, and one-half tablespoon of orange juice and one tablespoon of powdered sugar to every glass. Serve very cold. Sleep Reepirements of Children. No ehild nutrition worker, says the Public Health ,Servke, can hope to get satisfactory results -without in- sisting on entiugh sleep. for her charges. Besides darnaging the nerv- ous system, late hours cause "sleep hunger" and make children nervous and fidgety. The Serviee commends the following precepts just issued by the London County Council: School children aged four years need twelve hoUrs sleep a day; aged five to seven, 11 to 12 hours; eight to eleven, 10 to 11 hours; and twelve to fparteen, 9 to 10 hours. ChildXen grow Mainly while sleeping or resting. 'Do yeti want yours to grow up stunted? Tired chil- dren learn badly arid often drift to the bottom of the class. De you want yours to grow up stupid? When chil- dren go. to bed late their sleep is aften disturbed by dreams and they do not get complete rest. Do you want yours to sleep badly and become nerv- ous? Sufficient sleep draws a child onward and upward in school and in home life. Insufficient sleep drags it backward and downward. Which way do you want your child to go? Tire- sime children are often only tired children; test the truth of .this. That a neighbor's child is sent to bed late is not a good' reason fdr sending your child to bed late; two wrongs do not make a right. Going to bed late is a had habit, which may be difficUlt to cure; persevere till you encceed in curing it, Honey Bars. Honey is healthful as Well as deli- cious. Used as a basis for candy it insures a sweet that is 'wholesome, appetizing and milieu:II. Honey bars have all of those qualities. Place in a saucepan one quail: of 1 • three ger:C.-trims tablespoonfuls of buttea: and two LablespoOrffule of Vinegar: Boil the mixture until, when a little of it is dropped into Cold water, stone, kept during her early martied life in the 1840's, occurs this entry: "Engaged a dook after a long con- versation on religious matters chiefly between her and William." Query: Were William and the cook sympathetic souls? Or' did -the cook overcome the -mighty Gladstone in dis- cussion, or did he overcome her? If he did, he must have been discreetly non -exultant over his triumph, or his wife could never have engaged her. Cradle Song. This is a charming little poem by one of 'our gifted ,Canadian poets, Miss Norah Holland: Husheen lo! The sun is westing, Birds •are nesting, 3Shadovvs grew; - And above your cradle swinging Mother's singing— Husheen lo! I-Iusheen lo! Hu,sheen lo! If an the morrow Cometh sorrow, Who shall knew? Gad, His watch above you keeping, Guards your sleeping— Husheen lo! HuSheen lo! Minard'S Liniment Tor surne. etc. 'ehainpion, lawn -tennis player, 'who is at a hard hitter, will wear o.ut racquet in a -week or so. All teloudistaite -within six and a half mile§ Of the- earth. Above that height they do not exist. A COARSE SALT LAND SALT Bulk Callas TORONTO SALT WORKS C. J. CUFF TORONTO. ISZSIDICA.11,1721VMEttKtal-4.135.1=Xmawalae.r...maagarTS, urmrsewirmeasonurcranrascurr.....canazargesmat 1 Fifi rchants. PHONE 'YOUR RUSH ORDERS For anything in Fancy Goods, Cut Glass, Toys, Smallwares, , Sporting Goode, Wine Goods,,Druggists' Sun- , dries,' Hardware Specialties, etc., to MAIN 6700 ' on a Reversed charge. Torcan Fancy Goods Co., Ltd. TORONTO Major Harry Cameron, Man. Dir. ....etrearovroz...1 recao LIOCIODo ODOOODOODOODOODOCIOOOODOCIODooCIOCIfelO00000000000111 'El 0 El "Icr 0 D o " e - - LI 133:11 %\ 141111gih\ • 0 [9 The Most Economical Work Shoes 19 Vdr, Stimrner O Men, who are on their feet all day, certainly do appreciate the ' F.1 la comfort of FLEET FOOT as well as their sturdy wear and sound N • o economy. .0 ld e o' There are FLEET FOOT licavy Shoes for work—and many other 0 tstyles of White Shoes for "dress -up." — e H , . ,0 Put the whole family in FLEET FOOT this summer; it is a wiee ' li 0 '-' economy. ' , ' ED 0 El There are FLEET FOOT shoes for men, women and'children for CI O work and play for every sport 'and recreation. ' 0 0 9 The name taa is stamped On eVery genuine FLEET FOOT R O shoe, Look for the name, It Means. style, com- ona ink, 'ffj - 0 ed A0-) .fr 0 El 0 fort long vvear and econoniy. . 9 Ask our Shoe Dealer for Fleet Foot PORMIBWEIRO B - 0 --zz4Us ci:'9 ,{ El, 72A ana ntake Sttre you get Meet Foot. q>,,, I OClElOOODOMOODEIODE300O.ODOODOIntlIGIOOPOM,77-110EtOOOODOIDDO * quest. Spend Your Vacation in Canada. Planning vacation trips is one of thee..pleas,ures in the average Canadian D61Eie," The approaching holiday sea-' son tempts the mind to wander to -t shady nooks, to the seaside, to the fishing ground and the camp . Canada offers to her people all the attractions. it is passiole to desire, either for recreation or change. We have all conditions of temperature and altitude from „the sea level to the mountain heights. In our inland lakes and streams we liaxe almost every variety of fresh water fish, with boat- ing and. bathing ..to satisfy the moet exacting'. Why, then, should we look beyo - our holders for summer resortsa There is an old saying that "the fish- ing is always better on the other aids of tile creek;" can it be that this is the reason why so many Canadians crass to the United States each year to sneed their vacations, regardless of the superior attractioes at home? Canada wants us to see our ovin country, By spending their money at home, Canadians will, realize more ful- ly what a wonderful heritage 'we pos- sess, and will help to overcome the discount to which our Money is sub- jectedeon the other side of the line. -The Dominion Parks Branch and the passeeger departments of our railway and steamship lines have much in - Le -resting literature on Canada's ' beauty spots, which wil be sent feee for the asking. Thes6 booklets_ con- tain. much information that will help to decide Canadians to speed their vacations in their own country. Ultraviolet Rays Disclose Sc - rets ld Parchments. -- Much of the lore of ancient palimp- seste—parchment manuscripts 'froin which the original writing has been erased' and written over at a later date -'-i0 about to be laid bare by the mysterious power of ultraviolet light, ' says Popular Mechanics ltia,gazine for June. Previus to 1914 the 'discoverer of a new method, of using the rays ,a Benedictine' monk of the Bavarian or- der, had made such progress that many of the ancient' parchments in the Benedictine Abbey of Wesaobrunn had been made in diacloSe their sec- rets. In principle the new method is quite 'simple, being based upon the peculiarity, possessed by many or- ganic substances, of ileurescing-- glowing with a pale canary -colored light—when brought under the in- fluence .01. the invisible ultraviolet rays. - The old parchments possess this property to a remarkable degnee, while the ink of the older writings upon them, containing ingredients in. sensible to the action of tile rays, re, maine dark anal forms a contrast of Sufficient •intensiti to register clearly en a photographio'plate. Fire .Preventiorn Eints for Smoker., lDen't drop FIRE when you.smoke in the Woods, nor threw it out along the road. Keep tile forests! matehes,, pipe coals, cigar stubs, and cigarette ends Start many forest fireas BE CATI.EPIILI Don't. start a fire in. the woodsewhen you begin Or end your smoke! Be anre Yogi' match, cigarette or pipe is out, ' YOUR, CO.OPEPATION in order to lteep down forest tiros is asked. Break your mateh in two. Itteock out your pipe ardies into your listed. Don't drop alie cigarette. , FOREST ElliES cost rnillicins, a year, Don't start une. 67,4 A tank 'which, wi;11. tx•avel under water as wellaS or,:t :'etyrd iet so g,gested by a Frenth ge,areceet,'!,