HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1922-8-3, Page 2.11ad Your iron Today.?
HERE'S anideal hot -weather
luncheon!
Two packages luscious Little Sun -
Maid Raisins—one cool glass of
. milk. Big men don't need more.
290 calories of energizing nutri-
ment in the little raisins. Pure fruit
i
sugar, practically predigested so t
acts almost ',immediately, yet doesn't
tax digestion and thus heat the blood.
1, There's fatigue -resisting food -iron
also in this lunch.
Vital men eat like this and resist
the weather. Don't work their diges-
tion because they want to work their
brains.
Try it for a few days and you'll
'feel better.
ittl
Between-Meai Raisi s
5c Everywhere
—in Little Red Packages
A
neers
BY KATHARINE SUSANNAH PRICHARD
Copyright by Hodder and Stoughton
Synopsis of Preceding Chapters. er's eyes resting an him and laughed
Donald and Mary Cameron are vary- a little shame.fanedh.
ing a home out of the Australian wilds, "I think he's forgetting his eom-
When little David was four months old pany manners, 'surely," he said.
his father set off to Part Southern for "You're the first tompanyr he's had
fresh supplies. On the fourth day to practice on. she replied.
Grape-Juie
Punch and Other CodIni-Stare is bebig careful not, to
Recipes.' I crush the raisins winle stirring. A4d.
Grape -juice puncth . is very refresh, three-quarters of a cepful of `Sligo.r,
It reeteree two quests of grape- remove from the fire arid l'.eePing the
mixture covered stand aside to cool.
juice, ene quart of water, tele quart of
ginger ale, jule,e of six oranges, juice WiliP one and °lie -quarter ellPful's of
of six lemons, niake a syrup of olio heavY "'Crean!' !anti' stlif, fold'it the
penile1. of sugar ater,
raisin mixture, add one teaspoonful
and the wsqueeze
of a-anilla extract, then freeze.
the juice from the orange, and lemons,
and niece the rinds i&i. the syrup, 'When
the sugar is dissolv d relieve frorti ' Sanctified.
the fire. Wheal cep' remove rind's, add When Baby catne a guardianangel
remaining ingredients, adding. mere bent lris winge
"N sugar if needed. Pour over ice and About the house, and shut out sordid
serve told, things,
An attractive salad is made by lin-
ing 2. salad bowl with lettuce leaves.
Shred two or three lettuce leaves and
place in the centre. Over this place a
layer of radishes cut in very small
dice. Cover the radishes with a layer
of sliced tomatoes, and aver these
two gaunt and ragged men, one of
there wounded, entered: -the hut.
CHAPTER IV.--(Cont'd.)
•
Her- simplicity, and again the clear,
shining eyes with their direet and
smiling glance astounded him.
You'd'• best give this to -gem- friend,
"It is not much to offe,r you, out it Yourself," she wenton, 131-Ittillg the
a s
it were better, because you're wanting.
aad Fee get e mare eake ni wish bawl on the table. "It seems" to trouble
him to see hange face.
.She lifted Davey from the strang-
good wholesome food just now,
make some gruel for a -our friend and et a arms and he took the hlni of
maybe there'll be an egg to -marrow, gruel to the other man.
ar I can set snaree for a 'possum.' Be gentle with him and humor
She took Davey from him and he him," she ;Tarried, "but make him est
turned to the table to eat. The man all of it. I'll lout a blanket here on The
on the bed maned wea,rily. She nut hearth for you, and Davey and I will
Davey into his basket, lined with furry sleep at the other eed of the room."
slim-, and went to the sick man. The When she had thrown an the spare
cloths that she had put over it to soak clothing in the hut on the floor before
off the filthy rg awhich. bound his the.. fire and had spread a patchwork
head had served 'their purpase. She quilt and the raig of 'possum skins at
rifted them -and the festering gash en the far end of the room fax herself,
Ms forehead was laid bare. 1 she at dawn on a low stool -near the
•
Her exclamation, or a twinge of door and lifted Davey's lips to her
pain as the air touthed the wound, brse,t. She sang a half -whispering
sharpened has bra.m. His eyes open- lullaby, rocking him in her arms. His
. .
ed. He stared -with semi-conscious cries ceased, her thoughts a-ent off
gaze a moment. Thon with a hoarse into a dreamy psahn of thanksgiving
oath he sprang at her. His quivering as his soft mouth pulled at her breaeb.
fingers gripped. her throat and clung She looked TM to find the eyes of
tenaciously. The man at the table the tall stharger on her.
flung-, himself upon Him and tvrenahed A gaunt, long -limbed man, his
. his hands away; they struggl-ed for clothes hung on his arms and legs as
a moment, then the siek man dropped if they were the wooden limbs of a
on to the bed again; but he shouted scarecrow. The shreds were kriotted
inooherently, his fever -bright eyes and tied together, and s-howed hare,
baleful by- the flickering firelightshrunken shanks and shins, burnt and
"After the g-aals, 'n the sea, 'n thecut atout, the dark hair of virility
bush, to be taken now and like this, thick on them. His fate, lean and
by God—" he panted. "Let me be leathern, had a curious expression of
Let me be, don't y-ou see it's a trapl" hunger. The eyes dn. it held dark
"It's all right," the other gasped.
"Don't let your tongue run away, with
you, Steve." •
"I'll not be taken alive,"' the Man
an the bed tried. "Not now, not a.fter
getting through so far, PH not be
taken alive, 'n the one 'that tries to
take meld not live either.'
The tall man cursed. 'beneath his
bres Eh.
"The woman means no harm to you,"
he said.
"It is the fever troublin,g- him,"
Mary explained.
The sick 'man was already weak
again. He lay on the bed limply and
mu+tering uneasily.
"You'd best hold him so as •I can
put on the clean rags," she said.
She had a length of old linen,
sm-eared with _ointment from a small
The race for wealth, position, place:
' and fame
Seemed su-eh a paltry thing—when ,
Baby carne.
We longed to set some standard,
Mace -a, layer a, thinly sliced cu‘ sweetly wise
cumbers. Cover with French dress- Of life bre those innocent lale eyea.'
.ing, clu.st iightiy, with paprika. and • , •
serve very cold. „ We ijulC at leading toddling feet
Stuffed. beet salad. makes an appet- through fair .
,
izing supper dbelt. Boil medium-size,d And 'rola- lands—the angel helped us
beets until tender, plunge into cold there.
water end remove the skins. SCOOP
Out the centres, leaving the shells to And somehow
be stuffed( -with cooked peas, chopped place
English wahruts and a little cold
Chicken, 'veal or lamb cut into dice.
Place on lettuce leaves, tap with may-
onnaise dressing and ,serve with rye or
brawn 'bread and butter •sandwiches.
Pineapple fruit punch is particular-
ly good. Place in a, larege liaising bowl
one cupful af strained tea, one large
cupful of finely diced Piareapple or a
can Of crushed pineapple, the juice of
two lemons, one sliced orange arid
sugar to taste. . Chill on the lee for
two or three hours and just previous
to serving, stir in arre quart of cracked
-ice, one pint of ice -water and one quart
of carbonated water,- poured. from a
height. If carbonated wa,ter is net
available, use three pints of ice -water.
Fruit ice cream can be made of milk,
if cream is not available. Use five
cupfuls of milk. OT one large-sized. can
of evapo,rated milk, the juice of one
lenron, and three cupfuls of sugar.
At'd sb: lar-ge peaches, peeled arid
Mashed, or three cupfuls of straw --1,
berries or red raspberries, washed and,
crushedeor scan of crushed pineapple. I
Mix fruit, sugar and lemon -juice, axial
the Milk,nithen freeze. A richer ice
cream is obtained by making the milk,
into junket before' freezing. The Tee'
cipe will make about three quarts of
. 1
lee cream. '
Raisin ice cream is new to many.
memories, yet a ghtter of the sun. To make, soak (until PhunP) one cull -
Mary Cameron eagueli realized 11'1 of seeded" raisins in two cliFfilI.?' of
that she ha,ol known what manner of water and ene tablespoonful of lemon
-
man -'this was the moment looked juice. Place the.rfingTarre in a closely
into his eyes. That was Why she had covered Saucepan and simmer slowly
not been afraid when he confronted until the raisins are tender, and but
her on the doorstep; why, too, she
had been able to a.sk him into her
house and treat him as an'unexpetted,
but not unwelcome gue.st.
The man on the bed moaned. Sud-
denly he stalled up with a shrill
seream. '
"A wave! A wave! We'll be swamp -
every little meaner
Within our s took on. a higher
grace;
Our spirit music thrilled with grander
eounde
Our feet climbed Gadtvards in the daily
round
When Baby came.
. —Lillian Gard.
The Well -Dressed Girl.
!!! A mirror long enough to give a re-
flection of the entire figure is some-
thing every Woman should have, if she
ean afford! it. Sometimes a bUreau
mirror can be tilted so that it reflects
the figure, but when the mirror is
stationary, there should be an addi-
tional glass, hung in a goad light and
in proper position. By using a hand-
alass one can s.ee both the back and
front, of the figure.
The well-dreseed girl or woman
loelcs herself over -critically when she
has dressed, to be sure that all the lit-
tle details are correct. Skirts have an
unpleasant habit of sagging in file
back, and nothing will spoil the ap-
pear -ante so much as that. The Petti-
coat .thab is e_upposecl to be the right
length wnl. suddenly show below the
hem of the Skirt. or you'll find that
your heels have run over.
Skirts will rtimple and crease in the
back and you may find that your
coat should. be- brushed, across the
shoulders. The over -collar that fits in
front sometimes stinks out behind; the
hat that leeks so:evell,-aa-Csind the face
does not always "set well-tpon the head
or inse,y show that the hair has not
been arranged in the back. in a way to
make the hat becoming, there. Your
gloves and shoes may- not look well to-
gether, Or may not harmonize tvith
your dress, though separately each
item may be afli right.
His voice fell away, muttering.
TIlen again he was crying:
`Is that the land Dan that line
3'
against the sky over there? No, don't
y' see there—there,' man. God! Don't
say it isn't! How lon,g have we been
one-half cupful of -water remains.
Moisten, one tablespoonful, of , tern-
s -tar -eh four tablespoonful., of. epic'
'Water' adding a few 'grains, of salt,
add ta the reis.ins and cook until the
me to see you like the women at
home. But that would not have savei
you. Starving men, fighting for our
lives we were. :Wild 'beasts. Pity?
What pity's .lb'etii'sircAvn to us?. Do y'
1010.1.17 what it means to have felt the
lash, and made your escape from Port
Arthur, swimming the bay at Eagle -
earthenware jar, in her hands. the in this boat? Seems years . been hawks' Neck, wrapped in kelp, cheat-
ing the bloodhounds chained a few
yards from each other across the Neck
and the sentry -who'd shoot you like a
dog if he sawyou? Da y' know what
it was like, crawling from one end
of the Island to the other in the bush
at ni ht with only a native to guide
you . . not knowing whether he was
going to spear you, or run you into
the tribe'. . . making yournvay in a
cockle -shell of a boat in the open sea
-without any mariner's tools at all,
and only a keg of water and a bit of
'possum skin to chew to keep the life
in you?
"No You don't know! How could
you?" He paused a moment, and con-
tinued desperately: "And it's no good
my trying to tell you; Steve got a
track on his head the night we escap-
ed. He was mad: with thirst in the
boat.I was near it myself and
I had all the work to do, pulling and
tratning my eyes for the land. We
had to keep out of sight of other boats
too, and the Government sloop going
b t een Port Southern and Hobart
laid it over the wound and gently and seein' the sea, them blasted little blue
firmly bound it into place. waves jumpin' -up 'n lierldn' my fate!
"That'll be better," she murmured. Better throw me overboard, Dan.
The gaunt man overlooked bar, a Dan? Better throw me overboard
curious cynical humor in his eyes.
,.."You're a brave woman," he said.
"I'm not, indeed,' she replied; but IVIary turned pitiful eyes on him,
her eyes met his squarely. reeking Davey and hushing him gent -
She laughed softly, and told him ly, as he wakened and began to cry
haw afraid she had been earlier in the querulously.
day. "A sail!" the sick man shouted.
At the sound of his mother's -voice, "Some blasted clipper for the Port,
Davey piped, wistfully. She went over d'y' think she'll see us, Dan? Are we
to him and rocked his cradle for a too far away? Wilb the waves hide
moment or two. us?"
"Hush, Davey," she said talking to He sank back wearily, muttering
him softly in her native Welsh. "We again.
have company. There's one hungry - not be caught . . not be taken
man wants his supper, ansi another alive, Dan." He started ilp crying
man sick, that thy mother must make angrily. "I'cl rather go to hell than
gruel far. Do thou sing to thyself, back. Asir -gill"
son, till mother is ready to take thee A shriek that curdled the blood in
atain." her vemS, a cry that sped upwardS 10
But Davey had no great nation of an uncurling scream of uncontrollable
the laws of hospitality that separated anguish, flew from the .sick man. An -
him from the source of all consolation. other and 'another.
He wailed incontinently and from Mary looked- at she man before her
. -can't stand- it any longer. The
thirst and the pain in me head, Dan."
wailing took to uttering his protest questioningly.
with all the strength that was in biro. The lines about
The unkempt stranger munching to a faint and bitte
his dry bread by the table, glanced , was rie „ (s-rnile in h
furtively at M:try's back as she stoop- r "Thinks he's bein
eel over the fire stirring the gruel;.'"He weadd be if are were ()aught --
then he -got up and went to the cra,elle, retaken back 'again, You know where
Hear Toronto aticihontreal Radio Con-
certs every night, just as though you
were in one of these, great cltiaa, with
our Marconi Radiophone (Model C).
Write for full Information and prices.
-
The AUTOMATIC TELEPHONES and
TIME,. RECORDERS
TORONTO ;:; CANADA
, The welledressed is girl attends to
inivos:-,t
these details before hroom
,The her roo,
then forgets all a.biout them. . ,She The oldest son was home on his first
...cl (10.-e...111:1thl father were
vacation since he had attained the
eher type in connection with
dignity of class president He and his
every detain of her toilet -ni
discussing the affairs of
siiudis ,
make the mistake of using -white w -he tie potdaY
der if She is a brunetteIt
. -
1 lld,inally the boy remarked t " ' " Say
sible to change a dark complexion to da
,
I hope When I am as old ELS YOU
light punk, the color of the skin .ig '. ' '•
due to coaer piginent in the 1310.04, that 111 know iota' More than you
1 which shows through the skin. Every yanswered the father
collar has its own chh
arms and if a girl "es," ., "I onlY
1 tries to keep her skin clear and smooth will know as much as .you t/aink you
hope that When you are that oldyou
:
' it will surely be attractive. Snow-
white noses are ridiculous.
Do try to find the powder that suits
our skin_in color -and texture. I note
m
so any bwith faces wifaces made
ghastly white. Have you ever held a
piece of perfectly white paper against
the glass which fcrms your mirror?
You -will find that very little glass
is perfectly clear in tone-. Mere is
ueu.ally a ting,e of color in it (green
more often than not) and. it is due
to this ccrlor, perhaps, that we do not
alwaYs "See ours iseas ithers see us."
At least that is- the excuse I Make for
the many etarblin.g eontra,sts I see.
Few peopleean use a white powder
with su,ocess. Only a too florid blonde
can stand tit; the pale blonde should
use a flesh colored powder. jrhere is a
brunette shade for the very dark olive
skin, and treana-colored powder is used
far the .shades of complexion which
come in between Whatever the shade
•
used, apply it apaaingly and if you
value the texture of your .Skin, remove
every bit of the po-Wder before retir-
ing at night.
Father Was Right.
ktlinard's Liniment -for Durns, eta.
do now."
leezeeztem.amiSMIEG
Vaseline
LATE
PETRuLEUMaLLY
VERY efficient
antiseptic when
used as -a first-aid
dressing for cuts,
scratches, brnises, in-
sect bites, etc. Keep
a tube in the house
for emergencies.
CliEsEB;4.01-1 MFG. COMPANY
(Consolidated) .
1880 Chariot Ave. •Montreal
auc.xcre=sersvaasemorreleha
k me. Ica 'se 7E4 ma ma ma Nuak 7N ms 1ga me.
Town, for fear we'd he 'Seen, Picked up
his nese were bent. ,d back Months of echaniing S U PERI
r 'smile; but there it took to c! -et so far! I'd Picked uP ‘• -
eYes•
g fleg'gedr" he saidal
' The Blue the Fresh, the Ever Free"
e inland Sea
' the lay of the land near the Port and
the way to get al:Pout- in the country
: beyond, from sailors. It was a. man
!who got as far as the coast and had
! been sent back told me to look for
Ile lifted the child with awkward we came froin?"
carefulness. Davey continued to wail "Yea" she said. tee rnedey river -water in the sea and
nevertheless, finding that it w•as not "From the Is • his head -was get trthe -river at night. e wanted
7 1
the sefit covering of lifis mother's 3er-iced e direction of the Sea. tc,-------- te Wirree"beeause there
breast that he was laid, against, but "You're the first soul, I've s.poken to: a man—liVes near_ the river—we
a harsh fabric, smelling of the sea, since we escaped- except him, and he's hems' weriee give es fe,si and sheitda,
the earth dank leaves ',and a strange been raving mad most of the time.1 e t ". t the hills
or ,eip us o get, away o
this is a trip to remember! Six glorious daya on the Great Lakes,
A H* -,v,
oyaging 1,600 miles from Sarnia to Sault Star Marie, Port Arthur,
.,:ort William, Duluth and return. Six days of fresh air, sunny skies
and blue waters. As long as you live vou will recall with longing the de-
licious nieals t,hey sere on board the "Noronic," "Hamotatc" and. "Huroplo?
But, best of all to Most of usaAsi,,t;,SailZ,,sli'e ono, 061Iivirc.t,eo, tusTi eacly eacvsc eos,
promenades and concerts—tho
a magnificent Great La,kes liner. And" the trips ashore; the, lurieiieen at
Prince Arthur Hotel, Port Arthur; the trip by trairi to Kakcbeka. rails, near
Port .,-•-!,rthui•; the day in beautiful Duluth.
persor:ality. You -arid. I've got- to do, some talking,I, ewe gat "to the riVer and had to lie - -
YS TI1E GREAT IALES
.1'e and P011red it jilt° -a little bottle I -Ie looked aborit the room, lifted ( , • Tel el , 4iir I)Ugh
81.X .ait,
When she ts'olcathe gruel from tile ma'am'," . in the bush all day night ,
; earn., a -nein, e am, • _ .
rniwa.Soo--Port -.s p. tir-ltEg] cloth
ner eyes rested on. the stranger as he Donald's chair. eet it ;before leer. th,„ tee.e,s, to a wooden house we ecyuid
tried to appease Davey- ;He had reeevered sel-f-P°aseSsi°n,!Sr'.2'2111,01`.(,2; other houses that were all
arms., and niuttering awkwardly, des,: "Yee?' che, said. IINTilia4C1)'':1:shrn.airgy.and11?S'et;,(CirTot. lat
He was-, cradling the child in his was readjusting. his plans.
'ass's:fully: "There now! There!" An You knew, we meant to get all the take a inner through to him, i, no
'expression of aWe and reflectiveness food and clothes we -wanted from this we were earning; and to be en the look
.
veiled the Sharpnoss of his features. hut,'' he said harshly. We watched out for usAnd I'd got a rrtsage
'There! now! Inere then!" he l''-‘evt Ye0 all day irem the trees and .! from McNair telling an how to get to
4aYing, thought a Irian would be coming home i him sort of man he was to lona
Ile looked' up to find Davey's, rrioth-} after sundown, We didn't Mean to tat, e"iie saying. he was willing to help
11 /et e.oe of? 15 you screamed and
get away on condition that -eheri
brodght, him ',before we'd got tvhe.t -we es.e got ,oe our feet wed make it up
I. Silk anti Cotton 'Clippings
1) -ii -b',.'6 for Patch -Work arid
FaricydWct-k. , Large Package sent
for flf t.y :cor,Its, or three far a dia1-
0 lax; stamps or money or
L0....„, TELI,ER
, te. CO.
5. W eiliagton St. Weet, Termite
aanted. . . The dog's dead: Did yee t hi f eourse had to pay on
a In ' we
know? I killed him, c,aught hem by
the throat behind the shecl." , 1 td1,10eisPereittht.e..1°,1dee Ah•reladrcrltell'domgeete; ob-,,,ittlehth.e
"But that \vas a pity!" she cried,', ',Amid, pas% maliiTyg, h is ee reline me-
,
a note of distress in her voice. ,le -ab, e
-"Pity?" Ile leaned forw,ard, "Pat. ('lo be 0031tinued.)
tve, can't aff'ord to have pity, I saW1
von sitting spienin,g in the SUe, sing-,
Ing to t e .iki. l'I 5, heatt t rned 111 (4 in a , Lin intont for Dandruff.
OPeCial rCalire6 — Dancing" every
week -day eyening. :asfroshalenta,
Concerts. Lattotteott at Prince Arthur
Hotel, Port Arthtir. Trip hy train to
Itakaheits-, ralle, Pear Port Arthurt
Goia inoterifa'Aftornoott Tea, "North-
ern laavigator,a daliy shipboard pa-
per. atafto, Maven' Mania. ,11/L000li-gat
Chorus on l3eck. Sobiat tioatess.
Round triP continuous cruiao r.te,
Sarnia to 1)•0117h and return. inelud-
irig Meals, berth and Elide trips --$74.75,
Noronie. Hamortie and Huronio leave
,
Sarnia (Point Edward 1Dock) at 4 p.
m. 3D T, Tuesdays!, Thursdays and
Sa,turdaya. .special eteamboa.t train
leaVes Union Statien Tuesday, Thurs-
day and Saturday, at 10.02 ann., via
I-lamilten and • London; direct to
e
stamer. •- ,
, _ . ,
Buy your ticket to the 'West via
Northern Navig6,tion Water a-Vay f rein
any Canadian, National -Grand Trunl<
. Ticket , Agent, dr write for folder • to •
17. D. GEOGlIEGAN, Gen. Passenger
..- Agent
orthern Haviga.7 Dap Compan
oanadia,isuational-Grand Trunk Route
01.7.7777.7L.77.477cir$74.7*:
ra "el v4, 'kelb., 7:sx
ts.
./X
'170,1
The 'heroism of Capt. Matthew Mat
roe will long be remeruhercii! the
little tOWIL of Canso, Nova Scotia. II0
wa s. cap fain of the ninety -three -ton
fishing sob-ooner Alexandria, bound
fromng
ionish, to Gloucester 'oith
cargo of The nronCIL was Jranu-
As ru Xi':LIfi is
Blaek pow, which is temiles from.
n
away her sails and ,drove ber ashore at
As daYlight came all the emw saw'
through the flyinsnw r
g oand fog agged
ruassos of basaltic cliff to leeward, and
realizingthv
that eir e.sw
sel would 0011
be dashed to pieces, they tried to
launch their one, small boat, But a
heavy sea. struck the doomed. sehOoner
and smashed the boat to fragments.
The schooner pounded heavily- and,
sl'iattering her bottom, filled with
water; then the spars went over thed
sie. The seas. swept the crew as, they
clung to the :vessel; and the smother-
in.g•enow banighve ed all hoof their be-
ing rescued from the shore.
There was only one way to reach the
shore LIU safety, a way that meant des.,
pe•rate risk, But Captain 1\liinrot, good
sailor and true hero, decided to try it.
Tying a line Found his waist.and realc-
ing sure, that the other end was. tied to
the TesGel, he flung himself overboard
-into the icy water. In the thick. of one
of the wars.t 'blizzards known on. the
coaat of Nova Scotia he fought his. way
amid broken. spars .anal other pieces of
wreckage throngla the roaring surf to
the rocky shore more than a hundred
yards away. In danger of being dash-
ed against the rocks. that rise sheer
from the sea, ire slvam along the face
of, them until at last he sighted a low-
lying ledge upon which after a hard
struggle h '
Ile managed to land.,
During a lull in the blizzard_Captain
Munroe with the rove dragged his
crew of five one by one in through the d
.surf to safety. Having done that, .he _
collapsed.
Soalfecl, S'hivering and badly slia.ken,
the ship -wrecked saidon3 set mit to
look for shelter. Three of them went
ahead and broke a way through the
heavy snowdrifts; the t wo others
helped the exhausted captain. After
some time they saw a light in a 'fisher-
man's cottage and turned tow,ard it.
The kindly fisher folk ditl all in their"
power to warm and feed the pen and
insisted that they remain there to rest
the next day; and it is well that they
diel, for the blizzard raged all the fol-
lowing day, and the roads were im-
passable. But as soon as the storm
abated a little' nothing could keep Cap-
tain ,Munroe from trying to -reach his
home in Canso, where his wife and
little children were living.; ' he knew
that his wife was worried and he Mit
no way of sending her -Word, for all
travel was at -a ttamdstill.
After visiting the scene of the wreck
he bade good-bye to le's crew and to.
the kind-hearted. fisher folk and then
set forth. He could not go Last throtigh
the deep snow and the mountainous
drifts, and it was not until noon . of the
next day that, utterly exhausted, be
finally stumbled into the doorway of
his home.
"It is deeds like that of Cavtain
Matthew 1V1unroes," sayi--oire of his
admirers, "that justifies a nation's
pride in its own."
Make Music Your Hobby.
The average person would be amazed
If he or she- actually imew how many
men and women in Canada make
music their ,Loppy. By a laobl)y;
everyone knows, is usually meant'
one's tavorite.pursuit outside one's, re-
gular occupation. It ,should of neces-
sity be something quite different from
what occupies the mind and the hands
all day. For example, an acocuntant
or auditor'would scarcely make ma,th e -
mattes, his hobby. Goif would not be
recommended as a suitable hobby for
a farmer. Nor would a house'. .
likely gain much by making her
attendance at night ,classes in domeS-
tic science.
A holaby nrOperly used is a mental.
and physical arafety-valvo. Somecne
has defined at hobby as "the eacape
valve of the human eagme." In these
respects allIG/C IS an ideal-. hobby for
nearly every person other tan the
music t.eache,r of prolef' Lion a I music,
Ian, Indeed, fnustic can well b2 afloson
esi as one of two bobbies,
voliere the other is chosen fer /a:
ability to. talte one out 02 docas ana
furnish healthful exercise.
When the tired Pc, 11::----u lam] tile
fatigued stenographer, the salesman.
tPc profess:oil:al man, the student, the
mechanic, the laborer, cr anyoae show
;fig signs of a hard day's work, gce-i
home weary, NVit'l ncrvect on eige, a
cosy chair by i' n i fire in wlataat.
or on the Vera/id:ill s'aninier,
thing that appeals. To la acid music.
It soothes cr. Q, ilzrVes. It re.,..a.as '.1 '3
-mina while the 1; 3 1 ,-,litag. 'It
lteeps the minci from recalqing the
day's worries Lind froni :i 1)1
the next day's airricu,:ii Kake
EL hobby and you be the gainer
physically, mentally anti ,spiritually,
Wo Got You, Willie,
"Now Willie," said tlie teacher cf
the juvenile history* class, "you remarn-
ber who won tla3 U1c,f NVaterlsor
"lt, WEIS the Juke of Wellington"
"Yes, and who camo to his assist -
a ice and helped him win it?'"
"Ja feller named Upgardgon Atom."
EVery time a inan hag his fratune
tol1 1tsrid of a small pertton
of it.