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The Exeter Advocate, 1921-12-8, Page 2
By E. PHILLIi'S OPPENgE , (Coat? CHAPTER XXXE ,---teent'd.) • It was all over in t nose few minutes and Theanson 'found hinieelil the street again. ; He gui<�'".eihis way by in :t". egs itto Whitehall. The black- ness seen.e3 to hint to be now less int enet.ab e. Looking fixedly - east- ward - he Reenlel to -he cenacions of sera palm i gate nils in file sky, -Ile 'e .- 'i the r;tvenli:;c,� of carts in the roe D, retie bersee i L tn,:, being lei by the (leivers.. He f etni there, fnt odd ttenie:..t. F. .,:'1 had e'. ,'•e:'e'n the pollee r•r,iers• came 'alp: g with gee lamp lit, ciente to be ete,nree. in a few yards an.I n:eneeet d to the edge of the pavement. At. tan way cep Wititeltail there ;:as acre sat:'* line 0: t xleab un ane t4? pia for 1.2 re or ted. pie -r ;Fay to the garages until. day'night. The unu sial- nees of it was nenean ateeuneting. At tl;e ten of the nee—.n t ere:Dgi't:lir., T -,^n -s a:D turnen to the left through tl e Pa:: 31:11:-. a.• .s and p a>=ed into St - Jen es'e t' 1r :. He stye' ..4',t slowiy SS7crg-;alit.! 1Cy'. e gee to tine t»e..+"r:gI"re fors' to -t :Ee eft,E e'li; g e eeet', td •rhe T: ea c l,t p ear tat per a tt t :et; Fit e:i ..i, listened intently. He was 1 ., +c Ee;l cef pa r- t; eieene neon 'hearing lit 1 it eeente.1 i3 to hi es t.l„,nent (tone erar est. 'iie ceti:c{i� haat' then I. Of a thousand nae t1e.Y !a sn-xr.. Ian:time ripen an .., Y it, tai a sneange. He 1-- noel EIA• • tur`enae r i .' ta-r. Hs Fpr :pe.l the rainier with , innal mei ; laze t n- tree::t .:fite eannenent tenni. .l ast at that Hosea.: Lk. u :. :y ;what ep- pezrt t + e E fl ., et fnglrtea:ng cn the , kit, f ewe,? a rt peer' which se rule i ' ,� .-1 aril er •1 y thw de `. Tien are ,ic.-ee . -.,. Ce' c •c>ti1 ➢:is c•}•es with his needs Freet a Ftp'sliest p aiees ere etleet• :1'. nane;- -a Feng, level strearte tea li g:,. adtrte,1 te. menet tett to me ' a gleetels. Thee:. . was one bas suffered. We regret deeply to an- nounce the death of a very distin- guished young officer, Captain Ronald Granet, a nephew of Sir Alfred Anselman A bomb passed through the roof of his house in Sackville Street, completely shattering the. apertnient he- apertnient in which he was sitting, His servant perished with him.. The other occupants of the building were, fortunately for them, away for the night" The paper slipped from Thomson's fingers. He looked through the win- dows of his room, across the Thames. Exactly opposite to him a fallen chins- and) Hey and four blackened walls, still e' ;',y from the falling clow➢s, voices smou:deri.ng, were there to remind unfamiliar and guttural, wa*mned hint him of the great tragedy, He looked of what was coming. The darkness dmvn at the raper again, There was which loofned •over him, took shape, no mistake. It was the juugn:en` of He turns and ren far his life, so Tliiy` a higher Court than hiss - a little way above his head a He made his way clown to the Warof shrapnel now was streaming from Office at a little before ten o'clock. the Ioilere:l g..r' of the sa dmiralty,. the streets were crowded with people Tenating bai e -to look, he saw, searee- find there were throngs surrounding ly fifty yards agave him, -tie fallsr each of the places where bombs had of a huge Zeppelin. He felt hen e r been dropped. Towards the Pell Mall just outside its range and paused, .. Arch the people were standing in breatsiess. With a crash which seem-,. thousands, trying to get near the ed to plit the air, the huge structure; wreck of the huge zeppelin, which fell. The far end of it. all buckled u ,' completely blocked an the traffic rested aninst the hack of the Act -i through St. ' James's Park. Thomson iniralty. The other end was only a paused fora moment at the top of Why Every Month Is Canning Season, berries, strawberries, currants, elder - With Me. j berries, and cherries. It is easy to I find that by extending the can get them put away in warm weather ning season from 'summer to fall, and. if jelly is not made then. then into winter, I make my house Believing many of you may wish work easier. It's an excellent method to can grape juice and some of the of distributing the tasks more evenly' others,from year to year, I am giving and of relieving pressure during the the directions which I follow: busy, hot weather. l A. small amount of water is added' It may sound armazir,g to you to to the fruit, this is brought to a boil Boys ' { '{ {� i f housekeeper 1 h ' and allowed to simmer gently for a IfT�,t OWN}AP 5 aro a .oase::e: ='er annmg er US C3VE? 1 S SttiQ9 . nunin� operations for the winter sea- very few minutes, Then the juice is. 'fraaranf lather C r SOIL It ;w43 not common practice a strained through two layers of cheese • years <:,,a, When Z runt tem a d , cloth into dean jars or bottles, which, ne.i hbor of my desire to can food have been boiled in water fifteen min- ir every season of the year, she smiled utes. These are prated on a. false bot- -the kind one lets flicker across the tom in a large kettle and sufficient face when she is not solid on your warm water is poured around them to, ideas. - - ; reach the sh.tuldees of the jars and emu ever no 1r,1 of canning in win-` the necks of the bottles. If jars are ter?" she een.e1used, the li?s are half sealed, while few yards front where Thoncson steod, Trafalgar Scraare and looked around' "Weil," sail I, "for instance, xf •wr either a piece of - cotton or a cork, t «be,hottom of the steps 1ea^s"g tip him, The sr'ords of t1=.e newspaper is poor judgnDent to earl pum;iIan in which has been boiled, is inserted x s into PallWil, Mein �. c,oze*r sear:Itlights ;were indeed true. London had her' early wintry, when it is sweetest, fpr; loase.1yr in the bottles. played upon it, ?lien suddenly appear ;cars, yet there was nothing rn the D gin late sarin ant Tins fruit yuice is grocessed,�thirtyk ed as though from underneath. Seale use )n pies uu g x t; 1 flees of the r e wa to atmosphere peer, If summer; cranberries when they are in minutes, the water around it being of them stood fora u, moment cinch, -ythitag, there was an all f kept simmering all the Time, When,. swayed like drunken men, others lie- round arf greater Vitality, of greater se''' gin; onions Before they sprout,' - r removed,n the lids are gait to run. Round the corner from intensity. The ;war had come a little losing their desirable flavor; and: the j i s are a . r. . S. , n little coin ar,v;._ 1 Parsnips ev➢Den their taste is rlehert,;, tightened immediately, while the sot,e .._e A�i:j.s,r,t, ..q,i;a�•e ., itt p , „nearer at Inst than the ea,untaas of the p P ;: g n s removed -Brom the a�f Fz➢tl,ers. came with ine•1 hayonet', h daily Dress. It was the real thing it is not common sense to can peas, ton ,topper are the; .,..here r+as a .51-0111.. Trio of the men.with which even the ver •-d:, - Lon-'` s a plums in summer -time, l,e•.ttles and tightly fittieg cori:s, winehI T! e } � , pew�aelta, and puns , rail QC. , donor had rubbed shoulders. From. when they are seasonable." n t bare been boiled, are put in. When Th.ra of heard the crack of a rite, coenapur Street to Nelson's; Monu- I fled that carrvin out new around- the bottle, are cold, the togs are dip-. led saw one aI them leap ,into tete air' neem the men were lined tip in a long x g 'Meat in me1tc>d paraffin. I use. #hese The lather one staggered u emeltingv he year canning :schedule is fun, ar and collapse. cg a c', their . tivg to the re- ; juices not only for jelly in..king, l ut and fel➢ on his isnee dozcz of#eruiting office. well as profitzhlc. I always mane a• lice them stere there together with tl:cirn_ (To be concluded.) elapse ofrom f glasses of jelly frocanned' also for puddings and sauces, mends stretched to the skies. Then« - nee .-.--.. •, fruit juices the day before ('hrietmas, c>;eam, Fherlaet, gelatin dishes, and, Thomson was coned:roe that one ef? ',r s, and carry them. sib➢ie warm, in holly-' other k'sei•ts, the ciil-el:ld tik r e was cove.ng in his; , decorated »ckafics ti my once doubt- Iz the pus of steaming attd ata#ri- cc . tin anal:in for the sac In #,.e Garden of k.den, planted by God. p ° Vous c:iit;p 15 to he server at the Ieaet 1. ng stealthy gait,pi flash There >ieme goodly trees in the epring. mg neighbor. One Dominion Day She* ea, inthe winter, the vegetables for: ntia� with tern, gcoat t . „ time ec3 and her family ate deliei,ius putt/phial i8 are ct knell, net waste 1, in the fall, of :lght glean:eei upon the fugitive a ! fer a nitu tent, He wore a hat like a; pies ---the pumpkin I lied put "up tit; Here is a cambiration of vegetablecN helmet; only his face, blackeneai with u Trete: of beauty and height and ;race, Deeeilil,er, Another ear 1 se..t her He e' found on malt farms and, grease, and his staring eties, were Te staltacl in splendor before 1]is face. a can of cranberry Juice to he utilized, • are f ee e visible. He caste straight for Thom- in milli a •alter •lee • to serte with inehlentellen it i- oil of my favorite' v I:ran:Ailing heavily. A tt , Menem , the seasons first fried ehielien, canning recipes: "Ilr,nale up -In Tiao:ilson cried, tgtn•e l and c:.rd, he lap peer, ' From month to mean new reneone, 1 peek ripe tomatcnes. U1 email ear- - l •a., eel beech and the tulip rare. s Th man elingii a narleus blew at: lit tree: wenee rem.. front neer the " p ` Th Qra: t1"" a ' . .,• .. • rot", 2 tundra, 1 alt' 1.81 shell l':Il�• ju4tifying the rr°l;c.cnl a, +caianint, dRir-. p' i bin TI5E'm-lest ;;la t cgul«e ttna Q.a s a e ,t,! ,ing late autumn an'.S venter. ;.r('' i"aF*e, 2 le,t pe *ger. , 1 r:,;anal Strang 1 drawn z IN o; Or from a m r i g fi1 eu, the no, .e pine. �l'tlrlQi�r" I�4,34T , w6ht.B3 '`" a,Di '+g wlto'e cC"ot.=.° bed ♦ t .1 t sweeping , �A" REe an$, Lela through. the 1 •t The wee;i mg a tri by fret river line; brought to my attention. And hero alp the at.anir'aa tv rent'. :Aa,i, vs a en. lens se`s• e:tere:ese beep upon the Trees for the birds to build in and sing, .. " . n , " ' half minutes anal .un�^e in colts water Fila tt,lari and ex re,slna7l still to epi ;t .ata n ea lit et prey to 7, F �ie • H .t eaa of the stege, arid, ;with a queer bird alae sisal tree fora Joy in sitting. tare :at their let during ahee winter , r g a .a p y p' • months. immediately. Remove cores, , tent' bring Parl er eervt5'. right tp yoar I'�ar weeny.P,vy,e�' 1+ ee t,e tela• :fillet,- of Rte ,it:ct of bloeithirst ecke, risk down 1 home. t� a' Z carriage OHC ssati. .lie lire of the tv-ree➢.ed Zeppelin, ends,and spina. Cut hi quarters awl And the cgaiver n line o lig.hc, tt.erie Td $ Trees to turn at the moots: eats Canning 1n C'Aol \�e:itlleII 1. n11ACh pay 1 .et the ren for thea • r 'ti ff ground d t Lord ,r footfall; e tl a• I° ?I 'I3"1 l,rbla wild: s:asst°ort lis- p'-t,`slot aunt roars and ,e teai'si are some of them: , Buhl tele tonaatces by dipping them dmt.n,e gee gave hen cl en i en visia'n wtatdied inn ;hemp up aan fall, i n ince bolting water for one :seal on i! 'aI•anr+ vegetables and z Pers fruits 0140 4,Le:YOW Oh, captain; Young Lady—"Dear ale, captaine what do you find for the sailors to de eaten youare out at sea? Aren't the[ Hien very idle?" Captain --"No, lady; I keeps them busy hoeing the sea weeds out of the ocean current patch. SUCCEk :. Tots of fertile eggs. kiealtl:y chicks. Z!very bird Rept in vigorous healthy, profitable con- dition, by-N,a- ture's tonic. P1tATTS I'QI`LTRY I EGL'I ATOR Booklet "Practical Pointers' shows the way to profit and set:- Write— TV FOOD CO. Ola CANtaren UMEITEi) TORONTO shore comfortable than in summer- Place in a large kettle! Blanch rho Whatevere-ori send - whether is t something in the city wi` cis seeilaeal ti seeking for more eicttnls. The so len little blucher than the eleeth Even were coming forte now'ho;v- rwhile lielooked at it, #e.,in th,• Anton ever, and dletac encnte of them were alt roof came a Purist muse: the izi.e. n nrehang :l.a\ their prisoners. An- 8nd screech of re shell at• it: d.eehe other company was stationed all upwards. And then the eleopinl; airy around the huge eras, keeping ard r,eerned1 suddenly to eneene fed tear,'°T,homsonn vralked back once more to- night to neeolee hideous. Not fifty, ;wards the Admiralty, The sky was yards ;away, from him something fen; stall lurid with the reflection of many in the Park, anti all around slim IaneF,s fates but the roar of the guns had of gravel aal�:i Elocis of earth fel: in diminishes, and for several min:ites'. a shower. f' great ei1U tree fell no bomb had been thrown. With the txashing into the railing t•➢c,i:e by iii•, revolver in his hand still smoking, he side. Then then•e vias a deafening ex- ran into a man whom he knew slightly plosion, the thunder of falling mason- at the Admiralty, D„ ry, and a house by the side of the arch 1 `Thomson, by God. the elan ex broke suddenly into flOr't a. A few %debited. • W hat are you doing with moments later, a queer sight amongst that revoker. all these untoward and uneepected . T home on looked at it. litlppenings, a fire engine ds hed , •'I don't know," he answered. "I've j under the arch, narrowly miesing the uet Shot one of those fellows from broken fragments of brit+k and stone. the Zeppelin. Ilow are things going?" down in •'Ther are six Zeppelins Braun • around,and a dozen fire -hoses a eontn*enee�I tplay open the flaming different pants, and a couple of dozen building.aeroplanes,"Wool- The other replied. Wool The darkness was pier now, ,and the'wieh is safe, and the Houses of Par- silence. Theme were houses on i' . liameni and Whitehall. Heaps of re other side of the river on fire, and ports to come in but I dont believe searcely a moment passed without the they've done nnich damage." erash of a falling bomb. The air for! Thomson passed on. It was lighter a second or two wass fillei wizen piteous now and the streets were thronged shrieks drowned almost immediately with people. ' He turned once more by another tremendous explosion frons ; towards the Strand and stood for a further north. Every now and then,;a moment in Trafalgar Square. One looking upwards in the line of the .wing of the National Gallery was gone long searchlights. Thomson could des- and the Golden Cross Hotel was in tinctly see the shape of one of the flames. Leaning against the Union, circling sirships. Once the light Club was another fallen aeroplane. flashed downwards, and between him ,Men and women were rushing every - and Buckingham and he saw a - where In wild excitement. He made great aeroplane coming head foremost his way down to the War Office. It down, beer) it strike the ground with seemed queer to find amen at work a tremendous crash, heard the Iong still in their rooms. He sent Ambrose death -cry, a cry which was more like for an orderly and received a message a sob. of the men who perished with front headquarters. it. . . • l "Damage to public buildings and Every moment the uproar became Property not yet estimated. All dock more deafening. From all sorts of yards and arsenals safe, principal unsuspected paces and buildings carne Public buildings untouched. Only the lightning quiver of the guns, fo1- seventeen dead and forty injured re lowed by the shrieking of the shells. ported up to five minutes ago. Great Right on to the tops of the houses be- damage done -to enemy fleet; remaind- tween where he was standing and the er in full retreat, many badly dam - Carlton, another aeroplane fell,' aged. Zeppelin just down in Essex, ,smashing the chimneys and the ;vin- four aeroplanes between here and dows and hanging there like a gi- Romford.” gantie b'.atac bat. There was not a I Thomson threw clown his revolver. "Well," he muttered to, soul anywhere near him. but by the ; Well, y� .. occasional flashes of light Thomson ,"perhaps London will believe now that could see soldiers and hurrying people we are at war!" in the Admiralty Square, and along the Strand he could hear the patter • CHAPTER XXXVI. of footsteps upon the pavement. But "London, -too has its scars and he himself remained alone, a silent, London isprou, d of them," a great speIlbcund, fascinated witness of this morning paper declared the next epic of slaughterandruin. morning. "The last and• gigantic ef- Then came what seemed to him to fort of German 'frightfulness' has be its culmination. High above his come and passed. London was visited head he was suddenly conscious of a. before dawn this morning by a fleet downward current of air. He looked of sixteen Zeppelins and forty aero- np. The shouting of voices, appar- planes. Seven of these former mon- sters -Ile stranded and wrecked in var- ions.parts of the city., two are known to -have collapsed in Essex, and an- other is- reported to have come to grief in Norfolk.. . Of the aeroplanes, nineteen were shot down, and of the rest so far no news has: been heard. • The damage to life • and r • operty, great though it may seem, 1 much less than was expected. Suc:i losses as we have sustained we shall bear with prideand fortitude. . We stand now more closely than ever in touch With our :gallant allies. We, :too, bear the marks of battle in the heart of our country," Thomson paused to finish his break- fast, -and abandoning- the leading article turned, to a more particular account.. "The loss of life;" the journal went an to say, "although regrettable, is, so far as accounts have reached us, not large, There are thirty-one civilians killed, ' a hundred and two have been admitted into hospitals, and, curiously enough, only one person bearing arms 18$UE No. 49—•'.1. Wood for the haw, ti'e epsar and th flail, The keel and the mast and tile Barin Fan; He made them of t:very grain and girth For the use of man in the Garden of Earth. Then. lest the soul should not lift her eyes time, when the mercury is clirit, , taber vegetable separately for five n014,7,01014drareric, or the 1110.1 3. More thee is a;•aileble for the minutes, :an+1 cold-�3ill inimetliately, este fabrics --will be speedily returned nark. The children are off at school, N' hen I nave sweat. corn, I use four to fir tOriginal freeb less'When you e young chicks have grown up, the ears of it, cutting the kernels frani the think of clemaing or dyleini garden needs little or no attention, star, wafter blanchingthem five nsintstes thiuk of PARKER'S. and with not so many men in the fledand cold -dipping. The vegetables are, taut in small piens, combined with the there is test; oohing toem do. tomatoes and placed in jars. They are Parker's 4. It is an economiDal use of cans, pounds, if the sterilized fortyft;'e minutes, with the i this canning throughout the year. pressure front 10 toDye Works �x©netts Some of the jars fillets in early spring1., wind summer are emptied, and thenpre sure cooker is used, or one hour Limited Hely be used in canning the fall :end with five pounds pressure. In boiling; water or a bane -made outfit and in CIeaners and Dyers winter products, Moreover, the fuel From the gift to the Giver of Paradise - used serves 'a dual purpose ;warming condense,' steam, process -ons and one-� 791 1Yonge St. ' half hours; in a water -seal outfit, at` Toronto. `-'3 the roots and providing heat for can- , On the crown of a hilt, for all to see, fling. ° 1.1 degreea I'ehreaiieit, process one moommommmapticatngragaila God planted a scarlet maple tree. F, Instead of feeding and earing for 'tont. -Bliss Carman. • Im p erishabl France. e Those who thought that France, surplus of fowls may be canned to with the one-piece frocks or carried "bled white," was doomed to perish, 1 advantage. ILikewise, butchering to an entertainment or when calling must marvel at the power of the na- comes in cool weather, and no person on roof evenings :ere made from large tion to revive, Returning tourists ` doubts the advisability of preserving squares of Canaan crepe ar crepe de. who have had a good time there na- the meat which can not be used nu- chine in blue, black or grey. They are'. turaily see things in a favorable light, mediately. lined with vivid colors such as orange, but official accounts also are cheertuti. Calling the roll of the fall vege- jade or tomato -red chiffon or geor For example, Le Temps reports that tables which may be kept in cans for gette crepe. Very deep fringe finishes there were 623,000 marriages in. 1920, use in spring and summer is convinc- the E ige. The fringe may be in inateli or twice as many as in the same ing proof of the wisdom of canning ing color or two-tone colors are often period before the war; the births were them. The queen of them all is the tiled. 44,000 more than in 1913, and the tomato. Then corn, string beans, and They are handy on nearly all oc-. deaths 56,000 fewer. That does not sweet peppers. Somewhat later cauli- c:asions, make for race extinction; neither does flower, cabbage, squash, pumpkin, the 58,000,000 quintals of wheat liar- carrots, parsnips, sauerkraut, and Animals Have Sixth Sense. vested this . year in spite of the , hominy are found on most farms. Animals have a weird sixth sense which few human beings possess. Ants, for illustration, will desert their - hills, taking their babies and eggs with them, twenty-four hours before An Interesting Flight. know of no greater comfort than that the outbreak of a forest fire, while' One of the ,Host interesting flights which comes from knowing there are rabbits will leave burrows made in ever made by man took place recently cans of delicious friend chicken, rab- low-Iying land long before a flood oc- in Germany in the soaring and gliding bit, roast beef, pork, and mutton in curs. They have some weird premoni- competition for motorless flying ma- the pantry, ready for use when un tion which forces them to seek higher chines. One of the aviators remained expected guests come, and for the da r ground before the :danger is upon in the air thirteen minutes, "circling, turning and balancing like a soaring bird." He travelled six miles be- tween start and finish and at one time was at a height estimated to be at least three hundred feet. Mlnard's Liniment for Garget in Cows. Holland's Many Wheels. Two million bicycles are ridden in Holland, a country with a population of 6,000,000 persons. the unprofitable hens during the win- ter, it is wise to cull the flocks some time e o before cold weather sets in, The Newest Square Wraps. Popular little shawls to be worn drought; a crop that compares wail with that from a much larger area be- fore the war. awaiting the canner. Then there are the meats which may be successfully canned, particularly when pressure canners are used. I $15 Ib. for Woolf That's • what you pay for it when you buy a snit. What do you get a pound for it when you sell the wool? Canadian wool has to be sent out of Canada to be prepared• forthe spinner. A pound of wool bought from the farmer is. sold from one commission merchant to another, • stored, shipped by train and boat, stored in England, sold and :re -ship- ped until eventually it gets back to the mills in Canada at many times the price you got for it. There •is no place. in °engine to prepare -wool for the worsted spinner. Isn't it a shame? A mill la now under consideration, in Toronto, to convert raw -wool for the spinner. When wool can be gent direct to the, mill for combing and gold direct to the spinner, then the farmer will get the full price. If this its, of interest to you, M•$. Wool• Grower, write Dominion Ie ve1opment Corporation, Limited, 709 Continental Life Bldg., Toronto, and get the full plan when there is illness and.itis difficult to find time to prepare dinner for the men. After making jelly in the winter, tasting of the- newly cooked product and discovering how easy it is to boil up two or three glasses -at a time, I. resolved to •have fruit juices on hand, whenever possible, for this purpose. Of course, grapes are about the only fall fruit •from which one.cares to ex= tract the juice for winter and spring uses, but insuinmer I always hurried- ly can the juices of raspberries, black - them. The First•Savings Bank. The first British savings bank was started by a woman, Priscilla Wake- field, at Tottenham, near London, in 1789: It was for children, and was followed by one for adults in 1804. - Nope is an eager, living wish that what we desire may come true, Minard's Liniment for Colds, etc. EUROPE AND SOUTH AMERICA TO HAVE ZEPPELIN PASSENGER SERVICE The project of an aerial line con- necting the continent of Europe with ing the continent of Europe with South America by gigantic Zeppelin passenger ships; is being worked out M Germany. Doctor Hugo Ecker, one of the ehief directors of the Zeppelin works, Germany's-most'fanious pilot, and for many. years a co-worker- of Count Zeppelin. has just returned from a visit to- Argentine and Spam. Dr. Ecker has spent several months in those countries studying routes and landings- and assisting in the organ- ization' of the company. He says that he found Southern Spain ideally lo- cated for a European air harbor and as a port for a trans-Atlantic Zep- pelin line. The other end of the line will be near Buenos Aires, where it is declared that weather and wines con- ditions are very favorable. He estimates that a',Zeppelin with 150,00e cubic metres gas capacity has a speed of 115 kilometres an hour, with forty passengers, can make the trip from Spain to Buenos Aires in ninety hours. One hundred hours will be required for the trip to Europe an account of leas favorable wind Con- ditions. _ As thepeace treaty places almost insurmountable obstacles in_ the way of organizing and operating air ships from Germany; the organizations will be exclusively Spanish, with Germans in charge of all operations. aseline Trade Mark 1TE PETRO LE•U M :l ELtY" An application of "Vas- eline"White Jelly brings grateful relief when applied to cuts, burns, chafed skin, etc. CHESEBROUGH SIANUFACTt1RING COMPANY ca:a„„uaa:at 1880Chabot Ave.. Montrea). RNS Lift Off with Fingers Doesn't :hurt a bits Drop a: 11 U. "Freezone" on an aching corn, , in• sternly that Born stops `hinting, then. shortly you lift it right off -with fingers, Truly! Your druggist sells'"a tiny "bottle- of "Freezone'•" for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hare; cern, soft corn, or corn between the toes; and the cal - hues wit,houi soreness or 1rritti,,oa,