The Exeter Times, 1924-7-24, Page 2OPEN iErIER
XIII,
Youth of Pleasure, Life cif Dishonesty.
S11000ES in any sphere calls for hard
work, painstaking care and a' willing-
ness to do a certain amount Of drudg-
ery. There is no hue at endeaVor, with-
out its disagreeable tasks. Beery vo-
cation exercises our patience. Did
you ever think how much the oily -
bred boy la handicapped In this re-
spect? Ile is not brought up to do
trying things; life with hint is rather
a matter of enjoyment; occupations
that are interesting, no too heavy nor
too long, are alright for a while until
they become too menotonous, and
have to be gone through perely as a
.a ter of duty. Usually, however,
nothing goes very WrOng while he is
still a boy. A day comes, however,
when les responsibilities a.re greeter.
Ile needs ccnieiclerable income; he is
married, his expeneoa are increasing.
He has probably- cultivated some ex-
peaeive habiEse too; he must be as
good as others; his wife must dress
end attend social functions; appear-
a,nces must be kept up; sports had oc-
cupied a great deal of his attention
and continue to, do so. Everyone is
going to the races end betting; some
are making trips te the seaside; he
and his wife must do so, too. An auto-
mobile must be had, whether there is
a home mortgage or not. For one or
other or all of these reasons, he simply
must have money, and a geed deal of it
all the time. Where is it to come
from? He was not trained to apply
himeelf as, he notices, seine with good
incomes are doing; he cannot bring
himself to do it now. There is his
plight; his habitsare not economical.
He cannot and will not gee down to
steady persevering hard, work. "What
is to be done? He looks around for
opportunities offering a largo return
for little effort. He plans and schemes
—he takes more kindle to working out
schemes than to close application in
the details of office or business. The
schemes succeed; the big money
comes in. But it is not the fruit of
hone,st toil; it belongsto someone
else or to several. others. Like all
profiteers, lie has what he did not earn
and what is not his. He needs the
TO A FARMER
I3y Rev. Itf. V. Kelly; C.S.B.
(Continued from laet welt
mcaey, however, and decideo to follow
this course of procedure for the fu
-
There is much dishonesty in busi-
ness and even among professional
men. Do not suppose theses people
-were always so. The feree Of circum
you go te, lee eity, may learn pluinie
er same other trade. After tlie
usual periods,apeut appeeutice and
Jae Journeymen, he will opep busi-
',nese of his oen and leek for contracts.
Very soqn, he will proba.bly find there
, are no contracts= eoming to him metes
Ihe is a meineer of the combine. If he
ie, there -is the proeedure he is ex-
pected to ta,ke part in. Are you will -
ling that should happen? But would
there be any alternative unless the
alternative of deciding to go out of
business altegether?
IYou hear regularly of city business
Men, contractors, etc, becoming rich
,very quickly. You wonder how it can,
be done. Mee brains and hard work
Will not account or all those thous -
alias and tone, of thousands of dollars
piled up in a short ,time. A man may
be clever enough to devise remarkable
schemes and get away with them; he
, may eliarg•e exorbitant rates and sell
goods at Priees that will yield exces-
sive eroflts, but he is thief just the
same.
(To be continued).
The Death of Gordon.
(January 26th, 1885),
Of all the saddest words are said
And fraught with bitter fate •
Are those that tell of Gordon's deathe
When the succour 001110 "too late."
He might have let that city doomed
And safety sought in flight,
But his duty counselled him to stay,
And honor, spotless bright,
He facedthe raging Moslem haat
With mien serene and calm;
Death tor him no sorrows had,
He feared no earthly harm.
He knew the God on high booked down,
His fate would not fruitless be;
And. like the blood that martyrs shed,
Would yield peace and liberty.
At Omeurman ineafter years
The Mahdi's power was crushed;
He met the fate for Gordon planned
strongWhcn his defenceh •
And Khartoum saw the flags hall
And heard the ''Lest Post" sound,
While the troops. stood -firm at the
salute
On that famed historic ground.
Carried by Frientb., •
•
It was Anne Freeborn'feet-cexpere
euee as Sundayeeohool tea:
, deed, it was a, goat 'many y 'ince
es- LITTLE S'FIJEer SAVES-, 'TIME. she had been in a Sunday school'even
Meet. people who ax•e looking for valve, it ,might be in the iplet valve..as' a enpe; fele had outgrew/1 all that,
troublehave TIO diftlenity 111 finding it. In some types of engines the valyc she lied assured lier girl friends, She
An olltstanding exception to this gen- head may break off and get into tile had been through deep weters and had
eral rule is seen in the motorist who cylinder and when the piston comes loot ler faith. But when -Loraine, her
undertakes to locate , a trOuble, that up Pul'ell a 'hole in the Pist"head. best ildene, had been called to her sk
ic
May have developed in his engime.' I A petcock .may be loose so that it will mother and was worried about her
Trouble will hide in "a"tine piece of jar open sufficiently to effeet the coin- Sunday -school class Aune, ,obeying
carbon lodged under a velve or bo- pression and so cause the cYlinder'te generous impulse that she rued e mo-
tween spark plug points or in a ;wire Miss fire. "'These troubles are usually /flout iter, had promised to euro for
that has jarred loose, or in an inter-' confined to.one cylinder and net to the it, • •
• ,
rupter point, a piston rink"' a gas pipe, whole engine. , • ' Now, surrounded by the half _dozen
or what not. The motorist learnsThe gasoline alieuld be , ieSPeated ten -year-old girle she let them telex
eaely in the game that the most insig- nextee Is there any gasoline in the their time about settling down, She
nificant things are tremendously howl oe the carbureter? Is -there -gaso- •watched while the lit.tie secretary
,
portant at times. line in the eanke is the shut-off, valve Merited the attendance and, took. up
' Yet most troubles incident to ,oper-, in the line 'leading, to the carbureteri the offering. But at last there seemed
ating"is, ear may really be located quite open? Does, manifold leak?, to be no longer any excuse for not be
'quickly if the driver goes after them' Po pot adjust the carburetor. If retuning the lesson. They were look
111 a systematic fashion instead of, the engine has beenrunning, it is ing up at her expectantly. How slimed
wandering aimlessly' about the, engine practically 'certain that the carbureteei she bogin? K happe•thoeglit came to
and other pares, aa is often the custoin' is net out of adjustment. -Inspect the' her. ,,
of the amateur owner. The hardest intake 'pipe or ananifeld, Then putsta "What was your lesson' about last
thing a driver has,to do when the en- -tablespoonful of gasoline in each 'cyl- Sundae?" she asked. "Who"ccin tell
gine, stops or cuts up is to eliminate inder and crank oyer the engine. If 1110 the story'?,". • •
the idea that he knows positively what this runs the engine for a few resole- Hall aldozeu hands were raised. •
the trouble is. Often he is sure he can tions the trouble is probably in the "All right, you tell us, "said Anne
fix the trouble in just about one -elle- gasoline system and leaves -but the to oue blue-eyed little girl
lite and he putters around a long time speity nozz'le, which may have dirt '-'There WaS,a•sick-mansetoo sleet to
before he makes up his mind that Poe- bode e 111 it, or the auxiliary air valve walice the 'little -girl begaiet'-"ele,,ltacl
siblY' after all his cock -sureness is not stuck, as tile rerhaining cause of been sick so long, and he wanted to
Well founded. ' "' trouble, be cured. But the house was crowded
HOW TO CONDUCT SEARCH. , ,
The igmtima 'should be. inspectedifull, and anyway he' "Was too sick ic,
• next Test for a s ark b tain the Wall: oi• try to get in. But -"lie had
some triends, ,and they'. carried him
'right, up on the top of the house, And
they took ,off ;sonie of the roof and let
the Sick man down with some 'pieces
,of rope. They let him down right in
front of the big crowd. And—there
wile Jesus!"
'Mat was all. The little girl sat
back, and her cheelcs were a deep
stink.
Anne waited far the eeet, of the
PhotograPhedie England with a medel of one of the hospitals to be exhibited
. , ' c! R. AND MRS. WILFRED GRENFELL,,OF LABRADOR 111,tx.lhbeiebiss,:tviora3srtttltpwroicteheoduall..3rmtpiirf wi,re,•oty, arty plug, aii"heedng its-tey-
Q0ndeived ideas as to what the 'trouble pniairlitaltfletiitilie hell], ;In-eler chra, of
ic tehfiey•,,,eligeithae)".
at 'Wembley, where Dr. Grentell will lecture on the work of 'the International
uld
ff shi ,
'117teanYiebineb and
t 'hfa°tilt°o\ vs taaistY6ategiiies o*lihniech' enis- down?.
', Are, any wires" loose broken
I "The
1 in reality a process of eliminatipn.' with the switch the ‘iap.., .,,•.'"A're hsaptt'elries ,t)run
Trees. co oe p s Long Range gme three things are necessary---gaso- e :
or shortscircuit.ed?:••:,Are-espark plugs
'-' line, compression and' a spark at the
In the Garden of Eden, planted by The old Dutch sailing vessel§ of right time. Remember also that to - clean and are points one -fiftieth of
God days gone by were notoriolislY•intetrupter points
show' keep it running it is necessary to haven inch apart? Are
a
There were goodly trees in the spring- blunt of bow and °Willey Thee'. slow- ' • " • • • clean and adjusted right-? Do brushes
ing sod— nese was considered an advantage by make good contact? Is the distributor
water or cooling unless it be an air-
euporters of green coffee from the ,
cooledgi , d i t h 111 force
; the, rebels to currender without fsrtoeill,ainfotnhoetr:f.roBinuttltiheeysaanller59,7irmlethd then „
Trees of beauty and height and grace, Netherlands 'East Indies, to Amedea,If or lubrication. - ,, ,, s
think the Story was finished' t "There
. _1 , = clean? ° ''
To stand in splencler betore His face. since the effect et the confiuement of 1 pr
the coffee beneath closed hatches was If the
enthgeinestsateotpesr onp etd-liael rfoaa'idl'S'a nt do I E'astward vvitiithaL Orient . • . .
To thorn
Jeiis I! 't' mWhateantmaolilo tiliteati...ebeehlsda i id:
greatly t huprove e flavor. start it or if one or two -cylinders miss' '
Apple and hickory, ash and pear, _ held
.ExPress- ., ‘ wished for or imagined-ehealing help
fire, the first thing to dois to get the
Oak and beech and the tulip rare, Such "sweated" coffee brought top , , , ,
The trernbling aspen, the•noble pine,
The sweeping elm by the river line; • of Timor coffee is said to have taken
prices in market.
During the world war one shipment , over the engine.
,, 1 es an out9 the tool kit and crank ,s taAn teinu:::: so, ncotlhoorfou,v1,:ef::!4ins:np,trinesgs.riAd:„ ,aetilollesnavraahfyeo:saitevot'ap'teatiiill-le.,r:deit;eeteerleelet..s.iset),10,herlirocse;t;feaenttlii,cf,:ieeeli'll,.:elilaiwetyee,odcl.‘ib_editclsiot'
• neutral, the,..engine 'cranks ever hard,
If, with the gears in Is that from Paris to Belgrade or Con -
three and a half years coming from 1 it
i indicates a lack of lubricating oil, You pass eastward you. see Western
Europe slipping away both within anti "There was Jesus!"
. e
Trees for the birds to build and sing, Java, to New York. It was aboard the or a lack of water. Such a lack has
whioh I allowed the engine -to -reach a temper- oOtis without
„,ea'boier rsaivit;e;,,,Y;reatithigagiir leraav*ell: ahLdoareaieneehheaansiepobsasethltiee'in„.s,;-tt-ellis'eoeligwh-et,eokast.
And the lilac tree for a joy in spring; German. steamship Brisbane,
!attire wheke the lubricant:fails to p
,
• If the engine
cleared from Batavia, July 4, 1914, a.nd,
turtrs- tthelels how the chadge_comes abmit, as Anne. Loraine found' her 'curled' up
Trees to turn at the frosty ea.11 - fearing capture, took refuge In a har-' form its Work.
And carpet the ground for the Lord's b9r in Portuguese India, where it lay over fairly easy, it is not necessary to
1 k f '1 • te t bl
zC:I.Fruttartlhaaai:ileshla:apveu:rhsis,te:ah ltyaliceacintorsaste
•
d Passes' ilit° ting her lesaon for next Sunday e she
btas left thought
before the fire reading her Bible. "Elet-
unte
ia peat When, the „greetings were over Lor -
football;
1 ' • • tl t •
1 4' •
Trees for fr-ultage and fire and sha,de, turned it over to the British,' who pression. If the driver is not experi- ., .
a • , - wide plain. Europe seems far away— e e A
” •
. — ' , , OW 1 von like
ale° aakee "And la did ' lil
Trees for the cunning builder's trade; moved it to Bombay. Here the cargo enced and is unablato -tell simply by .
y -ears Sinee we left the .tuniult of A tender smile 'deepened on Anne's
Wood for -the bow, the spear and the Adelaide, reaching New York in Jallu- whether each cylinder has corneres-
. . Paiis the super-civilizatIon f i '
o SW.SS peaceful face. , "fen ' afraid 1 haVen't
ary, 1918, three and a half years after mon, he should open all the Petcocks _' a - .
flail, ,
hotels ? Even here- in . the seining car
The keel and the mast of the daring the coffee left Batavia.
everything has changed. Those tweed. -
except on one cylinder and turn the
crank two revolutions, noting if there '
sail; ,
, • , , • , is a resistance ..of one-quarter f
.A ee disappeered. They dropped Off
, •
ed American wad English tourtsts
revolution in the complete t ,ua-ps. 1
He made them of every grain and : ae 'Montreux 'and elaggiore andMilan.
'Compression occurs only on the;".one .
girth, We lost tliia *last of them at Venice.
Grenfell Asseciation.
—Henry A. Ashrnead, I.S.M. Portuedese seized the vessel a/2,d . The next test 'sho'uld be 'Ifor come •
"Novel" Diet
ages,and ages ,away. Is 'it, weeks Or teaohing my' small girls 9"
-was finally transhipped to the city of the resistance of the- Starting ,crank
Some meals. in hooks stand out in
stancee -has gradually drattef them in- one's memory, pa.rticula,riy when one
to it. Had they been brought up to Is hungry.
'Werk. as every farm bey must work;
had their expense account been as
limited; had they spenteas• few:Satur-
day afternoons ' attending baseball
, matches, there 'would have been no
need of resorting to such means of
getting sufficient to keep things going
Your grandchildren, should they grow
• -
up in the city, .may.hare these temp-
tatici•ne to face.
Conscience to the Wind.
food.
You will admit, of coursedear farm. Then there is the sausage Becky
.4er fleend, that if you move your family sharp shared with an'eld-time admirer
to the city, Your children And grand- in
'children will engage in the trades end her garret when her fine gay life
was far behind her. One can never
business undertakings carried on forget the pathos of that solitary
"there. Now, there are many lines of sausage!
i
business altogether legitimate iII 1-larrison Ainsworth tells of yawn-
theniselves, carried on by methods no hi g game pies ane barons of beef in
' eVho will ever forget some of the-
deleetations in Dickens' leaoks: That
elic.e of beef and tankard of ale youttg
David Coeperfield had before setting
out en his long journey to Prymouth,
the succulent lunch on the coach -box
with the Dingley-Deliites, the glorious
feast provided by Mrs. Pipchinfor
herself, of muffins, hot and buttered,
"Dombey & Son," and so one•Every.
word of Dickens' books teems with
man with a conscience can take part eine
„ eo
T wer of London," while Sheila
In Fallowing from the Toronto press,. Kaye Smith, in One of her novels, ac
-
records the public statement of the tually makes one feel one es eating the
'crown attorney: '`Mr. ' explained crisp lettuce and slices of clean house
the Preeedure when a man called for hold bread and creamy butter one of
tenders In those days to have the her characters enjoys. •
pluiabing done in a house. The tend- And these cups of tea in "Cranford."
ers had to go before the Plumbers' What wbeeldn't I give for one now!"
Association. If a dealer 'could show ________________
that he ,had formerly done the work
for that 'man, he was instructed to put
In the lowest tender. All other plumb:
ers put in bide •a little higher. After
the 'board of the Association had de-
,
ternaln•ed, what the price of the lowest
‚tender should be, a percentage was
.added, which was for .the Aesociation.
After thie percentage was fixed, e
certain amount was added for each Of
the other men who made, higher tend-
ers, In ,one instance, it worked out
that seven other'elumbers, who put in
tenclersewere each allowed $500 in the
lowest tender ,for a certain contract.
The Plumbers'Association wasaffili-
ated with the Plumbers' 'Supply As-
eociation, and the latter would, not sup-
ply any Plumber who 'was not a' mem-
ber of the first -mentioned body. The
Plumbers' Supply , As,seciation was
fined $5,000, and smaller fines of from
$2,500 down to $200 were imposed on
others 'connected therewith." .
. "Another Combine ,was the ' Tack
"Ceembilte. • In: one case, where a man
had dared to be independent: they
pressed. Win until 'Ile fi'nedly' went' te
the wall, and when he turned, and ask-
ed if, they asoled :pee him out after
• they bee Practically- ruined his bus! -
nese, he was told that he could "fry in
, his own fate'
, "Agi:eeirientS, signed by Mr. --- re-
quired, dealere to make statutory de-
6Iarations as, to the price at which
they would sell their gbodse.' These
pieces, were fixed by the Association,
one instance, a fine of: $2,000 was
Imposed • for •cuting privets." '
The Crown Attorney, Who' makes
this statement, 'Also tell a us:
"The plumbers' 'Combination, al-
though they suffered perhaps the bleet ng the mith International Labor Oen,
ef the punishment that was
wee, not any e.orse than, 12 ag bad, as feeence, Wnich •aasembled in Geneve
Many of the other' 'combinations in re- on June 16,.arici held a lengthy seeslod
spool to which investigations, to a: der- there. Included in this group are net
tren witent ter& place and which 'Were only, the delegates' who went, across )
mthsequently topped." frerd Canada expressly Ler , the as
Now, it Is altegellier en the course sombly, but alsb, the Cenadlaii officials
of thiegs teat one Of you family, when oa Lhe staff of the Internatienal labor
No windows in- Persian houses are
Visible from the street.
'
-seeessa, stroke of the piston. in the four-stroke
For 'the use 'of man in the Garden oe We miss their white collars, their
. Earth.
e
t cycle. Each cylinder should be tested macela.te baggage, the- sound of Eng-
• -
: ''ii
lish-words '
in a similar manner, opening all pet-
cocks except on the cylinder being The pe9Ple Who now fill the dining
tested. See if the compression .es_ car are a 'dayksskinned, .swarthy crew
Practically equal in all cylinders. ' If speaking wild -and guttural tongues,
there are not petcocks to erlen,"elr."e'rk The men have not shaved to -day, for
On the crown of a .bill; for all to see, Rusty on That Poiht. plugsgwillneed to be removed instead. there are xfo disgustingly critical
God planted a scarlet maple hand'father made hi
tree. Mrs. Aristah Iereet—"I understand TROUBLE IN iiaiAtIem VALVE.,r . a. Americans or Englishmen- to natice
—Bliss Carrna.n. your huss s money 11 one
cylei a very weakor and .comment upon, them. The Bul-
"There :1-------42—s no outerlibertylYtIiberte apart ou°rsf,°1Ldolerradno'uMnDsRlitchi°—h?'"Why—'Why---I no compression, the trouble is apt to garian diplomat. who was soroper
- be in the exhaust elieve. Exentinel and convention'aieYesterdeyeivhin
is
.,ii
from inner liberty; control of affairs rea•lly can't say-Leay mentory's a Ilt= „
is first central of self, and ungovern- tle rusty on that peinte:
the push rod to see if there is clearel beolten -French le sdiscussed reparie
ed Passions must forever mean ship-
ance between it and the valve when delis with the English King's
, After an hour's, impatient wait at there is, the valve must be' lifted out ,'''S,nd is, sitting in pink-striped-sili siiirt
--es---
: •, Messe.n-
wreck of life, destruction, and death."i Explained. the valve is supposed to be closedIf ger has .taken off hiscoat and collar
Whoever starts off in life with the the theatre he hurried to a telephone and the'valve and seatinspected for sleeves, rolling cigarettes and eating
. .
idea,' "I shall succeed," always does and called liP his Wife. "You're not, carbon. Sometimes a. piece of carbon with, his•fingersesele is getting home,
succeed becauee he does what is neces- here yet and it was fully an hour ago will lodge on the valve seat and, due back where he ean ,do as he pleases
sary to bring about this result. If only you phoned me you were just start- to the hammering of the -valve, -will, again, Where he need not heed the
one opportunity presents itself to him, Ingle - ' ' . ' become fastened to the valve or seat.labinird conventions of Western tui... -
and if this opportunity has, as it were, "Tee telephone girl shut me off be- For temporary repair it can generally OPTO•iie tivp,vrona- e,31 in e'empartrnedt 15-
boynlythInte ohnaeirheoinr.itsFhueratcherhiehseeizoefsteint sfohree cIalcnoilliyi,denpils2iletehde. s'elnVteenatc
. vbaelvseeracpaned befrlgewrolisuthnndoatinkiniliotfnheecieenxahdchaitiinhsg: 111-60'u'iliptvnemneeinefrrgamecl Bucharest
T_,..heyhaahrde.
,
brinks about, unconsciously or not, then was that I was just starting to theIfgtahreag,ter.etih.
. el, ,,ind eeaeitit'
somce, lithe „creatures.: with heavily,
propitious circumetancese-Emile 'Cone. put on my hat!"
eitamelled faces, '•hennahair, black
beaded -.eyelashes, exlieresiee slinky
Paris frocks, the skirts 9f whach drag
about the pointed toes, of their •-rete`
heeled shoes. Y They are drenched with.
a heavy perfume that hangs almost
visibly in the smoke -laden air of the
stuffy car. - ' " • .
Then lest the soul should not lift her
eyes
From the Gift to the Giver of Paradise.
DELEGATES FROM DOMINION, LABOR OFFICIALS AND CANADIAN NATIONAL MEN -
A.bove` are shown' Canadians attend- Office, Geneva, anti two eironlinent Of Ottawa, (Canadian Labor adviser); ternatiotal Labor office; Mr. Manning,
ficials of the Canadian National, at pre- Meg, M. P. Whites Torontoe.Hon..B,,Wie
. • .
sent in Switzerland on the railway's' Craig, attorney -general, of Manitoba
besinese, All the ,Canadian delegates (government adviser); Mrs. C. H.
and edvisers served • be various com- Therliern, Ottawa (government dee'
nittees, They are, frent left to right, gate); Tom Moore (Leber delegate)
front row': W. C. Neeon, ,egent-general mra, R. W. Craig, el. P, 'White, Tarot
-
for Onterie at Landon, Etigland (Cana- to • (mitnittcteturers'' delegate). Beck
(Ilan governineet advisee); eV. L• Beefs", vow: P. W, ' Corbett, legal section,. Ire
Cenecilan ,National Railways; W. A.
Riddell, chief of agriculturel sectien,
I.L.0.; W. 4. Black, European emigra-
tion commissioner, '''C.N,R; D. A.
Stevenaon• omeeri I.L.O., well-known German schoolmaster, "To Oh, I cati hear her call, .
'R. W. Maedonell, Toronto (employers, be a SCI1001MaSter is next to being a Aa, claepiee hand's acmes tee yetrs,
adviser) and 0 11 Tharburn, Ottawa, king. In the opinion of foola it is a_ Tier loving voice comes to iny eare
of the Catiadian delegates, F. A. Ac' humble task, but in fact it is thei "13e careful, dear, (lane, fall,"
land is not present in the elctin•e, noblest of occupations," --Anne Porter' Johnson.
taught them mime, though I tried my a.
best., You see, I know so little of all
a Sunday -school teacher ought to
know, but -thei eaught nee agreat deal.
It was asef e had beenesick, too sick
to *fella' end' surrounded' with crowds
cit -bitter thoughts and doubts and'ere-
judicsie -And the • ells's, were my
friends and carried me to where they
could let pae.slowe iitto the inner room.
And' -there'• wits 'jest's)" •
Safeguarding Flowers That
ismoreFortunes.There rei•oai
ice.ixi- garden-
ing than even the keenest enthusiast
. ,
aeelizes. Plant an 'Ounce of,surelower
seed and you will reap enough seed to '
sow aewhole acre of graund. An 'ounce
of tomato seed will yield in one gene-
ration 1,500 ;tuned of seed, or enough •
tfspermeed
eduseeeleae
,00r0,e10y
0toaxiiieb
siot tomatoes!
i•e., that they
have to be carefully guarded. One
Well-known firm keeps' its supplies of
double petunia seed, for example, in a
pate deposit Thi seed is worth -near-
ly $2,500 a pound. eStile hore valuable
are the • seeds of a certain -kind of
gloxinia, which not long.ago command-
ed apentich as $3,750 pound. ,In both
.eases ,the•Werld,'s-etocks; are so small
that they could. easily be carried in, a
coat 'pocket. ••
,Few people know, that, a I th ough the
'hest Celery is grown in Fran e, the
seed'Cif ,,Frongh..„,CelprY, ...planted tz else -
'.Where ,yieldeepop,r-,eroPs: The result
is 'that -fresh plants have tolie lin-
yeAstil,erdwa,iya,dothwesy were
,awreebokseeptit open
peeno;arse, pprted, from France every year. The
jedBun't, 'taon-ddayEnthgelirSeh arienSoinStleyd ttli..:larrotejl'Efc'ngglrlosiW1 g9rliete:idle)epariistaienci•ua'',PilYlaiditiff,11')enligit•
Athat.
li
Americans, and they, want to see these Stsall'te3s)eaas111Ca
and ,youwnaildlaortiV
bodis:;Doinilltt
Balkan people as they are—and the
)3alkan people are showing them. Peas need years of 'acclimatizing be -
Nen And women are delnking huge Sf'o°rilethey will • Yield well
in a foreign
Talcs are often told Of scett that
have germinated after centuries. Most
. •
seedsmen accept such stories with re-
serve, the number Of instances in
wbich this has actually happ_e.ned be-
ingiversmall. Not many seeds re-
, , •
quantities of white wine, smoking end-
less cigarettes, cha.tting,' 'laughing
squabbling notslly itt,myriad, tougues.
Yes yesterday all elie,se people spoke
lereeich for theme were Europeans pro -
sent who mus.t be impeessed. Beet)-
, ,
=day they are getting ,liome; • the Euro- t411-1, lite alterten9r,,
peenS are gone; mice again the bravo
baebeeisie.es' shutting langers,,then ewelee,
Onion and parsnip seed will At, as a.
them. ' *' '• - • ' • Lettuce seed' selii.:1.a..1„.11'eaelleps is
1-sweaeYasS: tb\velotig3,.Sehanrtlst'•-c:)'fle-d1;7,
The Sniallest.',seetimat.e'thiise 01, the
com,hion, fern.. They aro Mere peeper-,
spores, ,and
gtiYheerintnihatlewahne"44,bpsei tphoaClei annod 51)1(;-
n's head,
'
The Voice.
1 ekipped along In cbildish play,
A Fall in Oil.' I heedee eet at till;
The briers and ston:s along the way
"Necessities are going up," 1 IMVyheen"ms mother tio°ewkairndy tilil:(1‘eldu la.(shdahseaaffld:
''But'wouldn't you say there was a "Be careful, dear, don't fall."
Fa,11 in oil?"
--------ee"------- And now, long after, when I ;stray
Seamus' once said to Sapiclus, a Ailed the dangers of MC'S way,