The Brussels Post, 1927-11-2, Page 6"WEDNESDAY, NOV. 2nd, 1027,
uc.,,r, or H ?
Why is it that duck eggs are net as popular as hen eggs? The only
reason,we know, is, that the h.nl ADVERTISES just the moment
elle hays an egg, while a.duck keeps quiet and hides her egg under the
straw. We try to be like the hon. We try to tell the world we have
a great line of building lumber, dimension etc,
All No, 1 5x 13, 0, Red Cedar Shingles [Edge grain]
All No. 1 Extra N, 13. White Cedar Shingles
Alex. ?durr;ay t+;c Co. Asphalt Shingles
Ceder and Hemlock Shiplap and Beards,
Sici:ng Flooring, ( riling, illOteloiese, Etc.
Drsssed 2x4 Hard 61ii le+ for Flan For Tracks
1 1-4 in. Pine Wagon Bdtt Limbo!". [Etc.
pp.. Lot's not he Ducks
CiFfA,�ly � P, !� 9 t�?i� .,"t f�,t !y o ��';'r Vf1!'�'O >;
a A Y:,
t.:ee,., . -� d. n a � ,.�� �:� �� yet eat Po .
Phuna No. St) :'e' DELIVER
Fathers of Confedercuion
Ol'nuct SIotvat V$1 ane Of the -:,w
fathers of Confederation that could
claim Canada as his !airthulac•e. iLs
fachc•r was a Scottish soldier who had
served throughout the Peninsular war .
and who hal eon', to Canada 1u t a+
the war of 1812-15 was closing. This
gentleman tn::rriett a lacy whom he
had met in Kingston :mel Oliver Mew -
at, the eldeet of five children, aerie .1
in July of 1820. His father eeened a
retail store in Kind:tun but the ld.st
son did not crave for a nnei ..1..!,....t -
real'. At the age of sixteen
came the fir -•t office boy :if .h„ fam-
ous Sir John A. Macdonel tj,,1
plied himself vigorously to tee sttely
of British and Canadian pax. [twin_-' OLIVER MOWAT
•of 'these stn lien tete•
the eary da;
rebellion in 1537 broke out and Oliv-
er Mowat joined the volunteers in op-
position to Mackenzie and Paoineau.
He served with Mr. Macdonald for .
four years dual then came to Toronto
to finish his studies and to b,:• admit-
ted to• the. bar. Fate had decreed 1
that the connection between himself l
and his first employer should not
cease with the removal of the young
man from Kingston; for some years I
later they sat in the Union House as
bitter political opponents.
Oliver Mowat did not have the long 1
and ardour climb to success which i j
so outstan:ling a factor in the story
of other distinguished members of
the bar who have. climbed to ultimat
fame. Almost at once he was admit-
ted to partnership in Toronto, which
was highly successful from its incep-
tion. Numerous important and pro-
fitable cases were handled by :..tis
firm, so much so tilt: wen et the
age of thirty-eight, when he fiat en-
tered politics as the representative of
South Oatarie, he was looked upon as
a weal'cny man.
In a short newspaper account of
tris connection with Confederation we
are not concerned with all of the
outstanding political evenee with
1 -EYED AUTOMOBILE IS MEN-
ACE TO SAFETY.
No Motorist Should Drive at Night
Without Full Light.
In spite of penalties of the law and '
repealed police warnings,; the "one: -
eyed" automobile continues to he a ,
menace . to public safety. A "one -
eyed" car is a car which is driven at
night with one headlight not burning.
One has: only to watch night traffic
on a busy highway to observe the pre-1
valence of such cars.
No motorist who values his own'
well-being should drive at night with-
out full light as a protection to him-
self and to others. As soon as a
light goes out the scource of trouble ',
should be located; and the remedy ap-
plied immediately, if possible.
Often a "one -eyed" car means a
motorist who is unable to find, and
correct the trouble, or who docs not
carry the tools and supplies necessary
for minor repairs. In most cases the
troublo will be in a burnt out blub. It
cannot be in the switch or both lamps
would be out. Accordingly the wise
motorist who makes it a point to car-
ry a lamp kit with spare bulbs, will
in a few minutes correct the trouble.
If the old bulb is black or it can be
seen that the filament isburat in two,
it is evident that a new bulb is need-
ed. If in doubt 'cry the new one. In,
case a new bulb does not correct the
difficulty see if the wire is tighlye
connected at the plug at the back of
the lamps. The 'xouble is likely to I
be there or possibly in the other end 1
of the wire which leads to the wire
from the other headlamp or else to a
junction block,
which be was ronneute.i. Suffice it
to mention that he was one of those'
•;o wham George Prrown turned a.;
a -fin':lieutenant when he took the
ini:i:: .ceps that led to the calling
of the " rinee Edwarl Island confer -
en re in 1804, To Oliver Mowat at
that time were en'nueted the legal
tangles that arose out of ne confer-
ence. His great part was the guid-
ing of the enthusiasm of the move-
ment and the delegates away from
tee hidden rocks. and shoals of de-
feat by possible illegal procedure.
A few weeks after the conference
in Charlottetown, Mr. Mown: was ap-
pointed to on intpor:ant judgeship in
Upper Canada. He took no other ac-
tive part in the Confederation move -
gent. He n -entered political life in
1S72 when he became attorney Gen-
eral of Upper Canada. During his
term of office are premier which last-
ed for many years, !,tundras, reforms
were made to the legal machinery of
Canada, The University of Toronto
wee extended in eines s manner as to
enable it tc give practical instruction
in mining, engineering, mechanics
and ntanufae:urine. It was during
his term of office in Ontario that vot-
ing by ballot was first introduced.
They Laugh—
as Health Comes Back
Inose and Valerie are sisters, Their
Charts say they are 23 and 13 years
if age, respectively, but to lank at
:hem you would think they were 15
and 12 --.so dight and delicate are
they. And when you hear the laugh-
ter and chatte5 of these two—for they
are resting side by side in hospital
cots—you feel sure they moat be the
lesser ages.
Yes, they are both very slight, but
the wonder is they are here at all,
for Just a few months ago they were
admitted, victims of the ravages of
consumption. They are happy now
because they are gaining weight and
strength again; and you, who have
ney er lost your health, can hardly
understand what a wonderful differ-
ence that makes to people whit never
expected to get well. nut then—that
1s the work of the. AIuskolta Hospital
for Consumptives, and It 1:: being car-
ried on for orer three hundred pa-
tients each day throughout the year.
Inose and 1,alert(' are a fa'rmer's
daughters, in a hottte where there are
eleven children, and they say they
are learning all about the disease so
they will do their best to see that no
other members of the family walk
unawares into the dread path that
I'eads to 'consumption,
Wouldyou not like to contribute to
this ?excellent work? It depends
largely upon subscriptions.
Contributions fttay be sent to Hon.
W. A. Charlton, President, 223 College
Street, Toronto 2, Ontario,
Political Sympathy.
A son at college wrote to his
father:
"No mon, no fun, your son"
The father answered:
"How sad, too bad, your dad,"
'Just One Day.
Conscientious Employee— Could
you give me a day off from the
office, sir?
Bose ---What do you want to do?
Employees. --Commit suicide.
The average life spau of assts is
from eight to ten years, although
specimens in trapticity h
, some ave
reached the age of 15.
Asian migration to America via The giraffe is believed to exist
,Alaska is a proven fact, according for throe -quarter, of a year with -
to experts of 'the Smithsonian ins out water in the Nor•tt Kalahari de-
stitution. i , sert,
THE BRUS
ELS POST
WRO OWNS, 'iHI, :illi? g�' 7 y
""Ttmeeepnuver., V1111 1 t 1'ro'rcntted„ Here and There
Hold No Perrone for ,eirnum.
The ono rusts,, number e f g to 1, s
aerials which ht: v, been , ,,•i•t iich ht: v+ , ,,•i•t tt i
all putts of the smeary. and the In
ere:stint, popularity of aitoutn,,
have aroused I 13,31 Inti sum:,wt n.t
hitt, r contrive r-3 as to whoi, tin
rightful owner of the, air,
On one Ade, we lay., ihuen trite
111101,• that old Maxim, whir;i eater
"Whosoever hosoeve! n ll.: the land owns 1
from the he ateit, iI 170 dopa,,'
Others mal J.t i that t.hilo a mut
can do what i lilt a tit• air :abort
his ound, 1 • ,:Ins. t p event oiler
poet nt • making ti o r it, to long a
no antral dant' ice tall:,.1d.
1 iia•; been tetel down by judge
that unto landowner may cut dot,[
branel e•, of t n-utltltur's tree whiei
ave h i . his nrem rty, or roomy, n
ares „I i ,� nn i u r,•�r:•em ;t ail;
but h vi :r n!rphtnea, na1-
laons, Barri, t p 1 ,,,,s, or kitty fictlr
ow -,-f his ground, unless he suffers
logit:, or ' dons inconvenience by
their so doing,
These have, 10,•0_ nttmarou prose-
cutions of airmen (luring the past f:ew-
n 14
Irl tete by Heise '
t who maintain that
7 t
thou above the ground, to what-
ever height r theft solo' property.
But in every case where the !anti
owner or tenant has not been able, to
prove that the pilot was flying torr
low or doing harm, a verdict has
been given for the defendautt. On
the other hand, those who have re-
fused to allow aerials to pass over
their land have always managed to
uphold their refusal in law.
One recent ease was that in which
a group of country farmers and other
residents sought an injunction
again: t a ser -mol of aeronautics, to
Prevent flying In the neighborhood
on Sundays. The failure of the plain-
tiffs to prove that any concrete harem
had been done to them resulted in
the school winning the case. It is
not enough for you, as a landowner,
just to disapprove of airplunos; to
curtail their activities proof of dam-
age must bre forthcoming.
THE PLirhf.
Several of tate Popular Varieties Had
ltomaattic Origins.
Iiirke's plum was first brought to
the notice of the public b,- a man
named Kirke, of Brompton, England,
who discovered this splendid fruit
by accident in a fruiterer's window.
The violet, an older plum, was
first cultivated by John Tiadescant,
gardener to Charles I. At one time
this plum was supposed to be found
in the garden of every- poor cottager,
and in consequence became known
as the"cottager "s plum."
A plant answering to the descrip-
tion of the now popular greengage
was first sent from France by the
Earl of Stair to the Duke of Rutland
under the name of Spanish Green,
but its subsequent name, greengage,
resulted from an. accident.
It appears that the Gage family,
pioneers among fruit -growers, pro-
cured a collection of fruit trees from
the monks of tit,' Chartreuse. Upon
the arrival of the consignment . in
England, however, it was discovered
that the designating. label had been
lost. As a result of this accident the
gardener, ignorant of the correct
nam christened the fruit rafter the
fancily who employed him.
The cherry plum Is conspreuons for
its early Ilnwe1it1g. Its fruit makes
capital dessert and exe •slant pi,•:t,
The Fotheringham is a hardy var-
iety first. cultivated at Sheen, near
Richmond, by Sir William Temple as
far back as 1700, and thea known
as the Sheen Plum. Tit' imperial
'Diadem was first raised from seed
near Manchester about the middle of
the eiglttermih c'ttt:ury. When ripe
its fruit forms an exrellcnt preserve.
Another variety of this popular
fruit is the sloe, The sloe is used in
the making of home -trade, wines to
impart tate color of port, while the
juice itself has oft,u been sold as
cheap port wine.
1
Living Fishy Trap.
There are many settutge and evil
eroatures living in the sea that peo-
ple never lits• aoout because they
never seer them. One of the strang-
est is tete "fan -shell," of which a
triatnt sneeim,n, nearly two feet long,
has just arrived at the Landon Zoo
front Madeira.
This creature, says Tit -Bits, which
in some wonderful manner can snap
its two halves together in a flash to
,entrap any wandering fish, has been
rightly described as a highly-erganiz-
ed murder machine.
The specimen at the Zoo le a par-
ticularly evil creature, for it has lur-
ed some marine worms to'make their
tiny lime -built houses on the rime of
Its shell. The worms wriggieaahottt
and attract other fish, As the fish
endeavor to find a ws•y of getting at
the worms, they come just inside the
"fan -shell's" jaws—and all is over.
The trap will take a fish six inches .
long,
In ticeeid.tnce with it new pu11 •y
S tht hena:tueeut nl' Health at Uttat'tt
t1 has ai'po le ed twenty physicians •
" 111.heel, I l t Iii rang in Euro-
: login , it' , rile y tae to report for
t duty at once.
iitamlg,r 11, McNair, of the Ass) -
r elated G,•otwert, states that a1 the
end of hist week 100 cars of "Macs"
t (:1lacInt„'It Red apples) left the
O1tanaj'an Valley for New York and
1 that tell ears of .lotratbans will [neve
out to Sweden, Fruth Africa, Creat
✓ Britain and New Zealand
The Canadian Ptteific Railway is
s ' again offering a prize of S100 to the
Canadian showing the best spring
t wheat at the international Ilay and
n Grain Show in C:hrcago, it was au-
nounetxl at the office, of the agri-
cultural department of the company,
• The show will be held in November.
vember,
The grand total of Canadian trade
for the twelve months ended August
was $2,i371,0Ot1,000, as compared
with$2,314,000,000
tfar the
ear be-
fore. Import figures are up and
exports down; the former being $1,-
oaa,000,000, as compared with $967,-
000,000 the year before and exports
$1,204,000,000, as against $1,237,-
000,1(011.
A boons in muskrat farming is awn
the horizon in Western Canada.
Following the acceptance by the Pro-
vincial Governments of the Prairie
Provinces of the Dominion Govern-
ment's offer to turn over swamp
lands to them for leases to residents
for purposes of muskrat farming
there has been a deluge of applica-
tions. Alberta has had 200 of them
and Saskatchewan over 500,
British Columbia is capable of pro-
ducing all the bulbs, rose bushes,
fruit trees, ornamental trees and
seeds that the Canadian people can
use, it is claimed by authorities here.
Millions of dollars each year go out
of Canada for nursery stock that
could be raised in British Columbia
and delivered to the buyers several
weeks earlier than it could be im-
ported from overseas.
Boys and girls resident in Mani-
toba, Saskatchewan and Alberta are
now engaged in a series of hog -judg-
ing contests in which the Canadian
Pacific Railway is offering a trophy
to the winning teams of each pro-
vince, in addition to which the six
winners will be taken to Toronto, to
the Royal Winter Fair (Nov. 16th to
24th), as guests of the railway.
"More settlers are coming from
the United States to make homes in
Canada than in any year since 1920, "
said J. R Ryan recently in Winnipeg,
travelling colonization agent from
I the St. Paul office of the Canadian
Pacific Railway. "Personally," he
said, "I have brought 70 families
this season and have every reason
to believe that the total will be well
over 100 before the end of the year.
All the settlers have money—some
very well supplied,"
Prof, Robert Wallace, commis-
sioner of Manitoba mines, told the
Caledonian Society at its weekly
luncheon in Winnipeg recently, that
mining developments such as had
never been equalled in the history of
Manitoba were likely to feature the
next six months. Mining, he said,
had to be looked upon as a business
proposition. It so happened in this
country that mines are found in
places to which access was not easy
and no railroad could be, expected
to lay tracks into the north country
until it knew prospects there.
\Vtwld's 1Vonder (lock.
The world's wonder ,tock, or
which artists, sculptors, and gold-
smiths have been busily engaged
since 1911, has just been completed
and stands' in the Hobe Market,
Vienna,
• It abounds with unigate features,
the most striking being twelve
torical figures, each six feet high, and
made of wrought copper, which ap-
pear individually on the first Stroke
of the hour,
Hach figure parades to the accom-
paniment of mtfsie for sixty minutes.
It is then followed by another, and
so on.
Among the eharacteve,representee
are Marcus Aurelius, the philoso-
pher, and Joseph Haydn, the eotn-
poser. The latter appears to a pas-
sage from hie masterpiece, the
"Creation."
A Marriage Tcst.
A prospective native bridegroom
In Madagascar must stand before a
spearman who throws a sharp -point- b
ed shaft at him, }le roust show no
fear, and must catch the weapon be- n
tweet his arm and his side.
WILD FLOWERS
Well -Known Naturalist 'fells its How
' to .itbijoy 'firers.
The legend of ih, daisy comas from
the ago of ehivalry. 'pint, happy
knight who was an acenntud loves'
Wa,fi permitted by his lady love to en-
gravo a daisy upon hes !tuns. lltottltl
she siva lils suit neither an "aye"
nee a "nay," lite would wear tt cnt•o-
net of daisies, a elm that site wuttld
think over hes propo sl,
So says Mr. Merin,' Woodward. the
well -.known ,rtiint,Olkt. int "Hots to
Hitjoy 1',"!Id 1.. r4 "
"And there is a tale." be wren s,
"that to have pleasant dreams of the
loved and absent daisy roots should
be set Menta' 1t "nide : pillow."
In Elizabethan days the bulbs of
bluebells yie bled starch for idle- high -
plaited ruffs of gallants and ladles;
also paste for books and ter fixing
feathers upon arrows.
A prt'ventIee against all dlsl<'mper'
can be made from lily' of the valley,
To make this "gulden wztt,1' " frosh
flowers should he taken, wet with
morning dew, and thrown into water,
to be presently poured upon other
fresh flowers and distilled again and
so on several times, until it becomes
fragrant,
The root of Solomon's seal, crush-
ed while fresh and green, tend ap-
plied, was used in Elizahethpu days
to take away In one night any bruise
or black or blue spots which "a wil-
ful woman had received from her
husband's fist."
Attar of roses was first discovered
when Princess Nonrmehal, of the
Mogul Empire, filled a canal with
rose-water, sailing thereon with the
Great Mogul. The sun's rays dis-
engaged
isengaged the essential oil, which float-
ed on the surfteo. So was discovered
the famous perfume,
The cowslip, we are told, is Venus'
flower, and those 'seething to preserre
beauty need but bathe their faces in
a cowslip wash,
In the northern countries, where
salt fish and salt [neat are popular,
a medicine is made from watercress,
the whole plant being pounded and
the ,juice used, one wineglassful to
a dose,
Colisfont is a very practical flower.
The enttonv dowry under the leavoe
is often gathered in villages for tin-
der: the feathers of the seeds are
used by Highlanders for stttfiiu-- mat-
tresses; the leaves, If dipped In a
solution of saltpetre, burn like a
torch when lighted; the flowers are
infused as a remedy for coughs. and
were smoked through a reed by the
Greeks as a care for asthma. The
leaves are, in modest, times, the chief
ingredient of the British herb tohae-
co, often smoked by country people.
French people hax•ty how to make
a salad from dandelion leaves, and
roast the roota for coffee.
Periwinkle is recommended for
making loose teeth fast, and if tied
around the calf of the leg will pre-
vent cramp.
A pleasant salad for a atttlliner
Menne.: Catch some minae ws, fry
them in the yolks of eggs and the
.flowers of cowslip and a Rile tan•'y.'
f A glass of cowslip ww•in0 might also
be acceptable. Take nine pints of
water, two pounds of sugar. a quer't
of picked cowslips, and to those acid
two spoonfuls of yeast after straining,
Fennel has the property of mak-
ing fart people lean. Yellow toad -
flax has a juice which, If mingled
with milk and ,;et in an open dish,
is a certain litre for flies, which it
poisons.
Wormwood, placed in linen presses,
will warn off ninths. \lixr'7 with
vinegar, it is awn o.ntidate to tite pois-
on of toadstools.
11ns-s ort, if plaeed in the shoes
before setting nut on a long walk.
will present fatigue; added to 't bath
it wt-iIl lend fragrance and tete- away
stiffness from the bather's joints.
Qnceen Victoria Store.
Some eminent: stories ee'neeritin,g
Queen Victoria aro told by Sir Felix
Semen in the recently -published
autobiography. The Queen had a
great sense of dignity, but she :wlso
possessed a keen sense of humor.
For instatnee, when Su' ,Baines Reid,
Her Majesty's physician -in -ordinary,
became engaged to ane of bit' Maids
of Honor, the Tion. Miss Paring, the
Queen was exceedingly finery. and,
sending for him, lectured him se-
verely, T•Ie ought to have known,
she told him, that nobody Inctper-
mitted to propose to a Maid of Honor
without obtaining the Queen's per-
mission. Sir James listened, then
humbly answered that Her Majesty
was quite right; he certainly would
not do it again! This so strongly
appealed to the Queen's sense of
humor that she la.u„ bed heartily, and
without further ado extended her
pardon,
NEWS IN BRIEF
New Zealand has 1,000,000 less
sheep than 10 year's ago.
Typewriting may be sent by wire-
less by a. new invention.
Austria claitits to have the beg:
detective force in the world.
Hens in England and Wales laid
2,000,000 eggs in the past year.
Only 100,000 of the 13,000,000 in-
habitants of Burma wear hosiery,
Brooms have been replaced by
vacuum cleaners n the barracks of
the French armies.
Grennan progress in the snaking of
synthetic gasoline is causing appre-
hension among petroleum [nen of
the Netherlands.
In all Uruguay there are 25,055
passenger automobiles and taxicabs,
which is about 25,000 more than be-
fore the World War,
The name of ;tenpenny nails is
said to have originated in Great
Britain, here 1,000 nails of 'chat
size weighed 10 pounds.
Because of 'the moisture in the air
of England, materials facie more
ouickly there than in sunny India,
aecoeding to recent tests.
Gene Tanney promises 'co retire
fronn the ring in, five years. By that
time he'll be ono hundred per cent,
Arnerican, He'll have all the money
in the world and be too proud to
fight.
More than 2,000,000 pounds of
copper wer required for the sainting
of $5,115,675 one -cent and five -dent
pieces which the 'United States turn-
ed out last year.
Books are in existence whioh were
printed in China and Korea in 992
A. D. In the .eleventh century a
Chinese smith made movable types,
ut the 7000 characters of the Chi-
ese alphabet trade the use of these
ractically impossible.
Picture of the Coronation.
A remarkable picture, 138 feet
long, has been painted by a promi-
nent artist in the Queen's Dolls'
House Room, at,Windsor Castle. It
depicts the Coronation Procession of
1911. Over 300 horses and 3,000
men are seen in the drawing, which
is to the same scale as the Dolls'
House. Beginning at the door of the
room the painting shows the fine
white horse which headed the pro-
cession, followed by detachments of
troops, the roya.1 coach drawn by the
eight famous creams, the distinguish-
ed guests and the remainder of the
sovereigns' escort.
The Irish Assizes.
I Judge; "Before I pronounce sen-
tence, have you anything to say
against the evidence?"
,3lirglar: "Shure, yer honor, 'What
I can't get over le being identified by
a man who kept his head underneath
the bedclothes all the time I was in
his room,"
The Question of Cholce,
"Which would ycz rather be in,
Caney—an explosion or a collision?"
"In a collision," replied Casey.
"Because in a collision there yes are;
but in an explosion, where are yea?"
1—•Fife,
'Y- 4l? °JF -'SW t " ' e'JF- .t•"."C, + mow, ,,t nim r
,f,,,/;my t LADY'S ,;
"t COLUMN.
v4
GLASS PACKING.
If you must mute, alter ; aur will
-ter'.; fruit is put up, keop tit,, - jai'.,
from cracking by (eating old inner
leen,, tee ri;riu beneath to .slip Ivor'
tie-in.
NEW GLOVES.
Pitt -,,kit +z'Inw-'s, in pati, are doubly
interesting for ,ports by having a
gulf stick, horse or other sports em-
blem :itched on the cuff,
SLIPPING HEELS.
If your floors :int' so slippery that
you tend to skid while doing the
housework, stick a strip of adhesive
tape on the heel'- of your shoes,
WARMED BISCUITS.
Raking powder biscuits can be
freshened as they are waren if you
put them in a wet paper bag, tie
up tight and heat in oven.
•
COLORED BUTTER,
Apple butter gots a rich color and
a new, spicy flavor if you put some
oldfashioned cinnamon drops in
while it is cooking,
• ele
BOILING OVER.
If you tall butter to rice or ma-
caroni when It is cooking,. It well
prevent its boiling over.
POCKETS IMPORTANCE.
Pockets asgumo stellar roles in
all manner of chaps, a new suit hav-
ing octagonal embroidered pockets.
• es se
BLACK GOWN.
Transparent black velvet fashions
a skirt of boldly uneven hemline and
forms a lattice work over, a flesh
chiffron bodice in a new evening
gown.
ONE-TWO HAT.
A new one-two hat combines beige
and brown velcet, with the left
(beige) side trimmed with a rosette
bow of deep brown and the brown
side trimmed with beige. '
le is is le
ORIENTAL LINES.
A stunning klal'k blue georgette
with uneven hemline has tightly
swathed hips in gold cloth and a
gold bolero for a bodice.
SPORTS JEWELRY.
Colorful enameled bracelets, in
checks, zigzag and other patterns
now have matching, colorful rings to
help them form sports sets.
ee
SLENDERIZING HEELS.
New chiffon hosiery velour coat
hoe a shawl collar of black pony and
to be "different," has puff cuffs at
the fur.
- .,M '2
ODD SALAD .
Grapes, sliced fresh tomatoes and
cottage, cheese make a delicious salad,
with Romaine. Make a eheeso halls
with nuts for variety.
HOT FUDGE WAFFLES,
Blot waffle , cooked al the table
and served with hot fade suttee,
make. ,t.' elete e t:11dt• a dessert as any-
one rotted ask,
3 <• ,.
WASHING LACES.
Try teranuleteI sunny in rhising
water iu emehiir Ise-: instal of
gtnreb. The result will prove highly
edit is i •tetory.
1 A little salt ;idled to ;.Larch will
prevent the iron from sl,ickin.
ese
LUNCHEON DISH,
Baked tomatoes, en ea ill.;
with toast covered with elr ere•'
sauce and bread crumbs, make a
nice change from ergs:. 'Benedict. -
NEW FLOWERS.
The flower; that ideentt nit .eheld-
dors in the fall Are newest if they -
are of suede, in autumn Untie
edged with gold or silver bead,;,
0
nuair
HEIGHT OF MONOTONY
"I have always maintained," de-
clared Charles, "that no two people
tin earth think alike."
"You'll change your mind," .said
his fitancee, "when you look over our
wedding presents."
A Small Matter.
"What are you studying now","
asked Mrs. Johnston.
"We have taken up the subject of
molecules," answered her son.
"I hope you will be very attentive
and ,practice 'constantly," ,said the
mother, "I tried to get your father
'co wear one, but he could not keep
it in his eye,"4
His Alibi.
Judge: You are accosce, of steal-
ing eggs from this grocers store.
What have you to say.?
Accused: I took them in error, sir.
"In error? How clo you mean?"
"I thought they were fresh, sir!"
Why Discriminate?
Mrs, Newrich (looking over house
plan) : What's 'this thing here go-
ing to be?
Architect: Tinct is an Italian
staircase.
"Just a waste of money. We
probably won't ever have ally Italians
coming to see us,"
Proper Order.
Waiter (to patrons who has been
kept waiting. for some time) : What
is it you wish, sir?
Patron: Well, what I originally
came in for was breakfast; but if
dinner's realy now I'll take supper.
The Car Iket-Bagger
vs,
The Local Printer
Many business men, when considering the cost of
any particular job of printing, look only at the small
sum they may be able to save at the time on any ord-
er. They fail to ask themselves what the carpetbag-
ger leaves with them throughout the year as compared
with the local publisher and members of his staff. He
also seems to forget that if he and his fellow business
men would get more of their printing requirements
done fn their home town the publisher might be able
to employ additional help, which would still further
swell the amount of money to 1►a spent in the home
town.
Always remember 1 A dollar spent with a firm in
a distant town is gone forever 'so far as its service to
the community its concerned. A dollar spent with
other firms in .the home town stays therefand performs
many good services in its own community. Get your
printing requirembnts from
The Post PublishingNoose Brussels ussels