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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1921-1-27, Page 2Your safeguard is the name 1372e This is the genuine `tea of all teas'. f you do aaot use Sedada, send us a post card for a Ytree sample, stating the price you now pay and if you use Black Green Or.iViired Tea. Address $ajada,Toronto Making Housework Easier. "When I began housekeeping thirty- two year; ago," writes a progressive housewife, "I resolved to buy and to make ueo of everything that woukl make housekeeping easier, so I began with a waehing-machine and a wring- er, which were among my first pur- chases. "I ma now using many labor-sav- ing devices, among then!, one of the little vacuum mashers, whleh is fasten - ere to a har'le end used like a churn - dieting. 1 like this washer�hecalle 1 c n tree it in either a large tub or a pall and with it I can wash any- , tt from a delicate waist to bed-, di. e. grinder, a half -pound of round steak and the meat from two pork chops; add a cupful of milk and a cupful of bread -crumbs, one egg, a small anion grated, one tablespoonful of chopped parsley, salt and pepper to taste. Pack in a buttered pan; cover with butter- ed crumbs; bake for about an hour, Spaghetti with Sausage tastes good in cold weather. Run a half -pound of beef and a small anion through the meat chopper; then mix with .this a half -pound of sausage. Have three y;I,�nfuls of eet.)ked spaghetti ready and put the spaghetti and the meat in al- ternate layers to a buttered baking dish. Pour over the !mixture a cupful of tomato juice; cover with buttered MOSSBACK. Ie Teaches the Rattle -Brain a Few Trine Feints of Small. Town NeWSpaper Ethics, By WILLIAM DU,)LEY PELLEY, PART IV, The boy tried to defend himself, ills grasping fingers tightened around a proof brayer, lie struck aut insane- insane- ly. The' hairy mun went detvn and was trodden underfoot. But in that in- stant other hands laid hokl of Joe. Ile was jerked abruptly fn another direc- tion, Ile- felt himself being lifted bedily. Ile went through the door on the bobbing heads and shoulders of the mass, "Get a rope!" cried hoarse voices. "Smash thehardware store window and get a rope!" 171e next instant something hit the Dicks boy. His head seemed to ex- plode, There was a searing pain all through him. He floated, floated, float- ed gently away on a merciful cloud of darkness—into oblivion. They smashed Jeff Turner's window in a twinkling and unreeled thirty feet of new hemp, It wasthrown out,• A noose was slipped around the boy's wilted figure.. "The telephoue pole! The telephone Pole!" The boy's body was torn sud- denly through thee,,alpet and dirt. Men who had fared bads' in the fracas, and were maddened with pain and the de- sire for revenge, caught hold of the end that shot in the air. Poor Joe Dicks! It looked as if he were done for! Only Joe Dicks wasn't done for. Through that frenzied, fighting, cursing, milling melleo came a burly '1 beta a gasoline Lan ;vhich is crumbs; and baht until brown. This figure—the figure of a hatless and r` le I l i, e,epe ..1]y in very hot we.rth_ is very good with the sausage alone,, caatless man. And he was Bong some a I „lira tree the little span faste.ters omitting the beef, cursing himself. He was doing more than cursing. He was fighting also. to hold nay ironing sheat In pine. In Salt mackerel makes an occasional Ile was fighting dynamically. And a it :ling I can change the soiled goad dirtier. Select a fish which is wherever he hit out, men ani heads e ar , t' a u?an one. • , thick and fat; wash and soak over were giving way before him. Sturdily • I h;.ve a !,rend-miarer, a good food.- night in cold water, shin side u .: at his hack came a second slighter and c 1 ,1:;.cr, ::n apple peeler (pairing -knife, Change the water in the morning and more youthful figure. But size was an,1 l:-cr eun1hined), and two kinds le ve until rea,ly to use; wipe dry; immaterial—the younger man was ac - of am -openers; also a eels7er-shaped brush with drippings; sprinkle with a luting for as many heads as the pie lifter, which proteete the arms and flour, and either broil or put in a hot The secret of their progress lay in )arle against burning, for with it I oven until brown, Serve on a platter; their weapons. They were armed with can caetly reach the far side of the with mashed potatoes around the edge. , ball clubs They had laid hold f th oven. I have a wire mop holder wni_h Garnish with lemon and sprinkle wit I use in washing fruit jars, an-! a parsley, Serve with escalloped to sr ,lin:• nee far washing hoftlea, imatoes, I ha.e a ,:!tunic steam coo. -,:r with; Escalloped tomatoes and rice mak doers at the. tap and bottom, the doors; an excellent dish to serve with fish 0 en_l:ing outward, The cooker con-! meat. The recipe cat's for three cup tains fem. Shelves, and is my cannieg furs of boiled rice, three cupfuls o cutrt ae well. It is made with a sop -i remato, either canned or fresh, two or .per bottom, and holds a ganee ee three stalks of finely out celery, a w t r r. I conk fourteen ane -quart jars' salt to taste. Place in layers in bak of 'Tutt in it at ene time, removing the. Ing dish with bread -crumbs on top hotjars with a little patent holier. !dot with bits of butter; bake anti "I use a swing edturn and nave a' brown, This is a good way to us ee Irator, also a sat of small scales left -overs, and the proportions of rio and mail grindstone, both of which; and tomato stay he varied somewhat I keep in nay kitchen. ; Fresh celery is not essential, as eeler 'I Ilan a coffee pereelator, shied :salt or the dried crashed leaves may raven my eggs_ for I do lobe Blear; he ased. coffee. I have a vacuum-elcanei a Pa.tbit stew with nntuns makes a carpet Sweeper, a long-handk•d fiver nourishing and appetizing dish. Into bra h, and a l;ng-handled ,lust creep e.tp;n put one feerth of a pound holder for :a'p!ng !town wa11s a 1 .el:-; f "e'en , o ,.red, three large or img', twelve -ra tl' to I;_, a'ieeit When hot, "I nta•ie a ecvcred shoo b, -x of he add a rat tit that has Leen ekinnee] kitchen. It Bolds the old ,h IC nd' aa'l cat isle pries Turn the meat eeeeeeces aid makes a r.: e• he a and onionson all :'i<l,s until they are sides.. a golden i r wn. This. takes about "A wheelbarrow for hauling ago] throe -quartets. of an hour. Then to the house from the big woadnj!e sprinkle thepieces of rabi,it ait!! flour, wasmade of two old plow -handlers and add salt, pepper, two tablespocr Pals a r _L-rff wheel from an old whsei- of vinegar ant a little: belling wafer. o e h bats that the Paris boys had left in _lour office years before, after an awful I drubbing at the hands of the North Foxboro nine. And the bats made ex - e, cellent bludgeons. It is really sur- r; prising what e man can do with a ball club when he desires to get attention f and action in the centre of a crowd. "Stand back!" roared Sam Hod,— nd breathless, red-faced, hysterical him- _ self. "What are you boys thinking of? - It's murder your committing, but 1 you're too crazy with excitement to b know it! You can't lynch a man up e here in this country! The town won't s o stand far it! Back out of the way a • there! Give it to 'em, Pinkie! Lam- p y bast their eternal daylights._out and o teach 'em common sense and coolness 1 end reason!" ' Through the great riot plowed the c fighting editor, leaving a wake of bat. tered and braised and bleeding human- ity behind him. Straight through to Jre Dick's limp and unconscious figure b with the halter about its head he a el .hbed his way, and securer: the boy with his one free arm. r "I'm "I've l'un a little paper In a little town fol' over a quarter century, son- ny, and I've learned that going care- fully and making sure I'm right about things and being considerate of other folits's feelings, and printing only things I'd like to see printed about myself if conditloas were reversed, la the course that pays best in the end. Now, how about it, sonny? Do you • 1 want to come back and take that job?" But the Dicke boy couldn't say any- thing. ge "All right --then Ws all settled, an- nouneed the old editor, collect locals. 1 want someone who can write bright and spicy little items of human interest for the 'Telegraph' and liven UP its prosy old columns. But it's got to be someone who can watch out for and write stories of local in- terest that haven't any gaff in them to jab into human folks and leave a little hurt, and you—" "But me ---ane for that job, after what's happened?" "Certainly you for that job, sonny. Why not? After what happened I couldn't get a better man if I traveled a thousand miles and searched a hun- dred years. What's happened has vac- cinated you sonnei -vaccinated you against being rambunctious and im- pertinent and given to any more fits of literary indiscretion. It's been a tough lesson, sonny, but I think'yon've learned it—" "But the town won't stand for mel" "Oh, yes, they will, I've had Main Street cleaned up and settled mostly for the promiseueus damage. I've had your shop straightened out—the dam- age, outside of some smashed desks and spilled typo, doesn't amount to a great lot. You can offer the place for sale, and reimburse me after you get your money.The town'l1 stand for you if you go to oath man whose pro- perty suffered or whose'feelings you've hurt, and tell him you're sorry and apologize like a man and show him you did it all through nusunder-. standing and thotightlessness° and in -1 experience, They're very human folk in this town. If you've learned your lesson and confess your misstep, a hundred hands will be extended to help and guide you. Because all of us make mistakes, sonny. All of us do things, at times that we're sorry for afterward and wish we could undo, At heart ordinary small-town folk are lenient and forgiving and sympathetic and easygoing. The person who de- clares to the contrary hasn't lived long enough among them to get down to the bed rock and the hard pan of human nature and know them thor- oughly. The Dicks boy was humbled—ter- ribly humbled and ashamed and peni- tent. "And I called you a mossback!" he said. "Well, maybe I am a mossback. But it's better to be a mossback than a rattlebrain, any time, sonny, After. all, come right down to it and what are mossbacks? Aren't they mostly people who have gone through a let and learned to make haste slowly, and e cautious and long-headed and given to looking at a proposition from all Ides before being willing to plunge heady Ar 't th f lks h h barrette Old beards were nailed to- Allow the whole to =intmer ferer gether to form a box, then nailed to slow fire for an hour, beim• careful the foundation. In this wheel-bareew, not to let the gravy dry out. Garnish the men wheel a two days' supply of with chopper! parsley. wont to the kitchen door. As eve pass Shoo -fly pie is a favorite dish. Use in the kitchen door, it Ls .acy to pia•k three even cupfuls of flour, env cup - up an armful of the wood ani bring ful of brown sugar, three-fourths of a it in. We have a pump and a sink cupful of butter and lard mixed, and in the kitchen. one teaspoonful of baking -powder, Mix "We hair. used a chemical indoor these ingredients together into toilet for three year:; and would not crumbs, rind reserve about one-half: get along without it. cupful of the crumbs to sprinkle over "And now that I am getting to feel the top of the pies. Mix one cupful of a little old at times, and have to plan Meek molasses, one cupful of boiling' to keep young -looking, my daughter water and one-half teaspoonful of (who is married) and I have bought baking soda, Pour this over the a dress forst in partnership, so we can crumbs and mix lightly. Line pie fit our ,iresses. We de our own sew- Plates with crust; pear in the mixture and sprinkle dry crumbs over the top; then bake, This quantity will make filling for three crusts, An Improvised Double Boiler. After some experimenting I have found a satisfactory substitute for a double boiler to cook our cereal. I took a three -quart enameled basin, an old porcelain -lined kettle of about the same diameter, but with Iittle or no flare, and a pie tin of the same diam- eter. To use, I fill the kettle two- thirds full of water and set to heat, then tarn the required amount of water into the basin and heat. When. boiling I add salt and the cereal, stir- ring until it boils up, then set the basin into the kettle, covering with the inverted pie tin with some sort of weight on top. The kettle bail lifts the edge of the 1;aein, giving the nec- essary vent for steals. No further attention is required for an hour, when if the water has been kept boiling, the cereal will be ready to serve, though it may be cooked longer. When steaming corn bread, pudding, apple dumpling, etc., I use the same basin, but a largo iron pot instead of the small kettle. I fill the pet half full of water, place a grater or sim- ilar article in the bottom, set in the Basin, cover it with the inverted pie tin, then cover the pot with an In- verted pan the same diameter as the pot, with weight en top.—G. K. L. Poland, the reerented State, consists of 120,000; square miles, with a papule, - tion of 21,000,000. Minard's Liniment for Burns, etc. en ey o w o ave aid for their experience with money r shame or bitter experience, and earned to distinguish the things that ount from the things that don't really ount? All of us gather a little moss s we grow older, sonny. All of us cool down and go slower and think before we act. There have to be moss- acks in society, sonny, to act as bal- nce wheels for those who would make the world over in a day and do a ushed. and badly botched job. a peaceable mane' he roared. I'm a peaceable -man and generally known as something of a mossback. But I ain't forgotten how to get law and order and Justice. Burrows! Jam- ison! Barnes! Waterman! What do you think you're doing?" And he swiped at four young men who stoop- ed for the rope attached to. Joe Dick's eek. There is nothing that will bring a ntob to its senses quicker than calling its individual members by name. It fixes responsibility for the damage foot, and when responsibility begins o be fixed the mob spirit immediately ubdues, Lifelong habits of morality d obedience to law and order re- ssert themselves. Still hurt and hysterical, but some- what Bowed and sullen, they permitted, e "fighting mossback" to secure the neonecious boy firmly. Sam drag - ed the young editor back across the treet, across the car racks and the urb and the walk. He swung Toe round and dumped him in on the floor n • a Ian a th u 0 g e a of the "Telegraph" office, and pulled the door closed. Then he turned and faced the crowd, But the scrap was over, individual mischief makers had been recognized, and panic seized them at the retribu- tion that alight follow. They scattered. The editor stood pugnaciously in his own doorway, bis clothes half ripped from his torso, hit bronzed cheek bleeding from a gash near one eye, his knuckles swollen and battered, "The cowards!" he cried, "The cowards! And I was just getting ready to fight!" He turned when he saw the danger was over. Ile stepped back inside, and laid his club on the exchange table, "Half a dozen times in the past five years I've been on the point of throw- ing them war clubs out," he said "Now I know what they're good for. They heat editorial firearms all 'hol- low!" All night long, on a bed in sham Ifod's house up on Walnut street, the Dicke boy babbled senselessly and the little wife cried outside. Then, at soon of the next day, Sam entered the bedroom to find him sob- bing like the fatherless, friendless, and altogether pitiful lad that he was, The editor smiled sadly. lie swung over a chair. "Feeling better, sonny?" he asked. "Narrow squeak you had! Hope it won't happen again." "Oh, what'll 1 do? What'll I do? They've wrecked and ruined my paper. My money'e all gone, and I haven't even got a job to support Nan and the herby--" "Sure you've got a job, sonny. On the 'Telegraph,' my bey, You see, 1 Want a boy to go around this town end rir. "We own our home, but we are far from rich, and I have had to use nay hears in order to save in every possible way. Some Excellent Recipes. Mock duck --Run through the meat - COARSE SAL LAND SALT Bulk Cariots TORONTO SALT WORKS C. J. CLIFF - TORONTO It takes a joint of beef to make a bottle of Bovril. NEVJIR PROFITEERED }las not changed since 1914 Sane Price, Same Quality, Same Quantity. a ' t chastened v» l e Ila!• u h boy alone with this Qgiirrii wife, who The Latest in Knilur! The oorlicenl Weal Mete, entitled "Val). and Winter Sport', No, 1" 1a. chuck full of the ntttteot and rnnrt up-to-date color lllustratlons and knitting directions for winter wear. &'apes vests, s,raris, eweatera, stock- ings, toilers, etc. Send 100 In stamps for copy. Belding-CartIGelii, Limited Wetltagton 7i10ig., Teroate, Ont. , is no land fur 1,000 miles In any duce• se tion 'she same thing ucenra if a volt- ' age is taken southeastwards from the eyes were shining through her tears Sam passed out of the room and th house, and walked leisurely down to School Street, Ile turned in at Mrs, Mothers' gate to report a Local for that !light' "Telegraph." He wrote it himself: Miss Angelina Lashev, who ha made friends by the hundreds during her long tern! as a successful school teacher in our town, is convalescing very successfully from a recent indis- position at her home with Mrs. Eben- ezer Mufflers on School Street, Then he heaved a sighl,]ighted cigar, and turned to his last of "A. counts Receivable": to learn where I could collect eighty dollars' worth o bilis to meet his pay roll on the fol lowing afternoon. "This business is just ene dam thing after another," he commented bitterly, (The End.)' Moon Feast in China. The moon of falling leaves takes a Prominent place In the midautumnai festival celebrated in the Flowery Kingdom, according to a writer In the North China Hergld. Linder a resplen- dent moon, accompanied by offerings of fruit, the ceremony is widely cele- brated, There are feasts and rejoic- ing which reach traditional height at midnight, the hour for win -sniping the moon, The very poorest have their moon cake, a delicacy obtainable only at this time of the year. There are lighted lanterns attached to poles on the roofs, and fire balloons with strings of crackers are despatched aloft. { • The Chinese owe their festival to the Emperor Tung Ming-huang and i his magician -in -chief, It is reported that one evening this eminent couple adjourned to the palace yard to view the full moon and the magician, cast- ing his rod, converted it into a bridge and bade the emperor cross, and so transported him to the moon. Like a good tourist, he made haste to visit all places of interest and In due course arrives at the palace of the moon, Here there was an entertainmeut in progress and the royal visitor gave himself up to song and dance. Re- turning to'the earth he composed a poem in praise of the moon. The fame of. his visit spread, and to this day, the emperor's nocturnal trip is an annual occasion for rejoicing in China. e most southern point of Kamchatka, in !.astern Siberia. Between Cale horn and New Zoa- s land, in the Southern Pacific, a point can be reached from which the nearest. s land is distant more than twelve Itun- dred smiles, 'Kerguelen .Islami, In the Southern 'Indian Ocean, is over three thousand miles from the nearest mainland, and may lay. claim' to being the most iso - :11 tared island, Fairest Thing. hin 'iheFat T g The fairest thing 004 ever made For human eye to view is Godes dear sky by cloudiets. strayed. White isles and sea of blue! Forever move without a sound Those floating hills of snow; But whence they. come or whittler bound Only the wind can hitt, World's Longest Island. Though a glance at a map of the world gives the impression that one cannot sail the seas and be more than a few hundreds of miles from land, it is quite possible at several points to be actually 1,000 miles from the near- est point of land—even a tiny "islet, says Pearson's Weekly. Sailing northwest from San Francis- co, one can reach a spot where them The fancies of a myriad men Have mused upon the sight! And wondered as they gazed again And fait their hearts grow light; Something unnamed that pureness vast !Doth filter through the soul To "strengthen and to guide at last, The spirit to Ito goal. Thank God for what no elan can know, What litters no replies. By meeting mystery we grow To bo more truly wise. Not darkness only burs our ways And 'wildcats most our thought; den, to coverall the forested area of The truth mcoch a blaze the province. . i! ,inoalna.. faay notme n"nin �ht-su. Prince 'Edward 181011d Is not- . a forest province, practically the whole of her 'land area being under cultiva- The line where knowledge back must tion. turn Beginning of New ,Era. And faith her path begin.; Ontario le then the last of the forest Let us peruse the book of space provinces to recognizethe necessary Where time's a thing of naught, and logical connectins between forest - The fair blue sky that cells the Pace ry and foresters: The recent action By whom ail things were wrought. should, and no doubt will, mark the : beginning of an era in which the full- Hignest RailwayStations est practicable consideration will be in Canada. -.given to so regulating the methods of The highest railway stations, with cntting on Crown lands as to leave their elevations in feet above sear !bets in a condition to produce an - level, in the respectIce provinces of other crop of valuable timber species. Canada are as follows: It hes been demonstrated that logging Nova Scotia, Farleigh, 812 feet; operations in which cutting is not re - New Brunswick, Adams, 1,204 feet; gulatesi with an eye to future pro - Prince Edward Island, North Wilt- duetivlty are generally destructive to shire, 311 feet; Quebec, Boundary, the quality and quantity o1 the future fe1,550t; feetani; tobaOntalinEric, sonDundalk053 , 1,101 growth. Each area reqe- eM, k, 2,feet; fully tudted !n alieneeuires ofto be entCcaring, Saskatchewan, Senate, 3,171 feet; 41. that the method of treatment to bo bona, Mountain Park, 6X20 feet; lir!- pre ;rribed may be adaptive to local tish Columbia, Stephen 1,332 fees; conditions and al the same time he Yukon, Meadows, 2,824 feet. practicable from the operator's view - polio, to say nothingof being reascde CONTROL OFFRESTS BY TRAINED MEN RECENT ACTION OF ON- TARIO GOVERMENT, Pieces Administration of the:. Forests on Crown Lands Lin- der Practical Foresters. The opportunity for the beginning of a new 'tra in the forestry situation in Oatario was created by the recent aauouueement of the Provincial Gov - eminent that leuseefor'th the titnber adminlstratiou of Crown lands will bo tender the Provincial Forestry Branch, instead of comprising a separate or- ganization, In which no foresters were employed, This lethe most important development which has yet taken place in the forestry situation in On- tario. By this action, assuming that its logical consequences will follow, On- tario aligns herself with the provinces of Quebec, British Columbia rind New Brunswiek, which bad already recog- nized the necessity for taking thought for the future by making foresters re- sponsible for the technical administra- tion of Crown timber lauds. A partial example had been set by the Dominion Government at a still earlier date, when the Dominion ForestrY Brandt was placed in charge of the timber administration on Dominion forest re- serves 1n the west, exclusive of the licensed lands or timber limits. Nova Scotia has. practically no Crown timber lands, her forests hav- ing passed into private ownership many years ago. .The need for a pro- vincial forest service there Is baser; upon the opportunity for the develop- ment of better forestry practice on triose Privately -owned timber lands, and upon the urgent need for a great- ly intensified system of forest protee- So daily, hourly, let nae learn The worthiest lord to win, Minard's Liniment Relieves Colds, etc, ; aisle from the viewpoint of additini.ai cost xa:voived. , Ontario Is to be congratulated upon !the progretaive action taken in tints far noagnizing the need for a tecl.nl- aai adminiatrttion of Crown timber lands. Tito Provincial Fore, try Branch bus u great responsibility and e great opportunity for public service in the prospective addition to its pro vious work of forest protection, of the Inauguration of forestry practice up- on the great areas of Crown lands wbic.li have now conte unler• its juris- ' diction. Progress will necessarily he slow; economic conditions must be fully recognized; mud It will take time to develop the kind of organizatiur re- quired for so large a task. Public seuthnent is now undoubtedly fully repo for the development of this situs- ' tion along the most modern lines. It must, however, make itself actively felt, in support or a really progressive forest p0lfcy. Has the Earth a Tail? Opposite to the sun there is a very mysterious glowing patch, which is thought to be attached to the earth as a comet -like tail. The highest regions of our atmos- phere consist of very light gases, and the impression in that some of these. were driven away by the sun or by ' other means, and that they stream oft from the earth into space just US the Iight gases do from the head 01 a large comet, Naturally, such a theory has :.roused much controversy, and hes led to all sorts of ingenious suggestions, One t of these is that a swarm of meteors A PARADISE FOR SKI -MEN Preparations are already being made for the annual carnival to be held at Banff amidst the glories of the Cana.- dlan Pacific Rockies. Banff is ideally situated for winter sports and this season the dates have been fixed from January 290 to February 5th inclu- sive. The Secretary writes that the programme is to be considerably ex- tended. Ile says: "Our Ski Hill has now been com- pleted In accordance with the sugges- tions made by the world's champion, Anders Haugen, of Braaten, Minn„ and we are confident that a new world's record w111 be established on our Hill this Carnival. Wo have decided to of- fer a substantial cash prise to the man who can beat the present world's re- cord and to supplement this cash prize with a further prize of 110,00 for every foot or portion of a foot by which the record is broken on our hill. We will also follow the same principle in con- nection with the amateur champion- ship only in that case the inducement or reward will be in the shape of an especially ettraative prize. We have at the prbsent time four different Jumps, so that we will be in a posi- tion to stage competitions in all class- es of this very spectacular and hair- raisleg sport, :We expect that ladies hockey will be a very important factor in our sports this season. We have already been advised that the ratites of Van- couver, under the. leadership of Mr, Frank Patrick, of professional hockey fame, expect to compete, The Ito• gents, the Champions of 'Weetent Canada, of Calgary, the Patrlcias, also d! of Calgary, a team from Edmonton, a e team from Vulcan, Alberta, and per- a haps teams from•Wtnnlpeg and. Ottawa to are all expected to be on hand and compete with Vancouver and Ottawa for the Championship of Canada. A very elaborate trophy, together with ten very attractive and costly prizes, In will in all probability be announced a little later in connection with this event, "An ice palace will be constructed on a basis far more extensive than any- thing heretofore attempted and the re- sident engineer of the Dominion Gov- ernnoent le now at work preparing the plans for same. We expect this pal- ace, when illuminated, will be a view that will long live in the memories of those who Will be fortunate enough to visit us and seo it, The palace will be etarmed at different times during the e Carnival by representatives of all tho Ca frozen* sports indulges! 10, and it le (of the kind we know es shooting xpeeted that the fireworks tltsplay alas) keeps, us company through n these occasions will be toast in- space at a distance of about a inllilun resting. I miles, or tour times the distance of the "Special attention will again be ,moon. But a tailed earth is an Ideal given to art and fancy skating, and vehicle for lmngivatve fligbt. competition In the Reins ou our pro It might be argued that 11 our globe amnio promise to be very interest- has a tail why should not the planets g. The Connaught Skating Club of Mercury and Venus, and even Mars. Vancouver, with a membership Of a1• have one. Well, perhaps they have, moat three hundred, has written spy for all we knoyv to the contrary. Our Ing that the Club will be well repro- earth's ta(l wouldrbe much more easily stinted, and if we could be assured of seen by us betiauso of Its n0.srness and same entries from Eastern Canada brightness, and the States, together with the as-. - -" . --.-- surer; entries we will have from Win- ROmo Sells Street iiefuso. nipeg, Calgary, l:'dmonton and Saitka- Tho refuse fram the streets of Fiume goon, tint; feature oY our programme and tither Italian Close Is said by duo- would be 0110 of t1ef biggest events tion. ever attempted !n Canada. Applies: .;._.� _ 11011 will be made 'to the Amateur Airplane to Sarco„ t rlca. Athletic 'Union of Canada to have all 1t is proposed t0 adapt ilio aero' th plane t0 turn= diao40er0em • 111 Dark. ost Africa. Fie contests representative of the nadlan Championships."