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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1921-8-18, Page 6The Kingdom of The Blind By E. PHILLIPS OI'PDNHE1M. (Copyluted), which brings ani 'nee ng 0 withal the range of what they calla NURSES able% in planatiowHospital13x1 tor Incur. M)1o4 }Ioapttais. Now 'York City, cetera n three years' Course of Train. mg to young women, having the re- quired education, and desirous of be. coming nurses Thos Hospital has adopted tee altllt-hour system The pupils receive uniforms of the School, a monthly allowance and travelling expenses to en groat NM er' , ar Information appy to e Forest Reserves Belong to the People, The D'am}nton forest Memos in tbo Prairie Provinces and Railway Belt of Ilritieh Columbia aro located on 'tends nneutted to farming, The idea is that they shall bo so handled es to provide timber for fuel and buildtug, both now n and in the future, for settlements n d f N X k the fertile lands surrng oundithem, further 1 th These .forest areas are Pot reserved 6upertntendont. from the settler or held out of use, but are reserved from the slasher, who myself, though, that a girl with her -would pick trees all over the area and app•earance enol reflectedlbetter," , leave e. slash behind, whleh.at the first hint of the would burn like tinder and ''Seems to me I've heard ealetethiug thus cause the destruction of many deep -water gull" about Thomson somewhere," he seder, times more trees than the settlors. "Did that some from reports?" half to hlms•slf. "By -tile -bye, who ns' would cut 1n several years, Teo, tin- Granet asked eagerly, the male girl with the wonderful eyes, "" " ' said, "Further to whom our nephew is making h}m- I bar la conserved by lust salvaging all It dud, Sir Alfred a d, Y ep g dead timber and then by restricting the cutting to mature trees in certain areae, thus allowing the young forests' and cut -over forests limo to grow and to recuperate. The possibilities of timber production under properly re- gulated cutting atded by fire preven- tion are very great, Oil the reserves, too, over one hundred thousand heed ofstock—cattle, horses, and sheep -- graze every summer, These are own- ed by settlers in the surrounding dis- tricts who are thus enabled to rinse much more stock than if restricted to their own land. The highest develop- ment of these Dominion forests from the standpoint of timber production is quite compatible with their use for recreative purposes. On many re- serves summer resorts have been es- Synopsis of Later Chapters. Oapttirn Granet calls upon Monsieur Guiilot at the Milan Hotel and gives him a document from the Kaiser of- fering France a separate peace. The plot i$ discovered. Conyers sinks two submarines. Granet dikes with his uncle, Sir Alfred Anselman, at a club. CHAPTER XVI,—(Cont'd.) Sir Alfred ate soup for several mo- ments as though it were the best worth consideration. snhe khee laid be worth a hundred thousand pounds," down his spoon. Sir Alfred continued calmly. "If that. "Magnificent!" he said. "Now Its_ is impossible, the destruction of the ten—these submarines. There; was a little plant would be the next consid Taube close at hand and I can tell eration• You something which the Admiralty "Do I come in bore?" 'Granet in- here are keeping dark, with their quired. tongues in their cheeks. Both those "The do, Ronnie,"his uncle replied. submarines were sunk under water." The name of the village where Sir "I guessed it," Granet replied cool Mayville Worth lives is Market Burn- ly. "I not only guessed it but I came ham, which, as I think I told you, is very near the key of the whole thing.'; within a few miles of Bra'ncaster•. A. waiter appeared with the next Geoffrey, at my instigation, has ar- course, followed by the wine steward,tranged a harmless little golf party to table towards them. carrying champagne. Sir Alfred er regu- go to Brancaster the day after to- "Didn't I hear you mention Thom-• labile e�cit zone mayer holdprop picnics, nodded approvingly. !morrow. You will accompany them. son's name just now?"' he inquired. I { h t Worth, Slr err the th r da m Bou]o ne camp out, or erect cottages is which to spend the hot months. The setting aside of forest reserves makes for game protection and the forest offi- cers co-operate is enforcing the pro- vincial game laws. Many forest re- serves have been constituted game preserves, so that the supply of both large and email game is increased for the benefit of the people of the differ - ant provinces, The threat reserves re- gulatione are framed with a view to the maintenance of a supply of fish In waters within the reserves; and the forest officers sea that the anglers carefully observe these regulations. Thus these areas, which if cut over and burned over ruthlessly, would be- come dseerts of drifting sand, menac- ing the surrounding districts, are, un- der the forest reserve system, made to add to the wealth and comfort of all the people and also to provide sport and recreation. than that, the main part of the metre- self so agreeable?' ment is being made under the super- "That Is Isabel 'Worth," Lady An - vision of Sir Meyville Worth, in a selman replied. "She is the daughter large workshop erected on his estate if Sir Moyville Worth the great men - in a village near Brancaster in Nor- tis•t. I am afraid she has rather e folk," dull time, poor girl. Her father lives "I take it back," Granet remarked, in an out-of-the-way village of Nor - "Th plans of the instrument would folk, spends all his time trying to discover things, and forgets that he has a daughter at all, She has :been in London for a few days with an aunt, but I don't believe that the old lady is able to do much for her." "Ronnie seems to be making the running all right," her neighbor ob- served, "I asked him specially to look after her," Lady Anselman confided, "and Ronnie is always such a dear at doing what he is told." Major Harrison leaned across the "Just four minutes in the ice," he • In the mean fie, Miss or' , saw 'm o e y i g . instructed, "not !anger. What you; Mayville Worth's only daughter, is Awful swell he wee about something, tell me about the champagne country. staying in London until Wednesday, too. A destroyer brought him across, is, I must confess; a relief;' he added,; She is lunching with your aunt et the and a Government motor -ear was to -morrow. I have made some wanting at the quay to rush him up to turning to Granet. "I1 may not affect Ritz us quite so much, but personally I bee: other arrangements in connection the Front. We all thought at Bou•- lieve that the whole world is happier with your visit to Norfolk, which will logne that royalty was coming, at keep for the present I see that some least." There was a slight frown on Gran et's forehead. He glanced half un- consciously towards Geraldine, "Mysterious sort of fellow, Thom- son," Major Harrison continued, in blissful ignorance of the peculiar sig- nificance of hes words, "You see him in s one da, ou hear of him at glass, "let me say that I drink your coSir Alfred glancedacrossthe room. the furthermost point of the French health from the bottom of my heart, with all the admiration which a man "Very slightly. I spoke to him anilines immediately afterwards, he re of my age feats for you younger fel- hour ago. He thanked me for some • ports at headquarters within a few Laws who are fighting for us and for ambulances. He is the chief inspector hours, and you meet him slipping out oaf hospitals, I think—Major Thomson, of a back door of the War Office, a day or two later." "Inspector of Field Hospitals is a post which I think must have been created for him'," Colonel Grey re- marked. "He's an impenetrable sort of chap." "Was Major Thomson going or re- turning from France when you saw !rim last?" Geraldine asked, looking cross the table. and better when champagne is cheap. strangers have entered the room. Tell It is the bottled gaiety of the nation. me exactly how you came by the A nation of ginger ale drinkers would wound in your foot" be doomed before they reached the Granet turned a little around. tgeneration. 1900 Pommery, There was a queer change in his face this, Rennie, and 1 drink your health. as he looked back:at his uncle, If I may be allowed one moment's Do you know the man at that t sentiment," he added, raising his bl ?" h k d our -country." They drank the toast in silence. In a moment or two they were alone again. "Go on, Ronnie," his uncle said. "I am interested." "I met Conyers the other day," ne aamucea. rr ny : Granet proceeded, "the man who rom- Granet struggled for a moment mends the 'Scorpion.' I managed to `Kith an idea and rejected it. He get an invitation down to Portsmouth drained Ins glass and leaned across the tail Ms name is. "Did you happen to say that I was dining with you?" Sir Alfred reflected for a moment. "I believe that I did mention it," I went edowvnh-v'thhhis sister him on and tshhe "He's a dull enough person really" "Coming back, When we left Sou - young lady he is engaged to marry. he remarked, a little under his breath, logne, the destroyer which brought On deck there was a structure of some "but I seem to be always running up him over was waiting in the harbor. sort covered up. I tried to make in- against him. Once or twice he's given It passed us in mid -Channel, doing gullies about it but they headed me me rather a start." about thirty knots to our eighteen. off pretty quick. There was even a Sir Alfred smiled. He called the Prince Cyril was rather sick. He was sentry standing on guard before it— wine steward and pointed to his bringing dispatches but no one seemed wouldn't let me even feel the shape nephew's best thin in the world " he to have afro er for ghta of providing a de Andrew Carnegie's First Raise. When a boy gets his first increase in pay, he thinks, like 17dmond Dantes, that the world is his. The sensations of a boy at such an hour are graphi- cally pictured by Andrew Carnegie. The incident in my messenger fife that at once lifted me to the seventh of it, However, I hair t given up hope g "After y heaven, lie says in his Autobiography, observed drily, as he watched the wine all," Lady Anselman mur- occurred one Saturday evening when wgusts torre be allowed on board. ss—no Con- being poured out, "for presents- muredt "there is nothing very much' Colonel Glass was paying the boys yers had to pack us all off back to, menta." more important than our Hospitals. I their month's wages: We stood in a the hotel, without stopping even fox The conversation drifted away from row before the counter, and Mr, Glass Lnneh. Fran the howl 1 got a tole- CHAPTER (VII• Th msan Gran�ttwasd indeed Isabel, was at the scope and I saw a pinnace with half- Lady Anselman stood once more in selfvery agreeable sn ee g ss, el, All-] each d eat myth ori for the fie et a -dozen workmen, and a pilot who the foyer of the Ritz Hotel and count- Worth. There was a little more color` was evidently an engineer, land on ed her guests. It was a smaller party in her cheeks than at the commence -f eleven and a quarter dollars as they board. They seemed to be completing this time, and in its way a less des- ment of luncheon, and her manner had were pushed out by Mr. Glass, To my the adjustments of some new piece of tingu::hed one. There were a coupled become more asumated. surprise he pushed them past me and mechanism. Then they steamed away' of officers, friends of Grant's, back Tell me about the village where paid the next boy. I thought it was a out of sight of the land." from the Front on leave; Lady Con- you live. he inquired—"Market mistake, for I had heretofore been "A busy life, yours, Ronnie," Sir yers, with Geraldine and Olive; Gran- Burnham, isn't it? paid first, but it followed in turn with a Alined remarked, after moment's et himself; and a tall, dark girl with"When we first went there,' she re - each of the other boys. My heart be - plied, "I thought that it was simply gen to sink within me. Disgrace seem- ed coming. What had I done or not done? I was about to be told that there was no more work for me, I was to disgrace the fainly. That was the keenest pang of all. When all had been paid and the boys were gone Mr. Glass took me behind the counter and said that I was worth more than the other boys, and he bad resolved to pay me thirteen and a half dollars a month. pause. "What about it now? I've pallid complexion and brilliant eyes, had two urgent messages front Berlin who had come with Lady Anselman this morning," and who was standing now by her "It's pretty difficult" Granet side. acknowledged. "The `Scorpion' 's out "I suppose you know everybody, my in the Channel or the North Sea. leo dear?" Lady Anselman asked her gen- getting at her. And I don't believe Tally. The girl shook her head a little dis- consolately. "We are so little in London, Lady "They must be making them some- Anselman;' she murmured. You where, though," Sir Alfred remarked. know how difficult father is, and just His nephew nodded. now he is worse than ever. In fact, "To think," he muttered, "that if be weren't so hard at work I dont we've two hundred men spread out at believe he'd have lot me come even Tyneside, Woolwich and Portsmouth, now." and not one of them got on to thiel "These scientific !nen," Lady Ansel - A nation of spies, indeed! They're man declared, "axe great boons to the mugs, uncle," country, but es parents 1 am afraid "Not altogether that," the banker they are just a Tittle thouihtless. replied. "We have some reports, el- Major Harrison and Colonel Grey, let though they don't go far enough. I me present you to my young charge nan put you on the track of the thing. —for the day only, unfortunately— there's another destroyer yet fitted with this apparatus, whatever it may e Paradise. That was four years ago, though, and I scarcely counted upon spending the winters there." "You find it lonely, then?" She shivered a Little, half closing her eyes as though to ehut out some unpleasant memory. "The house," she explained, "is on a sort of tongue of land, with a tidal river on eiither side and the sea not fifty yards away from our drawing - room window. When there are high tides, we are simply cut off from the mainland altogether unless we go across on a farm cart," (To be coneinued.) An Eternal Peace. Ia L'spallata Pass, in the snow -clad heights oil the Andes, the point where the railway crosses the border line between Argentina and Chile, stands The apparatus you saw is something Miss Worth. Now, Ronnie, if you can the famous Christos statue, the sym- ir, the nature of an inverted telescope, be persuaded to let Miss Conyers have/ bo2 of eternal peace between the two peace perhapsyou will' with various extraordnary lenses a moment'sp P countries, The icy, merciless blasts treated by a new process, You can show us the way in to lunch.' see fortyfeet down under the surface Granetpromptly abandoned his of winter have bent the bronze cross, i of the water for a distancr, of a mile,whispered conversation with Geral -i but at the baso 0t the statue are these `treasurer of the family, the eleven and we believe that attached to the dine. The little company moved in and words: 1 dollars and a quarter and said nothing same apparatus is an instrument took their places at the round table' Sooner shall these mountains arum- } about the remaining two dollars and y My head swam; I doubted whether I had heard him correctly. Ile count- ed out the money. I don't know whether I thanked him; I don't believe I did. I took it and made one bound for the door and scarcely stopped un- til I got home. I remember distinctly running or rather bounding from end to end ot the bridge across the Alleg- heny River --Inside on the wagon track because the fo0twalk was too narrow. It was Saturday uight. I banded over to mother, who was the which was usually reserved for Lad Anselman on Tuesdays. "Some people,' the latter remark- to which they have pledged them- ed, as she seated herself, "find fault wives at the feet of Christ the Re- with me for going nn with my lunch- deoillee. eons this season. Even Alfred won't come except now and then. Pereonei- Minard'a Liniment for Burns, etc ly, I have very strong views about it. I think we ought to keep on doing just Imitating Daniel• the same a•susual—to a certain extent, A well.knawn actor was called upon, of course. There Is no reason why we without any warning, to make an an ahould bring the hotel proprietors and shopkeepers to the brink of ruin be- cause we are all feeling morn or less miserable." "Quite right," bei neighbor, Colonel Issue 0.02 --"ll, ble into duet than shall the people of a quarter in my pocket—worth more Argentina and Chili break the peace to me then than all the millions I have made since. Tom, a little boy of nine, and 1 slept in the attic together, and after we were safely in bed I whispered the secret to my dear little brother. Even at hie early age ho knew what it meant, and we talked over the future. It was then, for the first time, that I sketched to him how we would go Into business together; that the firm of Carnegie Brothers would be a groat one, and that father and mother should yet ride In their carriage. At the time that seemed to un to embrace everything known as wealth and most of what rolls worth entire q tor, On Sunday morning with father, mother and Tom at breakfast, I pro• dined the extra two dollars and a quarter, The surprise was great, and it took some momenta for thorn to peep the -situation, but 1t soon dawn. ell upon them Then father's glance of loving pride nor( !other's blazing e soon wet with tears eye a rs told their feeling le was their bey's first triumph and proof positive that 110 was worthy of promotion, No mime (Meet surress or monition of any kind ever thrilled me air this did. I cannot even imagine aro that multi, Hero was heaven upon earth. hey ter-dinnor speech. "Gentlemen," said he, "I feel like Daniel in the lions' den." The guests wore alt attention. "Now what did Grey, assented. "I am auto it wouldn't Dairlet say when he found himself in do us any good out there to feel that the don ot Ilona? He just said: 'Well, you were all sitting in sackcloth and whoever% going to do the atter-dinner ashes. Sondes, think how pleasalvt speaking, 11 won't be 1:00.' " this is to come home to," hie added, looking around the little table, "Jove! What a good-looking girl Miss Con- yets is!" Lady Anselman nodded and lowered her voice a little. "She has just broken her engage- ment to Surgeon -Major Thomson. I wonder whether you know him?" "Inspector of Field Hospitals or something, isn't he?" the other re- marked carelessly. "I came across him once at Boulogne. Rather a dull sort of fellow he seemed," Lady Anselman enghed. "I am afraid Geraldine found him so," she agreed. "Her mother is very disappointed, I can't help thinking -There never has been de- vised and there never will be devised, any law which will enabje a man to sue. geed save; by the exerei0e o£ those qualities which h.Iltyve always been the prerequisi- tes of 6uCCOSS, the qualities of hard work, of keen Intel- ligence, elunflinching will.I. —Theodore Roosevelt, Ai fele A Talk About Teeth. Suppose that u gene of thieves hid themseh'ea at the gateway of a city and poisoned ell the food going in by the gate. Suppose, - again, that the city grew ill one was weakened so that Its enemies ga'evailed against it, You have pictured to yourself the state of the elan with bad teeth. The thieves at the -gate take everything sooner or later. At first they take good looks, then they take good tem- per; and at the Hist good health. Not half, but much more, than half of the indigestion, the anaemia, the rheumatism, the heart trouble which spoil useful and happy lives are due to teeth. It is the poison from the roots of the teeth which day by day' corrupts the whole system. The reason is simple enough. It. bad tooth is a tooth which has lost the battle that every stmgle scrap,of our body is always fighting against the germs of .disease. In other words, it is a piece of ground which the enemy has taken. The enemy (the .germs) is now es- tablished inside the bad 'tooth. He is at work there putting out what can be likened to his "poisoned gas," so as to win more victories, and seize and occupy more pieces of the body. The "poison gas" in this ease is a fluid which doctors speak -of as a "toxin." It is a subtle essence, en- ormously poisonous, which is not very unlike the venom snakes .inject from their fangs into their victims- Its first effects are on the brain and nerves. Some of it comes directly into ,the mouth and mixes with the food. Sonic more of it goes into the blood as it flows round the tooth -socket. Thusfeels nervous about doing that, let hem, trade or profession shined be admitted a hind of blood -poisoning is started. remember that the pain he maty sufferr, to a club, a priaeipie which accounts But it is all so gentle, so much on the ._,ami he la not likely to suffer rlwch} for the comparativedy exclusiveness system of "little by Iittle," that the in these days of skilled dentistry—is, 0f Rotary. The dotage of these Chi - person being poisoned doesn't notice what is happening to him. He says cheerfully: "I have a bad toroth; I wish I had the courage to go and get it out." If he really understood what he was to+!king about he would say: "I am taking a small dose of poison every day. And I am foolhardy enough not to care." Because the poison, sooner or later, will break him. up• He will -lose his color, he will ,get nervous, he will have palpitation of the heart. Then Tomato juice will 10121010 ink Maine suflicla•lt to come:me me cf tie tine he will go to specialists in great aux- from fingers. ideals it hos Set before Ir. It =eels iety and imaging that he has had the The water in which pot-Mem!lave to foot-: mad ettcor.nage high 0111111 misfortune to "fall victim" to dis- been boiled will cleat! flat silver very standards in Lu it±t-, aril prfc ,3,:,. ease. He has not fallen victim, He wee.to inrpree , t n 11, UV In)). r14 that rer• has simply reaped what he sewed.Airprrrf and lnais:.urepraaf coni; eke' thebass , f .,'.1 i- ^.111; ( n•. t The beginning of bad teach is bad tanners should be used to stare coffee.. 1, elect. —or, rather, wrong food. It is a curl- nus fact that native rales have, as a. To remove iron runt front a delicate, At all e191, 1,: eiet ce , :et fabric, rpread it with cream of tartar. glrther:l:g.. tve1, r 1 / ,her Wears 8 Our rule, good teeth, They cat naturally.; Twist cloth to keep ereapl of tartar, u'he1.1.1'1 a badge (,n ; ' 1 11 le leecrll,"d givens children, bleached white, arand y Rota:ten. arc me in place; put in a. pan of told water, 1ene. peen: ,1s name and calling„ :lei this is ; 1.1f. robbed of its most nourishing part,i I trav"10 receraa vny ita rrer"z tried.' tlotlnilere he atilit Inter/dm tho busfor lhl t to pin• the husk. en the husk is the life, the; p due() his ire 1 ill. h to l e, welcomro. thing called a vitamins, w thovt which! re' In using any canned meat cr fish 1'y th" 87oat freemascnry "1 Rotary. bones aou soft and teeth weak. l the flavor is much improved if the, - And our children are given sugar! le opened at I•east one hour beforeSolomon's and sweets. 1'haze lodge between the using, the contents quickly washed in `1 Quarries. teeth and ferment, producing .acids.] cold water and the feel thoroughlyi How often great diseoverice epring The germs bid's there; the metes are made there, Indeed, the germs them- selves help 1e' make the acids, How are we to get at those danger, points and drive the enemy out of diem? It is not easy, and le requires care, "Yet it is not nearly so difficult as shaving. The amazing' thing is that leen who would not d150111. of go- ing mvshaved will go out every day with the spaces between their teeth choked with decay and d.atnger. I The best plain is to' -start a kiird of tooth -drill. Every night, .before go ing to, bed, the mouth should be wash- ed out car01uliy with a little water to whtch •a ptnah of lialcingeoda bas been added, Then talcs a 'pioog of growing. clean linen or cotton rag and work it Hero is the story of Rotary:— up between the teeth. Pull it back- On February 23rd, 1109, Paul P. Ilan wards rind forwards co as to remove ris, a Chicago attorney, feeling the all pieces of food that may have been loneliness ee life in a great •city, and left otter eating. finally, nee a brush destines of lacreasing lits circle of and tooth -paste or powder. I acquaintances, invited three other The reason for then course of drill men to join him in forming a, club. is that the soda kills acid, the nag re-, Harris later suggested several moves pieces of food, and the brush uamos, one of which was Rotary, be. polishes the teeth, A person who our- cause the members had formed the ries out this drill every night will habit of meeting in each other's but - wake with a clean mouth in the morns -: less pewee In rotation. ing—a very •delightful experience in At these informal gatherings the this hot weather when germs of every, four men !rad business talks- which description grow ss, easily and so p;� proved educat}vo and of Tho fusely. (interchange of opinions became a help Not only' that, but it will be an to them -In their several callings, easy matter in the morning to brush This idea of serving one another be - the teeth clean, ready for the day's came the fundamental idea of Notary. work. 1 Gradually the little group added to iia This is enough 6f it de /carried out numbers till fifty were enrolled In the thoroughly. But it is no use :begin-; parent club. nine tooth -drill with a mouth full of A World -Wide Movement, decaying stumps. Nothing will clean} Harris and his three 'friends follow - these stumps. The owner - of them od dioerent callings, and it was agreed must go to a dentist at once. If he. that no two members of the same WE ROM; ROTARY si8rlZd r QF Si. BROTH World -W, Which Fos in Susi no you know w Rotary hold its recently. Most of were Amerleane, bus European >oUatries,- represeuted, To -day . there' are ova'. Clube In 'various parts of They have a membersb10 o Year by year the movement, breathes the, spirit ot.brotherheed, nothing compared with the danger of cage pioneers became noised abroad, not going. } and in 1803 a si:.tcr club was inuugu- A great heart specialist said re-, rated at San Franciseo. cantly that if people took caro of! Other elutes were formed in the their teeth half the diseases which end State. tIp to this Ulna the clubs had in a failing circulation would disap-' no Mitchel connection with each other, pear. The same thing is true of kid-+ but iu 11110 a National Mani of Com. easy disease, and, indeed, of most of missioners was appeir,te11,-and later iu those dreaded afflictions to which the the year Rotary held Its first coeven- title "Killing Diseases" has reecntly tion in Chicago. been given. Tips to Housewives. Since that date fee niceement made steady prcgress. It is now a world-wide ergnnization. A glance at the obje.ric of Teeter!: Is The acids rot the surface of the teeth, the delicate enamel, es it is called, which is the first line of trenches against the germs, Once holes have been made in the enamel the battle is lost, Tho germs get in and begin their poisonreua work. Very soon the whole tooth will break down. We must, if we have sound teeth, give them a chance, Wo must feed our teeth or they will stop feeding us, They need the food whaeh is con- tained in brown bread, and they need to be saved against the acids which are 60 fatal to them. Brushing is not enough. The brush drained. Then e'xpe'ls to the otitsule' from trifling incidents'. 'l ho tilt° re' air for twenty . minutoa and chill in fiertlon comes 10 mind naturally nn Solo - the ice box. If the brand of fish is a' hearing bow thn quarries at Ming Sulo - reliable 0118 and it is treated in this' ruin wore tenni. Dr. fee at Mi nre, for way it a>an hardly be known from the! aeventeon years a reeideet of Pelee - fresh commodity. tine, teats the curicue talc. For many, 1110117 years, says Dr. Veero, 1reve1101'6 end 1rchnloingisto Washing Vegetables. 1 ware puzzled to know where the clime Children should bo drilled in the mous blocks at stone still ataadiug in Practice ce washing fruits and vege- the ruins of Solomon's temple at ecru. tables before eating. All market pro solani were quarried. One day a Iittlo duce reeds 'trashing to remove dirt dog chased a lizard dcwn a hole and dust, bacteria and sometimes par -3 among the diode. The nest 111:;tant tides of spray residue. The best of the (lag niso disappeared. fruits and usually the bust -looking} Hid master, coaling to the apening, fruits aro those from trees which have peered down In vain Ile called, and reaches the surface of the tenth only, been properly sprayed -while the fruit• to •his amazement bis voice came Lack That is never -where the danger lies. was in its early stages, and sometimes' as from groat depths. Ile summand The real danger -point •is the narrow the spray may not have weatbenidf nsslstance, and tt passage was "'alai space between one tooth and another. off the fruit 'before harvest, 1 into immense subterranean quarries. 'L'11ore were fumed huge eler,-ref of whole world was moved to tears of woe Ilot of a few acres would. 01 :er! at01e nlntr."t re auy i:, ht belled joy. Mrnard's LInlmont for Dandruff. Nursery Station, Intliau Head, Seek. r tH.,t the t+anl'lei+n,.t ^..-.:nut Benefits of Tree Plantations 1 seemd et etre or of hemmer? The conditions considered equal, sell tor' nb Ansi un't n' p.m curl,: D tar more than 0110 without trees - "And don't J r r r 1 a r, Norman Al. Rosa, Dominion Form;+ !fore, "that wc, are told in oar Bible; on Prairie Farmrs.BuyingAntiques. fact that the quarry- t Wtir9(r:4 1111• i(, ranud early ,1 There aro several ways in whlc}t g t t tht " plantations of trees benefit too prairie "anthem" furniture may be, ttpcn sonic tf tl,,, r r( ;.ern found saltier, the most Iniport.int of which of any ono of throe kinds; a Mere' Cascrintlone thlit perplex!: 1 the are the following: - 1. They afford shelter from the wino. to crops, buildings, and Stook. 2, They collect and hold the snow during the winter, preventing it from bonkieg up around buildings, 3, They preserve and retain the moisture in the soil by pre/aging the force of the trot tvinde in Menem, thus retarding evaporation, Theenow also hold by them in the winter, melting In the spring, furnishes a great deal of moisture to the land 1n the immedi- ate vicinity which otherwise It would noy retain, 4. Plantations will supply fuel, tong. ing material, 8nd woad for repairs et settlers would only realize that they can grow th4tr Pmt (1111 804 fencing rnatert}Il, as they, uadoubteety can, many more plantations Would he set Butt ail oris witted 'meap to them a great paving ig time ant; labor, G. 'they " tire of .;mathetio value, beautifying the inndseep0 and malting Igo en the prelria meth more pleasant and loss monotonous. 4. They preathy add to the money value of the farm, There la not the lydrl gen t'aya °a 1 i t it ' r est !enol ilial a farm which' site} t c had howl [be la time 1 t�t on it a well managed and productio a m° Wong*no`s fine ciimbed it It Wag p5ve ettlrelel• mu110 up of bits of antique carving, ` ;:'nrers until one scholar l,rononnectl panels alkyl so .forth; n real antique to + ti.o 1.'hmnictau. 'rho st ems were which carvings or inlays have leen' wrought by sem, of that 5nne of added; or a piece that la only a copy. i workmen sent by King thrum of Tyra It is extremely difficult ror an anlateee' to aid icing Solomon 1n hie teak. to detect a clover !Inflation, especially I r,._....,-_,..-. It It belongs to one of the first two' Real Diplomat, ar classes, Then why buy antiques? It i is all a !natter of taste; many olds a mei ntAine Charmer the Vicarage, as Un 11 110rss lotrnayi:ig thluge have a beauty that time alone calls. Tea was server!, and its Airs. can give, though new things of good 1 Charmer uibbiad at her 118110 she war* design and construction are just as murod; useful and sometimes just as attrac-, • tive, Perhaps the greatest pleasure "5 must say, cry dear Mrs.. Past01:,) to the oreinare person tat buying thee calla is delicious.' t1>X !clues is that he Iraq to buy 0i19 Tho vicar's wan beontad. Then the taco at a tllnb and that ora only ate two ladle, lett, and as they walked' ter thinking it over Caretully. home Mies Blunt burst out: "Really, Mrs. Charmer, Trow could yoti say that{ appalling hanle•made cell V. }''Y'HNnlit;la ya 1'. • sed u' o n, -„ "I did t say it was; tinned 31$rs, 0:3 pr.? • us= Clutrmor, with a twinkle. I only mid g�{ar oY ql e�' earn bald sub. ,'I mast say see And one must, yell tin of datDcr 9�ttdd $ �eo !tet k r tat tx lf'y ,, W . to to know. ore ler 'n> puroLs40d, tri finer elegy �y 1tto l t them over, or eaak iia tta aJ Not Ol7o. w to loo e 4ny car to 0117 repra0ontatEvr for tlaotitnlaster "Lot tis Climb tlid. nspoatiotl Very lar loch ar 1 , Breakage Deed Ger litntrlcmt ;3c:out+-"W rl• d, s r re ra