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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1922-5-4, Page 67.1;76T7iwysT.:ERy..OREEN RAY,OP Th1 By Wifliiun Le ...Q401.*a• I CHAPTER 'XVII,---(Cent'd,) "We're, certainly leerning some- thing," eaid ,Deni, as he finished. '00bviouely. Gaemeek is very susnicioue somebody, but it's oot Hildermen, 1 -le Write3 as if he weee pretty sure ef himself. Probably he -has proved his theory tl.nutt Hilderroan being a '&ovwnlent detective," "I. nave 'a message for Mr, Ewart, sir" e.he messenger interrupted; "Yon had better t -e1 it me" Delude suggested, "I'd lathe): Miss 1V1eLeod askad meee McKenzie 'demurred. "Those were My. Gernesk'e instructions. He SAW 'fail - Ewart, insist on seeing Miss McLeede "IT,ery well," langlied Myra. "I quite aemrecia.te your point, ,May 1 lelloW the message?" , "Mr. Ewalt evag to take no notiee 'whatever of anything Mr, Gamest: ;mid in his letter about Me. Illiderman, He was 9n no account to trust .Mr, Hilderman, but to be very careful not to let him see he, was suspected. The gentlemenwere always to weal- .their glasses whenever they Were in Sight of the hut anever-L-Glas.-aboye Mr. • IIlldeernars house." "Whew!" Dennis 'whistled.. "But why didn't Oh, I See. ;He was nfraid the letter might fall into Hit- derman's hands." • "1 wonder where Iton can have get Co ?" Myra mused Wistfully. , "We're. very Much obliged to yen for all the trouble you have taken, Mr.. 'McKenzie," said ennie, "you've done -very well indeed,' ' • . "Oh Mr Garnesk altio said that Miss McLeod was .to put on her glaeseg by the red light." "Yea, that's important," Dennis agreed, "Weie'll go. up to the house now, Shalt, we, -Mise 'McLeod ?," "Yes," said Myra ."and -Mr. McKen- tie Must come and have a nieel and a rest, as I'm sure he need:e- both after his journey. Pll send' Angus to look lifter the boatrium." So the, three strolled up to.. the. lodge. -. "By the -way," said ` Dennis, 'Of course it's, ell right; and you've car- ried out your instructions to the -let' -- ter, but how can yen be euro this is lVfiss AlcLeed, and how' do you .know, I'm not Hilderman "Mr. Garnesk deescribed everYbodY I should be likely to meet," McKenzie replied; "including Mr. Hilderman and Mr; Fuller. I know -you are Mr: "Ew-, friend bedause you have a "entail white ,scar above youc left eyebrow. So, being with you, ,and -wearing a shade. Etna' an 'Indian bee gle, I thought I was safe in coneludiag the lady was Mios"Gieenesk 'doesn't 'seem" to misS Much!" Bennie laughed. 'He made rne Telnint his descrip- tions about' twenty tireee,':';"said Mc- Kenzie, "so 1 felt pretty sure of me - When --theyegot- etp,,Ick:: I he: ledge, and the rneeiengersrequarernents had been o dm inis tered to,. Dennie :unpacked the pat cel. The 'spectacles peeved to bo something. like. Motor gogegles;. they fitted closely ,over. the nose and fore- heaared' entirely ex:chided' all: light except that vvhich could be seen through the. glass. The only curious thing about thern. \VAS the glass itself: . Instead, of. being- white, or evenblue it ektas red; kihd the ' surface was suOtched.diagonally, in minute parallel 'lines.: Myra and Dennis hurried up- etaire and lighted ,the . lamp 'in the dark -room. When the girl Came down again she declared that sh'e- could eee beautifully. , Everything ,WElA;;recl,. of yourse; but she ecould see quite, elti- aHave you any,idea why these glasses are ruled.iie lines like this ,?" • Dennis asked 'Me:Kenzie. "I'couldn't say, for' certain, sir," the youth replied. "But I' should think , it was because Mr. Garnesk. thought 'the glasses would beso-near, the eye . as to he ineffective. In.photograPhY; for instance, • yOu tan'.t .print either bromide or printing -out paper in a red light.' But if you eget a redglass -with emulsion apti make an -exposure' on it; you ,can print the negative in the ueual way. 1 don'h kno'tv why it "Perhaps there is DO space for a ray to Tenn," Myra stiggested. "You must tell Mr., Garnesk how deeply go-at-ofu1 we all, tree ,to said Dennis, "Pli give You a letter to teke back to him. It has been 'a wbn- derfully euielt hit Id work!".. "I should thinke he has got7some hundrede Of the glasses' finished by tirne.". said, MeKenzie' "and lie bee already asked -for -an eelimute for , fifty thoesand oi! theml"• ' - "Whatever for?" Myra exclaimed. •. "1 eouldn't say at all, but Mee Gni.- nesk Probably has it all mapped opt, Ii e always knows whet hes about." ' A couple of boors •liter McKenzie 1 ef for Glenelg, with -ample time to catch his beetrand the ethera'sat- doWn to lunch. Myra was delighted that sho could ,reee, even though everything was red, as ,thev had finished' lunch telegram was 'delivered to Dennis. It wee handed in at Mallaig, and it read: "Delft worry about •me. Mey he away for a few clays,e--,•;:warie" "Oh, 'good!" exclaimed Dennis.. "A • wire trOra Ron, He's all rig -ht. 'Don't worry about ma. May be away foe a few deys,' Sent from .Mallaig. He may, have got something' ho leelelos • .17111St neenesk about, and has gone to Clesgow.a ,•• ' ."I expoet that's it," Myra agreed, , "I'm glad be's wired. '1 do -•hope he'll write from wherever he is to -night. , Da Yoe thine 1 shill/ get a deetee the Moreing • "Certain to," Deunis vowed, laYing the telegram on •the mantelpiece. ,"Ile'e eme toewrite, hoWever busy he' Though Myra WAS cheappeintea that there wes no Poit'aenal message for her, she Aided to belieee that every-. thing was ell right. DenniS went oft Whet he called. ecetebguard dUte, end watched the zee and shorea with the entiring loyalty of a faithful dog, That eight:, after dinner, he wont our te koo an oyo eh thirega, Mid left With .hee' fad/ea. She him told Ice that oho felt miserable th t itali Wired -to her, and went 1�ltor telegtatil It Order, te got tati-ebaefOt olio' eould ft* my, mos- ' kg!) behlgOk She held the talo VIM .aultior tin) lion:, 0,114:ftll,r; 11 11i,T e he WWO eard0 O: " be away+ ter a tclee,d0leee-Dateart,', Oahe: olettdo ent, the ?Web Pella elowlg theoligh the ked glatea, /UP ofd let tWiee through, Old thenildeinfee eollapsed into an arinelleir he t oier 'roc' of Wife tealleatieni "'MVO. I' a whispered, "Evearal Ho Would neeier Edge a telegram to Mr, It.trnIlam 105 waY, if Rowel() allea t tend lila% WiTA, whe 01,a1,1. ItatiCe AttaPV-6(.4 le a moment elm jumped to her feet. $ho must het, and act quickly, She ran into the den, and pielced ip theeevelvee and cartridgee avhieh Oar - flask had seet, arid whieh kflie had put carefully away until nhould dome and elnim Hem. She loaded the re- volver, and tucked It in the pocket of the Burberry eoat Which she elip. ped on in the im11, Then she tore down to the lancling,etage, and Made straight for Glaenabinnie In the Jenny Spinner,: She lead- got about half a mile when Dennis, domiug up to the Lop a the (eel on his self-bnPosed eoastgueird duties, -saw her and recog- nized her .threugh his binoeulere. He ran down to the landing -stage, Puttieg an his red glassee es he went. His horror was eoinplete when 'he found there Was no craft of any kind about, not even a Towboat, Ales! I had edfotically allowed the dinghy to drift 4way. He van Along the ebore, every now mid then looking anxiously through his binoculars foe any sign of tiny 'kind of boat that would get - him over lo Glasnabinnie in time to fulfil his peomige of lookieg after "Eon's little girl." lel3rra Jas's since admitted ---and how proud I was to heag her say it -that she forgot about everything and 0000y - body except that I was -m danger, and probably Wideman knew something about it. Her one thought' was to held the pistol to his head and dee nand rny eafe return.• ' She came ashore a little beyond the houseehaving.made05 iettlieli wido de tette,. so that 'ole should not he seen. She knew the best way to the hut, and there was a light in it. She thought Hildermen would'be there. S'he had passed well. to ,seaward of the Fiona, and noticed that She was -standing by With, steam up.• IVIerea climbed the hill to the but with as much speed as' she laildermaa 'was etanding below,the 'door of the smoking -room talking to Three men. Blob knew that she would have,no chance, even with a revolver, against four rnene She might hart one of them, but she recognized, for- tunately, that the .0therS would over= Power her. - • - Eventually Bilderman went Imo the hut, and two of the men stayed out- side talking. •The other went down the hill. It was in watching ,this man that Myra saw the sight -that had astoeished me, the continuous etream ofelightsedown ;the bed of the burn - She waited, so she -said 11 seemed, for hourS and hours, beforp she eould see ri teal chalice of attacking Ilildernaen. Indeed, neither she nor Dennis CAD give any very clear idea precisely how hew it evas'that she waited there, but it must hey() been a considerable time At- last Hilelerman was alone. Myra crept to the edge of the little plateau on whiah the hut stood, amt.-111mi made a dash for the door. She thrust it open and stepped inside, pulling it to behind her. Hilderman sprang to hi feet with an eath as he saw her. "I -leavens!" he cried. "You!" Myra drew- the revolver and pre sented -it at him. , "Put up your hands, Mr. Hilder - man,' she ,said, with a calmness that astotished heraelf, "a -rid tell inc what yeti _have done with Ronnie -Mr., Owart," ' . ' Must admit You've: caught me, Mies :McLeod!" Ililderman replied. "I can Only assure you that yoller,fiahse is Saff3." "Where is be?"Myra asked. .."11tris. quite close at hand,". Hilder - man assured 'her, "and quite safe, What- do you want ine to do?" •"You xnust set him free at once," WONDERFUL "SLOWIele.DOWN" LAMP , , • • A. demonstration was given reoenely Manchester, Egghead, with a newly leven.ted which makers maCnaelneey rumeleg, at the Migheet possible speed appear to nut quite slowly sro -that every movemen'elt enekee ea bo easily seen. The secret of the lamp la that' it doee' net give .ta, continuons light bete Nellie fleshes. ef 1,- 00 ,000 of a second duration so that , the effect en the eye is`a aeries of pliotographie imareSetans• The lamp • le oethated in connection wee a gear -box which causes tee eget to flicker- eo rapallY, • 'rho Pholeg,raph Sirowe the inventor, Mr. A, J. Elverson; watching the niovereenta of a Bewing-machia° by aleien5 of his laulta SOLVE SECRET OF MYSTERIOUS FLUID ELECTRICITY'S IDENTITY NEAR SCIENTISTS' GRASP. Means- for, Converting Heat Directly IritcrElectrkity Most Pressing Problem. In recent experiments 'at the Uni- versity' of Chicago a temperature of more than .60,000 degrees -20,000 de- :gre.es liTgher than that of the hotteet stere -was obtained by discharging a large quantity 'of electricity 'item aecendenser through a very fine wire. •By means of thie ermemous heat the metal tungsten was actually changed Id hehum-an unprecedented and most ago -Malting feet, seeming to prove that -atoms of matter ,etee not. inde- structible.'• ' A.e at Present conceived, atom of 8 matter is a tiny package .eorrtaining number of electimns. num or .. varies with different-Itiuds of matter, but the SlIbStertiCe ceITIp081114' the e ec- teens is- elveeys- the same. I is the substanee out' of which 11 things are made and it fills all epeee, being 110 - thing more er loss than i-vhat wa have been aocnstomed to call the inter- stellar 'ether." • The sun, a gigantic seurce' of emergy, transmits this energy to us through the medium of "Waves" in the ether. Whet thesewaves strike the eye they irritate the retina and produce the effect which we call light. In other manifestations they produce ef- fects which we, term electrical. the energy is all the same energy. It appears WIG° in the .ft;rm of heat, to WilO111 the sea of air in whieh we dwell. Said Myra quietly. , "And if I refose?" "I shall ahoot you and anyone else who eoines near rae.a ' , • "Now • look _here, Miss McLeod,' said Hildorman, "1 may kb Prepred shot- me and half a dozen others I would not help you to find Mr. Ewart On the other hand, it would be awk- ward for us to haye a lot of shooting m going on, and I have no wish to ' har Mr. Ewart. If I produce him, and allow you tyro to go away, are you prepared to ewear to me that yell' will neither of you 'breathe a weed, of any- thing you may know to any living soul „far forty-eight hours? I think I can trust you." - Myra thought it over quickly, "Yes," she aaid, "if you will—" But she /weer finished the sentence At that moment soineone caught het wrist ina- grip of steel and wrenched tmm he pistol• from her. "Coe, come, Miss the said Faller, "This is very en-neighborle of you." Myra aceolce,d round her in despair There must be some way out of this She cudgelled her htains to devise some mattes of getting the bettee of her captivem Puller 1011 the pistol amthe table arid sat down. "You need not be alarmed.," lie said. "We 811411 not hurt you. Yee will be left here, that 10 all, And we ehall get safely aWaY. After this -we shall not be able to leave your precious lover with yeti) hut Hilderman insiste that he shall not be hurt, and we' ehell take him to Germany and trent him els a prisoner of war. ' (To bee ontinued.) As 'She Understood it. Mrs, 'Hiram Offen-1'I Bridget, see how dusty it is 'wader the bed," Bridget-"Yes'in.".. "Haven't. I impeessed epee you that YOu truest eweep under the hods 1" "Av Conroe, ma'am,an' , n' how could the dust get there If I hadn't swept, it mi der?" to come to terms with you. I yop Ether is 'All -Pervading: We have thus come to veriderst'and „ (first) that ether i$ the fundamental sabstence out of which ell things in nature, 'from •rooks to human beings, are made, and (see,ond) thet all of the so-called "void" of space is filled With this structureless, material, whose vibrations carry to OS Ilia energy of the sun. Furthermore, We are -now able to reeognize this energy In electrical in its nature. It :governs weather on -the earbh, 11 controls our planet ae An electric field, and tberefore •goveens What we call magnetie phenernetui. It produces on occaaions the annul borealis, which - o distUrbs the woeleing of telegraphic instruments.- All ef this, and le - finitely mere, it accomplielees through the medium: of the ini.ersteller -ether. New that we linee come to' know thosa things, -go are -for the'firstaime in a poeetien to enter aenew and won- derful dontain of discovery and inven- tion, „ Radio, which etheeic If we were only as gen- erous it judging others as ‘ve are in judging ourselves, as tolerant of others' weak- nesses as we are of 01.11' own, we should be very slow, to anger. The habit of hold- ing the gOod will, the kind- ly, sympathetic thought to- ward everybody would lift our minds above pettY jeal' otisy 'and meannesses; it would enrich and' enlarge „ our whole nature, The dally imbit f)f wishing eVerybody well, of refeling like wishing everybody a GOdeaPOOd, 110 mattee if AO are strangers, en-, nobles character and beau- tifies and enriches lire, , vibrations for eeetcling mete -sages over long distances, and even Lai the trarree mission oe sound ..,,by; idhe, `'WirtAoSe" phone, 19 'hut beginning, We /nay yet find a means of empleying them by whieh an artlfielal'elltylightecen be produced Ior iliumanataten of holism This is the, field In Which several investigators haw aheady If that problem reould be ieolved, ole might be able to flood . se dweBing, with light by the mere turning of a nWitoh or pushing Of a ,butbon-ia kind of light, that is to' eay, which would not be distributed frim chan- deliers oir other fixtures, Vet 'Wallah WOU44; like' daylight, fill late haus° with ei ,general and, diffesed llaumina- tien. It might setve in the seine way to illuminate large building's. or 'Cone' ceivably for the lighting 'of a city, at On the Way to Solution. ' • We .are now 'for' the first time get- ting a, notion. of whae eleetrieity, the so-called "myeberious iluea," really is. If it were asked whet diseaverer within the, limitof the re:aeon:abler emlaelva- -ble would at the- pres.eat tinee'be most 'Useful to Mankind,' the imply might Well be, os mean:a for cell:vett-Mg heat directly anto eleelricity. This phase of the prebleM haselong been one 'of deepeet inteeeee to experibientera, owa mg to the .geeet waste in producing cud/meet. . - That this is not an. irapessibfiity in pheeiee is peeved by the feet that when two different metals are so1dsg- ed together, heat being appherleto the point of joining, 'electricity is pro - &aced •That is togay, heat is eonvort- ill into eiectrie1ty withetet in -1 terveution -Id .al- steam engine. - ,If a number. Of pains of metals ..be taken, they Will serve to eompeee a sort of bateerye -'..,furt-giehirig enough icureent for a .small installation. . ' Here pes,sibly .10 the .germ of a prac- tical solution 11 a fremendotis prob- lem, How can the same'thing be dahe on a hirge sale at a reaaohably iow cost. A ;satisfactory ,anevier to that question Means it, simple ,apparates thatenitee he installed i,n any dwelling" and which will tirnish illurninatien; hetet the house, anl. do the cooking, , It seems' not Unreasonable to be- lieve that the time 15 coming -when he apparatus of the kind Will he as mu -oh ,coeel furnace to -day, 'The do - a neater ef (melee in dwelline houses As a i meetic electric faiinace will -be ifiztala led in kitchen ;Or celaareend, through ,wires pet.eing le eVery TOGin, it will supply tight ,anci heat and run fans in response to the pushing of the proper buttons. The cot of the outfit end tee expeuSe Of operating it. (the coneumpe teen of fuel being smald) will be so lit- , bleetlect theeiumblest 'home and poor- est feuriily. Can effoael to have its inclee pendent electric . -Let this problem of c',ornierline heat directly into electricity once le solo:, ediand 111 manufaaturing, plantS -great ergines end hive' boilers will be re- . placed by electric furnaces that take up only eniall-epace, with a 'motor foe ,each marline. -Prochiceiett Of ' mann- fuetured peoduate will be ...vastly cheapened, anid theie ;cast to; consuni- ere cerreepondingly less. 'A single otihfit of the kind will peovide for all the needle Of the biggest hotel; includ- ing lighting, heating, bookie -1g, fee- frigeration ancl'-the operation of the laendry.And if -this be practicable; why might it not be equably so :for a trans-Athantic steamship, :which is, a floating hotel, and Which might be equipped for like purposes with an eleetei,e furnace in the held--peehaps even furnishing ilia illative pewee? . How to Exercise. • Foe presmwing health' end pie -eerie -- Mg life exeeeise ±5 '•aa indiepensable :,hreahhinge eating, and sleeping. The eight kind of eiceeckse ,properdy pere'eemed ,aerates the bleed, streng- thens and regulates the heart, quick- -alis the circulation Peomotes the 'ex- 'cretieu of the poisons Reeled hi the 'betty and gives ,toee te Ilia the ce:gans ' The mesa suitable'forrn of exercise to teke depends, more 'or less upon emeromnent, occupation- and •indeed- elatteate. BItMen or wonaap -who is compled to remain in the city is noceseeeily deprived el certain forma of -exercise that alm'eday for et peesen living in the eountay, arid the man 'Whe-is at his desk the entire day uol ally' cannot take the seine kind -of ex- ezciee as the men; -equailar bard _work- ing perhaps, Wile is able to alternate hia hours of Work and of relaxation. The feran. of exerciee seleeted must be -congenial; otherwise, it will prole, - ably feel in its object. Exercise shoeldealways be ' taken in the open. air -be net out of doers, al, leaat beside an ,-. ciPem window. - That is the first andmiost Important condi-, tierce lVforeovez, the form oe exercise. should be .%1.11C11. to bring a large number of rrtuseles into play at once and -to anove all -the large joitts; in- Cluding"the 'Spine. It sheiuld not de- , mand complicated- enevements' that require meth akal. A impede who is compelled to exercise 'indooes can easily devise a, sehedule that will in- clude swinging' the' ,arms in variotes: directions; • flexing and extending the elbows; • bending forward,' backward and sidewiee with the hands' on the hips, and raising first one :leg and then the ether; keeping the .feet' to- gether ana etwisting. the .hoely to the, eight and -Le the" felt; Moving and twisting.the head in every direction. The best exercise poSsible is walk- ing briskly and breathing fully and deeply, with, •head ,erect anel arms swinging. The dietance walked Should be at -least two' miles a' day --four or five would be better,- ae.ed if the eve;lk (not stroll) can be taken with en agreeable earn/Tani= so' nnech the bet- tor, for the conversation will peO- mo-to deeper breathing and rolleve•the Monotony Aliat some people find in Where Com1Jifflty Ltte blotirishes Vtfonten an Dye Old There ie - one repUblie unknown ,to the outer world, which 11 ignoree, for it is sefe tpesseet that fewer, then three thousand people in all the pep - elation cif Europe are familiar with it, though this republic can count o() years and more of histoey. In this most ancieet rep -utile, the territory of 'which lies .four thousand feet above the valley leading to it no family hes en inch more land than 1t5 neighbor arid property emnains to -clay•!, on its oeiginal basis. In it indiViduals; cum nothing eind the folk heel mass are; eeerything, All ere equal,"and though ' rrioney 15 tieed for eel:pos(3e in the outer world, barter and eeehauge feria the heals of any commercial lraneae- tions, There being, no infeeioeity wealth there is no pride ol: purse, and the conditions of all being knowit there 1.e no pretension, 100 oeteetation, The Government is tracetional and the qualifications of the head functionary are nothing more than yeatmenemory and upeightness, Theee le ee council and no court, room. Seated beret() his door the heee of the eepublle givee hie deeisions, Teended on 'age end woet and tradition. Andeere, k small ceuetry high up •among the Pyrenees, with ite thread ,of dependence on or coneectlen with 'Seale; is wC11 enough Itheevn, bet the, other ancl eldea, Gaust, sheltheed by ,Iftanee, t'etilAinS 1e -dip 143 ago-familine only te ihoao ite 101 - mediate neighboehoral. Game llea more 0oe tee rev re. ef the Preech Perelleee ho' eeencl the "south end of 'the 055cm:ea-I- t ley. e'reere the diazy traCk to the re- public begilis aed wieds,alongthe face of • the precipices, throtiA ; forests, eocice gorges and Cloude _up to 'the mountain tom There lies Gonet-an } oasis of geeen times and bushes, garl. dells, fields end heuses, among the bleek rocks. Amid :a Clump of trees ' stand . ite ten -houeL inhabited by ita , ponulation of fifty to SiXtY Mello wo- men anclachildien; for seldom has the Goust Republic exceeded 'that number, and the sum of- the houseg hes been the even& through 1l treditheW When the pepulation iecreasee, and threatens to atint euppliee, which are held, in contemn, luxuriee and necee- saries.,allite,, youngstere ere eqUippea 'and Bent to push their lettunes in the valley below, 'There, toe, the young men find tbeie GOASt etrietly Catholic and obseevce tho pro - Malted degrees 51 eonsanguinite, hee ne priest'oe chapel, bet tile fent, except 14001 winteii 0103is 'taut them off, been& reguicaly to Lorene, Here they. /tee baptized, married ;and heeled. Te this day thole agriculture and illt- tlidltdilta, }Ina lunch nt thole kneWledge ate of Preece ,of the ale- teenth emeury. , Geuet, escrepine interference thretigh its poVorie and remoteness, grew up eenturie5 ago bito a self. aelf-sapporting conneueity: Thie tley teptiblie within a tellabli .! him kepi; a teaditionel meeeeedenee peaceItmily in the midst of poltheal haegoe whieh have tionvulSeel Europe, • Faded Things New . in Diamond DYcs. -each nackage of "Diamond 11:voe" centaint eilrections se simpleeany AVO. TO= eau dye or tint lier worn; shabby cleeseem skirt, waists, coats, stocic- togs, sweaters, coverings, draperlee., hangings, everebbleg, ,even 11,81te bee neVer ' dyed before, Buy, "Diamond . • leyes"eeno other Miele -teen perfect home dyeing is sure boe.ause Dlemond ; DYW are gearammed eot to'ePet, fade, 11 streak, or run, Tell your drugglet. iviiether the meteviel. you wieh ie dye Is woel 01 an, or Wiletner bt IS liner); cotton no mixed eeeds, The WiId Goose Sing.. Tio fyprirug, it in' Ole Nontlj 10700. ihuels are brealcinge gemni and white; Atel neeesfies pooled -with Aeril ram Are eeftly 1.10 to flight. Above the halls eve emend otrreeteile. . The eolith wind eelices'our refeaine 'rho Willoave weeee l,hel.r eilver veils, The oprieg 15 ioo the Nerth again. ntt.eiaw 5:itte0001000, Liar! OW the PAY. Slia 11/1(1 0-0 delved 1,10 1011f..- 0? •fir:-,vor .with .enpent. , "Ole, they lire peereolie levels!' she exelatoma, "reee theree area it Mee dove oe them etill." , 1 .; "Mf-5,3,ea." boos atemmered, "there's t a, !atm, bee 0 Intemied to pay it ee, Sateiatty nieet," Pid elo Amulet.' the • Meet parents declare that theY leVe ene, child jest AS much as the otliee, end that they have never made aey difference in the treatment, of their thihiren, yet they ean see that other parents have beell ra0Fit talfgir,•••and unkind to their offspring in the mat1 tereet family emeility. The mos glaring inequalities in their idees of ustice eta4e11-11:, cibl- dcn tbe turmoil and etalfe each in- fect that partialitY is reslanisible fer a large Pereentage of family quarrels - In the ideal heme eaeh and every child is treatecl fairly throughout it$ life, but ideal hornea are not alevaye the rule. If permit§ would leek back 'oe their own ehildhoode remem,bering the bitterehearthehee eaused by pan- tsewho daoi eofre pieearVocil:lvd1 IM1 dila° oill.iy,ts se, and a binding tie between their ehil- dren 'after the parents have ,paseca Bern' earth, ehould found their homes aotnid tlalleMebihasi isPe.°Ivfileeggtel:1;o'irghntosnel.°Y all . Some- yearif ago it woos 'eustOrnarY for the whole family to pirteh and save in order to educate the brighteet son and send him forth on a profes- sional career.: „"We ought to have one gentleman in the fernily,a was the elogan ,of these who denied 'theme seleias coriderte /ay: by, money 'for the one 'thane -it to be the most worthy of an edecetion. Happily) that' idea has -about died out; , and, in order to be fair and just,' fathers apd mothers who -educate only one give to the ,:ether" ehildren,- the ,arnoinit •of -money which the college educatiomie- presents'. If one sea chooses to be- come e 'doctor tied another learner the farmer lad should have the seine amount, yearaby year, for his farming yentere as Is paid outqoi. college ex, pensee. Farming is just as much, bf O prefOsion as is' "doctoring,". and intelligent people no longer ',believe -that farming la a good' oceapation only for a. person of low mentality. - A man who had had e hard struggle In youth, but fOund- himself in, com- fortable. circumstances later- in life married the second time, HIS first wife had died 'when the children ,41± that union Were still young, and he had; gene his. sturdy „eons end daugh- ters to •horneg of their own with ecant equipment and very little edueation He had a frank and, fairenlk witth the woman he married an to the lights - of his dead wife's children, and with . , her full knbevledge and coneert; he made the children .secure, 4' to their property rights. In 'consequence, that step -mother was'. coedially received by Ile children, all -a whom were anxi- .otis. that .their father should have a -comfortable. home. In time ether elfildeen 'Were ,,born, but. there was never any discord over the 'fact that these children coeld' be educated and clothed a style -unknown toethe older one. The -father, who desired to he fair arid just to alleinade it a point to.share his prosperitY with each and every add to the end of kb dais, and taus bound ,M1 together with. the ties orequality and justice . --the Same neighborhood lived a couple who had in their early married life also had a herd. 'struggle. Three children greiv, up,, two ef whom were Of grazer aesistance to their parents. By hard work. ,and earefel manage- ment the children' Dead otT the debts exidefinally the family 'atrii4ed on -,the toad to...prosperity. :By that' time an- Othee ehild had been -born, and at once became the favorite of the parents who were now.iii inidelle life. While they Were 'always, most carded to say that theyeloved all their children -the same, the most casual observer 'Could tele that they Were mistaken in their thmeghte Inequality, ef treatment circle Was dent asunder; Yet the pee- cauaell hitteer feeling, and the fainill ents elways lamented that ;it was . the •fault of the Older ehildreM, • Every neighberheod can furnish simibar examplea of- family Injustice, and. yottng parents will do well. to found their homes -on justice and per:. feet equality, Be sine Your sins -of faveritisin find you out end bring discord to a home whish you fondly hope will. be an ideally happy one. Humerenature is the same in ell ageee and inequality will always call Toeth a protest, so the best way is to deal justly with all, .and love all se sin- cerely /that injestice will -be forever iroposs,(ble ,youe faraily circle. Newl( .Methed Plants of ., .er teeny years the writer has kept' from fifty to mit huhdred or more flowering, plente' of various kinds, It has alwaye lmen .continual struggle to keep them free of tho 'pesky little green ,end white lice Nutt are, forever attemptieg to devour therm The Monarch' Primreet, the Ever- bleornine Palargoniume, the Puelisiae ned 't.he Asparagus Ferns Ate all - tacked by one or the °thee, and some- times both el these kinds of lice, early different kinds of sprayseheve been, used with little oe ne effeel. mem, hellibore, and eveit Par e grecs 115 gaving eueemeefolly Tema a pre- Paratil eentainieg pyrethrem pow - dee to destroy dies end niosquitoee, the writer conceived the idea of usittir it to destroy the Plant, Ilse P'"i°"slY' raeritioned t KnowMg that' this preparation coe- tamed about eeventy-five Per int. of pyrethrum powdee whiehls sttre death to eny ineeet, ehe was fully assured of success before a trial wae given. - very ,firet application of the powder peactically Icilled them all. The noslcY little things simplY appeared as 1 by magic. Of eouree, jt, hes been, necessary to, repeat the treatmene three or foul. times gizmo as the pawder deee not destroy Ile eggs, but none el the Other iirerienii PeeParations aecomplished this either. Ty obtain the best resulte it ie Reece-. Sary 11,10* ehe powdee undeeeeath the leaves and along the stems of fhb paint]. • This is readily accomPlithed, howevere as the powder coines in a box peeposely coemeented aed oper- ates as a bellowe ta blow the powder wherever desired. It sure dace' the work ---just try it, • Can You Tell? Wiler, the English tongue we epeak Why "bleak" he pet Thyniccl. "freak"? lariat you tell me Why .1/0 true We, eay ".sew" but likewle.e a'teev And tile faehloner of verse Cannot op hilS "Illgraa" with "worse' "Beard" earunclo not ehe earne 00 "heard"; 'Cord" is diffeemet from "weed"; "Cove is one bu6 "low" ia low; • "Shoe" 15 never eliyinect withe"foe." Thiale of, "hose," anti "dem," and "lese". - And of "geese," and also "elreeee." I Think- of "comb," end "bomb," and. "boinb"; -and ,"0511," • and "h,omm",01011 "eome"; -,And Since "pe'.y" is ,hryineel eyeltte- o„ay,,, • . Why int "paid" 'with "saieaa I'prayai "'good," Wo have "blaml,". and "feed," andi • is not proneueeed like! • "could.a - Wherefore "elene," ,but "gone,'" a. '"lone". Is the -re any reaven ddiewn1 ' 7.ho Nurr by• Flee: 'Altqselinena • CARBOLATED fETBOLBUM JEL1Y VER Y efficient antiseptic when used as a first-aid,\ • dre-ssing for cuts, scratches, bruises, hi - sect biths, etc. keep a tube in the house for emergencies. CREntROITGH MFG. Ctim.pamt (C 2800 ci.bot A,:amliciskted) pameamoseemesemseremeeemaa Doatatankittd expreemeth will beieg Par/ear iterIeeeelght to youe he, W Pie,Criegt one way,( Whateeie, Yeiit heusliAd 4,5064 al ,er , ea iaost cate alli444ilreq' eedilir to thoilnitokir041;.ii 'ri'yott• think Ot44461451'ilYeltig •P Acees ye Works Liti';fied Cleaners and Dyers 701 Yong() $f.. Toronto • 90 1717$141,FWA rem A Stnote ,yVIteoi Tractor and Ca iVator C•Ori1bIntd;, SyrywIliVzi does any work foi WI fee eed orhand hoo ean ha usod —Does Piave Times As MuCh, .;,>1•rotp. 000cooitbo f•c,..- the bait acrd home earclor---e, tabor sev,oe and meney ataltur for eVery Market garctelier„,a1u0oryinaa 944 ciit'taOr, s01i‘.11.1107 Uniferney Therough role alconembeal Cultleatloe., fen informatien aria leeserhittyo -Literature Agtnis Writs Now 52 COLaCifiNt onpt. TORONT'