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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1922-6-15, Page 7B isitra re ave * night -row long slime you ve "had delicious raisin ...11 breao.--since you've tasted that Meow, ' parable flavor? ' Serve a loaf tonight. No need to bake it. Just telephone your giocer or a bakery. Say • you want "full-fruitod bread.— geamously filled with luscious, seeded, Sun -Maid Raisins.' Tin; 'flavor, of thee raisins permeates the loaf. A calse-likedaintiness makes every slice ti cat. Sive it plain at dinner oras a tasty, fruited breakfast toast. ' ,'Make delicious bread pudding with left- over slices. _ i_Tse it all. You neednotwaste a crumb. Raisin, bread is luscious, energizing, iron - food, So it's both, good and good for you. Serve -it at least twice a week. Stott this good habil in your home -today. I3ut don't take -any but a /cal, full -fruited genuine raisin bread.' Your dealer will supply it if you insist. 5 .aid Seeaed aisins Make delicious bed,„ pie9, puddirms, cakes, etc. Ask your gro'cer for them. Seed An free book of tested recipes, Sun -Maid Raisin Growers Membeuhip13,000 Dept. N-43:3 Fresno ,BitiePackage Nativaiaisamaaaarsoaraiimpumar..osiitatas ant.001,4 • A. Touring Party. A correspondent wishes suggestions for entertaining' in a lane and un. fdrnisheci 1:001a. You might -have a Make-believe Tearing Party, Sending out the fol- lowing itrvitations.: tourbig PartY we've planned; inVited. - If yeti' Wear touring clothes we'll ali - be delighted. For Friday at eight of the dock •you are hid • • So bringakodalt pictures 'to show what , Arrange" he 1`00111 to lobk as much like a •garae as po.ssiblewithont the grease. The .boys in charge should %wear un' apahamriate . sighs, .Ohrlileingee, .adVertieehrients' of gasoline, tires and Other'.autoinobile • accesserie4.- ,Play any. gaingt desired, and -oaf `Upon ihoine who hav'e 'brought , Photographs to deeeriii'e the 'wiper- „ieimes. whiels these pictures illustrate: GiVe Petze' (a toy automobile). to the. Who; tells the mostimpoetible Yiva, 6oh1d alio play the old: fashioned Oahe Of stagetceacli, using' the parts of an anternebile instead of thae of the stage -Conch. ' • a "lunch -counter” winch tart be fixed up in one,cornet .Of the "garage," The menu should be Written' Out on order,.;blanks, on.o'itent. on a blank, Eatite sets at orders shOuld he given to the girls, . and their partners are'eN.Pelited to takdthe';orders, one at a, tifite,•'t'o the-',1uticlidettriter" where they 00V,tiOaS ef the'aitiele sgrifeefOr4ellie eoapleinust finith this .q,cotireel". 'be...foie'o'geingo Ter anything else. .As the:ft/ilia .calledsfer!. do . not altayss r‘evenible ,t.1.1rel.r. names, some eOtples'inak'firitc' it neceisary. tro' eat their loe-orean-tbefore the .sandaariches, v othera: may get,only;a. paper napklii on their firet trip. Here is: a suggested Ma, enand the, things they stancrfer Hen in ,the roadohielien sandwich- es. Cranks and lubricant oil—cucum- ber sahtlaviChesVtli &easing. Nifts to bolt ---salted peanuts. Snow a 'la skid---_,vandla ice cream.. Spare tit:es:a-doughnuts. Scorching juice-,• Ceffee',.ifigar Ball bear- ingeo, liveun s. • Pcbute proefs--ahard eatiOes.' -Chaftfi)18=Lpirlar 411/U1318AS, • • To reatehapartner* the earde fod the Mon 'should have sometathapWritten IMO' them, su0 as "empty radiator," trotrbleo" • "broken 'spring," .,rintl so On. ;The gialiar' eardissheyz the remedies ,foas,the ,ViribuS • troubles. Thtta; the first 'man 1.would And his partner in the girl :whose slip ',bore the words, •"water .free"; the second Refreshinents should be ',Served front would:hiant �r "spark plugs" and the next ,would: find .new spring." A great many 'things can happen to an •anternAille ana there is no dangca4of running out of troubles and their remedies. ' ats Wed With Metal A newly inv,ented process has made it praeticabIe to plate Weod with A Coating of metal, a thiliig hitherto deemed impossible. • By this means a plating of zinc or:lead may be ap- rifled to° the hull of a ship to pro- tect her against sidpwormsor to tele. gl'aph poles no wooden structures of • any kind which need- defense *against Woo 'than ea insects. •- ' Tha metal, in powdered form, is ap- apfied at so low a ten\peratUre that it • ei?) b safely used f coating even ,So " inflammable a anbstarum as It may De einnloyed for plating the wooden parts and cloth fabric of air- planes. Peeking boxes,can be -strengh- • erted and made water -tight by a metal spray aloe., the edges. IIigh structures that ore' eXposed to Weather, sach a -s bridgea aro with dit. ficultY pi:elected against rust, and' to' keep thorn wall painted is troublesome And expensive. On this account many bridges nowadays aro built of re -en- forced canicrite. It Stattetaral iron- Workwero plated awith zine by the -fiDitcyfrg Preerie* it wonid need no painting for a long time. ' ,2ziatip ',other 'Imre/It/one thi y. REPAEStNTATIVE, WANTeel, We will appoint a dealer In rent teWai handling complete Rtttlo Sets and Parte, „ Write at on C6 for yottr opperrtniilti, AUTOMA.T16 Thl.i..01-1'ON4: AND Twit 115.00so5ns. Ltd, 146 italiCitt4TO -- e ciz)w Puticile I3Y ROBERT 'X, 0. STEAD, (Co)yright The Idusson Book Co,), CHAPTER "You have the boy," ventured the "No,°' he aUSWal'el, 9,1al0Eit fiereely. "That weuld be different. I could stand it then. But I liaveri't jot hina and I can't get hini. Ile despises me because -Angelis° Istalce toe mach at times." Ile paused as though wonder- ing whether to proceed with this un- wonted confidence, hat the ache in his heart insisted on its right to hurnaa sympathy. • "No, it ain't that," Jie continued, "He despises We beaause aothin', Iteeni,e, Pm eighteen, an Eaglishman oceupiedslim second eleep- Lo thinks wasait. fair to his bet You could road an' write helter'n Mg berth in my coinpartment. As mother. He can't, understarn,d. He me __when You was -SiX'." we lay there, waiting -4w the train doesn't Imo* yet :that there's things, 6.,.; sic"Dectd63;iuguennuevger oguorptie isee.liseuhle?';cnechwe itiolesEtadrstt, Bbeera, icznanweact;,d juwmitpl:i —pulls and tugs of life, that i,ead a man as heinless "as a steer chokin' in Inc speeeh was ungrammatical'„ but ed.. out of bed and went down to the • his bask, I was like that.. :I wanted thought that due to ,carcles;s training platftrern in Anglo-Indian fashion, clad to be ,good to her, to be close to her, rather than to no training at all. Then I took to booze, as naural as "-ctil_wre,d go to sahoorm aea, merely in pyjamas and chimers. Ap- e tteer under the brandin' iron /oars mended, bitterly, "There ain't al prearling the immensely pompous 110. to drown his hurt,. But the boy don't echool ferty, Guest 1, tive station master, he upbraided him understanU4 Tbe <Ad man got itp and wouldn't have went' if cotiAd," he, in Fe Measured terms for -the long stOO.0 111,Osvastesn -window, watehing added ha, an afterthought, wishing to, halt. Through the window could the gold' of app,roaching sonset, 'gather bo.quite honest in the matter. "School,,, blear hint make his Protest:' on the' Mohn Mins. , . "Ho cleipises didn't -seem to cut no figure—until jus • me," Them 'after a long silencel"No-latelY-" ' "Thi5 'del" se Prfe3{11‘93andal°113' matter. I despise -myself," • "Ihst yeti have learned—some?" sho station -master. I shall certairrly re - long tie foothill troll, they wore still lourneYing together1owi the long, strange trails of the fatuCe; dint, , sionary, exquisite trails; rough) hard, eritel trailq hidden: ln -the XAeMittll tairag4, Of their YOUng hepafolnesS. • cro be emotinuccL) Politeness Overworked, The native a toia is perhaps the not polite fellow in the world, ea- peeially kiai the good fortune to bear sin official title, But, as Lord VroMric Ilomilton in his 'book "Trete There and Everywhere" ,,s'hows in this; wpd, unclutperonecl rides and in these acctount of a railway journey, his strange confidences whore sho was, a oliteness can be overtasked, girl and Dove was a boy, and all the 11 artificialities 'with 'which Society aims to protect itself had been atiipPed away, 1110,1* Was a Ciar41 sulVen- taro which added to the relish of the situation. , "ICS SU011 a woridmful life," the con- tinued,"One gets so strong and happy in "You'd soon got sick of it," he said, "We don't see nothin.'. WO don't, le rn We Were Pyurnevang saYS- freM Caleutta, to Cooch Behar and'itvere ob- liged' to` wait for a long, while that inorning at a big statielfUtWeen..the tw'o places, We avere:eictremelY anxl- out to catch 'another train at a June-. tion on the narrow-gauge roilway,aml were afraid. that the long wait wonkl cause us' to miss -it. A Joymp, baa10 doctor' asMroaelied and Placed continued, - , port it in Calcutta." a hand on his shoulder._ But Elden "Some. ,When r was a little kid my "Would you ea're, ejr, to 'enter ofe- was himself. again; 'rho ,eartains of fattier' useci't6 WOrk With me at CMGs., .ecial complain" in haelc kept for that his life. which he had drawn &peat for He leaaned me to read, a little, on to allaposolo a moment, he whippedstogether again Write my mine, an''a little more. But oB Go' . ' rudely, almolt violently, .and covered things didn't go right betvveen hint an' , _ , sto:ion master conducted him his confusion by plunging into a tale mother, an' he got tedrinkin' more an • ico of how he 'had led a •breed suspected more, an, just mama, hell. 'of it, we. through long passages to offat of cattle -rustling on a little cante/. of used to have al mighty fine herd of,the back. of -.the where the ten miles with a. rope about, hjs. neck steers here, but it's shot to piedesdlEnglislinian, entered 'a strongly word- ancrthe other end tied to the saddle. We don't putuP.hardly no hay, an' iri odcompthaint in the book. ,"And now," "He ran well," saki the olkl man, a bad winter- they, "die like rabbit. Ite aid, "may I ask when you inean chuelding _011i11 at the reminiscence. When WO sell at bunch the old rnan'll to start this infernal tnain?-" And it was lucky he did. was a stay, in town far a month or more,' "Oho the terain, sir, has already strong rone/' blowin' the coin and leavin'' the .clehts dee,arrthd „f..hee . five minuter.,,, The morning " after • Dave had go. But I'velaeen fixin' him this yeari . ' o' somewhat wonderfully contrived from I keep our grocery hills paid" up, „an train immediately folloWing the mail, a eaupie zjf .4eeiri4 pilled the bland native. / re- bronght in the borrowed saddle, Irene o'r two-, I sneak appeared, in a SOrt of bloome suit, away now an" then, an' with the money Fortunately, there was a freight the 'spare Skirt to which allusion hes Hoye a little to rattle in my jeans. My and some four hours afterwards our been made, and announced, a willing-. credit's good at any afore in town," big friend alighted from a brake van. nese to risk life and limb on any horse. that Dave might select fur that pur- pose. He pro:410'0cl her, witlif a de- pendable ino.u,nt, and their fi.s.,t jean,: ney, taken somewhat• gingerly along the principal trail, was accomplished without incident. It was the fore- runner of many others, plunging deep- er and deeper into the fastnesses of • the foothills', and even into the p011ee8 of the „very mountains, themselves. These long rides through' th.e ahnost unfrocked wilderness; frequently' aleng paths on- -which the .elernent of danger was by DO Means a mere fancy, and into .- regiona where the, 'girl's -salsa of distance and direction were totally confused, afforded her raany.,,s6delights on the .reiriarltable nature of her e.soort.allispatienee was infinite,,and, althotigh there.were no Silk trappings to'his Coutte.sy, it was a very genuine and manly deference he paid -her. She was quite. sure -that he avoirkl at any moment give-his,life if,needed to de- fend -her from ,injury -and accept the bransacidon asa matter cif.course. His 'physical ,endUrance Was inexhatatible, and his knew -ledge -of prairie atid fo-ot- hill seemed to her almost orteanny. When she had teen- utterly lost for hours he,would suddenly‘swing their horses!• heads abetitaand guide them home, With the ,accuracy ofothe goose Oil AtS flii"litS to the nesting- grounda., ITe read eiery. sign of Toot - paint, leaf, water, ,and sky with ugail- illg` ineight. 'He haa16. knoWledge' of habit's; and She ,had' first. thought hini igaorant, but as the days went by she had found in him a mine of wis. born Which shamed, her ready-made education. one was a Welty aecident. A Swiss naMed.fichoef, watching his children 'firing' a , noticed that' the bullets ciusliecl on the Wall produced O strongly adhering lead ecating„ 'Phis observation led him to make curio ex- periments with, small hob with, die- Ocharged at the wall at cleie range, .horined ther,enpon tentteions plating in spats: • The coot/dye:nee, firfallY • develened Out thii idea has a valved recept- .adle ler powdered Metal .(lead or zinc), which is forced out by. heated, gods passed through a, pipe. The,gas, under ' drives- o t the-- powderv pressure, u through a nozzle, in the form of a, spray; -with such violence that it fills Ilia smallest alerts of the srlrfalee struek And enVers flip latter, with a dense adherent platinps. ' Tho surface' to') bo plated .1s first cleaned With a sand -blast. So re- pidly ,eall the spraying be done that Lange surfaies are covered in a Short time, The ' pao,caes; • therefore, it rea,difly tand Move/naively available for use on struCtiiral ironVacirk of build- ings or !Midges!. Parte of machinery that are hard to got at may by this means bo'protected against rest; and it ie expected to prOve serviceable for plating the interior of vessels' utilized tn the chemical. industries, With. the help of SteadIS the pro. cesii: can' ho need to pro'dide Motel petterits ori4tUrifaldei, 0M7 Ployed. to advantage rim' the malting Of cloth/go and plinth* bliseka. 'Frein ono neglatiro Nock can rho intatood by 'the spraying' inethod in one hour thirty, finished bleeke-etmal tO albstre, • 010 gaoat ot thO earth deterteinktion; wina rkt44 1141110a, • At ter such 01 day they one day clic, mounted in a grassy opening: among the trees that berdered a monntain Csinyon,. , The , Waters of ages .had chiselled:a share pass'age .thratigli the rock,- end the.blue stream TI,OW swirled: in its ra-pid cour:SO a hinuired feet below.. Fragments .of rock, loo.smiecl bY the min and wind arid frost of cen- turies, had fallen from time to time, leaving sheltered nooks and shelves in the w,alls of the canyou. In One of these .erevibea they found a flat 4ene that „gave 'cOmfortable seating, and here.they rested .while the horses haii*Sed, their afterrio.on meal on the .grass aharve,Lfttle 'irregrdar'bits of stone had' brekeri Off 'the parent rook, and for a while 'they amused them- selves Wilth .tossing 'these int.o• the water, But both were consCious of a gradually inereas,ing tension in the atmosphere. For day,e, the, boy had been moody. It...was evident he was harboring semething that was calling thacugh his, nature for expression, and Irene knew that this aftetnoori he wo,nild talk of more than trees and rocks and foutpriats of the wild things of the forest. - "Your father is ,gettin' along well," he easd at length. • "Yea," she ausWered. "Ile haS had a good holiday, even with his broken leg,' He is looking ever BO much "You will be goin' away before long," lie continued. . -.,"Yes," she answered, soberly, and • "Thingsv about here ain't goin' to be the same after you're gone,' lie went On. bis Was avoiding her eyes and Industriorialy- thr4ing bits of crumb]. tafrock into the canyon.. He wore no coat, and the 0e0110 Of Ilia shirt was open, for the day Was wa,rm. Had he onaght, her' sidelong glances even his slow, self-deprecatia.g mind must have read „their admiration. But, he kept his eyes fixed on the green water, "Yoh see,,'' he said, "before you came it Was different,' I didn't knoW what I Wasamissin',- an' 20 it didn't nietter. Notbet whet I was dog-eick of it at timee,. but still I thought I was thought ;this was life, and, of course, now it ain't, .A.t least, it won't be alter Yoir're gone." - , seliloquy en it' bs ho turned it, over 110 her •"Thi fe, noW„ seeans eropty to you, All my old ife seems enintY, to' me. Thia scorns ;e.me the real life, out here in the foothills, with the trees, pinpi ond— sncl harg.ep,, Yon , She !tight;bwife ended the sentence tn.., rsy.tr* Wotilci have Come Muth Closet Win, and bosbn email truer, but .eonveritierialitYbad been bred into her for generations; and she,did not find'itpoSeible yet, freely fO speak the loth., Indeed, at she *might ef her tiq5flail here it, seetted id liar She had b'thenia ShatteleSslY Pii&riVentienal, Slio thought -0 16), aerreet-a.-"AlwaVS ''derahet dear" and Irene-still:filed to the note'of pride hie voice as hsa. saids this. The boy had real quality in him, "But I'm sick of it all,' he continued. "Sick of it, an' I wanna.get out." "You think you are not educated," she anisvered, trying ta Meet his out- burst as ta.ctfully as possible. "Per: haps yon are not, the way we think o.f it in the city. But I gun -s there'a" a .good many things you can't learn out books,. -and I guess you could show the city boys a good many thin -6 they don't know, and never will know." . For, the firit'atime, he looked hei, straight in the face, , His dark eyes Met her grey. ones. and demanded truth.. "Irene," he said,,"do you mearr that?" ' "Sate I do," she answered, "College coursea, and all that kind of thing; they're geed stuff, all night, but they, m.ake some awful nice'boys--real live boys, you krinw-into some awful dead' ones. Either. they ,get, the highbrow, and become bores, orotlie.ewelled head; and become Not all, you know, but lots of them. ,Aml then when. they *get out they have ,to start learmag the real things' a life—things, that •you'have'beerr leawning here for, ever so. long. My father says about ;the best educatioais to learn„te live within year income, pay your"debts,and.,give the. other fellow a .chance to, 'tfe the seine.. They don't chi learn that ,in college. Se when they get put they luive. to go and wolic'for somebody who has learned it, like, yonhave. Then there's the thinge'You do, jiist like yet were born to it, that they couldn't do to sav'e their lives. Why, -I've seen you smash six bottles at -a stretsh, you going full gallop, and whooning and sheeting we,epeld hardly' tell Whiell Wa 144,-7'Y= could Make more.money riding-ifor city petiole to look At than mciat'' of those learned fellows,With:letters', al her theli names like the tail of a .kita,. will ever 'see, But .1. wonldn't like you' to make it that way. There's mere usefuttirin.gs to do." • He was corriferted by this Speech, lint lie refcared to his a ceomplishinente maldestly. "Ridin' ant ain't nethin"," he said. - "I'm' not 40 sai'e," she • an.sWered. "Father. says the day 18 coming when our mountry will want men who can ehot and ride ine7re than. it will want lawyers. or professors! • -when it .d000, it eon caltaaa amine any sample.S submitted and will nie,",hesaid, and filiere„ was the pride do so withobt chaige. Such samples in his voice which comes to a boy who ,shOuld be accompanied by ',a abate- feela that in ,soire way lie can take a /ilea 45 to the conntry of origin. In isnuitelfee,,a7gcriold.; t, em the district ,Of origin ahould be stated is the Case -of North 'American woods 'Years latex. she Was to think of her if possime. nquiries an samp es remark and his answeo, conSecrated then in clean red blood. / They talked of •many things that afternoon,mnd when at last the length - Mg shadows weaned them it' was tirrie to be on the -way they l'ode long bailees in s.Jilence, Both felt a sense Ile was iii a furious temper. He had 'had, nothing whatever to eat, and, though it was ten o'clock in the morn- ing, was still in pyjamas and elippors, The branch train had Waited for us, for no ono seemed' ink any particular hurry; so all was well. A Flower Lessori. , To love a flower and leave it gasow- ing is a tesion we take tort to learn: , But when }earned, we have taught ourselves the wholesome .ar6 of self-' restraint, and learned bo resp44 the . _ riohts: -of others.• . "•• '. We want to admire. the beauties that. • grow by the wayside, hut 413 we do so, . must think .of 'the other felloW, climbing the uehill Way, and leave them for him to admire. 'Redently, a -gardener pla'nted a plot of Week -eyed Susanaby..the roadside in order that passers-by might enjos?,' • their beauty. . ..oste morning, he saw a latly,sto.p be- fore the patehand, with greedy, hands, rn.afce efforts lo.secuth tIM let. When asked to leave'just a few„She exelaim- -ed: "Why, I thought they Were grow- ing • And so, without.,.thinking, she, re- gatdiese. of all othea, would.eave PrAoltr.tteediartehzeemntadlia...sot. is tno uniusu-al hing' for-rperne collectors+ ...of rare plants to clear a ,whole district, ut- terly regardless of the many who. would be -content with even one sped- _ men.. •Identification of Woods. • The Forest' Pooduct Laberatories of Canada, ander the Forestry Branoh of the Department of tho Interior, are frequently requested by menufact- UTCM and others to identify samples of Caaa,dian and foreign woods. Iden- tification is made possible -by an hx- pert knowledge of the microscopic structure of woods and special me-: thods of preparing the material for examination, , Tho laboratories are equipped to ex - may be addressed te the Superintend- ent, Forest Preducts 'Laboratories of • Canada 760 -Univ.ersity 'Street, IVIont7 which, neither ventured to express, Living for yourself alone, working that they had traelleti very close in for yourself alone, you will be fore - the world VT their laopea end sorrows doomed either to oblivion or to infamy. and desires. 'P0018135, os'.theY,l'od5 --Mr. Addington Bruce, Tractig Heirs to Lost Malley 'Iliore is treasure' In Louden await - 'Ina the tak'Mg.. MillionS of pounds of "lost Matey" is, hidden" away in the t treasiiry, and se,fiii• 'as is known no.bedy owns it.'. Every three^ DrequentIV It is the'case that a year „ .yeara the'Cliancery Divisiqn of the or two years is spent on. a. successful gatioa worth while, and to got this In- formation a girl la employed in the Court, Records office digging out all possible details. :atgii court of JuStico.:14 London is- sues a loag list of the various funds in court to which there are. no knowa clainiante. These hinds have collie . into the couat in cli erent ways, some of them in large amottals, Sallie in small, and in evverY CASe",the' ramiey 11' the legal l'arliament of 1723, , ao; seatoh for an heir. The search oc- caelonally reads to Anierica or the 13ri- tish colonies on the trail of an heir Who perhaps left England 100 years The authority on wbich the "dor- mant funds" are held la in an act of property of Seine Person, bat the 11,a, poison tbinke lie or Ole is the identitY of the owner Is. nnynown., it part a the fatale 11 10 These amounts; collectively 41.'e 01111 NT, cult to gel 11. 1Preieuent- known so • "tbe dOrmant funds." The 61c1 Write lit and M01°60,8°1/1(3 money hoe been accumulating for 20d Such proof as it eopY Of a letterwritten by a father or a grandfather, aeaert= !"1'lle clamant o.todg' have been the log that hie heirs could got a10,000 by baSte "for the ,spsieging . up' in:tondon writing the 'court, 'mile Is too little of a strange profeaSion whoSemein- nroof,, hers tatn a, living by' tracing down um: • After'all, the belt Way 1.0 get meney 'suspeoting heirs and offering to prove Out orthe "dormant fund," if it is due, to them that they are °whets of for, Is to put the matter Into the hands ot tenet; it is no eaSy prefesSion, A tre- the prolesiiloilat treitetioe hunteta. tireGthri ofi work Must be They knoni that hiller 'proofs are re- done in _settielting 'ter an heir._ The mitred. • first preeedilte of the Men, 0 to 'die, Nob and their alio/110S by fraud sa,otai waaaeaea, ,?o A6.461141,, eover toad is ef 50 eoaaa oho oeo hex, war ohild et thog; ,largo,mougil amonnt to twos Investi, aro employed, hul ,onell efforts are rarely Siteces8ftit • . Tremendous Trifies 0„ur physical existence/and well-be- ingjdefamd,ori a aeries- et tremendous ',Wlthout'bhe inetedibly eiriall specks of (lust stisPended in the air, we ,would be dePriYed of the beauties efdiffused light and 'the bine of '.Worse still, there wenid.bo 'no, rain, for' WI-1.- tei-vapolir condenses, round these tiny specks, to forin the drops' that .even - fall as, rain., ..Watliout the, electric cpark-,=-Eintlar- ing abOul-the thditsLodth ,patt .of socond—hlgh, 'speed gasoinio ,ongines Would he 'ossible IlutOperhadia •the most amheeded, everyday- trifle ;IS the film of' oil'. ex- isting ,between tho m.oYing' Parte of eYoky piece el machinerY in 1110world. NO thicker -than a eigarettelPaper, this film, of oil done prevents a machine from becoming ,art in/movable mass..of Metal,' Witt -in -tit that -greasy coat be- tween the roVOIVing shaft and its bear- ing, or betiveen a Sliding rod and the guide oVer which it travel's", an engine wOuld'be seriously datnaged, perhapS wrecked, in a few Minutes. Although so thin, this layer of 'oil is, nevertheleas, trernendoaslY and clings to the metal surfaces in an extraordinary manner. There may b5. a weight a two hundred,tons on tile shaft, yet a, fikn,or;ag. one:thousandth ;of an Melt' thiek -Will Support it; and even,,,with this ;enornous,weight, the oil will not be Wiped off when the shaft revolves. ,• 'The maintenance of this sleeve of' oil is. one a. th6 Moit important -duties of tholes in charge of Machinery-, and all kinds of ingenimis delriees aro used to keee iip a regular supply of oil.' A eimple and clever automatic lubri- Cater tensed for oiling the shafting in: all large worlts, in Whidlt there may be thousands of bearisige. 16 we/ire on exielly the' sarne princiPle. att stylogisphic Pen—that is, it only surf - plies oil -when- the Shaft .le running, just as the Pen onlY .stipPlies ink when you hre writing with it. ' - In the high -Speed turbinee now moil on -hoard -ship' the failure 'ef, the, oil supply -for thirty seconds znight wreck .thaMachine.; ' When the enormous aniomit, of ma- chinery in the world is taken into lie- eount, -and when it is vomited that every. moving portion of 'the machin. ery is floating ea -films .of oil, it seems that this matter of lubrication is really a tremendous trifle." • That's Easy. Miss Jones (seriously): "Do you know who -is the laziest person in this room?" Percy (innocently): "I durino." Miss Jones: "You ought to. Who is it, when everybpdy else is Maus- tronsly studying, sits a'nd' watches the rest or looks out of the whidow?" Percy (brighbenina): "Why, you Miss .Tones. , • The Mediums. I wandered o'er the hills:to-day; Far from the city's smoke and din, Far frorn the walls that shut inc in. I yearned fo 'know. I longed toj-see, I hoped that' I -le Would speak to me. But only one snia bird sang sweet, And grasses whispered at my feFt. 1 .Vft5' theire a 'God above my heall,r And might I then his face behold? But lust a skY of blue and gold Plas all I saw—and wondrous sight Of fearless lairdi -in circling flight. • The ;blossoms of h 'cherry tme Came sweetly drifting. down'on • , As I lay' stretched upon fho earth, I closecl my .eyes that I might bestir • The So und of footsteps dosiWing near. The gentle breeze that kissed, MY.olteelt -Seemed trying, oh, so hard to sp ak, The trees were whispering overhead. I wonder what it was they .said? 'But now that ant back again" I "somehow seem to know that • Saw more than just the earth and ilfelal as if my soul had heard, Although there 'came no uttered ward. - But I' no longer _doubting go; Beeause I knovi. I3ecause' I knoW, , —Maud Morrison Huey, All That Matti‘t:ed; A woman who was staying at ear house acoldenttilly 'stepped on my nephew's toe and said to him, "Pardon me, Bobby."' "Oh, ,that's. all 'right. '''1" didn't shine my shoes td -day," answered. Bee latekoopers will find, by Woking up our catalog; everything need. est for tho produdtIon of honey. Ruddy -Mfg. ,Cfr. Ltd.' Brantford, canada ,Successors, to Ham' ariji. Co. Ltd. Bond fOr ' SY' .e,Mils.A gsaiatotiti.? gvalsirallys 1 on $185.,Tra,ctor °Tonto). Pays for Itself Ito or Sityed prywileel enagles ono otaplopo fivma 1ttl1ej as, much Wtfiki vvifeal 40e. Oefore tlio growing season- la far Sprywheel will haVe !Ore than 'paid fOr itsolf by the labor exAoose saved. • .Agenciea open in emu() loc Ades. ' 101 cod..0-rneoNF:, Evr. , PRY HEEL, irogoNTo