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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1922-7-12, Page 6Had,Your IroY0 7'odely? The Cow Puncher oast It- Delicious Ratsin Bread TIO this some morning and surprise the _ILI- family: Serve hot raisin lona ,at break- fast, made from full -fruited, luscious raisin bread. Let your husband try it with his cof- fee. Hear what he says. Your pacer or bake shop can supply the proper bread. No need to bake at home. Made with big, plump, tender, seeded Sun - Maid Raisins, and if you get the right kind there's a generoils supply of these delicious twit -meats in it. /mist on this full-fruitcd bread and you'll have lusciouS toast. Rich i11 energizing nutihnent and iron - great food for laisiness men. Make most attractive bread pudding with left -over slices. Tim e's seal economy in bread like this. Try tomorrow morning. A real surprise. Telephone your dealer to bend a loaf today. Sura -Maid Seeded Raisliris Make delicious bread, pies, puddings, cakes, etc. Ask your grocer for them. .Send for free book of tested recipes. Sun -Maid Raisin Growcr,s, embmhip 13,000 Dept. N-43-1, Freeev, CA,f. Barring Out Burglars From Bank of England. • If you would see tile marvels of a modern: strengeoem you should pay vi,sit to the, Bank of En,glancl, where, Y°11--0--Te fortiniatee you will bo steena the strongThold iniwhieh the "Old Lady of Threadneedle Street" guarde bee Az you stand in Ms room, surround- -ed by untold riche, you will be told that the deer by which you entered is of ,steel eo tough that no drill effilld ,more than Scratch its surfeee;^ if is 'a. foot en thickness, and weig,ha fotiltee.n Beneath your- feet is water. seven , feet deep„and below that abed of con- crete neatly severi yarde 1 thickness: Over your head are a ohniTar miniature lake and a similar,. concrete bed, top- ped by 'thick armier-platee vilitch, pan defy alike drills and exPlosives. But the Beek of England has.not al- ways guard&I ite tredeures etnee51sre- '1Y. Many yeara ago when the di ors flattered themeelves that • their stmnieereeM Was absolutely impregn- able, they',ieeeived orie day a 'dirty, illeipelled eat% which mai thuS: "Yon think your bank, to safe, but I know better. I've been inside these last two Mies, and you knew' Ruffin ,..tbcqt it. 'But 1 am net a thee'', 00 If ran ‘will ifl7g.t me. 4.n. t4e greet, tenare room with all tiennioney at twelve:tot nite, FIl expleee alli to you. _ Let'only, it &tin alone, and say mailto no- body:" As a matter of aniese,d- curiosity,° two, of the directors deeided to -keep the midnight tryst, and enteeedetire vault just before the "witching hour." Exactly on , the stroke of twelve noises esine to their ears, followed by a voice asking them to extinguish their lamps. TMs was done' wiessetippa stops advanced towards them' through -the darkness, mad they were soon lis- tening -to the strange storytelt], by the man who had written the note of warn- ing. , He was, he explained, a sewerman. While engaged on his work Inc noel. discov,ered a wny inep the vault by the simple process of raising a square reene In Its floor. It woeld beim beenthe ea.siest thing to plun- der ate' strong-rcona as much 50 ho pleased. But he wos an limiest 1100.0. Needlesee to say, the clireettee wen; delighted by the Man's. honesty, and he returned happily to the sewer, with the preinice of a life.pension ac reward. An Old-TiMe Butchering. _ The butcaerieg aeaeon in olden days was a time,' of, earthy sandwiched be- tween tberheat and toil of the summer end, the cold Of tbe'vvinter. The family at -whose house the butchering was to take place weeld7 be 'up' -long before daYlight,Some of the near neighbors and the lauteter would be on hand be- fore Sonriiie0 to alai) ',hi' the killing, the sicaleing and the Cleaning. The other neighbors would come during Ito early forenoon, in plenty of time, to hell) with the cutting, the lerd, rendering and the eausage, making. Everyone from the oldest -to ,the Yenegase came; soliote attendadee neceisarily-suffered. All the farmhouses had ,,an out - kitchen, and it was there that the men worked. As a rule the women stayed eloe.e to the house; but now and then one of them, -eineons to know how „the butchering was going, would slip- out to noreettgaite. :She was leerily if she got baek without having ore or more pligtaits,tiedto hen ' „ Livery community had its butcher. He vele • often a small farrii, owner, usually happy-go-lucky, cos -free and jelly. At a butchering he was the boss. He killed the pips, decided when the Water was of the- right tempera- ture, and when the lard, was e.00ked, eeeeoned and mixed the sausage and cut Out the "big .pieces of nieat. 'I -lo Worked all the time, for he was paid for hieservic,,es at the rate Of ten cent tor every pig that he killed; he, re; Calved alse a gift (If sausage end i beat If he butchered for a large be Mght- earn as much es .a dollar a day, '' About eleven o'clock one night, be- e a, let tchei, ing J. certain farmer and his sons heard a commotion out in the pigpen. On inveeeleating- they were astonithea to find that -all five of their big fat plgs had been killed. Ap- parently thieves had done it, .but had been. frightened 'away, before they cculd load the' pige ou a wagon. ' To wait until morning before butch- ering would mean an inferior grade of perk foo' the. winter, The only thing tor the farmer 03 do was to butcher at °rice. Warking en the moonlieht, he and his Sons; hadthe five pigs cleaned and hung up by three °clack. Then they rested retied the kitchen stove until this buteher aroused them at five They told him what had happened, and all went out to look at the pigs. To the, r great ismay the inge were gone!' Probably the thieves who liad hillecl 111m t I ewere he ones Vi in finally stole them, Music by:wireless telephone itenseoj by one American dotter to eoothe his patient; while unacr treat:Ilene - "este In Faris, When a street ear is f the drivee bangs out a sign saying "Complet," and the ecu does net stop for /mew/igen, A time-honored joke on the, green touriet is to tell him of the wenders ef "C,ornplet", and direct hini where he can get a car for ' the plaee, Of eourse, the toe'riet Waite an exasperating time for a "Oomplet" cat to take him eboord. This dOLIbtlei.4S 115 sees the joke, and woeld lfice to find the jolter. A Lulia4y. Sleet), baby, Mem>, Playing. ,thne must end, The cattle all whisper, passing by, Boughs above you bench • Sleep, baby, sleep. Sleep, beby, Sleep, Stars yoer guard will Itee,p, Earth beide a solenin-husb,' for _ you, Solt falls, the tender dew, for you. , Nothing MOTO Will Weep, Sloop, baby, sleep. Mann inseet-cafehing Miele have bristiee eroded -their nosuth , BY ROBERT 3', 0, STEAD, (Copyright The Ittl'u ets o It Book co,): SYlioesie of Preceding Chaptere, s famMIS Specialist, and 1 is daughter Irene, Meet with an acid- ( me while on a metoting tide in the feothills of Alberta and find a refuge the cabin of the Elden remelt where -dwell David end his dissolute father. The girl and boy promise to meet egian In the future. After the father's drunken death David goes to seek his fortuno in town and loses all his money at a pool table. , CIL?, PTER Almost the first persen lie met waS the stranger who had schooled him in the gamblieg "game the -night before, He greeted Dave cordially; his voice had a soft, seductive, almost feminine quality whielf Dave had not noticed 01 their whispe.red conversation in the pool -room. There was soeiething, at- tractive about his personality, some- -thing whiuli invited friendship and even confidenee, and yet beneath these emotious Dave felt a' sense of dis- trust, as though part of his ,nature rebeele.e againet the acqueintheeephip. "That was' the rottenest 'Itek''Yod, had last night," the stranger was saying'. "I never saw the beat Of it. I knew you were WT011g the moment you had your han0 down, but .I couldn't butt in then. I was hoping you'd' stay and raise him -next time; you might .have got your money bael that way." , "011, I don't mind the money," said Dave, cheerfully. "I don't want it hack. In fact, 1 figure it was pretty well spent," "Lots more w1. -e it came from, eh?" laughed the c her, "You're from the ranches, I s.ec, and I suppose the mice of a steee or two doesiet woccry- you a hehes worth." "From is right," Dave replied. "Pm from them, an' I'm not go -he back. As for money -well, I spent my last nickel fer breakfast, so I've got to line up a ,job before noon." The stranger extended his hand. "Shake," he said. ,"I like you. You're no squealer, anyway. My .name is Ceinvarcl, ?" Dave told his name, and shoolc hands. ConWarl offered his eigarette box, and. -the two smoked for a few Irian -tents in silence. , "What kind cf. adob d ,you want?" Cenwaed asked at length, ' "Any Itind, that pays a wage," sail Dave. "If I don't lilce it Pli check it as ecion as I can afford t' be par- tielare but Met, new I've got -to get a grUb-stake." know the :fellow that runs an employment agency down here," Con - ward answered. "Let's go down. Per- haps I can put you in right." -Conwax,d, seolte t'o the manager of th,e ernployinent agency and introduc- ed Dave. ' "NothingsVery choice on tap to -day," said the 'em,playment mam "You can handle -horses', I suppose? -v- • "I guee,9 I can," said Dave. "Some." ean place you delivering coal. TWILIT dollars a month, and you board With the, boss." take it," said Dave. The toss proyed th be one Thomas Metford. He owned half -a -dozen teams and was engaged in the cartage bus'- inese, specializing on. coal. Ile was a man ot big f,rame, big , head, and a Vocabulary appropriate , to the 'pur- poses to: which he applied it. Among his otherpossessians were a wife, num- .erous etildecen, and a house and berri, in which he beaecled his beasts of berdere including in the term his hie men, and his -wife, in the order, of their, valuation. The chil- dren were a by -'product, Valueless until such time as they also would be able to work. Dave's duties were simple enough. He had to drive, a wagon toea coal yards -where a very superior • young man, with a collar, would express eur- prise:that he had been sp, long gbee, and tell hint to back in under chute minter so -and -se. It appeared to be always a matter of greart distress to this young man that Dave did not know which chute to. back under until he -wes told. Ilayieg becked into po- sition, a door was ,opened. Theite was a fiction., that thet_coal ,in the bin should then run into the wagon box, but, as Dave at once discovered, this was merely a fiction. Aside front a tee, atcommodatinn lumps near the door the coal, had' to he s.hoveNed. When the Fax was judged to be full the wagon was driven to the scales. If the, load were too heavy some of it had to be thrown off, whi'e the young man with the collar passed remarke" appropriate to the occasion.. If the lead Were too light less distress was experienced. Thom Dave hal to drive to an addeees that was given him, shovel the eon] down a chif.e located in the most inaccessible position :the premises afforded. and return to the coal yard, where the young man with the caller would facetiously inquire whether Min' Blank had invited him . . in 1 aftoneen lea, e he had been 'waitine- for a ehan,ge hi the weather, Conditions .in the boardinss,hOuse, had the ysitin of distracting. Dave's 51 teniitn fr•un the rnpleneantr CSS Of 111S Werk. Mrs'. D:etforel, handicapped by her immerses offsnring, embP:tered 1",y (Ile 1 i'vv-Tence et her eon- tribni:ion - fee S'ate, and d;sboar:.- eneel by drudge -7 anti everwoelt, hadi leng ego ceined to place any store on' rersonal annearance .or even clean- linese:. As Dave watchet1 her elovenly shuffle to and from the kitchen, pee - ceded and perseed voung Metfords in all degrees of childish innocence, hie mind flew back. to dios recollec- tions -of hieown mother, and the ouiet, noiseless order of their home. Evee in the latter days, when ha and his father had beer' anything but model housekeepers, they had never known such squeler as this, 1Vletforci's attitude teemed les wife flectuated feel) coarse huntor'to bru- tality, but there wasleft, in the woman fie -sserelt of spirit to resist, -With neither tengue nor eye did she make (ley reset:nee, and her Seething:, bark end loath -were nesthee hastened nor delayed by ilia efeasere of- her lord, Hee bearing wee'that of one who hes (1101(10 the litst dret,s of hitterno4, for whom 05 11.N'..?ible chnilp:,0 Of CO1101201 cee be weete, Tier indill'erenee Was 10, The sleeping that:emendations had the virtue of simplicity, The Metroael tribe was hotned in a I orin-t5 Svhish et:emceed nee wall of the kitcloen, an,1 the eight boarders slept 1:Nisei's seer the main ease ot the hcrose, 'The robin Was not loos -go, but it had four corners, and in. each COrneT stood a cheap iron bed with talesor Spring and neuete" mat trees, The eo4ling eerie too ,high at any Pait, sloped at the Walla ahem; to the edges of the beds, •Ono tab e and waeh-betsie heti 'to serve foe Ole eiteritoatheir t,eaa gllt 'flcd''gereTthcr'sa* rgiA•vmerriltth l*In lP tear ablutions altogether on perform them in the borne:ten:tell at the berm All Metfore's einpleYeee,. with the exception of 10040) were fOreigners, more er 1c 'incoirverstint with 1110 Englith language. Sorimerhat to b surprise, they maintained an athittele of superiority toward hien carrying on their coriveretrbieee in a streeee tongue, and elbowing Irina little pa ,t in their eomnion life, Dave'S' which lied aleveye been accueboined to receive and be Teethed, on a bafila a Absolute equality, rebelled violent er aeainst the intangible wall of exclu- sion which his' felleev-worlterel bel about themselves, and as they had Shoves uo deeire for his eon -Many, 1 o reteliated by, showing etill leee theirs, with the result that he found himself very much alone and apart from the life of his new Surroundings. , His week and sapper were over by seven o'elock. each evening, and now was the opportunity, for him to begin the schooling for which he had left the mech. But he developed a suddee disinclination t,o .make the start; ho was tired in the evening, and lie found it much' more to, his liking to stroll down town, smoke cigarette's on the street corners, or engage in en oc- casional game ef pool. In this way the weeks went by, and 'when his month with Metferd was up he had neglected to find another position, so he continued where he was, 'He was beinggradually and unconsciously submerged in an inertia which, how- ever much it might hate its eresent surroundings, had not the spirit to seek a more favorable .env ironment. So the .fall and -winter drifted along; Daye had made few acquaintances and no friends, if we except,Conwad, whom. he 'fxequently met in the pool- rooms..., anciefor whom he h,a,d develop- ed a sort of eittachinene, Hie firet underlying eense of distrutet had' been lulled* by closer acquaintandeshiP Coaremed's mild,manner ee- ductive voice invited frieaship, and it became a customary thing for the two to play for smell stake, which, Dave won as often as he lost. • One Saturday evening anDave vas on the way to their accustomed:resort, he fell in with Coeward on the street. "Hello, old man," ,said °onward cheer- ily, "I was just looking i02" you. Get two tickets for the show toenight. Some swell dames in the ,cherus. Come along. There'll be doings." There were two theatres in ' the town, one of which played tc, the better-elase residents. In it anything of a risque nature had to be preSented dvith emtain'trimmings -whieh allovred it to be classified as eet," but in the other house no such restrictions exiet- ed. It was to the latter that Conevarcl led. Dave had bee» there before, in the cheap uppergalleey, but , Conwand's tickets admitted. to' the beet seats in, the house. Dave had adopted town ways to the paint where he changed his elothes andeput on a, white' collar Saturday evenings, Odle found him- self amid the gay rustle end perfumes of 'the orchestra floor with a very' pleasant sem.% of being eomebotly =- Ong °thee somebodies, The orchestra -played a swinging in,: to which his foot kept tap, end presently the cur- tain went up ancl. the show was an with h rush of girls and- color. • It was an entirely new` experience, From the upper gallery the .actors and actresses alwaye seemed more or less impe.rsorial end abstract, but here they were living, palpitating human beings, almost within hand reach, certainly. within eye reach, as Dave presently discovered. There was ra trooping of ,girls about the , stage, -with singing' and' rippling laughter and sweet, clear 'voices; then a sudden change of for- mation flung a line of garde right across behintl, the footlights, :where they tripped. merrily through metioes of mingled grace and acrobatics. Dave found himaelf .regarthng the yonng woman ilmnediately before hisn; all in white she was, With some s.cintilatinee, material -that sparkled in the, glare ef the spotlight; then suddenly.she was in orange, and pink, and purple, anl maevei, and.baeleagain in white. And 1th ough she performed the vorano Sten:3 with smiling abandon, there was in her dress and manner a mode -1 y which fascinated the bey with a sub- tlety which a more ,treckless appear- ance would have at once defeated. And then Dave Meleed in her face. In was: a pretty face, notwil-Mtandii.g its greese-paineesycLt smiled right into his eyea. llba heart thunseed be- tween his Elou.',jers as though 11 would drive all the air from his lungs. Shbsmiled at him -for him! Now they Weso awa:v again; there were gy- rations about the stage; he alriloqt lost her in the maze; a young men in fine clothcs rushed in, and was epparettly being Mobbed by the geelse and .said some linee in a eripid vome. which Dave's ear had not been trained to catch; end then he danced, aboet- with one of them --the very One -with his onel -Iitly,.how nimble she nest lie wondered if she knew the young seen very wel. They .seernel very friendly, But he supposed she lasel ta do that anyway; it was part cf her 'lobe it wag all., in the play. Certain y the young man was very clever, but he, didn't like his looks, Certeinly he could dance very Well, "I ceeld mel'e him :lance, cliffenent to tho tune of a, six-shooter," Dave said to himee'f,i, and then flushed a little.. 'Diet wes silly.Th,e YOnng man was paid to do this, too. 81111, it looked like very good jele, It Iooltdcl like a very :Smell lie•tter job thae. shovelling coal fce Mefferd, ' Then thero was a station breek- away in the dance, end the girl dis- appeared hehied a foreat, and the mobbing of, the yoting mah eeeme- meneed DaVe supnos,ed she had gone to rest; dencirg like that eins,t be hard en the wind, He tound little to inteeest him new in 1,,,d01 Wee gding ool en the stage. It seemed rather' fothiele They Wore just capering teemed and being ltheise. They woro lot of seeonderaters, And the yemig inee-it was nlein 115 dide't care /5 weit foe these; he Wee jest doing it, because Ise had to, There Was a vaseet seat in feent. He Wished the girl he. hind the forest erteilid efatne desert end rest, there, alien the could see the shOW herself. Thee she edithl See— , (To be eottineed.), raclor of God. I%JIe» reeked 'Palmetto, leekten from the etudiee, "how do you know illeene IS a Clod "VVhy .w/eitt makeeyou um( tbu qu- tica', Do yoke dobe the estieteece of "Well, I heard, one of the etudeate say thet bad, been reeding a book that leaved eenelesively that yeti could know netliing about thee nor even, be eure there le a Ged, Ho said that, if there were a Gad, Ho Thm out - 4e of the world eel of each a lettere that, we could ppt iolow Him. To the any way really to know?" "Well, my bey do you reinmenee fee ether daY that „Yoe vvere laugleng about Rebineen Otheee'e dispute at discovering that there wero other per- seua 00 the Aland bootees himself? elow Ma be diecover them? Did lie fiee theet? No; he discovered Ono track ot 11 bare foot in the Band, aed he knew that 1,1 could not be his OWn. HO knew that only a ireman beteg cored Ileavo, mai4e,11, and ho knew teat whoever had tuade It could not be far off, for the tido had eat yet reached it All thee° 'theme he knew to be true, tertilfough he had not seen ,a human be- ing -within miles of the ielaud. And the lreerWledgo was all meted front a neark In the eand. "Ie one print ,of a bare foot in. the eand le absolute' proal of the existence and presonee or a huMan being, whet am we to supeitee ,wilsen, ere ffee the prints of the Master's shoe, as Initiyan 'cane it, coves -deg , !the whole wide world? We see a mIlilon creatures that only God could make. We see on me ;altar), end in valley the Print of the finge,re. of Go?, ..Werseeen millien Hely- ore anti plamts and trees that only Ged could make peer. We see all the eivereand fthe eprlaige 'of the -world fed from the pity: We.see a geeat verge, yealeaffly made' 'andordered frpm the tiniest tipeek to -the greatest, of ell the worlds. Wbaft do all those things meen-theee uPon mil - noes of footpriatte ha -the °clay of the world? They meads God, livieg, pre- sent, ruling -and loving! They mean Goa and nothing else." As a IViam,Thinketh. If a Plan thinks every ene is against se,47.iheo.; wili b eeezIe beiugiri;l tioituireatery, t ethveeea 0 one is his friend, he will treatthem right, unconsciously, and they Soon -will be les, friends,. The man weer lives bbs daily uSa aecoedoing Willie formula has in'his make -Tip 00 spark' of sound arid true philosophy that will make his life brighter. It, we nut Oen 'all the relations with our fellows, a bill moo - sure -of friendliness and good will, we axe pretty eure t,o get it baek, full* and overeoseing, On the other hand,' ifsa morn IS eueeielons of everybody, eveey one will be eusploious of him.' The inan veto gees about looking for a eget Is surer to get licked some day, good and elenter. True friendliness it founded ose. elar oeflty. And sincerity Is ablaut the only thing in the woaddet,liat ean't beecoun- terfelted, The ,tropule,e toward triend- liness springs from the very soulmf a The World needs friendlinese, and kindness, and good -will. Not Sundays onlyelnet , every day in the week, a,nd threry hoer 00 11118 day. Thiek friendly. thmighte-. If you've got a soul, don't be astemed of it. Bring it into the office With you. For the oval is- the source and fountainshead el every good and .worthy impulse. Put your fthth Sas men, . Believe they,exe your friends., arid they will be. Not Popular. Little Geoa•gie Goode wae etending apart from all the other he.ppy boys, who were playing ai only happy, boys Call. • - "What's the matter, saner" asked thpa,sserby. "Why don't you play with Ole rest of the boye?" ' "They don't want- me to play with replied -the loneleeboy. bitterly. "What's the trouble, that the other boys flen't Want y011 to play with them?" the stranger pertheted. "ffrey've fmnirl out semethin,e about me," the lad firMVePeil.; taning hard to Ice* bablt the tears. "Was it something bad?" 'They thinir so. But I can't hMp It!" the bee defended himeelf. "dome on, tell nie all about it," he was ergol. "Maybe I ean beep you,' "N:5+ You esset bele me."- • lye,? te-Il me, ern way. The boy heeitated for a in.omentebut decided to eenfirlo. "Well, sir, the (ether beye eey that I am a softy because Inn -ane ho gulp- edlard-"I'M tvoin 155111 a gill!" "Yes," seed the quiet little man ilie corner, nnyeamg bee is the MO.,S peogeessive men I know. Always te to the niMuto be is Why only Ince night he sent in to ask if he might berrew my wieelese Teething sot," d tins QM CHUN MOWN liminceo P. A Bubble PArty. I A flock of little rainbaserecoloredi, disks en a eonrespondence card hethr the keynote of the Bubble Party, espe- I eially an' one disk on each need bore a -grinning little face gush as anyib,oely can draw in with three dets for eyes end nose and 01 perenthesie mark en' ltS sole for the mouth. A couplet pre- eeded the date and place: Fun" is what we're all of us after,,. So ceme bubbling over with joy and laughtee. Tile time was a warm Bummer even- ing, the plaice ewas a big lawn, the guests were mainly a lot of young folks who liked getting t,ogether fin* a jolly time. , Ameng the trees, the Veat ealored bubbles, were strung round paper lanterns of yellow, pink, •green, arid lavender, eraduemg et festive settieg for the light frocks of the girls, con- trasting with the darker attire of the lbeYa. - Having been asked to a bubble party no tee was surprised to see eoepelnabble pipes passed around and big bowls of soapsiele set on con.yene lent stands. Had the anedern eoarp- bubbling pipes holdang the soap been, Wed, 710 soameeds weuld have been requirect-neerely -clear water. Theyomig hostess proceeded to tie pink iibbens around some areas, ane blue around others -having an equal number a pinks and blues and an equal number of girl's endr boys, both on each side. A tennis net stretched across an open spaCe divideclethe two groups, an umpire and a scorekeeper took their place, and after a little eeelinvireary practice the bubble eoriteert was one Each girl blew a hubbie which it was , the cluty of a 'boy to blow across the net. Meantime the players on the ap- posite side tried to,. blow the -bubbles back so they wouldn't mine over. Stxiking at the bubbles was not al- lowed. This game made for a great amount of -huffing and putliug, whism proved highly humorous, and got the girls to leugleng so that they lied tilffieelty in puckering their mouths for blowing the huble'es. Any bobble which eroseed the line scored one for the side that blew it. The secee Inc each side wan carefully kept, and annommed later in the ovenhig. The next eoniest WaS Pet blowing* rings, but blowing through rings. A big hoop evraeped with woe,' strips was stneended from a tree, and thc twos grones--the pinks and the blues -- teak intnS, member by member, blow - leg a bubble feel Seeable it through the hoop. The side scoring the most bebbles threligh the hoep wes vie- teeloes, Then began some jolly twosefee sleets, aisle ad boys inatelied up for Peetners, and then each couple had to blew a men.etrous bubble together, The way to do it is for ezch to stert .4- ...-. blowing ore, the two being neer to- Be free fiend Faun. Theta - of &offerers Lave been relieved 11,5950, Neuralgia, Neurits fic3alica, Lumbago outl Gold, Ly New I Life Remedy. Countless grateful testbrmal- als received during tile nasi twenty-five years from these benefitted by "New Life." Does not centaxn any harmful drugo, Pleasant to take attcl dots not upset the digestion. One bottle for Oue Dollar; Six bottles for Five Dollars. 14/lailed dirett to Cusi,onters. "fife Tile1tte4u (En moan 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto Canada gether, and the hubblee will gradually tench each other end unite into one lame enc. Everyleady hed funnes, with to- beggen tabbies, blowing theM to roll (leen a cleth Coveeed incline such ae a, glorified hening boned. . The saneVerel Wiesil of the Buletles maae Seine trick bel.efes, such as semi e bra:eine renor'se bubbles, danc- ing be'sla".cs 1111d a bubble chain -a Seal eebble Wheu event ety had bubbled over sufficiently the seepeues b,owls VnTe removed and the little tables utilized (1 05 serving bebbling refreshments hi buffet fashice. Out ceme traye of tall glaseos filled, with feethy ginger tile end grepejuico bldaol fruit s.aled 'With a fiterY cream deeeseng, sandwiches, and final- ly, hells of pink (strevrberry) ice Mem. Neapolitan ice 00010, it5 PninbOW Strinea, w031d tiler) haVe been 111 itonpang, If anyone owns the glen sherbet glrisses, ireideseeni, tie bubbles, they are lovely for holding' the ice cream. Dateing or '0001 10115' Mete) genies may roliew the refreslitnenes. Some Siteplo Tisia 1Tiektuy-eut Cake is net eely asy to, Melte and dreemiehle. 1-10 11 Cons. Foe the children's 'sleety it's splendid baked in et leaf, cut like a short -cake and the layer thus made mimed, jelly. For sandwiches there's; nothing nicer than, thin slices ofeit spread with clioPped nut ineate and mayonnaise: 2-3 eue butter, 1 cup siege; 3 eggs, 1 Cup Milk, 1 cue eut meats, 3 cups flour, 3 teaspoons bak- ing powder, 1-2 teaspoon vemilla. Cream the butter, add the sugar and slightly .beaten egg yolks. Sift the baltieg powder and' flow together, and add the chopped, mit nieses to this mixture. Add the milk end flout Inik• tune oltcrnateily, and fold in the stiffly beaten egg whites and the vanilla. Any 'white Scinsg may be used on 11015 cake. And -this Apple Cornbread is just the thing in which to nee some of the first apples of the seenin: 2 cups corn- meal, 1 cup flour, 2 -teaspecers baking powder, 3 sweet apples, 1 teaspoon salt, 1% cups sweet milk. Mix the dry ingrediehts, beat in the milk and the apples cored, eared, and sliced 'thinly. Pour in a silialber tin, and bake in a moderate oven forty mia- utes. Serve hot -with lyatter or cold with milk for the children. Probably you have year pet cooky OT cake recipe which- you bring out wnhenever a small amount -of cream so -ars. But have you ever tried a Sour Cream Pie,?. Here's an .excel. Tent recipe:. 1 en'p thick sour cream, 1 cup chopped raisins, eup GiTgar, 2, eggss 1% tablespoans hoar,. 1 tea - WO era -CiattlaMOD.,. 1 teaspoon cloves, 1.-16 teaspoon nutmeg„ 1-16 teaspoon salt, ,pastry. Combine the raisins, sugar, flour, salt, and ,spices. Mix to- gether the cream,. "and the slightly beatezo egg yea& Combine the twe ros.1' aura?, and pear into a pie pan lined with it/semi:tea, entry. Bake thirty rabedes in a, moderate oven. Cover with a meringue. Return to a slow oven, and brown the meringue. Canada's forest -s belong to the whole people. They have an important tear- ing on climate and water supple. They enter into the daily life of the Can- adian, toth in a bmsinees and a do - tees -tie s.enee be a degree of which few are eonseious. The pulyhe unforten- lately is a strong eontyibuting factor in the origin of most forest fires, and edueatipn in this matter will do much to reduce the present enormous fire Local RAM Agent WANTED It we aro not represented in yoUr loCality write al onoo far onr prOp0- sa15ns, Malta some real profit on Radio Apparatefi eoov. yie furnish Complete Concert Radio ' Receiving Sets, Automatic Telephoneand Tinie Recordera, Ltd. natio Dept., 140 Victoria 50., 011eD033:60 Bee Supplies Be•ckeepers wIll fine, uy looking up our catalog, everything need- ed fur the produCtien of honey. ddy Mfg. Co. Ltd. BrantfOrci, Canada Successors to lente Proc. Co. Ltd. send foe a copy, r