HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1922-9-14, Page 6anWe Live for 200 Years
It 'is elainled that anotherepoch- be presented to 'elianealein 1635. The
Malang% seeeet has been Wrested erem reettlt; however, was disiastreue to
the eertitn diecovered Henri Parr, for through the high 'living and
,Spahlieger, the werld.famouS Swiss rich wineti lie woes, given he ,died
/scientist, and ' bacteriologist; Wh.ose November 14th, at the age of 152
,
treatment eor the cure of eonsomptlon' yeans,
eepreients the meet suceesSful .effort • '1.11e King's phySiciaa was induced to
yet mado 1.0 nil manlrind of this dread
(1110303,
Scientleee aed, medical men assocl-
' ated v;ith Dr. Spahlingee hope that In-
Jectirdr or the eenuu ferments will 10
tittle peeleng tbe human span to a
teerahf cue hundred and fitly years,
the Omit of the duration of human
Ilfq has altvaYebeen a questlen of
differeace antoug ;members of the
medical Dr o f erre i 00.
The Fr,ettell selentist, M. Flours,
heel studied the question 'very thor-
oughly, His theory its that the usual
length of leoth human tend' animal, life
eeems to teselt in -five timeg the p,eriod
ot growth, which he places, at about
twenty or twenty-one ybars,, thus
bringing the average between 100 and
005. .
• T-Iowever, e he states that , only at
forty (Luca the body absoitrtely cease
to inerease in size. Atter that age
any increaoe. is Inc to the accunrula-
• thon of tate
Takingebis theory striotly, It would
seem:that the extreme possibility of
life would work out tet five times forty,'
or 200 year.
Haller, a member of many 'distill -
gashed e'detetles, sold, "Tho utmost
limit. .of human life is within. 200
years': -while Prefeseor 1-Infeland, eon -
Mitered if "quite, poseible to: extend
huntan existence to• 200 years."
'WeeWilil nOw leave taeorles and ex -
'Tittle some uotable 00.1001 Of lellgovitY.
Tliemas Parr -wee born at Winning-
, -
ten, Shienshien, In 1483, 'and' far many
years was .a farieM at Alderbury, near
Shrewabiery.. The Earl 'or' Arundel
perettadieclehim.,teecome to London to and vice verea.
heeke a postenortem of the body tor
the benefit of the medical profession,
and reported' that be found this ergans
"eound enough to warearet his living a
g000-elm:1Y Years longer if he noel con-
tinued to live in the old style"
Ond of the most interesting cases
on record to that of Herm% Jenkins,
of Bolton ,Abbey, Yerkshire, who was
horn in 1501. He is:mentioned as hav-
ing given evidence in a case. at Ket-
tering, when.lie gave hto a'ge a 154.
1 -le died at Ellerten-en-Swiale. On De-
cember 8th, 1670; aged 169.
At Newnliam, Gloucestershire,
lived Ales. Kelthee. Slae tiVed for 1.03
years, having three daughters, the
eldest of whont' reached 111, the
second -110, aad the yotinger 109 yeare:
Aniong Norvvegian, records we find
that • ICemtigern,- otherwise lenoWn as
St. Mango,. by extretne absteintouS-
nese in food and drink," reached the
The Cow Pwicher
BY BODER'k 3, Q. STi1AP
(Conytight The Musson Book do.W
Syrippsie of Preceding Chapters.
Dr, Hat1;(1y, famous specie-1We and
hie aaughter Irene, meet with an ecel.
dent while on a moaning trip .44. the
feothille of Alberta and tired aeefuge
maim cabin pf the Elden Tench where
dvvell, David and his dissolute father.
The girl and boy promise to meet
again in the future, After his father:5
deanken death David goes to seek his
fortune in town tind loeee all hie
Money at a pool teble. He speeds an
eVening with ,Conward, hie poolroom,
acqueintance, and two actresses and
talcoe liquor for the first time. Next
mor.ning -he awakes frefe a drunken
At Chauvel Priory, In Worcester-
shire, there is, or was, engraved on a
tombstone the age' of 309, but it has
been 'said that the "0" might have
been inserted between the 3- and 9 as
This cannot be sahl regard-
ing the inscription on the tomb of
Thomas Demme, of Leighton, whose
age, 151 years, was' engraved on ,his
tomb In worde,
Probably the mos,t extrath'ilinary
case th that oE Humes de Cugna, of
Bengal, mentioned by Maffeus„, the
Portuguese ' author. Humes, during
his lengthy existence.of 370 years, had
four new sete of teeth, and his hair
ch'angecl frequently from blaek to grey
Childhood Ficiendshfps.
cetn still see my adored grandfath-
er ,as lie set at the Window with his
beafitiful,whit'e headhent over,a book.
In ,,his pictureg he is very stern;'but
I refnainher the sweetness ot his rare
emilak and the gentle liamtl laid on my
curls when I dis.respeetfully at upon
Plato
or Aristotle -aed demanded a
His plots were More -complicated
than those invehted • by..,:raothers or
aunts, aud no eaucifmore varied. There
was a serial in which one Tommy boy
and I elia,s.erl bears, climbed 'noun-
lains,emst real fairies and shot elo-
. pheals in the' coolest possible triann.er.
seldom interrunted--only at a
i,eldieis thee—but I often clujciked him
or put iii a breatlffees."And then what
(lid I do?"S Oatmeal n.
Sometimes the eateries wove aimut
cided on a plan. It was ummilly satis-
He began my mathematics by teach-
ing me the first two theorente of geo-
metry, and we spent a longtime cut,
ding out angles and folding them over
04 eee if they were equal. He was de-
lighted when- I seemed to understand
"She is woraderful," Ise told my
mother, 'She hasn't memorized A—
gile:knows."
I was also destined to be a great
classical scholar, tor I had teemed' to
spell three Greek wends. It talgbt be
that I would pant , beoauso on one of
our walks 1 had pointed tri the sunset.
I often wish now that I could go to
him when I ant sad'. I think Ile would
confer with Piato and Aristotle and
0051 000 what to do.--Ellzabeth Parvin
hie own b.oyho.e... and my grandmother
—never mentioned to any one else—
and. of lois loneliness alter she, went
away. My response Was always the
same. j choked him 'with a hug and
assured him that 1 loveclehim better.
than any orte else inworld:
, . ,
I- used to brine- him all.my silted
troubles and; he alWays. considered
them very gravely.' After discusSing
altt eideis,oe. the queetion; Plato or Aris-
tetle'isvas palled from' under eraa and,
we looked In the- book before' we dm
totted, "Tberi there'e tiansportalioe.
nlis is ono of the few tiontees on
Amerioa which haft, 41 north and emit I
trade equal to its east and. West trade,
We're, on the crose--rearle, Every eet
tier who geee into the North—and i
10 a mighty North—means more north
and south trade. The development of,
the Paid& Coast, the indestrialiea-
tion of Aga, the °peeing of the Pana-
ma Danal---these Merall east tInd west
trade. Evereee railwaT that taps thie
country roust come o thee city, be-
cause we have the start, and are too
big to be, ignored."
"'City' is good," ealci Dave.
sleep resolved to amend. is at- feu ehgae, one' as much en you
traeted by the singing of 0, choir girl like euee your jo
ke etarg it turns
in a church; then he attended a So. on you. There'll be a quarter of ei
calist tneeting. When delivering coal
million ,peopleliere before you're dead,
at the home of Ma, Duncan he is offer-
ed evening tuition in return for 00- jafee7up6P01joyeifeir with the life-in9tre:.
•
easional services as a coachman. The
firet evening he discovers the choir "Go on."
"Then there's the eoll--the richt
girl in Edith Duncen. Under his tutor'e
soil lin the world. Just dry enough be
careful direction Dave's education
keep it from leaching. Natural pee-
thriveS apace. Ire becemes a reporter
sibilities far .irrigation wherever
on The Call. One ,Suntley he told
"." ee,..0,,m,
0,eyeeii-
&Ebb. the story of his life and his
compact with Irene, • "I'm not hire about it as a giarin
country," interrupted Dave, with a
CHAPTER X. touch of antagonism.
"That is becauee you were breught
Whatever the effect of this corive00 up on a ranch, and are a randher at
sation had been upon Edith she. con- -heart," ceeweee ehee back. 'No
A Fine System.
Two American, tourists at 'the en -
trace to St. Paul's Catimeint were
mesevedfor time. -
"You look at the outaide," said one,
"and 1I1 lock at the inside—then we
can get the whole thing over in a few,
,minutes." •
There are men who gain nothing
from a fortune except t'he.fear of los-
ing 10.
.
Stories of Famous People
Homely Expressions used by the
If eberge w.ere. a republic,in England
-faeriori•Ow, the , first presiden'b to. be
elected would be 01(0 King, the second
would „be the Prince of Wales, aad
they' would both he elected for life,"
' Tic,sketh Pearsou, an English four -
Minsk is suee 4r0 this.' 1
&leo ofthe eausee of the prince's
i1i.rilaOtty is (het be b;ilievee in, and
etS 1111 lo, the principles of eqtialitY.
elotIting cculd have been easier than
'leer him lb have shirked, dangerone
work in the lobe .wer, flicked, he 000 -
lir gettieg up to the trout only
1,11,10. bettle'teOyal -oVltlo (be autherl-
liee. - ' • . re
W.,very clevice,twas tried La Iteop bini.
<et t of the de.ngerzene,, but hothinf
eoultl witlietend tiliehilageailabie logic
et the Priece's attitude., which wae
1101111110:1 011 by bitnself ou 011e 0e101-
0I0E1 10 these.words: "Jost. bettause I'm
thee SOUtete nly iether, is Lb a t• a.njrem
eon. why I should be bre:tied cliffeeently
to any other mother's son?"
it would be. 0007' to neiltinly ;11-
E1t9,21e(IS 'of his letelt of 'Wide," 1)18 sense
ot hernor; but there ie 0110 iticident
' Pa n him tolite,..
During his military duties at the
feortt 04 merle friends with a junior
sti ball ern in Icitehener's 0541y. , After
iihe war he met thie friend hi Ule
vereet, etema bends avarielY
and said: "You must 'come down to
Windeor end stay with 'My peeple."
The friend, not associating at the mo-
ment such a homely expression as
''my people" with the King and Queen,
readily accepted the invitation, and
afterwards nearly died with fright
whesi he re'alized what he had, let him -
However, le found out taat ,"my
people", could be just rte homely and
cha Tilling -as anyone elee's people. and
Iron), the' moment he entered Windsor
Castle be be,came one cfm very simple
arid very delightful family circle.
0.1
I
halving, , Sorry to keep you fte long,
but perhape you ean eafedi the .pne,iis
yet." And, with one of hie friendly
ntannerieMei Donward deaarW.
Pave eat for -gime raireffee in a
quandarY. He was dlecOliragad with
414 >413.ttrYi or, rather with bite lank
of prospect of any ineroeise in dils
salary. Conward'e wards had 'been
verY unsettling,' They eillied In 0P-
peeite darections. They fired him' with
a new cothusinens for hie city, and
they intimated that a gaeg of profea-
sional lend-gandelere waif soon to per-
petrate an enormous theft, leaving the
'mane holding the wick, Still, tiler°
must be a middle course' somewhere.
Ito walked be his little window and
locked acroaa the wavra prairie, Ne
buildings cut hie yewfrom (ho brown
hilleidee where the lazy raista.of au-
tumn beckoned to lardne and free, It
egaled it carefully, and,Dave counted rancher is ever sure of any country
it one ef the fortunate events of his- being a grain country. All he is sure
life. It baci 5ehled to him a new of is that if the farmer eemes it is
friendship, a confidence, to support geed -bye to the open range. Just as
1Wihn'd
arfciinng'anYT5ldel tilstirees.'9Pur104 ofbhaide b
Peeesn
- mate to keep the stockman out, eo is
the fur -trader blackguadd rethe
_ cli-
..
sion foe Irene, but now this was to the stockman blackguarding the cli-
be supplemented by the friendship of mate to keep the 'farmer out. But
Edith. That .10 was more than friend- they're coeniag. ' They can't be stop -
ship on her part did not occur to him ped... We only a case of education—
at all, but he knew she was interested of advertiling.
in him, and he -was -doubly determino
- I tell you, _Dave, the movement is
ed that he „would justify her interest
now, anclhefore long it'll hit us
and confidence,Ile threw himself like a tidal wava of e. I've been bit a
on e
into the -columns of The ,Call with gambler all rny life, bat this IS the
greater vigour than ever. . biggest jack -pot' ever was, and I'm
But ilast at this time atrothee incila- going to set in. How about you?''
ent. °marred which was to turn the "Id like to thipic it over, Promo -
04 his life into strange channels. tion doesqe very fast on this
Dave hal heart prornoted to the die-
jeb, thatts, .'
tinotion of a priveite office—a little e -yea and whim you are thinking, it
six-by-zix "box stall,"
a5 the siDwi's over cliances are slipping by. Don't
editor descaibed it—but none the less think it eveee_pae et eyei.,. .1 tell you,
a distinction shared only with the Dave, there .are big things in the air.
managing editoe and Bert Morrison, They are beginning to move already.
compiler of the woman's page: Her Have you neticed the strangers in
name was Roberta, but she was mas- town of late? That's the tuivance
ellline 0C, the tips, and everybody call- gemte_e,, -
ort her Bert. The remainder of- the "Advance guard of- a real estate
staff occupied a big, dingy room, with boom?" -
walls pastbd with specimen headings, 'His! That's a had word. Get away
'comic cartoons, and racy pictures, and
floor carpeted deeply with exchanges. from, it. Say 'industrial develop-
ment.'" • .
Dave, however, had established some ,`All right—industrial development:
sort of order in his den, and had in- Andede we have to have' an advance
stalled at leis own c000 01 spring lack to guard of strangers to bring about in -
prevent depredations epon his paste &Istria' development?"
pot or sudden raids upon his select "Sure. _Thetas the only way. You
eleepy co.wetown. stile and. rt
waOji es noW reeatied, a pew, ati
been tilirc>bbing Ito arteries of. tete, The
proportion of atrangereearnen White)
callare and street elio—at the 110t0111,
Wa9 steadily growing. Bente wore go-
ing um It was the firet low wave—
and Conwerd'e par had caught it,'
At any rete, he could nee Conward's
Story ebout the land nale. Thia yaw
newe—legitimate nowee 02 courne, 10
/Might be a faked eale—faked for ite
news value—but reportore tire not
Paid for being detectives. • The rule
was to publish the news while it was
hot, Nothing Is so !perishable ia new0.4.
It must be used at puce or discarded
altogether. The Evening Call car-
ried a statement of Conward's eglo,
and on that Statement VISAS hung a
oolutnri story on the growing prosper-
ity of the city, and ite assured future
owing to ite exceptional climate and
natural reseurcce, combiner" with ite
, ,
commanding poeition on tratt5Perta-
tion routes, hotir.east and west and
north and south: With the, industrial-
ization of Asia and the settlement of
the great. North—and how great be
that Northete., ete. •
Sit Gilbert AtheiresaTeronto's 'Trucks.
Sir Gilbert P'eriter''' the celebrated
'Ceara dien' W.lao: has latterly
tanned; te s ce na rib ' Writing in Cal iron.
0101, ' wag a- member 12 41 e Imperial
Pres,s'CoeffereaCe which toured Cana.:
e1aebont a year ago, During his Stay
110 Toratibo Sir Gilbert visited the eld
"Union, station here on several coca -
;dons' with theeexpress parpc.se of ail-
eniring the speed and eas.o with which,
the baggage,11101i hendled heavy loads
of beggege by meane 02. ho now fa-
miliar foot Motor VrtiChs: '"I'lLey have
nothing like these. en England," 5Ir
Gilbert observed. w 1 tli er0lioitars
"Aren't they .wanderful tittle levee -
(ions.?• 3 -Sons is .01110 particular bis
whfch yOu' are tar „ahead of England.
Let'e, Step a teia aeltnit:ee''ah;d, watch
'them?'
file of time copy. never heaed of the old-timers in a
Into bilis sanctuary one afternoon town booming it --the term goes, be -
in October came Conward. ..It was tween es_eie 1,e, e Never. The old
such an efternoon as to set every of- resident is always deader • than the
flee -worker at war with the gods; the tow -n, no matter how dead the -town
glories of the foothill October aee may be. • And-, this business is a
knovvn' only 'in the foothill countrYi sedehm, Teeeeigeee gang vm spring it
and Dave, married though he'wee to anywhere, and almost any time. .
his work, felt the call of the sunshine iLet me e, ,
itinerate. We'll say Alkali
and the open spaces. This was a time Lake is 'a railway station where leti
for fallen leaves and brown grass and go begging -at a"hundred dollars each.
splashes of colo,reverywhere—nature's In drops a well-dre§,Sedstranger—
'autumn color, 'bright, glorious,un-
„,,, buys ten lots at a hundred and fifty
subdued. Only Dave knew how ''' each -0 -and the old-timers are chuck -
bided leaped to that ,suggestion., B t
u ling over sticking Min. But in drops
the'world must go on. anether stranger and buys it block of
Conward's habitual cigarette hung lots at two hundred each, Then the
from its accustomed short tooth, and old-timers begin to wonder if they
his round, timid face e,.eemed puffer
didn't sell too soon. By the time the
than usual. His aversion to any ex -
fourth or fifth stranger has dropped
ercise more vigorous than that offer- in they are dead sure of it, and they
ed by a billiard cue was ,beginning to
sorts *2
obiusYttheir lots back. All
reflect itself in a premature rotunds- '''`tslrm
gab started, nobody
ity.of figure. 13dt his soft, insidion
knows how. NeW railways aro corn-
'vdtee`had not lost the note of friend-
ing, big factories are to be started,
ly confidence which had attracted
minerals have ;been located, theees' a
Dave, perhap.s.against his better judg-
secret war on between great moneyed
ment, on the night of their first meet -
interests. The' town .council meets
iDg”.Ir and changes the narne to Silver City—
" 'Lo, Dave," he .saire "Alone?
iimmeeeet said Dave, wiffeeeet, iorde._ having regard, no doubt, Go the alkali
jug up f,,,,,, his typewriter. Thee, in the eleugh water. The old-timers,
and all that great, ' innocent public
turning,.he kicked the. door shirt 'With
which is for, ever hoping to get some.
his heel and said, "Shoot."
"This strenuous.life is spoiling -yeur thing for nothing, are now glad to
buy- the lobs at five hundred to ten
good manners, Dave, my boy," said
thousand dolbars each, and by the time
C,onward, lazily, exhaling a thin cloud
of amoke, "If work made a man eiFil t'heY've Wight it 10(0 04* gang moves
on. It'e .the smoothest game in the
you'd die a, millionaire. But it isn't
wo.rk thatenakes men rich. Ever think world, and every comae -unity will fall
' , for, it at ieast twice.... Well they're
of that?" '
freshly KEENSinbced-
1U %Vital)
vitakes dinnertsty
otui,ditiestiblo
ItEE
susrAg
0530)1 (0)1000150000/0
651,111114140111R9
-"If 'a man does not beeome rich by
work he has no right to become "Of coerae,It's a little different in
at all," Dave retorted.. this ease, because there really is
something in the way of natural ad -
"What do you mean ibY that word
vantages to ,support it. It's not all
'aiga-ta;'vetlolaveti?tooDlve Define lobo." to pres,5 at
so moo, bigzer.
hot air, That'll make the ,,event just
four." "Now, -Dave, I've been &pining lir a
"That's the trouble with 'follows
little already
like you," Convvard cent:treed. You " and'it struck me wee
'night Work together on thisde.al.
hav°n't time' You stick 400 °I°5° to 'Your paper has considerable'weiglile
your jobs. You never see the better and if that Weight falls the right wee
chances lying all around: Now sup -
peso you let them go to press with-
out you to-diey, and you listee to me
for a, while."
Dave was about to throw hint out
when a gust of yearning,for thempen
Spacee syvent, ever him again. It was
true enough. .Fle _Was giVing his whole
P
life to his paper. romotion was slow,
mid there vv,as no,prospeet of e really
big position at any time. Ile remem-
bered Mr. Dunean's 'Ten -melt about
newepaper training being the hest
preparation for something else. With
n sudden decision lie eloeed his desk.
"Shoot," he said again, but this time
with leSs impatience.
'Tbat,'s better," sold "Conward.
Have y�0 over thought of 1110 future
of -.this town?" '
"Well, , can't say that,1 have I've
been busy „with 1t preeentel'
"That's what I sitepo,ed You've
beer, too busy with the details of your
iittbe job to give attention to bigger
things. Now, let me pass you a few
pieces of inforroaticm—thing,s you
must knew, hut yen have never put
them together before. What are the
natural eleinents which melte a coun-
try or city a desirable place to live?
I'll tell yam Climate, transPorth,tion,
good water, variety of landscape. cp-
portually of independence. Given
these conditions, everything elee eSEI
be added. ger!, Our climate --of
coorse it is misuridereteed 1r tho South
and East, hut mieunderetanding
doesn't ruffle it. Yoe find I know
what it IS, This is a White fnan'e eta
Mato, o* 01.10.1atibude into Elia,
Ops if you want to ilad the seatei of
POWOr and success. London and Ber-
lin ere /earth of LIS; Paris very little
te0111."
'"Where did you get [hie Stuff?"
Dave interleitteri. "Sottnele like the
prelode nt eti addrees before a baton-
ete,e'
"I've beer; thinking, while you'Ve
been toe busy to think," Conward`re-
,
you won't -find me slangy. For in-
stance"; on item that this property" --
he produced a slip with some legal
ciescriptionthas been sold for ten
theeeand dollars to eastern investors
—very conseevative inyestors from
the East; don't forget that—might
help to turn another deal that's jest
During the following day o Dave had
a keener eye than usual for evidences
9£ "industrial developirieet." He found
them on every hand.. 011 peoperkiee,
long considered unsaleable,were
changing owners. Hanclecnnely'fiern-
effices had been opened on
principal corners for the sale of city
and country property. Hotels were
crowded, bar-roonis were Jammed!.
The .,preponderance of the male pop-
ulation rhad.never been so p'roneunced,
and every incoming train added to it.
Money move easily; wages were stif-
fening; tradesmen were in demand,
.There was eaterial for many goad
stories in his inveetigationa He be-
gan writing features on the city's
prosperity and prospects. The rival
paper did the same, and there wee
soon started between thenz a competi-
tion of optimism. The geeat word he-
eame "boost." It stood, apparently,
f Or any action 00 attittide that would
10005055 prices. The virus was now in
the veins bf the community, pulsing
through every street andi by -way of
the little city. Dave marvelled., and
wondered how he had failed to read
these signs until Conward had laid
their portent bare before him. But
EIS yet it was only his news senee that
responded; his delight an the strange
end the'sensational. He was not yet
indeulated with the aoisqn of easy
(To be continued.
Clinging the Chicken Dinner Around
the World,
The popularity of the ehigken din.
neer ie not cenifineil to Canada, but ap-
pears to he world-wide in lee appeal.
The excei'leuce of the dimme, accord.
ing to the best colinary Nta rldur (310,
rests on tWo points; namely, the cosi.
ity of the 'Med. .and the flavorful meth-
od ef Its eookery'.
Every eduntry has allele° bird
to ego on state 'cm:lesions, but it ie
She average chicken whose emokery
eetablieheg .ehe cooks' and the coun-
tries' reputation for cfalciten &miens.
Like the traveler's eheek,'the ,chicken
diloner makes the whole world lEin,
and niany a lbad oase of Mune Sick
-
mesa has Ibsen swealowed during -its
consumption in Wien eurroundinge.
No doubt Canadian heuselreeper
loifothosgoaksilribp:anctiwoketeini, tittienkbetsherine4sYbles
world. May he they ere one and ell
right, but the writer refueee to be
chicken pecked into ark aegument, so
he rieelee tracks right out into,
foreige terettory and offer alie hoetse.
keeper a Pew re,cipee that xnest eland
upon their own meatit, for the cooks
who .orliginated thein axe too far away
to croW fOr theie ,ONVTI rights of su.
tPhriel,Trit ageoY..evIllhtle'etli8ennuPel:pllerlinet"b.ruiPonnilge'
convenience and custom of each coun-
try wherein the dinners. are served:
Japanese Chicken—Seleet a young,
tender chicken .and out 10 into con-
venient 'pieeee. Place the chicken in
O deal; pat witla seicddecarret, pars-
nip and potato. just ecever the meat
With boiling water, to whirJh add three
tablespoenfule, of Mirxen. and a quar-
ter ctipfitl ShoYu eauce. toyer and
cook gently until the chicken is ten-
der, skimming occasionally. Lift the
chicken onto a hot dish and surround
it with boiled rico, thicken a little of
the gravy and pour over the chicken.
• Chinese Chicken—Bone young,
tender' ohielcen and' cut- the meat ail
cony.entent'pMces. Dice the fleeli of al
areelemeneapple or that ofa can
of sliced fruet. Pare a piece of .green
ginger -root, pound, it aad eaak it in a
tablespoonful of rice wine for ten
minutes, then equeeze it over the
chdoken., Heat two tablesPoonfule of
sesame oil in a frying pan and gut in
the chielten, all a cupful of ehoiling
water and cook until tee chicken is
tender. • Thicken the gravy with a
dessertspoonful .each Of COTTIStaVeh and
sugar diszolved in a little of the pine-
apple, cover and heat 'through. Serve
with boiled rice.. IVIusihrtionth ma3r be
saluted and eat] ed,' with a few blanched
and ;split almonds, if desired.
mexieino chieken—Boll a young
chicken rin ,blie usual way until tender,
then cot it into four serving .pieces.
Meantime put a bablespoonful of oil
or lard in a frying pan and fry the
pulp at six Ohele Peppers, with the
orumbs of half a staleloaf .of 'bread.
Olen done pound .Inidoth. Blanch
and' oast in the oven a half cupful
each of sweet elmonds and peeled
melon seed, then chop fine. Strain a
pint of the chicken broth and stir en
these ingredients to thicken. it, then
turn it over the chicken. Add salt
Sunny Goldenrod, •
. , . . .
Tell me, 'sunny goldenrod,
.Growing everywhere;
Did fairies come from fairyland, '
And weave the dregs you wear?
,, •
Did you get from mines of gold
Your bright and eunny'hue?
Or ddd the baby *stars, some night,
Pall dawnand cover You? '
Are you clad in bright sunshine,
Caught from summer's day,
To give again. in :happy smiles.
To all who pees your way?
•For, ,
RHEUM AT IC
SUFFERERS
Testimonial;
Dear. Sire, --After eulterhig
SCIatica for over 16 years 'Eteltir
speadltig' Money Oninolicino,
baths, eiettrk,, bolter, etc., which',
did me no goad,"I VMS cured MI 1
tieing due •bettle of your NEW'
urrY] RENtEriv.
Yefir,s
" Will. Cliefay,
Gerard Si, Eaet, Tone:Ito
One bottle for One Dollar;
Six bottles for Five Dollars.
Alitiled'Ilireet to OnStotners.
`Nrti.t ifIrtitrht 010 mpaou
73 West Adelaide St, Toronto
-Canada ,
Lovely 'are you, goldenrod;
I will try lie,yon,
To fill each day with deeds of'gold,
Be loving, kind and true.
Sow the Right Thought Seed
—Get the Right Harvest.
If you want to substitute harmony
for diseord, wisdom for ignorance,
truth for error, prosperity for poverty.,
happinests for unhappiness, you can do
it bY right thinlcing. It is all in the
mind, in your habitual meneal atti-
tude. Whatever comes to YOU in life
le the product of your thinking. The
thought 10 10110 Seed; the harvest must
follow the .planting -o5 the seed and it
must be like the seed. ' If you plant
discord seed you ,Will reap an error
harvest; if you plant poverty and Am -
happiness you will get.that. kind of a
harvest. The thought is alwaYa the
seed and 0 ycii 'Went to get the op.
posite of these thIngi, you must re-
veree your thought Tf you sow the
rig!' t thought seed you will got the
right hirvest.-0. 0, Mallen.
to taste. ,5e00e tortillae 'with '
etilokeu.
Pereian ChickeneeTraee ,arka ibolt le.'
tender chicken in two quarts of 'Water,'
adding e eltePPeld e01001; a hiti 1504,
istx whole 'PePPreemene, a hyvel tOi,o-
apronful of eat, a stick of cinnamon'
ahd p hunch of sweet heihs, When'
the oiiat °poke tender lift it, remove
the big bones') and cut the Montt' 'inte',
AeCOSt. Strain the broth and add bit
a ,cupful of eeeded raisins, a,larnp 114
btabtor ond' the alicken. Cev'eranet
eeelc RentlY Until the 'Tie° MIS taken'
1-99 ail the brathi watohing that it d 0010
not burn, then serve 'on a 1(04 dtabo,
evdth 'a 4 ew blanalied almonde and a
listmtah:i inoose water sprinkled over the
French Chicken-nd s
,Clean aplit ,a
astittg 02.hielren end brown it ill,
11011,fteT, th,e1:1 put IL 'into a eaucepan
with 'a pint .of white wine, a half had,
,garele, a teeepormitul ef sweet herbs;
three cloyee, salt and pepper, S41110231'
one hour, then 114 t the chicken and
thicien the gravy Wien brown roux,
Pi nagu reTt eer °,afIldtbeepgrTnalvere saeri4faalcce"!'
*Rh grated' gruyere oh,eeee, lay evts
the eltidkene cover with the rot Of thci
'gravy, then spninkle generously with
oic;re • cheese. Pat the dislo into a
'TisQ94jiSnii.tijall7iiiaiSyloVetiC:Igial:C4ktdilnilbl—ra:WrSinollhgnieren(tlYte:aisuarastityri
clever it 'With wafer, and cook until
tender. Biemeeve' the meat toa butter.- •
ea.musserolo and 'ewer with en onion,
eoroepeptexipenopneer, aziomed tfttni:ily1 ..bal.1;ildeeOrt tg:1101a.,ie
toes, quarboro oupful of olive eil, a
tablespoonful of taragon vinegar,- a
teaspoonful' of salt, a half -teaspoon.,
ful .of powdered sweet herb e -and ia
little pepper. Cover and took in tile
ov-en for forty minutes-.
-India Chicken—Prepare a plump
young chicken and boil until tender.'
Lift the .abieken and eemove the large
bones and cute into eerving pieces,. "
Make' a sauceof a sliced .onioue-0
.Piece. of ,ginget: aoot and a.half -clove
of ..,garlic,..elleati. fine, then fried 00
three ,tableepoon-Eole of ail; -.When soft
hut net brown. add a tableepoonfal
each of euro). powder ,and flour -and
work in steady a Pint of rich Milk.
When blended odd the' cream of a
fresh -cocoanut and 'Om into a double
bailer. Add the chicken end let
heat, but do not boil. SerVe with -rico
steamed dry and relishes, of eated
cocoanut, ohutn.ey, mincel peppers,
sliced and broiled bacon, strips- of
dried fish, Pickled' shrimp, 'rolled ahdh.
ovies and: preservereginger.
,Eungarian Chicken—Slice ari
into a small quantity ef melteefit
.and cook to a 'goldell brown,,,then add
a teaspoonful of paprika and thee a
piht ef stock. Cook ten militates, then'
put en the Woken, one into qizarteri.
add Salt and pepper "and -cook „a hag
, hour -until the chfcken is tender. Lift
t'he'Chkken onto a hot'clish, 414i,
l fill of -soar cream- to th.e gravy and:
boil up,- then -polar .over the meat. and
-
serve -rice aa 0 bordermenial 'the'
dish.. .SOmetimes quick deimplirigs,are
serverawith; this cloroli, inwloiOh etiee the
rlco 00 omitted.'
1Vicunted in front of a banter, which
eup,plies .the ps-wer 10 toter-bladetl.
rotary cutter for clearing land re-
duces stumps to chips.
Tile Stagnation of
Monotony.
I have alwaYs noticed teat
people who move about -the
world much, people who travel,
who feei theft minds neon new,
'fresh iniuressions and, neW ex,
perlenceS, have mere vitality
than tiles° who eemain ,cloister-
ed at home. They are ,froshar,
their minds are more alert; tlicy
are nmee buoyant physleally and
mentally, eller() elleerfal,
.tie, mere alive, because theft
mlacis 'are better nourielred;
they are growing, while the
,C;llfteara get inin a rut and' stage
Ia
monotooY is fatal -to growth.
People who live seeleded, /no-
notonoliS ltvos, become such
slaves dr habit that after a while
they don't wont to matte nny
cluing° in their dolly retttinet
They cannot' 1(001. to .ge away
from their homes, to le -ave their
own beds, their' own areeidee
their hrmie comforts.. 't'hey aro
reetd01 in ono place; theh• llyea
ere rutty, 111011. minds become
rutty, stale, They are dull and
stagnant 11110 10 pool og Witter t ha t
has lee wintdoti.
Real Castles in thf...
The'filture people of the world will,
quite possibly, live in beautiful cities
of perpetual sunshine, floating in the
alr above the clouds, earth mists, or
any other obstacles' teat to -day stop
ros fromeereloying the golden rays of
That is. the prophecy of Captain
Lawson,- the American designer of a
fleet of lame air liners which bears his
Ten thousand years.'hetrce, be pre-
dicts,'high' life will be sky lire, and
eociety'will. move in vast aertel cities
raised and held stationary ladles above
the 'earth. '
The ,ale that we breathe at the bot-
tom of the ocean of atmoSphore which
'eurroeindi the earth is not of the hest.
.We would be tar better off somewhere
hear the sureece. '
'Although air erasure at sea level is
„ .
very great, the ages have bullt up cur
fraMes to enable us to grow accus-
tomed to ite in fact, it would be
harmful; a.ud probably fatal to
httempt to tramsfer man to the high-
e,st altithdes all at once. ,
But in the years to come, when a
man will leave his earthly °Mee tor
his 11 tt1 sethurban boine four miles
away, in the sky, lee will have grown
accustomed to the rarity or the air,
and be will and that 10 hes oe benoa-
caul inneenceem hie bodily health..
'rho cities -will be held up re space
1oyigasea of a lereatee littlug newer
then ally known to -day. Every large
imildiagw'ill have.eheneatat it -a large
etoleige,tenit, lir whiall the gas will be
b el n war el lee future will then
have anolbee gree[ horror, -the nbioO
mg of the storage tanks, or oeleer at-
tempfa to 'Set the gas free and tieing
r;ty abler '"(111y is ng tbrrough titbits -
ands of feet to Oast -auction:
,
'Whellier the nutimn body will re-
tein its ability to breathe on earth
whilst et 1111,0, seine time it eon obtain
,.suieelent oxygen irom the higher rbtb-
01! se
it Is impozelble to predict. Per.
impe vleliors ,to earth' will have to
weer some sett of diving setts..
'Ate shall, in these days to come, be
such st1U-sulutated beings that our
hoescs Will' have to be protected from
..overa teen tlo zi from King sot.
The rcols, oe probably one great
root to n, whole city, may bo In the
Shapo Of a demo or donis.,e` of 'a per-
fectly tranepareht euhatance resemb-
ling gifted, but a great improvement,on
any glase lthown to -day.
Waterproof Cloth Produced for
Roller Shades.
Should ri new clotls be generally
edoeted fOr holler curtains, It will not
1)
1.17el'Irc'c
il-ic'arYtsehatil1(100115t10lalte°110s1:Watli reeto
d v./1611eina:
fluty beeeme settca, Tife 10 01w Cloth
1111IY be elcaeed whir soap and water,
Anil grease efelne ronmvod walled
fabric, 11
I wish I could burn 11 1000 the
censciouseese of every person.
whe wants to meite a succese.011
Me that Ile cannot tio 00 wluUo;
he associates. himself with he
feriority and harbors a lew es-
timate 'of himself. Get away
from both. Have nottting tie do
with them. If you are a:victim
or the. intericeeity, suggestion,
deny the suggestion. drive it,
from year mind as the greatest
enenry of year welfare. -0. S.
Marden,
Live Stock in Canada.
Statistics fuamished be- the Pomire
len Department of Agriculture show
that there were over 500,000 mere
milk cows in Canada in 1e21 than iibe
1920, 400,000 more other cattle; 417,--
000 fewer sheep, nearly' 400,000 nioro
swine, and 6,5op,000. more poultry;
Average values were triuth less last
year than in the,' year befoee,",claire
cows tieing placed at $51 againet 380,
other cattle at $28 against $47, sheep
$0 against $10, swfaie $1.4 Relined.
$23, and poultry, $1.02`againet $1,21,
More Phonetic Spelling,
"Mainieteh said a late avieyear-ole,
"will you please tell ma how Lo spoil
" dear? I 0410 '0 1 noir
' a
q.q.y such word. Why do kon ask?"
" 'Cause I went to write' 'T love my
-
_teacher more then tunkin telt',"
Prize for Originality.
An.erganization. of Beiglah scieritIsits
will award a eeize of abour,$4,000 next
year for the best original we've. to,
Erench or Eooglbols 015 tlie onieritille ad,
veneer of eleotricity and ite teeeniekel
applications,. '
Better Done Afteiev'aiele.
wish 1 hodn't Melted Jim-
my Brown this Morning."
Marinna—"Yen s.ee bow wrong
was, done you, dear?"
iv:5er!e,,y eauee didiet 'creme
(won that 110 wile goingEl
to give
va
,