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The Clinton News Record, 1922-9-28, Page 6Variable auhnuer Squash, Every aow and then some old food standby steps- forth with newpossi- bilaiee. This time it is the humble squesh, To some it may appeal only as an occasional variation from the regular inenet of vegetables, to others it may be the oromiSed *dish of tbe season, and some may even be aston- iehed when told what they are eating, 'There are so many ways it may be disguised and yet maize a tempting and appetizing diph. If you are unusually fond of this iti iron bearg -vem aetable, it. may even canned • and vein make a tempting and colorful dish for the winter table. After a Mack scrub of the -brush, re- moVe the ends and careancl cut the rethainder intd aieces of a sizeato fit the,jare. Pack' closely ihto sterilized jars and fill with salted water about the same as you would cook it in. Protessafer one hour. ' There are many epicurean diehes to beleade feints eummei'asatiaah. StOffed squash. Will be proclaimed good by a great many. With a stiff -vegetable •brush scrub. the squash well and 'cut a „ slice from the top, asefor a jack' o' lantern. Remove -all eeeds and fibres. Fill with a dressing made of one pint of bread crunibs *elf seasoned with salt, aepper, butter, a ' large onion elioPped 'fine, . and two wellebeaten -eggs, Replace top and bake for two beers, beating.. with bacon or pork one that's good to live in." drippings. • "But, Gwen—" A cup of sauash added to the bread "But, Peggy! 'teems grow. Fashions dough as itis being separated to make buns or raised biscuit will make them Two Kinds of Beauty. Tb e study class had met with Miss Marc bank, and the subject of the epealcer had been interior decoration, "0 Gwen, wasn't it fine?" saki Peggy, 'And Mies Marehbanks's was just the one right place in town to have it! he could "sit sereneand liaten te all that perfectly 'scathing talk about clutter and crowding and meaningleas bric-a-brac and wills plastered with pictures and—" "She cauld,",agreed Gwen. "That beautiful great living room of her il- lustrated every point the speaker made, . &aft-, rich,' restful color, few pictures, few °Teammate -a -everything 'euitable and harmonaibs, -Yes, it Was an object leason for anybody who was striating in fiesh." "The minutes' get home," continued Peggy, "I'mgoing to 'stare every blessed object firmly in the:face and make it give an account of itself; ,and if it can't prove that it really adds to the beauty of the room it's in, up attic it goes." '"What Will your mother have to say?' suggested Gwen. . "Mother! Oh, mother's tired of run- ning things and only too'glad to let ine.do as I wish. Of course I wouldn't touch her room." "And when you're through," proph- esied Garen, "the house will be good to looksat but her room will be the a pretty' golden color with a _delicious -flavor. They will also keep moist Much longer. . Try sense squash cakes: To one cup of squash sifted, add .three cups of flour,, or enough to mix , thick with a spoon. Add one taas.poon of vinegar, 'One tablespeon el 'butter, salt, ono. egg, ore cutiaca 'awe teaspetins of baking powaer. Bake in gem pans an a quielaaaven, or drop from spoon on pan and ,balce as drop eakee. Scallbped squash is also good. Pre- pare and code as. for meshed squash. Putanteta batang,diSh andcover with cream sauceeeprinklesc.ra.cker efie bread crumbs over the tap, and bake. A few pieces of peen peppers, tomatoes or a' little minced parsley adds Variety to the dish', which 'makes a ",eveleome cliange on the fall' menu. Dricg Peaches for Winter. Peaches are usaellY dried npeeled, although a superioravariety is made ,by -remoVingathe. skins:, Selec't peaches .for drying which are ripe but noa saft. Wash, cut in half, removeestone and place in trays' with the 'pit ,side up. Manyholisewiveetuse a lye satiation .for removing the skins,. . Dissolve., two Wends.' of , corenieteial eoncentrated Tlyo in ten 'aellians'oa•evatet. When sboiling hat, Place,. altesepaaalies„e in a tealte'aeaWooden baaket-atia ilunge into the ,sialiftian, aria .6tte".16 two Minutes, moving the basketup 'end- d:owp to hasten contact with the ,lye. `.Lift, from lye when flee creaks, or -checks inathe peel ,aaaeat. Plunge 'im- mediately into, cold 'water- and move about to.wash.off the lye., Retrieve the 'alone by 'I:fibbing 'between the hands or with a brush, Wash to reinevethe 0 'adhering ftee.• Halve, take out pits Iiit;issehat,enecipualsidav.n,tinhyaveecio.tiltil;g8htheiili.*a ceu8 he and alace, on the drier, cavity side up. 11 aeaches are daied an the San, beautiful, but she said, '.'What a; dear •l ' coveredm -With uslin mosquito.net-',1 deems nest folaSa dent girli.1f . t6 radiate contentment. ting to protect from insects the same a, -h :. dear In' et, you as With ether kinds -of. fruit.' In an! ".ane,said that! o e' a aetificially" heapesleyeGweni ,NeW You've 'tiaistll ted. drier the teinpeoa atore „at the .h.ogionipg, 01 . drking, ray pleas. Ihasteveii dare; emi- fisea tee thaat awful .gift -vase with.. -the :Imitate nob he more than lair degreee This may be gradually incteasea resee that Aunt Jane gave mother!" "If that vase were Mine," inuaniur- to IGO degrees. When the pieces, are ed Gwenneth sympathetically, "an ac - pliable and leathery and no moisture can be preesed out of the freshly .cub cideirt would have happened tO it ages ,sorrocc, the product is, eutedieemy ago while I was dusting!' dry. Transfer from the drier to laraa . ' wociden,or pasteboard boxes aild , cover with mualin 'which :will •aiditilt Plaainglaalliii Chattedh. the air and exclude inseetsa-Platee.the box in a Warirt reom in a rather dack Tie )ate Mr; "„cv. Andrews, in his spol.ate. heeehatall the area, is in, a.Loge e.and Legend hf. the Priglish uniaote eatatiffan, after ,addelt pack °Ilu'rala',' glYeA'i.sbnie ill'l-eiesting la - vary of course; but where reasonably good taste has prevailed and the fam- ily'interests have Iseen ' in worth- while thiiigs' a raisin. grows go - full of life and eatmosphere that -well, af 'course it needs cutting out and -prun- ing back, esi to-speek, and changes and re,mo,vals that are part of its growth bat ato upreot the whole character of it is something that needa a.good dea Of thinking about, it seems .to me You eould make year living rooin as beaatifel alas Mies Marchbanke'a and in the same way. I clon'taleubt 'that as as matter of pure 'artistic *range - merit it would be an improvement. But there are other kincisef beauty -to con- sider -there's the 'beauty- of terneme brarme,and of,outlookefor instance. If, should change over my room I know that. it" wcialan't ,pay. . "There are to many things in it that I know; noneeof 'the bric-a-brac an( pictures Eire 'nleaningless,-'4 And, Peg, , I can't spare, one of them! My pic- tures either refresh my memory- of ahose wonderfiil. six months 1 h'ad in _ Italy, 'or they.give me an a11 -outdoors _ feeling of space and grandeur when weather or sickness et dull duties shut me withirgloue Walla. I'd as Soon block one of • my windows aa banish one of my pictures!" ' "I see," 'said Peggy thoughtfully. "Yet Ido think that the speakei was right. , baowaing isn't restfult 'and when things are crowded nothing ihews to its best .adaantage. 'Now, does it GWeri?"- l'On.. entering 'a room, no; as the furnishing ,of a amen, no. But to live with,.lepereon May -want either rnany whirlovas an's I ' cica or one ;or tWo eVer- lattiagly beautiful lactates peraectlY , , displayed; end, P'egg3r, Mather knoass that saeaker,aand• she called .at bur XY ROB ItT J'„ C, STEAD. "(Copyrigat The al son Boca. Co.) ,Synopsie of Preceding Chapters. *Pr. 'lardy, famines epecialiet, and hiadaughter Irene, meet with an tied. dent while one motoring traria the foothills of Alaetta ,mid and a refuge In the cabin of -the Elden rands where dwell' David and his dissolate father, The girl and., Joy premise to ,eneet again in the future. After his aatlier's drunken. death Al:maid goes to peekhie fortuee in town and loses all his money at apool table. 'Ho spende an evening with Cenward, his 'poolroom acquaintance, and two actresses aod takes >liquor forthe first time. Next meriting- he awakes from a drunken it hi peranarfealt coatilhicair and store' forinaticia'abont;ehereltaausie In olden tinatcha ,'" Apticote and nectarines are bleated whielt cholas uteri to have of in preeiSely the estaie ay playing at ball in chtirch at tastes. ' W, The origin of the" trealge is 'obdchre, ih a dry airy place days, fie Itielitiohs extraorclinarY malammenmon rife though'it lies been suppo•sed, to "be,...not distantly related 'to She' ieore general custom of preseating,eolered eggs to ohe's faienasa "tiowevet it arose, it was, coriductea In a 'fashion Whicli im- plies that it, had some religioussig- nificance., and Wage in fact, regarded at tts oonanencomeataas a religieus cere- aneay,. The dean tecelyea 'the ball, and iminediately began to chant an- aatiphon, marina meanwhile itt a stately atop in thno to the made, then to onetime of the' clergy: w6en it had "CerMinly, I did," atal the young wo- e reachea the bends of the dealt, he -in faint threw it 'to mots ca the choristers, the antiphon, accompanied by the et- gan, meanwhile oontinuinga The statutes ef the cathedeale regulated the size et the bane used In this Strange rite. In many places there is atilt a traditien that the Willie ef foot- ball iaLeSpecially appi•,opriate to Beater Monday, and in several townuntil (Mite recent times footbaa was 'played in the alreet's on that key by 0, pro- iniecuoils eineeourse caf paopaa It Is hatural to Imagine that there mita be Some eon:mien origin of this ,and the Practice just described, einirse, We have lest the religiona eigallic,ance of tire bail 111 thee rtaya., For R H E UMAT IC SUFFERERS New Life RemedY is t Standard ItSmoly fa& last quarter century for Rheumatism Sciatica, Linn, bago, Nout4gia, Gout and Neuritis, One bottle for One Dollar. Six bottles for Five Dollars. Mailed iiirett to customers. aftutEitrilentekto, 010 01Pktitil 73 Wait Adelaide at, 'roronto Canaaa even temper -save on rare and ex eueable oceasiops-ealad woe .frbm `the staff a loyalty which Conward, with all hie abilities aa itgoed mixer, CRU d never have commaeded. He had prospered, of course, II a statement to his loanleer ran in o seven figures. For yeare he had not lenoevn the experience oa being alert of money for any' personal purpoee. Occasionally, at area., and again of lete, the film had fouridalt necessary te resort to high finance,' This Waa meetly accomplished by aetting it bank eo deeply involved n,their eleso- lslinoa that mm in oeras of emergency eleep resolved to amend, He Is at- it ahaeoeut desert them ,th rt would. traetea boa'aila aseging of a clioir girl ia T a aural; then he attended 'a g0; a1hWearaeaeay strhe ways 9fd oftengnaratatrhda.Aild ltndte callet. meeting. When delivering coal otganization of Elden bad joatified at the home of Mr. Duncan he is 'offer- thernsdves., Dave was still a yoking ed evening tuition in return for oc- ,e,„, man; not yet' in hie thirties; he was casional services as a coacamall. 'a' rated a millionaire; he had health', first evening he discovers the choir comeliness, and 'personality;' he cam - girl in Edith Duncan. Under his tutorai mended the'respect 'of a wide circle oarefua direction , Dave's education of buainess men, and was regarded as thrives apace, He becomes a reiporter one of the matrimonial prizes of the on Thet Call,. One nday he told Edith the story a hia life and his pcity;,b1 eh iOsf filleaonr hehawdabseaehsudeisceells:,sed f 7 compact with Irene. Conward drops in' with talk about "induatrial develop- And yet this night, a.s he sat in his mente and tees Devoe emegineti9n, comfortable rooms, Mid watched the a real eatate partnership. tawtrtelegt lights come fluttering an ee the west he -was not so sine of his They form .. T ht 'II tted th great hills to .si loue e , , , . CHAPTER XLsuccess. A gas fireaburned in the . grate, ripplifig in blue, sinuous waves, DaVid Eldon .smoked has after: and radiating an agreeable warmth cigar in his bachelor 'allarteas. The lin the May evening air. Dave finiehs years had been good to the firm of ed his eigareand stood -by the window, Conward and Elden -good far beyond Whete the street light now poured in, the wildness of their first dreams. blending its pale effulgence with tsa The transaction of the section bought blue radiance. from the grate. He was from the English absentee had been but the beginning of bigger midi more daring adventures. That section was now considered close -in property, -and lots which Conward & 'Eldor'5 had originally sold for two hundred dol- lars each had siece changed hands at mores than is thousand. The street railway rap far beyond it. Water inalns, sewers, electric lights, graded streets and concrete sidewallcs had sprawled for miles across the preine. Conward, in that -first wild prophecy of his, had spoken . of a city of a .quarter' of a million people; already more lots had been sold than could 'be occepied by four times that poiala- tiorL It had' been 'a very maraellous de- Velopment=an enthusiasm which had grown deeper and wilder until 'it swept; along' as an insane abandon, bearing halts current the last vestiges of conservatism and 'caution. .Ferat last the' old-thaers, long alluded to as the "dead ones," had come an. For years they . had held back, scoffing, predicting disaster, and while they held 'back, venturesome youths had be- come millionaites. One' can stand that only ese longe and at last the old- tinaers 'were buying and ',selling, and debauching with the °nets in the lust of .easy. money. Dave had often. asked himself where It all would 'end. 'He traced it from ite beginning; -from 'the day. when he wrote las 'first abobst" story; from the '.hundred -dollar bill thataConward had placeclein his hands. It was a simple course to trace; so simple novr that lee was amazed that only. Cerea „ward .and a few.threwd others' had seen it at that time. It had begun With the prosperity of incoming money -the money of a littlegroup of -speculators and adventurers and the otheesawlio hung oir taeir train. They liact filled thealew 'hotels, arid' office lonildings. ',Presently" sonieone began to build itanew hotel. Labor Was scarce and leer carpenters,,,masens, layers,',plumbers, plasterers, laborers, had to. be brought in from the outside. There.waa no place for them to sleep; there Was no, place 'foe them to ,eat; there were 'insiifficieet stores to sup- ply their -wants. More 'hotele and shops and 'stores:and houses had to be bailt, and ta build them' mere care 'penters and' Mastitis and bricklayers Mid Plunibersanet plasterers and Lpainters had tO be braught from the mitaide. The thing grew upon itself. It' was like- a fire- starting slowly in the still "'prairie 'grass, which by ite own heat creates a areeze that in turn gives "birth' to a gale that Whips it forth in uncontrollable fury.' Housed went Up; .blocks of them, streets of them; miles 'cif 'them, 'but they could riot keep pace with the dernama, for 'every builder -of ,a bouSe must have a roof .to aleep uhdet, And there' were steeets to build;, ptrets to grade and fill -arid pave; ditches to dig and side- -Walks to lay and wires to string. And more houses- had ,to lie built for the men vata paverl streets and dng ditch: es and ' laisi eiaewalles and' strung wires. And more 'stoeos and more ho. td's and more churches , and more schools and More places of aemsement -were needed. And theafire fed an RP own 'fury' and spread to 'lengths on- dtearned by those' Who first set the match to the dry The' proceas of saeculatioa Ives easily ,defined.. The fit -St baeers Weee cautious; they looked over the yeeant lots carefully; weighed their advan- tages and disadvarithaes; the prosnect of the city griming: this, wayhor that. But s's.aicely lied they bought When they sold againat'a profit, end were eeateel -with (Mick reareb that they had net bought more, or earlier, Semi the _caution oi the early trantactions was fel:gotten its the,rush for 'ileac, lots,. which; almost iinmediat'elya could be resold at a profit. ' Judgment and discretion became handicaps in the race; 'the, suceesafial teen "Ndi be.:wht, threw all. such qualities to the wields. trot:tunes were made: intrinsia values wets., lost s'ight, of in tag glare of great and sudden proilta..t Places', mounted op and aela 'end when calmer coansels held that they hadare'ached their lite - its all euch counsels wete Mead -led by pricee Soaring highee • Awl the firm of Conward -are.Ealen had proated not the least in these wild ydars of gain -getting. Their mahogany-anished firstefloor gaarters were the last word in oalige luxuri- ance, Conevard's private tootit Might With eedit have hotted' e ptemier Or president, to yu1's2cq WP 15 bo impressive, iattlicr Elan It gird' aala other science, 113 Conward abort little of his time therein. On Dave fell the regponsibility or' °falai manegement, and his nom was fitted for efficiency rather thee luxury, It tonerreouled view of the keg general office telieve a battery of atenograpiters and elerks 'aids 'care 61 the detail ot-the lessieess of Conetard &'Eldena Juttil 1a,0 hill cetablished his ability as atioffice managele ' Ills fatenest, his aearleas- semis his impartiality, las lIa a man to be admired. Has frame a trifle stoater than when we last saw him, but still supple arid firm; the set of the -shoulders, the taper of 'the body to the waist, the keen but passive face? .the poise of the, whole figure was that of one Who, tasting of the goodness onife, liad not gormandized thereenla He was ealled a success, yet in' the honesty of his own soul he feared the eoin did not ring true. Conward had inaisted.more and more upon -"weighing the coal." And, Dave had concerned himself less' and less with the eneasure. That was what worried him. He felt that the crade but honest' conception of the square deal which was -the one valuable herit- age of his ehildhood was slipping away from him. He had little in coal- men with ....Conasard outside ef their business relationship, He suspe.cted theman vaguely, but had never found tangible ground for his suspicion. Dave did not 'think, and those confi- deem& peculiar to a' state of semi- intoXicatienawere denied him, He was afraid to drink'not with the fear of the craven, but with the fear of a man who knows his enernya advantage..He had, sufferea own home and he feared the' eneiny, and would make no truce, Neither was he seduced by the vices vahich the *possession of wealth made' easy to his hand,. He counted ,marc' as a dream -a sort of supernalism Out.af the past --that last night andeethat. last compact, with Irene Hatdaebuf at had been anchor- agefor his, ,soul ote more than .one dangerous lea, and he would not giae it up. Some. time, he suisposed, he should take' a Wife, but until then that covenaiet, sealed, by the mootlight to the spare's:slag murmur Of the spruce trees, sheuld stand as his one etitle of character against which no caveat might be registered. He *as turning thia very matter over in his anina, and wondering what the end would ,be, ;when a Iceoelc came at the deer. • "Corne,"ahe said, svaitehirig on the light . . "Oh, ha you; Bert. I arn honored. 'Sit down." The girlthrew her coat over a chair and eankainto another. Without speak- ing she .exteeded her shapely feet to the fire, but when its sooishing warmth had coniforted"her lanbs ahe looked up an"Adl'saainid' ' s:nte Put it over on es; didn't he?e" "atill nursing that grievance over yeax sex," laughed Dave. "I thought you would outgrew it:" , • "I don't Name him," ,continued the girl, -ignoring' his interniptiata, "I am just getting. back froni forty-seven teas, Gablale, 'gabble, gabble. I don't 'blame him. We deserve it." - "Then you have lia,d nothing to ea`t`I'lrnost.:; Only insignificant Inca- " 'geOvrtaibiep°s-r-ressed a button, and 'h Chin- ese boy ' (all male 'Chinese are boys) entered, bowing with' that deference which is so ,potent to separate the ,white Man•from his silver. The white roan. giorieS in being salaarned, espe- - *.tn d t he vrtztOnn-mixt,, mally ba ea Oriental, who an Wrote' with a touch of art, And the Oriental lias not been ,low to eapitalize his mutter's vanity, "Brimg something to oat, Go out or it, and be (prick, For lave, "Ice cleara? Toast? Tea------?" alai)! Something to eat! Houle, friea oblokori, hot vegetables, eleaaert, everything," "You've had trout dinner, eurelY?" asked Bert, , "Sueh a ainnm as a man eats alone," he-auswered. "Now for eerily - thing real. Yen atick to the pupae like the hac, derat you, Bert?" "Can't leave it, I hate it -and 1 Jove it. It's ray poison and my medi- cine. Moat of all P hate the eocieta twarldle. _And, of coaree,,that's what I have to do," "And you write it up ao gloriously," said Dave, "Enthusiailrn in every line of it." • "You read, it, ,then? I thomeht all men looked on thesociety pages with contempt." "They do. But they look on it just the same --long enough to ,see whether aheir names appear arnong these present," "Or whose husband la out of town?", "You're growing more eynical all the time." allow ean I help it, when I see both sides ofa the game? If I printed Mal what Iiknew I'd have every lawyer in this eity busy to -morrow -except those who skipped etit_overnight," "You know it," Date agreed. But here is dinner." The boy wheeled' a table between them, and there was a savory smell of hot food. (To be continued.) aa ...- , Baiting a Bear With Buns.' 'In ancient times ben- baiting was a popular European recreatien. The bear was oluaineal to a phstaand doge, were 'get Upon it to the delight.ef the spectators. While Lord .Frederic Ham- . ilton the author of Mere, There and Everywhere, was in India, he baited a bear in a way that was certainty moreamusing, if net more, humane, than the old'way. We were at beeakfaet, he Saye, when kubber (news) of as bear only fwo miles' away was ,1A•ought, in. My hest, the Maharaja of Coopli Behar' at 011eS eedered .the howclaai elephants round. Opposite me on the ,breakfaet table stood a large plate of burls, which the camp baker made most admirably. Ever sinceemy earliest 'Childhood I had gone to the zoological gardens in Regent's Park on every possible .oc- casion, and therefere,was in a Position kriow what was the favorite,thod of beats. .That they did not live on buns in the jungle was oWhig nietely to the fact that there' were no Mins, there to live On. Iaagiled that the dainty would prate just as irresistible to a hear in the jengle a,S it did' to his brethren in the' big pit near the entrance to the zoo at home, and, ignorihg "the rather cheap gibes of the rest of the party, I provided myealt with, hall s, doz,en buns, three of which Tattacaled by long .strings to taa front of my 11.0W5all, Spare they swung like a pawnbroger's, the'bear was lying in a small patch of barnbao and broke cover at once. As I had anticipated, the three swing- ing buns arovted abeolutelyirrestsa ible to him: , He came straight up to me; and' I Shothiin Smo othbotes He -is' meatadecorative in his Dearth peeition, aa a rug on the floor 'of my drawing -roam -a -a fact that is whcilla owing to.the buns,. , The Migrants. I faintly hear, far up in ttluienyn coia lg shloars,t, The silver music of a The voice of winged armies as they fly Through cloud 'and etarslane too -a dis- Werbler Onaatlirash, and finch mad 'Thian linked' to elan, they sweep in Wild crusade --- Borne on the winds' beyond ,the reach of foe, • • Wrapped- in impenetrable Mist and shade; I strain each senseato catch the flaked And vainly stare akft to pierce the Wondering, wliat rapture swells the pilgrims' thnoats, What sherd it is toward which they . all embark, Wishing I, too, could join the veatur- ous flight To that strange dime that lies 'beyond the night! ,e Theacolor for mourning varies. In Euaojse it is black; in China, white; in Egypt, yellow; in. Turkey, blue; while kings and caedinals matirn in purple and violet. The ancients wore sackcloth. • . NV rst is Yet to CO111 M.A1100141 Concert EA Marconi Model "0" RotionoratIve ReaelVino {iota, furnished aueranteed to receive concerts ep far down south as blierntiiiie, -roma, Atheitia Gae,and west as far as Kanses,Olty, Mo., DenVer, Col. and Omaha, Neteraelaa In addition to all the other Canacilen and United atatee broadcasting 6tetienra Amateuree radio farm and dealers, note our. pricee on radio 'ararts" Radlotron VaiveS U,V. 209 ... 16.70 All Vern ler Rheostats . , . ,, 2.913 ,Racilotron Valvee U.V. 201 a. . 7,75 8.0. Filament elecka • • ...a.... a Radlotron Valves U.V. 202 ... i0.50 Varlaalo „Condensera, 43 piste Sakefite Dials • alia Variable Condeneele, 23 plate 1,00 l'/" ,R1tOOStSt Maks Varfaleie Coadensers, 11 plate 2.20 S.D. ,2-A aahoneo, super penal. Maanavav ,R3's .,..„ ,,, , • , 60.00 tive 'aanneoiloast 4obb bbrn Plionesal0a0eelver' type ' 12,00 Audio Tranefermere „ ' 6.9e prest-04.1to J30'Arnp. -"A"" Coll Mounts with handles3,7.1 Battetieo 18.00 Many other parts of Quality equipinent vaeo , at Most reasonable Pricea. Hall ordera elapped eame day' tui iieeelved. ' A 'RADIO EXPERT IN ATTENDANCE TO IIELI' 13O/A714 YOUR. DIFFICULTIES, D0 NOT IdlalSITATIq, TO WRITE US. When In Toranto LOOK for the RED rata° don at 140 Victoria ate _feet North of ,Qinsen-Auteiriatic Telephones ae Time Recetders Ltd, Meta 3914 Sounds. I woke 'as midnight tarried upon its And hePaurrdpltelihels1111740 day'hides With- in the core of eaance. lieard. the Shadows running races in , the garden; , The lonely dew that WePt beside the sleeping liliese I heard theastars hynins 'on aold • and 'silver otgeiese ' I' heard the indths horiey *from dreariiiiig,rosesa The fairies Bill/nth-1g ..liatterus out of crimson gauzes; The cocoons spinning Wings of black 'and' aellow apangles. ' heatd 'the forest chant a stcity t Wo its chirdren As I awoke at midnight. I woke, as midnight turned upon' its purple hinges And yearele the masses sprouting on the rotting shingles. ' I heard the cobwebs . weaving gar- ' menta for the rafters; Lost eehoes searchiLg up and down , the dusty stairway. I -heard the attic step and step iinfoag the saidars. ' I heard the gnomesthat sit and snig- ger on. the-bedpbets. . The "things" that rock ire enipty chairs ,and set theta creaking. • One secret -sound was stranger far than all the others; I heard a 1111i.g11 that had'. been left among the worries-,- , As I awoke 'at mianight.` - -Jennie HarrIV-Oliver. Humor -From the Schoolroom. -A Toronto school insaiectot relates a slumber of good stories in' one of tho Canadian- iimgazines. "Who made you..?" asked as teacher. The little girl ..addresSed &ideally Wished to .beaaccurate in her reply - "Go 11 -made me , so :lona"-=indicating thelength ef a abort baby,- and I 'gnawed the 'rest," , - aBeareal Said a 'teacher,' acau anyrafe youequote a 'verse from' Seri6ture-' t� prove that .it is Wrong for' a man to• have two "wives? Ho- pateod,and, af- ter. a moment a bright boy raised' his lielnd, Themes," said Use teach- er, eacouraginglia Thomas, stood up *and said eolemnly, "No' Man can serve' two masters.." .- History and Sc'ripture were* never mixed more thoroughly than, by tire boy who Wrote -"Titus was a Roman. Emperor, supposed to have written the Enistie to the.11ebrewa; hie other name was, Gatos." Here are a few answers dulled at random: "The toad pastes theough your windplae, to the pores, and Um passes. off your toady. by evaporation through a lot of little holes in the skin ealled 'A dada is a' round straight line, with a hole in the middle." "In Mettle the principal occupation ie gathering Auetriclu feathers." "The two most_ famoue volcanoes of Europe are Sodam ana Gomorrah." "Climate laSts ' all the- time, and weather only a few dayS.'; "The blood is putrified in the lunge by inspired air." "A demagogue la a veasel containing beer andsother liqutd.s." • I "Tom, give nie a ,s•entenee contain - leg this word reaponsibility,"' TOIT1 sala, "When ode suspender autton, is' done there is a great responsibility on tlae other ?"'ingaired the teach-. . . or. A vety as1l glel 'answered "A thing for courting with' ' "Mow did that' blet come oh your copybook, Sarri?".'"I think it is a tear, aliss Wallace," "How could a teat be alack, Sara?" "It must have been a dolaredaboY ,who dropped it," suggest- ed the reflective Samuel. "What 'Made . the tower of Pisa lean'?" "The. faMine , "Noviahildred,"' said the teacher, g n esi ory at .iaa. he se tat `alf 11 e 1 'Englend-tell MO ill whose edge would you live if you could cheese fer youmelves." "In the reign of Xing James," said philbsophic Alec, tan - cause education -was very much neg- lected in his lime.", Giant Airplanes to Carry 100 Pe -epic 5001Miles, ttalhin cleoigner has undertalcen to build a medallic capable of carry- ing 100 passeegene for a S'00.nelle Matt vathout stoPpleg. It will have 16 en- gines at 800 horsepower each, a vviclth of nearly 180 feet, end a carrying Guts) 2ace-02 10,100 sdnare feet. Another flatten firm Is Millais% a hydroplane to travel ,iboist 1,800 milea without stopping, for the Porltiguese airmon kvho Will attempt to repeat their trans. atlantic flight. Otm iv,,ho is horn wiatin the Eihund of BeW 13011S, Leedom is considered a genuine Coelereass, A AEA'. CORN REMIDY azutico•lage:o*cr'yuithfo,cr000rnspotrl't.ICv,(7,1,1; v1Ilv001050 them palmessla row i'osi.r.gtte'6%tar•itn1,s15A1‘;)-ia0I°sfr' tA2igp,o7,,i7y.,..sTewilritn371.1s11160tEnie raasseaosio, iia,•est 007', Tomato, oats , Handshakes' Tell Taes. „The vractice pi grasping hands .la no recent innovation of ofkluette. This gesture dates from antiquity. The customs however, of. ehalcing Ita.mla or. iginated kluring that pil'ocluctivo Perioa which we anew ae the Middle Ages, , ,aithe homiehalle is not suca a futile formality as one woula stitepose. Sym- bolic, in tae, Met ,of peace or frieralehipait ia 'also a 'valuable guide to eltaractet.f • The.different kinds. of handshake itra many anti tarieus-far too numerous torethe variety' of forms to be 'noticed here. , There are; nevertlielese, aafew definite types of aandshalca whlk act -as an .dffietellt gui.de,to the personality . of tbm: oso who. give the ' There'ha, first of all, the. hearty -grip ig ftienciship, Indrea- tiye of peace and'geo.d sill. The key - nate 'of 'Oils thandthalse 15 conlidenne. More often than not It Is given by- a lairdsearliest heray, lianal-aa 'true eign, wrote; Shakespeare, of the 'heave Mind. Then theta ia its afititliesis--atteaara guilt, lukewarm, flabby , touch. This handshake ie one whica reveals net. vousetess, aid indecision, Irreselutien of mind, and infirmity of purpese, ao clear a sign is it of caatactet- or,. rather, lack of chatacter-taat ,Imo -re taan one applicant .far a post P°tnistenellena'iageip ntbyn°,ffele':yin do the timid, halting handshake. „It is: never giveli by the- Mali of nirttle' huid -detertainatioe. . ,, There Is alao the. brief, liasty hafid shake, offeresl usually by the peasen .of restlesee animated temperament, and denetina an intelligent,. active. mind: It has neitIter.the. strength of ISA hearty -grip, leer the eveattnese of the arreselute, one., Yet a true thilineaa ,tlan of character may be drawn frees It by the man of eapertenee steel pea ce,ption. '' . Lastly there ie the lingethig, lorigasaer drawn -met, fallsof-feelina haradelealee, the,, special. prerogative of tiva.,; ,feveT rrr atrietly indleative of elfdrapter, this hatalettake does at leaat 2convea artniaitingariasia ably- and, mere. 'JO-. ,auently thati. mere words 'Gee • The -handshake, , such a common, 'eatery -day act as 11 50, has taaSeaanse of more, imPert theot the: simPtq, ap't et raalutation: .Bebind at Ilea ,the great indication of character, retealea through the mast primitive of' our senses -the sense of touch. Dye Silk Stockings • Blouse or.. Sw'eater in -Diamond- Dyes "Diamond Dyes" add yeara of Weer to worn, faded skirts, waista, eoats, stockings; sweatera, 'coverings', hang - alga, draperies,. everything. Every package contains directions so sinapla any woman can put new, rich, fadeless' colors 'into her Worn gatihents or drapertes.even if she has nearer dyed before. Just buy ,Diamond Dyes -no other kind -then your material will come out right, because Diamond Dyes are guaranteed not to streak; spot, fade, or run. Tell your druggist whether the material you wish tO dye is wool or silk, or whether it is linena cotton.or mixed goods, Dancing in Church. -There are stili tvao' 'Eiji -eaten churet,es in which the • praetice • . , dancing ,haa, surviveci-thase of Se- ville, and Echtereach in LuxeMbierts, ' At Seville it is customary on tho , Feast of the Immaculate Conceptioe, . and of Corpus Christi, for the choir boys in the cathearal to aance darteg Ite elevation a the Hoot. A ballet is danced every evening c Mina the octave et the feast hofore the high altar, by boye from twelve to evente_en years of age, in plumed liatsasand, tat dress.' of -pages Of the ime of.iatalip III, • At Echternach Abbey chureh the dance is held on (ho Feast of St. Willi - bred., It 'consists. of a d.an.cing places. aion round the town to the abbey and into me olsurela 'where dandeg. taises elace, and -is witia,easea ay many ,'thousands -of people: - me Dons 1900117:06 ,Non-skid .Tire and Tube 4,000 Mile .Gtiarantee 0.15, rin= 3a/snared at TlOs ` otmtr. lainztv win sup 15 &ay romt, "WE ,mhfh, arraaa- G. GMAY 456,111,Vg6":' Mo ouggi 23e, Aiiniuto the