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The Clinton News Record, 1931-01-22, Page 2Clinton' News -Record GUNTON. ONTARIO Ternie''ot Subscription—$2.l 0, per year in advance, to Canadian addresses; $2.60. to the. (LS. or other foreign. countries. No paper .discontinued until ell arrears are paid unitise' at the option -of the publisher. The date to which every subscriptions is paid is denoted on• the label. Advertising Pates—Transient"adver• tieing, 12c 'pm count Anne for first Insertion. 8c for 'each subsequent Insertion. Heading counts:2 linea. Small advertisements,,net to 'exceed one inch, such as "Wanted " "Lost," "Strayed," etc.. Inserted once for 31c. each aubsequenr insertion. 15c, Advertisements sent, fn without in• utructiofle as to the'numbei of In• sertior s wanted will 'run until 'order- ed out and will be Charged accord. Ingle 'Rates, for. display advertising made known on application. Communtead-ns-Intended for pub • Ncation must, as a guarantee of good faith. be accompanied by the ,name of. the writer. G. E. HALL, M.. R. CLARK, Proprietor. Editor. A ''RIs: l SCAP!AD By KATHLEEN;NORRIS, SYNOPSIS, Mora, Kate. and Martin are the on1Y working members of d Widow Oiea household.. Martinet ;it; night; he haSal»enoe to goto Germany but finances forbid, Mary hate work for -Gordon 'Rountree ,in his, of oh e.Shi Meets ' 'Gordon's friend:; Steynes who Is 'ieing pursued by a_Rtue- .Sian countess and her daughter-=otilect marriage. In 'order to'..dlsedurage them. Christopher pt•onoses tbatMar tate act RS hie Trifeof for 2} hcheque With istlro .thought tieing, the.. cheque from Steynes,.'.to send .be to 'discouraged she anagrees. Mr•Y The iratcountess rtgoessis " to Steynes' hoose for the rest.of the night. A_.burglar breasts in and is shot py Steynes, As a witness, Mary isnsuppo ne ed Wraps % be on a business trip for Rountree. CHAPTER XKIV,—(Cont'il.) "My dad!" prayed Mary Bate, coy- Ming her eyed with her°hand, crouch- ing down against her pillow, shudder= ing'in, the chilly gloom' that conies be fare morning. "My God; what have I done!. "Is•it as:easy as this;" she 'thought, for 'a girl to get in 'wrong?' Is this all there is toit2" Whether' it *was the -coffee; or Mrs. Peters'" snoring, • or her own tireless threshing Thoughts that kept rest- less, the fat ,was that;.she was hope- lessly awake, sleepwas as absent£rom the possibilities •of ,the moment as flight, or peace of Mind, or''coherent ,' reflection. ' Mary Kate tossed.' and twisted,'• sighed, started up neryously.. settled herself, 'with an aching' heats and' a ury throat,. resolutely to sleet.. =After awhile there was pearly gra. ripene1al, Real Estate add Fire In- at the windoSis. brininge to see he never earenaarenaAgent. Representing 19 Fire had shlonged ngedso Insurance Companies.. The shapes of she furniture emeia>- Division ..oust Office. Clinton. ed slevelY from the 'mass of shadows. The two glass doors through which alone the -light was 'filtering—for Mrs. Peters had barred and locked the win- dow—grew a brighter gray. Mary Kate had been cold, an hour or two ago. But now she was feverish .with the bad air of the hermetically sealed room, maddened by the drone— drone--drone of the sleeping woman's Meath. Suddenly ,he vias out of bed. She groped for the dressing gown, and felt fog' her slippers. Noiselessly .;i.e opened one of the porch doors, and noiselessly crept out into the wet freshness and silence of the porch. On this same porch she had been happy, last night, just as the sun was rio ing. But between sunset and sun- risM •she had lived through half the emotions of her life. The garden was drenched with heavy dews, but already the warmth of the coming day was softening the air, and the trees and shrubs, gray shadows 'in lighter gray a few mont- ents ago, were taking definite shat c. Color was pouting into them; brown into the great gnarled oast boles, green into the young trembling leaves on the _ lilac trees. A great clump of bridal DR. PERCIVAL HEARN wreath stretched snowy streamers into Office ant' Residence: ' the brightening air; the sad and sub - Huron Street - Clinton, Ont. tle odor of wet earth and grass was Phone 69 cut by a sudden exquisite breath of (Formerly occupied by the late Dr. acacia. C. W. Thompson). Mary Kate huddled' in a basket Eyes Examined and Glases Fitted. chair, wrapping about herself a plaid that had been folded across itt She saw the wet leaves glisten in the first shafts from the east and the stiff curved leaves of the oaks and the thin shredded foliage of the peppers take on a paten of shining gold. The sun dazzled bright in the upper leaves of all the trees, sank down through their branches in broad banners and waves of warmth and brightness. It was morning. The girl watched until her eyes were heavy and sore, and until columns of blue smoke were arising here and there beyond the trees, from more than one stately roof -line. Birds were hop- ping and calling among the wet bushes now, there was chirping, and the flash of wings, everywhere, and toward the kitchen May Kate heard the erispin of steps, anis the clink of milk bottles. She went wearily indoors, findin, Mrs. Peters gone, and the neighboring bed flung open to air with a certain Nordic thoroughness. Exhaustedly she flung herself once again on her Led, drawing the covt,ra over her, wrapper and all. And this time sleep found her .almost instantly, deep, 'dreamless sleep,, in which she could forget'for a little while what had pre- ceded the merciful oblivion, and what' must folfow the inevitable awakening. '* :N •% * "This is Miss O'Hara. Yes. Now, Miss O'Hara;" said Constable Brown- ing, looking up from an improvised desk, in that very living room for whose Spanish completeness Mari' Kate was so.deadly weary, "we'll only detain you a moment. • Will you Sit da Trust Bonds. Appbintments made down?" to meet parties at ,Brucefield,' Vhrna Mary Kate had entered heavily, •slowly, looking fearfully into the face of one man after another. She was dressed' in the clothing ,she had worn down froin town, on the -day before; she looked ghastly. pale's and the rings about her eyes were black this morn- ing. The^e were several • persons in the room.; Chris we's there, . Peters and Joseph, the old gardener, Gordon Rountree, looking nervous and sym- pathetic and 'troubled, 'a young pollee officer, Constable' Browning, who had been hers lastnight, and a businesslike young man who was busily taking stenographic records of everything that was said. There was also a heavy, faced, gloomy -looking, young mart who seemed td be from she Coroner's office, or perhaps he was -from the City and County Hospital. A jury .if Spanish Inquisitors bald Mt • have appeared TIME TABLE more horrible to Mary Kate. To her the room was l: veritable torture • Trains will arrive at and' -depart from chamber. ' Cirtnton as follows:, The bright dawn had'been obscured Buffalo and Goderich Div. • :by a heavy fog; the garden, the world, • Going East, depart ' 6.69 eon- were blotted out by it. There was a a- (I`• 2.66 Pah- certain gloom in the room, accentuated Going West, depart 1.1.66 aram by the roughly -plastered walls and the " " 10.09 p.m dark furniture; above the table where 'Lonlon, Huron a Bruce the Constable eat a light was burning. 'Going South, depart 7.8,8 amt. "te'1 were in this house last night, , ,r " _ 8.58 pats. Miss O'Hara?" ' • Gc n ' North, depart 6.27 pain` — ar. 11.60, dp. 11.68' pan. ISSUE No. 4-‘-'31 v 1,��rwrpt jM!i C ART Banker A general Banking Business • transacted. Notes Discounted. Drafts Issued. Interest Allow- . • ed on Deposits. Sale Notes Bur- chased. i. H. T. RANCE • Notary Public, Conveyancer , "I—yes, 'I' was here." "Have I your name and l'ectly?" ' Be read them. Her 'traie eyes wan dered to Chris',s face. "Yes, that's right." "You are, a friend of Mr. Steynes?" • "Herdly.'that. He asked me to 'de 'something for him, 'as a 'Sort of ,joke—n' She ,sant the expressionless ,glances, of the officers cross and Meet.. "Why; that's all, might" Browning said ' considerately. _ "That isn't .our affair. We merely want to know how. you first became aware that somebody was trying to break rote the house. Just tell it simply, what you heard and saw, and what you did. Take it easy: All we, want is the truth." • "I told you," Gordon Rountree said, in:a,low, hurried .Voice, uncomfortably,, awkwardly, "that 'MSS O'Hara. has been my secretary for.two years, and that she is a young'ladyr for whom- ha!—I have the greatest—well,. res- pect''. The Constabl'e's,hard eyes fixed him with an iMpersonal stare.. He pursed his, lips as if , about to expectorate, Swallowed, looked. back at his papers[. "Surer he conceded in,'differntly. 'Mary Kate, rapidly, without looking at anfbf them,•told her story. There was a . brief, riot 'unkindly, cross- examination. "That's 'all," said' Browning. • . • "You .won't need Miss O'Hara any more?" Chris asked.•. ' Not unless he gets well—the feller that was shot," the officer said, with all the rancor of his type for the arro- gant:and idle rich. "If .he does she may have to appear in court." "It seems to me a—well, if you'll excuse me, a rotten thing," Chris- topher said, "that a man can't take a shot at any armed,burglur in his own house, without dragging his—his friends, his guests through all this publicity.". "It isn't that," Mr. Browning ex- plained, with the menacing patiemie of those who know that they are in- vincible. "It's that—looka here, now. I don't say it's so in this case, and I don't say it's often so, but suppose this young lady had framed this up with the burglar? How would I know—" "It seems to me you're rather ex- ceeding your authority, Constable," Chris said, in a pause, in a tone Mary Kate had never heard from him be- fore. "Anything that is in the line of your .duty, by all means do," he went on, a white line forming about his mouth as he spoke, and his color reced- ing unt:er his country tan, leaving his face pallid, "but don't diverge into any plot that you happen to rmember from any book you may haveread!". The two men frowned at one an- other. Each was.measuring the other's strength; thepower of the law against the power of money. And as usual the money won. The Constable drop- ped something of his truculen • man- ner; no use to antagonize these people, who had influence sometimes in unex- pected quarters. "That's all right, sir," he said civil- ly. "I'nr sure I have no object in an- noying Miss O'Hara. As , ar as I'm concerned we'll have no further use for her, and if she's- wanted at the trial, she can settle that with the Court." • "All right, Mary," Chris said, conn- ing over to her. "Colne out into the patio a minute," he said, putting his hand on her shoulder, "I want to talk to you." The square patio was filled' with fog, but the sun was beating against the gray Mass, far up in the sky, and the soft damp air wits warm and pene- trated with a strange golden light. The little red fish swain busily ander their lily pads, and the parrot walked ups side down en the gay hoop sf the perch, and tallied and chuckled Mys- teriously to himself. All the upper windows were open to the morning air, letting out the smoky, close, dusty air .,f the night. "Ddn't worry about him," Chris said reassuringly, with a jerk of his betel toward the living room, and the inq'ai- sitioner. "He's just puffed up with a little brief authority." u "Chris, if Moody—the burglar, lives, accents . will they have a trial?" - Pattered upon - "Why .should there be any trial? That marble front, and were wide There isn't any question that Moody was in the house; they saw him lying there, themselves, at the foot of the stairs. The elan undoubtedly will plead guilty. I never heard anything funnier in my life than the way this Browning ass is carrying on!" (To be continued.) 'Sticky' Dishes When food sticks to the pan, add a little bicarbonate of soda in cold water and put the pan bank .on the. stove' to heat' the .water 'slowly. You may be 'surprised Trow much conies off without any rubbing. address Cor What New 'York Is, Wearing' 1BY•ANNAI3,ELLE WORTSIINGTON ,'Ihustzated'.D,essmalciorq Lesson, Fitr- nished With-Ev i PrIttern Frafnk 1: inglend, B.A., LLL.B, Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public Successor to W. Brydone Sloan Block — . Gi!nton, Ont, CHARLES B. HALE Conveyancer, Notary ,Public, Commissioner, etc. (Office over J. E. Hovey's Drug Store) DR. J. C. GANDER Office Hours: -1,30 to 3.30 p.m., 6,30 to 8.00 p.m., Sundays, 12.30 to 1:30 p.m, . Other hours by appointment only. Office and Residence — Victoria St, DR FRED G. THOMPSON Office and Residence: Ontario Street — Clinton, Ont. One door west of Anglican Church. Phone 172. Eyes Ex -mine. and Glasses Fitted DR. H. A. MCINTYRE DENTIST Mee over Canadian Nationr. Express, l:lnton, OIL Extra -.ion a Sp --Salty. Phone 21 D. H. McINNES CHIROPRACTOR Electro Therapist Masseur Office: Huron St. (Few doors west of Royal Bank). ours_'lues.. Thurs. and Sat., all .day. Other hours by appointment. . FIellsatl Sealorth Oflice—ilioiOffice—Morin. Wed. and ri.ens. afternoons. Phone 207. CONSULTING ENGINEER S. N. Archibald, B.A.Sc., (Tor.), O.L.S., Registered Professional En- gineer and Land Surveyor. Associate Member Engineering Institute of Can- ada. .Office, Seafor'th, Onterio. GEORGE ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer tor the County of Huron. • Correspondence' promptly answered'. ,imnledlate arrangements .can be made • for Sales Date ,at. The News -Record, Clinton, ur 1,3'010l1ns Phone;203. Charged Moderate and Satisfaction Guaranteed., B. R. HIGGINS • Clinton, Ont. General Piro and Life insurance Agent for Hartford Windstorm, Live Stock, Automobile and Sickness and Accident Insurance. Huron and Erie and 'Cana - Gulls Choose N.Y. for Winter Resort One of World's Greatest Tourists --Atlantic Crossing Mere Hop Although, many human beings :flee from .New York and, seelc'.warmer re- gions when the cold weather takes "hold, the 'metropolitan .'region 'is . a popular Winter resort .for sea gulls. Coming from Newfoundland, the coasts of Labrador and even further north; these oceangoing birds,' notably .the big northei'n or 'herring' still, ar- rive in early.winter and remain mall early. spring. • The m'etropolitan region offers many 'fine feeding. groundsfor the birds, 'They 'swarm .ohove the harbor); swooping'clown to its waters for dead fish or pieces of refuse and .following in the 'waste af. vessels to pick up scraps thrown overboard by .the ship's cook. Marshes in the Jersey ,mend- ows, streams in'ssuburban areas, ,are 'staked with delicacies that tempt the.gull appetite. It must be admitted' that the.•guil, pictur-esque•ns he may be when, ,;hovering with: , motionless wings above •„is/vessel, is • a .scavenger. by;nature: City dumps 'provide food -the, gull does .nots despise; he brings man able assistance ,in tie cleaning hp of waste, In.'eear-by waters. tut the gull •tis 'a • wanderer and traveler whose peregrinations have no- li'mft. 'Be may summer in Bud- lion:e, Bay or. Iceland, :and Winter along the Great "Lakes,,, in; Yucatan Or even in the' Mediterranean The North ,Atlantic is an important field for his tours. When an ocean-going: 'vessel, or' a fishing schooner, sails out of -bur, harbor,'swarms of gulls=• especially .the little kittiwake, ,with - its graceful black legs=follow astern and it' is believed that they some - Hines travel in this manner straight .across the Atlantic. Birds marked as nestlings' in. England have been dis- covered as adults on this side of the Atlantic, and some raised in Prussia have been captured off the coast of Mexico. t The large Glaucous gull, or Burge - To be smartly :garbed gives young. .daughter that lovely 'feeling of as- surance. Note how -much more charmingly. and pleasantly she goes about her work. Today's darling frock of patterned wool crepe is immensely likable, it has smart sophistication and practi- cability. It's really very simple to wear and master, often ventures southward as to make it. far as the New Englated coast, the The bodice cuts in one at the front; Great Lakes, and the Niagara River; and at the back. It is lengthened with and • the Black -baked Gull fregently a circular flaring flounce. It adds extra width at the front, so essential for sports activities, through an in- verted plait. The neckline is generally becoming. Style No. 2881 is designed for girls of 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. It is strikingly chie and gay in a tweed mixture in beige and brown with a dash of red, . Covert cloth, wo ri jersey, and rayon novelties make up attractively, Size 8 requires 174 yards 39 -inch with ik yard 36 -inch contrasting. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; 'wrap it carefully) for each number, and some years ago and the address your order to Wilson Pattern United States made an Canada andnt he Service, 79 West Adelaide St., Toronto. by In the British Museum. I'What do yon see in that time -touch- ed stone, When nothing is there But. ashen blankness, although you flak are scarce they have to feed on sen urchins, clams or periwinkles. These shell fish can be caught only at low tide and are had to get out of their shells. The gull, therefore, takes the clam in its bill and hovers Salad,:, r tea drinkers d> „ t 1 :: „est green tea Turks Install Electric Mu - zzins To Call F .' ithful to Prayer The anient',and conservative Mo- hammedan religion has accepted the benefit' of 'modern radio science,; so that the faithful'.; now may be called earlier and. louder for prayer without requiri,ig a -priest ' to climb a tall tower in the chilly.. dawn to do it per- sonally. in Turkey, it is reported, ex- periments .are under :way with radio amplifier& and loud speakers' to give the traditional .callof the muezztn 'from ,the tops of the mosques at the tours specified for prayer or other re- ligious services, - The Turkish. Gov- ernment, it is said, is elisions to econo mize in the 'upkeep of the mosques and the use the electric muezzin saves enough time that, the "services and expense of at least one priest• can be dispensed with. It is possible to connect the local amplifier and loud and Bsyfleld Phone 67, THE McKILLOP MUTUAL, Fire Insurance, Company . Head 'Office, pea€orth, ;Ont. President, Jsimes, Sirens. Beechwood. 'nee. presldont ; Joules ttonnolly,Gode rich. Itl_actors Jamas Shuulrlice„ Walton; Wm a limn. Hallett; richt: Ferris, •Flul- la t [times 13i:1;m:wety Ilroaubagen: . Seafo th:ljGr. U1. M Caitiey, SeafOrdfbot, lgr.nts;- N J ' Yei.'RVR No. 3. Clinton; John Murray, 'Seafelth; Janes' Watt. Blyth Dr1- winseley. Searorth. Set:[ tarn and Treasurer; D. tr. ilo- Gicaor, Seaforth, Any money to be paid may be pato 'to hlor.rish'ClothIfle Co., Clinton, or at Calvin Cult's Grocery, Goderich, Parties desiring to effect insuranbe. or ' transact Other business will be promptly above offloerS aon ddressed to cation to their roopecof e live post offices. Lossesinepectel by the Director who lives nearest the creno. 4140g pDg A'+fii kt n IWbY visits the seacoast, but seldom goes far inland. * * * The herring gull, most often has his home—if it can be called a home —generally on some little island off Labrador. To such a place, where there is abundant food in the form of cod, Caplin, clams and sea urchins, he goes in the Spring to find his mate and build a nest of twigs, seaweed, grass or moss. Three eggs are the ordinary lay and but one brood is raised in a season. While herring gulls sometimes steal one another's eggs, as do ravens and blackbacked gulls, their worst enemy, until re- cent years, has been the professional "eggers,” who carne in ships to make a business of gathering gulls' eggs. which this pra:tice was ended an every summer the Dominion sends its patrol boat back and forth along the coast. There is a feeding trick of the gills which shows their intelligence. When speaker of each mosque to a radio re- ceiver and to broadcast the necessary' calls from a central radio station, 'so that one good radio announcer acting as muezzin can Serve'the•whole try at at once, the only local, necessity 'being tbat someone get. up in time to turn on the receiver. Even this might be done by an automatic alarm clocks or an electric phonograph and amp 11-, fier may be started automatically in the same way.. Another advantage of the electric call to prayer, the Turkish engineers urge, is that a battery of loud speaker's , in the • tower. of 'a mosquemay be made 'many times more powerful than any human voice, so that one tower will serve a much wider countryside than is possible when a live muezzin instead instead of a 'vacuum -tube 'one broadcasts •the call. ' Let's praise each• other' now and then, Give credit when it's due; Let's side with good and honest men Of 'whatsoever hue; Let's help the down -and -outs again To tackle life anew. give it A rigid stare? "You look not quite as if you saw, But as 1f you heard' high above a flat rock. Lotting it go, Parting your lips, and treading softly As mouse or bird. the bird has to follow it down in a hurry, lest another of the species, or "It is only the base of a pillar, they'll a raven or saddleback get there first. tell you, Sometimes several attempts are Than came to us necessary • before the target is struck Prom a far old hill men used to name and the shell is broken. Areopagus." —"I know no art, and I only view A. stone from a wall, But I am thinking , that stone has echoed The voice of Paul. "Paul as he stood and preached be- side it Facing the crowd, A small gaunt figure with wasted er of the old church, which has a features, . 'very pronounced slant, it dates Calling out loud from 1573, and is the only , part of ' the old church that is now standing. "Words that in all their Intimate 'me most famoud' toboggan ruin in the world; the Cresta, is one of the big attractions of St. Moritz. It ie three-quarters of a mile long and tile distance has been covered in fifty- nine seconds, or at very nearly the .speed of an express train, Then there is the skating. .Some of the finestskatingin the world can be seen at St. Moritz, and the place io worth visiting for that alone. Let's be as friendly as we can Alike with poor and rich; Let's gaily round the helpless loan Who's -lying in life's ditch; Let's make the most of our brief span, And never play with pitch. Let's fill our homes with song and glee And banish snarl and frown; Let's take .the youngsters on our knee And ride to London Town; Let's teach them from their infancy That right's the best renown. Lot's pay the debts of lova we owe, Forget the debts of late; Let's share the goodly gifts that grow And pile the empty plate; Lets' all do all the good we know Before it is too late. —Tit-Bits—A.B.C, Another Leaning Tower While the Leaning Tower of Pisa is the most famous "monument" of its kind in the world, it isn't the only one. St. Diorite, where devotees of. winter sports are now gathering, can boast of a leaning tower of its own. One of the sights of this beauti- fully situated Swiss village, now cele- brated all over the globe, is the tow - Dress Flowers Flowers are .again being worn on evening gowns. 'If you want 00 l'efur- nish•;yotlr evening frock sew a'gariand of gardenias'around the' deeoiletage. These are called Biel" necklaces, after the Hawaiian. garlands. reflected, And then . were gone. ",I'm a labouring man and ki little, Or nothing at all;, But I can't help thinking that stone onceechoed The voice of Paul." —Thomas Hardy, in ,':Satires of Cir- cumstance." New. Caps ow but Rain Spots Removed • Rain spots on fine fabrics. can be removed by -dry brushing, .Fasten the - spotted. part of tho garment over the ironing )loard and pin it securely • An evening accessory that has be- 'in position. Brush briskly across come something of.a fancy this win- .the: grain of the material with an old ter is the little .formal cap male of toothbrush, or any other brusb hay. glittering sequins- or metallic fabric Mg stiff fine .bristles. This treat - and a veritable •Juliet affair, just coy- ''ment of rain -spotted material is more ering the back'of a young head with effective than dry cleaning. since the hairline 'exposed.. ' •gasoline' often faile to remove such _ --"1'—_-- spots. • S 'Kitty: "Paud proposed fool times - ^ s- before •i accepted him." Catty: Lots of nien will never know what "Who were the three other girls?" .' it is to experience brain fag. Economy Corner Meringue. Put 2 egg whites, 14 cup coufec- tionery sugar, 2 tablespoons cold wa- ter (or to egg shell full), pinch of cream of tartar and shake of salt into bowl• and beat until stiff. Then spread on pie and brown in oven. Do not beat meringue until it is ready to be spread and I find that cold storage eggs will not melte a successt'ul meringue. It requires strictly fresh eggs. Also watch it carefully while in oven, as it scorches very quickly. - Apple Sauce Cake Half cap lard, 1 egg, 1 cup sugar, 1 cup seedless raisins, 1 cup apple sauce, sweetened for table use, 1 tea- spoon soda, dissolved in 2 tablespoons liot water, 2 caps fl sir, 1. teaspoon cinnamon, Ira teaspoon -each of all- spice, nutmeg and salt. Beat well, pour into a greased loaf pan and bake about 1 hour in a' 360 degree F. oven, Prune Jelly "Is she fond of el Garen?' "1 should say she s. She fought her husband for seven months in the courts to get the et atody of then[." Wooden Works Run Clock Ludwigshaffen, Germany.—Tho pub- lication "Pfaelziches Museum" has One pound prunes, 1 pound sugar, 1 ounce gelatine, 1 orange, 1 lemon, whippets cream. Wash prunes well, then cover with water and soak over night. Put on to boil in same wa- ter until tender; add sugar and boil. 10 minutes; strain and remove stones. Take gelatiue soaked In 1 cup of wa- ter. Put on stove juice from prunes equal to 24 cups; add juice of lemon and orange. When this commences to boll add gelatine and prunes. Turn into mold and serve when cold `vitt[ whipped cream. Cranberry and Apple Punch Cover 1 quart of cranberries with water. Cook until quite ender. Strain through bag and when cold, '' add 1 quart of sweet cider. Sweeten to taste and chill. This is very good. Mixed The master gave the class n sent discovered that a clock made la' 1640 tence to punctuate. The top boy of and now owned by the clookmaker the class managed it correctly, his ea Michael Mass, in Annweiler, is still in fort being: "In came the soldier, on perfect running order, although its his face a fiery look, on his feet Itis works are entirely of wood, including,; sandals, on his back his armour, shout- all houtall the wheels. The only bit of metal lug aloud his battle -cry." in it Is the weights. Jones handed hi the following: "In came the soldier on his face, a fiery A. piece of lint soaked in vinegar I look o11 his feel, his sandals on his and spread,, over a bruise will pre- back, his armour shouting aloud his vent discoloration. I battlecry." "534" The New Giant Cunarder lItai;>,. The -above is an artist's drawing of the new giant Cunard liner at pi'esent under construction On the :Clyde. This enormous vessel will register 73,000• tons and will be the largest liner afloat. Prompt relief from COLDS..... . . SORE THROAT . . RHEUMATISM .. LUMBAGO ... NEURITIS . . .. . ACHES and PAINS Does not harm the heart Yr packageTRADE MARK IREG. AcAAlnp'inn".. bo es ofn12 taAlso botcontains 4 and 100 [tidirections. druggists.dy ' Made is Canada 11r wS '410