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The Clinton News Record, 1929-08-01, Page 2
Clinton Nal/vs-Record CLINTON, ONTARIO Terms of Subscrlptton-42.00 per year in gdiande, to Canadian addresras t2 50 to the U.S. or other foreign Co,,iicries. No paper discontinued: until all ,:.i•rears aro paid unless at. `the option of the pblisher. Tho 'Gate ; to ,v111ch' ev 1 y; subscription to paid is denoted ort 10r labot ''eidvertisinp Rates l ransient adver- ' tising,' 12o Per count :line tor. first insertlon, So for each subsequent :Insertion. Beading counts 2 lines. Small advertisements, not to exceed lone inch, such as "Wanted." "Lost," ' Strayed; etc?, 'Inserted once for :35c. each. subsequent insertion 15c, 'Advertisements sent In without In- structions as, to the ❑umber, of, in. eertions wanted will run until,order- ed out and will be charged accord- ingly. Rates for display advertising nilade !mown .on application, Communications intended for pith - 'Ideation must, is a,gu.:rantee of good faith, -be accompanied by tho name or the writer. G. 15. Holl, , M. R. CLARE; Proprietor, Editor. �, �t�i (�is A �n BANKER 6 general Banking Business transact- ed. Notes Discounted. Drafts Issued. 'Interest Allowed en Deposits,_ Sale Notes Purchased. H. T. RANCE.. Notary Public, Conveyancer. Financial, -Real Pstate and Fire In- euranee Agent, Represeuting14 Fire Insurance Compania.,. Division Court ,Office, Clinton.. W. ERYDONE 'Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public, etc. Office: SLOAN BLOCK CLINTON DR. J. C.:GANDIER Oftlee Hours: -1.33 to 3.30 p.m., 6.30 to'8.00,p.m., Sundays, 12,30 to 1.30 p.m. Other hrurs by appointment only. Office and Residence —. Victoria St, DR. FRED G. 'THiOMPSON Office and Residence: Ontario street - Clinton, Ont., One door west of Anglican CbLrch. Phone 172 Eyes examined'and glasses fitted DR. PERCIVAL HEARN Office and Residence: Huron Street — Clinton, Ont. • Phone 69 ' (Formerly occupied' by the late Dr. 0. W. Tbmmeson`: Eyes examined • and "glasses fitted fI DR. H. A; MCINTYRE DENT'S r ; Office hours: 9 to 12 A,M, and 1 to 6 P.M., except Tuesdays and ,Wednes- daye. Office over-. Canadian National Express, Clinton, Ont. • Phone 21. DR. F. A. AXON DENTIST Clinton, Ont. Graduate of 0.0.118., Chicago, and R.O.D,S„ Toronto. Crown and Plate Werk .a Specialty D. H. McINNES . Chiropractor—Els:trice! Treatment. Of Wingham, will be at the Rotten- bury House, Clinton, on Monday, Wed- nesday and Friday forenoons of each week. -Diseases or all !ands successfully handled. r GEORGE ELLIOTT Licensed "Auctioneer for the Comity of Huron. Correspondence promptly answered. Immediate arrangements can be made for Sales Date at a'be News -Record; Clinton, or by calling Phone 203. Charges Moderate and Satisfaction Guaranteed. R. HIGGINS Clinto.i, Ont. General Fire and Life. Insurance Agent for Hartford. Windstorm, Live Stock, Automobile and Sickness and Accident • Insurance. Huron and Erie and Cana- da Trust Bonds. Alerointmenta made to meet parties at Brtmefloid, Varna and Bayfield. 'Phone 67.: tJ • TIME TABLE Trains will .arive at and. depart from Clinton as follows: Buffalo. and Goderich Div. Going East, depart 6.44. a.m. „ 2.50 p.m. Going West, ar. 11.50 a.m. ,. ar. 6.08 dp, 6.43 p.ln. ,.. at. 10.04 p.m. London, Huron E, Bruce Div. Going South, ar. 7.40 dp. 7,40 a.m. �, „ ,. 4.08 pan. Going North, depart 6,42 p.m. ar. 11,40 dp. ,11,53 a.m. T win mttiofin vag e I1 i V e • e!' .. L ilove R1°ifil~I •:cgtil 5 2) tea Tasty eci es ALMOND CAKE. Ingredients -6 oz. of ground sweet almonds, 1/z oz. of pounder bitter al- monds, 6 oz: of castor sugar, 3 oz. of butter, 1 Ib. of flour, 4 eggs, essence of lemon. Method—Break theeggs into a clean bowl',•,add the sugar, pre viously warmed, and beat the.mixture well together with :a wire egg whisk' until it is as Melt as cream. Add the butter' (melted), mix it the almonds, flour (sifted), and essence of lemon with a spoon. Grease a plain mould, fill it with the mixture, and bake in a steady oven. It will, require from.11/2 to 2. hours .to bake, and great care must; he taken to prevent he mixture burning. As a precaution, it is ad- Visable to lay 3 or 4 thicknesses of newspaper under the mould, and wrap the same round the sides, fixing, the paper, in place with . a 'piece of twine. Time—About 2 to 21/2 hours. • Suffie Meet . for 22 M. cake: APRICOT MOULD.., Ingredients --41/2 pints of milk; 2 :oz. of ground rice,' 1 oz. of easter- sugar, 4 tablespoonful's of apricotjam, or 1 gill of apricot pulp, and 1/2 -gill of cream. Method Being the milk to boiling ,point, =sprinkle in the ground 'rice, and simmer for about 10 minutes. Dilute the am or pulp with a 'table spoonful of hot water and press it through a sieve orstrainer into the stewpan. Add the sugar, and when .well mixed pour thepreparation into a wetted. border mould. Let it stand until set, then turn miit, and pile the stiffly -whipped sweetened cream in the centre. Time—From 25 to 80 minutes, Sufficient for 5 or 6 persons. BEANS, FRENCH OR KIDNEY, BOILED. • Ingredients—French beans, salt, pepper, a' small piece of soda. Method —Cut off the heads, tails and a thin strip oe each side of the beans, so as to remove the string. Cut the beans in a slanting direction into sties and, as they are cut, drop them into cold ,water. Have ready a saucepan of boiling water, and 1 heaped teaspoon- ful of salt to; each quart of water, and a email piece'of soda if the beans are old. Put in the beans, keep the sauce- pan uncovered, and boil briskly for. about 15 to 25' minutes, according to age. Drain well, oprinkle with pepper, then serve. Time—To boil the beans, about 15 to 25 minutes. 'Seasonable from July to October. MACARONI GHEISE. Ingredients -4 oz. of macaroni, 2 oz. of grated cheese, 1 oz. of butter, 1 oz. of flour, 1 pint of milk, 1/2 a teaspoonful of made mustard, salt and pepper to taste, brown breadbruinba, Method—Break the macaroni into small pieces, put -them into slightly - salted rapidly bailing water, boil until tender, and drain well. Melt the but- ter in a stewpen, stir in the flour, add the milk, 'and boil well, stirring con- tinueusly. Now add the macaroni, cheese, mustard, a liberal seasoning of salt and pepper, and mix all well to- gether. Have ready a well -greased fireproof dish, turn the mixture into it, sprinkle the surface with brown breadcrumbs and grated cheese, place a few small piecee of butter on the top, and bake in a quick oven until nicely browned. If preferred, the mix- ture'may be cooked in scallop shells or ramekin cases. Time—About 4 of an hour. Sufficient for 1 dish. YORKSHIRE GINGER CARE Ingredients -1 . large or 2 small eggs, 1/2 pint of cream or less of milk, it Ib. of butter, 1/2.' lb. of castor sugar 11/2 oz. of ground ginger, 11b. of flour,'. salt. Method -Whisk the egg thor- oughly, add the cream, and beat these together. Put the mixture , into a saucepan; stirring till warm; add the butter, sugar, and ginger, carefully. stirring over a very moderate fire. When the butter has melted, stir fn the flour, adding salt, and make into a paste (the .flour must be fine). Roll out the paste and cut it out with a plain round paste cutter on to greased flat tins, and bake in a moderate oven. Time—About ei of an hour. Suffi- cient for 11/2 to 2 dozen email cakes. The pen is mightier than the sword; but is does justas many foolish things il'HE NdcKILLOP MUTUAL Fire Insurance; Company Hoed Office, Seaforth, Ont. DIRECTORY: President, Jaime Evans, Beechwood; ,Vice, James .Connolly, Goderlch;.,Sec.- Treaeurer, D. F. McGregor, Seacorth. 'Directors; `Cxeorge McCartney, Seaforth; James Shouldleo Walton; :surrey Gib- son, -Bruceaeld; SISo, Icing, Seaforth;Robert Ferris 'ilarlooli;John Bennewefr, Brodhagen; Jas. Cenolly, Goderich. Agents; Alex. Leitch, Clinton; J. W. Yeo, clodeeleh; fid. t•Iinchley, Seaforth! J, A. Murray, Egmont/vino; R,' G. Jar. tnuth,`Brodhagen. Any mene,v to bo paid. Ip may be paid to Moorish ClpthIng Ce,,'Clinton,_or at Calvin Cutt's grocery, rc oderfch. Parties deslrTng '4o effect insurance or .transact other bua!noCs Will be promptly attended to on` -application to any of the aboveofficers' addressee. to their respec- tive Post office: Losses Inspected by the Director who lives nearest the'-r1eno. -they call him °The man yottean'trattle Many successful' business mein regularly use Wrigley's. The act of chewing has a soothing effect. The healthful cleansing action of Wrigley's refreshes the mouth+- gently stimulates the flow of the. natural juices+ -steadies the nerve& -w aids digestion; ISSUE No, 31-.'29 FOR DEB AND SUB -DEB. A sprigged dimity' for the sl'n debutante and little sub -deb who•fo1 lows the styles of her older gist closely. The diagonal line of hip yok is what makes it so utterly smart an graceful. The attached full gathere skirt swings beautifully at each ino of wearer: Its sole trimming is b of soft faille ribbon at left hip. Flow- ered organdie, nine green handker- chief linen, printed voile in gingham check in blue and white, dotted ba- tiste in pale pink, lilac shade in wash- able crepe de chine, printed crepe silk,. flowered chiffon and pastel georgette crepe will add chic to summer ward- robe, at a srnall 'expenditure. Design o. 534' comes in sizes 12, 14, 16, 13 and 20 years. Pattern -price 20e in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20e is stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each' number, and address your order to Wilson. Pattern e Service, 73 West Adelaide.St., Toronto. Patterns sent by an: early mail. , Drought Within bushed cathedral of the trees A whisper' inane upon the heavy ' air, As though one heard the all -but - silenced prayer 01 earth, athirst for some God-given ease To lie tormenting; the great argosies Of laden clouds for ever onward fare, Full -freighted with the comfort that • they .bear Yet may not bring to port. So He decrees. Plenty twill surely come to death's despite; Yet though green vistas to my view unroll, 3 have felt horror in the 'hopeleas night, m er d d ve ow For me -the dust of drought it on my soul;" I may not ever quite forget again Rid- hand withheld the solace o2 the rain. —Iiasen in the Sydney Bulletin. Victoria: Two Palaces of 700 E.C. Are Uncovered in Irak Chicago—Palaces of two Assyrian kings whose conquests are recorded in the Old. 'Testament, magnificent buildings long buried and forgotten, have been discovered, the University of Chicago announces. prof. Edward Chiera, directing the Assyrian expedition of the univer- sity's Oriental Institute, has just re- turned from Irak with a romantic story about the finding of the royal abodes of Sargon II and Sennacherib. Tho expedition :was `blessed with almost too many results," said Dr. Chiera. Crating incl moving themes - sive fragments was little short' of an engineering feat. One item now en- route to Chicago is a groat stone -bull which weighs 40 tone. In all, 125 tons of Assyrian art are On "their way here while another 125 tons have been turnedover to the Irak Government museum, the "Govern- ment having assisted the -Chicagoans generously. MAKE HASTE Gather roses while they blossom; to -morrow is not to -day, Allow no moment to •escape ,to -morrow isnot to -day; Today is the opportunity for enjoyment and: work, rfnowest thou where thou wilt be tomorrow. Time flies swiftly away. Procras- tination of a. good deed has often brought repentance; to work while, it is called to -day is my advice; time hies swiftly away: Gleim. HOME Somothing like home that 10 not tf'FtE1E IBA If BOOKS home Jo to be desired; it is Sound in ` write The Bordeneo. Limited, Dept. the house of. a friend: Sir' W. Temple. B 40, r40 08. Pool St- 'nvoOtt, 80ontreai, For two Bak, Welfare Dolts. "by APT�Aii� E Dlf`1G� © 1924 by BR1 55400'S INC -AL RIGHTS RESERvrE_,_,-. ',Leak.RELEAS.CD by',Leak. SERVICE 1830. BEGIN HERE TODAY Alden Drake, Alden, a sailor, now grown soft and flabby through a life of idle ease, .visits Sailortown, where. he meets Joe Bunting, a seaman,. with whom he drinks himself if his feet in a barroom. Awakening next morning Drake hears Captain Stevens of the, Orontes denounce "his as a '"dude." Angry, Drake sneaks' aboard the Or- ontes as one of the crow. He is dis- covered by' the captain and thrown ove1.'board.' Drake boards the vessel a second time, however, and manages to pass muster as "Peter Finch;" 0110 of the signed members oC the crew. Mary , Manning, daughter of the owner, is a.passenger on the Orontes. In the forecastle, ,Joe Bunting makes an enemy of Tony, one of the sailors, by kicking him out of his bunk to make room for Drake. NOW GO ON WITH`THE. STORY CHAPTER VI.—(Cont'd,) Drake mustered at the break of the poop with the watch. As the mate called the names' over, theskipper came to the rail.: As'the men' respond- ed. to their names, and moved aside, the skipper played the beam of a faeh- light over their faces, looking for the likely helmsman. Tomorrow the men themselves would arrange wheel tricks. and loolcoute;'tonight a man, would'he chosen by the watch office, and ap- proved by Captain: Stevens.' "You, Bunting, relieve the wheel," said Mistei Twining. The flashlight flickered over Joe's placid face. ."And you, there—" Mister Twining pointed into the darkness, et a momentary, loss for the name; and the skipper's flashlight, seeking out the new look- out, fell upon the startled face 5f Al- den Talbot Drake. CHAPTER VII. "YOU DIRTY ROY." • "Mister, send another map on look- out," the skipper said grimly, "Come here, you dude!" Drake stood before the. big blond man with a curious feeling of elation. Heexpected to hear an interesting opinion of himself, expressed in vivid sailorese. "Come here, you!" gowled Stevens, standardcompass with his tin of brass eleanin'g, gear. The lad grinned in Drake's face, but before he could utter a remark the second mate song' out from the poop: "You,' Sammy!" The apprentice timed ' aft, his mouth open.' es, s1r." "Give your brass rads to the boy— Yes that black fellow, Who 5' ye think? You, Di eke,' come •aft and get busy on the poop brasswork." Drake hesitated. Ile had seen the flutter of a whiteskirt aft. IIe felt as if he simply dared not obey. If he refused to go aft, ;it would be insub- ordination; He would probably be 'con- fined to the forepeak. i "Boy!'? roared Mr•. Adams, "Get a move on you!" A grin of good nater- ed amusement played at the second mate'seye corners. Drake suddenly made '.up his mind to face' it, and walked aft with his brass rags and tin of briekdust'and oil with liis_head up and his sooty face turned ;'• squarely upon'the world. He started with the brass plate; that held the patent log, His back was to- ward the two deckchairs that stood .by the saloon skylight. Then he had to come 'to. the wheel, to polish the big brass boss ansi the inset brass rim. Stealing a glan,:e at. thedeckchairs, he grew 'hot at the.: sight of Stevens' .sneering face. Mary Manning read a book, her fair face rosy red, herblue eyes ever upon her book. Theskipper was talking, but-she`appeared, notto hear. Her color deepened as Drake finished the wheel and went to the skylight to.remove the -rods. And' 'she got up. Steppinginto the companion- way she said: "Captain Stevens, I'll come on deck when ,the work is done. My father would never permit the poop brass - work to be neglected .until mid fore- noon; neither would he tolerate work- ing the ship's 'boys to the point where there was no time for pe'isonai clean- liness." Drake stooped to hide a grin, He felt the hot flush of shame surge through him; but he'could grin, for Captain Stevens' face turned red, and the bruised lips opened and, hung open ONE SNAPPY PUNCII LANDED ON THE SKIPPER'S JAW. and fastened a grip like a steel trap on Drake's jacket. "A dress suit gentleman, are you? Went slrmmming and got drunk, hey? What did you steal, that drove you to my slip, you putty faced whelp?" Drake suddenly wrenched free, leav- ing some buitons in Steven's grasp, and forgot all considerations of dis- cipline and rank in the glorious thrill of one solid, snappy punch that landed flush on the skipper's square jaw and set him on his heels. Surprise had a lot to do with the result. Its effect lasted but a second. Drake struck again, a straight left-hand jab to the mouth that crew blood. He knew it drew blood; he felt the grinning lips burst. But he knew little after that. A terrible, white, snorting face came close to his own, two triphammer fists drove through the defence lie put up as if he were a ten -year-old bey, and after ope agonizing moment when he believed his breastbone was cracked, he felt exquisite serenity stealing over him and relinquished himself to it gladly. • * tN Yp y .r It was early in the forenoon. Drake sweated behind the hot stove on which bubbled the soup and beef for the men's dinner. He had been put on the ship's Articles as Boy, . Every now and then he carried out a bucket of soot and clinker to dump over the lee rail, He had felt that -he was getting a bit grimy. IIe hurried to finish the job. Ile would have a chance to wash before starting on something else. As he took out his last bucket of soot, an apprentice climbed down from the c °' M0. -fig. �g�). l pl' ,y Y1�-h'A:iS! aYl';C+ C��r9e Balm-use EAGLE It C eoyoENsep. � ns the girl.vanislted with the air and step of an offended princess. "Mister Adams! Send tlils con- founded boy for'ard and have a couple of hands scrub him! Get him out o' nay sight, d'ye ]tear!" CHAPTER VIII. DAUGHTER Os THE 'WIDE IV/IT/IRS. Drake sat cross-legged on the fore hatch one dogwatch, sewing a canvas =per. A piece of old canvas lay beside him; a cut-out, partly, stitched pair of canvas trousers were thrown over his feet. He sewed expertly. tie used tht sailor's palm and needle like a saihnaker,' Fat little Joe Bunting went ever to Drake, and his rubicund face regis- tered„surprise 'of the work done. Ho picked up the canvas trousers. His lips puckered in ,a silent whistle, and his twil.kling gray eyes widened. "If you wee a' sea long enough to learn to .tailor like that, you ain't got nonbusiness as a boy aboard this ship,” he said. He regarded Drake's grinning face with a puzzled expres- Sien, examining again the well cut. garment .in his hand, It was made of old-c,tavas; softer than new, truly, but it was the fashioning of the work rather than the stitching that arrest- ed attention. That sort of work was seen in the grand old cleepwaternnen, of a past and gone decade, Joe could do it, and a few others aboard the 03'01 tee, but 't was not a general ac- complishment, and the ability tr turn out work of that sort hinted at a real apprenticeship +.o the sailing ship. "We learnei to do little jobs for ourselves when 1 was a boy at sea." Drake smiled. "Nothing much in it. Salts gave me a bit .of canvas and lent me his sailmaker's bag, Tasked Ike Saintly for a pair of scissors, and he borrowed these from Miss .Man- ning." Jqe was thoughtful. He glanced aft. Trt+ skip:-r.r and Mary Mannino. walked the poop together, along the weather_' side from tafirail to the break The skipper 'seemed happy. pp 1 apvV• The girl was laughing and fullof pleasant chatter. "Well, matey," said Joe, "there ain't a bloke in this ship as can turn out clobber dike that, an' you may lay to that• I never cut out a pair. o bags to: ekal them, not in all my gain' fishin'. I ain't maisin' no remarks, me son, an' I ain't arskin'.no questions wet ain't novo o' my business. If so be as you wants to ship boy in this packet, boy you lain be for all Joe Buntin''i1 bother yell. But if you does other jobs same as you're a-doin' this, I'll gamble my donkey's brekfust you won't stay boy long. What yen dohs' for, anyhow?" "Fun!" said :drake, thinking Joe referred to his- being 111 the ship 'a ell, "Fun! Why don't yuh git yer things outa the slop chest? X011 can't make everything you want, You Won't never 'aye no solani easy," (To be continued.) Sport of the cash° 4t EY CARL R. RASWAN Before sunrise` all of us were eeeily for the chase, which was to be in the neighborhood of lehabra• Mirfiya, the only rain -pool .in this region which contained any water. The:mares with their riders stood in a•large somicli•cle around the great Shealan tont. The thin greyhounds were ,leaping al ouf' the horses. They would ,'follow us 011 the leash, but, once we were past ail danger from their enemies the fere cions sheperd dogs of the camp, they would be freed, They knew it was their day. Joyous were the falcons, also, perched .before the tents, cooing to their trainers and masters. At ii. word 'from Fuaz, who slave mounted on., his warhorse,. a slave wearing a leather gauntlet 'on les hand released one of the falcons, and,. when Sant called' her with the fel- comer's Beent, "ldr-id1!" she alighted upon. his raised left fist. After he hail ;hooded tee falcon a- gain, he rode over to me and with his free arm clasped me to his heart. "We are going to hunt; through the endless spaee ,,,of the air," he said. "The chase .is a sister to the battle, because the prey, when brought to our feet, is a defeated hero." Our., party made a brilliant scene ate it rode pray. Fuaz had thirty negro slaves' with'' him, each one carrying a hunting falcon and :also, after the dogs were released, taking 'care of two greyhounds. Eight of the prince's; relatives and friends, astride their celebrated mares, aleo carried 'fal- cons on their gloves, and more than two 'hundred riders ' followed ns: or rode. several miles' ahead. Suddenly 'his :trained 'eyes discover - •ed a heron mounting higher and high-. er into the air. Shouting some joy- ous words, "Yi aini, ya ylhidd, hanals el-talak!"_"Oh, my eye, 0 Hawk, there is thy prey!" he tried with eag- er hands -to ,unfasten the hood and the foot -thongs of his falcon: while his mare was still going at full galloy. Excitedly the = went on: "Oh, thin: eyes aro quicksilver and thy chest is gold -brocaded silk! .Oh thou art the lightning and the thunder,- the sword of heaven!" Now that he had loosed the lash, he cried to her: "Iftalt, idol, iftah el- yefarfir! "-"Open, open, open thy wings!" and, liftingher up and down and 'swinging her sidewise in his hand, released her. The cruel but noble bird soared into the air with fluttering wings and cries that rang unnaturally shrill upon the desert .emptiness. Then downward she darted like an meow, falling with bowed wings in order to seize the heron, who, at the very last lnolnent, flung himself away. Thereupon, fall- ing again in a terrible "stoop," she used the increasing speed for a sed den upward curve, in th epath of the wind, which caned her windward of the quarry and gave beg a new posi tion, higher and of greater advantage for her attack. Fans cried out in delight, "Praise be to the Lord, my falcon is swoop- Iing down!" and from the old Arabic poem he recited; "She catches . the prey- in her talons as in a net!" With her feet held close to her body, she rushed down,' straight and steady, and then with a quick, nearly unnoticeable spread of her wings, swooped again—stopped and swooped once more—on to of the prey. Roll- ing and falling, ,once stopping for a moment, because the big heron was fighting for his life in the blue ocean of the ail', came the ball of scuffling birds. Feathers, torn loose, flutter - ad' to the ground. Then I saw that the falcon bad been able to separate herself, not without dealing the final deadly blow. Thereafter she sailed away in the wind and, as the quarry bounced to the desert ground, gave herself a satisfied swing and with a swoop brought herself close to us. Two of the jirwa, or female grey- hounds, were now sent.after the prize,' which they dragged in. ..A. rider met them half -way and cut off the head of `the ` big bird. Finally we sighted a herd of gazell ee New life came into the whole party. We spread out over a long line of attack„ more or less in a half - circle, We came very close to some of the gazelles, but they managed to break suddenly to the side, The sport lasted for at least an Mier. Some of out' mares became ex- hausted and were kept back, Swiftly the rest of ns kept on moving, assist- ed by the greyhounds. I slowed my mare down When I noticed that four Bedouins, including the prince, with -twitching hands were again loosing -tiro leather hoods and foot -leashes and straps of'their hunting-birds. Buzzingand' ,Tying, the birds sail- ed away the moment they: were set free and in an almost incredibly short time were gliding down, close .to the ground,' on the 51001', unlucky gazelles, which, with 'clashes and side juleps, with newy increased speed and .with despairing strength, tried to shai;e off the gruesome' murderers from their bleeding necks and heads. • The ob- ject of, the falcons was to blind the animals. Pive gazelles had been killed, `but there was one young buck that had led 09 a merry, chase. lie had shaken off two bh'cis already, one of them lam'PBedouins were not going to giveed, t'1she no; they knew that he was nearing the end of his strength. You could see him distinctly a few miles ahead of us, watching, Slowly our left and right wing of riders closed in on him. My hope was that he might escape, but the hope seethed vain, He: was losing ground rapidly, and the two strongest falcons of one fal- coner, and two more, .belonging to Fuaz, had the' burka removed. These terrible birds soon had the poor b,tclt 'n their talons'' and were trying' to i 'each the glistening eyes, with their, beaks. Eagerly the Bedouins called o them their respective names: "Ya 1• 'STANDARD tOFQUAfuET ; } YEARS BET.It HOME, t pA , t �' II.fli�la.11�rrn��'"•'. Ill eAsT REM) 1.8511 �;k Iclfattafl!"-"Oh my .snatcher!" "Ya: saffaji! "—"0 my ;striker!" The young gazelle buck was wiser than they thought him Suddenly he stopped and leaped into the air with' three falcons sticlung'to his head and neck— end' then' down he went, bur- rowing his dagger' -like little horns with a quick 'side thrust of his head into the ground. It was the work of an instant, but ithere was only one, falcon on his head when he dashed. away. After a while we saw that not even this one bird was`torturing bine any more. The hero'of the day ,dis-. appeared, into the sanctuary .05 the desert. Our return was not so glorious as our departure from the tented plains hacl .been. The mares rooked the bestof•ail; they carried not only their tired masters but the delicate grey. hounds, which had sore feet from thea fine gravelly :ground and ,the. hot peb- bles on some rock-strewn stretches of the desert, and also the tropics of the chase thrown over ,their croups or withers.—good-.cheer for the banter's pot and for hunger -bitten souls. I had my fill of hunting with falcon¢,-; and greyhounds: that day, and en the future found it more enjoyable -just to. run after a fleeing hare or gazelleon. my swift mare, though 1 never suc- ceeded in outdistancing either one of them,—From the June Asia. BAFFLED BUT RISING .AS Every failure is: a step to succtsss;- every . detection of w]rat is false directs us toward what. is true; overt' trial exhausts some tempting 'form of error. Not only : so, but scarcely, any attempt is ,entirely a failure; scarcely any theory ,the result of steady thought, is altogther false, no tempting form .of error is without. some latent charm derived from• trutIl.—Professor Whewell, CHARACTER -.see The happ peas of woman, ae of man, depends in a greater measure upon the individual completeness p0 character. TRUTH I have seldom known any one wild deserted Truth in trifles, that could, be trusted in matters of Importance. --e. Paley. Save the Prate of nut Fare to Toroirato Permanent Waving By Experts $5.50 When you visit Toronto don't fail to have one of our . famous Permanent Waves at the Reduced Rate of $5.50. With or without appointment. Specialists In the Shur Wave Method of Permanent Waving. (For ladies, who Dare.) AT RO;�ERTSON'S 288 YONGE STREET, TORONTO Write for Booklet "W2" on the car(. of a Shur Wave Permanent Wave. DOZEN different things may, cause a headache, but there's dust one thing you need ever do to get immediate .relief. Aspirin is aur absolute antidote for such pain; Keep it at the office. Have it ready, inthe home. - Those subject to fre;r guent or sudden headaches shouldl'. carry •Aspirhn in the handy pockets tin. Until you have used it for head aches, colds, neuralgia, etc., you've . no idea how Hutch Aspirin can help. It means quick, complete relief tot millions of men and women whei use it every year. And it does not depress the heart. Aspirin 1 a krnaes14it Registered i>a Canaile,