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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1926-10-07, Page 6Tfi0 Fiefs$ Etn d delis ons POLSON IN EVERYFOOD IY ART}IIJR'B. REEVE. Glenn • Buckley, "tia one, side and ,Il dud Ja<.k Curtis eftthe Utter:- .Ken ivEtii 1,1011O,. We were on alaother alzs-^ t'ien, Might' it not be a good plum, he re0soned, for hiin co take ',p this side; of th0 znattex'..ar ti s un..�7 (wn k -]i ,%gyer there Baas to be learned? Far to the east, now, on the Island, Craig, Easton and myself wore very busy with the 'direction' findes encleay.' ()ring' to :ecate tho hang-out of the ay racer. Every hodr, a quarter after the bona. m ssages there bungs "" -'—=_ __.--_--_- __ 4 , bondcast between this Izonat we we've CHAPTER XVIII (Cont d' "--""'s caking and thu `Seootei moving up must ho iesoitel to, -if the were a er the Sund. Souletimes tlacie.,wero Lien restrained hiserr ieism This to escalie, v was like 'a girl, But it was a bit of Ha othhira and er messages.; sent group, te'veci £ages a clew to him, 'lie began sears:hvig they. "dropped r)uiek:pinto .with coal ear, wecould, not figure out wa of in code �a ai,out in the air,' as' it were, on a crouching bolow the pvotecting 'sides, I nely and Mighty' difficult code. Ken- ehanee 01 pulIing sombthing•SIoWn'. The. " thugs • dashed hast-° turned, nedy reserved that to.'iind out by de- It might have been perhaps half an started 'scouting about to pick op, their ciphering•at leisure; afro to grace out. }mut of.p patient: waiting and adjusting trail, - . when Ken suddenly,twistingi I the-source,suspected e Another. wgroupen- mord heard. his a knob, Just then'the pre o'elook.whistlo that,` suspeete i tiyab. being sent and loud "Ken wn name called from the blew. The bond dabs were an, too, was_on the received Iry that boy Hank speaker.>' men, fr these, were So it titias that the gem of the idea Tho boy started. This Was like.a The ,;engine idling at the head of the of hisvown ing ain tofu ' abseneetigr.'woi'n voice from the. sky. It waspiiraeeleus. coal train puired' and: snorted as; it'Ke ', cere r, in r- Evezybody 1s familiar with the' accounts for that undue semetiveness ' Quickly he shafpened it up, moved the full car ahead of 'Ken's treed: u: Ruth.and hecvcre;reriz- adage,, One man's meat is another to eei•tain kinds of food which the , "I an Dick Gerard on the `Scooter'!' Ruth, just enough bring -the f empty kn the C.ub_> man's poison:" Very `few people, how- lectors calf "anaphylaxisl' ' Some of We are pulling into Bayles' shi and `car"In ;whic � #'D hi empty l "T111 me, Roth. Are S and Glenn ' over, appear to know why this should these organs, or, 1, maybe, groute of and,will be over by=the coal dock,'the rapge of' the. werehey shovel, under and the i•eolteder at the Hinn'? to P" be 10. Bringhelp steam shovel, .; Y Ruth loosed_ finally. " ate: Tien, cells, are ''sonsiiized'' to certain foods p immediately, ,Please eget The fdremail raised his Band, The .`"Yes," she said finally. "Brit 'I' tun' Considering the infinite rernge of as the photographic plate is to light; ,.Ken Adams at Rockledge, anybody huge steam shovel dipped into a great notgoing "to take yet. there: And I'ni. changes 'that Nature rings inthe ar- Organa Always Alert. who .is listening in, if.Ren does not pile o1 coalion the dock. The iron jaws not going there myself. I'ni disgusted. rang-ement; 'shape, color, and: other hear this himself. This is Dick Ger- of the shovel bit into it, ciosed,'and S'in through:" ' qualities of a couple of oyes, a`note, a The coneequeisceee that the owner and who is Lost, Tell him. The Bayles the load' Was raising, dr ppin as he " ell . lright," mouth, and their few 'eyes, oriee, in of ench a stomach; liver, .lungs, or 'seal docks—at ones 1" shovel- swivelled over a g, t W thahi all Kent.was Keil and Ruth were both almost be-' dirscti ova • the until it stopped tgladhen to hear his sister any that. 'Fnr- order that every'human hying map whatever'ether noartion'of his anatomy Y i he heads O£ the two, thermore he did not intend to -Tet her have what we may calla •facial mono- is 'thus unduly• touchy, soon knows' all side themselves with excitement. To i luckless, young :fouls crouched in neeet it when he heat discovers that' them there was no uestion but that coal oar. the know too :much of what: he intended qq doing. You can set ii%'down `here -at- niltinrk hu)iereby he can.be 'out arsd and 'all le not wel] within.;or o this was Dick himself: They savi'tlie she d s g shed from all others, it , ko wing hi$ To blas' best, et d .turned in the end of the Club.". - • little .w.eakness; ;either Por ets i o£ los ability, Ken hearor to see the bucket directly yhaled'serprite nobody''to-learn that a g it a, songht'to ransariit. He was so eager head,: h y oyes (To be eontniued.) fit 'of ebeeut-mindedness, or throws' to get off that'the onI mess " e g side ,They scrambled,np the slippery similar variety. prevails , throe glivut y ag he, "sof the car to avoid it. Every "—'—r` fp ,the whole of the body.,' There are on .prudence to the winds and •chances could think of was the simple word foot they, advanced they s•iPPed back Eelis, and Belfries. this planet at the ''present-momeltt• two. about fi5teen'hundred millions of hu- Unfortunately, the "sensitized":or- "We can't leave this place totally1 The' signal was given, mao •beif e e andnotnet Trevor sleep at' their osts unguarded," decided ' Ken. . "'Yet u11 G • . The engineer g , one of them Is ap and Mast go.This we:Pulled ed his lever. Idundreds of pounds fasciniile of another. • the rash: eater finds himself poisoned have it; is an emergency. I. of coal . began dripping over their and belfries, soon acquire a strong with the very tit bats his Yrlenda en- > g We'll 1 k Laddie in. Hee, heads, hold over the few who care to explore Laddie, -good ood be Watch till we come "lielpi Sto back!" P• them, 'Lonely' and deserted as they Ruth's scream was muffled by the may -appear, there are hairtily five min - The collie wagged his :tail almost roar of the machinery':and therumble as if lie understood, and '&"few mos of the"tdeadly liuncbewei lits of cathea either of the .day or night -up' inerts later Xen and Ruth were.whiz- that were just' about to cru h th al there that do not see strange sights er. ' These ancient towers, and the inner heights and recese51 of these old roofs No Two Eyes Alike. "• toy, It is a fact observed daily that meat Thus one man clay develop an at people have a gait when walking, and tack of asthma through being poison- a speaking voice, both, of whieh are ed by a perfectly fresh egg—an article characteriatie , of themselves alone- of food that will cause faintness and That. means that their leas al,enot as def geaous cardiac .collapse in an- other legs, • dor' their vocal cords as .other, those of their friends. It Is not a far Or the poison produced bythe cry from the larynx to the•aungs, nor ing of other foods bye eah • from the lunge to the liver, and, these other people with in -turn to saynothing !cause uc sensitized intsdas may o hing of` the heart,, cause such. various'atlmeuts as nettie- the atomhch, and all Other internal or - 'rash eczema, Bans, .differ in each , individual. : I. -gout, giddinrheumess., sick- { boadadche, gastritis, giddiness•; and so And so the' internal organs— and; on. Epileptic fits may be caused by more particulIrle perhaps those of the curtain foods, and cured by their avoid - digestive system—di(X:ering „ in -their' anon. intimate makeup as they do in each Fortunately*, it . is now possible individual accept i s hie to , a with h n t thanks p n s or reg test sufferers es ora s and d sneer at t n. what Y A e e t t. t wth r oto j a P is what they do not foods they .react in such distressing consider fit to become part and parcel and dangerous ways, and thereaYte of the master or mistress they serve. land desensitize -them by rho adrafnis• I t zing along to the -next harbor where lifeless, s .„ em hear stiange sounds. the big old shipyard was. ' The bells in their tower hold con I itt`e did they realize what it was con- stant -converse with man,-but"they are CHAPTER XIX, not oP him; th�aY„cal they were so blithely running into, I(lhim-to'hisduties, Hank, back home, was glbatiag over Bruised and' blackened by the 'coal they vibra"he to his woes and joys, his ' n Y is radio' and thea as it was dropping ' apparent success he piling- down on them- and perils and victories, but they aro 'a hafi'hid in fooling his enemies. Par they scrambled to avoid it, Ken and on e to the East,' Kennedy, Easton and my- Ruth did their best to call for: helpc sympathetic l end Passionless f self were But no one. heard: above k at; his will, buthanging1oldge f painstakingly following too above lr1m; ringing ant the old genes results of the -minute little direction L was one of their en tion, and ringing in the new, with mechanical, almost eppreesive regi. la i ' and ad' iron tY anconstancy nc h ,o which o Y ten make s them and their gray tower the mostreveredend ancient thing in a large city. • At Tournay there is a famous .ol belfry. It dates from the twelfth cen- tury, and is said to be.,built on a R nen base. It now possesses fort belts. It commands the town and`th country round, and from its summit f obtained a near view of the larges, and finest eatliedral in Belgium, with five innifleent towers. Four fa a- a of However, ' i • emies who. saw. He» bad climbed a trestle ,to get a better view of the whole of the Bayles' coal dock and had been o the e Scooter had been shipyard, hoping thereby to locate the detailed to stay as the "Scooter" put hiding boy and girl. Prom his van - to sea. His instructions were to --get tage point the thug,had caught'a Ken, when he showed up, hold hien for glimpse of them in the coal ear Iran- Abe gray racer which would be sent teeny seeking safety. tT'e.waved his In •Bayles' shipyard and coal dock a sailor, an evil -looking old salt, who It is, then, the peculiar individuality t tratlon of the.apporprfate remedies -in 'the por im to carryr him oft' once he was arms to the other two thugs and soen of 'certain of the internal organs that known as_"antigeus." ' hung about talkinf g to a men on the and Ruth fall 'were or down s rescue eKeti . he f things worse to comer •. scows and tugboats, in general, "mak-, Just as the three thugs scrambled ing friends with the toughest custom- over to capture Ken and Ruth the en ere in case of need.- " gineer and the workmen waked up to A ,long-distance eye ne on mos under their II •SEEING THROUGH M• ETALS - Strange Uses of invisibly Light, Can anyone tell whether the heart of an apple is geed or bad without cut- ting the rind? : Most people would say . Y no. Yet itis done every day in South Africa, w,heie fruit from the large • farms is. passed through.an X-ray in- strument. . Looking through a small eyepiece the operator sees the shad- ows of the had parts on a screen as If they were peejeeced by teenage lam - tern. Some time ego a valuable picture at. tributed to a famous artist was . put up for auction, but a ddscriminating buyer: suspected that It was a fake, so he had the alleged old neseiter sub- jected to X rays, A third eye siuidenky, appeared be- tweeh• the two eyes .of the painting, showing that the present picture was peieted' over. anethor, Leather is like glass to these won- der(uI rays, and many of the largest boot 'shops in. I;ondon-use an instru- ment by which buyers can actually see their thee lying In' a' new pair oY boots. This le particularly valuable In the case of email children, upon whose description of shoe comfort tie reliance cad be glaeed. 1Vorking off the ordinary mains, the eiectrib pressure -le the instrument' ;is in• creased to about 90,000 volts,' The machine Costs about £].Oil. . Preventing Accidents. Seeing through steal lip X-rays is spinally.poasi1the only •to a depth of 8 • in., but up to 12 in. of alumlaute are quite transparent, and by the use of X-rays flaws or .blowholes in, metal • castings are distinctly visible. A 'serious accident took Place at Shanghai recently owing to the ex - 'Weston of a . turbine , d'ise, Some deaths were caused and', th'e-roof of the buikling•Wee knocked=out, it is very necedsatry that , the •turbine diets, that revolve at very Sigh speed, sheuicl bo flawless, and'X-rays are wit- lhhcci •to'etheieetesling,e' .but 'thhe, nia- 011111e used to very elaborate, costs about £1,500, ,and. tweet& at.a voltage of 200,008.• - Whether he kith screwed his smeivs' in straight le a vitally important mat. ter to an aeroplane woodworker. By Good taste and good health; demand sound _teeth, and sweet breath. The use of Wrigley's' clew- ing gum after every *meal takes' cars; of this importantitem of personot?-hygiene in a delight. re eshing_way..by clear- ing t'he teeth ot"frood particles and by helping the digestion, Zee result is asweet breath that, eliliths care for one's self mei cote sideration for others -Both marks oftethlemcnt, Ask for • ,00,98 •� X-raying the -parts, the screws can. be seen through the wood, and often a for hick a what was going almost d it is founds that the . wood has been ,aught have seen him on the deck of noses. They -were rough and dirtybut Its split internally without •any outward tee "Scooter" miles away by this time, they were good', honest..fellows with, brothers guard the summit of :the bel - sign. Weakness that might cause ter- out in the Sound- Dick was still a families at home. It was only an in- fry at Tournay and relieve each other Able aocidennts leltlius detected. prisoner—and he was not broadcast- stantwhen the workmen dropped their! day and night, at Intervale of ten 'rho welding 0f metals, that le so ing anything, tasks and, rna to: the help of -Ruth hours.. . coat and Ken. The fight as the - + Belle are g workmen converg- j n s d n� a Y e e t Important .-in engineering work, is A steam shovel Was loading a torted to a similar manner, anal the ear on the track from the huge piles heard best when they are long lengths et fibre from which cot- of coal that had been unloaded on the ed was short and sharp. "Take that, rung upon a slope or in a valley, es- top is made are also scrutinized in activity. Everywhere about the dock was you bigJbruiser! One of the workmen I peolaliy a water valley. The traveler Ulla mytgtorlous light, also email par_ et viay, There was no loafing on hauled Off tvitha sock on the jaw to' may well Ivories at the distinctness these 'obs. thethug-nearest him that sent him with which he can hear the monastery ticks of metal ate shown up clearly -Thus it was that when the neon sprawling; no as shadows an'the stream and the whistle suddenly blew there was no Itbe1Is on the Lake 'of Lu. was a good fight but it was a fi Lugano, or the. same 6irooessisnow appliedd to their delay in stopping work. : The men short one. The thugs saw that they c uioh bells over some of the long products by 00100 :manufacture rs ofwere tired and hungry. Still it was had failed,: that they were outnumber- reaches of the Rhine. Next to valleys, tobacco to detect -metallic dust. a good job, for the salt breezes off the ed, and ran for their lives, falling Cuttatf+icdrry the sound farthest. For. Whether a pearl is a real one ora Sound made it as good a piece as any rather than climbing down into the y, many 01 the finest bell - fake can he fatted out In the same to do heavy woik in the summer. ' $e- motorboat that was hiding nt the end towers In existence are so shoaled. It way. The sides, that lunch hour was a prized of the dock. is well ltnown how freely the sound of genuine has a kernel rest. The men took their lunch boxes The workmen were ver helpful tothe bells travels in th emlddle, round which the cyster and sought out a shadysot on the; the boy And Mete P e s over Salisbury Plain, g pgirl and Mete surprised -i' To Mite ones stand at the summit of. makes the pearl, and•the X -ray -c mera. doelts and there metered .the breezes' Some of them had radios. They knew trash n r reveals a clear outline with nothing lit which people from the cit mane �of the ease. Theo i g t bell, Al at the ringing Y miles Y had had a chance of i the middle In the 0606 01 the manufac- In cars a151 .boats to enjoy, and had not known it, It does to show the sunset bell, nest at'the5 ore et a oe!som effulgent tared , Pull o e e uI sn su pearl. f the ur enc of thef • how necessar . i g t moor's da is to wit - wed I urgency 1 mission f Y tis always to have i y t Kon and Ruth pulled up at the shore ones eyes open, tiers one of the finest eights in the X -Rays in Industry. " entrance to the coal dock, 'finder the( ;t was not ion befog ' World. The moment is Even thormo ho g e, cleaned •up iono of;brief meters are . X-rayed huge sign was another in red which •a bit and rested, Ken and Ruth started but ineffable splondor, when; between nowadays to make auto they are made warned, 'away safely fin the: car,, sadder and 1 rho mountains ahtd the plain, piist tts of the correct kind of glees,. Lead No AnritlTrdNei3 lvieer. the sun is sstthig, tike mists rise sn d - glass shows- 'np differently on- theDANGER There was something, on a sweeps Ken's mind; denly, in etran now and it was ;the first tine he had' and g cps and spirals, aoreon •to soda glass, and if any va• > They.,pazked the car and seeing no beenaloneand had a chance t i ! ar,G amfttsn through with the 1 pm -18 given off by- the glass 01 it.ellni• one at the gate or about` the dock t • '"Ruth" he be , o ask it. 1111 thermometer the resulting loss of gen " I d lit e t kn a00351 cy might lead to fetal results. The most curious application of X- rees to industry is their use in con- neetiont with ...large consignments of Havana Clgates shipped to Great,Bri- tain. Tiny microbes that make their home In the heart of the cigars get hungry on;' their journey aerose. the ocean, and eat the centre of the cigars. Thousands of expensive cigars were formerly ruined to this wee e.but it has receutiy been discovered that, If the Mora are subjected to powerful X- raye prior to,;ddspateh, al; these "little. pests are dastrgyed. stealthily entered. They kept back of What about those racing debts that any shelter that afforded them hiding heard from Thank -and that stuff I as they made their way, keeping a heard' over et the Blue Rooster Are sharp eye out for.. the "Scooter'' and You really'gambling Ruth?" any traces of Dick. `� "0f course not,' 'lien. S don't Down at the end of the dock, under gamble." the shelter of it, where the tide was, Ken was watching her face care -- low, lay -a small but fast speed --boat. fury. He Must believe Ruth. Yet he It was front;.• this that the evil -faced knew it was not the whole truth. "But, ruler and a couple of companions as Ruth, do any of the, others?" tough as himself were watching. I "Ken," slie turned to him, "dc you "There they comer' think it is fair to me to tell what The three stole stealthily down the others are doing? Isn't that up to the dock behind piles of lumber. The them?" dock was still deserted for it was not "Well, yes," agreed Ken reluctantly. yet the end of the noon lunch: hour, "But it all seems . so strangeto me. although it wile approaching.. Someone loses a lot of money gambl- "Do you see anything of Dick?" ' ing. Theis comes that robbery at the Keri had been looking vainly about•for house, and mother loses her emeralds some trace. - I and you lose the pearls that had be - "No," replied Ruth. "But we longed to Grandmother Adams, There 'haven'tbeen' all dyer -the place yet. -must be some connection. I can't figure Let's go—" it out." She never finished the sentence, ' "I can't either, Ken. But you'll Looming up.' before• them suddenly never get anywhere by asking me th were the three thugs. It did not' ;need tell on other people, Please, Ken, if even intuition to tell the girl and the you want to find' out things, go,eto. boy what those men were there for. thein. And tell Thiele Craig and Eas- Ken and Rah did not hesitlte: They ton the same.. I' net not going to be a turned and lied "Hey ' „ snitch. Nobody loves 'a squealer." y; He s overhere! It was Ken's own philosophy, almost The• Bali did. notstop. hem.' They his own,woids and he had admit knew in an instar • thatthey had been and stop. But his mind was ,ovokfng led into a trap by the faithless Hank, oh' other means of ,getting at the in- of �coal,ver piles dodgingu around about the hdock seeornformation. on her other ways, that sheRuth hadhad Houses • and tracks, everywhere the-gambling•debts 11011 Dew nothing her - flight led them. self of the:robber That eliminated _e Here, Ruth! . Quick!" Ruth as auspect In tact Ken had Ken had sensed that their pursuers never considered' her such. Atthe were gaining .on them, that soneeeruse same time it left it up to Vire.. and Du1e..in Darhness. - Wlth so much stress being laid on the virtues of artificial suniight,'spet tial leterestattached "to the announce• meet, made by a prominent London. 'doctor, that we do not sufficiently con - alder the health value of darlsness, The, authority in question states t'hit%• be Ilia 'Opinion, many of the Ills Chet . llavelehelr or'fgln in digestive troubles aretr,"aceabie' to ' the• too lavish nae of light at,meals. Brilliant lighting, he deserts, is harmful in dint ing-rooms, restaurants, and other blaces'Where meals are_partaken Ottr digestive processes, on the per - feet working of which human health and happiness so largely depend, are interfered with by the extra stimulant provided by garish lighting: The de - :Amide made on the senses by such factors as bright lights add arresting sounds: mean that blood ie drawn from the stomach to the bmain and muscles, and the assimilation 01 11001 naturally suers, ' According to this authority, the best light ter meal times is that given, by shaded candles, .But we should all be better In health. and in temper, -the pbysfetan states; if we ate our meals in semi•darlcness• Funeral, Almost: Lotti -"Bill prat}used to. Dora last month while they ,were. out motoring," Betty=-"Thenehow is it that their engagement is only. just a/met/need 4. Jetty -"she oou'dn't accepiy frim 1111 they came out of Ura hospitals' , rs 4s. ,Ste . 'W W.'... 1h"�;s Among the dovieis in the famous'� gardens,at Ifampton Court Pa:Aace are 20,000 pansies, 12,000 snapdragons, and 10,000 ciysanthemunis. There are half a million plants in the gardens t:eeUC No. 0 118: !Altogether,. golden "fire which, melting down through a thousand tints, passes, with the ,rapidity of a dream, lute the cold purples of the night—Prom "Music and Morals," by Ii. Ft. Hawels, - The Happy Day. All day long D -purpose in yonder ' Green •meadows t0 wander .And think of a song: I shall take Provision of-bereies, Black treacle cherries, And possibly cake, - Where the boughs Of gliding willows Freckle green pillows I shall drowse; Or,wander blithe 'Through scented acres Where haymakers Sharpen the scythe. I sliall'not-hell; ' I shag not trouble; - Througli'fields or stubble 1 shall conte back-- While ack—While dusk is spread, Where twilight lingers-- With ingers=With purple fingers, A song in my head. -Sylvia Toweeend 1Varher; ;t CANA17!•NN DELEGATES Al' LEAGUE' OF NATlOtes 'Above tilt Canadian delegates tobre0eh'of the Ontario government; latter has made •several important, the lire ant session 02 till 1 rogue o{iion. Philippe 13oy, Canadian ,comznis-sperohca in the leagae asscinoi'y; in - Nations are sliocn as phootogrephecl in eoner- to Prance; Sir Herbert Ames11•nding ono 10 which :ho athrme Geneva From Icato right they are:and Senator Sir George poster,'forn1eruana�cla's right to a teRii sora • r n Dr. W. A. Riede 1 former sugieri?i•niiniste0 of 1001.0 and commerce, "'Ihe:he Councl,l 011 the'league, li ,seat on tendert. of the trades ,and Leber 1257 THE NEW SURPLICE COAT - DRESS. The black moire coat dress is the season's smart dress, and the woman who -,prizes -simplicity, good taste, and a' charming "wearableness" in her frocks will findthis a most becoming gown, Thesurpliceline is attained with a shawl collar, -while seaming over the bust and shoulders terminate in inverted plaits: The sleeves widen gradually toward the bottom and have a tight" wrist finish. No. 1257 is in sizes' 40, 42, 44, 46, 48 and 60 inches. bust. Size 42 requires b% yards 39 - inch material; or 8»K yards 64 -inch. 20 cents. . Our Fashion Book, illustrating thea •newdst andmost practical styles, will be of interest to every home dress- maker. ' Price of the book 10 cents the copy. ROW TO ORDER PATTERN)&. ' Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose he in stamps or 0013 (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for .each number and address your order to Pattern Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West -Ade luide St., Toronto, Patterns sent by return mail. Paris Auto Accessory. With every ear sold a Parts automo. bile dealer furnishes a pot of special paint and a sprayer, about the size of a Poucitate pen, so that scratches and i mare can be touched up at once tt s keep the bodylooking new. Pressttre } p for applying the paint is obtained by 3 blowing through a tube connected; with the sprayer. While the prepare.; w tion is speo"ially adapted to covering p metals, it also may be used on fabrics p and. leather. ' Revenge is a kind of • wild justice, which the more man's nature raps to, the more ought Law to weed it out. --- Francis Bacon. • The Wee Bit TVere is a small musical -instrument known to sono -of its- friends and ad- mirers '115 "the -wee bit bogie," though to the world in general as the' concer- tine. cancer - Regarded i Re or g c fs ,i one point. of vfow, the concortine and the wee bogie. are one and Indivisible; seen -from an, other angle, they are' as far' apart as the' poles. As;scail 3la ed s. con- certina strike -the ear es somewhat. -dull and oommoupiace instrument, but such epithets as these could never be' applied to the, vee bit boric, On the: rare occasions when the voice of the wee bit'boxie is heard in. a fifty street, it acts. as possessing a fairy's .wand.. You are wafted sudden ly away fro mtiie city_ lights and glare,' an find yourself once more in the deep deTiths of the country, under the clear gray gloaming of the northern June. The 0.10 is -keen, but sweet with the scent of larch and birch, of whin and broom and inuuaiera)le wild flowers. The'arase is soaked with heavy dew,. the sheep still browse peacefully be- fore settling down for the night on the higher ground, the denizens of "the big hoose" are indoors. This is the hour at which the seen tireentae. plowman, with slow and heavy -booted step,' perambulates 'a park playing on the wee bit boxes. Tho plaintive Scottish airs, so full of beauty and tenderness, mellowed by love thoughts of the long centuries in which they have' charmed the hearts of men, mingle'naturally with the dew and, the scents'and• the greenling, ;lad form a fitting finish to the sweet sum- mer day. Anti now the melody beeemes faint- er and again fainter as.. roti and his little instrument wend their way home to the farm. The sheep slowly move Up the knower; all is stillness; the rabbits venture forth onto the lawns around -the old tower. The spell breaks, and once more wo find ourselves "in the busy haunts of men." . Bible In Hungary. The number of Bibles bought in Hungary has more than doubled sips, ng the last two years, teco )diug to 4 tatemeut issued by the association of ublishers. In 1923 the Hungarian people bought 12,600 Copies of the testaments. In 1914 more than 10,000 ere purchased. Last year 26,885 assed Prem the booksellers to the :elle, Publishers expert that the de- mand will exceed 80,000 poples during, 1026. • Japans National Care • The word jiiuikisha in Japanese means man- power _vehicle. No Boiling , No Rubbing Just Rinse zoith ins® A package of Rinso is a package of miniature soap bubble`s. - You simply dissolve for 25 seconds the ting bubbles in hot water, soak the clothes a couple of hours, or overs night, rinse thein well in clean water and—that's all. Result—clean, sweet-smelling clothes, hours of time. saved and die hand work changed to just rinsing. Rinso dissolves the dirt, you rinse it out. You will never know how easy it to 40 the washing until; you've used Rinso, the greatest time end labour saver the housewife has ever known; R-417 Mack hr ,tile makers of tux