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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1927-08-18, Page 2CLINTON tfli `iY S'"R Jac C! f, CLINTON, ONTARIO ry arms of 'Subscription -62.00' per YoaT advaneq, to Canadlaa addresses;: $2;50 to .the U.S. or other foreign countries. No paperdlecontinuect until all arrears are paid unlgss at the option of the publisher. The date to which every subscription 1$ Paid is denoted on the label. Advertising Rates—Transient adver, Ming, 12c per count lino for first: insertion, Bc for. each 'subsequent Insertion. Heading counts 2 llnes. Small advertisements, not to exceed One inch, $815 Aa "Wanted," "Lost," "Strayed," etc., inserted once for 85e, ,each subsequent insertion 150, Advertisements sent Io without .in etructioas as to the number of •in- eertiont wanted will run until order- ed out and will be charged 'accord- ingly. Rates for display advertising made known on application. Communications intended tor pebll- cation must, as a guarantee of good faith, be accompanied by the name of ,11 Grocers Stogy] ORANGE. PEKOE ,BLEND Tsai' $f you * t; q ethhig better—ir7' at. Q. IO., HALL, RI. R. CLARE, Proprietor, Editor.` G. D. MITA GART Al. D. McTAGGART • 'NicTAGGART BROS. S. BANKERS A general Banking. Business transect- ed. Notes Discounted. Drafts Issued Interest' Allowed on Deposits. ' Sale Notes: Purchased, H. T. RANCE Notary Public,` Conveyancer. Financial, Real ,Estate and Fire 1n• curance Agent. Representing 14 Fire Insurance Companies, Division Court Office, Cllnton. B RY?aON E Barrister, Solicitor, Ilcltor, fYlotary public, etc. Omoo; SLOAN BLOCK • " CLINTON DR. J. C. f$ANDIER Ofl1oe Flours; -1.30 to' 3.30 p.m., 6,30 to 8.00 p.m., Sundays, 12.30 to 1.30p.m. Other hours by appointment only, Office and .Resldet:c,, -- Victoria St. DR. FRED G. THO P M Si.1N Office- anti Resliience; Ontario Street - Clinton, Ont. One door west of Anglican Church.. Phone 172. Eyes examined and glassest A ted. DR, PERCIVAL . HEARN Office.and Residence; FIuron Street Clinton, Ont. Phone 69 " {Formerly occupied by the Late Dr. ,Eyes ExminedTand3Giessen Fitted. DR. I-1. A. MCINTYRE DENTIST Office hours 9 to 12 A:M. and 1 to 5 P.11I., except Tuesdays and Wednes anys: Olfl.ce over Canadian National I±xpress, Clinton, Ont. DR. F. A. AXON DENTIST Clinton; 'Ont. Graduate of • C.O.S., Chicago, and ' 1..C.D;S„ Toronto. Crown. and Plato work a' specialty D. H; McINiNES Chiropractor—Electrical., Treatment. 01 Wingham,` will beset the Commer• Mal Inn, Clinton, on 1Igndey, yC ednes. day and Friday forenoons of each Week. Diseases of all kinda•successtul1• bandied. I GEORGE ELLIOTT Licensed. Auctioneer for the County •of Huron. Correspond nce prompt!;• ans. " linmediate arrangements be mad a made foir Sales Date at The News -Record, Clinton, or by calling ]'hone -203. Charges Moderato and Satisfaction Guaranteed. • v OSCAR KLOPP donor Graduate Carey Jones' National School of Auetioneering, Chicago, Spa- -Mai course taken in Pure 'Brod Line Stock, Real Estate, ;Merdhandis e rah .Farm Sales. R•ates`In"keeping with prevailing market, Satisfaction as- sured. Write -or wire, Zurich, Ont. Phone 18-93, '+ li,` • B. R. HIGGINS Clinton, Ont. General Fire and "Life insurance,'Agent for Hartford 'Windstorm, Live Stock„ -Automobile and -Sickness and Accident •Insuratmee, iluron and ]brie and Cana. „da Trust Bolide. Appointments made 00 meet parties at Brueedeld, Varna vane Bayfield. ''Phone 57, ., CANAIAN{'ATI® NAL AIS TIME TABLE Trains will arrive at and depart from Clinton as follows: ant al° and Goderlch Div. Going East, depart 6.25 a.xn, 2.12 p.m, Going West, ar. 11.10 a.m. o an '6.08 dp, 6.53 p.m. " ar, 10.04- p.m, London, Huron & Bruce Div. Going South, ar. 7.66 dp. 7.66 earls 4.10 p.m. Going North, _depart - . 6.60 p.m. 11,03 11.15 will. The McKillop Mutual Fire Insurance Company Head' Office, Seaforth, Ont. DIRECTOF.Y:• President, Ja' les Connolly, Cg5er16h; Vice, James Evans, Beechwoerdi ,Soo.. Treasurer, Thos, ID, Hays, Seaford:. Direoters: George McCartney,. Sea- forth; D. F.McGregor, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, Walton; Wm, Ring, Sealorte;, M. Nie➢wen, Clinton; Robert Forrles•> 11'01.1130k; John Benneweir, Brodhagen;a! Blas. Connolly, Goderlch. Agents: Alex. Leitch, Clinton; J,, W. Yeo, ,Goderich; Ed.. Hnchray, Sea. forth; W, Chesney, Egmondvllle; it, G. Jarmuth, Brodhagen. • Any money to be paid in may be paid to'Nlooriah dlothing Co., Clinton,`' 'or "al Cutt's Grocery,- Goderlch. i Parties desiring to affect Insuraneo dr Transact other business i wilt bs•• promptly attended to on application to any of the above offioers addressed'' to their respective Most Wilde. Losses• Inspected by the Director who_, Uvea' nearest tine scene,-er venini, but he salaamed like a coolie to the little American. =-"Master," he said, "you were hard to find, I have looked over the world for you." And he squatted down,on the dirty floar by Redman's` camp stool. The two iuen spent; the remainder of the night looking at the present, that the creature brought Rodman in his prayex-darpet., They, wanted to know where the Oriental got it, and that's how the storye came out.- • .He was something, searcher seems our nearest English word foie, it—in the' great Shan Me'nestery., on the southeastern plateatz'of the Gobi, lIa was looking for Rodman because he had the light,—.here was another 'word that the two men could find''ho term in any modern language to translate; a little flame was the literal meaning. e. The present was ,from the'treasure- ioom of the monastery; the -very carpet around'it, Giovanni said,. was worth twenty thousand lire. .There Was another thing that comer out in the talk that Giovanni afterward re- called. Rodman was to accept the present, and the man who brought it to him, The 'O'riental would' protect him, in every Way, in every direction, from things visible and invisible. He THE THING ON THE HEAli't11. made quite a speech about it. But • there •was -'one' thing from which he " The -first 'confirmatory evidence of And there is another thing that I could not protect him. the thing, Excellency, was the print want you to think ghout. Think about The Oriental used a lot of his an of a woman's bare foot,',' the immense 'destruction of value cleat words to •explain,, and he did ' He was an immense creature, He not to us, so greatly, for our stocks of hot get it very clear, He seemed to sat -in an upright -chair, that seemed 'preaieUe•Stones are not large; butjthe mean that the creativeforces to have ;been provided `es especially for' thin meant,-lof the p p y g , practically, wiping out Spirit would not tolerate a-•ddviston' of:: hint. The -great bulk of him flowed all the as'sexnbled wealth of Asia, ex-- eut, and - filled the chair. It did not cept the actual earth and its strua- worship with the crentivs. farces of the 6oHy=the celibate notion' in the seem: to be fat that .envelepede him. tures: monastic idea,. '' It seemed rather to be'some soft, Put the. thing some other way and ®. tough, like the pudgy PA Giovanni thought; Rodman -.did not g p gy mass male-. consider it. Six one we should sad'- understand it; he thought he hinteslf ing up the body of a deep-sea thing. d'en'y 'discover that pure gold could, understood it better. The monk was One got an' impression' of strength- be produced by treating common vela pledging Rodman to a high virtue, in the country was` before ;the open low cla 'with sulphuric cid' or that .e• l it YP Y A a the lapse of which something awful" l62'3 •trindow; the clusters of cultivated some genius should set up'a�machine Shrubcn the sweep of'velvet lawn en the border of the Sahara that re- :wee, sure to happen. ", oxtending to the `great wad :hat in- ceived-sand at one end and tarred Giovanni wrote a letter to 'the A NEW STEP-IN CHEMISE, closed the place, then' the bend of put sacked wheat at,the other! What, State Department when he learned Tha woman, er girl who engoys the .river- and beyond, ---.the distant then, 'would our hoarded gold• be whet had happened to Rodman. The ;making' d'aiooty undirgarmenits will State; Department: turned' it over to find :the attractive step-in chemise mountains, .blue ,,and mysterious worth, Or the wheatlands of Ati5a •, blending indiscernibly into .the sky. tralia, Canada or our Northwest? the court at the trial. I think it was. shown here quits., simple to fashion. A soft son, Clouded with the haze of The illustrations are fantastic. $ut one of the things that influenced the' View A has' laceawn 'around itis autumn, shone over it, the thing Rodman was atter was a judgeIE his decision, Still, at the straight top and, itt ,the ]ower edge "'Coil know how the faint moisture ractiical fact : He had it en' the time, there seemed no other reason- extending 'u . the sklea whirs Vi, P way.able decision to makerg p . , w B M the bare' foot i11 make an im- Giovanni and Lord' Bayless :Truxley ,Thel•testi ion . must have a -is untrimmed. Nso. ize is"6 nines pression." were convinced that the man would ri y appeared 16, 18 and 20 veal's.. Sire 18 (36 `b -at) He paused as though there •was work nut the fvrnxvlae, They tried, incredible; it must have appeared requires 114 yards 36 or 39 -inch ma fantastic. No man. reading the re- tenial 3 Ma - some compelling force in the reflect- over their signatures, to prepare the am. 5 yards 23b -inch ]ate fc. tion. It was impossible to say, with world for it.. cord could have came to any other View A. Price 20 cent's the pattern• accuracy, to what race the man he-. - The whole of Alis was appalled, conclusion about it. Yet it:seethed The secret 4i distinctive dram lies. longed., He came from .some xmpossibior me—to It' seemed rim=' g queer Tho rajahs of :the native states in in good taste rather than a lavish er , blend of Eastern peoples. His body India: prepared a memorial' and sent possible for me—t0 consider this great, Denditure of money. Every woman and the cast of his features were it to the British government. vital bulk of a lean as a monk of oneshould want to make her own clothes', ous of the oldest relig'ordersious Mrngolian. But one, got always, be- The thing, came out after the rays- world: g in the :.'are him, a .feeling of the hot East terious, incredible tragedy. I should lyin low down against the stagnant written that final sentence. tion-nvofy common, •academie' senses- g that g not have you t os nt , of such a monjc he distinctly Suez. One felt he -bad. risen I want to think, juste now, about negatived. , He impressed me, instead, slowly into par world of bard air and as possessing the , ultimate .qualities sun out of the vast sweltering ooze , ;h1S_fi.91tr,;a i¢'Ymt Y" F a: 1 ttf is of -clever diplomacy—the sahtle am- bassador of some new Oriental power, shrewd, suave, accomplished: When one read the yellow -backed court record, the sense •of old, obscure, mysterious agencies moving in Sin- ister menace, invisibly, around Rod- man could not be •escaped from. You believed. it. Against your reason, against all modern experience of life, laid° St., Toronto. Patterns sent by you• believed it, return mail.. - There was one man In the world that evorybbdy wished could have. TIIe Husband Eraffitit been esent tmelt'yeas Monsi-preur Jonatqueilehe ti. Jan, quellTeat wa's London' Daily Telegraph• (Cons.): 'chief of:the' Criminal Iavesttgation, ,rhe daily who is a director of tke Department of the Service de'" la ,C, leago Social S.eryice Bureau is, busy' Surete- In Paris. He had been in year :in, .year out, Investigating lily charge of theFrench secret service .husbands feaya their homes• For a on thefaontiexy of the. Shan states, and long -tine post bliss Inderrieden has at the time he was in Asia.. handled' 83,000 Case's of desertion an - (To be continued.) anally Yet she renialns a believer in ;marriage, It is a eonfesslon' of • faith not less ]mpretsive than that T HE TENT -FLAP SI MP L Y A Democratic Gaine of the beadlewho, leaving attended g 1'ENED AND THE BIG OMEN- Robert Hunter in New York Sorts. tine University sermons for fifty TAL APPEARED. • ner's Magazine: Golf teas always been years, thanked Cod that he was still tiie most democratic of sports- Com- a Christian. In all her innumerable the great bulk of a man that sat in mon land by the sea is us',m1i called casee of fugitive husbands Miss Index. his, big chair beyond Ine tit the win- the links; azbd all of the historic rieden vows she has "never heard one dow. courses ---stints as Leith, Arunatlield, first-class excuse." By this she seems It was like Rodman to turn sip With Musselburgh, Blackheath and St, An- to mean proof -thet the husband errant an outlandish human creature attend- Brews—were laid out on community 'tad every right aisd reason to depart. .Ing him hand and foot, How the thing land. The best tilayers haveusually and the wife was wholly intolerable. came about realis like a lie; it reads bepn artisans; . , , Golf in earlier nen- There are pltiloSophers who hold that like the wildest lie that anybody ever turies seems to have been the favorite Itt every .quarrel both •'sides are to put forward'to explain a big yellow sport of the •• "oomm is and meaner blame, but this Impartiality is too sub - Oriental following one about. sort •of people" wherever they bad lune for the normal human reagon, But It was no lie, You could think 'easy access to the links, '. History is Without pretending: to ,,a fraction' of up• -a lie to 'equal- the actual things very uncertain es to the pidgin .of the Mies lnderr]eden's, vast a experienceof that Happened to Rodman. . Take the game. There are .those who are eon- human incompatibility, we, are pre, way he died! . winced that It eyes Itiiportei them Hol• pared to maintain that there are cases The thing began in India. 'Rodman land, and It is•riotunreasonable to be. df desertion in which the deserted, had gone there to' consult with the elleye that the Scottish 'epbrtsanen of sometimes husband, sometimes wife, Marchese Giovanni concerning some property ' and position may ; hive is altogether:- right: This .the most molecular theory that was involved • brought balls and .clubs Prem Holland 'austere divines'' admit', and surely in his formulas. Giovanni was dig-, and adapted the Dutch game, of holt Chicago is mot suolt a bower of cote ging up a buried temple on the north -';to the Mike of their native slant'. Ito !tablet felicity that; the thing is not ern border of the Punjab. One night,1any,case, it has 'been the game of tit -s' there known. ' In the explorer's tent, near the exec-toonitnoll, for centimes and the Chief " vations this inscrutable creature, pastime of the people residing near Reasonable: - "I wish you wouldn't keep humtiring walked in on Rodman,. •No one knew such public ground. .. i " how he: got into the fent or where that &ane tune over and over ,again. g h ., ittteretwenty B t 1 are tri °a verses." crit' This is the season oil u the nom -y o r , •Tits Ion y mid ho cam from:- • '. Giovanni told about' it. The tent'• torts of home and Pay an eXhorbitant i —Amherst. J° . flap simply opened -and ` the big Orien- rent for an ovenitke• shack_ -by a Mos.. to appeared, He had something lQuito infested river, where the drink- Another alliteration' which is pope• under his arm rolledup in a prayer-(.ing water is warm and the' flailing Is lar in Canada'lot Canedlstn Coal for ca •P_st. ' 1-16—gave no 'attention to'Gio-I rotten, and call it a vacation. - ' Canadian` -Citizens: ,. hV WY nick, safe, sure relief from painful callouses on the feet. At gil'hug anti shoe stores �deA1'ois I" K s Zinc0. Wilson F'ezbliohin Company De spoke" English with a certain care in the selection of the ..words, but'with ease. 1. It is necessary to try to understand this, because it e:tplains the concep- tion' everybody got of the creature, when they Saw in charge of Rod- man. I am using precisely the de- scriptive words; he was exclusively in charge of Rodman, as a jinn, in an Arabian' tale might have been -in charge of a king's son. The creature was servile—with al- most a groveling •servility. But one felt that this servility resulted from something potent and secret. One looked to see Rodman take Solomon's ring out of his waistcoat pocket. I sup Ione there is no longer any doubt about the fact that Rodman was one of thosh' gigantic human in- telligences who sometimes appear in the world; and,) their immense con- ceptions dwarf all human knowledge —a sort of mental monster that we feel nature has no right to produce, Lord Bayless Truodey said that Rod- man odman was four generations •in advance of -the time; and Lord Bayless Trux- ley was, beyond question, the greatest authority on synthetic chemistry in 'the world. Rodman was rich` and, everybody supposed, indolent; no one ever thought very much about hini'untii he published his crochure on the scientific mapufaeture of precious stones. , Then instantly everybody with any pretension to a knowledge of synthetic chemistry turned toward him. The brochure startled t14e world. It proposed to adapt the lustre and beauty of jewels to commercial uses,' We were being content'' with crude imitation Colors . in .our commercial glass, when,we could quite' as easily have the actual structure and the actual lustre of the jewel in it. We were painfully hunting over the earth and in its bowels 'for a few crystals and prettily-ciolored stones which we hoarded and treasured, when in a manufacturing laboratory we could easily produce them, more perfect than nature, and in unlimited quan- tity. Now, if , you want . to understand ivhat .I am.,piinAting here about Rot/tilt man, yen most -think -about this thing! as a scientific possibility and not as a• fantastic notion. Take, for ex- ample, Rodman's address 'before the Sorbonne,or his report to the Inter- national Congress of Science in Edin- burgh, and you will begin to see what _ mean. -The Marehete Giovanni, who was a delegate to that congress, and, Pastreaux, said that, the only - thing it nlythingit the way of an actual prac- tical realization of what Radmanout- lined was the formulae, ' 11 Rodman could work out the formulae, jewel - stuff could be produced as cheaply es glass,' and in any quantity --by the carload, Imagine it;` sheet .'ruby, sheat' emerald, all the beauty and lustre. of- jewels in the windows -61 the caner drugstore! and the home dressmaker will find the designs "illustrated in our new Fa- shion Book to be practical and simple, yet maintaining. the spirit of the mode of the moment. Price of the 'book 10 cents the copy, . HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. , Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stantpa or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully} for each numberand address your order to Pattern -Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade - CAREE 083I:3S UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITIIS. Moro 0.0 A sludentgaao successfully employed creating Advertising bes1gns- and Iilustr l onsl Interior beconaanm Sculpture, Metat Nott,, Stained Glass, leydcry, and,other highly-paidtwortr. ONTARIO COI:LEGE of ART GRANGE P01515, TORONTO DAY AND 1. i•EN)NC'CI.AS$E$ IMP/141,1 007.,0. WRITE, 000 PRO$P05155 OR PARTICULARS.. Alk11 e4b6LiALSO .' - aATA Hon. atOttawa,arriving on the "Atuitanie." in'the grou ), II n. J. alcolm, 1141rit6ter of. Trade and Commerce g 1 ',LIFT to RIGHT, Mr, and Mrs. Malcolm, Mr. and Mrs, 11• ,0. Gampney, of Ottawa, and F. K. lllgrrow,'of Toronto: Kitchen Kinks 13I5CU1TS BAKED IN A FRYING. P,:1N. On rlaf au ngs t tit o untry when pm-I:ping, one c .otn- s to Lak,, of atits but hat no Oven. Every camp x, Noway i, hat t frying pan. Grease tie entire inside of the frying pen, siclas and .tall, and heat lit. Make the tirzaulto very ,limy, so they will. net quite reach the top of the pan whentfully raved. Fi41, the heated pan with than, put a tight cover over the pan, weighting it down, and thoon watch the fire -to sae that' Ib temain's' het enough but not too hot. In this way( Cie pan becomes a little oven _end bakes very well indeedSince tits Weevils will 'bake in just a °few minutes, the first batch may he kept hot, wrapped in a cloth, while a 500 - and! orthird batch is baking,: RIPE PEACHES 'STEWED. It sometimes happens that one has on 'taint]. peaciuds that'seem almost ;too - small ;to peel, or' they may be so '';lard they are net fit to use. . When this occurs use half a teacupful of sugar to a pint of water and add half tablespoonful of fresh butter. Put the peaelies in and coiner the vessel; boil till the fruit is tender. Serve hot. The peeling oan be -rubbed, off if, the peaches are boiled for a feel mdln- ubss, but It is usually not Objection- able, while the needs add greatly to the flavor of the fruit. SOFT GINGERBREAD. One cupful` of eugar, 1''cupful '.of treacie or syrup, 1 cupful of sour W'i'le .3 cupful of blither, 2 eggs, ;I tablespoonful of ginger, 1 tablespoon- ful of cinnamon 1 teaspoonful of ground cloves, 1 nutmeg Mix all the ' ingredients, . adding Wheatmeal gradually till it fortes a seft:sli.dough" At the very last, add 1 teaspoonful of-baking'sood'a d.in:.taly- ed in hot water, and bake in -a steady oyen.bill ready DELICIOUS SALAD: Mix together 1 cupful of very small peas' (freothdy cooked or canned); 1 cupful of chapped celeryr,'1 cupful of chopped peanuts. dressing e Make a ressin feas follows: _ l thi 1 level teaspoonful of mustard, 1 level teaspoonful: of flour, r teaspoonful of salt, 1 teaspoonful of ugar, yolk of 1 egg (beaten), ria cupful of vin- egar '(dilute if extremely sour), '4 capful of sweet milk. Mix the dry ingredients, add the egg, then the vinegar, then the milk, Cook in a- amble -boiler, stirring con- stantly until rather thick. When cold mix it: well through' the salad. This recipe- served six persons. STEWED- Ri�3:UBARB. Two pound's of rhubarb, washed, and cut in cube lengths, 2 cupfuls of sugar, and 2 'cupfuls of water. Bring the 'water and sugar to the boiling pofr-t, add the rhubarb and let that cone to a quick boiling, but de not stir. Shake the pat if the rhu- bario fit -not covered. It should be brought to a boiling point quickly and then itnrdediately allowed to cool. The rhubarb becomes, tenderin the hot juice while cooling. This is delicious if a pe'rs'on likes the rhubarb in tatliole pieces and with plenty of ]nice, CANNING RHUBARB,," rix ASIAN MAIO T11e 1027 pi'° gram :Canadian National' I7t;tt lbt tion fait' y. teems with new -features, new buildings, and new 'Phe 'WOrld Cha.mphlp x00,000 .9wimming•. J3alonsco •op August 31st new has over, 300.. entries representing 30 nationalities. ion Prie r Wales hnnolr •I-7ncxidboith>n:^visitorswin with Joie-- prosenco'to open the .1100,000. Princes' Gates, tete new Eastern Entrance. • The new Live Stock Pa-` ,v111on covering 8 acres wilt surprise and delight the Agriculturist. And the Grand Stand Spec tante Canada" Is an en- treneing spectacle magnitl- cend depon a eclipsinentbyo g,.,: anoycrt.. �Pttrovlousari. silage presentation,. JOHN J. 15IXON.. WATPreGenE',.: M.. 'RSsldenG ' .Ili tib'. ari• lira thalf of the month, it may be well . to use one of the ,'called summer radishes, such as ,Chartiers, but, dur- ing the latter part ol'the month,°it will be safe to use varieties-. like Sparkler,' White Icicle, etc.. Au important part of the work in' our vegetable gardens during the late summer is to ]seep all weedsfrom ma - luring seed around the premises. Be as Careful as we may, lilenty of weed seeds will find their way to the gar- den, and vie are only adding to our own labors in future years if we per Hitt aiiy, Weeds to go to geed In. the garden. The ends df rows .and the 'border should receive the same care• fut attentiola as the cultivated -parts - of the ground. Mother's Vacation 'Pour in prozerving jars while still hot the fruit thus prepared and seal immediately, Have the jars clean and hat, ready for the rhubanb. ,• SUBSTITUTE FOR CITRON. When without citron for a cake, or pudding, use dried peaches or apri- cots, Cr if neither is on 1)and, u',,, prunes. They do not need to be soak- ed bat should be washed; dried, and then cut'into tiny pieces. If added to a cake.battr, roll them in flour. They give a delicious fruity tats and make a lino substitute for citron. ' The ! egetable..Garden in , - August Usually August is an off month in the home vegetable ;garden so far as planting Is concerned, but It need not be. " Of course, long season cropscan net be planted now with : any chance' of a harvest, but many quick matur- ing kinds still have time to make n crop' before winter ;tomos, It ie very important at this time of year'to be carefulof the varieties chosen for planting, as many kinds that are'-s1ac- cessfnl for early"season use will 'uot give good results' now. There is still time to mature a crop of Chinese cabbage if an early variety de planted durtng'the first ten days of the month. This vegetableis really at its best during the cool months of fall, 'and light freezes only serve to make It milder, As a anatter of fact, real 'good quality can not be had:,in this vegetable during the hot months of. stimnaer. 'Sow the --goad In rows. about fifteen to -eighteen inches apart where she .plants are Us r x'entain, and thin them to stand about eight Inches• apart In tate row. This Yegetaable 1s. delicious served like cabbage. "'. -Another salad plant not given the attention its mer'its'• r•eset've, is,'.kale. This 'plant; seeded nolo, will net giver the large heads. of earlier seed, but the small,tender leaves' will be even more delicious than the larger"heads, and the pants not used this fall can remain in the garden over winter. In, early spring, these plants Wil kiilckly produce a fine salad crop. if the plants are to 'remain :outdoors all win- ter,' Dwarf Siberian . is probably the best variety to use for late sowing.' Plant in, rows two feet apart'anil''thin. the plants as space demands. Whelt, seeded thickly in the row, the Plants thinned out may be used for belling greens,. This vegetable produces "greens" at a time when sinoil are not generally available, and la • view of this fact•- should'' receive • more atten- tion thaxi 16` usually given it. Early varieties of turnips, smelt es extra -early Milan and Early lied still still give a good crop of rdots for stor- age over winter. - Sqw there in spa:os made vacant by 11e removal of early crops. During tits iiret half of tlu rnonLlo male two orLhree'plan lingo of. spinach for fall use ,.Victoria and King of Denmark 'tie good varielaek `Tor ibis purees°. A iberel ten -dress- ing Or nitrate of soda, or other nitro• genous fertilizer, will hurry maturity. and produce extra loaf' growth. 1 seed is lamed .durin • the snd',. 1 � p fa August is 'vacation time for many farmers: Tho hay is cared for and the wheat harvested and there is a lull in farm work preceding -the fall harvests. Thoughts then roan to short trips, perhaps a camping tour, or a day's picnic.' The day's Picnic 18 a tine peros of relaxation, and the short trips too, generally for every- body but mother. Site ltas't° prepare a blg.luneli, and hasto see that the children are' behaving, and:. keepug themselves ,presentable. Therefore, often these periods of relaxation for the rost of the family are „ anything but vacations for another. A real vacation means to get ati'ay frons, familiar sights and regular du- ties; ' The men' and the children have changes of work and scenes iivtheir regular activities, but mother is usual- ly always at home, busy from day- light to dark, with the multitudinous duties of keeping the home and the family in proper order. ' So, in making the vacation plana it is well to remember that mother also needs a vacation. A week or two for mother away from home and family responsibility, should be laciutleti in all family vacation plans. The doctorwho complains through the press that people do not pay enough attention to their feet prob- ably thinks they still use them Ag irl in Hamilton, Out., has never been 'absent or tardy from school in d.4 years. There's a girl - who wait make some, man a good slalom clock. Prince Carol didn't get the throne from bls-,father,, but he inherited a fortune, If' the prince has any sense he will be better satisfied with the fortune. A mixed ntataphor is, forgivable, but heifer°. of slang, -Dr. J. Herbert Low,. Principal, of Erasmus 'high School. ' a1. --householder stunned a burglar by throwing a loud -speaker at -him, We 'are otterixlaze'd by out's, a/hough It doesn't move. x DOUBILE MINT— easy to remember—and hard to for: get, once you've tried it. Keeps teeth white, breath swect, ails appetite and digestion Af terr?; Every' Meat - ` ISSUE No. 34--'27