Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1924-01-24, Page 5ii s b ere r cele 483, 'deliver the i opt" ons, Iver to this,. wo his most Val,lablo tissot is his discrc, trial, An intrepid Woman, Pple- A- remarkable ae1ilovement ivas that (tiler o f ,Mrs, George Duller, wife of the welt- fee- lcnoWn English jocltey, wbo the ether orb, 'day, at Brooklands, broke two motor, an racing records/in the course of which g nt .She 'drove a ..anti car at a. speed of .,i ed a . over 105 miles' an hour. Though not many „men would Cara few to attempt such a .feat, when she had.. in flniahed the intrepid woman slnihngly ive- declared that ahe would do _it again any day! • are ough pre, olnt- ands are, re - airs, it at attar the' :M. nen ere of pact won. ally, kers A P-taceen Parliament. Lady Terrington, M.P. for Wycombe, England, le one of the pleasant band ,bound to` introduce a more harmonious note into debates when tired .men get cross and angry. ,It is nearly six year's now since, as a widow, she married again, her hus- band being the heir, of -the first baron, who was a merohant•prince, a Iawyer, and a power in railway and banking circles, Lady -Terrington and Mrs. `WintierE ham are the two Liberal women mem- bers. The Conservatiesse have three, and so -have the Labor Party, so that there are now eight women in the House—Lady Terrington, Miss Bond -- field, Miss Lawrence, the 'Duchess of AtholI, - Mrs. Hilton Philipson, Wes Jewson, Lady Astor, and Mrs. W'lnt-r ringham.' etch next free ,Am. An Eternal Gift. 'Here is a little passage which eon=' tains a. lesson ,for us In Canada, ro wasteful '11ave wa been of our Persists and so neglectful of: restoring them, The thirty -mite boulevard;th'at leads from the Imperial summer palace at Nikko, Japan, toa near)y village; with stately 'Japanese cedar ,trees` planted en both' sides, towering two Is• hundred feet or mord into the air, makesFa deep impression on the visit-. or. The legendconnected with the trees -le extremely interesting. Sev will oral hundred years ago the Emperor V kt of Japan summoned all the noblemen war mpt iter sant the Will Sir d by has of the pantry to his summer palace and told each. to bring a gift. An im- poverished' nobleman, realizing that he could not make an offering in gold or silver, carried with him a sack of see da da and, 'planting them on both' shies of the highway, made the remark that his gift would be the greatest bless, e of lag of them all, and tliat hi A nklme. would be remembered Iong after the gold and silver offerings of his col. leagues had vanished. To -day, many Hundred years after the seeds were planted, thousands of persons enjoy thebeauty and the grateful Shade of the trees, and the seeds from then( have caused other cedars to grow up in the neighborhood —trees that have tprocided• many gene, rations with the wood for the. construe. tion of their houses, y 01 die, 1s - Mee' Ice. and an the, ndly and rna- redit lobe, ting tines nize mph= has ited thin, the. here, ad - aero s for eats. ectal (-ear. ; ern - Ata anal,-<,. rig- s the rhold key sant edge rd in re - ,that Blind s M[u tela riS Have Won- derful Memories. Blind inusioiana have so long ao0us- toined'us to theig`.renrartttible; powers - of quick memorization, that the -follow- ing feate, which are vouched for by the Natiahal Institute for the Blind, will be the more readily accredited, Prod Turner, one of the most accent- - blind musieia[ts iu Scotland, recently' 'memorized' the whole of aach's "St. 'Matthew l'aseloe," and in four lnontlts trained his ohoir and hirn- self accompanied the entire work on the organ, '`Sinclaif - ogan,,the blind epnlposer andorganist,• memorized Sorttervell's "The •Paasibirof Chrlat"- a fairly complicated cantata occupying 75 minutes 1n performance—trained his choir and accompanied a suocenal fell rendering all inside. the peeled Of less than two months, '(baring which he was working under the stress of other hi portant recital in .Liverpool' for the 1Z;ABE l ii' �'{, RI( t' 'llwE.i "'When. h'a,,' $ co80no wand:, F,'om ,e1 ind8 the eayebt edit tseldimags deyart." CITAPTER' II,-(Cont'd.) was ,e nensp<iper c ippgng 1 erhaps even more than Alice she and . he pounced upon i0 cjuicklp, look revelled in this temporary taste of mg toesee if by:any ehttnce �4lice'hat luxury, : Aliso hail the cempen,5ation observed the' action through, the Un of youth, and llez' future was.not yet of th open doors, Alice, as it hap dec Jed. 'For Jean Carney the futureperiod, `did see, -111.1t it woad ecarcol Iva• already here, howevermuchshe hare 'occurred to,her to show curl might trg to cheat herself. ily years osity. The incident ',VIM too oornmon of stupid, soul -starving penury one plane, too trivial to cell ;'or2omment con d 'purchase two 'months of life as Yet, that newspaper clipping well it ought to be lived. '111a., 'it as all;' have i ,terested Alice, v¢onld have"vol did her; heir, at the white- the daughter why -her another had 'se - flounced flounced -'dressing table she pIn ted at'lasted' this par,`ticuhir, spot for thei Using 3'oultg itgain—and :also won hard-ei'rned e atlas. It yvns, nit ;fac dere(' what there would be tor dinner, • nothing less than, an'announcemen Po one thing, a half bottle of chain -'of the; recent arrivals at the Minos pagne and a Benedictine with i:lie kalee' xlotel, 'among whom figure coffee. ;Lunch had been so - lath, she Dr, Ph lmn Ardeyne, eelcbrated ITamle wouldn't bother with tea. • ^'Phar;c Street specialist; of Tendon, England Thierman,-.tiien—the opportune tsr armee to him -had dr ten Jean Car nay- to.Bozdigheza'in spite -of the lac that the neighborhood had'steel memories -for her 'which, if revived might be a little painful: In 'short How nice and high up the rooms she Wae oh' a match -making errand were, hi Wheat a - comfortable lounge th Di tArdey el ii~Rot c nearly x lch to sit - and dream.: She y two fetched a cushion, a rug;' and il• &oak years ago she had decided that h and settled, herself,. But the book was Was the one ,man in the `world fo merely for appearance sake- Alice. He had'• been imgh Ally. at Nearly twenty years ago since she traded, She knew, although Aline at had. been here last, and Bordighera that time yraa .merely .a. school ,sir was changed. So many new hotels But nowt yet nineight say that. Alice and villas had':sprung up and the though not yet nineteen, Was grp surrounding eountry.was being ruin- he, and own—Jean wanted reasons o ed by those barren -looking, though i her' daughter t doubtless pleat productive 'tailraces, marry young,'8011 naturally sheltvant- ed the marriage to be a suitable oil But the old town would be the same in every way,- and the old Villa Tatlna.°.:Could. elm bring herself -to take a surreptitious peep through.the gates of the Villa Tatina? Almost she wished'she hadn't come here. Memories are,queer things. Oneimagines the past to. be quite dead and done for, yet swell, she had come on Alice's account; not for lier- self. The 'child must have her chance of happiness. "Mother l" ' Mrs, Carney gave a'start. She had actually fallen asleep; for a few mo- ments and somehow that, made her feel a. little guilty, 4Ve.ld•• T hat .tter''tlr iste sell from impelniti ;favor kes in elf in prison trwhere- mbh, is I try was cast' into the, Piber, ah rase in Protest and -almost irrst'its banks,' Ultimate y rho body l ae'�taken 'to it' ienelY'hoo : at the top ef'the mountain whish now bears its • name, neat Lucerne, e According to another verslon, Pilate retired ,here 'during hIEt.lifetime and • was thrown toto'the, Pool by the Wan- dering Jew. In any cane, his presence caused terrible„ 'bit, • avalanches and inundations devastating the dist d trice amid a fiendish din in the; recess- es of the anoentains, x;, A='Spanish,rscholar volunteered to �. t exorcise the trouble'd -spirit, and.a11 - t the way up; he was beset by torrents, a lk1 wide as 'rivers, abysses ,of- infinite d depth, ail'of witch last fitly -bridged y themselves at thesigo :of the cross. At the -pool, however,, Pilate =-appear- ed as tall, as a 'toiver,`'brandlslring a pine trunk, 'A terrific combat ensued, lasting all day and night vdiue the al , whole mountain rocked. I irate -watt ' t at last -reduced to -terms, swearing to goodness ,she had' got those cigarettes through safely: It would ,have been such atdisgrace, to say, nothing of ex- pense, had they -caught her, She lit one now and stepped out on to` the balcony: remain quiet' in his pool except on Fri- o- -days, when lie might roam about the mountain. ' - - e A: -'law-yras- passed that none �shouid r, dare to climb the peak an Fridays, and ' -such as did so met Pilate in red-judi L •ciai robes,- and retained blinded or' maimed for life. wn I in the sixteenth century,, however, f the ghost was- hially laid; atnd.:a peo- o cession went up eyeiy year, headed by the vicar of Lucerne,'te cast stones. a into -the pool;, "Oh, is that: you, darling?" "Mumsey, you oughtn't to sit out there, The sun's going down" "No, of course not." , Mrs. Carnay dame - in from the balcony dragging the rug and cushion with her. "Well?" "I've got everything," ;Alice ,said• "Isn't the basketsweet?" - Her mother thought thait'the' girl herself . was about the sweetest thing she had ever seen. ' They 'resembled each other only in height and figure, Both were small slender +women, beautifully formed. Jean was fair, her daughter clerk. Alice's coloring was a 'little unusual, .a golden, cream complexion warming to pinto an the creek -bones, eyes like brown ta'unt pansies, 'and hat 'with sunburnt, 'cop- per lights in it,; So like her father, thought Jean' Caxna.y, with- a quick intake of breath That straight, finely modelled „nose ,of hers was like itis; and the slightly full, pouting lower resemblance struck hermore lip, The nese ru forcibly this evening than it bad.estei done' before,-aned..the Twas suddenllly afraid of it There were reasons why Mrs. Camay did not want the girl to look like her father. Resemblances may go too deep., Alice went into her own. bedroom, then came back and steed in the door- way. Mrs. Carney, was busy undoing the parcel from the chemists, "Mother, didn't you wonder why I was so' long?.', •- Mrs. ( Camay looked self-donscious, and became verj' preoccupied with •a refractory knot. �I did, rather. Perhaps' you—?" "You'll never guess 'who's stopping here!" The girl tried to make her voice casual, but there was a delicious little throb in it which Betrayed her, "Somebody we know?" , "Possibly you don't remember him. That nice doctor man we (not at the Archers' two. summers ago. Fancy his being here, mmseyl"'<., „ -Mrs. Carney wrinlcled her thought- ful brow: • "Let :pie see, Doctor- what 'Was his name?" 1 "Philip Ardeyne. Don't You remem- ber, malmsey? Everybody was so: taken 'with him, and . he ' liked us so much,: only -he had to go,back to Lon- don 'almost at once." • Mrs,. Carnay":dinOpiod, : -"IIe liked •you; very much. Oli, yes -of course I remember Dr. Ardeyne. The Arch- ers talked of nothing else.- Fright - full rich, isn t he?. "I don't>Inow' about that," ha , Alice. re- plied, "butn.they did say° he was so clever 'acid has the most, wonderful Suture ahead ;of him Why, imlum ey, already he's 'Alienist in Ordinary to heavy, nematization work for an ha National Institute: for the Bitnd, in ad- le, dition to : 'hts norma professional brainS. t t h 'd "B s Majesty the Xing, " whatever that ay mean. ' Mrs. Carney burst into a peal of ughter, : •` "I suppose ite,r0eans he's; a. clever tpecin is , s e said. But duties To carry.in the memory -Beethoven's thirty-two ;pianoforte sonatas as Wil liam Woletenholnme does, and the en• tiro forty-eight prehtdes and fugues of anew ac ,,aa in"the case of H, V,' Spanner r'ect- "'two blind musicians; resident in Lon- don—Would semi no light aceleve- [ of meat, and yet these form but -a emall wear portion of the range •of'works pigeon- al holed .in the trentalletorehouse of bird these gifted men, with cg :aid,, llcos iked inert: yn l i its No She hlefore' we vrere ma •rloo; a on f tts}l t0 Paye a80110 the aolot' of my, eeee And,niy HAit," Before I found out that all S;rotj., oro lnteleefod in, wail th1 Olin 00 nay money, l' Pi tg ' (lest. c,£otveeau1lianco who Obits is a carol:eel mean at t n• you certainly have got it off 'pat,' my child. And so ,you rant into Do. Ar - dense and that's why you were ^-sc,i "Fes, I met him in the Rue Vit- terio Emmen.uele, and he remembered Me at once. He's stayieg' in this. very hetet "We had 'r tea- in the loveliest nlace with a garden, and 'there's go- ing to he'a dance in: the hotel to -night, and to -morrow night Dr. Ardeyne wonders if: you'dcare to go down to the Casino." • - , Wo'A Itee about-thate" Mos.' Car nay replied, "Even_.if I don't feel' up to it, there's nottling'to prevent your going. 'Yon. carne her to have a good time, and' you're to enjoy every bless- ed iminute: of it. • I'm glad there's someone- hero wo 'know, ' That will make at so pleasant:1or you from the very start." pleasant , , , Moeller, dear, you're so 'good to me! When I think howyouu've stinted end saved, and hbw J wasn't always toe nice about having to go without—" ,"Well, you she now, don't you? It will- be everth it if we have to go without" tithe et, :for. tate rest of our lives. Run along and dress, my pet. What will you wear? I think the White tullewith the 'Pale link rdIo. Yeti' hast'. ladle very nice tonight: First iml0reeeions in a illaco, like tele aro so important," ' Itirs .Carnay'else dressed, -The 110- ,e :eltp- ojf a sitting xoom ,separated cite tWo bedrooms ` bit they ,left ail the doors open so,thaL they could talk Ase G'n nat ay -vart tartan 'ing sapid he ear t, nt btr acelUfl lltZnd- o a' br o ado i';gilk 0ne';s io had evening on p, little. Mace Ill out, lea > Mrs.' Carnay:nodded, smiling ser- enely as she. fastened a little bunch of violets in her belt. "Ready?" site called out, Alice showed herself in her, white tulle frock with the pink girdle, and they admired each other with :little naive cries alio loving. pets: "Murnsoy, you've no idea how .nice you- look, . I. Stever knew before that your -eyes were the `color of violets." "Don't be sillyi Look'at yourself, Wait "a minute; let me pull' out that skirt,, It's got a little crushed, Turn around." • , "Oh, mother, if only this -could go on. for evert We're just `a pair of Cinderellas, you and I." "Never mica 1. Sonzetleing may turn up. Perhaps a ruracle magi -lapped'," said Mrs Curtsy.. But, after ''all -would it have to be a miracle? Was it too much M expect that Philip Ardeyne would fall in love with Alice and ask ler to, be his wife? CHAPTER III. Two weeks' later they Were planning what promised to be a, most intorest- mg excursion, just thethree of then —Mss. Carney, her dun hter ,;end 7?hilip Ardeyne: Two weeks of tile ex- pensive holiday already gone --like a flash, it 'seems but, oh, how delight- ful it had been, Nita. Carnay had spent most of that time . in gentle occupations, She sat on her own balcony a great deal and read, or on' tries >1 Ilctel verandah with the knitting br ised0 -Everybody liked :her, and the young girls could not very well be jealous of Alice It hen it was -explainer) that Dr, Ardeyne was an old friend. Ardeyne himself fostered, this Moslem -Indeed, it seem- ed to him that they were oldfriends, Now and again Mrs, 'Carney went down into the town for a little shop- ping, and on those occasions it might have been noticed that she cast sh quick glandes' right -and left b, paying particular attention to such members of the English villa 'colony' °as she chanced 'to Meet. It did not zrtatter at all if she were recognized, -but ho doubt -she had changed .considerably in twenty years. One or two (piddle-` aged women she remembered as girls when elle herself was Mmo. Daus > companion at the Villa Tatiria,=''She Was much shocked to bbserve how un- kindly time had dealt with them, (To'be continued.) The Town of Tenderlaoolc. The little town of Tenderitook : '15 scarcely more than just e. nook Beside the road; where.,childreu play And old men loaf the time away. , Six shabby stores, of ehurchea twain, Beneath the 'elms- a Lovers' Lane, A sahoolliottse Baldwin's Hill atop, Of Course, a .moving -picture shah, And little more.'s Yet it's`the'p Iaoe To which I longsto turn my .face And :Wander back, and there to, stay, And, eayer•4nere to move :itwee. Oh, nothing there„at Tenderhook Amounts to much, and. yet 1 radii Amoss the lithe, and loug'to roam Dace itheto to Tendei'hoolt and home: The, Wlfe's Christmas Present, "Say, Bilil 1f you take out.any more life, insurance the rates' is gonnii be awful high." "How so? I'm engaged in no bar- ardous tasks." "You are; if you keep smoking ties@ cigars.' 'Sunlight Tablets. The British Admiralty i a experiment. .Ing' with. a new. extract, in tablet form, of watercress,, apinanh, and 'citlier. i green - plants. It is called pliyllosan, and `14 .may supersede lime -juice tor' the treatment of scurvy. Phyllosan is the discovery of Pro - :feasor I9, Buergi, of Berne 'University, and Is made from chlorophyll, the vital fluid in plants Which beers a algae chemical relationship to human blood pigments, "The theory of transferring plant energy to enfeebled members:. of the human race was expounded, by Dr, A. White Robertson;, the famous Army surgeon, as long ago hs 181;2;°said a London specialist, - "and Prete`ssor Buergi's application et it has been wel- comed el-comed at Several London hospitals where patients have been rejuvenated by a 'course of treatment.” Its place in the b'tevy as a rival to lime•julce will depehd upon .the speed of Its action In strengthening blood that has been weakened by a lack o1 green vegetables and fresh fruit. Conspicuous. sudea"ss, it is claimed, has already 'attended the Royal Air Force experlments on troops is ;Oak suffering from scurvy, medulla, and general debility, • Taxi -motorcycles in Paris are said. to be doing a' brisk business, Wares are cheap, and the -speed is astonish- ing, Some of -the side ears have in- close`tl bodies. 'Whether they wall :con- tinue to be popular after the novelty of Siding in them has worn -011- re- mains to be seen. _AND. THE WORST IS` YE T TO COME 'DROP Gt 4,WS I � r ihmlc it nc4essttry fc p. t; Phe �iVointin who; likes de'eo0ate are. Howevei't if waaheu; calces, yet 11 ansucee.,5:a1 in the us "5oansud, nd ftrttrsad' lm ra oft a pastry hug, cart cheer up ,0l-al'gbe res will dial k; j!Stat erotz new, cheap. ancB et ective decoration is, point 'is not at her disposal,. Ginhdrops � Wand _an istand " on ltom 'a-'-4nomen accident are to be thanked, also the girl who stcl'ned on 0 gumdrop; much, to' her, disgust, and iouild on picicmng� , up the tiny of cm ding eon eetion Ibat she held endless possibilities for edlce l; 'y decoration in her good right hand When dropped, the candy the t.caus r ed the excitement was one of 'the tiny, highly flauoted-green gumdrops that; fill the cracks and creicesiof-se tnariy colorful boxes of candy- When hick- edup It°was a- cunning little trefoil with sugar dew sparkling all over it, witb'an idea on each leaf for the St, ),?atrtcic'e Day,.eake at thatmoment baking for young nephew's birth- day. Talk of coincidence! ,If a pink ora purple p e ono had fallen there wou13 have been io'results,. but a' green one on the irtsh saint's day,started some- thing. Apart from sanitary reasons, a 140 pound' -promenade -could scarcely be taken over: each gumdrop, but -a knife blade dipped in hot: 'water. quickly Presses the guinlny candy into a thin flat sheet, and embroidery scissors or a tiny.sharp tin cutter finishes the work. If graceful ; connecting, stems are needetlethey , can be 'made from thinned stringlike bits of candy, or painted on the icing with a fine waher- color brush dipped in the ,diluted green , color paste which no one i afraid to use nowadays • - Christmas offers great opportun itiet for the exercise of one's original ity in gumdrop - garniture.' The tin Miters used -in preparing carrots an beets for soups and salads twill ca stars, crescents, clovers and the li to `one's heart's content. For Valentine ' calces - bright re gumdrops can be used to foil" the i evitable hearts and; drops of blood'' On layer Oakes,_ Individual cakes can b outlined with sparkling red drops. Pink gum paste with the aid of'e broidery scissors,. can be eut into tri pointed petaled daisies. From lir and ,yellow_ drops quaint pansies can be formed, ' . At the risk of being suspected :having an interest 3n a gumdrop Inc tory, I am ,going to claim kinderge.'r tett possibilities for them. Two your eters are occasionally parked with ra for, an afternoon.. Well, not Imo,: ago a stormy day, with few materials on hand, "` a. demand for •a pretty cake and a premise to eat only a tiny slice resulted in; a product 'worthy of delicatessen, : shop for ,gaudiness . and bad form, but it interested them and taught them something. , - Pink. icing, an outline of 'young gumdrops of every color in the box And, as it' happened to be.no one's birthday, a lone candle in the centre tor everyone's .."happy next year" were the /et -stares of the. cake; but by the time the candle had burned they knew amethyst purple, topaz yellow, ruby red, pearl white, sapphire blue, and have always remembered it as their jewel cake.- These Baine children tido great' pride in a Noah's Ark cake. 'For this a; light sponge -calve "batter that any child can digest Is baked in a square Pal, iced and' set aside to dry. -'he thinnest of cooky 'dough is 'cut •out with duck, rabbit, sat, camel and other animal cutters, baited thoroughly an attached with a drop of sugar syrup - to the iced sides of the eake. If tlyd :frosting is chocolate the cookies are Ie£t as they are, but if white icing is used the animals':are lightly touched up. with ,color paste or^chocolate. Tho gratifying feature ig that the young visitp05 Are usually 50 -pleased with: the solemn animal precession. that they eat very little celc0, -thus reliev- ing the hostess of considerable anxiety as to possible aches in their little tummies. OUR COMPLEXION'S,' Do, you lniow about usingfuller's earth -to cieanee the pores of the skin? i' toutld'out`about it only recently and I have been delighted with the results. A friend of mine who lived for sev- eral years in the biggest dity got this secret from - seine little beauty -parlor girls who advertised it ,so4'well that my friencl„got some'f iller's'ea �th.ire^ mediately ---until sa' `did I when tihe told me.' Fuller's earth is :a soft clayey sub. -bailee of 'a grayish -white color and n good-sized package can be obtained ram any druggist for a small sum, To, apply, add just enough "water , to make a stiff'-pti5fe and apply to the face, allowing' it to" dry. It is ad- visahle to assdme the pleasantest ex - session you ean,.180 you will have to bold it for hall an hem', Don't laugh' r talk or, -you'll break the mask. The est ae.rangement I 'have found le reading. I' generally have a serial that I oani''reat, at' such times. Alter' anywhere from a half to 'three-quar- ters of 'an hour you: can wash the mask of!', using an old' piece of -cheese- cloth go something that you can throw away, and you evils 'find your dace all neatly vacuunmed; for that is . just what fuller's earth ,does -it absorbs' oil and draws out blackheads and all dirt from tho pores -Josephine' Wylie. TIlil END 07 Till l?1bTH, Go follow down whatever way, Whatever pati you will, Or wander_ into cello land Whero pipes, of ,pleasures trill; ii you 'aro melting happiness And mirth and joy, my friend, You'll dud''the happiest path of all. Iles`children a the end, —Jay B. Ido", APPLE AiND CABBAGE SALAD, Shave cehbage line and soak. for, one our imm cele •y -water, made by adding` ne; teaspoon 01 celery salt to each nett „ water, Drain and dry 011 soft awal Add an er'ual anmount of apple lit into ;match lire© tioet ,iiia with py wa; s ONE OP THE SEASON'S YOIJTIH- FUT., MOI)TLS. _ 4555: Jersey, wool crepe or kasha - cloth could be used for this style. :It y has the new flare fulness in_plait ef- d feet let the sides,' and smart usefLl t pocket topping* the plaits: kel The Pattern is cutin 5 Sizes: 12, 1;14, 16, 18 and 20 years. ,A 1.6 -year 1 ,size requires 8iia yards of 40 -inch ma- n_ terial. Fof 'vest of contrasting ma- 1,terial % yard 24 inches wide is re,. e quired. The width of the skirt at lower edge le 2% yards. m Pattern mailed 'to any, address .on e receipt of 15e it silver orstam stamps,- P, Y ac- the Wilson Publishing Co.; 73 West Adelaide' Street, Toronto. Allow two weeks for receipt of pattern, of —+ Jenny Lind's Voice Dia - covered cav'ered b"y Cat. O A. eat was responsible for the early discovery of jenny Linins voice. When. she • was a Iittle girl she; had a pet; with a blue ribbon 'round its neck, to which she used to sing sometimes, in a a window looking out ' on' a much-tre. `quested street in'Stockholpy. One day the mad of a famous dancer heard her and reported her "Bud"; and thus it dame about that she was taken in. hand and trained for a musical career. She was at that time, as site herself later, wrote to the editor of e.,biograph.. io dictionary, "a small, ugly, broad - nosed , shy, awkward, altogether uu- dergrown• girl"; but she sang 'so beautifully that the Swedish govern- ment paid -the coats of Tier, mashie! education, on the condition 'that she irhouid In ante giro her services to the national opera, She was oaly.teu, wheu she first sang in pubiio. Then for ten more years 'she worked hard -.-so hard loge she wreaked the 'beautiful voice With whieh she had been born. In conster- nation Abe went to Paris to seek the d aid of the meet famous' .teacher, Man. uel CittrCfa. }11s -answer was crushing:, "it should be useless to teach you. Mtge. You `have .00' -voice lett." It was them that , Jenny Lind "made herself" a great singer and a good musician at first, with the, aid of Gar cia. He tirade her promise not to sing a tone tor six weeks. Then he taught her' hew not to:: ileo her'volc0 moor' reedy it was that, and not overwork, that had injured It, She, had to stab all over kgaltti from the very begin- ning, singing scales up and down very slowly and learning how to breathe correctly. " - It.took -her ten months to recover her voice under Carcia's guidance; but that wee only the beginning. To her teacher she evils- eternally grateful. And yet she could say truthfully in later year's; "As to the greater hart of what I can d1 in 013' art, I -have my sett'aetfitired by incredible work." - Thirsty Liners. Few people would caro to pay for a 11ner's drink for one voyage Wass the Atlantic, even In water at a bent per gallon. Very little change would be given out of $2,500, • One of the big'litlantie liners has to carry about 5,000 tons of 0reeh water for alI purposes for -4 einglej Voyage from Southampton -to Nesv York, This tonnage alone is about i. two and allalf tinges the Sleight o Nelson's old flagship, Victory. A'.paseenger on one of -these leviatit- ans uses 'for drinking and domestic purposes :about fere "gallons a day 011 ;the voyage. And as 'these ships a;er-0;, age 8,000;' passengers and c ew, it M04118 they have to carry, roughly,t, .week's water supply Sol a small coun- try town in Melte; neatly stewed away' along tho silos of the ship. But it is the giant 80110)s that ioos'o the greatest thirst, On one voyego : the Bereegarta used over 3,000 tons of water,. or, et tan pouaula to the roughly, 672,000 gallons, :liulo f 5-ical-Oh. A od'iiumaluaclilnd shounot,;.. }vial'goout Mir seventyn years, 'says ld 131' Meetabe, the English army dootol who has written on human life; Its e joymegt and prolongation,' Ove against t➢:opinion of the Pealniist e,uotot (repasts vi, 3,"Alnthe Tom eld. 'My ntel'it 'shall not a1 vat pirive with loan, for that he 11100 f{esil yet bit d01s,,•hlili bo a'lhuncitcc 11 and twenty. yearp„ " •t.guiii,r Clam 1, acientllic analeglee, [1', pItor thc.C,l points out that n.cst Of the iiieb 03 mals at job"=a lite anew teat•t3,ai ir(X1`. mttlely IIvo C,ni80 ,.heir gi rss ing p;rr 1f "mon falls abet( oP thak, rt is ,u'if all dyeing to seine kind nt itmtottmP apex ho'beltevac: Moderation Irl 01 blies is Me rule of health, 8 f p 0 b h ((c c bolted dressislg. , • -o)y1A,IN1ptot U1, 1;5 1sT:11 0• AS,any.peopla wlio drain china t