HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1924-03-27, Page 67 It vrflL. realize the difference
between " ala a" an i4 "just tea."
FOOD FOR T•HE SICK.
A •problem. which most housewives
have to 'solve at source time or another
is the 'planning and preparation of
food for those who are ill. In vary
serious illness, the doctor usually
states very plainly what the patient
or maynot have to eat,` but often
may ho orders a liquid diet, a simple diet,
or a soft -solid diet.
A liquid' diet includes milk, choco-
late
mills,malted milk, beef tea,' ex-
tract
of beef, soups (both 'clean and
creamy), grape -juice, albumenized
grape juice, albumenized orange juice
and orangeade.
olid diet includes crackers
A soft -solid urea soft or
and milk, pea or potato puree,
toast rico, tapioca; custard, big-whodoes not get that sleep
he�rain
h.
cream ,, and Scientists have` proved
grapecream, gruels,msoft boilednegg
ra a •'nice, lemonade, orangeade and cells possess a vital elementinwhhourss
g P 7 exhausted during ourg
simpleegAnsordered for and renewed during sleep.-
A esen din ladesusualy a sells of an individual
convalescents includes only:easily' di- " -The brain dies - after suffering
ested foods, such, as milk, clam broth, killed, or whostrain, after ss suffering g
stewed.. oysters, eggs, toast,- well cook- fatigue ed vegetables, rice,; tender meat, either
broiled or roasted. nested
The following menus are suggested
for persons showing symptoms of hav-
ing taken cold: Breakfast, prune • juice
and milk toast. Dinner, oyster stem
and crackers. Supper, hot rolled oats"
gruel, `buttered toast and tea.
These menus are suggested for the
convalescent stage: Breakfast, grape-
fruit, poached egg on toast, cocoa.
Dinner, lamb ° broth with rice, baked
potato, baited custard. Supper, cream-
-tuna 'fish on toast, corn flakes with
cream, orangeade. made
Albumenized grape juiceis
with two tablespoonfuls of grape
e
juice, the white of one egg," one-half
e
teaspoonful' of sugar and chopped i 'e
To the beaten egg white add the grape
juice and:sugar and chopped ice.
Serve in a dainty glass. Have all in -
gradients chilled before combining.
•. Albumenized. orange juice is made in
the same way, using the` juice, of one
orange and sufficient sugar to
sweeten.
hires one egg, ono tea-
spoonful
req.
spoonful of sugar, a ' few grains of"
salt, three-quarters' of ".a cupful of.
Milk and a grating of nutmeg. Separ-
ate , egg. Bunt ocreai'nyadd suger add
Add the
salt, and beat un
milk and fold in the white of egg,"
beaten until foamy. Sprinkle with
nutmeg. Serve immediately. cul
For rico gruel use one tablespoon
of rice, one cupful of milk, three table-
spoonfuls of water, a few grains of
• salt. Scald the milk and water in a
doable boiler, add the rice gradually
and cook twenty minutes, Strain.
Rolled oats gruel can be made in the
dame way. which always
Ftoatitag island,
pleases, requires one egg,' one-half
tablespoonful of sugar, a few grains
Of salt, three-quarters of a cupful of
milk, Scald the milk in a double
boiler. 'Separate yolk and white of
e . and beat separately. To the
beaten yolk add salt and sugar, and
their gradually add the scalded milk.
Fold in two-thirds of "beaten white.
Return to double boiler and stir con-
stantly until the mixture coats the
or looks creamy, then remove
spoon
from hot water. Flavor with vanilla
4�
CI cartComthani
By ELIZABETH VC1RKC ILLeR
"Whin hearts actionund,
From minds ids aafjeet couiasolt€ngo dspc s- ."
CIIAPTER'XII. I self to listen patiently,' and the pre
The arrival of Carrie, Egan canoed cious holiday moved day by day: to-:
a happy shudder throughout the, Mi- wards its close. •
mesa Palace. Mrs.^Egan-was of the But she comforted herself with the
stuff upon which hotel gossips, feed assurance that Alice was happy' and
and fatten. Colonel',Derwent, the having a good' time. She would' not.
doyen' of the. English element, Who let Alice:come; near "Uncle John" for
had been to some pains to search: for fear
n i through the town and the doctf infection. Influenza was or
"Major Carney, . deceased," in 'the rid o was suffering from a mtld.
Army, Lists, and, discovered that there said Hug
was no such person, forgot Jean and form of it. Jean took' risks herself,
his deduction that sho was divorcee. but she' didn't intend that Alice should
The colonel's bosom friend, Count lose any lug laid ofup those se golden
hours by be
Praga—the Anglo Polish banker--
h lowered. The who; from ,altruistic motives had in- In the natural aetrer, courso of things
personn' off dlee are both and strong sisted upon playing.Cupid to the, Hugo grew
detorion., tel ceased his' match -malting Towards the end of the week hei
whole hotel,was: well enough sit - up for
keep watch of his lo her activities abruptly and became both
will, will
and will use 'safe and logical , n retiring. Count meals, and Jean left him alone one
weight :Pra apearia g afternoon while she and Alice went
means to importantt eatl mennorti o couplee had. run into at Pau,
Egan hea down into. the town to do a little
One element of personal of season's ago ; and shopping.. , '
attractiveness is what -may be de- knew that' wherever she was there , doors all communicating,. Huge
scribedThe
"careful "trignoss'1' in a woman, Or also was i ting b address clicked/
ked/ and was given the run of• their now ex-
" The knitting brigade shocked
and
careful 'grooming.rather shocked tensive suite, and eventually found his
sisters who''ara clattered, the. English way to the sitting -room; which he had
h a their
llalmost identical by jdl 'not entered- before, II
T ere' re o unconventional country -a was half -
twins, and naturally
e inns woman,the French ladies -mildly ly alikein f .which feature. one,,has amused, and the Italians—as usual— dressed,with' •a faded, old bathrobe
looks r his shirt and trousers, and badly
stringy pain,which always
god and poorly care or,
rag wholly uneoneerned :.with; anything over
family needed a'.ahave. A stuber white haze
skin, but. :their own personal. and f Y
Her, disgraced ,his chin and a wore no
weak but some -
1 d f sallow
tubby nails and collar awry affairs, it collar. He looked. a and
s 'was scandalous;
in-, -Mrs. Eganas he ambled
hint is of ussY, ndaortyn bot if what ruffianly person
clot g
cliNo o one ba' be be and often to lack was 'merely because ailsf she ctli on n- about snaking himself. acquainted with
tNo can be beautiful or interest tun on the ironrails strict weren h r these new surroundings. usual,over-
swift
preferring—as car The sitting -room;' "as
swift silver car and its resounding wed with the flowers which Hector
was over -
Klaxon horn. - no ownns c a tinghata-sit flowed sent down regularly.
e didnot such a thing Gaunt
Was said sh.Hugo looked them over with suspi_
-and most of • her ' dresseswwerehe' cion. g There were two small framed
froni the and she went down to where `of Alice,' one on the man-
tewe rocky Cap ints norio, tents
to Photographs
' were; neither huts nor tents to tel and ,one on the writing -table, and
Mrs. Egan die- these he also, inspected, .Then he pick -
minimize publicity. g d d u a bronze paper -cutter and play -
pick-
ed
greata gue or' ro ed in her; own apartments an
hi this vital element that .they cannot:robed downo. in the propartm afforded
be seined different colors readily by by her' Roman striped cloak.' It be=
laboratory work; whereas, the brain I came the fashion to stroll past the
cells of a rested. and -alert individual ;Cap about eleven o'clock and - see her
will take on, a bright stain or 'tint head bobbing against the waves half
workers out; to stroll casually back
other ire .
-ndam
Students
a
a
soli .
St s
readily.
u
rn
if she - would rid
ret
wondering
areagain,
enough
sleep
gett
who fail to
short-sighted and stupid.' They are safely or be dashed o pieces against
trying to make bricks without straw the
frightened and fascocks. inated the
or clay, and it wand glbeoves
does showe. Shentire hotel before she had been there
es the a week
Shoes and lavhours. Inside of
brushing. g, twenty-four
evidence of : neglect. This woman s a 'few daring spirits among the position s is an indifferent one, set were feebly emulating
socialp younger
for people, do not value her for what her example and being scolded for it..
she really is. .
The other sister is "trig" from head
to foot. Her hair is shining and'al-
clear, her eyes sparkling, her. hands
ways beautifully combed, Her skin is
and nails in ` good condition, and her
garments becoming and beautifully
cared for. As"a,. matter of fact, this
sister accomplishes twice as much as
the 'careless one. Her social position.
corresponds to her appearance, be-
cause her mental processes keep step
with her culture and painstaking na-
ture. She is frequently described as
"a very beautiful woman,
fully jabbed a hole in the -lace curtain
with it, hurriedly putting it down
again and drawing the curtain well
back sea that the hole didnt' show.
After this he went out on to
the bal-
cony and, looking down discerned the
heads -of some people having tea on
the verandah far below him. One wo-
man wore a large hat bobbing' with
yellow flowers- What would happen
if he should fill Isis bath sponge with
water and let it suddenly rain on
them? akin form
With this amusing idea taking
in his mind, he stepped back into the
room just as someone knocked at the
deor.
Ri bean to beat fast. It had
His heart g
always.been like this at That Place--
whenever
lace—
whenever he thought of anything real-
ly jolly, some intrusive person' seemed
to read his mind` and forestall
In fact, of late, he had almost given
up practical joking on that account.
"Come in," he said sullenly.
The door opened' and; to Hugo's ut-
ter amazement, there entered a man
who was more familiar to him than
his own brother. He clapped a hand
to his forehead and '• gave a faint cry.
Was he back in That Place?
HEP
My neighbor, Smilax, was in trouble, he had two broken
limbs; and to hit. went old Mrs. Bubble, with tracts and helpful
hymns. And to his hone went many neighbors, a, good, kind-
hearted drew; to hope -he'd soon resume his labors, and be as
good as new. '.The village optimist procee,ded`to leis; dire. couch
of pain, and turned some sunshine loose and pleaded that ho
would smile again. The, brethren of his lodge ware present at
every, crucial hour, to make the sickroout>swe.et and pleasant as
any maiden's bower. And I alvine refrained from calling Mimi,
that tortured' guy, though sympathetic tears were falling, at
times, from either eye. And people said, "Your heart' is hardened,
you visit not' the Sick; 'believe us, you will not be pardoned for
such an evil' trick. You hear your neighbor Smilax; yelling until
his larynx cracks, and yet you visit not his dwelling to aslc him
how he stacks,. Von carry, ilim:no plea of custard, no bowls of ..
whobesome soup; Yon pack no: sandwiches, with mustard, .'to
Smilax in his coop" But when the invedid.was better, and feel-
ing;peit and'sinart, he said to me, "Ole, donirerwetter; I thank you
froze my heart! When sickness laid its shadow ear me, and
made me wilt and droop, you, you alone refused to bore mo with
sermons and with soup!"
I
rtes' a,3e
A eeletenaaiag'
end agreeable,
t�evee2; tend n•
Umeneefie 'zee
reveler.
G o s, d, '910W,
teeth; . breads
armor allgeseleine,
lee rn l ci e Ube'
suer a eregyrar•
taste bolters
R24
Little Victorians.
In the early days of Queen Victoria's
reign childtien were kept strictly in or-
der. They were also, deolares Lady
Dorothy'Nevin Inbar hook Under Five
The Larne Shoulder. Reigns; "generally'forbidden to downy,
Invoezttion: 1- thing they particularly l
e dhed—more I;
Although a painful or crippled shoo ie than for
'think,
on nasal princip
R'e
thou,am.
ea
tth
mlin
codsab
elless, les
s
rarely -con -test Y w
relme a
Ra Y,derisinso Y ,
nn:
r trees
an sufR.ien
•I
Y
now
IiY neitt abs
Spirit of delightl
a lame •rile, it is Perhaps a greater. af- .;Their beaks; she further states,
Wherefore ae ayst thou 'left me. mon serve n trice the arms are of greaten "were of a totally d e t from
Many a day and night? service than the .legs. Mani 'things,
a night and day th boulder those of most of them contain
Many a we get i
'T1s since thou art fled away.
syn may give rine topa.nm es to -day;
some are of slight moment and are ed poetry, or rather "versification, ,in.
culcating pad
behavior; especially
ameuable`to treasome d which
Win thea back agaito that moderation
with regar
How shall ever one.liko me disabling an
diiRouDttment; .to comaaro moat The
childhood us'teeldy and perhaps not;again.?In may be owing •to `trouble in the
W'ph the joyous and the free.shout-
.
h l naturally abominates. The highly
Thou wilt scoff at pain:
Spirit false! thou haat forgot
P
or orange extract. Serve in a glss
dish with the remainder• of egg
white, slightly sweetened, on the top.'
baster stew (one serving): -six else
ters,':one cupful of milk, one-quarter
of a teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoon-
.,ful of butte. Pick over'the oysters
carefully, removing` any. bits of shell,
place in a"" colanders and wash,with
cold .water, Reserve oyster liquor,
heat it to boiling point, strain through
Fair -complexioned girls •got ' horrible
cases of sunburn through leaving off
their hats, and an Oxford undergrad-
uate—a swimming man -was nearly
drowned by following Mrs. Egan's
capricious •,course -through the rocei
coast sentinels. + She wore a sort
of
fishnet cap to confine her bushy hair
at tennis, and in consequence:the
Lenglen bandeau went into temporary
eclipse. : Rope sandals became the
popular': footwear for mountain climbs
although' so far' no one but Mrs. Egan
had abandoned ,the respectable and
useful stocking, , Two girls' tried it
surreptitiously . while out by them-
selves
hem
selves on a lonely trail, but they he
their legs badly scratched' in
underbrush, and the adventure was
not repeated.
muscles or in tbe.'ioint,Yar the o el sautary precepts enioinea in books
der joint is one of the most loosely salle as ;vire, -. Turner's Cautionary
thee net• consitrnoted joints In the body; the Stories were in great favor with par.
AU but those who need.arm withthe
I
Who -everybody asked --is _Mrs.
Egan?
It was Colonel Derwent Who sup
plied the more,td'chnical items, of in-
formation. Mr's, Anthony Egan, said
the colonel, was the widow of a well-
to-do broker or "City man" who had
been shot' by his -partner in a business
quarrel. Didn't they remember the
Simile case, famine in its day? Well,
Mrs. Egan was-. the heroine of the
Smarle case. The defence had at first
tried' to prove that she had been pres-
ent when her husband was killed and
knew a great deal more about the
matter than she admitted, but after-
wards with the Court's permission --
to Hugo Snrarle's plea of not guilty
was added that of insanity, and the
jury had brought in 'a verdict of
Guilty, but Insane.
Some people did remember the
Smartie Case, or professed to do so,
and were thrilled. accordingly. But it
was much more interesting- to learn
that two :years ago. at Pau Mrs, Egan
had driven a young man of somewhat
gender intellect suicide, and a little
later on ;nearly got'herself horse-
whipped by reason of her flirtation
with the young husband of an elderly
English schoolmistress who objected
to the affair, and made of her objec-
tion a really delightful scandal.
The ladies of the Mimosa Palace
as
theywere
s fax
began—in
0
1elb
e a
H g
Able=to ".draw in their Menfolk, and
the more discreet among the men
themeelves, notably Count Praga and
Colonel Derwent, walked softly and.
the
circumspectly, casting eyes upon
houri from a distance.
It became apparent quite. soon that
Di- Ardeyne was' anold friend of hers.
How do' such, things leak 'out?
Nobody, unless it were Mrs. Egan's
Italian. maid, ever saw them together;
nobody, except the concierge, knew
that be had made enquiries contierning
the' locality of herr ropms. Yet the
evhole hotel breathed in the knowledge,
and quite suddenly people—good-
'looking, middle-aged women with a
.taste for youngish men -those who
had been a little jealoue'and resentful
of Alice Carney, 'began to'be sorry.
for her, They predicted for Dr. Ar-
deyne a swift fall; for his fiancee;
unhappiness. -
's And all the tiine, in the very'centre.
of this -buzzing hive, lived Scan and
Hugo Smarle, in sublime ignorance of
Mrs. Egan's presence here. -
Jean had brought her husband back,
in the heat -of the day, when the hotel
appeared to be deserted. "My brother,.
Mr. Babes,"was given a room next to
hers, and promptly collapsed into his
comfort and privacy. It was a largo
balcony. He
xoom. and he had: his own b y. and
had caught a chill on the train,
he was weak and nervous, so 'Jean
called in,a local doctor and' permitted
Alice to see, "Uncle John" only once
or twice from the doorway. Because
of Hugo's indisposition Sean had her
own meals upstarts.- She .rather en-
couraged liege' to" take things easily,
dreading the moment of his first pub-
lic appearance.
Would she ever. be able to break
lute, she; wondered, of babbling about
Broadmoor? --or,' as he called ' it,
"That Place." •To her, he talked o£
nothing else, recounting oven and over
again :foolish and irritating exper-
aences with his fellow -prisoners, their
various idiosyncrasies, svtheir petty
'habits,
habits, °tire loathsomeness of'one .who
was caught cheating at cards, the bad
table manners of another, the un-
pleasant characteristics of their
guards and beepers. So it ''vent on
for long hours while Jean forced her -
ants, Some of the lines in that vol.
blade by the
scapula, or shoulder
lays snow and and the Porins
umo with regard to gluttony are high-
muecles only, anthe flbnoaa capsula ly characteristic of infantile education
Of the radiant frost; that inees the joint is loose and al- d rsRood in the past. For
I love 'Saves'' and winds, and etoinns, as it was nn e
. lows considerable sagging. example:
Everything almost One of the most comanan farms of ,;hlaiiitna, why mayn't I when I dine
Which is Nature's, and may he. lame altaulder •i&•the soreness and stiff- Eat ham and goose and d B
Untaleted by mane misery.
The` newcomer, clad in tennis flan-
nels, stared at. him with. widening eyes
and dropped law._
Hugo Smarlle began to whimper.
"I won't go back—you. can't make
me. I` won't go.. This is Italy. You
can't take me back- if 'I say I won't
gpPhilip Ardeyne shut the door, then
-•-as an ,afterthought—locked it.
"I'm note going to take you any-
where," he said. "But, of course, you
can't stay in this room. Huw did you
flet here? Does your°balcony adjoin
this one?"
rink ort
nese that follow some unusual move-
• . done to excess•, as. *hal a per
t
I love ran
quit saiitudaa
wine?
son who is out of practice plays tennis „And why mayn't I, as well as you,
And suet, wisp a all the afternoon. That form is mere."Ansi w ding, •soup and mutton too?
As is quiet, wine and good; ly exaggerated fatigue; the muscles
Between thee and me W oa" are poisoned with their own fatigue . ;,Thou tames the quint dignity in re
'What difference? but thou dost p toxins, abler of which is lactic a cid: In iffy:
ease. such a case tate toxins are rapidly Because,
A DAINTY "PARTY" DRESS.
4696. Chiffon, batiste, net, dotted
Swiss or silk could be used for this
style, with lace or embroidery of a
simple picot edge for decoration. The
outline may be straight or in pointed
scallops.
The Pattern as out in 4 Sizes: 4,
size
'
6,
8 and years, , An 8 -year
requires 2% yards of 40 -inch ma-
terial. ••
mailed to any address on
Pattern
receipt of 16c in, silver, by the Wilson
Publishin Co., 78 West Adelaide St,
' double cheese -cloth. Scald milk in Toronto. Allow two weeks• for xecerp
doable boiler, adcl the oysters and cook of pattern,
lt?
ntil oysters are plump and gills.
curled, add seasoning and liquor.
Serve at once:
TO 13E BEAUTIFUL.
Everyone ought to be interested in
en appearance which is attractive.
and pleasing to others. Why should
we';premium 'to be a 'blot on -a land-
scape of so much natural beauty?
It" is a personal satisfaction to know
that we are malting the most of -our-
selves.
To radiate a truly beautiful spirit,
and to be 'sure of ,a'aincere' manner
and charm of presence, we must be
kindly in our thoughts as well as our
words. The beauty which lasts trust
be more than shin deep.
The individual who is decidedly
over -weight: or lrder-Weight has sac-:
'lilted svinmetry and i, ,,4'y. -Health
Chapped , Hands or Face
The things I seek, not lave them less.
my clear, it is not right
0 eliminated, and, the pain and disability To spoil the Youthful appetite.
quickly disappear: Blit when the trou "The daily 'lids of a child then was
I love Lave—though he has wings, hie ie not over -production, o1 toxins; of a much simpler description
And like light can ileo, .
than eA
butundorellmination of them, we have present. Finlike the young people of
But ,above all other things, a mm•o chrmn'ic condition which calls
Spirit, 1 love thee— for - - -`- light enc today, we stood is awe of our parents,
ptheir wishes were regarded EIS Irmo°.
T 1 d life! O come'
Cured by one application of MED,ORA
GRSAM. /eaves skin emectli and vel-
vety. Used exclusively in Toronto,
General ,Hospital for ten 7eame: Ask
your 'druggist for 60c battleand pre-
aeave your', youthful complexion, er
','ant postpaid- on .receipt of 60c:;
J. A. MabOonald, Phm.B., 34 Hogarth
Ave., Toronto.
ADHESIVE PLASTER.
Hugo, with a trembling hand, point-
ed through the line of open doors,
"fhat's my room*"
The doctor looked and saw that the
door on the other side of frirs. Car-
nay's bedroom was open.
"Oh " he said, "that's your room, is
it. 'F/Tell, you'd better get back to it,
old chap. The ladies who occupy these
rooms might be•alarmed if they cants
in and found a stranger here."
Hugo grinned feebly,
"Pin not a stranger," he said. "I
belong here. I'm—I'm my wife s bro-
ther, you understand. My name lee%
Sntarte,- You thought it was, didn't.
you, doctor?; But that was just an -
cam. little mistake they made at That
Place. My ,name is John Balisi and
my wife's name isn't Mrs. Semite at
all. Her name is Mrs. Carney. She's
not my wife;' shes my eieter. - And
I'm not Alice's father. Pm her Uncle
John. Perhaps you'd better tell me
What yoti mean by coming into these
rooms?
I've been very ill—a little
light-headed
'flu'—but
,
�e al-
I'
ed
with
- cad
• hth
g
ready got a doctor. My wife saw to
that. 'I don't want anything to do
with you, Ardeyne—or with anybody
else from That Place.
stop
Hugo ped from sheer lack' of
breath and • Sault: down lull -a chair,ex-
hausted and trembling.
( o be continued.)
are arc an haat rays or Por maesrasa ', " bl
Make once. more my heart thy home! a of th muscles t
abledecrees.
case:a one or mar "My Cather was as au Dora
whose
e mus: ese t
—p er about the fait n maybe rule over his ismer
•
oy Bysshe Shelley inflamed In- y was
absolutely un-
flammatlon can be decognized by the questioned, Web do I remember how
C Weakens presence, more or less. . marked, of .You . at breakfast my mother would on oer-
London Traffi - osrdlnal symptoms: heat, pain, red- rain lava catdh my eye and significant"
St: Paul's Cathedral nese and swelling. The treatment of 1y loon delve at her plate 'chore her
St. Pout's .Cathedral, which for sea -an inflamed shoulder should begin
knits:, and fork had been carefully
oral'centuries has lorded it over all promptly in order to pr'ev'ent en abs• crossed—as a sign to the family that
London from the peak of Ludgate Hill, teas from forming. ` its head was in no mood for conversa-
is showing signs of fatigue. Its stones, . When the ,cause of lameness is• In tion. 'Sly father, though a meet good-
blackened by the fog and soot of.by- the joint itvelf it may be tuberculosis', natured man, e'ee at times roused to
temtpeeary tory by anything that clash•
ed with his mood."
Iters, Turner's' book of edifying
verses for children was by no cleans
the only one, though It was one of the
pints by which these ddfilerent affec- beet known. A book of the same sort
gone ages, are getting weary from the gout, acute or chronie rheumatism or
constant - vibrations caused. by the the so-called• dry amthritis% wh'lch is a
roaring try -filo that swirls all around diminutlen of the synovia, or lubricat-
the structure, and the'unrelenting pull Ing. fluid, in the, joint. It is not Res-
et the Thames:.u0,0n its foundations. Bible to explain' in a brief article the
The south transept has began to
lean toward the river and the south-
west tower has dropped several laches
from the perpendicular. Something
must be' done soon to preserve
crowning achievement of Sir.-Chris'to-
pher+ Wren. Mervyn McCartney, archi-
tectural adviser in the dean, says a
large sum of money will have to be
spent on the Cathedral before very
long, and the Board of Commissioners
at present is considering several pro-
posals for its preservation,
An American firm whidis underpin-
ned some of New York's great sky-
scrapers has examined St. Paul's and
recommended underpinning as a cure
for its architectural maladies, but the
commissioners are set against such 'a
method.
In the eighteenth century Iron straps
were put around the cornices of the
transepte to hold the building together
and since then et has been necessary
to make other repairs to the mel•alige.-
merits caused by the movement of the
Cathedral. Twenty years ago it was
discovered that the roof under the
Wast pediment edam had otopped a. f
ew
ant
inches, and within the present decade
ithas been necessary to repair two of
the piers. It is expected that repairs
to the..othee six piens, some of the
masonry of,willoh has rotted„ 'will re.
quire' 10 years to complete. '
Meanwhile, the ,stream of busses and
nvoter lorries wlticlt Rows past the
building becomes larger and larger,
with Consequent increaseJn the doves
toting vibration.
Deal Promptly With First
Offence. '
Purchase a roll of adhesive plaster,
and you will, never again be without
some at hand. Its uses are many and
varied. Last week I found it neces=
eery to send fifty cents in coin
through the mail.X placed the money
at the top of my street and held it in
place with a strip of the plaster.
is t at par, and efficiency and en- • Try it.
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-Number
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tions can be distinguished, and the
diagnoses ie often difficult even for the
experienced surgeon. When lameness
follows a fall in which the shoulder
is.•struck either directly, or indirectly,
as when a person fall's on his Band,
there may he a slight dislocation or a
simple strain of the ligaments.
And finally a hot, uncommon. emelt-
tion is inflammation of the banes be-
neath the deltoid, muscle at the round
of the shoulder. A bursa is a beg filled
-.with 'fluid placed at a prominent point
to obviate the' ciliate of friction of Cha
,structures as they move oneover the
other. Whenthe bursa becomes In-
flamed either -from injury or from dis-
ease its' purpose is frustrated, and
movem•ettt causes pain. In that case,.
as in most cases of dame shoulder ex-
cept
xsept joint disease, the light and heat
rays from the electric light bulb 'with
a special reflector oaten give relief.
interior Decorations.
'Has your husband ever been decor-
ated?"
"Not s'
ince the .Eighteenth Amend-
nenwent into }effect "
We Teach High S �eed Short -
;hand by Maiil.
In Iran 1•to d n onths
M , under our guid-
ance, Hy AIL,. you can learn to Write
see fast as anyone can dictate to you.
The cost in low and results certain and
guaranteed. Only a' limited number
aeceyted,n
If amniteene, able is yidur chance to
melte at start for n �euccesstul and pro-
fitable career. \
tiiustnatea Circulars am.cl Terms FREEon re4u'adt:'
Shorthand la the eteipping-sl.one to
btrsincoe opportunities',' -
SAWYER SCHOOL OF' SHORTHAND
107 Mannino Chambers.' Toronto, Ont.
ISSUE No. 12--'24..
"I -le Refused to Quit."
bearing a British imprint was long't�
nee In a New England fauttiy, and a
few of its detaclted leaves are still to
be Pound in he scrap -book of one of •
the daughters. Only one preserves
the popular dialogue form, and the ,
child speaker genies a less mnterlally
minded infant than the one who yearn-
ed for goose and port wine:
If I'll be neat and very good
And quite politely oat my food
And hold my knife and fork arlgbt,
And show no eager appetite
And leave no scattered erttat or crumb
And 1111l'm spoken to be dumb,
May I at table set to -day
And 'hark to what the grown folks' say?
Ane.
No, no, indeed, my little pet; '
You have not learned the, hall as yet.
Good Nurse must teach you ere you're
able r
To with your elders dine at table.
This moment, lie! Suppose a guest
On the Campus of one of -•the largo 'Viewed' where those nauglity elbows
universities in the Middle West of the rent,
United
nttmeut has been /out manors surely would bo blamed .
States a mo
sat in honor of one of the students Who. And we, Y'owt'�Parent§y sadly shouted:
d fighting in France. On'it is this Rej,
dla g g
simple but appealing inscription: "He Oh, no, mammel Oh, no! Oh, nol
played on the scrub Area years; he I'would not Warms my parents so!
refused to quit" I asked what childred mayn't expert
Day after day the boy-Eanson:was : Until tlteerue ariners are cermet,
his name—went out and played with
the "scrubs" to help the "VaraltY•" Takes Him Down.
Then 'cane the summons to Play a Mutt --"And your friend really ntar•
sterner game on the fields of Frjtnaa„ tied his typist, How did they get on?"
and he toolk:'his plaoe. •Jeff—''Oh; sante as ever! 1Vheu be`,
On the .battlefield he exhibited the dictates to her she takes him down.'
same fidelity as on the football field. �„
One day his officer called for valun• liisonse and Burn OffcrinOs.
teere far ahazardous bit of mcouting, of sho makes lin >
A certain -municipal: council was Hanson weir' out wait the party but penelope—"They s y
favor a Juvenile Court to he "never returned. And io-day that.. dol of her husband."
asked to fa r lent` re- eUnder-"wall, the frequently ha
deal with.. youthful'- delinquents, and little inscription on rho: nioiiuu , 1 Be 'Bale , , int of.
sed this - on the ground that calls to the hurrying students the tenses 1uim, and Bale places. burnt they epee
story of a nian'who refused to "gilt. ferings before him: tvcry"f1aY.'
"He refused to tlult.l" What finer :
tribute can bo given to any roan. Scientists predict that the dominion
the Police Magistratewas very len-
ient with boys and dismissed most of
them with a warning. Had they
l wn it the councillors were advanc-
*When Jesus named for his disciples
knoof men is on the wane, and that_il
n
i Cha very axgunient that proved those qualities which he regarded as time women will be the ruling sex.
tine heed f "a specialist in preventive most essential 1.;t 0 C1lriattaii disciple
social work. Magistrates' who; simply he put at the head of the, list steadr-
say "go away and be'a goofl bop," and nese; and lie closed his discourse with
emi
f
then forget all about the lad meter he these solemn 'verde that, carry the
comes up a second, third, and fourth same sense, "No man, having put his
time,not•:helping to reform his hand to the plough tied looking back,
1
chhaaraa character.
er. The.first offence is an in-. 1s fit for Um kingdom of God>'
dication of moral disease and should
receivep
rom't•treatnient, the patient I'n Epping Forest` there aro 114
P
being kept under 'observation : until cricket pitches, 244 football grounds,
the disease is entirely eradicated. It and 139 tennis courts fat the use of
is ,the inefficient method 01 dealing the public Epping Forest is main -
With first offenders that encourages
boys. to continue in wrong doing until
they have passed the stage where they
can be influenced by moral considera-
tions. In no depart'nent of social or
business activity is it more important
that there should be aspecialist than
in dealing with the
starting out on a
doing, --J. J. Kelso.
:a
Golf is becoming
rank and filo of t}
They are now allo've
.
youth wlien first
career of wrong
popular with the
e` British Army.
d to wear fatigue
dross when'playing.
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maltlna opno,tunllloa.: sou most: sliitlxly tun
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p oilatud I one Rost to ,Tou1 mtlr0 . ge.nolnotlna
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na},noaei pinata. ass annum., to rascetas 19
4bsrintatt' 1x80, 01 a.-i'ortee, Room 1, tlno,.
aurid 4n/ 1.0n110, Cando. • •
tallied by he City of London.
-_- -- Forte, ..-- — ft %a4