The Clinton News Record, 1924-06-26, Page 6..ititeetietteetieettitteell-ileeteileelettleteet.
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-29.
Pur Fresh rad Satisfying.
Sold in 441unlireatZtin Tr7 ito
HOW MADE IRONING EASIER pressin'g them in; if crosswise
olds are necessary for storage, they
are made without the use of the iron.
Sheets are 'folded" in the same way.
Round table covers are a little more
difficult to handle. I fold them M half
lengthwise, and in half eross-vvise and
then roll them. - Pillow cases are'fold-
ed in thirds' lengthwise.
A. way to avoid wrinkles is to hang
the clothing carefully on the line, and
to fold it neatly in' the basket when
taking it down. Of course,I allow
the clothes to dry thoroughy before
putting them away.
When my iron was dragging one
day, a good friend, trying to cheer me,
explained that there was no way to
make this work easy. I meditated over
her words a long- time. Finally, I
drew a conclusion of my own, one
which is a little more` cheerful. It is:
Ironing tan be niade easier in most
households. -
I have found five ways to reduce
the toil connected with this weekly
task. The work is simplified;
1. By purchasing 'clothing for the
'family and house which may be ironed,
quickly. —
2. By avoiding unnecessary
wrinkles.
• 3. )3y considering it -proper to use
sheeas, tea -towels, and crepe garments
folded from the line without being
ironed or with" a light pressing.
4. By using the best up-to-date
methods and equipment.
5. By planning, the housework so
the ironing will not fall on the day
When baking and many other duties
must receive attention.
I'll. haveto admit that I sit on a
stool when ironing. It was rather
awkward for me at first, fee I learned
to iron while standing. Now I am
exhausted -if I spensl I'Vedneeday; my
ironing day, without my high chem.
The height of the ironing board also
• 'is of importance. There is no definite
rule to be given alma it. M the-ser-
eface is, too high, the worker will feel
. pains 'betwen her shoulders; if it is
to low; the small of the back receives
the strain. I like an ironing board
elteat is firm, and one which its covered
either With several layers of a met old
• blanket or one thicimese of „quilted
table ,padding. I use Muslin for` the
outside covering. This is,fairterted on
with thuntb tacks. These may be re-
moved with less effort than pins, and
they are e.ffleient in holding the cover
- in place, -
As to the iron, the self-heatieg
kids are step -savers. In, homes
vrhere electricity is available, of
cotarse, the electrically heated ones
are ane. However,T haVe triedlnany
.other types of thee' irons and have
found -them quite satisfactory.
Ironing machines also are helpful,
especially for use in large families.
I know of elle farm woman who has
one of these appliances; she rents it
by the hour to her neighbors after
her own ironing is done. I have used
two kinds of ironers—thoee operated
by hand in which the cold 'rolls remove
the wrinkles by prosure, and the
electric ones with heated relieve.
There are several rules or practices
that I follow carfully M all'
of which make for good results and
the eomfort of the Wotkere They -have
helped ine eo much that I have de-
cided to tell you about them.
' Every surface is ironed dry before
• anotherone is given atteetion. Wrink-
les 'form materiala that are not
ironed dry. I iron as large a eurface
as possible at a time. This makes for
speed- • •
The sleeves and other parts of a
garment that hang off the board are
given fleet consideration.
Moons hang the best When they are
ironed lengthwise instead eof cross-.
wise, from the hem upward to the
gathers. I inn, the bibs and strings
first.
Hems, barids, tueke, folds, and every
double thickness of material require
extra pressing to remove the ineistuee
and to ,prevent a rough -dry appear-
ance, When ironing tucks, I pull thetn
taut and* lien them, lengthy:rise' and
• downward from the upper part of the
tuck to thetbottotn. •
• 'Colored clothes are ironed, on the
wrong side. 1 fled that this Prevents
• : the shine whice otherwise makes its
appearance en the seams and hems,
It is well to remember that too hot
an iron him a tertdeney to fad e dyes. '
Woolens are co;tend with cheese-
cloth When being ironed. -Iprefer to
have the, wool, fabric half -dry, eo the
cheesecloth need not be moietened. Ah
iron hot enough to scorch the delicate
fibres is not to be used.
• To. preeent a shine on silks I iron
them on the wrong side with a warm
but hot hot iron. I work with taffetas
and crepes when they -ere quite damp;
to the first type, of ailk this treatment
gives the . desired 'finish and it keeps
the latter feom shrinkage.' , If .e. silk
is too wet when ironed, it will be
papery.
Table' linos are ironed partly dry"
on the wrong side, the the inning
eempleted on the light side.
. Ruffles are beaked straight on the
been edge, and then the trot is worked
up into the gathers. like to use a
email* resented lime for this purpose.
Embroideries and limes are ironed
on the wrong side over a soft padding
elf Turkieh toweling, I pin a Turkish
towel over one end of the board when
start ironing, 50 it will be ready for,
use when needed. _ ,
The garmetes which need mending
are arranged in a pile as Proned. I
do this to avoid sortil.g then. out
afterward.
Folding is given earefbl attention;
in _fact, I consider it of great import-
ance. No matter ,how beautifully
ironed a gement is, it may be Wrillid-•
83 ELIZATH 11(1`0K liTilLttreetZ
"VP-feen hettete oornali(tIttl,
Front 'minds the aczgest
• • ,,..flon.CF1.40,'
• CHAPTER Xi.-- (C(3nt'd.) Mind living quietly ' jui,t--just {
'And how could Hugo have black- first," Site Said annieuslY•
mailed Mrs. Egan" Gaunt demanded, ."Oh,' well, ;lust firs't," he eon -
„
"Perhaps she's afraid that he'.s still ceded, "That's' what am doing.
maid and might do her an injury if Been doing it for—”
she refused," Jean said, "You see, he "Not quite a month," Joon rernipd-
-he killed her husband. Probably ed"hiin.
Mao. Egan, more than anybody else He looked peevish. "A month'e a
in the world realizes what Huge is long 'time, and I've lost 00 Inugh time
capable eV! ' already. Fifteen years, Jean. I'm
Gaunt. pursed his lips. not growing any younger, you know."
"That's not altogether likely..No - "But what ao you want to do?"
doubt the money was owing to him,"Perhaps I'll go into business.
as he said, "It'e the simplest explana- Twenty thousand won'o last
tion, and in my expeeience one need "Hugo, you know you're not a bit
, bat
iliiititis .„,,,,,,,,,t it is. ,oid „end •set,,, 'He, 1,C,(....1111 -COVIth, SO Vie. tire • 1$1, totli 411611'
4}a'',4414tk old,"... grurobled T-Tugo. 1 .,...
W „ , , ' - ' '
Way he could think of.. ', e`e are elil'e ,tr4ett in eisolfbf titeWallo
was determined to dusult Jean in every 0C.`,,,lb) t..L.S xi men an nwogmtnii...,,e.p. •
Alice laughed, potencies unguessed undre'imel till
"Aumser 016! Why, Tincle John, 1 they shall be touched and: awakened , •
,he's only thirty:eight or nine, ,But by the, rigiit. contr,'Lining, influence.
'I'll admit I llarglf noticed how y'oungli,2,-.11,4,,etibei,a,tty to...,till.,,,gs.rey, 3.1.a.epe, pet.aei, ite
until we ea
I =,- zn, to o
Brdigliera
p•Ii.viieerleni.jaoririiyi, adgoalriolti?„tinnk, 'mum
8e3,7 WLb 1LLcr opit,en ; hut t1ithe ..lireand the
I-Inko, 'started so visdOs:tly"1.1.,,h.t,itie,11,,lei,1:,,),, clitillot.„taessta olitea,,lilsxfthoareteosi atop'emr600lnda'inanfd
eyeglasses tninbled off.
thought aboutlit.al, all," he repliedas t, Lection. We are.'difforent, hen.oeierth,
he -Stooped to retrieve them,' . ,1 because there is one whoni we seek to
- • (To be continued.) ,..' pidase. No longer Call we lire unto'
otirselvee 'alone. - To ti.M'eldil of Sai.ify-'
, , • • ''' Ing liini,, who inspires and CO11118, BIS
Tkee Prayees ' foe Sleep - a
lid encourages, we strive to build het -
,d •Waking. tvieilintili:athne ,,,,,,,,i.,,,,,i,..,,,,,ail andvvearedlio droop; we
---- eled,t'iiii, - . say that we must rise through fr'om
the, duet and. renew tile oftort sin. e
0
fin Winos
4
si laf,ev'eellititralteteltit:(1 •
te• aids Allocation
ve I a: 5119Ils add: 'keYee°°s1j' eet 337,e t ti eflj
ttlk-7dl
offer bearty catlierg. '
WILY -texas+ teeth.,
rs'lfe:itrtril
She goody .
not search for the obscure." of good i Mrsines . Do. p ase, '
"You thielv you can use it--hon-
estly?"-
"Of course you can, my dear. But
there's one thing—" Gaunt bent -
over and knocked the bowl of his pipe
against his boot. "This matter of a
dowry for Alice. I—hang it alll—am
I to do nothing, give ,nothing? Am I
a mere nobody, While Hive is allowed
to strut and—and—" •
"Oh, elector—Hector! Please don't
make it dieficult."
"It's you who made it- diffieultein
the arst place. You -el -ay wife—"
- "Hector, you - musn't say such
things." .
"Did we not stand in church to-
gether and pledge ourselves to be man
and wife?"
my sake, eave it alOne. We 'shall be
rich on what you already have, Really
quite rich."
Hugo relapsed into one of his sulky
silences. She knew how stubborn ho
could be if he wanted to. -,
She began to wish that he had not
been. successful with hiseclairei upon
Mrs. Egan. But, oh, how they needed
that money,' or even a small fraction
Carlo drove them straight to the
Ma'am bank and Hugo -made his 'ar-
Tenements and sent his telegram. 01}
the strength of it, they allowed him to
draw 10,000 lire.
Here, again, Jean 'wits faced with
worry. eSuppoee something bappenecl
and the money didn't collie through?
"Hector, you know how things Shouldn't he have waited? - Suppose
were; that I wasn't really your wife," Mee. Egan changed her mind or—?
ale went on as though he had not Hugo stared, at her haughtily. , She
heard:. . . "And I loved you then; had shown her apprehension before
love you now. Perhaps you think it's the bank officials a little too plainly
easy for me to stand aside. always. for his taste. He reproved her coldly,
I've a good mind to reach out my hand 'begged her to renter/dyer that he was
and take you. You belong to me. 'Why not a fool and disliked being inade to
shouldn't I?" . look like one.
"Oh, please--pletese don't say any Hewing _said good-bye to Oarlo with
more." ' a generous preeeht, their progress
Hugo's head popped out of the din- back through the village -was marked
ing room door. He might have heard by the wildest extravagance. A jewel -
every word they said. ler's window fleet arrested Hugo's at -
"I'm ready/'.he piped. . tention and he remembered that he
----e-- had to buy a wedding gifteefor
CHAPTER XXII. Also a present for Jean.
Jean tried very hied not to be a
Mrs. Carney was decidedly upset by
drag on this freely -oiled *Wheel, but it
Gaunt's outburst. She had not ex -
was difficult.' If only -he aetually had.
pected such a thing and was caught
the 'money safe 101 his possession she
unawares, eIt was as though she had
acme a would' mit have said a word. Of eourse
been strolling quite placidly
lawyer's letter seemed genuine
country lane towards the sunset, a lit- the
enough; the bank officials—norie too
tie saddened beceuse the day drew to
crduelous as a rule—had acee ad' it
its close; a little pensive for things
that might ha`m haPPened differently, as such, and so did the jevv ler to
whom pago gave a cheque for ' exe
when suddenly from behind. a 'familiar purchase. That £5,000 cash
tree there dashed- a highwayman de- Peni3ttee
would not last long if he went on at
mending the treasure in her purse.
She had not been thinking of the this l'at94?ell• aSsuining that every-
thing was all right A pearl neck-
highwayman—she had been thinking
lace for Alice, nothing wonderful, but
of home and the sunset. -"And, oh,
real pearls are never cheap, and an
there was so very little in her purse,
immense solitidee 'diamond ring toe
Jeadill'oll after. sholi they visited all
along the Rue Vittorio Emmanuele,
and they returned with silk shawls
and stockings, embroideries, laces, fine
lingerie, and half a pound of navy cut
—the latter being Hugo's present to
himself.
the climb uk to ,the foiit of
the Old Town he told le *Me what he
thought °rho. It had been 80 diffle
cult, on occasions impossible, to get
her to enter into his game, thee only
purehoes for which she had shown
the slightest entheisiasm being half a
dozen. yards of glass towelling and
1 h
Er6 thou sleolmst gently MY, • live and toil no longer selfishly.
Bvery..troubled thought awaYl . IS a truism that 'we not know
Put off worry end distress, • what w,Carl do till the burden we
As thou putteet off thy dress never thought We ceuld :assume is laid
Drop thy burden and thy •care on 111,, till the irksome 'respOnsibillty
In the quiet arias of 'pray-er. ; confronts tis and 'we cannot evade it.
t • Then all our powers' are summoned.
". • ' and 'made- Manifest,.'. and the.' iSiue. is
, • • • . .
Lords Thoultnowest howl live.• surkising mirselveele All through:
Ail I've dome 'amiss forgive: • '• the tiMe of, warsoldiera":and-tho'Se
All bflgood,I've„ttried to , worked tor selaiersewere doing, 'recie
Strengthen, hies's, arid. Carry througli; than they ever kriew..they were cape
Alt I love in safety keep, , 0f,.40rig ,411.101,116,1,g, 0.§
tehile in Thee I fall asleep' broke l'OrtlyinteithlaZerlfat„wasMdie;
• thee a mere upleaping incaddesoende,
A PLEASING FROCK FOR
MOTHER'S. GIRL.
4153. In white or colored linen this
will make a very satisfactory "wash and she needed it all, every bit. This
dress for warm days, itis alsepretty small gold piece far Contentment—if
n crepe -or voile. Drawn work, bead cheeplye that, ,big silver dater, he
the fates were kind and Would sell so
or floss embroidery or braiding Weald represented the price of Fortitude, the
be attrictive for decoration. The skirt pessession of which was so necessary
of this model is jeined to an under- for a lonely wotean; and the little
body and is finis separately.
' liedoins the sixpences, and threepenny
The'Petteril is cat in 4 Sizes, 6, bite; 'they represented the cigarettes
e0 and 12 years. A 10eyea.r site re8t and chocolates of life, Patience Good
Smiles. Well, the highway -
quires 8% yards a 32-lech material, Huneor,
pattem mailed to any ada.,._eso on anthaans whaads in
onaittuhed her purse and all
receipt of 15e ie. silver, by the Wilson In effect he had said: "Having used
Publishing Co„ 73 West Adelaide St., up ',these things myself, I will refresh
Toronto. ,Allonr two weeks for receliat my empty heart at your eeepense."
of pattern, As - lingo and she drove away
Send 15c in silver for our up-to-
date Spring and Sumner 1.924 Book
of Fashions.
LILY WHITE CAKE.
One cupful of sugar, 1 cupful of
flour, 1 cupful of sweet milk, 3 level
teaspoonfuls of balchig powder, a
pinch of,salt, whites of 2 eggsel tea-
spoonful oe vanilla: Sift all 'the ha
gredients together four or five times,
Boil the milk and parr over (ley in-
gredients and stir'. Do not beat it
Then add the Whiteis of two eggs
beaten stiffly and a teaspeonful of
vanilla. A small pinch of cream. of
tartar is good but not eecessiny,
Put M an utgreased mah. Place id
cool, oven and increase heat for about
thirty minutes till dene,
For the icing use one cupful of
sugar, seven tablespoonfuls of water but he didn't enthuse a bit. With nay
and one egg white beater; gaffe
Boil•sugar and water till it hairs
from the spoon. Then pew while boil-
ing hot into the egg nihite beaten'stiff.
•Continue beating until ready to spread
the icing on the cake.
Redthot cinnamon eaedies placed on
top make -this coke:peel** and,taele-
crowded into the cart evath Carlo, she some SUtl100fl
5.
looked .back and -Sale Gaunt standing But when they reached the Villa
on his mountain -top, a tall, strange Charmil Alice mads up amply for her
figure,' silhouetted black against the another's -shortcomings.
sunset, every line distinct—the point "Oh, anurnsey, how -wonderful "of
of his beard, the bulge of his shirt him to buy us all.these lovely thingsl
where the wind caught and blew out Isn't it just like a fairy tale. Thinks
its loosely tucked folds, his arms tip- MUinsey dear—look back. Why, two
raised waving the old panama, his months ago we were still in Florence,
negligently graeefui body—all etched, woiederinge if we'd got 'enough' saved
agamst the hot stilt
MIS JUL poorlittle splarge, feeling like
The dear familitteity of him brought
a lump to her throat and tears -to her
eyes. She weved back, and Hugo--
twieting about so that he nearly die-
loclged her from the crowded ,seat—
remit needs wave too. ,
. Night Watch. • ,
If sluMber should forsake
Tey pillow in the dark, ,
Fret not thyself to mark
How hong 01611.116st awake:
There is a better way;
Let go the strife and etrain,
Thine oyee wail elm again,
If thou wilt eine* Pratte* -
Lord, Thy peaceful gift testers,*
Give My body eleeptonce more;
While I "waft my soul will rest'
Like a child upon Thy beeast. •
"I don't.know when I've had such _
real pearls! •Oh, aren't they just
a good time," Hugo said, with a happy too eweet! 'And your ring's a perfect
sigh, 'Nee foe fears. -Oki teeter treasure. You ought to have heaps of
hasn't • ehenged as much 1"13 Yt"I'd rings, troirnsey. Your hand are just
think. Only he doesn't seem to care macig for them*"
for actisenture anymore. I tried to
A 'great light gleanied in Hugo's
talk hien foto a voyage somewhere,
eyes— Rings for Jean; heaps of them!
That wae true, Jean's -hods were
just made for rings.
Jean hastily choked off the flow of
• New Date • .
Ere thou rlsest from thy bed
Speak ti God whose wings Were spread
O'er thee In the helpless night;
Lo, He -wakela thee now -with eget!
Litt thy Mirden and thy care
In the mighty arms of peayer. ',„.
Lord, the newness et this day
Calla me to an untried waY;
Let 'me gladly take the road,.
Give me strength' to. bear my load,
Thou my guide and helper be—
.1 will travel.theough with Thee. .
' -,-Henry Van -Dyke.
•
4- iv
074
She ---"They tell me late hours are
bad for one,"
He---eYes, but there are two of ue."
. --.4-
Feuds in the Animal World.
Thst tutus* citn7 en 'feuds
a pair of conepirators—no, adventer. ether eniniale le-"a*faot knOwn to na•
eases, we called Ourselves. And now tural-history authorities; but most mai.
Pm ging to bia married to the beet reels areprone to agolel hostilities that
man in all the world—dofet laugh; will lead to nothing but wounds.
mumsey, because he is ----and Miele Mot 'creaturesfully comprehend
Jahn has come into a fOrttine and Mil their own powers and those of others
being so kind to us! Pearls, raurnsey capable of inflicting Maley, and they
.SAVING WITH TRAYS. a
Traye ate a great help to 'me In
saving handling of die'hes atid silA•er,
As I dry the eishis I put the silver
that Will be needed for the nevt Meal
bn a small tray and set itein the cup-
bo'riee hetween Ivitehen 'and dining
rootn. I d� the Salim with the elates,
money' we.could easily:fit out a small
boat. Of course, there len t much lett
in theewoelcl to discover, but it Would
Sean. You'dhave band retie/ling it, nether penny, she said crossly, "Rol mon,
be ft„, you could h„,,, come.) toa, mad suggestion. „
mare =isn't Id erect, John spend of the other'e- young, ore not tth ern -
and this is the thief cause of
ment she imagined that ehe wouldw0°. on't have anything' left if he goes such hatreds as exist between the
111:e this." elid-cat and the ' wolf, the mink and
jean smiled eegretfully. At the MO -
have loved eceighing it,
With vete AHug.o glared, and thrust his- hands the 'fox, the racoo,n and the weasels.
' "Just the three °I as' e' e into his pockets.. "Your mother!" .he The enmite t 1-1
tha. _at crow displays to -
a small crew," Hugo went me t
"111 ; spat out, in Sheer, awful diegest.
no—old hector won't dm it. He says ,
But Alice finally eestored film wards •
the hawke is an example, and it
he's Anchored on: Monte Nero and -- to is shown also by the suspicion with
there he 'mane to -.stay: He might
altnost be in That Place for all the
change he gets. I'm afraid such a life
wouldn't suit me, All very well for
awhile,' but a fellow Must' do some-
thing or stagnate. ,f shall be doing
- Jean's heart Sank' With .ti sickening'
something:800n."
sense of helphisshese„
are unwilling to risk possible hurt or
even engage in violent effort to little
Purpose. Tens, the mime and the hear,
though undoubtedly possessing a
hatred .for each other 'due to their
seeking similer game, hold a truce
rarely if eve; broken. •
Feuds between deftennt Speele.s, one
of both of which theiaten the ,afety
Work! TOUT ill Seventeen
Complete timetables for a round'
,
tile -world passenger service Which will
accomplish- the journey in oventeeia
da,ye" have been worked out lay experts
' preish illnks have ;been InallPeil out
British organization.
of Imperial Airways, Ltd., the new -
for: the- 22-,000trielle -air-line, - and tests•
glow ef It, a beacon seen afar, is still caret-, whirl maintains a speed of 105 • -
flame burned and warmed, and tne.„Laroendtoonbbeynthmedemworitnhilia,ig:ihriepxspor:sesatooi:
mous ,caPaeltY, Paesengers will leave
Iremembered, anti it stilt invigorato. melee an. our. They may expect to
Tior none eau maul-16st a valorous emelt Constantinople the followine
morning and Cairo by midday,
that' died away se tuddenly. A steady
spirit without bringing, to other lives
the light that shines from the aspect
of every radiant example.
Romance of a First -Aid. .
invention.
"Mummy' has asked as to write and
thank you that We still have a daddY."
This teaching letter 'Wag received by
e St. I-ola Ambulance Man front the
good humor. They event off together
to her room and spread everything
ott on the bed, -deciding which wall for
Jean and *Mee was for the little
bride, 1VIost -of ie turned out to be for
the beide, smce Jean had behaved ,so
whieli all herbivore regard members
of the larger felines and eanines..
Amotig the reptiles certain fends
Wet -that era more di eu lt to 'explige
such is the king'Snake's desire to des -
badly and Hugo thought it just as troy all poisonous and some non- veno -
well tmteach'Iter a lesson. ' " , -
-.They gee to ,talking about Jean i.n innia°ue: is)0P"ieyceirtgty ityli.ganer ita,011121, .Neeolli-v:1111g1,78"
„ the Privileged evay assumed by close
water, glasses and other dishes. T1', why the rattlesnake shows
- -et' "Hugo, sutelY, surelY Yet, Wen t relatives. Alice stood up foe her underst°d- . , ... ,
When I'm readyto set the table I lift ' . , a reaclinees to inflict its beiriely ag
four children of a miner whom he had
saved from death in a mine accident The Atlantic crossing to Europe will
by his prompt and skilful first aid: be made by the great airship liner
The incident has a direct bearing on 50011 to be delivered, to the 'United
States,mbIth,e, Zeppelin CoraPauY.
the -story of a wooden box which his 10
bateetithafl jx3erditisinh thEmeepriiirTinaxituiliebiteioaaal.-mine 'J.° ""`"9 v°"" to Europa
scheduled., so that worle-travellers,
gliding do -in London will aCcomP-
It is the invention of Mr. Charles
iteh in seventeen days what took Jules
Verne's imaginary hero righty claYs.
Harness Volcano.
A. new plan for harnessing volcanoes
comes front Hawaii. The territorial
government has consulted the 'Dome -
A long-distance airship will take
ehein from the Egyptian capital to
Australia, arriving on the ninth day
after leaving London.
The air travellers 'will erase the Pa-
cific to San Francisco in another glad
airship, and will cross the United
States by aeroplane eeprees. Neer
York will be reached ba the fifteenth
day. This- jink is already established.
Hamner, who began work in the pit
it the age of twelve and a half. The
daily "imbed of accidents turned his
thoughts to the need for a complete
first-aid equipment In a box that would
POstess the following' appareatly to-
poesible' oombination of advantages;
It must be dustproof and easily dis-
cernible in the dark. It must be "thief ment of. Commerce about a suggestion,
Proof," yet available to all, seemingly practical, for making bricks
He experimented tor fifeeen years of molten lava from the eratev 'of
until he peritected • the device which lauell' The- idea is, to streteh across
now ca,n be ascii at Wembley's coal- the crater a broeley thee will carry an
endless chain of buckets to swop up
P1,1,roo' es' stew the key inside Is o,btnined the liquid lava, bring it to the rim' of
by 'striking a metal knob attablied to the voleareo and pour it into moulds.
a rud fixed above a glass plats In the ,
intericir of the boa. The ,-downwarda "
action rof the rod breaks the glass and
allows thetkey, which is hung- on a
elmin, to drop through. When the
'box ie unlocked the loud ringleg of a
bell warns the miners that amebae 10
opening it.
The cross of the Order of St. Solui
of jerusalom is enamelled on a dm-
sglasaa inamthve door.prpBeyhind the
'`I e etuall shiaes
throegh the cross, and its gleam in
the datletells'the miner where to Wad
the iirst-aid box,
A Project in India.
A great irrigation project lnYolving
the storage ot 80,000,000,000 eubic feet
01: water has 'been planned in goatla
eera -India. The water Tall be taken.
frog( - the Cauvery river and elistri-
bated to 200,000 acres,
dining ..1.00111 and quickie set the e glar:gsesii•Y-belieldee,-$aenndeeliuumPUb:s, atiriodgsregegartL
the trayS to' the serving table air the .
articles in place.
Hi the evening I put the eerenl dish- .
"es and a pitcher for the cream on
their tray', and the coffee eups :and
Saucers likewise: :Small; tillage 'to
thinli'ofj but they.miike theeiifferenee
?between a huerted breekfaet and
Pleasant, inliutiiett•raeal. ' .
With daseeree the-'serviee, dishes,
With epees/is-or f-delts and eugar and
cream, natn.be assembled on a tray
on the kitehen table weitle mie. re' pre-
paring, (limier. Then 11 takes but a
moment to:serve the pudding, finit,
Or 'ice cream after the other. dishes
'have been taken irons %the' table.
Foolish Slaughter' of Birds.
It is declared by the best French
authority, „that swallows and other
small- birds during thebr migratory;
passage ere slain in thousands by
every concolvable ,device, including
metailleireliPS'allargedi victli'electricity
03; wirielrionormatts.:rnimbers are' kill
ed, bee a' tingle ly troke,, to 11s(3otteavimrmlii
Spitted,' roasted and servtitl .,,up to
"goormetd in the ',Trench restaurants
of toce'-us °elm httle,i' bordering' on the'
'Mediterranean. -
ed by improper folding. . • ,
I Pad rectangular And Square table Treht "creat.nres
with , Li wi ember, !,be .., Riiie in 500 cities throughbut the'worlcl. •
•••
. ,
cleft, mada'and exilibited'hyllYnthony tteStimanaV, Lha Hutu
COVETSree et four ei g s Rare .
- ,
•
with indifference the nearneSs of
nurses and cattle, unless trocide'n upon.
Its enmity ,for the hog •.fs natural
It May seem strange, also, consider-
ing the small intelligence will which
we credit reptiles in general that the
skunk' and son -le snakes readily dis-
tinguish herbivorous from dareivormis
anlinalt fleeing from the latter 'and
uPon the flies they attract, , *?t,t.his licw:s'AP'dirt is ge.1111Y1°°seneci
„
approaching deer and cattle to feed
- and dissolved,
Cortez and Cocoa.
The fourth centenary of thp iritro- Even the diri:that is ground in at neck- .-,.—
dtietion of coma into -Marone is shortly
to be celebrated by a conference of
That's Whet Shp Meant.
Wide—"Don't you forget it, your
wife's one woman who knows her pro-
per sphere!"
Hubby—"The earth, I suppose, you
mane"
111111enennanonas
1111)10111W.111.JO'-0011111'1
es- „ •
Soaking to kes the
place of rubbing—
UST by soaking the slotnes in the suds
bands -and ciuff-eclg,es yields to a light
pire pioducers" et, the wembisy Ex- rubbing with dry Rinso. Not a thread
It was in 1.524. that soldiers' of cot, • is weakened. The mild Rinso Suds work .
tei, returning ('on the conquest of thoroughly through and through the
Mexico, Mtrodueed !! the beverage to Clothes without injury to a single. fabric.
their spanao) ro:ow-corint14,men, with
whom it'speddily &Mod favor. ' -
Nof until the middle ;it the seven- Rinso is made .
by the makers of Luso. For the canal 37
teentli ecein 'y, 'Power 0,r, ` 1110 tile w,ash it is as wonderful. as Lux as for fine tl-tings. -
.
.orink intro,roco:t into illngland, alDng
with las andcolEce,- all tilueo in the
course di a decade. ' . All grocers and departrnant Stores Sell Rinsp, .
Tho. first '1,01)AI11.11 coffee house dales
iron). 1052,- the ftrs,, chocolate horse LEYER BROTHERS LIMITEN TORONTO :
, ..
was opetmtt in 1010 and Pepys drank ,
iyik; lir:, t any) r ll 1 ea iill 111 1 0, ' . ri-=Mitrimei,=.174.=..,xxxogpiyis.a.vaiiipzimararezwisaigsworsarlomillsssMoisos
•