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The Clinton News Record, 1924-11-20, Page 6
OglitalP 18!580) Si ays pureJ:1 fresh. o 'delicious I Try it today., A FOOD: MARKET. A -food market or exchange is a popular way of leaking money for a church, lfor' the school, rural library, or other civic enterprises. Rightly managed,' one exchange is worth sow- 'oral suppers and is far less work. A, merchant in town will often donate window space and part of a counter, and half a dozen women -can manage the sale.' The most profitable things pilfered for sale are cottage -cheese," chicken soup with nood1es,•cekes, baked'beans and codfish' cakes, all of which cost far less to make on the farm than in town. One good fat hen, past her prime and cooked until :'tender, . the meet, :shredded „gad amnbined with noodles, will bring $4 by sailing the hot, thick soup at 20 .cents a pint. Baked: beans should be made . with fresh or salt pork and are still more p rofxtable than the ehielcen soup, al- though the ,beanswill 'net `sell so well. Cottage-cheese'ie always in demand, and • while real -cream must be used, through the mediuln of Meads 50 -cents. worth of cream will bring in $2. This is worth thinking, about. One ,woman: puts ' up galldits.' of. ,watermelon .pickle:eaeh summer, with Ito eapense: savefor sugar, vinegar and spices. She sells this pickle at exchanges insmell glass jars at 15 cents a jar. Her friends„give her the preserve, and picklejars, which come 'from the' grocery, so they need: not be returned. ' Various kinds, of pickles in 'small jars sell readily. Jelly does not sell so well, for it is like -buying a g iwhen ' in a poke wh`the 'glasses are sealed or covered with paraffin;.- The sale of pies is uncertafn,•but good cakes always find customers. Vegetables and fruit, are easily.dis- pos„ed offeat market prices if they ,fail .to sell al. the exchange: Dressed chick- ens are popular, but they bring more ;f .cooked and sold with noodles. Doughnuts made the clay they are sold go quickly at 25 cents a dozen, but if mads the daybefore they sell slowly. Fresh cream, buttermilk, eggs, butter and honey ae1l well,but bring scarcely more than market -prices. Iced cookies and cup -cakes are very popular. At special seasons, Easter eggs, scrapple, , mince -meat, sauerkraut, potato salad, rolls and sausage bring good returns. Sn certain ,localities 'cooked hominy would sell very readily,so wouldcod- fish-•balls. Most fame will yield p0. tatoes and eggs, and .codfish is com- pni'atively inexpensive. , Made jnto balls, ready for frying, these prodtieta will be foundvery. profitable: The expenses connected with a food ' merket,iire,small, the profits large. whole The length of time necessary £ or the nuts to stay "in the water is determined by the freshness of',the nuts and -the thickness of the shells. The" meats are not. softened if the water is poured off within ten or fif- teen minutes. The meats can be crisped; of course, by heating 'in,'the oven• corn pops better if treated •in Pqp co P P the. •same way with cold water before popping.—M. J. M. USE THE MASHER. '- Use a wire potato masher: to Bream the butter and sugar for e Bake. It is much.easier and quicker than a spoon, gia pem,'YY -011gllt to KnOWe odd�4o autumn• ,To hn Keats'e171relt:ed our lite?atu�r�; wttb five of .ii"& r est Qdee !-Odo to a IVighting, Tales Oj1 a 1 34TH ', c hest known, but the olLopin t >w a� �yy LAZA 'hi YORK Nil LB'� the, 5hortesL, has the.:;perfecUieu aY"a L3W' ax"��.•r - : f . , flawless p, -em: t ....:0 oastatUndi . Season of _mists ,and mellow!,artful CSoseboslose-triend'ol.-the maturing >ii4r "Whoa nrinej silo rageoi 0e,aieeellateo dwprrrt'° sun; Conspiring with him how to load d !"10 With fruit the vines that round the IT P E' L;—(Cont'd.) ', Iance. `We shall have to make fox• the 1 C the PER, towards the, caves, he said, 'lin, any ease, youid , thatch -eaves run; As sune dipped sleep more comfortably ander sheltex•,;l.To bend with apples the mussed cot - b e ame. garden of the Villa Patina ' beaame.:•a scene. of great . activity. !Jean, Coale "on. Where's Carlo , .. tape: trees, Gaunt and his hoy, Cailo,, had :the; We'dtna rte aril pouring.” another, ten :•'.` And illi all fruit with ripeness to the business of here adjusting the pack an the miCarlo it wil be managed to get the mules Te wen, the gourd;: and rilump the mule: and them was troubledewithginside'the castle ruins, and he' 51ew l ell t sh gos. ' •. food for a, eek and pas hurt enough undertook to guide huge. Gaunt tool: ! ' 1Vitb a sweet kernel; to s et budding food for a s week and was hurt an halfause charge of Joan. Se 1 part way 1 Gaunt refused to take more than half and then u again ever a path I more, ram rung a of it. Hugo was all the place, downp was 1 getting in everybody's way, and there compaossedtao of n ldersdaid beiars who ",Anti i.11.1 more, later fiowero`. Tor the were the servants itchatteringe-roth d rim-, ning about, and' children -from the Old rain began to fall thick and fast, and! ITnitl they -think warm days will never Town who'had, boldly advanced into tnIIe ngotwentwonas aalteaiC1treckleselY Tor Suniiner has"o'et•brimmed'the1 the' garden . o -watch. interesting "his trail body e , o s l roc©edinggs, and refused to be driven flangingiin trail's hand, llob radia - cls' p 1 lou h Guido did his, best to, disdaining g g Who hath `n s tahurr .Tito barked li' d t the { it b d t 11 b t cies y ee1L . of soon flee etc amid thy' a atter aw Y, g out to the others y store. kee ;Bain, o11t: spirit of the furiously at the'lightning every time; • ;ca er Jean ` , she the sPl , it split : the : darkness. Jean, minded Sometimes whoever seolcs' 'abroad. occasion• when, she came down' olerl e thunder more ;than she did the l • may rind Iivas bag.: It was cooler 1' Constant . booming Thee eating careless on a granary her`little.cat lightning. The cons TRY' THIS FOR -CREPE; SLEEVES; • When matting• a long-sleeved dress of .Canton crepe or crepe de .chine, or. any of the other crepe weaves, face the sleeves back about four inches with taffeta of the same eater.', This keeps the sleeves from twisting on the arm, and also helps to hold up flare cuffs, which are inclined- to crumple when 'made of soft 'meteriale. O, F. and 'a breeze had sprung up. Gann the saddle, and. present- made her intensely nervous. ,ly lifted. herwintothe cavalcade "Here, Pd better, carry you,” Gaunt started, all was ready go a said,when she had elippedfor •the ines Gaunt, Hugo aTito )valla thiror fourth time. "You'll` be up he rearea with the CarlockbrinbiAT ivrenchin our ankle." so the stvihage,c ivle. • F1 - He gathered her `up and she clung lowed them. the village children fo to him, with her arms around his neck. lowed thein. - Above, loomed the high, broken walla The longest, most ,fatiguing and of the ruined castle•; - and below the least interesting ter the t of the trip came precipice .seemed to drop sheer into first, through the' of they,. of Ventimiedglia up infinity. Yet she was not afraid. She itsthe old town of Ventimiglia ,would not^havereinded had he missed tiont was began totmanifest a and' its dvTs masugges his,footing, and' the'ty 5 of -them gone to have st`advantages. hurtlingdown together. Her face, -_wet "I- wouldn't. have believed it could with ram, brushed his, and she nestled be so, cool anywhere," said Jean' who closer. to mit on her tram safe inside`- sweater: actually forced p From above 1 sweater, ruin, It'ugo shouted :down wholly un - weather -wise eye to- wards roc 'ons. Gds east hisnecessary dl ti. wards the East, ^ from which a strong "Coyne by, the lower path, it's be . s lookedlam 'of briar: are they? wind was' blowing. The al y ter. Lookout for that c p where y lightning :and far awayd of an stick, -Hector, • - i It . snot of them; thou hast 'thy darker than it s ;ter, the en Y Th e little dart of .. quivered on and let. me pull you up. Mand feu music too, a„I They were almost bound stumble. Ah,herr, we all ,rel .bloom the, soft the horizon, Th Y. s don'•t atubo he While barred. clouds to have a thunderstorm, , bat l was . With the zest f a school y dying day., 'cel to last longand "could not afor the -biggest cave, where not likely mad _ ouch• the stubble -plains with reach them for some hours. ;There! Carlo had lighted a- torch of brush- 'And t h e -.. rosy u , Then M a wailful choir the small gnats • HEMSTITCHED SHEETS. Who doesn't like to see u: hematii"ch- ed: sheet? And'' hi these days when such pretty ones may be bought in the shops so reasohably, there isnoreason why we all shouldn't indulge our fancy, only—and here our sense et thrift stops us. For we all know that the hemstitching will be the first piece to wear opt, and there will still be some wear left in the rest of the sheet. Mine. started to go just recent- ly -smell breaks appearing here and there. me to get 1occurred to It suddenly Y narrow' tape, either linen or bias bind- ing, a trifle wider than the hemstitch- ing, and. stitch it neatly underneath the,. hemstitching on both edges: This leaves a -'very neat -fluid( whether the sheet is used_ with 'the hemstiching or the binding, as the right side, and it Will last until' the entire sheet is worn out. 1 don't see why pillow cases and cloths could not be treated in' the table same' way; thus,we could indulge, our liking for pretty things and still not feel we -are being unduly extravagant. —Mrs. H: N. G. Mr. SECRET. OF ORACICING NUTS. Pecans can be cranked more easily to stand in hot if -'they are allowed' )mit before' crack- forafewm es water Ina,,. The shells.open"more-easily and the 'meats Gari ' often be taken out lftet..,Rvery Meal Thy. lair soft -lifted by the winnow bag wind; Or on a , half -reaped furrow - sound asleep, • thlowsed with the fume of popplhs, .r _while thy hook Spares the next swath and all its twined flowers; And .sometimes like a, gleaner thou dost keep Steady thy laden head across a broolr; Or by a elder -press, • with patient look, Thou watchest the last oozings, hours by home, Where aro'. the songs of Spring?; Ay, would be plenty of time to have dinner and,psttheir supplies it't a dry place. It would meant lot of scrambling over rocks,..for Castel il'Appio was 0 real ruin,. and what had once been the in- terior of, a tiny fortress could only be reached by arduous toil through briars and over heaps of piled up murky with impending .toile: Earlier stones. Gamuts throe h, but it a way in the evening terrible -things had sug- to get the mules through, but it would' geeted themselves to her,. That strange Jr difikcult: clicking in her brain, the desire -'to wood. CHAPTER XLI.. In the` middle - of the night Alice Ardeyne woke up and could not get to sleep 'again.' It was very hot' and close, the air He said nothing: about the impend- ing storm, ;directing .the gaze of: hie companions. 'to the west, where the serenity and beauty of a fine sunset drew attention from less pleasant pos.' sibilities. • , -But presentlys,.Jean, too. saw the darkness advancing over the distant mountains 'mid ,remembered gloomy Clementine's prophecy. "We're going to have n storm;” she �aNapprehensively. uo,very, bus -between stumbling over the roughly' cobbled path an keeping on his eye -glass, halted a ni meet to look^ ` • "So -eve are!" he exclaimed, "T wish I had a pipe organ. It would be won derful to play Wagner on a mountain - throw erself into the river and thus solve Philip's problem as well as her own—were they not significant Symp- toms of mental 'derangement? ' But now, though wakeful, she felt mord or less composed, Her brain was tear and steady. . She found her- self 'sinning at 'the• idea of self- destruction --but it was a wry, twisted smile. .She felt that years had passed and aged her since that conversation over the telephone, with Philip The house was very still end the. Thames -side valley slumbered peace- fully. Through the rough, clotted mass of dark clouds the moon peered out occasionally, the same old mobn that brooded over all the world, Some. storm. where, no doubt it was shining Tor upon .,we„;,mumsey—and for ' Hugo Sniarle. the storm was not M 5se was still in Bordighera, or A 'POPULAR: "STYLISH STOUT" e' MODEL. • 4889. Striped and plain Woolen is here combined. This is a good. model ler satin, crepe, or sharmeen. Ros- hanara crept with satin for collar and panels would be very: Att'ractive.., ' The Pattern is cut In 8 Sizes: 86, 88,: 40, 42, 44, 46, 48' and 5p inches bust measure.- A 88 -inch size requires 4% yards of one material, 40 inches wide. If made as illustrated it will 'require 1% yards of plain material and 8'I/s. yards'of striped or figured material. The width of the dress at the foot is 2 yards. 'Pattern mailed to any address on receipt of 20c in silver, by the Wilson Publishing Co., '18 West Adelaide St., Toronto. • Send 15c in siliver for our up-to- date ate ra ll'and Winters 1924-1925 Book, of Fashions. ions. i,. mourn ',Among the river eallows, borne aloft Or sinking'as” the light wind lives •'or dies; • ' And full-grown lambs loud bleat from hilly bourn; . fledge -.crickets' sing; and now with treble soft The redbreast- whistles from the gar- ' den `croft, ' And gathering swallows "twitter In the skies:'; �u� yet, and 'Gaunt began to wonder of they might not possibly escape it. They toiled up ,the last little' ascn and , beheld a marvellous- panorama, sail lit by the last rays of. sunset, Jean. was lifted off her mule, Gaunt and Carlo unpacked the supper, and un Y had- beana week ago, *lien a picture postcard had arrived from Hugo,,' Alice slipped on a dressingegown, and making her way through the sleeping house went out into the gar- den, If anything, ;it seemed more Hugo and:Tito.beated themselves corn - !calling outside. She for}nd herself re- line on a flat rock, watching the icalling what Hugo had dticasttwellen nand the preparationsot y pestoked: Everybody with hungry eyes. be was "keeping the fortress." It had was tired, but did not care to admitZ uzsled leg to knoev while that meant: Gaunt made . coffee and, soon the ler poor. mad father! meat was ;Spread. It was to She walked to and fro on the laivn, cold repast, And the cooking lie, had her slippers drenched with dew. Be - promised to...do proved , unnece%sary ;low thiver moved _sluggishly; here 1Vfaddelina s famous' foie gras in aspic and: there a fish` splashed or something and little chicken -pies were delle ie, > stirredin the rushes. Wes it going and there !vas cheese and salad to to rain? She held otlt ser hand; but. finish 'with, helped down by chianti ;although the air was heavy with mors - and the hot Coffee. turethere, were no rain -drops. tv A£teiards Gaunt and Hugo ]ill Slie had intemled not to think of 'their pipes' and Jean had .a cigarette,' Philip. for indeed that way madness while Carlo explored the ruins with lay Philip loved her..: She could a view to finding a dry plane In winch scarcely doubt that. But the sort of to camp. love she could • give him was not The storm was coining, although not enough, .and she tried very hard to rapidly. It was cold enough to make realize that elle must become recon - a fire necessary. Reinforced by food, oiled to a division of his -affections. �BMut w h y , oh why, had n't'he maurriediTu o gathered sticks and fir tones, and they soon a merry, blaze: re, gen Spread- before their feet was the nage go • theavoid hurting anybody, e seaave, d 4 th wayto or of , lot aghts Oshien flu a lg lights. of : Mentons and Monte„ Carlo Alice :-felt sure. Perhaps `that `was. twinkling on the. right, and Bondi- ,after• all, the real reason why he •had thio g ghera on the left: Behind them tower- married her: She hadtried. so hard ed the big snow-capped mountains, not to believe that. In Lucerne he thrown into -bine!, silhouette by the lead assured her that he had married lightning playing among their peaks. her with his eyes 'open, and because L; was cosy around the fir" Hugo he loved her too dearly' to give ,her shivered with ecstasy •and 'demanded tip. . She had believed Nims She was again 'and again to be praised foe lav- apt, as most simple souls.•ave, to be« itg'thought of such a delightful party lieve what was told fixer.' She had W be- liy ' eve need never go beck to Bowed mumaev's dui ra0000S lie a until IIt'a:1tk 'Yoaagp� con;lectton Sou can, bay. . ands i$'a *•,ire1p iio • for the aamQu l and tee$il. 74f4rites,rs, means h glesefit as'dtrel$ es r ,Colonial Georgia. In English Colonial days Georgia, the thirteenth' col0ity,' was formed to make, an.'asylum. for • the poor. The laws 51 England permitted imprison-- ment for debt. Thousands of iinglish laborers who -through ni1efortune and thaugs htle s cohtracts had become in.- debted',to:the ,fich were tnnuaily.Or Whole -` risons. W1 tilt lOw n'int4 rested and. p families 'were' rendered destitute the law and to provide refuge for 'the. downtrodden poor of England, and other's •p es ri go {s OIHNNY' ie, taleiiag a prescription. His careful mother idoctor—ordered it. 1-Ier daily ,doctor-brd -the, fatally health t ivo aticra ounce of, prevention--�,ifebuoy Soap -works ; in combatili;s disease. Every day your children touch dirty objects and cover theuitelvee with germ -laden dirt. Give them Lifebuoy —the -health soap. Lifebuoy protects The rich creamy lather of, I,ifcbuoye� The skin derlull health element deep :down into every pore. ski y purified, and cleansed --delightfully AP 0 -aHe sial Habit titan , Mose �1 � • The; odour vanishes afteruse, but the protection retrains. ERS LIMITED TORONTO cit 4 -oz LEVER BROTH "A Country Road.". What's nicer than a country road When Autumn fills the air! Brown -ribbon in September's sun A -winding God knows where. Past houses old and tumble-down, Past modest hones and grand, Past acres rolling to -the bills, And little. plots of land.. ' Across :a crazy little' bridge, . Above a 'gurgling stream, Where fishes darting to. an'i fro, :. Like bits of silver gleam. - T,lien's:lowly up a moss-banlc'd hill It views a shining lake; Then thro' a Mae of `gold -leafed ' trees, That only, God, can make. Then it becomes a village street, -: Where little children play, And lowing nerds of cattle, seek Their homes at close of- day: And on" and Mod it etwists -and' turns Intoe:the dimming light— ' A. ion esome s'esiy little, road Ilia in thed'ark of night. ' ": ' -_Cliff •Bastin.' Rings on Trees Tell of_,tlle oWeatilter Cycles. Ald to Clear Thought. Tie --!`Clear thinking depends abso- lutely, they say, on good food." She -"Yet; doubtless a dinner at the Astorbilt would prove a great lxelp In the eonsideratio'n' of your proposal, Mr. Rich." ` Riibbish Colors -Froth Even such an'ordinark•thing as coat tar has a romantic history. r Was looked upon For;a long time to w as almost valueless refuse, the ers nasal of which caused inanufac ur much trouble: and expend. Then ex• periments weft made to' see if -any use could be found 'f or. it, but at first noth- ing muoh Was done. ' Later itwasfound that coal tar could besplitup into about ten prim- ary praductSi. From these in turn, roughly three hundred other sub- ttances could, be obtained- The meat anaortart. of: these coal'tar sub- stances are benzine,- xylene, naphtha- lene, phenol, cresol, and so bp. Purified phenol is known to' the public as carbolic acid. The importance of the other materials is that they are the basis of .many aniline dyes and other products, of emelt value • in medicine and .commerce. :The process of•extracting these' pro .dugis from coal tar. is technically known BA "fractional distillation." The separating'of one. substance from the other depends on the fact that each has a different boiling -point. A special boiler is required for heating the tar: This ;has' an elaborate thermometer eonnected.'with it, which is extremely genitive at high temperatures. Trees are pre -histone, almanags, giv ing weather reports forsakes when there was no weather bureau to record' them, are described by Prof. AE. Douglass of the 'University of Arizona in the annual, report of the Smithson- ian tnshitution'lnst issued. Prof, Douglass'studies are based an minute exaattihation of annual rings of trees: Beginning with the common knowledge that these rings are tinned at the rate of one a year, the fight, porous seotiolt growing in the spring when there 15 plenty of water and tbe denser part.when the summer drought' omes he went on to study the effect The Mental Burden. .The peak' et the: day'.. Toad is more often in the mead .than in the hand. 'Pleat is, to say,. beyond the executive 'burden is the heavy freightage of a• responsibility assumed, and amiable counsel not to. .worry' does not take from us the mindfulness of alt that we are carrying, • But the workman who broods is de- tracting from his value to his task. Heneeds to cultivate deliberately the Qualities ofserenity, equipoise and de- tachment, Something may be•learned from the attitude of -Japanese Intel- lectuals during the earthquake, though we 'May smile at them as trtotcs and fatalists combined. For instead of running about in circles cryin'g`, ,Woe aiamo." and-wrin in their hands they were an inpenetrablo mask ever their einotions and saib, "What is to cootie 'will .come. If we must die,' we 'die, .sari: beheld with. no• outward sjuow of emotion their universe of bamboo and rice -paper shuttled into ruins 'about them, It is an axiom older than the bricks o.t Babel that the Worst is what. never Ocouss, Like all epigrams, the state. anent overshoots the -.mark of the, winged 'woilde: but 'itis extraordinary how often we evade' the thing we dread, if •ire -march toward it 'unafraid. There at•e few clays in the lives of apY but the immature whose proslicot is altogether pleasant. To think,' as the ; ll of sore ' oat affirms, is ..often to be fu 1 yew, The tl ou g titless at d t he con- sclenceless are gay; With our: sober prescience of a destiny we feel the shortege.01 time, the irnminon'ce of the' end: ';`Jut it Is important; for the siflte, iii' our wale, t0 admit the sunlight of irradiating laughter, to disseminate oetente and cheer, to keep our anger, Our, black moods, our envies .and re- e'entnrents subliminal, and not: in sight .en hearing. ` The load imposed,that we' cannot shift to other shoulders is ,sensibly lightened by the -disposition of the the distressed Protestantsof other I the JAMAS. : Oglethorpe, countries, . Jam t e, of Parlia- i thilauthrupist, amen b• l meet, appealed to George II: for the. privilege cf. -planttn" ,a ,'colony in;' America.' The petition was favorably , heard, .and on June 9, 1732, a royal charter was issued.!,, which the terri- tory between tbe Savannah; and Ala-' bama Rivers and westward tient- the} ,: 'upper'.lountaine of ;those rivers. to the' Pacific was organized and, granted' to I. a corporation 'for twenty-one•Years to I -be held in truetteer the poor. In hair- I or of the icing the province received the naxue Georgia. A. Canadian Wembley. Even when .the British Empire Ex- hibition is over, its memory will still be_ preserved in Canada, where the latest 'railway -station, fifteen miles south-west• of Grand Prairie, Alberta, has peen' given the name o? WembleY. This is not the first time that places in Canada have been named after well- known persons and. places 1n the Old Ogentry. There Is a Beaconsfield and a Gladstone in Manitoba, an Asquith post -office ' in Saskatchewan, . and a of years of: drought. as compared with Bonar Law station: in Ontario: Revel. year'sof plenty, of accidents to the, stoke, Brttith Columbia, is another di case in point, It was named after the flrs,t Lord Revelstoke, of Baring Broth- ers, who took over the fleet bond issue (Attain milliondollars) of ,the Carta - diem Pacific Railway: ` are the` In addition to these, there classical example& of : Hudson Bay, named 'after the explorer; and Wide roots, of fires and. of at ease, Every event in the life of a tree left its record in the rings.- After learning the correlationbe- tiVen known historical. - conditions and comparatively recent tree rings, Prof. Douglass began to carry his re' earches back into earlier telltales, „to brought home so sin- San s 'nP We � t 1 was the villa; be said. ; -h 'have to t.11t'tzu. 1 here all' the time. r Do we a gofully. d • To be continue ) back, Hector • „ ( e. a anyway." Gaunt t to . e t 1 a to -night, y of to- > N 6 cone - the c. 'se et ih the ,seldom1 plied. He' - held out his !land. ,Yes, Fortune is the rain was beginning:. What a nem- pany.of a loafer. The Blood Orange.- The range vi The blood orange is obtained by grafting' the „whet orange on to • the 1 stem of tho pomegranate.' This blending cf fruits 'gives the' ;Moeller tint, 0f pomegranate Mice to theendee of the blood orange, and some tastes are so-sensitivo.as to cie. beet the somewhat astringent flavor to the poxnograna±e. fn .the more Me- oioua 1Ulce of the orange. • The 'juice of the orange, whether the ordlealy variety- or the "blood,"' consists 01 b1trlcand'Snalic acids, with fruit sugar, eitrate ,o'f lime and water- Iti0antiseptic inits acttan,and we have the statement of the rlrarist, John Ievoly;1 that the orange sharpens ap- petite, exceedingly 1mgt veracities it istti ea- • a -dee sirable,Irait to include in one's dietary: Vit Saul hart i preS1llldi14 of theele try I ea0U(. <L G�ahad'a 1 s1UW.1 Lon iepee-aledin' a -Wreath, f,om.;t<anada atathe foot,u Nelsons Celun?n m, a 1 i0 ' -ea cadet', 11ro'shorcu saluting: • p using trees: of the age-old• forests 0f sur, Woodstock, Chatham, and Lon., the southwest as lila "tine -sticks. don -on -Thames in Ontario.-- The 1a 1 Middle - discovery records•. of the time or The 1 named, suitably enough, is in `.bilddl discovery of America, of the. Crusades, 1 sex County, which provides another ex - of the Norman invasion of England,. ample. Ontario Also boasts a Glee - and of even more remote perloils, can : gow and 5. Glencoe; O be read en many stumps in Calitornia.1 Vic;,, y a ne of the interesting 0180005 of in 1 Did ou ever realize that by yield• giving .shared by he trees is •:ing instead of resisting, by bd G iu eontitmation of the theory of an ,instead of being stubborn, of being s year sunspot cycle held by astrono-' tickler for an apology, you disarm andweather Students. EverY the -resentment and awaken the bettex - band' of re- inured o has i awho j !even ,oars there, s' re - nature of the one 0 of heat an , that toll of caster ',times In 'between. Secondary sunspot cycles of long" lmo nod n at gain" ati e thus is r iatfvelY nod drought, rings, ,with wide 'rings' Y°uv Many people have g the good will of one whom they had regarded: as an enemy -0. S. Marden. diaration are also.. suggested by the tree records. 5tocking•OutiylnO Waters,,, :Owing to the great distance and the indifferent means of transportation available, the Department' of l(1ar•ine ' and Fisheries ham found tied. e a. not teaslble to transfer` fry, trona existing it, : hatcheries td `many of, life -ip°, .illi b fit isolated spawning areas of -British eat iv t o •ter e only alternative 's the,o y A ia. Columb • fry, these waters are stocked with eyed salmon' eggsand. upwards 01 28,- 000 keye salmon eggs' d so0 5 0 Mak an 00 have been 'carefuily".ela ted in'selectedel ooted I pieces during the'eurrent season Flood Lights to Repel,Bandits.' Floodlighting projectors far ,use on eailloadcars carrying Chinese so1- diers sent out to repel bandits have just .been provided, Tho floodlighting projectors Were; cqu'oped with 259 - :watt lamps, and a considerable nate- ber of these projector's wore mounted Oti,several railroad cars used to trans- port detachments of soldiers. Good work, weal -done .by tins ;means in re- ducing cing the ,,umber e,1 bandit.•' attacks upon railroad trains on the Tientsin- t'ulcow railway, - ,�, new type e1 storage ;tan!- for ,_ gaso aro is spherical in shape, as ores - on sure is mote equally distributed over the entire, sphere.._, ai tfeaarai: J Its delicious" tasteand pure quality! is only eiinalled by its iii; h nutritive value, wtite,.fo,' .8D6852gDSE[02G Recipe Book. �l•1 GANApA 8-rARClt CU, atmerlt' MONTREAL 3