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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1925-04-30, Page 6ACTS A130 The tba plant grows best in the pure coolatMosphere a a mountain tea garden. The higher the garden, the finer and, more de- licious the flavour of the tea. This is-part- iy d'ue :to the 'clear sunshine on a high mountain side1 partly to the more invigor- ating, air, partly to the More 'frequent rain- fall,and perfeet drainage. The largest and roughest leaf grown at an elevation of ,7000 feet is much superior in flavour to the , .tinieSt tip grown only noo feet above sea - level. All teas used in the "sALADA- blends are grown from 4000 feet to 7,0() feet, ele- vation. The tradernark " SALADA," is ai , • gnararttee of quality var tee.III th1 orly of rieit'efa a es LOVE, EPIC jr wa not! MeVe; e'Se- softly ,that Baree hen She said; airaost in "13 aree I Baree Bpi. Bare,!" ti hu It was the first time 13'irec had hoeril his -name, anti there S01.00- , . , 11..Y0,:reX1191,1C'nt Mare,)16.1.1A..'eolno -o the tumff so soft .end unsefinf m" ntal rOW11ho ,eyo,nkender:h eup cif the canyon. Tdo his eonnd of it ihet in spite o himself Otideettess;"'sain"-ii,pbn, cot, vstrUi brealt the wan, fifty or sixty, the g in ,hitn responded to it M i.st , tried, te eiatic feet wide, which opened into a na_ whimper -that just reached the 'Umiak, their leader, bit tural Prieen about Cal acre in extent; low's ears, Slowly she stretched in 'inais Pan aqoall fro,m him, It was a, beautiful spot. On all, sides en nrin. It wasbare and round ancl ieq.ff , /octoiy iinhallej,He but that leading into the coulee it Was soft. might have darted. forward isecicarr.o tcd 040 mooilig 01 the ,...but in by walls of reek, At the far tk,,,gics.,nt,h lotf.ehaissilb;:dyBaune somothlng isePO's04 the 'llaPsnoPiiiel) efaC.14/..()170 jeensd wriaptilfir111.1 chors.°ckaededsrriTt],1 ag,6„,,,e,r- held him hack. He knew that ii, was 171 net an enemy; he knew that, the dark intt-th,94./facl most,. at Ow wolf leas 0h.3 Itta mu /018 00 fho chase, ,tho lornt,' 'the- lOild orgy' of ori.e "tech, a1t11 l'unn1169 blood. CHAPTER VII.-- (Colt'd.) , -For a quarter of au- hour. I3aree 1 watched him while he knocked fish out of the pool. When at last he stop- ped, there were twenty or thirty fish ameng the stones, some of them dead and others still 'flopping. Erom where - he lay flattened out between two rocks, Bareecould hear the crunchiag of flesh and iones as the bear devoured his dinner. It sounded -good, add the fresh smell of fish filled him 'with a craving that had never 'been roused by crawfish et even partridge. ' TWOrtV seconds after the last of He Paid to Hear His 0Wri Lecture. Many times have we begrudged our admission fee to lecttmes,. „Nye:might even, go further and gay -that -.many Wiles a. lecturer has convinced ue tlfat he Was the .one who rightly 8hou1a - have paid and paid, handsomely. Once we attended a- leetare on tools. Because we had some misgivings about the whale affair we sat in the back of the tall, where an early de- ,parture would not be, conspicnous. Th81. lecturer;'- a thoroughly unattractive- leoking man, came to the centre of the platform, scrutinized the audience with an apPraislag 07e and began: "I have chosen feels -for my subject because there are_more fools than any- thing else In the world. You find them. ev,erywhere. I haven't a doubt that ;there, are some in this very hall; you -- will see themgoing out iu a minute or two." The lecture laste(1 an hour atul a half, We stayed through the,.whole of it and learned much, we dire say. , The flian on the platform, you see, has you ail the way round. You pat to shear hire; lie can say anything he likes about you, and you can't answer back. But there is one case on record -where aleaitror did have to pay ad- mission to.hear his own lecture, It was Mark Twain, and Ike tells about it In his autobiography. Now and then, he says, Beeler and I had a mild little adventure, Mit none ,that ,couldn't be forgotten without mutt of a stain. Once we arrived late at s. town and found no committee in waiting and no aleighs entire stand. We struck up a street in the gay moon- light, feutul a tide of people Sowing along, Judged it was its way to the lee. Sure hall --a corset gueifs-and-joined lt, At the bali I tried to press in, but W80 stopped by the tioltet-talter. "Ticket, please." • . I bent over and: whispered: "It's all right. I am the lecturer." . He closed one eye impressively and said loud enough for all the- erawd te Itears "No, you don't Three or you have got in unto now, but the. next , lecturer that goes, in here to-nIght PaYs!" • Of course we paid. our OWn Make. . The proud parents of 8 young hope - fel parehased him a new go-cart and as '10 Was as big event in their lives, they decided to wheel their offspring horre in the apiek-andopan-vehrele. , Out on the Utley avenue.they noticed folks looking at their outfit and smil- ing At first they thought it just nat- ural admiration for their first-bern, but as some snickers were heard they•:!res came perturbed. The parents-. gleneed atbaby but he 100168(1 as usual. Malls; the wife decided to walk ahead and.look back to see what the trouble , Thua she got a good view of the equipage and to her horror she saw attached: th the front of the carriage a Placar/1 left bn by the ebbe keeper. it read; ' • ' "Our Own Make. test In TOwn." The Eplacope. A young French surgeon of' Paris has invented an apparatus, called the episcone, that Non enable medical studentil in an adjoining room to ob- serve every detail of an operation ' withont disturbing either' the operat- ing surgeon or the patient. The an. paratut, which cousists :Mostly of lights tind mirrors, produces au en- larged picture of the operation, and a loud speaker earriee -the ceniments of the surgeon. was thick underfoot, and strewn with - flowers.. In this trap Pierrot had got more than one fine hunch of venison. gdoaxa - 'adn.H..) OU SOM eaatti 080.1,1 in the face of his rifle. He -called to Nepeese as he saw Baree entorimff it and together they climbed the slope Baree had almost reached the edge of the little prisetfaneadow when sud- denly he stopped himselfso, quickly that he fell back onhit ha,unches; and his heart jumped up into his throat. Full in his path. stood Wakayoo, the huge black bear! Baree darted to one side and ran for the open meadow. Wakens°. did not stir as Baree sped past him -no more than if he had been a bird or rabibt. Then came another .breath of air, heavy with the scent of man. This, Wakayoo had disapPeared in a turn at last, put life into him. He turned of the crCek, Bar ec was under the and began lumbering after &tree into broken.balam, ragg h the meadow trap. Baree, looking back, that was still alive. ath the whole.. saw him coming -and thought it was of It. and it vas delicious. . , Nepeese and Pierrot come Bares now found that Waicayoo, had over slope, a nd t the same instant solved the food Problem for him, and they saw both Wakayoo and Baree. ' this - da' he did not retdrri to the Wherethey entered into thegrassy beaver pond, non' the next. The big dip under the nick walls, Berea turn - bear was inceiSantly fishing up and ed sharply to the right. Here wee a down the creek, and day after day great boulder, one, end of it tilted up 13aree c°"1-buted hi te*a'ts'" off the earth.' It loOked like a sPlendid Eel, life continued to be hiding plaee, and Baree traWled under exceedingly 1/..-:.1sant.- And then' came the break -the change that was des- tined to nrean as much for Bereft as that other day, long ago, had meant for Kazan, his father, when be killed Otto man -brute in the edge of the wild- erness. • This change came ow theday when, .in trotting around te`treat 'rock near the -waterfall, Baree found 'himself face to face with Pierrot the hunter and Nepeese, the star -eyed girl who had shot him in the edge of the clear- . It was Nepeese whom he saw 'first. If it had been Pierret he would have tureed back quickly. But algain the blood of his forbear was rousing strange tremblings -within him. Was It like this that the first woman had looked to Kazan? Baree stood still. Nepeese was not mere than twenty feet from him. She at on a 'rock, full M the early morn- ing sun, and was brushing out her wonderful hair. Her lips parted. Her eyes shone in an instant like stars. One hand remained poised, weighted with the jet- tresses. She recogni 'zed him. She saw the white stay on his breast and the white tip on his ear, an,d under her breath she whispered moosis!".-"The dog -pup!" It Was the wild dog she had shot -and thought had died! The reening• before Pierrot and Ne- peese had built a shelter •of balsams behind the big rock, and on a small white plot of sand Pleerot was kneel- ing over a fire 'preparing breakfast while the Willow arranged her hair. Ilt raised .his head to •speak to her, and Sassy Baree. In that instant the spell was broken. Baree saw the man - beast as he rose th hit feet: Like a shot he was gone. Scarsely swifter was he 'thee Ne - A PRACTICAL STJIT-FOR THL GROWING BOY. The growing boy needs practical clothing. Ai outfit for general use is the' blouse waist and knickerbockers. Tho picture shows the,k-Aickers made from tweed and the waist from ma- dras, or •any washable meterial Suit- able for shirting. For the little boy a wash suit in two shades of reffi 00 dark linen knickers and light or NVhite waist is very suitable. The' blouse is tailored like father's: The collar' is close -fitting and mannish. The cafe, which are fastened with buttons and buttonholes, or buttonholes and cuff- links, are deep -and turned back. The waistline is adjusted by esing buttons and loops at the side seams. 'The knicker-Imelters, roomy and well - fitting, with front opening end with or without side pockets, and one large pocket on **right hip, completes this -outfit, No. 1087. Out in sizes 8 to 14 years; site 12 years requires 21/4 yards of 86 -inch material for the blouse and 11/4 yards of 82 -inch material for the knickerbockers. e• • • eyes shining at ,him to wonderfully were not filled With the desire to harm -and the voice that came to him softly was like a strange and thrill- ing music. "Bares!' 13areel Upi Baree!" Over and over 'again the Willow called, to him like that while on' her face she tried to draw herself a few inches farther under the rock. She eould not reach him. There was still a 1 oot between her hand and Baree, and she could not wedge herself in an inch more. And then she savr, where on the other gide of 'the- rock there was a hollow, Ihut' in by a stone. If she had removed the stone, and come in that way- -She 'drew herself 'out and stood once more in the 'sunshine. Her heart thrilled. Pierrot was busy over, his bear -and slie would not call him. She made an effort„...tb move the atone which closed In the hollow under the big' boulder, but it was wedged in tightly: Then she began digging with But Wakayoo kept straight ahead into the meadow. From where he lay Bare° could see 'what happened. Scarcely had he crawled under the rock when Nepeese and Pierrot appeared, through the break in the dip, End stopped. The fact that they stopped thrilled flames The.y were afraid of Wakayeet-"The pig bear was two-thirds t,f the Way across the meadow. The sun fell en him, so that his coat shone like black satin. Pierrot stared at him for a moment. Pierret did not kill for 'the love of killing. Necessity made him O consereationist. But, he saw that In spite of the lateness of the seasre, Wtikayoo's coat was splendid -and he raised his rifle. - Bareesaw this action. He saw, a moment' later, something "spit from the end of thelun, and then he heard thith deafening_ crash -that had come with his own hurt, when the Willow's bullet had burned through his flesh. Ile -turned his eyes swiftly to Wa- kayoo, The big bear had stumbled; he was on his knees; and then he struggled up and lumbered on. The roar of the rifle camd again, and a second time Wakayoo went down. Pierrorcould not "miss at that distance. Waltayoo made a splendid mark. It warelaughter; yet for Pier - rot arid Nepeese it was business -the business of life. " Barre was shivering. It wire mote from excitement that fear, for he had lost his own fear in the tragedy of these moments. A lbw whine rose in his throat as he looked at Wakayoe, who had risen again and faced his enemies -his jaws Vapirig, his head swinging slowly,. his legs welikebing under him ag the blood poured' through his torn lungs. Barre whined -be' cause Weltayoo had fished for him, because, he had come to look On -his as a friend, and bees:Use he .knew it was death that Wakayoo was facing now. There was i third shot --the Wakayoo sank downin hiS tracks. His 'big head .dropped between his forepaws. A racking cough or two mune to Bane: And then there was silence. CHAPTER VIII. reseisteitine 1Vrieley's freshens lite metals atul aweeleau the breath: Nerve% are soeilted, threat tel •refresliall and dischtiest aided.' Sootisy te carry thaliss! ' I ePeritinefgat • Things Schoolboys Say. The following bright answers to questions, were given at a recent seheol examination: - Q, What other minerals exist in England besides coal ,and iron? A. Lemonade and ginger -beer. (a. What did Wolfe do at Quebec? A. 'The wicked beast made war on LIttle Red. Riding Hoods , A problem IS a Azure which you do things With Which are absurd, and then prows them, Sit, Andrew is the patent saint of Scotland: the patent saint of England is Vnion Jack. • Q. What is "below PAy?" A: The eldest 8011. T110 00100811S of Rhodes wa.'s a gleat explorer; he discovered land in South Africa. pigktula -loan of Aye wag a French pheasant girl caned. Maid of Athens for her bravety and patriotism. After many years she WAS cremated. A fugue is 'what you get in a room full Of people when all the windows and doors are shut. An Irish buil is a male cow. ' Cereals are films shown; At the pic- tures. People in Iceland are called Equin- oxes. Queen Elizafieth 1V811 called theyir- gil Queen because she knew Lattn. _ Bvolution is. what Darwin did; Re- volution is a form of Government abroad, and Devolution is something to do with Satan. Five -minutesand Nepeese 'could move the stone. She tugged, at, it. Indik by inch she dragged it out until at last it lay, afher feet and the open- ing was ready for her body. ,She loolthd again ,tOward, Pierrot. He was still logy, and she laughed softly as she untied a'isig red -and -white Bay handkerchief from about her shoul- ders. With this She would sebure Baree. She dropped -on her hands and knees and then lowered herself fiat on' the ground mid began crawling into the hollow under the boulder. Baree had moved. With the back of hii head flattened againit the rock heheard something which Nepeesse,had hotTheard; he had felt ,a slow and growing pressure, and fromthhis pressure he had draggud himself slowly -- and the pressure still followed. The mres of rock was settling! Nepeese did not see or hearer understand. She was _calling to him, -mere and more pleadingly: "Bares-Bared-Baree--" Her head and shoulders and both an were under the rock now. The glow of her eyes was very close to Baree. Ile whined. The thrill os a great and impeding danger stirred in his blood. And then-- . (To be centinnsd.) "Depechez vous,mon pere!" she cried. "It is the 'dog -pup! Quick!" In the -floeting cloud of her hair she sped after Berea like the wiBd Pierrot followed, and -in going he ceught up his rifle. It was di$ficult for him to catch up with tho Willow. She was like a wild spirit; her little moccasined feet Scarcely touching the sand as she ran up' thelong bar. It was wondreful to see the lithe swift- ness of her, and that wonderful hair streaming out in. the sun. Even now, in this moment's excitement, it made Pierrot think of McTaggart, the Hud- son's Bay Goznpany'S factor over at Lac Bain, 'and what he had said yes- terday. Half the night Plemot had lain awake, gritting his teeth, at the thought of it; and this morning, be- fore Barre ran- upon them, he had looked at Nepeese more closely than ever before in his life She was beau- tiful, She was lovelier even than Wy- ola, her prireess mother, who 'was Tell.Tale Eyebrows. What a lot of difference there is in dead. -• Floating back to him there came an excited cry. "Hurry, Nootawel He has turned into the blind- canyon. Ile cannot escepe us how:" She was panting when he came .up to her. The French blood in her growed ts Vivid crimson in her cheeks and lips.. Her avhite teeth gleamed like milk. - "In there!" And she pointed. They went in. , Ahead of them Barer) was running for his life. -He sensed instinctively the fact that these' wonderiul two - legged beings he had Joked' upoik were all-powerful. . And they were after him! Ile could hear them. Nepeese was following. almost as syriftly., as he could run. Suddenly he turned into a cleft between two great rocks. Twenty feet in, his sway was barred and: he ran hack. When he darthd "out, straight upthe canyon, Nopeese was not a dozen yards behind him, and he saw Pierrot almost at ber side. The 'Willow gave a cry. "Mana--mana-there he is" She caught her breath, end darred into a copse of young- balsams where Baree bad disappeared. Like a great retangling Wbher loose hair inipeded her in the brush, and with an encour- aging cry to Pierrot she stopped to. gather it over her shoulder as he ran past her. She lost only a moment or two; and •W,eis after him. Fifty yards ahead -of her Piernot gave a ',yarning shout. Baree had turned. Almost in the same breath he was t6aring over his back -trail, directly toward the Wil- low. He did tot see her in time to stop or swerve aside, and Nepeese flung herself down in his p6th. For in instant or two they were together. Baree felt the smother of her hair, and the clutch of her hands.. Then he squirmed away and darted again to- ward the blind end of the.'canyon. Nepeese sprang to her feet. She was panting -and laughing, Pierrot earns back wildly, and the Willow pointed 7160 I him . the eyebrows ef. people! Some are bushy, otherti ahnost invisible. Some are straight. others 'curved.' From the variations, it la posible to judge A good deal of the owner's character, . -.keelson whose eyebrows are streng- ly marked, with -long hair et vigorous growth,"is usually priMtical. fined eyebrows denote a etrong char - As Nepeese gazed about the rock - walled end of the canyon, the prisen into which they had driven Waltayoo and 13aree, Pierrot looked up again from his skinning of the big black bear, and -he muttered something that no one but himself could have hoard. "Non, it is not possible," he had said O moment before; but to Nepeese it avag possible --the thought that was in her mind. It wag a wonderful thought. It thrilled her to the depth of her wild, beautiful seul. It sent a glow into her eyes and a deeper flush of excitement into her cheeks and lips. - As she quested the ragged edges of the fit -tie meadow for signs of the dog -pup,, her thoughts flashed back Swiftly. Two years ago they had bur- ied her princess lnothen under the tall spruce near their cabin, That day Pierrot's sun had set for all time, and her own life was filled with a vast loneliness. There had been three at the graveside. that afternoon as . the sun -Went down-Pierrot, herself, and a dog, a great, powerful husky with a white star on his breast, affd a white -- tipped ear. Ile had been her dead mother's pet from puppyheod-her bodyguard, with her always, even with his head resting' en the side of her bed as she died. And. that rkight, the night of the day they buried her, the deg had disappeared. 114 had gone as quietly and as con_kplethly as her spirit. No one evee'satv him after that. It was strange, and to Pierrot it V.S a Miracle. Deep in his heart he was, filled with .the wonderful Con- viction that the dog had gone with his beloved Wyola -Into heaven. But Nepeese had spent three -win- ters at the Missioner's school at Nel- son,House. She had learned a great deal about.white people and the -Teal God, and she knew that Pierrot's thought was impossible. She believed that her mother's 'husky We's either elead,or had joined the evolves, Prob- ably he had gone to the -wolves. , So - was it not possible that this youngster site and her father had pursued was of the flesh and blood of her mother's ,pet? It was more -than possible. Bares had net moved an inch, feom under his -rock. He lay'like a thing stunned, his eyes fixed steadily on the scene of the tragedy Ci4 in -the mea - An Educational Creed. Babindranath Tagore, the Indian philosopher, writes as follows of his School; "When,r started 11.1 was for- tUnate in having almost all the naughty boys from the nighborhood. never used any coercion or punish- ment, Meet of us think that in oder to punish boys who are wicked a re- straint of their freedom is naeessary. But restriction itself is the cause of nature's going wrong.' When Mind and life are given freedom they achieve health. I adopted the sys- tem of freedom -cure, it I can give ft the name. The boys were allowed to run about, to climb difficult trees and often to come to grief in. their falls. They would get drenched out in the rain; they would swirl in the pond. Through, natureai own method a, cure Caine to these boys who were consider. ed wholly bad, and when they returned home their parents 'Were surprised to find the immense Change effected." OnlyplL s rea emu°, 6 :"Many :women, I've. found, -choose theilr ia,undry EQap merely because it is exfra hard iii because ,the bar is big and bark-regardleSs Of the soap's' Quality:, - "As for myself, I always insist on Sunlight Soap, because learned many years ago that it is more economical, to use only pure laundry soap, and I believe that Sunlight is the only pure laundry bar soap' rnade in Canada.. Every bar of Sunlight carricj'a $5,000 GUarantce Of Purity. ' - 'And as every bit of Sunlight is •pure cleansing soap, it 'cleans quiekly with very little rubbing, and a little,of it goes a long way. Por washing clothes, dishes and general housework give Me Sunlight every time. Sunlight doesn't inakc the hands rough and red, either."' Lever Brothers Limited, Toronto, make Sunlight. 8§Emoung=zawoomamilmant Automobiles Banned in Swiss Canton. WHEN ES BEGIN TO ME One of the greatest puzzles to-sths average beginner in -radio is the fact that 'sooner or later he notices- that the signals received on his redio set are not so strong as they used to be and that he cannot bring them up to full strength unless he turns on Iris rheostat and makea the filament of his nibs burn more brightly than form- erly. . The trouble is usually net in the set at all but in the tube. If indicates that the tube is nearing its• end in its useful life sue is really slowly dying of old age. To undersand this, let us consider ivhat a tube does when It 10 perDorm- ing in a radio set. ' We know that the filament in the tote lights when we turn on the A battery. Now, it may be taken for granted that the lighting ot this fila- ment is not done for purposes of il- luminating the inside of the radio set. Inside of the -material of which the filament is made are milllons and, mil- lions of tiny invielble pretioles of elec- tricity known as electrons. When the filament is eold, these elettrons repose pereefully in the ma- terial of the filament, • The Moment the material compos - Mg the element is heater to a certain temperature, these electrons become very violently disturbed. They seelt to escape; they fly hither and thither ready to respond „to any attraction .which. tends to pull them away from the filament. ' It is easy to get a little picture of this If you will only think of ,the steam engine. The water in the.boiler Would The voters in. the SWISS canton of Orisons, which is very popular with tourists; of all nations, have decided to ,exclude- motor ears from the whole of that part of SwItzerland. The issue was largely between town and coun. try; the farmers were opposed to on our B batten" and what Mippens? The -B battery is always connected with its positive side toward the plate of the tube. We ,know that unlike charges - of elentricity attract each-, other, With the plate positive, these violently agitated' elec:trons, or nega- tive particles cif electricity, .ree im- mediately attracted to the plate and rush across the space inside the tube merge with a positive particle there. This stream of electrons ensiling the spaCe from illament to Plate gives us the signal in. the headphones. , Now a fileniesit can have in it only a cretain number of electrons, Onee all or the electrons, are gone from it, the filament may still light as it did in the beginning,. but this illuminate:a does no' more geed than t would to build a fire under an. empty boiler in a steam engine. ' The useful -life of the average fila - meat in a ---radio tube has been esti- mated at about 1000 hours. This means, 1000 hours of actual use. In that time, virtnally all -of the electrons ate boiled out of the filament and have gone over to the plate, sad there is no longer anythIng in the filament to act as a trigger aud give uti eignals. When the tube is new, the myriad electrons lodge on the surface of the filament, The heat in the file.ment im- mediately remit: the surface electrons into violent agitation and so the tube tune -dons very .efilciently. In time, however,' the supply of these electrons Is exhareted and the same amount of heat does not give off the saure num- ber st electrons. Then it Is necessary to raise the temperature of the file; meat so that the agitation of the eledsl automobiles because they wear out the lie there indefinitely and be portectly rons on the inside of the filament wires • roads and thus increase the burden of useless if nothing happened to disturb is made vevr much greater and they taxation -a poorsreasen, thr in spite it. But we build a fire iir.the boilers are driven out to the surface where , of the weaVand, tear on roads the, can- and raise the temperature. to a rertain they can be attracted by the B battery extent and then the water becomes violently agitated. The A 'battery which lights your fila- ment IS used simply as thelire under *the. boiler. The heat serves: tosdisrupt the material and release the negative electront3. • Now, with the electrons rushing viot, .lently here and there and striving to get. away from the filakent, we. turn ton as a whole gains in wealth from its tourists. In other ways Grisons wii benefit. sThere will be no ataiclents from careless eltriving, no idle odors et burnt gasoline, no raucout horns echoing harshly among the peacefu mountains. ' Lutine Bell. The Lloyd's offce in London has an interesting old bell ---the "Leine bell," as 10 11 rings only for mli- fortune. When the frigate Luthie went down off the Dutch coast in October, 1709, ,she had. on board bullion to -the value of miire, than a million pouree sterling, only 5111011 part of which was recovered. That -of course meant 1108. -VY lOSS to the undervvrlters, and when during th.e diving operations the hell of the lost -vessel was recovered it was apropriately placed in the Lloyd's office. To this clay the Lutine bell is rang whenever a alliff is Posted as lost. - eBaree Wanted -to approach. It, was like an invisible strihg tugging at his vory„heart. Itt was Kazan, and not Grey Wolf, calling , to him hack, through the centuries, a "call" ,that was as olcl. as the Egyptian pytann s acter-an individual with A good deal 9 had him -and he didn't 1110 1110 0(1(1 perhaps een thousand years older. of personality, lyehrows o1flat, silky Nclotawo!" But agahmt that desire., Gray WoU hair suggest ihat their Owne'r t lack- That t':ias the w_ondcr of it, She was pulling, from out the black ages ing in -force and puslifillnesS'. had bcen.reckiess-and Baree had not of the forests. The, wolf, held him lDyobrdWs th,oe fle,et in the centre, bittnr, 1.121! It was (hen, vvitii her quiet and motionless. Neneesc Was it the tFp of the nose, ere usually 0 sign or quick temper. 'A person with oushy eyebrows will, 1)0 amiable, Arched and finely -pencilled brows de- note an artistieor mieginative 00(113701" ament eyes shining. at Pierrot, and the smhe fsdire' from her l'.he that she spoke softly the word "Baiee,', which in her tongue meant "the S• little brother of the wolf. In and out amengThidhs. ecks Barce soup:int rayift,h7 for e way of escape.. looking about,. her, She was smiling, For a, moment, her face was turned 'toward him, and he saw the white Shine of ler -teeth, and her beautiful' oyes osomotl glowing s taig 1., at um. Aed ;then, suddenly, she dropped on hal' knees and peered under the rock. imarspain voltage on the plate. -Consequently, as the tube begins to lose ail of its , surface 01.84t1'0110, we have to turn art our rheostat and burn the filament very muoh brighter so as to.drive out seine of the interior electrons to the surface. 'When tine state of affairs Is reached Otto best thing to -do is buy another tube to replace the failing one. . ' Amethyst's Powers. Am.ethyst is tra.ditionally sepposed to have the virtue of warding off or rering drankennese The wred itself, which comes from the Greek, literally Means "not intoticating." 'Tlie ame- thyst aleiLhassbeen heldto have .the power to make men shrewd in busi- ness deals. Turned About. . Japanese women buy their dressea by Otto pound and their bread by the The Motor -Driven Tooth . Brush. - Tooth'eleanliness is one of the most important factors' in good health. At last has appeared what Wag inevitable - sooner or later -the Mechanical tooth- brush driven by a small motor. The inventor believes that the hand-, scrubbing given by •the average man, to his teeth Is entirely wrong In ,theory. '" a baditward, not up and down, to fit into the interstices the -teeth and cleanie them completely. lthr this reason. he devised a rotaxy apparatus with- two types of brash; one for the front and,one for the Meier teeth. The actual brushed are-tletach- able, so that not only can ali,ineinhers ' of the family uSe the same motor-, Power _for breithing their 'teeth, but also old briutheis can be replaced. The brush revolvre at fairly high speed on a flexible shaf t driven by al small electrio motor, • A Thought for A. thought for hint who, cannot see . A Mac bird or flower, Who` funght lo save the Motlierland-i The hero of at hour. Ide caimot sec a, binebird fly, Although he hear,s, it sing'. A blinded soldier cannot see A crocus in the spring, Every conciii7S1 over an impulse, ' Which might bring sorrow or shame 1'. to yourself, 01' trouble end sorrow to, -Ono 00 tim n? amphibian 11101103 laes is Eh Il 1. DW1iat Oho H.Savy W11 0U-(-11 NI 1 1 3, , ' 11,13L11e5, is one step toward the goal for the Arctic Right which. Donald 13. Mac:Mihail will 111101(0181 thls .shnuncT. : o C life self -clevelopment,,-Ella Wheel-'' . ... , • , Two machines 80111 be used for the expediiion. ' 0er 'Wilcox... ....