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The Seaforth News, 1924-01-31, Page 21 'he Econo , of GREEN TEA ele,t)8 is in the larger number of cups at gives per pound, — Delicious 8 -- Try it. About the Ho se 7 HER FATHER'S WORDS. to let any berries drop. If any bet - It was Martha's last night at home, ries fall she must pick themup and She had known of course that it wouldgive them to the next player before be hard to leave her father, even; the passing can go on, In this way though Aunt Ellen was coming to the berries must be passed down the keep house for him, but she had never . line and back again, The side getting realized just how it would be till the' all the berries back first wins. time came. It was queer how difficult A berry -stringing contest may wind it was to talk; both were oddly silent., up the fun. The one who strings the Then the clock struck ten, and Martha most berries in a given time is the turned to her father. 1 winner. "I—I didn't know that it was going! to be like this!" she cried. "I don't: CLEANING GASOLINE. feel a bit like a college girl, father.! Gasoline used in the dry cleaning I feel about five years old, and Lome- of garments at home is often thrown sick." I away because of the dirt contained. "I feel as ifthe world were coming This can be removed and the gasoline, to an end," her father replied. He again purified for future cleaning in By DOROTHY ETHEL WALSH. Grouping Rooms. The modern bride chooses the fur- niture for het• entire home es though for a simile unit.. She reallzee that. an appearance of greater space will be given to her, homeIf eachroom Is not made an isolated portion of It, Tying the color schemes of two rooms together le a simple- process. It consists or Introdurtng some of the sante colors Into both. These colors: may play an unimportant) part In one, but because they are;. present, in both the two rooms are. brought Into harmony. lamb room may needIndividual 'treatment, :.but Instead or planning each of their! color schemes, with nothought toi the other modern decoration treats, them its one unit. In to-dny'e.sketch the artisthas' shown you the hallway in a certain; apartment. Because the living rooms beyond is of northern exposure andt consequently Is decorated in warnl� colorsthehallway... repeats some of. its hues. But because the dining' room opens Into the living room arid has green as its basic Dolor the sante tone also nods its echo In thee. hail. Thus are all three rooms now In relation to each other The walls of the hall were made cream like those of the living room. The por- tieres are green as in the dining room, the light shade orange to similar to those used throughout the homes. was smiling, but Martha saw with a a very simple icemen, C-' pang that he looked old. "I wish II For each gallon of gasoline to be could say things, dear, the things that settled,' dissolve two ounces of tom your mother would have said. I don't mon washing powder in a half pint of know much about girls. Only I'm hot water. Stir this into the gaso-: pretty sure of one thing. You may line while still warm—be careful to' feel strange and lonely at first—a do this away from the fire, and pre-.. little country girl among so many ferably out -of- doors—and allow the who have had all sorts of things; yet mixture to stand undisturbed for sew the real things of life are always the eral hours. Then, carefully pour the BY J. B. HR same, no matter how th - TheHidden Merrington, and I kn,,w Mr, Herring-' ton was in the smoking -room sir." "Wel,, you'd better not misunder- stand me again or you'll have to look out ter °another•s tuatiorl. And please understand this, Mr, Herrington is an invalid, and he •is to 'see no one without my_permission."_.,,' "I quite understand, sir, and I ask you to be so good, as to overlook it this time," Ardington turned on bit heel and left. the footman standing in the hall. Detective -Sergeant Peters smiled in- wardly, but not a muscle of his, face betrayed' his thoughts. "Why is 111r„Ardington so angry?" he said to himself," and. why is Sir Alexander Bradney- eo 'anxious for Mr. ,Herrington' to paint' his wife's portrait?" Her had left the window open when I. he had' drawn the 'curtains, and had overheard most of the conversa tion between Bradley and Merrin But as. yet he did' not know the :a wers;to the questions he had as himself, Perhaps he would ni know. It was his duty to report his superior officers and leave the lotion of problems to others, he I • , P rt LL n F -,ey I or'a high-class man •to secure ex• cinsivo selling rights for the tamone. "Saler" coal eevipg,device, Tlioiis ands of "Savirs" now in use` in Canada.They are guaranteed tu• save 25 to 50per cent, of the coal used for either furnaces 01' ranges. This is a machine, not a worthless chemical. Tlselasive territory is now being aUcioeted to responsible men who can qualify ,Some capital, and ability to direct'a selling' force required, This is a genuine pro. position. for a high-class loan tor every town.' Act quickly, Write for full particulars to Victory Specialty Company, 53.Yonge St„ Toronto, Ont. Where Genius'Rests. gton.1 A good deal has been heard recently ked about "over -crowding" in Westminster Ile Abbey, but conditions there might be to much worse. For by no moans all of so- Britain's great men ai•e sleeping in "Dngland's Abbey." Milton, for example, le burled in the Church of St. Giles, and Shakespeare uth in the chufch at Stratford -on -Avon. the Thackeray lies at Kensal Green with that poor `Phomas Flood anti kie Coll• as ins; Fitzgerald lies 'ln ilia quiet little the churchyard at. Bulge, in Suffolk; and bud Gray, who wrote the immortal Elegy, at- lies in the country churchyard which Ilyj inspired it, Stoke Poges. ess' Goldsmith resits in the Temple; and nd Turner, Leighton, and many other er,' artists sleep their last sleep' under the ace dome of St. Paul's, Here, too, are "the nd nighty Nelson" and 'Wellington. These n-, two saviours of Britain met only ounce 111 life, but they lie together iu the ads,Cathedral. ah Bunyan and Defoe lie in the grave - CHAPTER XXI. Ruth Bradney was again at So Barton, It was not so much warmth of that' glorious spring had tempted her to leave London a desire to place herself' beyond 'reach of danger, or at airy rate yond the reach of Lacly Anne a Bob Garwick. It was indeed the 1 ter young gentleman who had find driven her to the peace and lonelin of South Barton, The Gaewieks a Lady Anne had been' asked to dinn and she felt that she could not f them.. She had pleaded illness a had fled, like a coward, into the cou try. On this Saturday morning it almost as- warm as summer. She h and she sat there in the, sunshil Without ; hat, or . even so much as wrap round her shoulders. Th was not a breath' of wind and the s was a calm as the cloudless sky, the left of her she could see the woo ed cliffs of Folkestone, and to h right the edge of the Romney Mar stretched out in avast curve to 15 B[1RLA ._ beaches of Dungeness. And it seemed to her that here ulled'a chair out on to the verai tie, yard of Dunhill Fields;_, and Wesley a lies across the road, where the traffic ere on the City Road rushes by with a ea' sound like the unresting Sea. To Scott, Iles at Melrose, and Keats and d- Shelley in the English cemetery' at er Rome. Coleridge rests at Highgate sh the along with George Eliot, and Con- e outward ear :gasoline into a second container, tak- cumstances differ. Courage and hon-: ing care not to disturb the water and CHAPTER XX.—(Cont'd) "Ruth Bradt ey," Ardington where she could find rest—where she Paint a portrait?" sated ft t "Dark hair could nose ern e esty and kindness are current ever -I Y !sediment at the bottom, and the re- " per raft? echoed Mer P after this quiet spot, was the only pia stable, the great landscape painter, at in Hampstead, where you will also find ce the grave of Du Meatier, the author of "Trilby." a pause where. In. the end, being sterling, covered gasoline will serve for clean- d n t think Oh, my dear Ardington, I and grey eyes —a very beautiful wo- get away from sgi t bl ing agate. y of her , u ren enough to they must win the things of biggest:dont tht k I " " pursuers—creations possibly value in life. I In order to revert the water and "Oh, Yes, you can, old chap. Any- ", you have seen her?" querled own imagination but 1 P y, you must try." p Y Herrington. strike terror into her heart, Fletcher, I']1 try to remember," Martha.or I I sediment from entering the second way, Y " » Lady Anne, "Bob" Garwicic—she saw Y But I have never d "That sounds like you,father! —1 said container it will be necessary to seers "NO, not a portrait Ardington—I les—once, u College was different from any , nice a ght I' d start o thi 1 thou — spoken to her." thein all as puppets, and her Machan thing that Martha had ever ex epi-, smallquantity of the gasoline, n something else— "I'll think it over," said Marring- as the man who pulled -the strings. P but the movement of the water, when a landscape. I really don't think I ton. "I don't want to talk about g But here, in the sunlight, they succi. In her high-school class there pouring, can easily be detected and when could I work-er I want to be alone any more just now." seemed to be very far away from her, had been nine girls; at college she was, no difficulty should be experienced in ton. I couldn'tJust at first, Aiding- "Well, Sir Alexander is coming Somehow or other, when she was out in a of four hundred. Certain do myself justice with through here again to -morrow on his of London, she was no longer afraid. itis class keeping the fluids separated. Sal soda a stranger looking at me all the time" way back to town and hes going to Her husband was coming down that g popular at once --athletic dissolved m the th Ardington Y, settling solution. Either solution side, and began to fill his pipe, g "Oh, yes, Ardington—there would lied ile of the week fora night and one of the unnoticed ones. should be thoroughly mixed with th "S' Alexander b h bust gait f th t d B W Dire washing owder as pulled forward a wicker call on me. Perhaps you would see girls, girls with beauty, money or a' same manner e gift for leadership. Martha was only; g P also makes a good chair, seated himself by Merrington's him." minute. He had come down in the" When the question of class dues res wn t e s exan or Bradney called bore a no arm to seeing Sir Alexander °' a sex ay, El gasoline to obtain best results, half an hour ago," 'he said You Bradney,° she was not afraid of her husband rose Claire Jocelyn �» win a mistake o the Barton and Arlington's new under -footman, Sir; here own fancies. Alexander B• d morning—he' might arrive at any a y proposed twenty rive dollars, and Claire had enthusias- tic followers. Martha began to calcu- late; could she afford to pay so much' as that? Then something caught her' attention—the dismayed eyes of al plainly dressed girl whose name shel did not know. For a moment Martha; fought hard; she so longed to bel among the girls who counted for something in the class. To have any- one think that she was queer and per- haps mean might spoil her chances. Yet that girl's eyes! Martha got suddenly to her feet, i "Madam Chairman," she said, "it! seems to me that the only fair way' is to have each girl write on a slip j of paper the, sum that she can afford! to pay. It isn't easy to say it out loud sometimes, but we could all writes it. From the amount on the slips we could strike an average. I make this as a motion." Martha's heart was beating bard as she sat down. Then to her astonish- ment her motion passed, and the dues were finally put at ten dollars. As they left the meeting half a dozen girls stopped to thank her, and suddenly Martha remembered her father's words. CRANBERRY GAMES. Cranberries are as good in games as in sauce. Be sure to use firm red berades for the following games. ¢263 "This darks I I "Never weep for me, dear; God le First a large.glass of cranberries an effort, I suppose. Is Sir Alex-, "Nothing, I suppose. I didn't like ever kind." is shown. Each child makes a guess ( t ander Bradney still here?"i it, that s all. I'm no judge of art. My Ah! but the 1 "No, he's gone down to South Bar- wife liked it very much indeed. I be- loneliness, now the lash as to how many berries are in the ton. He has a cottage there." hawed like an ignorant fool. Now I has fled. glass. The one who guesses nearest 4263. Figured percale was chosen "Shall I have to go to London— want you to paint another, Mr. Mer- Who'd be the withered leaf the to the right number becomes leader for this practical apron with rick back to my studio?" irington. I am willing to pay you five wind has left. behind? for the next game. rack braid for trimming. One could "No, no, old chap. Lady Bradney hundred guineas for it. 0' The children sit in a row with their have gingham or cambric, or sateen, will come here." • "Ardington said sour hundred." BETTER -LOOKING CURTAINS. hands laid together in an upright pee The style is also good for rubber- "Not from London surely—day "Did he? Well, I meant five hue- In hanging window curtains of net, sition on their laps, The leder, with finished fabrics and for crepe. after day?" dred.You see I ,aid you nothing for P "No,, T Y g muslin, scrim, Swiss or any light ma - are a cranberry between her hands which The Pattern is cut she'll motor over from South the last cue;" curtain over. rod are laid together just as down the 1e of slip- Medium. It materialrequires 1% yard of 32 from Here. s Fourahundred nguineas, the tobacco. filled his pipe and lit at the top of the window,.. turn up. other la ers p old chap, and the work will do you all "1f you don't like niy work," he even with sill and baste the hem with ping her hands between those of the Pattern mailed to any address on the good in the world." said, I wonder you—" ; fine thread so it will hang. perfectly. other children. Into one pair of hands receipt of lee in silver by the Wilson There was a long silence, and then "Please forget what I said," Brad- • even, Before washing pull out basting she slips the cranberry. When she Publishing Company, 73. West Ade- Ardington said, "I've sent for your nay interrupted. "I only told you thread, as the curtains will doubtless ' has finished she says, - "Cranberry,' !aide St., Toronto. Allow two weeks Paints, bruses, etc., and I've ordered because; I wished t,o be quite frank shrink When ready to hang turnthe The child who was farthest from the;wants you o paint another portrait stitched in, as curtains do not shrink right count in the guessing game must) PATTERN POCKETS, ecreennow that I've finished the rood of her, and that is enough for mel' after the first washing, if pro guess. who has the berry, perky Y The: most convenient.. place to keep "Lady Bradney?" said Herrington I thou ht, did not reply. Isere, he done ..• Fax another jolly game line the patterns is in pockets made for the slowly. "Lady Bradney? What is .• g ,, man who has:quarrelled__—,,e.._______.- children up in two rotes having equal; purpose and hung on the closet door. her Christian name?" Kith his wife about the first portrait, Beware of being conquered by love numbers in each. Give the first child of the sewing room. Use a piece of "Ruth, I believe." Land he wants to make it up with her. of comfort. in each row a handful of cranberries, cretonne or an desired Again Herrington was silent. Flo' "I ask you to do this as a favor, a signal each material I, was Tying to romem er the name b A MODEL EASY TO DEVELOP AND ECONOMICAL OF MATERIAL know the mat I mean, don't you. 0g toal n part of when he was at South B t while hethere she tau fi d at "Yes, the K,C." to ney tvas sh g e Ardington was silent for a few, straight into the smoking-roomn, And when, later on in the morning moments while he lit his pipe, Itjwhere Merrington was alone. mer- she heard the sound of his car she seemed as though he were waiting far ; rington, seated in a chair by the fire, was still not afraid. He came out on some o darkness of oflight Merrington's conto the • rose to. his feet as he saw a stranger to the veranda and kissed her and g memory. ' advance through the doorway. He said something about the weather and of• g sturdy figure with th "You know him," said Ardington' had been half asleep, and at the first the jolly week -end they'd have. ter tt ruse. sight of that stn • And then, after a few minutes of Do I. Not personally." e this sort of talk, he said, very abrupt - "Well, anyway, you know his wife, it was. Then thea footman "Sir ly, "Merrington is much better. He Lady Bradney. You painted her por-1 Alexander Bradney, sir," and Mer- would like to paint another portrait trait just before your accident. Si,' rington stiffened bowed slightly and of you, if you'd sit for him. At exert er did not like it, He—I1 said, "Oh yes, Ardington told me. It think I ought to tell you this, Mer-' is most kind of you, Sir Alexander. rington—he called to see .you 'the Sit down, won't you?" night you left London to come down I The footman touched two switches, here. He wanted to ask you if you'd . and the firelight gave place to the paint Lady Bradney • again, and bright glow of electric lamps. Then though he wouldn't pay you fax the, he drew the blinds and the curtains, picture he didn't like, he was willing and made up the fire. He moved slow - 1 to pay you double for the next por-;ly, as though he were an old man. Sir trait, which amounts to the same! Alexander said something about the thing, doesn't it?" "Yes, T suppose (weather, and-Merrington answered ppose it does," said Mer- him. Then Sir Alexander said some- rington dreamily; "but really I don't: thing about the state of the roads, feel as if I could manage a portrait, and Merrington offered him a cigar. just now, Ardington." I It was not until the footman had left "Hadn't you better try, old chap?, the room that Sir Alexander asked after Merrington's health, "Oh, I'm quite well," Merrington replied. Your friend has told !you, of course, about the first picture.' "Yes— I know, you didn't like it" rt "I did not. I behaved abominably No its not that—not altogether ` about that, I'm afraid. I lost my that, Merrington," I temper and—well, I destroyed the John Merrington pressed his hands' Portrait." to his face. "It's horrible," he said.1 Merrington. smiled. "What was darkness— — oughtto make. wrong with it, Sir Alexander?" must snake a start some time, and the sooner the better, so Trehorn says."' "Ah, he thinks I might—might re- member if I painted this Lady Brad- nev." (To Be Continued,) Tears in the House. Tears in the. house and a lake upon the lawn, Peter in a paddy and Pattie in a pet; Barging and bickering ever since the dawn; Who'd have a boy or girl when holi- days are wet? Tears in the house and a hubbub in the hall, Heart -ache and merriment making life a jest!-.- Bride in a whirlwind, kissing one an all; Who'd halve a little girl to lose her at"her beat? Tears in the house, be there Heaven overhead! , v h in one size—B rtIt' ] b M tenial slip each t the Registering --- Registering Envy, Mrs'. Iinagg--"I've had to put up with poverty and drudgery ever since we were married. And, to think, l jilted young Multirox fax you." Hubby—"Yes, some men have all the luck, money 'n'everything else." Mlnard'a Liniment. Henle Cuts. THE ,COSTLIEST FRUIT IN THE WOKLD In the greenhowses of the United''. States Department of Agriculture at Washington, which house quaint and -curious plants from every quarter of the globe, several yaung trees are growing Which are unigtue of their kind,' says an American writer, ' They are closely allied to the oranges, leu - ons and citrons, but bear, a fruit en tirely distinot, sometimes called the cedi'at, Paradise apple, or Adam's at - rile, and known to orthodox tlebrews throughout the world as the ethrog, yn or sacred Jewish citron, This fruit has played an important role in Jewish religious ceremonies ever since the de. liveranee of'the Israelites from the land of Egypt,;and. is' one of the'.cost- liest and most interesting, yet one of the -least-known fruits in the world. Ainericans in general have ave never heard of it, although thousands are used in this country every year. Thousands of esrogim are imported into this country each year from Pales- tine and the Greek islands in the Mediterranean for use in the Feast of the . Tabernacles, or Booths, which is celebrated for one week each fall by all' Jews who adhere to the' customs and traditions of the ancient and or. thoclox religion. Perfect specimens of esrogim ordinarily. sell for from three to five dollars apiece, the price run - Mug much higher ' when good finite are scarce or hard to get. Twenty-five dollars for a single fruit is not un. usual, An Historical 'Fruit. According to the passage in Liviti• cus XXIII., 33 to: 44, the Lord directed Israel to observe the. Feast of the Israel to obsedve the Feast of the Tabernacles, beginning OS- the fif- teenth day of the seventh month of the Jewish calendar, 'when all' Israel. ites should dwell in booths or tents,.. as their forefathers did on their de• liveranee front Egypt, and when they should take the fruits of goodly trees, interpreted by.the ancient Hebrew doctors of the law to mean esroginh, branches of palm trees, boughs. of thick trees—myrtle—and- willows of the brook, and rejoice before the Lord for seven days. This ancient ceremony has' come down to the ;present day practically unchanged, although its symbolism has been somewhat obscured and few . people, even among the Jews them- selves, realize the romance of this per- sistance of ancient rites. The citron—ethrog—is the common' species for the orange tribe in Pales- tine and was probably the first intro- duced, It is a native of Media, and must not be confused with the citron which we know in this country and from which candled citron peel and similar confections are made. The fruit Is larger than a lemon, which It closely resembles, and smaller' than the citron of commerce, is of an ob- long shape, pale yellow In color and very aromatic. One is . sufficient to perfume an entire room. The rind is think and hard, the pulp bitter and very seedy, The scanty sweet-sour aloe is rich In pectin and makes a fine jelly. The chief distinguishing haracteristic of this unusual fruit, ewever, Is a protuberance on the blossom end, having the appearance of a pestle seated in a mortar, and known as the pitam or pltma, It is the stamen of the blossom preserved intact on the fruit, and without this pitma the fruit is of little or no relig• !cus value, Ancient Laws 81111 Binding. The tree is about the size of a ton- gerine orange tree, and is distinguish- ed by its dark leaves, ivhich are larger than orange leaves, and by the odor- ous oils which it contains. It matures fruit after two years. The blossoms are a pale purple, the flowering season lasting over several months. The doctors of the Jewish law made numerous regulations concerning the proper cultivation and selection of es- rogfin, which are ginding down'to the present day. Stolen fruit is forbidden for religious use, or fruit from a &eQye- whose owners are idolatere or troika town which has been enticed to idWatr'y. No fruits can be used from a' roe that has been: grafted on tither ro etoek, thereby changing' the species frena, the one mentioned in the Talmud. Hadi tree must be a seed ling, Birds living in a state of nature produce more cocks than hens, except the linnets, which favor foods such ° as mustard and crosses, which aro h rich in nitrogenous properties. To be shocked at vies is a great pro- tection to virtue.—Dean Inge. HUMOROUS p L J►; y REFINED "THE YOUNG COUNTRY BCHOOLMA'AM," and a others. Far all Information apply: Clara Rothwell Anderson, 255 Maoltay Bt., Ottawa. Thousand Cob Uses. For soups, sauces, graolggs, savoury dishes, meat jellies,' bee"lsta,tea, and restoring the flavor toleft over 'shes. cranberry, who has the cranberry?" for receipt of pattern. a canvas, You can have my studio, with you, Mr. Merrington. My wife hem as before, but this time it can be I'm going to take a bit of a holiday, t y ma ora a t b 7 ut Bradney continued.• At givenig 1 child . passes little narrower than the door and long • it conveyed nothing to him. ' Marrin ton gave in. Y g n. The black g nIt had serif her cranberries: to the next in line, enough.to hold"about four rows of wall which enclosed that part of his..denly been borne in upon him that if using only one hand and trying not; pockets, Make. the. pockets wide' life was too high and strong. He• could' he refused this commission he might Army Goods Store and Staple Goods, 85 Queers St. East, Toronto_ Send for Price Lest, Post Free. Now Ready. Y 18GUS No. 6-'24, enough so that when held a'little full they will be about nix inches wide; they can be four or six inches long. They may be bound all around and then'stitched on, or just bound at the top. Patterns for garments for each member of the family may be placed in separate pockets, or patterns of the same kind may be put together. The lower pockets are also very conven-! lent for bits of lace, trimmings, thread and embroidery cotton, elinard' e Linimens for Dandruff,. and uff, neither look over it nor bleak it down. no get another for several months. • And there was nothing like a commis, sloe to make an 11111 Work. And work he must, hard and steadily, if ho were IRSE,,,3 to be saved from his .own thoughts. eel-?`d.� » g saidgratefully,"and ill do it he it's most awfully kind of you, Sir Attu It a nth Beneeuo ani Alexander, -I only hope that -that err u v ars' course or Trah1 the portrait will be worth the money. n, nn<i dosrinul of ba "I thought I told you to show Sir Alexander Bradney into the drawing - room when he arrived," said Arding- ton to the under footman, "I'm sorry, sir," the man' replied, "I must have misunderstood your or- ders. Sir Alexander asked fax Mr. the Toronto hospital for incur• t hies, in nldllutln r ed 0ep1tels New - York Clty risers a 1••ea e Ing to. 1100 worsen,' having the. re. rulred epi nil coming oro ,. Tele liospltal- has nRonled P U, t•hour system,' 'tits pupils ror,i1P uau fm me 01 the School, 0 meal T 0,'« un 1 tra vetting xpen u rid Id '+nl :dery i'Ork, ,Per Ur'•:e a '.0„non tirtll1' In ` th1 FartHH n, WOMEN! DYE FADED THINGS .NEW AGAIN Dye or Tint Any Word, Shah. by Garment or Drapery. Diamond Dyes Each 15 -cent package of "Diamond Dyes” contains directions so simple that any woman can dye or tint any old, worn, faded thing new, even if she has never dyed before. Choose• any color at chug store. In enc .14, 10.60 and 100 Pre0 vents chapped hands, crackedlips, chilblains. Makes your sklnsoft,white, clear and smooth. an itituGGISTs SELL ar • Pumping for Fish. Since the Stone Age, the accepted method of catching a fisheetas been to inveigle it on a hook. Catching fish in a net is also a method of cotiii.der- able antiquity, It kis been left to the Americans to' evolve the latest method of 'catching fish—that of sucking them up with a pu! Amptube running fore and aft of -the fishing vessel empties into a tank, and eight -inch motor -driven centrifugal. imp at the forward end sucks in out fourteen tons of fish and water a. minute. This gods into the tank, which .oatoh- es the fish and allows the water to run off. The method Is simple and extra- ordinarily efficient, for If the boat passes through a shoal, more than two tons of fish ,a minute may caught, Gasoline represent 45 per cent. of the value of all petroleum produced, Babies eighteen inches longa willgrow upto t birth g be adults of medium height; while one twenty-two inches long will be taller than, the average when it is eighteen years: of age. scas0 r cru. M.e x .tc ..r kr,19. „4ta4Lmw ab TWO !AVER WASH e.0,.;1.ROs OFINDIIRAUU flBREWARE cut' . 64�'�a7°t7t` f e 0/MALE8Y0ROCERS ANDRAROWRR£ MERCHANTS , r o`a.e