HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1929-10-17, Page 2Tilts ,, Ian ti
1$ 1114+ itari
st1Io abi
reef* tea
'Fresh frons the gardens, sea
was the same personality, that the so-
oalled 'ehaege' did not change that,
and that what we are today is the
living product of a progress ot grad.
nal shaping, which stretches back nu -
broken to our earliest years.
"And it is because of this continttitY
of pereonallty that we realize that it
is impossible to place one's finger
on
end-
ed particular date, and say, '
my education,' Whether we are
conscious of it or not, our education
Is always going on. We are making
ourselves the whole time, and it
makes little difference that, in such
and such a year, we left an official
educational institution and entered
upon the larger School of Life,
"One of the most remarltable things
in lite is the enormous force of habit;
and almost equally remarkable is the
degree to which—if we have strength
and persistence enough—a habit can
be cultivated. A man can go far to
Middle Age Gives
.
AdviceV1CC t0 Youth
'A Searching Address by Sir
Frederick Sykes Delivered
Chancellor to the Stud-
ents of Bombay
University
"The Governor of BombaY gave
same valuable advice to the new
grantees of the Bombay UniversitY
in his first convocation Address es
Chancellor of the University.
"'When you go forth from this Uni-
versity,' he said, `to face the impar-
tial test sit the world, think and go on
thinking of yourselves as perpetuallY
on probation, Education is a matter
between a man and himself. The out-
ward trappings of education, its insti-
fle
C
SL
kE T BUTTON
'nice MAttetiAtX
rea
0.1USSRA'tEa ey
I,E(tiN Htiteel TODA'Y'.
Ned- cornet, i,enore tOardenworilt anti
Bess (Winne take refuge togeteer 00 an
Island when they are ehtpwreoaed,• Le-
nore is engaged to be married to Nese
They and the Isla"d inbaiilted ey a man
naDou sQo (s takes Ned and Indian
wife.
prisoners and mattes Bees and Ned slave
for him. Lenore is allowed to 1001 the
squaw with the ,useworlt, but Bess.
and Ned are driven by their master until
they tali unconscious.
The priso.lars are allowed to build a
cabin and, after it is nnlnlied. Bess an
Ned are sent on different treamtng
routes
They have sawernl narrow eecapes "•nom
death. Together they clan how to escape
from the island. When t'ioomsdorf be-
comes Infatuated with Bess and mattes
advances to her Ned interferon,
lutes and its carriula, are all relative- make atter his of own
to . Itida a what
t as
Iy obstructions, and the only thing
which counts is what the individual I he wants to dis just where sticking toe it. of
student has been able to make of him -j "And this1a
self and of the opportunities at hie `sees fty 00hisixty, looking
1 okinand gl Basi ank i 0e .body
on life,
disposal"l'—Times of India. else's mistake. IIe says to himself:
Wisdom of Middle Age `If 1 had only practised this or that
"Middle age brings with it a certain quality or activity, deliberately, for a
belated kind of wisdom, for which it short time every day, what a vast 011 -
can claim no kind of credit. It is a Terence it would have made!' _;For, in
;wisdom, such as it is, wbieh comes by a span of twenty or thirty years, those
the t,imple passage of years. Por it short periods mount up and you will
is then that, in most cases, a man realize liow much it is possible to do,
ceases to look exclusively forward, if you only take hold of time and turn
and begins to look backward as well, it to your own purposes, instead of
And looking back, he can see (not in-
frequently, with bitter regret) what
he might have done, but has not,
"He can see in what directions he
might have employed his time and his
energies better. And he can see
'(though possibly this is an illusion
born of vanity) what he would do now
if he had those past years to live over
again. And although 1 hold strongly
that the least justifiable of all things
Is for ago to impose its own sobrieties
an youth though I feel that as a
man grows older, he loses, in many
ways, far more than he gains—yet I
also feel that the elders will not be
wholly fulfilling their duty unless they
Pass on occasionally some ot the
things that have struck them in that
retrospective vision.
"The backward -looking vision — to
the man or fifty, let me say, glancing
back at what he was in his twenties—
peso dividing lines between one
period and another tend to fade away.
fro the young man just emerging
from College, his entrance upon what
eve call 'the world,' seems to mark a
definite crisis. The first chapter of
his life has been closed; another is
opening before him. The transition
is, in his view, epoch-making and mo-
mentous.
"But as we grow older life is seen
through Viewed the
num.
asa
contl
iso -
disap-
pear.
p
e landmarks
then
of
miet years
pear. We realize—and the younger
among you will also realize, when a
few more years have passed—that
what seemed 9D definite a break was
really no break at all. We see that
on either side of that apparent gulf
CHAPTER XXVII,—(Cont'd.)
open.
he said in his steep, rumbling voice, } tutu
"There was no need of even' coming, It was merely a tin of fine snuff from
here, Yot, seem to be forgetting, you among Doomsdorf's personal supplies.
sI
"T kill myself? Not yet, but l
long way,' The girl's hand sl1ppef
cautiously out'(.0n1 the pocket of her
jacket, showing him what Seemed to
be a small, square box of tin. But the
light was too dim for him to melte
out the words on the paper label,
got this from the shelf—just es eve
the instant Dooresdorf appeared, Ilie
muscles burned under his skin,
It wee only elbeub . 0 Yards io the
cabin. If DPotnsdoef gain at all, it
would be in the space of a few sec-
onds.
The door of the cabin closed behind
hex, and Lenore was alone with. the.
night,
Could she take the fighting chance?
Could she rico above this awful first
fear, master'.it, scorn it, go her brave
way in the face of it?
I.ut before ever siie found her an-
swer, she found 'terself a, tite cabin
door. Listless, terrified almost to the
verge el collapse, she turned the knob
and opened the door. Doomstiord had
not yet gone to Ws blankets; other-
wise the great bolt of• iron would be
in place. He was still sitting before
the great, glowing, stove, dreaming
his: savage dreams. The girl halted
before him, leaning against a their,•
At first her tongue could hardly
shape the words, Her throat filled,
her heart faltered in her breast.
"Bess—asked to see you," she told
hint at last. "She says for you to..
come -to her cabin."
(To be continued.)
left the cabin"
The hopeful tones in her voice eel
the happiest sound Ned -had
since he had come to the island.
"What is it?" he whispered. by a
"To kill myself?Not 5d
et ante for freedom. Come into the
cabin where we •carr scratch a match."
They moved into the newer. hutof
"There's no need of going farthee," logs and
article in which. lay her h and there Bess showed hr.
two, ehere you are—all the thing
told you at first."
He paused, and his voice had drop-
ped, and the tone was avenge and
even, dreadful to hear, when he spoke
again. "I've evidently been too easy
with you," he went nn, "I'll see that
1 correct that fault in the future. You,
Ned, made a serious mistake when yeti
interfered in this matter tonight. I'll
see if I can't teach you to keep your
place. And, Bess long ago I told you
that your body and soul were mine—
to do with what I liked. Bou seemed
to have forgotten—but I intend that
you will call it to mind again."
But Ned still faced him when he
paused, eyes steadfast, his face an
iron grey in the wan light. Hig.train
ing had been hard and true, and he
still found strength to stand erect.
"I want to tell yuu this—in reply,"
he ansa erect in the clear, firm voice
of one who has mastered fear. "We
know well enough what yuu can do
to us. But that doesn't mean that
we're going to yield to you—to every
one of your evil wishes. .Life isn't so
tleasant to either of us that we'll sub-
letting it slip by you unused.
"I know that this is hard advice, mit to everything, in order to live,
When a man is young, and looking !matter what you do to me—Icar 1w
forward, he does not see how vale- what I'll do to yor if you try
to able are the minutes and hours. It out your wicked designs by face."
he
later, when he looks back, he Doomsdorf eyed hire eaimly, gone
is only • contempt was ttho e g
sees how much he has thrown away. ,smile of P
"There comes a time when the kind i from his lips. "You'll show fight?"
of qualities, which (let me say) en- he asked.
able a man to pass examinations sue- "With every ounce I've got! You
cessfully, cease to be of prime value.' may master me—with every advans
ectal strength
They are sup rset vhed nY `Yea meet and
tabut yyou''11 ha ge of Sand play
e to kill me first, Bess
qualities which,
k with a man, and particularly will kill Y uersewontbbe she'll
off1you'll
CHAPTER XXVIII.
Talking in an undertone, not to be
heard through the log walls, Bess and
Ned made their Hasty plans for de
liverence.
Here, in the cabjll they occupied,
the assault must be made. The Tee -
sen was simply that their plan was
defeated et the outset. if they attempt-
ede to master Doomsdorf in the
squaw's presence,
The plan, on perfection, was really
very simple. As soon as Lenore came,
she would be sent back to the'cabin.to
bring Doomsdorf. She would need no
further excuse than that •Boss had
asked to see hint: Ned's knowledge
whledie of
the brutes psychology
hat.
Ned would be waiting in the newer
cabin when Lenore and Doomsdorf re-
turned. He Mould immediately excuse
himself and pass out the door, eft the
same instant that Bess extended a
chair for Doomsdorf.. And the in -
Aborigines' Welfare
Studied in Australia
when we have to deal with him over
work, matte us feel that here is a per-
son whose judgment is to be rospect-
ed,
"Chief among those qualities is dis- "When I want anything,
interestedness of outlook; but almost casually. payto all
as essential, perhaps equally essential, NI'ed, 1 tenni, pad ad enough d r. a remark -
for
all
i that a man should do his thinking "Don't presume ark -
is t
for himself• He should be capable of ably even tone.
t
forming Itis own conclusion on the I value your lives
i on song c that BI'll?
If llI turn one step
himse i
Be-
y
simply have no one to do your trap-
ping roe you. It isn't worth it, Dooms-
dorf."
He eyed them a moment, coolly end
•
it
basis of arguments which he
has thought out and approved. He
should be an originator, not an echo.
Nothing is more unsatisfactory to
deal with than a mind exclusively
furnished with second-hand materials.
And perhaps I may add, nothing is
more uninteresting.
Meaning of Success
"When we speak of success, what
do we mean? � We mean, in
a very
manages
large measure, bow- a man g
to impress himself upon others. Suc-
cess is a thing that can very seldom
be wrested from an unwilling world.
"As a rule, success has, to a great
extent, to be conceded. The world
lets this or that man go ahead, be-
cause (quite simply) it trusts him and
admires his qualities; and the world,
in tbose instinctive judgments, is us-
ually exacting and nearly always hon-
est, It may be deceived for a time;
it is seldom permanently deceived;
d when once it has found out ha
sides, Ned—you won't be hese!
Ned's eyes widened, as he tried to
read his meaning. Doomsdorf laugh-
ed softly in the silence. "You won't
be here!" he repeated. "Yee fool—
do you think I'd let you get in my
way? It will rest as it is tonight.
Tomorrow morning you start out to
tend your traps—and you will tend
Bess' lines as well as your own. She
will stay here—with me—front now
on.
Ned felt his.•n•zscles hardening to
steel. "I won't leave her to you—"
"You won't? Don't make c"r,y mis-
take on that point. If you are not
on your way by sun -up, you get a
hundred front the knout. You won't
be able to leave foe some time after
that—but neither will you be able to
interfer0 with what doesn't concern
you. I'll give you a few in the dawn—
just as a sample to show what they're
like. Nor am I afraid of Bess killing
herself. It's cold and dells here,•b
Canberra, Austral10-4.comprehen-
sive Policy for the protection and
welfare of the Australian aborigines
has been laid down by the home Af-
fairs Department or tite Com11Wlb
wealth Government. Great care 1s
being taken and much expense in-
volved in an endeavor to .provide for
this race, The totanumber
of aborigines in Australia is now
ber of aborigine sin Australia is now
about 21,000, and they inhabit the
vast empty spaces of North and Cen-
tral Australia, where the. white popu-
lation is Any about 400..
Nearly all of then are under super-
vision in some form or other, 'Many
work on cattle stations, others, are
cared Tor by the missions, and a nam-
ber of them are -under direct charge of
government officials appointed for the
purpose, There are alt gother about
40 official protectors of aborigines
with full authority -to -relieve distress
by the Issue of rations and clothing,
and all the missions receive govern-
ment subsidies to std them in their
work. - The stat#rn ownere also do
valuable work by providing accom-
modation anti rations for the wives,
families and relatives of the blacks
employer, on their properties. Por
instanceto employ 20 black boys on
a cattle station generally involves the
station owner in keeping of a colony
of about 100, consisting of the fami-
lies and relatives o1 those employed.
The task of attending to the wel-
fare of the blacks is a very difficult
one, largely owing to the childlike
minds of these primitive people. They
do not appreciate what is being Clone
for then and frequently will it it
make use of the facilities provided for
their comfort, and more often than
not they prefer 'to live according to
their native habits.
FOR ALL
your balldntuse
AG1C
AIN&
POWDER
Ned moved toward her, reaching
for her hands.
stant that he was seated Bess would
clash a handful of the blinding snub
into his eyes.
Ned's axe leaned just without the
cabin door. Doomsdorf would notice
it as he went in; otherwise his sus-
picions might be aroused. And in his
first instant of agony and blindness,
Ned would seize the weapon, dash
back through the door, and make the
assault.
They had scarcely perfected the
plan before Lenore appeared, on the
instant t she
va to
her cat.
Just
an
is
y
• dan
head
a
el
halted, her face and g
glory in the soft light, as she regard-
ed their glittering eyes.
Ned moved toward her, reaching for
her hands. Tor a breath he gazed into
her lovely face. "Bess wants you to
go—and tell Dooms dorf—to come
here," he told her, His voice was
wholly steady, every word clearly
enunciated; if anything, he spoke
ut somewhat more softly and evenly than
ll usual. "Just tell hit" that she wants
to see hint."
She tools her eyes from his, glanc-
ing about with unmistakable appre-
hension.
Her searching eyes suddenly turned
in fascinated horror to Bess. Stand-
ing near the open door, so that the
root" might not be filled with the dust
of the snuff and thus convey r warn-
ing to Doomsdorf, she was emptying
the contents of the snuff-box into her
handkerchief. Her eyes gleamed
under her brows, and her hands were
wholly steady. Lenore shivered a lit-
tle, her hands pressing Ned's.
"What does it mean—?"
"Liberty! That's what it means, if
the plan goes through." For the first
time Ned's Yaiee revealed suppressed
emotion. "Liberty!" He' spoke the
ward as a devout man speaks of God.
"It's the only ehapee-now or never,"
he went on with perfect coldness.
"You've got to' hold up and do your
sue -
High
If
we a
share—1 know you can.
IIEN a cold or exposure
brings aches and pains that
(penetrate to your very bones, there
i 6s always quick relief in tl.spir1111
tit T.111b : °. Aga . of that
just
a n.
' e t
u little l
"�iea<ac_g or y p
effective in the more serious
,pr sufteeing (Folli neuralgia, neuritis&
u'hcumatism or lumbago. No ache
r¢r pa?n is over too deep -polled for
' Aspirin Cabloti £o Teliel e, and th0y
iaoii t affect the heart. All druggists,
'Width proven directions for various
fuses which many people have found
pnveluabfe in the relief of pains and
aches of many kinds
SPIRIT
an w e,
mistake, It is always unsparing. it's colder and darker—there.
"Life is one long examination in ! stand a lot befoi a she'll do that"
which success is within the reach of "That's definite?" Ned asked.
each individual according to the "The truest words I ever spoke. I've
quality of the effort which he makes, never gone back on a promise yet"
It is not mapper, out with clear roads; "And believe me, I won't go back
its safe passage needs individual Cour- on mine. If that's all you have to
age, confluence and steadfastness in say—"
pursuit o (the goal aimed at. "That's quite all. Think it over—
"Sometimes it may seem that the you'll find it isn't so bad. And-note--
modern
nd-nowmodern world, in the elaborate or- good night"
gauization with whip it surrounds the He bowed to them in mock polite -
life of each individual, tends to force Hess. Then he turned back into his
tall into a common mould, but this is cabin.
only a partial view of its meaning, In For a moment his two prisoners
the ever-changing problems which it stood inert, utterly motionless in the
presents, in the manifold demands wan light. Ned started 0 turns
which it maker on the character, ter, still
l butd by at the as sst glance k
there is still the widest scope for am- her white, set face, he whirled in the
f
bitten, for originality, and herein lies
the
whole interest and fascination of inin no way the stricken, terrified breathless amazement, 1tcoun
the adventure which you are about to tenance that he had seen r few mo -
undertake; _ anents befere. The lips were firm, the
lwaFor _Good eyes deep and strange; even in the
half-li ht he could see her look of in -1 we've got every chance—
t
50
Mwu 'Mei-. - teed—and
be
it
eves.*•«-•+� _
od
o d,. an
011ieis island
for go th
oc�rs,c� .
•k f o •om
Work ur it's e fu
e c
1gwry'-i-3..
• }r axorabi r' p t freedom es P
Work f ter some hope, fie it ever so
lowly;
Work! for i
High Grade Rice
Sydney, N.S.W.—Tile final report
of the rice harvest for this year from
the bIurrumbidgee irrigation area in
this State shows that 23,000 tons of
first grade grain was brought into
store. There is a Rice Marketing
Board, and title body rejected all rice
below the milling standard, leaving
.M Autumn Recipes
WWI 000lei' clays, hearty 0101100
which have been Outman" dgring Wei
hot weather come agalit into favor,
Stuffed, baked potatoee are OWNS- ,
popular and the vai'latien in season•
ing, given helms, Should matte them
evengreater favorites.
Tomato Stuffed potatoes
Balce slit good-eiaed potatoes and
50001 cont theoe tcontents, Mash thioff one end ce s add
cue 011,1
ecoof
Ane chapped. onion, enc-half.'•cup
canned tomatoes, three-fourths tea'
spoon muittU d, one•fourtii teaspoon
Celery salt and salt and pepper to
ta',9te. Mix well and refill the potato
5110110. Return them to the oven to
heat .thoroug4tly
Pork Rol1 .
Cut ono Whole pork tenderloin
lengthwise and sprinkle with salt and
pepper. -Make a potato dressing, with-
out sage, add spread this over the
meat, Roil as you, would a jelly cake,
tie with a string and put into a bale
ing pan. Add a little boiling water
awl lialre, wasting frequently, until the
meat is tender. A strip or two el
bacon may be laid over the meat Ilei.
fore putting it in the wren, .Remove.
the meat been the oven, slice it as a
jelly roll and arrange the slices on a
hot platter. Make a gravy of the
liquid in the pan and add to it a table-
spoon of tomato catsup with salt and
pepper to taste,
Veal Heart Loaf
Boll a veal heart until tender and _
Put it through a meat chopper'. Add
half as inch bread crumbs as there
is of the, heart and season liberally
with salt, pepper, sage end red pep
per with a dash ofnutmeg if you litre
that condiment. Moisten with the
liquor In which the heart was cooked
and put the mixture into a square pan
which has beet& well buttered. Dust
the op of the loaf with Creat rumba,
dot with butter and bake tor thirty
minutes in .a moderate oven. Serve
]tot or cold, out in thin slices,
Cheese Fingers
These are excellent to serve with
tate salad course. Blend one-fourth
pound soft American cheese with one
tablespoon tomato catsup, add one
tablespoon butter, a dash of cayenne
and a little salt. Spread over very
thin slices of bread, cut each slice 10
strips one inch wide and toast quick-
Iy in a hot oven. Serve at once. •
Wheeler House Eggs
Saute one pound of fresh mush-
rooms until tender—a can of prepared
mushrooms &nay be substituted—sea-
son with salt and pepper and a few
(crops of onion juice, cool and Put
through a coarse sieve. Scramble one
dozen eggs and remove to a hot plat-
ter, Cover with the nmahrooms, gilt`
dish with parsley and toast points and
send to'tho table while hot. This
makes a fine Sunday, night supper
dish for six people.
*lulled Cider
To two quarts of sweet cider add
-halt cupe one and one p. of brown sugar,
one-fourth teaspoon salt, oneteaspoon
cloves, one teaspoon allspice, six inele
long sticks of cinnamon and a little
nutmeg. Simmer for ten minutes,
strain through cheese cloth and re-
heat. This is best served steaming
hot in earthen mugs.
660—Slip on dress with V-neck and
cape back terminating in a tie at
front, attached two-piece skirt with
yoke back set in ciectilar tunic at
fr, nt, dart -fitted sleeves. For ladies
and misses, 1.6, 18, 20 years, 34, 36, 40,
42 inches bust.
HO of TO ORDER PATTERNS
Write your name and address plain-
ly, giving member and 51130 of such
patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in
stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap
it carefully) for each number, and
address your order to Wilson Pattern
Service, 72 West Adelaide St., Toronto.
Patterns sent by an early mail.
His Hearing Restored
The invisible ear drum invented by
A, O. Leonard, which resembles a
0.551010 is trademark tk6lntered fa oaaada
growers to sell title as they pleased.
miniatul"e megaphone lilting inside Professor Leonard Hill, Director of
The totalis more than a required the ear, entirely out of sight, is help. Professor
all Australian alstn requirements. The` ing the hearing of a great many pee- the Department of Applied Physiology
harvest ot last year yielded 18,000 pie Mr Leonard invented this drum of the National lnstitute for Medical
tons, or 3000 less than this year's" to relieve himself of deafens and Research, in his presidential 'address
and there is still 4000 tons of it on head noises, and it doss this so enc- tion the
icouferencety mean,said:rs' ssocia-
e at
ors
el v
Oatis
wheat tell he • inald
mtilto a
h tetone atiller.
a
theno oattention in 1thatyour
and fur all
h 8SSltd C
c Yof
"T N
et the waterside in this city. It Is a deaf man. A request for informs -
expected' that this surplus will Sud .certain bacillus which shall be ewe-
expected'
market outside Australia, as the tion to A. O. Leonard, 70 Fifth Avenue
rice is of special quality, and would
be esteemed even by the people of
rice -growing countries.
What's the Use?
The office cynic says he felt in-
stantly relieved this morning when
reading over the proposed new Tariff
B111, in full detail, to find unmanu
tectut'ed lava 611 the free list,
Some great resolve had 005010 to her 0 nd Doomsdorf. If we fail, it's likely
—some' sweeping emotion tha� mi�ht ��..ih �u� death toulcfn't�to any worse
aim n
noble and holy! Isuicide? Was that the meaning of
Hall, lu
tion
in
her
—hjewman ofire" S•eso
all labors he akin to hope. Was she g g
and everything to gain,"
Wore
rdor,
Le
their a
_ I this new lookOverswept by ,
face? He could conceive of no other turned back tht�ough the ,leer,
GENIUS
abler of genius e1o11e hien•; in self-inflicted death Icer instructionsaca were simple. The
Vie three i, fee s bone lay deliverance Exam Doomsof the -
& understanding, feeling, and t enr ch does lust, Ile dared not hope 1101 easiest ess k task
of the chude chairs,ers,
' anae; the three things that enrich any happier freedom. handkerchief—clutched as if she had
gonias are contentment ot mud, the, Ile reached groping hands to hers, been weeping—in het lap. Ned eat
{
cherishing g of good thoughts, and the .,You don't mean" -•-he gasped, hardly
exercise of memory. --Southey, able to melte ids lilts move in speech to wn g the
other
excaseahimself ;
4 1 '+ ou don't intend—?t,
titan this, So we've nothing to lose-
a
>r—` 1SiCJU ltlo --'Zg� Stop Colds with Minard's Liniment. y
Suite 437, New York City, will be
given a prompt reply. Advt.
A Good Rule
The plain rule is to do nothing in
the dark, to be a party to nothing un-
derhand or mysterious.—Dickens.
For Sprains—Use Minard's Liniment.
r
Realyes
re ", -seer
to use
DIAMOND DYES are used by
practically the same method as
any other dye. They go on easier,
though—more smoothly and evenly;
without spotting or streaking. That's
because they are 'made from real
anilines, without a trace of fillers to
injure fabrics or give things that
redyed look.
Diamond Dyes boiltaiit the highest
Quality anilines that motto eau buy.
That's why they, give such clear,
bright, new-lookingcolors, which
keep their' depth and brilliance $o
remarkably through wear and
washings.
ext time you have 'dyeing to do,
y Diamond Dyes—at our risk. Bee
eomparey results. sieTr ouo will surely
agree Diamond Dyes are better dyes.
The white pachage of Diamond Dyes
is the highest quality dye, prepared
for general use, It will dye or ilia
silk, wool, cotton, linen, rayon or
any mixture of materials. The blue
package is a special dye, for silk and
wool only, With it you can dye your
valuable articles of silk or wool with
results equal to the finest
e.
sl
work. When you buy tnmberthl
The blue package dYes silk or wool
only. Tho white package will dye
and wool of goods,
dealer hasg silk
both
packages.
•
m :
Dyes
Sun Proof
!EASY TO 1JS1i-B TTBIt RESULTS
AiL 11EALbIIS
less, but is easily cultivated.
"If men are as susceptible as guinea
pigs are to the -toxin produced by this
bacillus—and there to reason to think
they are—it would appear that on
gramme, say a saltspoonful, of the dry
toxin, would suffice to 1ci11 a million.
"The toxin acts if inhaled or if it
falls on the eye as a. Powder,
"If men set out to prepare such a
toxin and scatter it by aeroplanes,
what would be the use of the panoply
of war?"
Things Said
Bachelors of Science invariably
write better letters than Bachelors of
Art, because they have been taught
to write what they have to say and
then leave.—Mr, P. B. Showa".
If you want 'simply to get "fun," a
hard heart and •a good digestion will
help you more than all the cardinal
virtues.—Dean Inge.
Mr. Ramsay MacDonald and Signor
Mussolini are virtually two peas from
the same pod.—'Mr, deorge Young, M.
V.O.
I claim to be descended from the
Thane of Plfe—Maccluff, the gentle-
man who killed Macbeth.—Mr, G. B.
Shaw.
YESTERDAYS
Our yesterday's to -morrow now is
gone,
And still a new to -morrow does Goma
01.
We by to -morrow draw out all our
store,
Til] the exhausted well eat' yield no
more, Cowley,
It seems to be quite generally agreed
that the Arab wasn't the guy that put
the pat In Pot estlne --Springfield
11311051,