The Seaforth News, 1927-01-06, Page 6DOROTHY'S. DOLL HOUSE
Dorothy's little head nodded, weigh- Ann':, "And we must not sit in any
ed down by seep ah d'excitement, even of ' the big chairs. There are not
though itwas really not night at all,
. but the very day when she was to give
the party to open her new 'tense, the
almost magic doll's house that her
father had frtted up for her.
This house had created a great stir
in her life, and she could feel all her•
dolls tingling with the excitement of
enough of them to go round."
Marjorie: "No, and we must not
ta15e a piece of cake till every guest is
served."
Ann: "Certainly, not,"
Just then Dorothy stirred and then
'her eyes opened wide. Satisfied that
the dolls were all in their right -places
it, though they were sitting very still and that they were listening to her,
in orderly array just as she had she said; •
Placed them, with the strictest orders "I do believe you have heard every=
that they were not to move till the thing that I have been saying to you
about bow to behave ,.at the party,e
and she smiled approvingly. •
The dolls all nodded, as : much as
to say that they were ready to do
".heir share toward making it a sus
great hour; ,. The greapt hour 1 Yee,
that was just what it was going to be
when her lather turned on the electric
lights in her doll's house end showed
—them to the startled eyes of the
guests at her party the dolls and.
their mothers.
She knew by the eonveesation that
she had heard between hey father and
Mother that no other little girl -at
least not any that they knew of—had
such a dol'l's house: Electric lights
and an elevator! It was a palace of.
dreams?- She had. grown so excited
Watching the work of building go on
and waiting for the great hour that
it was smau wonder that -now that it
was actually upon her she was fast
asleep at ;$fie very gate of her dreams.
The dolls themselves were as rest-
less with delight as they could allow
themselves to be, They were seated
in orderly array a little distance from
the doll house, all in new dresses, or
at' least freshly washed and ironed
ones.
As Dorothy was dropping off to
sleep her thoughts ran back aver the
hours when she at w•atohing her
father work on the doll's house.
What busy plans she had made of
cess,
"I thought so," ,said Dorothy, "and
then it will be the grandest and best
party-"
But Dorothy was stopped short. A
sudden light shone in her eyes. "Her,
father was switching on the lights in
the doll's house. Her mother was
standing beside her with a 'large plate
ef cake in her hands, and in the dis-
tance `she heard the voices of other
dolls' mothers and the rustle of dolls'
dresses.
The party was on!
"Will you please take the elevator
and go right upstairs," she said to
each dell guest in turn, till nearly all
had been given a ride, each by her
own mother. But there was one uletic
girl guest who stood apart, looking
very unhappy.' Dorothy, with the eye
of a true hostess, discovered her, and
she also saw wley this little guest was
unhappy—she had no doll to put into
the elevator for a ride.
At first Dorothy could not think
.just what to do. She could lend her
the wonderful parties that her delta one of her dol'l's,: but that, would not
could give" alt the other dolls in the be like having one of her own at the
Circle of 'their acquaintance under the party. Then she thought just what
electric lighta'that were going to shine to do. She left her guests end went
down upon them! And, more won-
derful yet, when she met them at the
door she could ask them to step into
the elevator and tell them that they
would' be taken upstairs to the second
floor, where the reception room was.
Think of that! What an experience
in a dell's lifel
Mother, of course, was helping her
with the party because it was ale too
much for her shoulders'to carry alone.
Every doll in her family of 29 had
had to have some work done on her
clothes, and without Mother they
never could have looked, as they did
how, asshe saw them before her just
as she was dropping of, to sleep. She
had a little ironing board in the kit-
chen of her doll's house, but truly it
was not large enough to iron so nsany
dresses, and her own hands were not
equal to the task And as for needles,
Ole had found them of no use in the
t'vorld except to prick her fingers on,
std yet Mother made perfectly lovely
dresses with them.
Lights, electric lights, flickered be -
Sore her gaze, and she saw the elle-•
yator run up and down, up and down.
She tried to waken herself—she must
epeak to the dolls and tell them all
he last things that she had to sees
them before the guests arrived, and
she 'lost
herself, and
instead of
ken h ,
'her own voice, she heard the dolls be-
gin to talk.
Marjorie (addressing Winifred and
Ann) "Was there ever another fam-
ily of dolls that had electric lights in
their house?"
Winifred: "I never heard of one.
Anyway, none that live around here."
Ann: "I heard our mother's father
say that he wes going to give us
tights that turn on and off just the
way the big ones in the house do."
Winifred: "And they do. I saw
him work them himself."
Winifred (sighing): "It's going to
be hard to live up to the electrie lights
and 'air elevator."
Marjorie: "We shall have to be
over so polite at the party. '1° you
tree not, polite and generous with your
things you are not a real lady, and
sine things don't really beteg to you.'
1 heard someone say that once."
' Winifred: "I shall act like a lady -
1 shall let the guests ride in the ele-
vator first."
straight over to her own .group of
dolls, so neatly and politely arranged
in rows. She looked them all over care
fully, peering earnestly into each face.
It took all her courage, but she picked
Ann out of the group and after an in-
stant's hurried whispering " to her
mother, she went and slipped Ann into
Molly's arms.
"She's yours," she said to .Molly in
• Largest radio horn in Canada, m'easin ee 7 feed 6 in
oompoeitlnn. B. Walter, of Kitioheavem, owne'la
hes high, miid•e o
FOREST FACTS BRIEFLY TOLD
teS
POPULARITY OF SKIING IN CANADA
Great Outdoor Sport. Has Gained Thousands of Devotees`
Every 'Province of the .Dominion.
THE FUR INDUSTRY
OF TIS DOMINION
Slrl-ins has trade tremendgus strides feet Higher than the hilliest hill of the ;AU i`UMN'SS AT MONTH
In Canada during the last few years. Laurentlan5, yet they .aFpeal mate .REAL NE TTE.D.$1,400,000
Tins great outdder•ePort dial awrept the stronglyyierilap"a to the average skier,- _
couiitly from coast too oaast, enitating as tlreretis not the sane necessity -for
armies of recruits, and is fast' beoam- l preparatory training, and the enjoy- Experimental I'OX tatiOn t
ing one of the moat papular of Cum went derived le almost•ae keen
winter paatimee. No oatdoor,activity I Nowhere Perhaps has tho''progress
repays 'its devotees with a more of ski-ing been more marked than in
abcundthg "sn a,ntre oS' health and the cities of Ottawa., and Montreal,
strength; none 'provides greater de- I w'he're the dievotees"of the sport repaia'
light or a .keener sense of freedom. by thousands .to the •nearby.liills. Ot•'
'Vadat;
,velvetyti f snow; the'teiwa ia' particularly fortunate in the
bash frail, the'apes., the swainnp, ob- fact that the Skiing grounds extend'
Sur14iFJZ.
erside, ., Will.
Benefit Breeders.
The regular autumn sessions of the
Montrose Fur Auctions Sales Company
a mans o resulted in the sale of pelts to the
rivate bust,
value of $140o,oP90, and p„
statics during ammeter jaunt, become almost to the gates of the wits and may nese trausacteal in the eoue ee of tli ,
easy to traverse. Like the snowshoe he reached in ii1`teen miuwtes' ear or sale represented, according to esti
tlhe:ski•provides the key to the wilder- train ride. The capital boasts of has, mate more than 80 per cent of this
ness giving tGe freedom of the land. lug :one of the largest,' it not the amount, the, value of ,paltry to change
The uaiivei'salityof ekidng is its oat I•argeet s'ki club in the world—the Ot hands dulling thedays"of auction being
standing the aoteristic: This sport an. •tawa Ski Club --which has new a mean-; seyeamntly -seals over .$2;000,000 Gen-
peals- to all, young and old, rich and Iharship df over 1,600,- and' there are erally. speaking, 'Mite ,prices inevaiiiiIg
poor a13ke. -Therese-1eperheps, juot as 'several smaller oinbs iht addlttou- The were -better than the, sum -titer sale.;.
many elciere over forty yearns oe age es tate, uuxa sr of skiers• in `the city has
"tame are under, Just as many mourn I beea estimated at between seven and.
end-on-olueep,birch or •pine skies: as. on eight thousand.,
Um mors' expensive and more dhsrab•1'a,) Ntunerovs Wtalls,
. have been cut l -n
hiekory es. 'ash. Skill in swings and }the wooded Mile of the Gatineau ids
turns is, dou'btl-las,• a very dee' nable as !to llat, on the north side of tine Ottawa.
oompliehmeent -and' requires w gseatere er: many cameo have been built,
d'ea'l of panatela, bait real enjoyment Otero skie're can find warmth and ghe'-
'can be had while the novice is bercam I ter. • Each weekend, by every avail'
ing proitctents and although, 'the un eble means of transportaati'on-busses,
skilled skied. may fall oftener he, also !cars and teams. --and from early dawn
has' ride share of the fun. ( until highnoon, thousande of skiers go
Conditions for ski-ing in Canada as a . to, piok -up the ends:ddfethes'e trails, and
somewhat' different from those% which' eland a 'dairy in the,opea'.making pro'
obtain in the Swiss or French'Alps. in 1 vision of health and strength. 'thous -
the Canadtan Rockies there is an ap- ands make hikes ef from six to twenty.
Preece to the conditions in the menu- miles during It day, • in thls fashion,
ttat:nous areas. of Europe, but it is is Dues hill and: date,
the 'hilly Sections of Idastern Canada i Everyone carries' his: or her sapplles
that ekldng has so fax gained its great- for the ,day in a small knaps'a'ck, and
est popularity. Clad with snow.:during the skiere da their own cookihxg in ane
the' greater part of four monthsi, the or other ,of the camps, scattered at
vast expanse of hilly land, north of many goads of the snowy wilderneet.
the Ottawa and Sit. Lawrence rivers, From these oampe,eome of. which have
pita tioulaely_, in the ;Quebecerfetitreals Ian attitude of 1,400 .feet, sad are ten
Ottawa zone, provides' ideal eondltions
for pleasure ski -Ing: _ Although the op-
portunities fora display of skihl or
miles dIe'taant teem Ottawa, 'aertes of
wonderful train leads by • swift dee-
tents, to the gates of the pity. Tile
daring are not so great ae those that, return trip from the more distant
airs afforded by the Swiss, or French I ps be madeoonsfortalily is two
Allis, which. are Many thousands- of l or thaws hews.
not Eo the same'extent, it will be pro- prodirotm "
The President of Elie Laaig• , Weighing the Baby. -
O tars 1 learning to plant tri Ball L miter t}o
n 1O a e
During iUb past ,season, 3,500,000 Semi dm•a, half a mihildan tests of
high It meg: lie sugerisi5g to ,some read- G•randtather ties the 'kerchief knot,
ling forest trees, .;mostly picas, tame grade sulphite pulp, meetly foot
distributed from the Provincial Pot, port, by next year ami is inor lrrttlaie province of S!askatohew•att with
estry station at St, Wililiams. A. de- its output of ]Papers of various kinds.
a iiele p ivinceof but elan are wevu
-mead for a million in excess of this. The United States •consumes 8, , matter, of fact, -teat ut11a en. aysa s-
'tiimber ie anitici'patecl for 1927,' . 000touus of woad pulp every year, the in blear ofovict, do which -a °Pe:rat oP
on
I1estilents in Northemn Fromtenac h'eavies't coalsumption •of -the world.
cent. od'ad•1 varier is Made $261,396 is invented" which employ 130
cessful occupation
are making a pus- Ninety per cell 'p p leen poyIng"themn $03,847, end account:-
arid
ccount;
and l canes
of gathering pine krone h t Dost en y pis M Have beulrled f far a pr•oduotion valued $305.783:
and spruce canes from which will be be the last ten year's miumily" tiecattso, ' mew is pa State'arm valued
at u'b05.78a-
taken seeds Par refore's'ting work. The of the scarcity at available imiljlwood ed m. the last st years amounts to, 3, -
prices paid are $2:50 pen• tom far Fine in We United States. : 877,000- awes:, siasye, Superirrbeivdeiit of
ca
m
eaediug firs to "find , the eoanasouhly termed Teniae+lp gtt7des the swinging
weight,
little more than a whisper; as if she cones, and 32.25. pee ton Por ep _
did not want the /others to hear, canes,
The astonished• 1'Iolly could not find
wards to speak, but her arms closed
tightly about the doll, and a smile
went over her face that lighted it all
up. She hugged the doll closer still
According tea recent .Aseeekited "Just throw It away. it is only a
A g
;lar
th mil
o f a:.f4
' Tt did hurt not to have one—my Press dispatch. Prom France, those in piece at paper." Tht is
brother broke mine this morning. I America who wetly of the way their phrase in everyosue's ems. Though We
to stayawayfrom the local taxes .keep risi'n'g': may. well envy shoed& know that paper costs mousy,
couldn't bear
__ the Alsatians who haiabit- the three it is only when we have ewer bills' in
party." „ '•t" said Dor-
othy,.
or- _veliees that run up into the Vosges. out handle that we are mat wasted'iI'of
I air so glad you d'idu ,
oth and she gave Molly's hand a lit A dozen' villages" own the timber -cove it, Large.organ:airtime a :have faunae out
y' erred mountain sides which surround that waste in little 'things, even in.
tle squeeze, at the same' time leading tltean. Ife've'nue Ei+om.tlte forests pays Papa , eonnhs up to a Tanga total. Re
Tier along to the elevator and helping aNl eominuuaty expenses', iveted:bag ceai'tlly, oiilciate of the Southern Pacific
her to put. Ann into it for a ride. the ill :church. What i discovered that if one 'ietteaheed'Vete
amen the anise/is at about the sante 000 employees, the cost would ba . Anilesleak aresloping g th -a' 1's craw
Damage to woad products by in-
sects in the United States causes as
annual lass of at least 345,000,000, ac -1214 feet from the around and at that
cording to the Barecau of Entomology.1 point it was 34 inches in diameter. The
Much of this less, the Bureau states, section topped' aft was 125 Peet long,
id be twee et,
A s'pa'r trey of great lingo was re-. State Forests Gafford. le Pettis. This
oemtly tapped in the togging operations , is an area •Considerably larger than
01 the Matters Lagging Go. ef Toledo., the •amore St 000 of Cony larut. lint-.
Ore.. The high tension. cut tits tits •eff rile "geceaut years this' abawddnm,eptt
has progressed at •a gelekened Irate,
4,41r terms' oowtatning' 1,362;54e acres
having be+en.':abaando•neitt within the last
five years.
r•O'
Nova Scotia.
The tidal mud is red here,
• Red es a harvest moon: .
And 'the fls'hipg smacks, are gray and
drew
Brut the roses are in bloom—
They
loom—
They'dtriuggle over the- sagging .stoops
1 ore of e v a. •s ,c un s An'd•oaysr the battered' floors. -
lh g The water es as a dove's breast
left over 1s distributed annually wasted once a week by east of its 94,- the slo in shores;
n the vita s in less fortune more then $9,000 yearly. The coat. The sloops Dome up, the 3 W ., l
time the tih gam
and kissed it, then she said to Dor- can easy p
When the party was over and the
guests were leaving, Molly started to
slip- Ann back into Dorothy's arms,
but Dorothy shook her head, "No --I
want you to have her,"
She watched Ann go out of the
house, feeling an ache stay down in
ate parts of France sire digging clown pony's stationery bili ter last year was. . in, -
into their savings to pay the tax col-' $508,00'0. L ones paper wee purchased Tall schooners nudge the, wharves.
lector. to 1111 eighty-five freight came to ca- 7 fpsthread 1n anl`awtfhera
The W. Gwtzeit Company of Kotlta, paclty. (Business Chronicle), Pert s ti . .
her heart and a desire to rush after Findan�d, operate tiaras sawmills, int- With the ameotion''and operation of:Between the bobbing yachts',
heh fnd kiss her. But she didn't, be-ducing about one hundred million feet a new paper mill at Cornwall _Ont., Drab dories filled with nets and hooks
cause as she said to her mother when of lumber per year. The refuse is run taxmen in that distriot have 'now a Hug the beaten docks; ;
they were all gone, through a h'o8 and sent to a sulphate new oppantunitY to said Miler woad SILm,,wingwd 'snails of sailboats
"It wouldn't be nice to lap the others mill which turns out 22,000 tons of for pulp. J. B. Wilkinson, of the Are etched against the rock&
know." pulp The seaphat liquor, beating Howard Snnith Paper 1Vltlds - Liralted
ld
_ 'e 1001 a .. .
"You are rf ht, dear. It would hurt aim i Cheat sent to a chemical hes been in. that e'eotloan and 'has put.- The ,t a creeps, liken a, coat now
g Fl
Molly's feelings more than going wits plant end the, rosin recovered and *based '8
out the doll altogether. You were manuBaetwed into soap, of -which 600 paper making, Heretofore the United But the roses clamber, tendeadie
h we re s h d• a rant gwannttty of poples Ear It is pounding the weary shores;
mother'spolite and generous little t produced each year, as well 'States has provided the only oppon'- Over the battered desire,
p ii• e
girl, and she gays Dorothy a great ars pitch, printers' ink, turpentine, tar- tawny "to Canadian fau:mers to,dis'pase And the huts'.ontentsdly shadd'le--,
hug. 1 pesucol' and wood alcohol. All over of peeler. All clustered in the lee
"And I think," said Dorothy, "that Duro s the utilization of wood ma "Rooagnizlwg that, fornatry la a part Of a high hill tall o$ eine trees,
behaved beautifully." ere 1 isvery,complete. of the larger matter of Panel. utii'ization,' • Just out of neat h of the eeal
the dols bah y t n c 1
The average Now Englander regards w•+e have •ooeducteel. a sundae of tear Vironia:Linwood.
his home land as a well populated and lands and have framed a program of •'es
She Called the DaO.
industrialized earner of the world. i land development which embracers a ; r gad:
h gate. 1 But 28,000,000 of New England's 39,-,broacd application of forest manage Ve y
The tramp paused outside the f"serene you going le maa+ry that
"Gleam out!" shouted the lot's of the 500,000 acres' are still Sweat. Lumber memt. It is cur 'hope that as time goes h fel. afloat all?" •
on conditions wldi permit the con'tinnt pretty 8
house, "I ain't got no 'hood to Chop, � cotttinu.es to be the' biggest resource 1 - "Nu• unfortunately, she has an lin•.
ain't nothing you could do here." of New En,glanid, geographically, , outs enlargemeint - er these, activities:speech."
s
There g _ at i the Gain aiim 10 to perpetuate our easter- pediment in her sri
„ there is "retorted the ;According to Ga.. Se ach ns, o ,, ,
Bat madam, How sad! What i's, lt'1
„ ., to main-
wayfarer, with dignity. l could give Fiaiprdsh 'rule and paper indauG'tiy is prise and', at the �'aine time,
y r " advancing like that of Canada, though tarn the piseent high otandeaxiei o f our
you a few lessons in gramma .
i
And carefully over; his glasses peers
To read the record, "Only eight
Softly the Who groes around, -
;The father laughs at the tiny girl,
The fair young mother sings tee words,
Whike .,grandmother - smooths the
`s golden curl -
Canada's exports of., fare -in the first
three months of the fiscal ' year_
amounted in value ta-:$3,263,526, of
wheel $790,175 went to the United
Kingdom, $2,398,130 to •the Vetted
Settee and $65,015 to other,00untries.
Al -moist the entire total of eacporta con-
sisted: of undressed furs, rnmskrat as
ootinting for the highest value, tee
lowed. by beaver. -
The 'dig farming industry coati -twee
to make marked torogress aceording to
all -inddeatlon,a, though' actual atatia
tics from the G•ov'ernment _covering the
pest year are not yet avail able. The
Canmd'ials Silver Fox Breeders' As- -
eoelation, at its. annual' meeting, re=.
ported the most,succesefu•1 year in Ito
history with over 3,1o0 Members and
10,518 Poxes trenaferi•ed. An elven-
tieing cam'paig'n' covering- the United.
tates ,and several Iraropee a con'ntries
resulted in thousands of inquiries and
numerous shipments, gird the Aaaaiela-
tion is further 'establishing .this• Cena
diem industry in. many •pasta of the
world:
New Experimental Station .in P,E.I.
,:ail :Litho -ping above the jareclous thing,
N•estie5 a kiss within a prayer,
germ:ring softly, "Little -one,
grati.'dfath'er•dle not weigh you lair:"
•
Nobody weighed: the baby's' smile,
Or the love thet.°aaiie with -the heap -
less one; .
Nobody weighed the threads of care.,
Prom which a women's life is spun.
A Chip Off the Old Block.
WHSN MY
POP WA9'YOUNG
146 AWAYS WON
AT 'SPELLING
MATCHE51 1-I1> WAG
i LUUt CIAMPM
Ta5 WORLD:
"1-1-1r-7-1-
2-1-2
YEAH1 GOT
NOW DOES
-THAT 1.1ELP 'Y003 r----1—',..--..
T CAN Pti-' liARDSR
WORDS 1AAPItsi 0U
CAN:
C-44" @` - -
"CH1EF"t ins -NAT'
"She can't say. '9''00!
An «vent of come signilcance in the
Canadian fuer farming industry Is the
eetabilshmeavt of au eceperlmental fax
station at Suninuereid'e, Plante Bl wand
Bland. Conrplated last year by tea
Dominion: Departm01 Agriculture'
it. has got secumsiyent nuttier way by the,
donation of 5 acres of laud and 25
pairs of foxes by local fox men, a.ne-ls
expeoted to lie of inestimable benefit
to fez 'breeders and other; fur farmers
all three the Dominion. :`!t•.conta'ins 35
breeding pens, 35 dog pane, earl two ..•
twee exercising. pens. There are of- ..
floes, laboratories, a waieh' tower;
which permits a view of.«very pen -on
the r nee, and other builttings a11' well •
constructed. 1`1'he investigation wcisic .
is under the charge or an expert
formerly with a Qttebeo'sese'arch eta -
tion, and every Phase of fox Panning
will be inivesitigated, more especially
the fee,ding and: breeding of the ranch -
•bred tax. -
l5vidancs is• cantgnuatiy rooming to .
band of the development of the musk
rat Farming industry, on Which 1t is s0
d•itereelt to .seen:e accurate atatistice.
News of it further elaborate-•esteblish-
meut fbr the domestic rearing of musk-
rats- has recently come Prom Western
Canada. Here a cattle rancher, who
began trapping muskrats in season,
oonnmented to see the•pc srbilt.as of
f�rming thein, and two yams ago se-
cured three este three quarter. sections, •
er 2,400 -acres, with five e kakee on" the
tract "conntaining a little over sirt hum
deed acres. He has been protecting
and restocking the waters which had
been almost entirely depleted by t ap-
ping, and has built up' a catch w+bich ,
pinomises to be'a vary •prcfitrabl;e ear-
terprise' and return 'him profits equal. -
to
qual•to_ leis cattle ranching, •
'Development -In the Kootenay.
Fresh evid'enoe is continually lbeing
revealed of the niannsr in which the
fur farming industry is axpnudtag in a
quiet, tutastentabtibus' way, Worcl
corimeefrom the Greaten district of the
Kootenay area of British Caiuiubia,
whish 1n the -past has been a famous
trappi'n'g taoritory, of four fermiu
simieltaneou5LY corning into existence.
TIis brat involves .five fencing of four
teen acnes of low-lying land for iuusk-
rat raising, the soldier settler halving
permission from the Garvie Conserva-
Nollody weighed the baby's souk, -
For these on earth ne -wedgltte;tihere.
be
That could avail; God only lniawa.
Its• vele°.. in, eternity:•
•
Only eight pounds to hold's soul, '
'That' seeke no angels, sliver wing, •
But shrinee it in this human guise,
Within so frail and smell a .thing!
Oh,-mothsr, laugh your merry. note,
• Be glad and, glad, but don't forget,
Dtom baby's .eyes looks out a soul
That chilies). home ie. Wee yet.
• -•=•Etliel Lyfin Beers.
The Bull Kne.w.What Re Was Doling.
The .atpplicant foo•.' au. insurance
po1•icy was ,being given a, medical ex-
amination.
"Did you ever have a 'serious ila.
nese? asked „the physician;
tool"
"Did,yeu„ever have an aocident?”
:,No"
"Neves. had du ac deent?"
:'Never, except a year ago when e
bold tossed me over a•fenoe." . -.
"Don't you call that au accident?".
"Why, Ire" was the answer, 3n a
tons •01 aurprkse, "Re d'1d.it ori Dur• tion Beard -to. capture the necsesn'y ..
breeding stack. ' He also ecntempla.tes
the breeding -of marten, mink • and
fisher, with a perm'it'to take five pairs
each - of parent stack. Gloss by is a
sucoessful•000n ranch, welch is taking
ease of, any surplus of aged ho'rees or. -
Old heel in the dis't'rict. The first toe
faxen has been fltt id up and tiro to -un -
dation , sliver greys in minced. et='
rancher poss+eesieg a stretch of low,
wet land' on the west s•ieeeof th-a teem,
itis a n.brd'fo;r inuslt
rats, andaturalby judicieeoustngte111a0et ling from 11is
garden has'a'a.umnlated a substantial
colony of rats, the uucicits of a sac•
starutlal ranch' of the futur c,.
pose."
Polly thrusts itself .onto the fore-
ground in order to' be seen. genes"takes its piece modestly'is the
background, in' order to see,
simmoixam
The Grocer Probably Owes Miss Killjoy.
ileATSAKtiJbSizegkcrEisl'
woR.V. LI5$5N
TO ME;GPSede
"MECHANIC"! 6
;OOKIn' -C41E tib"op
\l
"ap
vilsto
Co • 11In, t 926, by "the 11,11 ' ndicate, lint.)
Chaflillg- Spots.
When sending doilies to Ii15 tailor . -
foe cleaning, one gentleman, ,an ad-
-eemtielug, mau,by pro$aagion; used the
-n0ethods: of his vocation to cavil• the
isleawer's ate:ntion;to allots uponette
garments likely to be overlooked. f'i'lth •
teller's chalk which can be bought
fora Penne at any •climarensetah store•.
he drew a circle around each spot.•
When the gen-neat wets returned both :
the chalk ani the allot were gone.This dievino le useful also for the -
woman•who dry -cleats iter own things,
as. it keeps the locations of the spot
from being missed whenn the pipet fades
at 'the hist touch of the !laid,
'