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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1924-05-08, Page 6TIRES rusreausa Wingham, Ontario evoll Thuretho Morning G. pMITII, Editor and Proprietor, 13, Elliott, Aesociate Editor Subscription rates: -- Out> year. $1.00; slx 'months. $1.00 in advance. Advertising rates on application. Ad'rertieements without epee:120 eile tedious will be inserted until forbid and charged accordingly. Cleangea for contract advertieses wants be in the office by noon, a:ore day. BUSINESS. CARDS Wellington Mutual Fire Insurance Co. lesta.blished 1840 Head Office. Guelph' Risks taken on all classes of insur- ance at reasonable rates. ABNER COSENS. Agents Winghttee J. W. DODD " °Moe in Chisholm Block FIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT AND HEALTH • INSURANCE • AND Rem. ESTATE r.o, Box 366 Phone 198 WINGHAM ONTARIO DUDLEY 110LIVIES BARRISTER. SOLICITOR, ETC. Victory and Other Bonds eauuht and Sold. Office—Mayor Block, WInghern R. VANSTONE SARRISTER • AND SOLICITOR Money to Loan at Lowest Rates. WINGHAM J. A. MORTON BARRISTER, Etc. Wingham - Ontario DR. G. II. ROSS •Graduate ,Roya, College at Dente& Sur,,tene Graduate University or Toronto Faculty of Dentistry OFFICE' OVER H. E. ISA.RD'S STORE W R. IIAMBL'i Special attention paid to diseases of Women and Children, having taken peatgraduate work .1n. Surgery, Beta teriology and. Scientific Medicine. Office in the Kerr Residence, botween Inc Queen's Hotel end the Baptist Church. basiness give,n careful attention. Phone 54. ' P.O. Box 113 Dr. Robt, C. R itond • M.R.C.S. (Eng). • L.R.C.P. (Loncl). PHYSICIAN AND -SURGEON •(Dr. Chisholm's old stand) • DR. R. L STEWART Graduate ot t.I'aliTeiieity Of Toronto, Faculty a Medicine; Liceatlate a the Ontario College of Phyalcians and Surgeons. Ofilce;)Ccitrancs: OFFICE IN CHISHOLM BLOCK 30SEPH1Ne ST•RBET PHONE'S!) Dr Margaret C Calde General PractItIorier Graduato,Universttyl:of Toronto. Faculty of ,Bdiediclne. Office—losephine St., two doors south cf Brims -wick ;Hotel. . Tniephones7-0111ce 281, Residence 1111 Osteophatic..Philaciart DR. F. A. PAJRKL OSTEOPATH IC 'pHYS1C I AN An Diseases treated. Office adjoining residence next 'Anglican Church on Centre Street. • Open .every' day exeept blonday and Wednesday afternoons. °steer:artily Electricity Phone 272. DRUGLESS PHYSICIANS • -CHIROPROCTIC DR, ,ALYIN 'FOX • Fully Qualified Graduate. .Driglese Practice being In absolute •sword with the Lawof. Nature gives the, very best results that may be oh - tined in any case. Hoar -1O - 18 a.m., - 5 and 7 8 P.m. -*Phone 191. • 1! When..Exposed toAi tea loses its freshness and flavor. '21V uss1 For that reason is never sold in bulL M10•••••••••00•10/11110111, OUR INDOOR TOILET. The most annoying feature for WO - men who live in the country, is the evil -smelling, unsanitary. (and that means disease -breeding) out -door toilet. Where there are small chil- dren, it is especially inconvenient in winter. And it is horrible and un- healthy, for many reasons, winter and summer. We have overcome this annoyance THE \VINOD' &X' DVANCE Oy EiLizA13Wril YoRK NtILLeR , Whe hiarte cominott4, From minds the flogest eettneeginge &poet." CHAPTER XVI.--(Contid.) Alice, not being entirely a fool, caught glimpses of what lay behind the tattered curtain which had been drawn for her deception. Here and there she. saw a fragment of some- - thing which was very ugly. •The hor- ror of it made her weak with fear and shame - Hugo—that had been her father's narne, but her father was supposed to have died—how long ago? As many years, or thereabout as Uncle John had possessed his old hat. HiS rambl- ing talk of the early morning began to have some melanin for her. Was ing it'an occasional shake. • The result this Otrange old /nen ler father? And, will be a clean, fluffy garment that so where had he Veen this long will not sag er stretch out a shape, thee' In That Place? Had he been results that too often follow our ef- al----pr.ison by ahy chalice?, forts to restore to their original fresh- And it seenied- to her that Philip ness thee comfortable and popular knew perhaps eVen more than she her- self feared to guess. - Her mother, she could see, was half little wistfullY, and was edging off . articles of dress. and the money he had given Carlo for the •groceries, and what Jean felt he ought to give Maria for her share in the labor and—oh, any amount •of other items. Their voices rose in altercation and reached Hugo. In imitation of Gaunt Hugo had stripped off his own coat and rolled up his sleeves, but he still stuck to his new hat. He peered out fintively, pretending to be wringing the water from the grey strip of towelling he had been washing the windows :with, and then bobbed hack again when he thought himself ie danger of •,being discovered. Gaunt saw him and called out: • "Tell IVIaeiti to bring As some beer." Hugo diaappeared like a Jack-in- the-box and a few minutes later came back with a tray. "I brought it myself," he said. He set it down, looked at them a USE BRAN FOR HEALTH. • iwuilil',de.h.wq.iutohiehtlayyPePse—'eelsiaenvaseiorviYle.ry good idea Fig Raisin Pudding -3 c. fig pulp, good idea again, when Gaunt—still quarrelling with Jean about money --interrupted indeed," the diystreseed •little woman, hirnaBsealef fetchtoinviteano therHugogitaos s joinfor :them.your.. 1 c. seedless raisins, 1 lemon (grated, by iitstalling a standard flush -Lei • t, C. -kept repeating. Then a terwards we 0.e 'let rind arid 'uice) ee tep sal efi c _ i e • f self," he said. "You've only brought without the prohibitive cost- of a flour, ih c. bran, 1/4 c. sugar, 11/4 c. could go at once to look atthis place • water system. We expect to have the water. I've found. It's called the Villa 1"1 , d the extra lass was duly pro - Wash and drain dried figs then run Charmil. Isn't that a pretty. name? • Mr (taunt sa s -will saysheget me a Ser- foaming, cured. Gaunt poured out the beer, Wouldn't it be jolly if we could light stuff, deliciously cold, through the food chopper. Sumner • - until tender with the water, sugar, Vant. this very day, Alice? and Hugo settled himself as near as raisins, salt and bran. Add the other 111,°,17.? in Do 7°11 he' could get to the big mane There.was trang we could? What do you think, .• • • ingredients—after rnaking the flour Philip?" sometaing pathetic in the pale, near- Ardeyne replied. less Gaunt. One understood then, hrow- „ sighted eyes that dwelt,upon t e ca e into a paste' with a little water—let "I should advise ite--by all means, . in his day of great adventures—and There was a professional note in very likely etin_._:Hecior • Augustus his voice that made Alice wince, but Gaunt had been a Master of Men a leader whose lightest desire was as, a Jean was too upset to 'notice any- leader to his adoring followers. Hugo * * * Smarle had once followed;this bige fel- An hour later, lunch being over, low through” the 'trackless v:Taste of they went to -inspect the Villa Char- uncharted seas; that 'pale, persistent 'nil, and found Hwtor Gaunt there gaze went back to theeday when there had been no Jean Carney, no tame Italian Riviera' on their maim; a tiule, when life's course was marked by the stars and life itaelf 'was. full to the very zenith with romance which in- cluded not the name, ef woman,. Mad Hugo's gallantry in marriage may have been actuated by a double motivea the seeond.—though ,perhaps not the lesser—his great admiration for Hector Augustus Gaunt. Slich a latter soon but we have had the use • of the toilet for three years, while waiting for the more expensive equip- ment, which can be added without the low of the equipment 'already in place, Money was very sparce with us boil two or three minutes and pour when we made the venture but we into individual molds. Serve cold achieved the apparently impossiblei with whipped or plain sweetened by following this plan: cream. Our small income wag budgeted Bran Brown Bread -1 c. bran, 1 c. and after carefully considering the sour milk, 1/4 c. raisins, 1 tsp. rnolass- various expenses, we found that by I es, c. sugar, 1 c. flour, 1 tsp. soda, extra economy in som,e items for a 1/1., tsp. salt. Period of.three months, we could save Mix together bran, sour milk and . . . ; house-cleaning with the aid of his one-half 'of the cost of the toilet. We raisins. Add molasses, sugar, and f R. D. 11;McItil' CHIROPRACTOR QualifiGr ed aduate, , , Acijustineues -given for diseases al kiiidee • seecialize in dealing ' With eseeldree; ' Lady attendant, Night. oalle" resborided to. ()face oe. Seott St, Wingbam. .Ont, fee lionsir of the tate. Jae Walker), Phene 150. I'honees Office: 106. Residence; 824. A. J. 'WALKER FunNCIITRE DEAT,EIR M anti •-otor leguliSereat 1611,101itAlyi gaseatreess.9 • I I aithful Maria and an Italian girl he deterrnined to mhke our little garden' flour Which have been sifted with the . had discovered SOmeWhere. The lat yield a surplus which we could sell soda and salt. Put the mixture into, ter's name, he informed 'Jean, was and thus raise the remaining half. a greased can; cover tightly and Louise, and she was a good cook and Here is a• recoed Of actual pro• duce steam for .three hours. - laundress. , g the elbows, and his Trey flazinel shirt dem We planted extra Seed of the c• flour, 1 tbsp.- sngar, 2 tsp. bakin raised and sold from our kitchen gar.. Bran Gridd/e Cakes -1 c. bran, 1 Gaunt, with shirt sleeves rolled to 1 egg, i c tucked negligently into belted trous- vegetablw demanded in our locality powder, 1/4 tsp. salt, - ers, hzid started to wash the windows. melted shortening. • . t g in tiny getting the top prices.sugar, Mx and sift flour, baking 1 strip of terraced garden, and in the motive might be difficult to account for His mule was te here the . . and matured everything very early milk, 1 Cosi). . 3 bushels string beans ....... $7.50 Powder, salt; add bran. Combine egg glass -covered corridor he had unload- and trace from its obscure beginnings 2 bushels very early harvest with milk and add to the dry ingred- , ed a choice supply of provisions—a to its even more obscure fulfilmerut, apples •... .. .. ...... .... 4.00 lents. Add melted shortening. Beat' couple of chickens-,-vegetabks, flowers; but undoubtedly it could. exist in the 1 h f Hugo 10 bushels plums . ... 8.50 therouglely and ,bake on a hot griddle. ileutter, eggs, a fla.gon of .olive oil, and comP psyc o egy o , a- S I Yet t' b l't Cucumber pickles .......... 5.00 Bran Muffins -2 tbsp. shortening a small cask -of wine—all_the produce .mar e. e a oia ion„m,ao e a . - k e'• of. his -own farm. He had 'taken it tle mixed with jealousy. Hugo sat . . 5 teishels tomatoes ........... 6.00 Ye c. sugar, 1 egg, 1 c. sour mil , . for granted that Jean Would settle, at half -enviously at the feet of his idol, once into the Villa "Charrnil, and had and Hugo's psychology included many 12 doe. ears Golden Bantam corn 3.00 bran, 1 e. flour, .1,fi tsp. soda, ei tbsp. . salt. • Made all the necessary arrangements things besides self-abnegation. ,It.in- $33..00 For three months we put every penny saved in any way from our in- come -together with the garden money in a special box and then had enough for installation of toilet and building of septic tank. • We flush the toilet in the usual manner, filling the box by pails of water from the well. We keep two extra pails filled with water in the toilet recess. There is no odor and perfect satisfaction. A concrete septic tank outside the house digposes of all sewage. , Let every wc•man insist upon the„abolition of the disease -breeding outdoor. teilet. It can be done.—Mrs. B. B. G. LAMPS THAT WON'T SMOKE. Every farm housewife knows how hard it is to keep kerosene lamps from smoking. , An ounce of prevention saves much work: When the lamp smokes it is wasting fuel: Therefore, the first secret a a well-biirning kerosene lamp is to- have •clean oil in the lamp. It should never be mixed with other oils or have dirt in it. Fill the bowl each day as the lamp is used to within half an inch of the top of the bowl. A full bowl also makedfor a safe lamp. Have the chimney lit the holder. Keep the wick well trilmned and even. In addition, see that it entirely fills the opening through the burner. This prevents the fire from burning back down the burner and igniting the oil in the bowl. Keep the charred part of the wick breshed off even with the ;top of the slit in the burner. A burnt match is useful for this purpose. —Hazel WASHING A SWEATER. In washing a sweater, put it in a small' pillow slip, squeeze it in a lather of good soap, rinse in three waters, each time squeezing, the evater out. Never eVring ; shake well and hang On the line in the bag initil dry, just gly_ Cream shorteningRua sagar to- for her. • chided, for one item, a desire. to be gether, add egg. Mix and sift Roar, She, poor woman, almost wept in .great himself. ture add bran, then milk, 'alternately to have things Adone for her that she 'n the financial discussion, at first tirnidly, then—be- soda, and salt.. To the creamed Tmx- her gratitude. It -was such a novelty• He ii°`"v iuterfered i with sifted dry ingredients. Pour into could scarcely believe in this good jag thlerated—with some decisiveness, • greased rnuffin tins and bake in al fortuhe. taking.Jean's Part' No, 'Hector, we can't—my wife' and moderate oven (25a deg. lahrenheit) Maria had built fires an was very I--Laccept charity -from you. It's very airing -the beds andAinen. Gaunt for 20 minutes. This should make 12 husY kind of, you'. 'We do appreciate it already made. out a list of what large muffins. If •eweet milk is used I had of Don't we, Jean? We're frightfully 0,.the considered necessary in the way grateful for all you've 'done, but we •instead of sour replaw the Y2 tsp.. r soda with • 2 taps f b k' d . 0 a mg poor er. groceries' and Other thing's and had' can't ac ept charity. And there's no , desPetched Ids boy, Carlo, into the c Raisins or dateS enay be. added to the village fermabout meeting Carrie Egan? she •the. need for, us to do so.. Dui I tell you Muffins as desired. '• It suddenly occurred to Mrs. Car- owes me pees•oe,meneyeameashe proms ' . • NEW 'BICYCLES FROM $30 TO $60 N'Crrite for claSeription, and, our special cash nrices, It mearc0 buying a Bicycle ' tor at least $5 less than rou will pay elsewhere, and all our 181cyclee are thoreagid y guaranteed. lust ad dross ss 1"(BlICY NictilliDE: • 4o4. voNoe 81%, TORONTO . ' 11,ittereated itt Sorting and Athletie, btipplies, Or in Motoreycles, advise like 'When Catalogue Med PriceS oui these kbo8 wIll e nay that for lifteen-y,eara she had igee m pay ea , ea. e. few., days, wall ,- • never ,erliCOred,what might be. palled a be rolling in,wealth." . holne,of her. ,own. - Trarei, .the Villa . ;gee -feat -heeled upon, Hugo, puzzled . Qhs.rinil was only _a , rented lionle, and annoyed, • , , ' sParselY' filled 'witli the , ather i) oor "Hugo,e-what can you mean about .46-S17 Isticks ofefurniel ture emed, silf.fient Mrs. Egans`owing' you money? , And by a paimoiliciailandlord, but' in her how, could you fipeak to aere en front 'eyei it was beautiful. And she could of Alice and Dr. Ardeyne, too. You see how, with a touch here'.' and there, gave • me ,.•youg eekom, word of, with flowers: and .cushions and furni-• honor—'honor—'ture cosCers, it could be made a very "lyIV dear Jean, you can trust me," haven a joy. ••• • ' ' • Ham was 9,:lit,tle pompons. "I'm no Gaunt had Come out 10 the. gate to foot I glaolce, to' her' merely as one greet them, and explain his own Fires- does speak eo a, lady of onePa acquala_ ence on the premises, and it was thus tance. De. Ardeyne suspects nothing ;that lingo Stnarle and he mef for the me L-rior Alice; either.... Mrs. Egan'. CVOS first ti since Jean's curleus mar- 'me twenty thonsandpounds, not to riage. The, last' otcasion has been mention' the interest." here in thievery town in the old Ville is . li.'* '"How do you make that 'Oat?" Tatina, som'ethine• mereGaunt ked;OWning so heavily stone's throw distant. than a good uponhlinthalsche,,tiii.aiied and drew ii Poor Hugo looked an awe-stricken, back into something faintly resembl- . shrivelled' little efeature 'surrendering ing a shell of geserve. • , his hand to the big pavr of., Heeler 'She promised it M me," he said -. Augustus 'Gaunt. It ,werned as thaigh sulkily. •• • . .. , " SUIT FOR TYthe sheer • bulk •• of 'Gaunt gave ' him "But Hugo, for . wbat?". jean ,de - A SMALL BOY. ' "NATTI-IF ••' '' moral eadendance over Jean's bus- mended.. "Tony Egan - left no ,money, 4694. Pongee,linen, kindergarten! Hugo that he -didn't want Us be cut had „failed. -Don't -you , remember, •Fritilimy 'stiles a irrighood hein to exercise 'their old. •°harsh 'When the time or eountrY Wan- dering arrives. They OPI."383 MI now. They are irresistibly friendlY. They would not try to nae it 'easy for you to .pass to the other side of the hedge dia you need to go ftirther, We a trespasser; look:lag this' way .'a4t1 that, writes P.' W. DeL, in "'The Lon., den Daily Mail." Wherever there are stiles they are friendly. They differ much in form, from the rude steps on. the tern and foUleve walls. of :Cornwall to the tern hip's timbers taken from the, shore and fashioned into :stepping ways amid the 'briars and 'branableS of Norfolk hedges: , They mark the short cuts to rest ea well as work. 7.'hey are °rowed for dalliance no lese than dispatch. It 10 the loiterers. season that Is starting now. The lure of the field paths la strong. There will pe wanderers alone and wanderers in threes and fours; • but perhaps as often'as- all ethers there will be 'wanderers'''in twos, tramping from stile to Stile till, they find one more friendly than the.rest—a lovers' seat. Summer co-mee, . with of leaves and eurge of flowers, With un- 'ceaaing drone of insects in the.sunny air.. The quiet' woodieide that the little path hugs is grown bosky; the beck in the hollow tinkles over its pebbles be- neath the .planle -bridge, and then LS lest in. a forest of *Mogi herb; the corn is known so high that children. Crossing the fieldseare seen. pnlY they top the stiles; and every stile Is deeper get, so ha•ve the lusty 'brambles -pread their Jong arms around and all , the- hedge- row plants given themselves to aban- don. The .1oVerst must sit 'closer. And then will the, small meadow- brewn butterflies disport around siibtafroM *idols." to eve. We,call them, gatelieetiers,:--becaus.e' they 'haunt' the fisid JateWays, With wink of .eyed Winga 'and 'airy They,keep a stile as gleefully. hand. There evefel• protests fiting as you Yeni.,finandialtventure loth, gingham and seersucker , are off from the pleastires .-of 'hotel life Huger', She averted her eyes, shiver- , good, materials for this design. and iminured behind,the pink walls ing a'little. "It was, over that . . . The Pattrn is cut in 3 Sizes: 2 4 of this little tucked -away hemse. ye , . , and 6 ars. e A 4 -year size requires Gaunt, behaving rather as though it , yards of 27-ineh material, To were his own place, showed them make collar, cliffs, belt and pocket ,of contrasting material as • illuatrated, will require 'A yard 36 inches wide, Pattern mailed to al y address on receipt of 15c in silver, by the 'Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Allow two weeks for reeeipt of pattern. Send 15c in silver for our up-to- date Spring & Summer 1924 Book Of raShiOnS, A CORNER Fog TitIP noys. around. • The' Iong windows of the ealon opened upon, the balconies ever» "looking the sea, but direetly eeeehang- ing he railway ,lines;.,although these were invisible by reason of the thick growth of;'palms and olives which Cov- ered the -steeply'terrzieed slopes. The Villa, Charmil seemed Somehow to hang MySteribUsly between', sky, and sea, upheld only by the feathery tops of the palms. -1-ingo; Promieed his Meals in the arbor; took heart of grace. arid re- covered from his fit of overaWed des- pondency. Almost immediately he at- tached himself to HecterGa •init and The corner, a our large living room •begged. to be allowed to wash win - Is given over to the two Yung 6°578 cloys. The favor -being granted he of the family, who are interested in was left; lo wash them ,aleyeaa..whieh music. In this way they feel that they wasn't quite what he wanted --while have a real part in the home and arei Gaunt discassed varieus house - not crowded out. hold arrailgettients with Jean, Alice and Avdeyne went briek to the hbtel to pack up the Carnays' and Hoge's OUR SALT SHAKERS. clothes, andalso give this rather stud - A plods of gummed paper over the den notice that •the suite would no hole in the bottom of your salt shaker longer be required. . does the work as effectually as a cerlt, • Hector Gaunt and Jean- at in the and it does away 'with the necessity of arbor with the stone table between arehihg for ono of the right size. if them' Jeali with her bag tanthling no gummed paper is at hand nse the, °Iit lastatGgenam"ilass of s°11'd Italiaa notes andit st bo Z P flap of' an Oirvelopo and a bit o/ .jahhh\g., merWeranda on the*areinobille mucilage, expenditures, Mittard's 1-infM0111, H4ala Cuts. which Gaunt had settled in advance, *Mfnard'P 1-kil There was the tiontlfs rent, for ..0_ '•A.Fe* Chuckles from Ireland. Manse geed things have come from Ireland; not the least which are its ,characteristic. • mirth -provoking jokes, and anecdotes. Of recent years, alas! the people. have had little eeongh cause for light-heartedness; and 3ret,-• asoMisa El poinM out 'in her memoirs, there are still, in Ireland some to make jokes . and others to - laugh at them. - A man with authority, she write, .caine upon .ene of his workmen who was clearing.. a water Course; two Other .viorkinen -Were standing near. by, watching hlin do- it. beYS," lie said; "this is what we •"alwaYs. see" in Ireland! Otto man working, and two more looking on!" There's three of ehem now, sir!": said ,ohe thaloakere-on And the- old People..can still laugh,at' themselves,—which is perhaps the touchstone of humer,--especielly the w old oinen, who regard the World and Ito needs . and- follies as. from another plane, having neyer had, tirne follies hayingeonilfied. all needs .e.ept .a .plech, tee tea, peed Paireen o' boota. ,cannot- little/ old Mrs. 'Leary, Who, dying, •saldisayly: "Sureg three' 'inches of a- coftin'll: do ,mei 1eays to them, 'make'the 'Coffin a- irnal.Ppign- too" higesthe •Way -the. people'll think °the womaneed• in- eide in .4.-Tresn't ,allsout oso as What she,wase" - ' • . . - • ,Ane consider the two old "nurses" at. Ross, one of whom, was acting as • butler and ,housinaid,, and thes,pther • as. cook and. yal.rdebey ; eeach, eopeicious of her own •alailirdity, Would deeeiribe herself, and ,her conipanton aa,•"Meien' "the other owld 'halm!" you •quarretled. Tony g haying dono something Itueer with your share of the money," •• (To be continued.) • , Could She A,newer That? ,Fainiere=e'Mother, that boy of ours ain't dein' nothin' at eellege but feel- er?: round with the girls." Wite—"Oln. I think not, Hiram—lic*0 avorkin hard.' Earmer-A•ivorldia hard,' eh? Then What you Make ot this here Alma Mater lieb allus 'bout hO ieves (,•••vcwilr-4-.C;sle• We Know. • pug----"Ilow are things going?" Appleworm—"Not so good. TI e landlord has just raised our rent to' forty apple seeds a month!" Let us build altars to the Blessed "(Bitty which holds nature and soul in PerfeCt Selutipn „axed c,ompels every atom to SeritS an Univereal end. Let ue blind to the beautiful Neeessity which rudely or softly educatee him lo the perception that there are no 'contingencies; that law rulethroegh- otit existence; algae- which is not, in- telligence; not personal or impersenal -Let disdains worda and. pasees under- standing; , it clessolves persons; It vivifies nature; yet solicits the pure in heart to draw on ael its omnipotence. ,--Einersone rlidaY'm lY43/'' 8 lite After trii,37 Mrocit • II% 14e -100,0esit4 . ccogifloOtiirm yon eau. lbuk —4114411 'ilt!4;':' he lO 10 'dt,, itOiso adoilong,WOr or t.b(i ara4 lfeetla. witioar..0, Ingenue OS wen ao ,.'jpzeiaelare. • Nature's Night -Lights. , What is -the 'most' efficient, light in the world? „ Some people might vote at once for the "last word" of science in artificial illumination, but they would.be -wrong. The Most efficient light known to ••us *Vas 'known in the daye of pine torches e. , , and rushlights. It is that with which • Nature has endowed the glow-worm* and the firefly. - Selene° has so far failed to solve the problem of the production of light without heat -'-a problem which seems to have given Dame Nature no difil- cuaty. In all aetifiCial light production an enormous amomit of energy is lost In the 'form of heat rays and chemical raYs. Thus a four -watt. carbon glow lamp has o.;141Oluolis eeffielency, of lees. than a half per cent., and the most pe'rfeet artificial ii•luminant has alt efficiency - of only tour per cent,' • - Sbience ,,hare compares ,badly with -Nature, for the lemingua efficiency of the firefly is no less thari 99.5 per cent., whilst the glow-worm's light' is eighty times more efficient than a tungeten lamp. . Love is the only fire that isenciegh to.melt the iron obstinacy of a crea- ture's will. '• WOMEN CAN ANY, • GARMENT, DRAPERY Dye or Tint Worn, Fade Things New for 15 Cents. iamond Dyes Don't wonder' whether you owe clYe or tint siicceesftilly, beceuse perfect home ,dyeing guaranteed with erste. v. M011d DYC"8 °Ven if. yG1 ha nevai so much'?" dyed losfore, Druggists have co]' ors, Directions lu each packags. 'orti eel 4S. ittts A t ter. Dakirtiffi We want you4 Cream. We pay highest price. We sepply cans. Make daily returns. To obtain best results write now for cans to 1 BOWES'CO., LTD. TORONTO Bees on arm Nothing pays beitt'er when properly managed.. Sead• for our catalogue ,of beekeepers' supplIesc...„,Expert ad- ' vice freely given. •- 'Ruddy Manufacturing. Co.., Ltd. .113,nentford • - Ont. ninmereiukomormaterimmeeiicemenrodu - seasseaassaa' • ICONS, . . ..;...,,,,..retlici gaiiufa 1 r =Attest': P;altialt4'brOlOaleit OOnirej:eli It - '-flit1016,11* "d isit6ki"PitilAN' 'ore*. iltalt A trolliffs- "',1344,20 t-igiti pusisiwassamaismarainummumear YOU CAN • USE 'YOUR SPARUTIME,OR •.ALL TOUR TIME THERE'S MONEY Ir. AND PUT .Money.in Your Stocking! Moneyin YourPurse! • Money in theBenk ! Act as our Agent. - "Sell our E. Superfine Hosiery to your friends, neighbours and acqUaintarices,, . The work is easy. The goods sell themselves. Ani' wornant•tYill tiVolice,r'ecOgnize the 'mgt. quality of a &E haalery. Yrhis class of hosiery hot gepeiAllyobtaiitrabiclocally. Therefore, • people are arialouk to buYfrom our agents. aousewlyea who ,need more ready. cash, ' ashObIgIrlsf `with IC010 and dresses to buy, • Oachers, men or wrimen, any one can sell a & osierk and Make money.. At the 5 -.Me time they do a real fayor to their customers• . Write Te -lay. B. ti E.' MANUFACTURING ,CO. (Dept. N.) :London . Ontario runnidaA:Molvers,„, ,Ptt, kfieitess. •- , Mhaptiti:Nower,100 Reer, Ouriatga..frihlrifirAtiokat t.A.vao,•4¢,&keve, MiyoUrherd. ' „JAMES...'SMART RANI' iRocionna caw.