HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1924-10-09, Page 2• • • ••••• •-'neaell• 1;11!1;••
nn -no r7,'"
EIj• 11
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1
Ala i y
, ,....______ ..._,..............--_,__-
or
1E3 161552
is most sip reciated in t e it -3x , "Rovr did you manage it?" Gaunt
•
wallow( AtwAxcrig-TnaK
. '
'
Imill""111111111111` hini in an unexPeeted fashiell. He geeceseeeeeeeeeacen
had not intended to discuss his own
state of phyeieal Iteing, NUFtSES
"rgl 4‘1,1 hiliTiltp''' ho replied a little ne aoneaq aeolthltul ter linouroblee, int
*shoitly, "Been worlciug pretty 'hard, attillotloo sits Douala oott sato meanest,
that's all." , New York Olt!, °MOO a three yeah', Osoone
"1 OnlY got bacIt from, Jamaiea a of Teepee to ;moo ivoniall, hooloo the
foW ClaY$ ago, so you must tell me all roquitiet „roohui:oltialeit,..1;doliseni.ild•o:ipotodet,tiroco.litild:to.
wircpurnuieww,77-77.17--7--
hcn Cornman
BLIZABfirei YORK MILLER
"Prism hoeirts 00010414
Arms -riAirfokt this sctost oeseturstrings atepmet?' ,
•
----,....mmeamEnrosemessa
h CHAPTER XXXV.----.(Cont'd.) But at the bottom of that seeming y
plamd stream there were rocas and a
dangerous under -current,
it today. skeCIL •cint Ardeyne'e frieeds got to suspect it
deliciou flavor. Try Hugo twieted uncomfortably. y
• ""'"' • - ---
•
, t=eieliteaganan.tek
tr.
HUSBANDS WHO LACK AMBI-
TION.
A girl said to met "I am engaged
tO a man who has but one fault. He
ks utterly lacking in energy and initi-
ative. He has got plenty of ability,
but for years he has been in the same
position, where he does just enough
work to hold his job.
"His motto is 'Never clo anything
to -day that you ean put off -until to-
morrow.' He riever answeksea letter
under three weeks, ancl when I am
going anywhere with him he is always
lite, and I have eo wait, and wait,
and wait, 'until I am ill a redhot tem-
eer when he does arrive. .
"What he needs is somebody to keep
continually behind him, and push and
prod him into making a success of
himself."
"My dear," I said, "don't undertake
the job. In the -first plac-e, it can't
be done. When a man is born tired
do-nothing sign is set on his fore-
head at birth, and no wife can eradi-
cate it,
"Whether indolent and slothful peo-
ple are afflicted with .sorae disease
the news, I'm staying here and I have ;:ouurr mhos -4:: puolle reeolve ifillforme oi
a sitting-roore. Coaie Upstairs tied we to. Salvo I, a ma ntaly atlawano ee ,teeelie
can have an old-time chat. There'e .
memo to ,atid From New York, Igor lorther
something rather particular I want to ndaritiation genaly to tee suporatootesa..-
consult Yon about. ProfessionallY, 1 ao-aaosogoasaaaeageares----ceeee----na--- motorist is content to rash - with a
Instantly Ardeyne was all concern. '''-''' • — — n ' glance to light and left, But there are
7
ay, Oetober Pr 1924. .
..areneneanenee--enena•n'a"--enenne="aanahesnat
VIII.A.Cg•E HOMES OF
GENIUS
Heernlets Made Panieus by
One Inhabtant,
;
Many villages are jut pieturesque
gnsups of honees in the mit-let of gsleen
fields and wood, through which the
"Not about yourself, hope—" A LOcust Story. • others in Beitain wiiich attract vide
"No. It's -it's for eornebody else. The district mounted patrol of the Ors from afar 1SQOE,tlise Of thDir associa,
But there's plenty of time. I want to seruger.sderf (Transvaal) in Africa tiau with a greet name. ' • • •
hear about you erst." - • while destroying locuots, in the legun- Selleo.ree, in alanapslare, is an out-
zgae jed the way down a long cote dary of the 'West Rand noticed. one e'tendieg examele. Gilaert- 'White
They wet up iri the -lift and Mrs.
loeust,W,ith a Waite body. He cap.tured spent seventy years there,' duriaa '
sorne rnysterious way. liow, with- ridor to her eitting-reom. she wen
• ' 1 lei tor
le so curious, Wasn' • it and found tied. around its body whic e reco
'
. bl si n o f li'm and , ave a .0 ,
about b.irn. Thue''Whit'e "Natural Bee
•
Stoke Pogo's ia asseciatea wita one
great name -that Of the po'Vt Gray. In
tory of Seaborne" has be,come an Eng -
i „cirtirchyard he fs supposed to have
perfect p•eeen in the language,
of this tity hamlet roend flee world,
11.s'h elaseic and has carried the name,
p'ennecl hie imraortal• elegy, the ifee-s
. . . ,
f lant and animals lie observed
,
The ,Hero of Quebec.'
,
Westerharn is ,aasociated with the
mania of Wolfe, thele,re of Quebec. He
is ,conneCted in the public Memory . '
with Gray'e Elegy, as well as with the
addition of ,th,e Dominion of Canada,
to the British Empire, for he is said
,te'ha.ye- -repeated the famous stanza ,
ending with the words "The. paths of. , " • „
glory lead but to the ,grave," as the •
boats . With. muffled ears approached .•
the fortress which was the key to a ' ,
continent. The house In which he was ' '.
born' still sta,nds. • - ,i'•
' The. village of Eversley, in Hamp-
shire; is aseecia.ted with the clime of.
Charles. Kingsley, author of "West:
, wa.rdeHo!" whowas the incurribeet of -
. itS church. for thirty-three years, and ;-
in the vic'arage-of which. all the novels . .
and pciems. ay vehicb: he is known were
.,
penned; The nearby village, of Hers-
ley is proud of the fact" that "John
Keble, author of "The Christian Year," ,
was Ito Vicar -ter over thirty years, and
...that -its. church was built out. of the
Proceeds of- the sale of that poem. -The-
fainou& hymn, "Sun of My Soul," is
taken from It. . ' -
- A Son of, the Manse.
enough for them that he .had lallen °at a aPohen word or vls1 e g t first, ahead -o 1, g
people divine a lack of seecning MAT- f er hearing the message: o I) a
were people
and nearly been killed?
"1 didn't manage it" h • ei mony of other's Ives? It was re-
, e sal (JOS y. • • '
"It juet happened." reeled, perhaps', in the Arcleynes'
•ther too deferential treatinent of each
b ?, 31.°ur other. They were on affectionate lDul,
' ' rid'b tw ea tluese.
"Did ecou lean over and lose
"I just fell," he said. pot farailaar teeth's, a g e
two attitudes lies a great difference.
a 9.110f3
Hugo shrugged his shoulders.
Gaunt gave up cross-questioning The little bride was still a young
corning proverbial. dwelt no wifelY knowledge. And Thrills,
him. Hugo's stubbornness' was be- girl: ln her soft brown eyes there
to stand alone, but who has te lean on Gaunt hung about hoping to gee allow( d himself tobetoo theroaghly
Je.an and announced his intention'to. in taje,•dernands, of his pro-
ddelina a 'staying to lunch. While fessien' f°1; TecentlY wedded man'
a woman" nor can she respect the
"He treats, her ad though.she were
man who is too inert to hold his own. Hugo was taking a short nap he
among men. -- strolled into the garden and down by
"To a wc,rnan plain lazinese, lack the memory -haunted pool, But san-
d energy, slothful self-indulgence in shine is different from, moonlight.
ease are -Unforgivable, sins. She c,ould, Last night e been
a sam in an inaccessible ruche,
fconiebody reinarked.
Somehecly, else- a woman --said
yell ask me, there's some
more easily condone the breaking og sentimental, and now When he tried
• mystery about that raarnage."
a e en Inman merits, Ana to -remember all -the things Jean and And so there wan and like all mys-
when she discovers that she is mate I he had said to each other, some of teries it betrayed its presence.
11 the T Ca d
them seemed rather foelish.. He had On their return co London, Pailip
, kissed her held her in his arms. plung•ed deeply into his work; fairly
-tied to a man Who is afraid of work
drowned himself ilt it. There -tie a
great deal te. do, and as much more
es he caged to shoulder. He pent his
partner for a holiday, and his own
days were crowded, sometimes one he -
Breakfast -Stewed Prunes, Cereal, ginning when, the other ended. ' He
, Toast, Coffee. restless for the first theta in many head vhere there Were always guests
' 1 A d h' . elf had to'
Luncheon -Rice with Cheese and Years, and a yearning to lee up and but s ten r eYne, lras- ' th
I3acon, All Bran Muffins, Cocoa, Date doing took possession of him. It was ,rush back to town aa leave e en-
°, to Alice.
and Nut Salad, Cocoa, Cookies. because of Jean, no doubt. if
world teretainin
Dinner -Cream of Tomato soup, might call him ,an old man if it chose, I On one of these -necesjons he fo d
Croutons, Baked Potatoes, Buttered but the blood ran hot and strong in himself in town on a Saturday night
Beane, Lettuce Salad, chocolate Pi by bhyis ',air's. He could still be tormented with nothing special to do for several
Nuts, rigs. ., the pangs of love. , • hours. "The French scientiSt whom he
The toe Of his boot struck some- had come to meet .had missed a train
thing and he looked down, then stoop- connection. somewhere, and" in cense-
CANNING SOUP MIXTURE. ed and picked it upaexamming it elm.- quence the evening was practically
1 'nod of having lost when he fell It was a hot, airless night, and the
love flies out of the window." -Dor-
othy Dix.
MENU TO PLUMP UP THIN
FOLKS. •
Oh, egell-ethey had their lives to
lead, Jean and 'he, arid Hugo also, One
mustepet a good face an it.
He lit a cigarette and leaned
against Huge's' sheltering pahnotree,•
his puzzled gaze turned towards the
Brown Sugar, Cream, Bacon an- eggs, take poor Hugo-ewith him? •He felt Week -en -cis they
d sea. Should. he go to sea again and
'Iced on his lectures at nights.
Crea.med Potatoes went down to eiders -
In the fall, just before frost and ously. Huge's pipe- The one he com- wasted.
know. But I do know that laziness is hive been canned, I ani sure to -find alover the balcony. I•low came it here? Young doctor was sudden y seize I.
that Paralyses theii" energies, 1 d° in3t when the more perfect vegetable&
an incurable vice, and feat you can do number of late -bearing plants still clever, but in 'this metance he had a to sheer torture. Should he go back to
Gaunt made no pretence at being' a sense of restlessness that amounted
pare for the vegetable souwhich ' '
p is •
and the accident had occurred by his offended, and IVIonsieur Carre was not
een .. a ' g last ni lit., scarcely polite. Foreigners are easily
ning alone. These I gather and pre-
strch a treat en cold winter days. Al-,tr in -to climb back iritc, the house. even an acquainta.nce who might ex -
Y g - epee the informality of a note and
_a_
nothing with people to whom no producing nice tender vegetables, butveritablebrain wave. He realized at Maidenhead and let Monsieur Ca.rre
Rehievernent is worth the "effort it not in sufficient gnantities for cane! once how it had happened. Hugo had take care of hiniself? But that' seemed
costs, to wham labor is the ultimate
cursof the world, and whose only de-
sire is to loaf through life.
"That kind of a man never laves a
woman well enough to work for her, be used in this way and the greaterl • • follow on to Maidenhead as best he.
could by mself. --
most any fresh tender vegetable can! CHAPTER XXXVI.
power he needs to make him a sac- the soup'. Tornatoes, turnips, potatoes, h Alice Ardeyne had settled down Intel
new life mare or less happily. Philip -regardede closely written
There was -the lecture, of course.
the
London in mad -June. .
and no wife can supply him with the the varlet the betterthe fl f
y e e avor o 1
sheets rid manuscripttdistastefully. He
cess, Ma.ny optimistic women have carrots, onions, green beans, cabbage,' Ge;nerally less, but when moods of had laid them aside or the week -end,
ettempted this feat, but they all fail.
"As for a woman making anything
of a man by trying to keep him jacked
up all the time, that is another fal-
lacy. The only effect of a wife keep-
ing' continually after a husband and
trying, to spur him on is to make him
hate her. She becomes a thorn in the
flesh. She is the outward and visible
sign of the thing loathes most. She
is the nagging of his conscience. She
is a perpetual remnader of his own
shame M being too weak and inert to
do a man's part.
"No man's love survives having his
wife tell him of his faults. A man
may suspect that 'he cuts no important
figure in the 'outside world, but his
admire him, that she shall believe in mixture (besides saving the late veke- e ne's numerous friends. He was ing greetmgs was conscious of an un -
vanity demands that his wife shall greatest advantage in canning socipi
him that he shall measure up to her tables) is that the soup is so whole- PlYrild of her and liked to see her in comfortable sense of shock. What had
d , .t e eapFisive frocics he insisted upol-t She done to herself? Perhaps it was
standard of manhood. - some an nourishing as t co ems a iant aBogrrdoitgehscieruae
"Therefore you 'cannot picture a greater variety of vegetaleles than "It' the one wav a doettyi•Ihshretaaldr:woll'll it twslinotretr,
her having.
e time the soup is say, my darling, that you clo me air. And now -apparently- it had
earn and celery form the main r' dissatisfaction were on her she kept .
gredients. !them to herself. 1 and was in no mood to take up has
Cut the corn from the cob, dice the' She was -flat so much unhappy on'
'vrriting on the S13111. of the moment.
potatoes, turnips, onions and carrots I her own account, as on Philip's, and TA: Meant getting out reference books
Inch. were:,.all n. eatlY P, ut away. It
string the beans and cut into sresei because -try as she would -it seemed w
pieces and 'impossible to forgive her mother for meant changing Ills clothes:again, for
, slice the tomatoes, The ' whet seemed more and more a more , he had dressed with the intention of
amount of onions used depends liPoill strous piece of treachery. Time mag-;tcaikiarnigdgatehs! rearednehhesacvoaen-jet toondlyinns'ewreaatt
their strength, but six large anions to:nified the hurt, instead of diminishing!
three gallons of the other v.egatables it. lover the lecture in the ease of a soft
Ard-
is sufficient for the average taste. Thel Yet there wore ma ------------ hen !shirt and, his aid golfing- coat.
with the exception of corn and cab-leaine realitY. He was so kind and Claridges and afterwards watched the
hage, merry and busy, she could scarcely do dancing for a little while. Then he
This canned sou '
p mixture keeps less than repay him in kind. He gave strolled up to -the foyer in a thor-
her a great deal of money to play with oughly bored frame of mind and ran
splendidly, and the contents of a jar and a big house to manage. She had into Carrie Egan.
added to fresh beef stock makes a a car and a chauffeur of her own. andj She had 'changed in apperaance
complete meal in itself. Possibly the a delightful week -end cottage at Maid -.very much, and as he found himself
enhe• d h the entertained shaking hands with her and exch.ang-
swift' glance around, then a sigh as ,
V. --------------------------
of relief at finding: the thorn empty. "Farmers do your best -26-5-24,
Chris -
"Sit • clown, Phil I won't be a thine." The distance between Chris-
tiana and the place where 'the locust
She left hini gohig into an inner wa,s captured is more than 200 miles,
1mfrom *MAI thene came the mule amd, the' locust despatch flier must
have covered the distance with a
swarrn :about a mile long in 24 hours
which included a rest over night,
mar of lier voice and that of another,
which sccanded just a little fretful.
Ardeyneehad scarcely time to won-
der about,*when she was baelc again,
smiling Yet, as he could see, excited
and re, her breathless.
' "Oh, it is good to see you again!"
she exclaimed. "One feels so safe up their 1Dlessings.
with you, Phil. I don't know anyone • '
I've longed for more than I have for
you these past few, incinthe.".
-Ardeyne Wondered if she knew he
was maeried. It seemed a fitting
Moment to break the news to her. F"far-
tunately she helped him over the awk-
wardnesS of it.
, "You married that girl, I suppobe?"
she 'said, as he Was making up his
mind how to tell `her without drag-
ging in the ,subject by, the ears.
"Of course I did" he replied.
"Where do you keep her?"
:Ardeyne explained a little stiffly
about their week-end:cottage. and hew '
he , himself happened to be alone in
London oil a Saturday night.
"You're happy?" she asked a little
wistfully. I
"My dear Carrie, if I were cynieal
I might 'reply that I've only been mar -1
tied two menthe. Of course I'm happy.
What do you expect?" a
"Oh, den't know. You must care
for her a great deal. Knowing what
you do -L ---even I, with my little knowl-
edge Of such things -well, I'm rather
surprisedthat you did it. '
Ardeyneeshiftet1 uneasily. He did
not care .at all for the tern the con-
versation had -taken. • It was natural-
ly most distasteful to Min.
(To be Continued.)
•
-For Sore Feet-adtriard's ainaneht.
Too many people remember to mul-
tiply their troubles, but forget to add
other vegetables I •do not measure, Alice -was quite happy. What was! Well, anywaY, he must dine, him -
generally using about equal quantitiesipretenee for Philip's sake often be- self. He -went to the Savoy instead of
s 500)11• . •
men finding much 'Comfort in the so- when made of the vegetables one has can advertise," he said. '"And I must mop 'that gave her, a frisky,- juvenne
. . , • '
efety of a wife who is. a spur in his en hand at th •
side, urging him to take ha.zardous ! wanted.
, credit." ' grown amazingly. .A.nywaY, it was
jumPs. Nor can you imagine a man' Mix all the vegetables together,I She heel the usual desire of a newly bunched up in a conventional fa,s1don,
'Yearning to come home at night to! season. with salt and red e
p r
ppe, atm
, married woman to plan her life on and she had on a black dress which
a wife who is alWayS asking bim if he' sufficient water t different lines from those of the dis- made her look sallow and years -older.
,
o cover and cook aeuntled people one sometimes en- This was leY no rneans.the same Carrie
has done tbis and whY he hasn't dene,lintil all the vegetableS are tender. e'fatnetereci in books, P.hilip'st friends Egan who. had shocked and deligirted
that, and throwi..ng up 'at hint the Boil raPidlY then Pack lie theroughlY should be her friends. He must lose the knitting brigade a tho Mimosa
achievements of other men. ste'rilized glass jars whije at the boil- nothinii by his marriage. Particularly Palace.
,
busitess. But in real practice it is in sterilized glass jars, and add one Life .flowed on easily and busily:I '"No -not so well as I might be;
sounded somewhat ptofessional.
love of meddling in other People's tables, then cnt into small pieces, pack waYs•
neither as diverting nor as successful level teaspoenful of salt to each quart There were no quarrels; no stories to,Mrs. Egan replied. "And I could say
make the sunshine more vivid. It was .the SameCif---you." She had not lost
as it promised to be. Putting aside jar, or one-half teasPoonful of salt to as though Philip had a good-tempered,lany of her fra.hkness. "You loolc like
obliging sister keeping houSe for Man.! a screwed-uP rag, Phil. What is the
That is to say, on the surface, !matter?' sh turned the tables on
Being a man ,s Inspiration is some- ing temperature, if possibl 0 s was only half a wife to him. 11 "Are you quite well?" Arcleyne
Or, you TsTacte loses
thing that appeals to the feminine can Wench and cold dip the vege- must be made up in other asked, surprised into a question -which
Plans for Root and Storage
_ Cellars.
Plans for the construction of eel-,
lare for the storage of roots and of
perishable' products generally, are
contained in the pamphlet "Root and
Storage Cellars," issued by the Dept.
of Agriculture at Ottawa. Three types!
of celiar are presented -(1) The cellar1.
ander the barn driveway; (2) The
cellar ander a building, and .(3) The
isolated Dieg ams and speci-
fications are given for each.
HINTS WORTH TAKNIG.
the difficulties of the task and its
boomerang rewards, evc,meri find that
they .son lose hiterese in the under-
taking.
"For women ''do not love long where
they donot respect, and no womari r-
epects the man who has not strength or 35 minutes (under; 15 -pounds pges-
each pint jar. Partially seal jars,
then process one and one-half hours
in a home-made canning outfit, Or
pack vegetables in jars ,• without
blanching, add salt as above and pro-.
cess two hours in home-made outfit,
sure) in a steam pressure cooker." At
the end of processing period, remove
jars from canner, seal tight, 'cool, then
store in a cool, dry place.
WIIEN MOTHER IS COMPANY.
This plan I find Works well in get-
) ting the children to do their part of
A pitaanntutitt /. 1 the housework. First, I do not corn- .
and instreentidie ! eland, for I find they had rather feel
sweet and a ',will 1 they are doing a favor. So I ask
X - a.o.t-11-nee$Ill i there if they wil. or would like to do
beAtealiet nis -77
aveth " so and to for Me.
1 t aeh week one of them takes over
al 0 0 d 11! all it•
Itoalths• Waned.prahousekeeping so as to give my mind
anIe��m 4 a rest from household worries. The
ij irest of us ere hired help and do tho
Illailseet me , work, with the housekeeper's deme-
nt:KA etfilar .
testa leiellaalso ' blots and hap. The next week let
someone else he housekeeper.
qt. ... '.I, one day of their running. the house
; The feature enjoyment will be that
e ,' { they can give a company dinner, T and
1 the rest of the faleily to be the coin „ , .
: pany, Or course, we are Wee fielP
1 until the dinner is seady, and get the
; dieter aceording to the orders from
i the housekeeper.
I Yon will be surptised how readily
I each girl takes her shore of the Work.
; Even my boys want their share Of the
. ,' ..... i, " -e-,rg •. r, 111 - L
noore,..on,n+
I, wore, Carrying water, eetthig table
and emptying Slaps, and'iQeally enjoy
.“.-------- --
a -40----''''''' ,;e', -`'l, 1 m A D
ttfUei ale, 't. --XL . le, . •
, •
VVe,,IWIalce Payments Daily.
We Pay Express Charges.
We Supply CSIES.
Highest Ruling prices Pahl.
BOWES ca, Limited
Toront9
eans d Peas
Send Samples -State Quantities
Morreve' & C.,'39 Front St. E.
, Phone: Main 1738, Toronto, Ont.
A REALLY GOOD
PLOW
.Th Geanuine ,.: ,,,.7.,f,ir..,",,,,,9,,,. ,.
.`,.,.,.':!'1,.. .......L
:71
•',?:,...,1,'..„.f,.. :::'-'
"Wilkinson" ''' '
The Bateinan-mWilliinb7sort 'Coo Licct-
Tor-onto nt. - . •
In making salad dressing add a lit-
tle grated horseradish to give it the
pre -per "tang."
, Keep a needle, threaded, handy in
the kitchen to take that "stitch in
time" when a garment is snagged, a
holder lases its , hanger, a dish towel
is torn or a dozen and one daily slips
that require that aforesaid stitch.
Smither the fire with fine chips,
closing all drafts, when, a fire in the
range is not wanted for some time.
Open up all' drafts, lay on the wood
or coal and shake down when the fire
is -wanted. This saves fuel, also the
extra work of kindling. a fresh fire.'
Rusty steel should be sdalted for
several hours in linseed oil and then
polished with, imslake,d lime or emery
powder. This powder is easy to else
if applied with a cork which has been
dipped in the 'linseed oil.
•
Minard's Ointment Heats Cuts.
Watch Your Peas and Ques.
The farmer, if the man is YY
Will open keep his honest 11.
The country's full these latter days
og ,iy,',indlers on the hunt for jj,
•I'hey'll•take his xx and his 'yr
With seerningla the greatest ee.
Ms 1313 and im and uu and suet
Get care that simply beats the Dutch,
While right beneath his very nose
He hays a bill he never oo,
--A. M. Hendee,
Stylish Steut.
03.7
- .
cit't
•
Tuairlicolt 4'444r
• Deantyriftr4-4'lla4YeAVIWiltlseritalind°11,tinthe
'ping -time:the going is hairdeSt-
fireguett finish thit resists
nt. . :tAttok.rommus
iSFO. Rdir, off. lir
;0-
44nRersiBfilleithiS
andhow to
0144m Tit
,t
lasiolial
• . .
The publications of the
IDonainion Department of Agri-
culture are obtainable free of
charge' on request, with excep-
tion noted.
:They contain helpful ieforrna-
itiaornmionng.all subj,ects relating to
They !number some four hun-
dred
exinatoaplli,esa:nd the following
Tho Safe Uttnaling at Commercial
Wented-----WOnlan, clever, t�
vacantly with large corporation, , mot of pubrioationo.
Soesendee .14ints.
Preparing Pcniltry Produce for Market.
Winter 1-rtr Pew:11=nm%
Wintering BOO in csnacut.
Root and 'StOtngo
Flitteil:tiiviin:goSnttollacrilo':gbs.and 'Hog Grading.
P8Dtileescetrvibnatioofn LearbFrCtluittss'and VegetniniOte
/nOe!t: Anfltec6tinUse
g Live Stock.
„Farmer's Account nook -Price 10 cents.
I. •
"DIAMOND DYES"
COLOR THINGS NEW
Beautifill hom.c dye-
ing. and tinting IS
guaratteed with
,Diennond Dyes. Just
din in cold water to
tint, soft, delicate
settedea, or boil to
dye rich nermaten.t
colors. Each 15 -cent
package oon,tains di.
rot thins:so simple any woman eau dye
or tint lingerie., milks, riblione, skirt,
Wait drese,5, coats, stockfugS,
SWeater,s, draperies, coverings, hang.
Inge, everything new,
buy "biamond Dyes" --no other
. . . ,• ktnA-and tell your druggist Wliethee
Photograph shoWS, the ()aeration el niedie.al et:ienee's leicat torearltalile tire material Yon Wifsh to color is Wadi '
' and reedrit eUre,tive pielver,,artiacial sunlight for siehly and titiYerettlar Child- or silk, or -whether ii, is litien, eetton,,
„
ran The ray is prodtteed'IDY a querfa reeseury lainp, Or naxed. geode.
• ,.. .,
. . . ,
.. ,
• l'""
Cut out this advertiseinent,
mark on it the bulletins desired,
including the full List'of Pab-
lications, MI in your nate and
address, and mail to:
Publications Branch,
Depattrnelit of Agticulture,
Ottawa, Canada.
(No postage required)
PostOffice ..... „ ......
Ro .... . 4.1" ... • .. .1441,11"•.4.41.1.1”,
Somersby, in Lincolnshire, 17,1p,S un
IC110Wa to fame until it found an ever- • •',
fasting name as the birthplatle of. al- ;
fred,Teenyson, who was born in its a
vicarage in 1809. He spent all his ear-
ly there. The scenery of tl-iis part
of Lincolnshire colors all his earlier
poexes, whilst the, "brook" which he -
immortalized runs: ploee beside the -
house. is famous .."Northern Fa.riner"
was a man of the neighborhoed, and
Locksley Hall, afthough a fietitious
name, is generally supposed to be a
'neighboring mansion. "
A vicar, of the moorlaild parish of
Haworth, in Yorkshire, was the Rev. ,_
Patrick Bronte, who became, the Sather
of one of the most remarkable and. tal.
'ented fan:tildes in Englisb literary an;:
nals. In the dull village pa-rsonage •
close to the graveyard were written
such immortal works as "Jane Eyre,"
"Vilette," and "Wuthering Heights."
The three sisters, Charlotte, 'Emily,
and Anne, were all highly literary, and '
their name have left an imperishable
imprint on the neighborhood.
England's Greatest Evangelist:.
Graem,ere is associated -with ., the
name of Wordsworth, who lived close
by at Dove C-Ottage, and later at ley -dal
Mount. Fr0311 these Two residences
he wandered over the fells and by the
streams, crooning to himself the Me
mortal poems which hare made his
one of tile greatest names in onr litera-
ture. "
Beinerton, in 'Wiltshire, is famous
because George Herbert, was its rec"
tor. He wrote some of the most ex.
quisite sacred poems in the language.
There is a pictere in the Tate Gallery
which shows bim eompeaing poetry in
the vicarage garden. '
Epwarth, in, Lincolnshire, is famous
all over the world as the birthplace of
John Wesly, the evangelist, and el
his brother Clia,rles, the greatest el
all our hymn writers and author of
"Jesus, Lover of My Soul." They were,
like 6o many men who have iminertal-
ized villages, the sous of the vicar.
Mix.ing the Menthe
Apples, it is said, are rapidly' outdo -
FrovitIC 111. ,A, I, ..... • .
),2.
/OnlitaltMEIMORtintrtnn*SMIVIIROCIMIPOIMIIIIMINVITSOMMOMMI
ing tomatoes in popularity as -an 5,0-
coMpaniment.-01' fried b aeon for, break.
east in some London hotelS, •••But. this
no: means a new One, having
Iong been a farorite in certain parte of
the "West Country.
Cheese and cola apple tart are ba-
miliar , items on the tables of York- .
shire co-untryeolk, where they are- us-
ually s.earea bogethera In Spr,,BOX
cheese an•d jam are often eaten to-
gether, though to the unaccustomee
palelee the mixture is not a specially
enjoyable one. •
Moat people Icnow how goctl ewe Qin-
tent jelly is With neuttort, but few Inv,:
tried, pruhes with roast vete. 'ilea is
O corn -neon dish in .Sivedoe, where fcca
combinatione are carete113( s tu di ea.
Milk with hinth, again, seems lamppetizing to us, bet you Tell 'oeten tea
It relished in Belgium,
A Spring That's Solid,
A lspring balan•te 111 whith Lee
"spring" coae,istS ef, a solid metal bar
over an inch in diameter is used bly ,
the H.S. Bureatt Of StenrIerds as aa •
aid in calibrating testing' biechines,
P`eWer Oritriches'in South Afriee.
The eernber of aetritaies 111 South -
Africa lied aropped Seam 900,000 to 1.1.0e
000. Thet 1,s,th coneequence feat' 01
Stt estreth feather shortage•'•
"