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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1931-07-03, Page 6V • I •. � .r •. Y .: :,.•�,� u., :. ,. ,. s •. .. ,.. .,. a4. ,...,. •' , «... ...,., r.: �. .... � e .d:.. %. , ... .,.$ •}! 3 .. t. .. ., , ... � r. .. r ' ti .... i� �A}Nei .l�l.... ., .,.. 1 T �:- e i - � L� 1YC..: �• Y .. ., , tt vµA{ r t� Y '71 ..� .. \- . .v:. . , 'a.. ..... u' ., . .. .., r. ,d. ., � , s n h 5 c. .. ii ,, a , �, r ,. � t � .. ST L 4. �. .. ,• . M1 ,r t d � .,t r . .1 f a in ,.. 1 t. .t .. t -e t. .t.� � r , .,1 ,1_. ... l i. 1 .. .... r � � -.. .• -.,. r .. ..Yr. .. ! � . �` t v.. r 1. f -. , •, .. ... 1 h r r ,. i ..,.. � , l ,. �aE`x. .. �'s„ .. .. Y .. n., ,.. ,' •, 5 ,•. v Y u �„ -.... :. .. ., :' :' s .. �. :. W.r .4.. .r .., t �-.. ,r Y ...... �,. . 1 lr... ..a �'i ., t. .. .. .. 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Y• f � it , ! { .. 1 c �i.. ,. : r .,r t s, f . Y. , �. Lev. �V l:: .oS. i' 2 M. , $'V .i•, . ,,:,m rf.. , f e . t 4.i iF. . , . }. :.�.' Y� Y''•S ��i:, as fi..., •:. '7 ton. + •!t. r,111Y�.: ,. 1y� +"'�s • "i THE �y" 'art► daft _ . , ' ,urroa w rouVtiaav .. ,.. .. .. a ball ;sine came a camp fire with ride from the castle. volunteers Mr. Hearst with then rock against leaning,; pulls therefrom for New York, guest's curiosity, Mr. Heaxst s work He Will leave the sit in a 'corner, alone, 'tary Wtillicombe and or that. To that este him most, there dripping .of telegrams citing, advising, La Cuesta Encantada his success. A publisher ies, he is citizen of view is unwarped, unenlisted, and things with the clarity which out while seated by Mr. Hearst, a days "I'll tell you," and, fumblixtg which he was a telephone, and relieves bis is never done. table at dinner to or with Secre- go over this paper office which inter- comes a steady praising, testi- ordering. Perhaps is one secret of in many cit- of none. His point his sympathy come to him isolation brings. i Jus ice Sewell, and to all the oourt and jury, that Proctor end his wife have been affrighting children in the night-time. And,wlxile we supposed the old xnan to'b reading the Bible to his old wife, the pair of hoary re- probates have whisked up the china Hey, .path on one broomstick, and flown ovary to a witch communion. Now, in the sunny noontide, they go totter- ingto the flows.theyrevealingsedentary Behind these two, who help one another along, and seem to be com- forting each other in a manner truly pitiful, comes a woman with a dark, proud face that has been beautiful,a and a figure that is still majestic. Tt is Martha Carrier, whom the devil found in a humble cottage and tempt- ed with his 'promise that she should be Queen of Hell. Last of the miserable train comes a man clad in black, of small stature, with a clerical band about his neck. Many a time that face has been up- lifted from the pulpit of the East Meetinghouse, when the Rev. Mr, Bur- roughs seemed to worship God. Alas! He yearned for knowledge; he went groping into a world of mystery; as the witnesses have sworn,he sum- in'oned up the ghosts of his two dead wives, and talked with them of mtit- ters beyond the grave. Behold, at this very instant, a proof of Satan's power! Mercy Par- ris, the minister's daughter, has been •toy a flash of Martha Car- rier's eye, and falls down in the streets, writhing 'with horrible spasms. Hurry on the accursed wit- ches to the gallows, ere they do more mischief! Among the multitude there is horror and distrust; friend looks askance at friend, as if, in every crea- ture that God has made, they suspect- anac er. ed e witch, .or dreads her Never, never again,wh her • this or any other shape, mayglancepressure , St rsal Mad- ness riot ine the Main Street. These scenes, you think, are all too somber. So, indeed, they are; but the blame must rest on the somber spirit e their web of life hardly a a singlwoe gee thread of gold. I will exhibit one of the only class of scenes, so far as my invests- gation has taught me, in which our their ancestors were wont to steeptimes tough oldre k offts in wine and indulge an outbreak grisly pollity. Here it comes! What! A coffin, borne on men's shoulders,and six a ed gentlemen as g- g pallbearers, and aspeaking, Tong train of mourners. Now you are angry with me. You find yourselves walking in a funeral procession. Ev- en so; but look! back through all the social customs of New England, in the first century of her existence, and find one occasion, other than a funeral feast, where pollity was sanctioned by practice! These are the ob- equ1eSa ocaskf o dof ale rand nor Brads( a et. y icedaff- wine and aqua-viand many at edr hashbeen t of spiced ed. Else when should the bearers sty er, and thwere as theyaged palllbearers, too, strive to walk s'o my beside the coffin? And wherefore do the mourners tread on one another's heels why, if we may ask without of- —andthe fence, should the nose of the Reverend Mr, Noyes, through which he has just deliveringthe funeral discourse,provement glow like a ruddy coal of fire . Well ,ell old friends! Pass' on with burden of mortality; and lay it in the tom -b. should be allowed to' Peopleeight themselves in their own fashion;testants New England must have been a dismal abode for the man of pleasure, when the only boon companion was nom- have not had much faith 'in what air; generally called intelligent tests. In- deed after reading the O'Connor art-' fele, "Taking a Man's* Measure" we have less faith than ever, since he points ••out the extreme importance of properly framing the tests. He men, tions that in one case he devised a hundred tests and in the end discard- ed them all since rents proved that were not teats. He says that in some respects the most ap- proved tests can point the way to success or failure. At least they can tell a man that his chances of being good engineer are '2A times as great as his chance of being a successful contractor, or vice -versa. None of ' � them will enable any pundit to say definitelyT�"You• cannot succeed as an engineer, or You will be a success- ful contractor." There remain al- ways exceptions, the variable and elusive element of personality. Mr. O'Connor gives the surprising results of sode of the tests which he has devised. One of them was made by means of a simple sopors- tus consisting of a board with one hundred holes drilled at one end and a shallow trayat the other end, con- twining 300 small metal pins. A thousand girls were invited to take the pins from the tray, three at a time, and place each three in one of the drilled holes. One of the 'girls did it in five minutes. Another re - quired fifteen. That is to say,one was three, times smarter than an- other. At first sight, the difference does not seem extraordinary until we remember that one normal man is not three times as tall as another normal man, nor one normal woman three times as 'wain as another. In another test two rows of figures were offered were the same in each column. Others were different. The candidates were asked to them over and write down in adjoining columns whether the figures were identical or different. One man fin- ished the task in 40 seconds. An- other eooe three minutes, Moreover the man who did the work the fastest was more accurate>, than the slowest man, and Mr. O'Connor calls attention to the not- able fact that the slow -but -sure proverb is largely a myth. There were men in the various tests who were fast but inaccurate, and men who were slow but correct. Generali Y however, the fastest work- ars were the most accurate, sed' the slowest the least reliable, Combining speed and accuracy, the best man showed himself twenty times better than the poorest man. There was a third experiment, somewhat like a jig -saw puzzle, except that there were two faces of the disconnected blocks to be fitted together and reassembled. xty times The astclman at this workpreyed to eas ithe the test still morTo mak Dose e thesresultof rex- tremes both college men, had preeti- onme t,e and same education and en presumably the' same general intelligence. Further teats showed that b y thorough g practice it was possible for slowest of these competitors to p improve, although as time went on t]ibix rate of improvement $ was lees and less, At the same time the fast performers improved also, and at the end there was practically the same g between them. But all the ton- were not equally expert in all the tests, and Mr. O'Connor says the matter of the blocks revealed engineering talent and that of the figures accountingtalent,or probable b abilityin secretarial week. After many failures a test devised to re- veal the kind of ability that an en- gineer should have was devised eight years ago and those taking ih divided into four classes. A recent survey shows that of those who found the test easiest 70 per cent. are earning a living as engineers, while of the worst of the students only two or three are doing so. But the two or three hopeless •prospects are doing as well as the' many promising ones. While the tests are not absolutely conclusive, therefore, they are highly sutwe and useful. Another intilligent incident was the intelligence test of a backward youngster brought to the inquisition by his cultured teacher. The child went through some of the tests much more resell) than the sch•ooI teacher. Y Because he was dull in some respects his latent abilities had never been and he had suffered from a sense 'of inferiority which threat- cried to make him in time a num- skull. Equally interesting was the test of a brilliant engineer who to amuse Mr. O'Connor tried the musi- cal test. To everyone's astonishment he made a perfect score, the only such score in the examiner's ex ' re- ence. But he had never cultivated the musical side of his personality in any way, had been unaware that he possessed; it. One eras not to in- of'course,that he should have made music hs life work since he • whighlyutthe successful to tindicates etnh t neer, many people have dormant aptitudes or gifts which might proPvide them' at least with fascinating hubbies and thus enrich their lives. frequent my gave from another appearedsash most have lana ago also during Now the for very living traced or plauit' from the the organs exactly should. " ''t`A}:} t ; r ;cal a .. ��� cN enasks �"+ t t I - I • r, 'ell be to the w s ,• IRE ,'�/� items riWe -mob Is that old roof causing trouble 4ain? You no sooner get leak plugged than another pars. Patching will keep poor—re-roofing is the o Certain cure. W Brantford Roofs are weather® tight, fire -safe and colourful. Brantford Supertite Slates be laid directly over the shingles. That saves time, money and ffibL9S. Your dealer will gladly give you a re -roofing estimate-- FREE) . Brantford Roofing Company, Toronto, Winnipeg, Montreal, �' ,, a � e N< I wee attacks vision. Kruschen then person. wonderful. gone which as not suffered the at 58 year my food, fit—the a joy."—(G. Headaches to to parffal many without Krusehen root cruise of as cot teas one ap- you my can old rantfor Rows Limited, Head Office and Branch Offices and Warehouses: Halifax, Saint John, N.B., it ar ' ' , "r ,. ' Factory: and k5 '�� . {y <n „,a „ n�'� r`A N.,,. s ,,,,it,: r � c `+{ ;9 �•-, r c„�1, ' ;' ' ' " .7; 3 ��• ....Y ie Brantford, Ont. St.John's, 278d. a ma reins to headA,e s with of ditzpness afie My oecupatieu is a very one --s printer's• reader. Salts a good•trial, and onwards I'seen •" nate The the thingto x48 le bath to weaker. g T had discarded some y being strong enough,...li from -bad ciraulatlea early mornings of winter. I can enjoy cold bathe round, enjoy and am eager and am what I consider sort of fitness that makes F.) can nearly always a disordered stomach constipation—a o� indoor workers suffer ever suspecting it. Salts go right down of the trouble and removes by gently persuading elimination to functioe Nature intended they RECIPES One-third cup shortening, 1 egg, Lasses, one-third half teaspoon cinnamon, teaspoon ginger, salt, one-half teaspoon spoon •bakin'g powder, try flour. Cream together shortening. Add and buttermilk beaten together, ants which have Bake in a square erate even (350 minutes, * • Raspberry 1 pint whipping .1 cup raspberry 3-4 cup sugar (less Heel fruit) ✓ther 1 teaspoon gelatin 2 tablespoons cold 8 tablespoons Chill the cream' the fruit through theabog in cold water boiling water. Pulp and juice and until the mixture until light, then has been beaten toat traysnof the and freeze. + sugar, one-third cup one-third cup mo cup buttermilk, one- one-quarter one-quarter teaspoon soda, 1 tea- 1 1-3 cups pas- the sugar and the egg, molasses, which have been and the drysmitten ingredi- been sifted together, cake pan in a mod- degrees F.) for 45 * * Mousse. cream pulp and juice or none for can- water boiling water. thoroughly. Rub a sieve. Soften and dissolvehin Add to the fruit the sugar. Chill thickens. Beat fold in cream which until stiff. Turn in- mechanical refriger- MAIN STREET of early morning is itself over the Main bellman whose office at the street cox- peal upon his hand wearily homewards. awakes,and sends from its chimney. being passed, theMan go to their fields but remain within walk the street, yet an unburth- belongs neither to a Sabbath. It is the •in one sense, a day the day on which, have made them- the minor severities receive their re- At this very mo- has bound an idle -post, and is with a ea -t -o since sunrise,Daniel standing on the$3,QOG. with athat which he is con- throughout his 0 is chained to of Prison -lane, blazing on her ma- all for no other of- her had against her Such are the prof- serve the good peo•- England village to earlier part of lac- forenoon, strove)- has come hither- slowly into seems a clergyman; near, we recognize Lynn, who was pre- here and has been as he rode wilderness. Be- town thron • in g g house, mostly with that the sunshine than a shadow them. There go grim rulers of a There hobbles sour an bitter old of her neighbors an occasional air- Last of all, there lugging in a (boys whom. he has Gods blessed if for nor nothing1. itens, when the first stir of when the new the New England had become aetu-as its daily life must wlith hardly and enliven it. sinister to the Intel- to the heart; espec- generation had be- gloom, and the religious ardor, to onward, Time; build and tear down Provide other of men to trade, along the s t. Do accustom , N :mess ' paration obligations. The economic recovery of the world also depends on it. The German Government is en- gaged in a decisive struggle :for the ,i future." In other words,the German Government said on Jue 6th what some of the best students of interne - tional affairs have insisted it would have to say some time or other. Fur- has reached the end of a rope. would snap the rope. rope, if we mightl it a line instead of a say that the big fish would get away altogether and the nations to which Germany owes large sums of money would have gone sup- peFeos. From time to time since ions we have been regaled with fictions a to the prosperity of the German people. whichNo doubt they have had times we; a better than but they never have been free fromh the crushingburden laid upon p n them by the Treaty of Versailles. Germany then was disarmed and helpless and had to accept whatever terms were ,offered. There were many who said then that the terms were impossible, and that if Germany ever fulfilled them it would be at the cost of ruining this generation and the next to pay for the folly of the generation that willed the war. Dawes plan and young plan were merelyexpedients to P postpone collapse. The general busi- ness depression has merely hastened the time when Germany would throw up her hands and ask the al - lies, particularly France, what they going to do about it. Perhaps ,the imminent collapse which Pre'si- dent Hoover is taking steps to avert, could not have came at a better time. The German Government has given proof to the world that she has tried to perform the impossible. In February all salaries of civil servants in Germany were' reduced six per cent. Since then there has been another cut of four per cent, on all salaries less than $750 a year and per cent. on allmist salaries above The cabinet ministers have •reduced their own salaries by thirty per cent. All railway employees, all public service corporation employees and all employees of the Reichshanri are, according to The Nation, subject to these reductions. The dole for the unemployed has been'reduced by five per cent., and hereafter will not be granted to those less than 21 and married women. The allowance for maimed veterans has been reduced. Seasonal workers will be aided for only twenty weeks and then at about half the present rate of unemploy- merit insurance. In addition to these taxes the government has imposed P what is called a crisis tax to raise $100,000,000 for necessary services. To this wage earners must pay one Per cent, on incomes of less than $60 a month and a flat $15 on salaries of this a month. It nsid be said that this latter rate is considered very high in Germany. To -day there are in Germany 4,250,- 000.0 nemployed, according to the best avalable statistics. Next Winter the German Gokvernment has counted upon having to care for 4,500,000, though there are some who say that the figure will be nearer 7,000,000. It must be borne in mind that the present German -Government, like the Labor Government in England, is nstwith 'orit ort eofinennority groups. Some of these groups are • enlypro- and might o the new at a critical moment. This would mean the end of all honest efforts to keep up with the foreign obligations. Germany would' .be in a kind of chaos, forced to choose between Hitlerism on the one hand and Communislm on the other.Neither German Communists nor German Fascists have any ambi- tion of paying` another mark of eign war debts; for they have always g stoutly denied that Germany was, as she formally admits in the Versailles treaty,primarily and wholly responsible for the war. What would happen if Germany formally repudiated? Would England send her army' and navy over in an effort to collect? Nota soldier, not a ship. ! France might try collection by force, but France would find the game riot worth he candle, and al- though Franc* is to -day the most formidable military power in Europe, with the possible exception of Russia, she would not wish to run the risk a driving with Italy,Austria, xHitxngarynto an 1h and perhaps 1Ruasia. A military occupa- tion would be followed by the rarpid germination of bolshevism. Germany Might follow Russia into the latby- rinth of her dark experiments, and Tierer+ww happened to her, France never would be paid. Nevertheless Ftenee •i'a hatxnted day and night ley the -fear of a new Germany which sa4ne day may try to revenge herself °n her old enemies, and if there is to any obtaele td the ,Hoover mora - torluttn; whish Wil. • ur#dou►btedly ,be followed le a reduction if not cancel- y ' laa1,. of all ,debts grovt+dirtg out of the ar . Frdnee will tis that obstacle. . /� e v l�, FOR SALE S 1 l V . C L U F F 8c S ®N S • RACE TRACK BETTORS TO PROTECTION ENTITLEDI- On June 8th, at Connaught Park, Ottawa, one of the most remarkable incidents in the history of horse roc ing in Canada occurred. The race was won by a horse named WeeThe' Tod- II, beating'the Seagram Stable's Kitting a nose. But after the num- bers had been shown, and before the bets could be paid, a protest was lodged against the horse, and she was g g deprived of the purse. It was discov- ered that her trainer had claimed an apprentice allowance to which shedismantling—numbering,arse was not entitled. The mare, there- fore, ran with five pounds less than her proper weight. It was plain that she should have been disqualified and the purse given to the next horse, since, in a sense, Wee Toddler II had won under false pretences. P But the extraordinary part was that the money bet on Wee Toddler Il was dumped into the pool and des tributed among the holders of tickets g on the three placed horses. The mon- ey bet on Wee Toddler II was simply confiscated, the racing association taking some of it, and the bettors on the other horses taking some of it, Everybody took some of it, in fact except the people to whom it reallybeen belonged. It would seem at first sight as if the money bet on the race should':collapsed. have been refunded; but while this would have been .a good deal more sensible than the' adopted by P the stewards at Connaught Park; it yet would have worked an injustice to those who had bet on the mare. The weight she carried, and not the weight she should have carried, was g published on the program. Nobody' was misled by any of the facts. She was announced to carry 105 pounds, and this is what she carried. Those who bet against her did so in the knowledge that she was carrying this' weight. Those who bet on her acted on the same body of information. No bettor was misled or deceived. All; the bettors on Wee Toddler II were merely gypped. Through an error on' the part of the trainer, which was not discovered until after the running of the race, they were deprived of the profits which their luck or their cleverness, had fairly earned for them. While Wee Toddler 1I was not entitled to win the purse, those who' had bet her were entitled to their money. It seems plain enough that if the g racing associations will not protect the people who support them, the Government should give that protec- tion. $afore now we have suggested the advisability of a racing commis- hion despite the fact that we are averse from commissionsgenerally. and any further interference' of Gov- ernment in human activities. But any argument that can .be used in favor of a poli a force can be used in favor of a racing commission to pre -objects vent such decisions as that of the Ot- tawa stewards. The governments, provincial and federal, receive mil- lions of Mars from racing in the course o the year. What 'd'o they give thpublic in return? Permis- sion to payexcessive prices to attend race meetings. They offer them no protection whatever once they are in. aide the gates. It is true that they do take vigilant measures to make sure that every dollar paid into the machines is accounted for, but this is because the Governments take a rake.. off on every dollar thus deposited. Why is it that we never hear of a race in which all bets are declaredP off? It is because when bets are de- Glared off neither the Government nor the ratong associations has a chance toyeniakrs a o dimerace. Somecounts g mDuon thetra k a horse which had been heavily bet ran away and circled die track six times before par in lythe it somethApparently hacould picked up be 'stopped. stable r in ittea that did Hata agree gT with it. In any event, Mr. Abe Orpen declared all bets off, for the reason that Mr. Open has an unusually )lively sense of what is owe ing to the people who o racing and g g of lib( on horses. Frequently we hearance btirt fereltnever being dgthenpeople wlro have bed for foul et their ! n fouled havethe the�horse that satiafa tionhas of hatttrig� their money refunded unless dio horse happens to win lightning rase artg�ltt'rhe=dhot or etruek'byroom �n ata way to the starting point void pet)hiiyitixilc oa5 it rvbiild not M x u nedE to the Betters. ielle Veowe *brews ds to !••,t n ,s rt aids aid the a'fd of- p 1 : d iii x 5 p iations, ow d y fi ' ' ., ;el " , ,lip K• ; , ' ,,,. .e d, r „ 'thy, cYatioxf faith-, n/, + r ;; ,. ; ,f • :' i fully and well. But apparently are without authority to declare all bets on a race shall be offthough there are cases as g we have mentioned, when the are simply robbed of their The racin associations make own rules or the benefit of ing associations. No representative ing the race going public is summoned their councils. The voice of the age man is unheard; his interests nored. Yet the racing associations appeal to governments for a reduction in the assessment levied upon and their appeal is heartland Do we observe any of these being passed on to the average loving citizen who plays the Well, we know that Mr. Orpen manhungry men last Winter. thoughts naturally turn to hibition agitation in 1916,when gY•' hotel keepers learned to their sternation, that perhaps three cent. of their customers were their friends. they that declared in that bettors money. their the roe- of to aver- ig- them, granted. benefits sports races? fed Our he pro- the con- per also supper Jelly Balls Chips Cracker, Rolls Olives P of his It Fran- moun- front, which guest the of of Mr. and through wild an- gazelles, will last La amid without has One: in New which floors so tear for fire- most St. Don- the at is s have precious in aro- suite, Museum este — for those as gasp lower are single sleeps his flaw- eo ,the ,there 'may, and en- ac' nisi- q Spanish castle which lies crated in his New York warehouse came from an ands- lusian hilltops. Its sale woke Span- ishpatriots to action. Approaching the magnitude of a party issue, theP issue,he idea, of protecting it from the infidel Hearst found itself in Spanish legal chambers. But when the bill which made it against the law of the landourw for Hearst to take it to America was finally passed it was found that he had ,already abducted 65 per cent. of it The remainder found its way to the Bronx 'unmolested. 'Its removal entailed building a road from theothers, mountain top dawn to the railroad. The crating, packing—cost more than the structure itself. Elsewhere in Europe, the Hearst eye lit upon a ceiling in a ruined castle. It was bought and paid for; a crew came to take it away., But the peasants who had lived under- its spell would not have it touched. Riots threatened. Then, apparently, the at- tempt was abandoned. Weeks pass- ed; suddenly the ancient .ruin collaps•universal ed. The peasants, faced by the futil- ity of a providence destroying what they had sought to protect, at last let Hearst remove the ceiling. That it had been little damaged was due, per- haps to the fact that the fall had I caused by wily Hearstians..Each night they had removed a single stone from the foundations until the whole P Whole liners have been chartered to transport treasures from Europe, through the Panama Canal,t • P the oc- gbeen can doorstep of San Simeon, At the foot of a hill at present lies a dump of packing boxes which contain an I English house which Mr, Hearst plans to set up"a da .two'snine-tails. Yr or ride fromenjoy La Casa Grande." Mr. Hearst has never lead a live tree chopped down to make room for any improvement. He has hada sin- PDeath. g legiant tree moved aside at a cost of $30,000 or $40,000. To curve a path just so, an old oak was slid four feet. A majority of the trees on the Enchanted Hill have been wafted there whole from elsewhere. Palms grow in altitudes they never dreamed of. Last year, Mr. Hearst spent 204 out of his 365 days at San Simeon. Most of that time he kept his guest' rooms fairly full. An average' of fifty or sixty guests is usually composed of a base of senior Hearst executives with a stratum of substantial elders, a celebrity or two, and an icing from the cinema world. Life among this miscellany is not without discipline. Rule 1: no drink- ing in your room. Rule 2: One must appear promptly in the Great Hall each evening, there to congregate and await the entrance. Within any- where from 15 minutes to an hour, Mr. Hearst will appear; an must be on hand. The housekeeper will have informed you in time. Do not dress. Rue 3: Never mention death in the presence. Beyond a few such restrictions La Casa Grande is La Casa de la Liber- tad: go and come as you please. A typical suite is two bedrooms, two baths, a sitting room. You have a valet or a maid at your disposal. The housekeeper at your disposal. The housekeeper will tell you when Mr. Hearst is to swim, to play tennis, to ride accompanied, and you may make your plans to attend. Non-compuls- or cars are alwayso at your disposal. But the great rite of La Cuesta En- cantada is the rite of the cinema. Every night for ten years Mr. Hearst has witnessed a motion picture. The showing follows the evening meal. In the comfortable theater, you seat ourself where Y You will, except for one spot—a divan -like accommodation in front. This is Mr. Hearst's own, his and a selected guest's. To Mx. Hearst San Simeon is still '� a ranen. Witness the informal essi the a c napkin resting paper P g the silver service the ban bottles of ketchup, A-1 sauce, pickleq, this and that, clustered about the base ofcold the great 17th -century candlesticks; the albsence of any linen on the festive •board. 'Obseryalso the ping pong based under thee• Gothic 'mantel, the billiard table fn the Great ,Hall, the « Camp' on efy "Hearst awiinmingthe offieral and riding Lion -and ams la n g Atnvosphe es mingle on the En- chanted elill. The stage is set with the treasures of Euro • a es Hollywood amuse; cel btitiess strutortaking peer cuxiousl _ rout behind and be- yinto gond•bhem all is functioning a great chain of newspapers and their allied enterprises. To spread the gospel, is a wieeless and a telegra4p'h office, and a whole telephone exchange• Nrpt merely s' telephone in every retina there are inatrumeYtta all offer the grounds, There the fable of the exeeutfve who fell to wondering hovel -�-- PURITAN The gray light slowly diffusing Street and the , it is to cry the hour reel?, rings the last bell, and goes House after house the smoke curlieg The breakfast -hour Inhabitants do not or workshops, doors; or perhaps with a grave sobriety, cried aspect, that holiday nor a Thursday Lecture; of public shame; transgressors, subs selves liable to of the Puritan law, ward of ignominy. meat, the constable fellow to the whipping giving him his deserts Ever Fairfield has been steps of the megting-house, halter about his necit, demned to wear visibly lifetime• Dorothy a post at the corner with the hot sun tronly face, and fence than lifting husband. . . , stable sights that Pte of the New while away the' tore day. Betimes in the ler he first that ward this morning—rides the •street. !He and, as he draws the minister of engaged to lecture revolving his discourse, through the hoary the whole ' now, into the meeting such somber visages becomes little better when it falls upon the Thirteen Me'n, grim community! Goody Foster, a beldam whom many suspect of taking ing on a broomstick. goes the tithing -man, couple of small caught at play'beneath sunshine• ayeHlhepyuare ewee, days. In trill spirit had ssided, settlement, between forest and the sea, ally ally a little town, l:alve trudged onward anything to diversify Succi a life was lett, and sinister ially when one •queather its religious counterfeit of its' the next. Pass onward, up new houses here, thy works of yesterday. successive generations' talk , or quarrel, all thy daily and Father Time, in which thy footsteps, years, have riot made' at last, thou lewdest soon which, once pear no more, only a hideous dream The worshipful sheriff of Ea ex, armed guard, escorts condemned prisoners p their place 'of execution Hills. The witches! them:! The approach up Prison the Main 'Street, them faces. See that aged couple, gspondent ;and his wife Ellizebeth. two old peo�rle in Essex who seemed Christian 1' itwas '. ifs, Yet have we .heard satisfaction of the — • T FOUR BUFFET MENUS Four buffet luncheon and menus follow. Menu No. 1. Cold Fried Chicken Potato Salad Hot Rolls with Gold and White Jelly Pecan Jumbles * * * ; Mena No. 2. •o Fruit Cocktail with . elon Shrimp Aspic Loaf Potato Salad Asparagusyour Parker House Rolls ' Olives and Radishes Iuif Peach Upside Down Cake, P. * * Ibut Menu No. 3. Jellied Tomato Consomme Cold Meat Loaf Lettuce Hot Corn Custard Rolls Gingerbread and Banana Shortcake. Whipped Cream * * * Menu No. 4. Fancy Assorted Sandwiches Celery Green Olives Jellied Avocado Salad Raspberry Mousse Sugar Cookies. I g Rhubarb Betty. Two cupfuls fine bread crumbs, 3 cups stewed sweetened rhubarlb, grated rind of 1 lemon. 1-4 cup but- ter, brown sugar. Cover the bottom of a bin; dish «•ith bread crumbs, add a layer of. rhubarb and continue until all in grdients are used, sprinkling Iemon rind over each layer of rhubarb and clotting each layer of bread crumbs with butter. Have crumbs for topAnothergges layer •sprinkled with (brown sugar and bake forty-five •minutes in a moderate oven -350 de F. Serve with cream g' --plain or whipped. A Luscious Rhubarb Pie. One and one-half cupfuls cut rhubarb, 3-4 cup sugar, 1 egg beaten,discovered 1 tablespoon flour, 1 cup seedles raisins or chopped dates, 2 teaspoons grated lemon rind, 2 tablespoons Iemon juice. Line a large pie plate with pastry and brush it with egg white. Wash the rhubarb and cut in half-inch pieces. Peel if necessary, but the young, pink plant is the best and need not be scraped. Mix the sugar, flour, beaten egg and seasonings and add to the rhubarb. Stir in the rail' ins or choppedfer, dates. Place in the lined pie tin, cover with strips of and baker 45 minutes in ang a amoderatttice e� oven. Serve hat or cold. Jellied Rhubarb. One pint diced strawberry rhubarb, 1 cupful sugar, p gar, 1 cupful water, one lemon, 1 1-4 tablespoonfuls granulated gelatin, 1-4 cupful cold water, Wash the rhubarb before dicing it• thee place it in a (baking dish with the sugar and the water and cook in a slow oven --390 deg. F.---fior about 50 minutes, or until it .is pink. Stir carefully once in a while. Strain, and to the juice add the gelatin, which has first been soaked in the water. Stir until the gelatin is dadissolved; cool and stir in the grated roto a wet juiceemon. Pout' anou d tend he )set in a cold place. Unmould the next day and serve topped with sweetened whipped cream. The pulp if not strained too thoroughly makes excellent filling for tarts: • 1 HEARST AT HOME No man, not even William Randolph Hearst himself, knows the 'value ranch at San Simeon, California. lies, aver 240,000 acres of it,midwayhold between Los Angeles and 'San cisco, stretching up into the tains from its 50 miles of ocean the fabulous Casa Grande crowns it, and in the great houses surrounding that enormous building, are chefs -d'oeuvres from collection of the greatest collector d'art in the world. ' Guests arrive at the border Hearst's ranch by private train are motored into the hills parks where roam herds of seals --bison, zebras, llamas, kangaroos—and through what Sequoia forests a thousand odd from now. They reach at Cuesta Encantada. the Enchanted Hill, and find Moorish palaces enchanted gardens. You cannot fit La Cuesta Encantada into the Hearst Art Empire considering the whole. Mr. Hearst three other art repositories. the house on'Riverside Drive York,for- an a artment house of Mr. marst took over whole that he could knock down walla, out ceilin s. The establishment g 60 rooms, one targe enough a party of 250. There are two places, Gothic, said to be the beautiful' in the world. Two: ata Castle in Wales; and three: recently purchased' Belmont estate Sands Point, Long Island, which French chateau. To To the San Simeon ranch alone gone over 60 carloads of things. Of almost every object cry hall, and alcove, and guest the trite could exclaim: piece!" The six Gobelin to which cost $575,000, the ceilings which castles were wrecked, , all preciousobjectsy which make you ae you wander through the roams of La Casa Grande -these but curtain -raisers. For every is in the spirit. A guest in Cardinal Richelieu's bed, opens eyes to gaze upon a Gaya, sees ars nodding in an $8000 Vase. To tbe of i n cities Simeon, true cdllec creationi J world over, Mr. ears( gives', sr►rrtethitxg over hfilf. his time ergy: The anecdotes of fife tion are without riiumber. A BLUE HOLIDAYS Florrie never. missed home so much as on a holiday. When every- one else was happy, a pecul'i'ar lone- liners descended u pori her. Then a friend told her what comfort she got from talking to her family over Long Distance. Florrie tried it, and discoivered that was a real "(blues" cure, She no ion ger dread holidays. this • Ma -treat, for so many dusth! And Here along a pxoces- witnessed, shall ap- and be remembered of thine, • 'Cap/Fain Curwen, at the bevel of an a conspany of from the ail to j on Gallows There is no mis- witches! As they (,ane, and turn let us watch Jahn Proctor If there were all the County of to have led a true thisvery ry pair. it sworn, to the. worshipful Chief • GERMANY HAS REA'CH'ED LIMIT OF RESOURCES President Hoover's statement on Saturday y was undoubtedly the answer to the statement a fortnight earlier by the •German Government, as fol-. N, lows: The putting forward of the last power and !reserves of the nation entitles the ileiKiiarr Government' makes it its dot y to tela the world The limits of the .pr•fvatfons we have ime�e�m�ed upon' our people have been reached* The (lovrnnaerrt i conscious of the h fact that the direly nnenac'ed (business tt'nd ffrfuncra,l posi- beet, of the (Reich calla i erstivel r,' for afleivnati'on of the unbearable - n1s x aT51 t -, 'l " INTELLIGENCE TESTS THAT ARF. INTELLIGENT • S oma weeks ago a ehQrming corm- suggested that youth unser- rain what (branch of industrn or sci- elite to enrich with their labors should a; toren ° uid sate lager for vocational guidprice. ;Wes should prefer (lie. method outlined by Johnson O'Connor ire the Atlantic thou' h hitherto g h rto we , lx�i1ialiNXe'tt 1;;lalu �ksnirirjl "" s s