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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1921-11-24, Page 7I -1c, 41 10'r V w-=�and the worst is yet to come Sugar -Mill Waste Yie.1 Outwitting the Fwx '1 11 Us Bdilding Idaterial LIVES SAVED AND " - I mo— - Once, mo -,3 science has turned a en passes to beatirr.-I machines, I CRMIMLS CHASED or un otan fur-boanug aulmals Luc cage (!an ue seen vorn Usem. 11 lox Is. probalwiy the most dIfficult to sible set the traps on top Of little catch, Hie Is vory cunning and s�by lmolls -and aliio on titumps. The ground and only the m0at deceiving sets will, should be dug out, and notches should catch Mrs. I be cut in tile sturaps so that the tra-ps First be sure. that foxca are staying I will be flat with the surfnee. And or travel 'through the locality where! cover them with dry material which you, rnak�e your sets, for It Is of no uso matches the surroundingli, The roost� to make sets where there are no foxes. er being alone. will do much erGwlng Tloa following water �et Is a good and this willattract fox -as from a. long one before freezing ,yeatlier sets In'. distance. They will be susilliciou5 Of F 111d 4,small pond and pInce. s-pme bait the cage And will not go up to it. But In the water about a toot from the they will circle around It and try to m1hore. A wild 4ucic i7, Ideal. It can find out what it is, 1v doing this they be JaId on a stone or other support will get on the highe�3t places they can which should be about�two, Inches� be� so as to get a better view arid will get low the surface of the water. This will caught in the traps- which you have set hold Me bait Partly above water and there for them. make It look like it i is floating, Now J it you Imow of a OeAd horse or cow set a trap midway between the bait which hak; been dragged out In the and the sliore. llvme the trap abo 0 wonds, keep watch pt it It fo*es are 11alf-Inch under water and place a tuft feeding on it set traps in, the pathway of moss qu. the pan. It should be which lead to it. Dig the ground out tbick enough so that it will come a also for these sets and cover the trap� little out of the water. A fox In at- with dry grew. or leaves, tempting to get the bait will use the The best time to make these sets Is tuft of moss as a resting �Iace for Its In the evening just before a light fall foot, and thus will step right Into the of snow. The snow will cover all me- trap� terl-al which may get disturbed by Another good set !a made by taking I making the set and it will make the a live rociater which should be put In I Whole surrounding look natural. The a cage about three feet square. Hang 1 tra.ps should be smoked in a smudge it cut in the woods about six feet from made from green boughs. Gloves the ground. Now YOUT traps� should! should be worn when. handling them be in a circle around the cage, from so that they will not become tainted $eVCT1tY-fIVe, to two hundred feet away. again, as a fox will stay away from a The traps shoWd be set so that the set which is scented with -human odor. Bits of Canaclian News. work In the three prairie provinces To encourage finishing cattle In the under the d4rection. of the Department of Indian Affairs. Each will be allot - Edmonton district for the export ted a district and will visit hemes, trade, H. P. Kennedy, president of the schools and other Institutions caring local stock yearde and an extensive for the sick and paying particular at - shipper, is offering V1,000 in prizes for, tontion to the betterment of condt- the best finished cattle brought on the tions emong the Indians. market In certain quantities, Mr. Kennedy has declared that Alberta cattle are equal It not superior, to The Family View. those raised in any part of the world, A notorlous- war profiteer was talk- andbe is strongly in, favor of finishing Ing to a group of young men on a golf process being effected at home. club verandah. "Look at me," the Four prominent labor men i4 Cal- profiteer said. "Twenty years ago a gary have provided the necessary I poor boy, working like, a dog and to - funds, to build a five -room modern I day--"----?' He chewed violently on bungalow to prove that such a house hisdollarcigar. "Lookatmel"here- can- be erected for $3,000. The house peated. "See what I've done for my - is nearing coniDletlon and the builders seaf.11 The young men looked at him are Nvell within their original osti- curievusly and then one of ' them said: mate. "Your motive7s, good, of course, but Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jr., of New doesn't your family object to- your pes- York, has purebased an. estate near Ing as a horrible exampde In this� Victoria, and will spend a'part of each way?" year there. The beauty of the country 05% and agreeable climatic conditions de- His Very Beat Mulligans. cided his selection of this Pacific A country clergyman. was once Coast home. preaching on an obscure point of Some thirty plaver mining claims theology, which he elucidated in an have recently been staked along the original and striking manner, finish - cast shore of the Big Smoky River' in�g by saying, "This is entirely my east of Grande Prairie, Albrta, by farmers resident in the vicinity. Di�,­ own view. Commentators do not, coveries ot platinum together with agree with me." was inforniel that traces of gold in the sandstone are re-! The next day he sponsible for the initial activity, but one of his parishione-�:s wished tozee a riew significance he's been added by him. Going Into his study he was the discovery of tungsten deposits fr. greeted with ordiallty by -one-of his beds of clay back from the sandstone s4desmen, who happened to be a mar- ket gardener. cut banks of the -river. Sainples of the "Morning, sir," beamed the caller. letter -analvzed disclosed tungsten 63 per cent., platinum 8 per cent., and Heard you say yesterday as common also matallic iron. taters didn't agree wV ye, so I've F11gur-,,:, published by the Ce us IbIrought -a sack Of my best. Hope In Childhod's Magic Land We never met a ruffian there--excePt in picture books! Each man was trusty -hearted, ti'ue; each woman perfect seemed, W�e judged the world with Kindliness, we'd never heard of crooks, And noble lads and lasses walked along the dreams we drewried, Folks always gripped each other with a friendly helpful hand, And selfishness was blotted out—in childhoods magic land. There were no e save in tales --who spoke in lying guise, There were no people—save in tales—who acted meanly souled. The citizens we sojourned with were A, so straight and wies, And life was just a meeting -place for creatures "good as gold. The days run on --don't let us join some sceptic hopeless band, Let's keep some grand beliefs we learnt in childhood's magic land. J. S 0 M E OF BRIGHTEST GEMS OF LITERATURE. Regarded So Lightly by Their Gifted Writers That Only Chance Saved Them from Oblivion. bureau ;!h,�w a healthy growth Inmany I you'll get on betterwith em." D,- We know on the best, authority that Nova Scotia. towns. Bridgewater, with 3,152, has grown by 14 per cent; A New Version. . had Sohn Keats never PennOd that Dartmouth, 7,904, 56 p�r cent.; Inver- The Sunday -school teacher was marvellous "fragment Of an elAc ness, 2,952, 9 per cent.; Kentville; . talking to her class about Solomon poem," llf[yperioir," his great, con - Shelley, -would neverhave 2,717, 8 per'cent.; Liverpooa, 2,263, 8 per -cent.; Lurienburg, 2,786, 4 per and his� wisdom. "Vvrhen the Queen of Sheba came temporary, written I'Adonais," Which, next to Mil - cent.; Sydney, 22,527, 27 per cent.: and laid jewels and fine raiment be- tons ,Lyci&.9,11 stands as the greatest and Trenton, 2,837, 62 per cent. fore Solomon, what did he say?" she requiem in the language. Yet know on equally good. auth- A lack of apple& In some parts of the, United States has resulted in In- asked. One small girl, wbD evidently, had we ority -that Keats labored, very fitfully creasedshipments from( I experience in such matters, replied at the poem, and finallY gave it up the dine, in spite of the fact that the . promptly: " 'Ow much d'yer want for in disgust, orly including it in his last duty is now 30 cent-, a busliel as com- the lot?" volume under probest. pared with 10 oants a bushel last year. Shipments from Kingston to date are Circumstantial Evidence. The -title page of thIs pT1e,11k---3 volume runv. " 'Lamia, Isabella, The valued at $150,000, as against $5,000 The Bingville. board of select men Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems,' by John Keats, Author of 'EnIdYmi0n,' last year. A new Industry, which will add to had held many sessions and finally formulated a set of auto laws that was- London. Printed for Taylor & Hess-ey, the development of the town of Drum- triondvil3e, Que., will seen start upon the pride of the county SO -the con- Fleet Street, 1820." Among the "Other Poeirm," not con - the building of a plant which, when stable felt no worriment when he a motorist. fadored worthy of mention is, not only i�;Ic, completed, will give employment to stopped "Ye're pinched for violatin? the auto the longest poem in the but, in at least, of its qualities, the F,bout 150 men. no Dominion Silk Dyedug Manufacturing Company, has laws," he pronounced. "Which one?" Inquired the traveler. some, greatest thing the poet accomplished. just bought 15 acres of land adjolu­ Ing the plant of the Butterfly Hosiery "Darned it I know, but yo certainly Nowman thought so little of his "Dream of Gerontius" that he is said Company, Limited, and the building h nit come all the way down Main al 11 street without bustin' one of them. to -have conderanted it to destruction, of the plant, which wil start in about Just So. and Was, only deterred- by the deter - K month, wil-I give employment to over § mined intervention of a friend. Br*Nvn- & hundred men. Irish emigranta to tile number 01 ing, who destroyed every. vestige of Four Regina girls, all of whom 4,388,199 left their native shorab for his tgrivenilia.,12 made a desperate en - served oversoaa with the Canadian other lands between �Iay� 1861, And leavor to include "Pauline," but, as it forces, have left the city to take up December 31st, 1920. was published, he failed in, hip attempt. up ana clear of the drag on the hull,; gradually increasing acccleratioiL So scaTce did it become that Ros� Tragedy of an Avalanche setti,being tinable to find, a copy e�lse- where, spent many laborious days in call M6 1, �idi,,Ulolls MIM as ;"t?), the British Museum Library copying An American dfiwr tells a moving strung out fora quaTter of a mile, and destruction on foot among them were five packers, it Word �clr word. Scott threw the original draft of - story of sudden and awift in the U. S. Norbhwcs�t. It happened all halfbreeas- , The Lay of the Last Minstrel" into the fire, and was only persuaded to re - on a Fobruary day, whona warm sun and a Chinook wind from the Pacific The officer heard 'I'D Sigllal Of dAn- ger, no cry Of alarm. With the swift write it thy two :friends to whom. he had read it, John Kleble, too, Was 14yerso was melting, the snow. All along the Ili$ ness of thought the an I ow, five hun- dred, feet up the mountak�, b(,,gan to to publishing his "Chrigtian trail, as the officer and party The width of the avalanche Year,)' yielding only to his father's ex - wound up the mountain side, great move. about half a mile, and it 'inoVed press dtsae to, see the book in print masses of snow scemefl to overhang thern, aril more thart once the officer was very rapidly. There were thousands b efore hedied, and- FAward. FitzGerald was equally diffident with. rogaTd to r,,,;t.icod howanxicus the,grizzly-haired of tons of snow, hundreds of trees, 110mar Khayyain." Them is, more� ol,,d. gajul,� �eeraed to be, Only a nar- hundreds of great boulders. O`V01�4 'a -tc�yl which lilay or rday not row path lirLd ;;"11 elcared through In a fev! moments it waa all over, lilte iixooke 'LIP' be true, that Kfplirrg's� "Itecessl6n, the gljoN"r, and t.110 jwenj 01011�1' Of Whit ff�Pmed hungever the spot. It drove off down. i Wag TeKVO4 from the allt]IWO Waste- loWe(I one 11iother in oingle file. four the mountain after two, or three min- pzper 43asket, Halfway up they came to Cabins o4nnpled; by miners. Three e looked for his ute,-, Aud, the Offic r Carelessness a Flne Art. lwawny nj�yi in rell, shirlV 5t-M� EIt IDACY trair�- Not Iflail ilbr,ft mule haa c ­_caped, Some weeksafter leaving (big lodg- -patead, Ings in Mornington Place, 11arn the door of one- of the Cabins talhillk Salateq 11 110 loolt(,d, for the Cabin-*, alld, they, Tennyson wrote to COVOnttY PatITIOTe, gis the p,,11-ty filed past, were oxcban,�,e,l, L,,,it had tua, had al"ed Ind8ed, the, very "a 'IT' STOM Barchurch, asking him to call Obook rarty trail had , �ecii AWC% down into tho VfC �t thereand see it lie coW flticthis 110 occaO,,�11 to ImIt. 11undrMl lley a, mile below, and almost 'Across of long, batclwmr, lagor4iko had gono about thr�!,! 'P(!'e of half a mile wide I'lor "t �' book." Patmove went, and, in a cup lliey ct, and; were about to niahe ft ti:,"I ii'- trce nor Artib—not heard where Tennyson had kept his in th6 trail, When the leade' 1 1 t',P­ �., was neither '�tL(11 of (, Lvelanebe had arth. The 10 butter and sugar, found the boolc full 1, , look baelz. The guide was C',_, ,,I q �Vay dowil to the rocka. it', I of -vc.rae,-. It waz the book in Whieh 44ACCr �e=A. %0, MIC Of 1111110 _ Tennyson had. been wont to inszrFN those I'sivallow-flights of song" whiel we now know as "In. Memoriam." But it was Ell-abeth Barrett Brown ing who ma& mwelessness a fine -art It is possi-ble that very 1�,We <A he] work would have survived, had it no been for adevoted lover before and, ai adoring husiband -after -marriage "Aurwora Leigh" was written in, Italy and, when the Brawnings paid -a vist to England, the manuscript was stuff ed into the trunk containing her littl son's velvet. suits and lace collan. At Marseilles the box was lost, an there was great lamentation. But wa the grief for the last "Aurora Leigh,' which critics hailed a few months late as the greatest poem ever writton. b�, woman since the days of Sappho? B no means. Mrs. Browning never guy the poem EL thought. Her one concern was that she woul not be able to, dispIzy her lovely boy 'his velvet suits and- lace collars befor her admiring friends at home! For I tunately--4for litemture--the box wa I traced to its lair. TeI1 Him Now. If with pleasure you axe Viewing Any work a iiian is doing, if you like him or you love him, to] him now; Don't withhold your apprbatlOn Till the paasan make.!� oration " — it- With SUIC - lilies o'e waste product into on-, of commercial ' which pound it to a pulp. VY'lien thor-, vellue. This new achlevement I-, the oaghlly beaten, it is TaGsell, throug'h making of building board from the re-; rollers arvi evinpresscd into, a continu- ELECTIONS HAVE BEEN, fuse of sugar cane Uter the juice ous sliect, 12 feet. wide. At this sta�ge "OUGHT BY AIRMEN. has -teen pressed out at the sugar mill. It is soft and must be dried-. F -az bagasse, is about The drying building is more thaul The refuse, known is� 10 per cent. of the -welight of the en- 1,000 feet long. Hete the -product tim sugar -cane. crop and arnounts to subjeeted to intense heat by means of Divers Uses to Which Air. 260,000to 500,00 tons a year. Its coiled cteam, pipes placed beneath the disvosal has long been a problem, and floor. The finisbed, lumber comes cut: planes Are Being Put in Vari- Z�e,oqiginal practice was to burn it in in -sheets 12 feet wide and 900 feet ous Parts of the World: great piles. It is now being made into long, swfficient material to build., tbree, In Nebraska lately, during a recent a mbstitute for lumber which. possess� or four five -room. bungalows. It Is heavy flood, �3verai bridges were car- es peculiar qualities, and for sonu, pur- sa-wed, in the same manner as ordi- rled awa;7, and the rivers. becarno Im- poses is superior to wood. nary lumber, into stardard-size, sheets, passable, It was just at this 4wk- The first plant for manufacturing. 4 by 12 feet, though ol course it may ward time that a physician was hum - bagasse I'lumber" was built in Now be- cat into any other sizes. ! moned very urgently by V_AePlaono to Orleans, at a cost of $50000. The One ton of bagusse is required to� t,,,, perform adifficult operation oil a we- bagasize isbaled, as it comes from the make 3,000 feet of lumber, .80 the to .' man as the only means of . saying her rollers of the sugar inill, and i�hlpped possible production from the wasteDf. life. to the "lumber factory." There it is Louisiana?s cane Iand, wouldbo from' The doctor found the river running first cooked to destroy the decay-Tro- 760,000,000 to 1,600,000,000 feet P,'bfgh with such fury that nQ boatman ducing spores and is treab2d. with yearl if there ware sufficient rar'nu-1 would even consider the Ide-4 of erosv- chemicale to make it waterproof. It facturing facilites to use it all', Ing. He then thought of the Govern- ment air -mall station -at North Platte. The Thinker. The Grandmother. Hastening there, he told the Dfficer In Back of the beating hammer Upon -her folded hands the sunshine charge his predicament, and begged, By which the sto-�l is wrought, falla" I to be taken acro&� in �oue of the spare Back of the workshop�6 clamour Bathing their lines and scars of toil, aeroplimes. The officer had no auth- The seeker may find the thought. In light, I ority to give perraiEzion; but, ag ha - The thought that Is ever master And they are quiet as the evening man life was at stake, he wimlessed Of iron and steam and steel, earth I to Washington, and hqd a plane coming on of, brought out ready to start it the reply That rises above discustei That waits in peam the i shoudd be favorable. And tramples it under hieel! night. I Real Live "Thrillero." Back of the motors. hurnming, She has held children's children in The laconic official permission Came Back of the belts that sing, her arms, promptly throu.,gh, and in a very.9hort Back of the hammers drumming, Whose babies soon may lie against time the doctor vae landed in a field Back of the cranes that Ewing, her breast; c1cse to the farmhouse in which the There is the eye which weans them Now, in the shade of memories with- patient lay. The operation was per, Watching through stress. -and strain, drawn, formed, and the woman's life was Thei-419 the mind which plans them, in the high midday sun she sits, at saved. Back of the brawn, the brala! rest. There was an exciting race, worthy I of a most sensational illm, between Might of the roaring boiler, TO her, remote, with her completed er. aero -plane and an express, train the Force of the enghWs thrust, life I t,-�her week in Germany. The Berlin Strength of the sweating toiler, About her like a garment, age is kind,! police had dia-covered an attempt to Greatly in these we trbst, For still her children, small, and very! sinuggle twenty million marks from But back of them stand% the schemer, dear, ths German cspital over the Swiss The thinker who drives things Play in the secret dwelling of her :rro, t*er, a ve�ey pmfitable transaction through, mind. which is against tha lair. Bwk of the job—the Dreamer The train had got a good start when Who's making the dream come truel Summed Up. it was learned the smugglers were 41 "What Is the secret of su"OM7"l , aboard her, and three fast aeroplan�w A Short History of England. asked the sphinx. set off to, overtale her. In this they "Never be led," said the pencil. Lucceeded.. and the smugglers vere a -- A schoolboy was told to, write S rested and' the eash oom-mandeered at short history of England. His efforts "Be up4D-date," srld tho eraser. "Rub along sornge!how," Eald the Nureniburg, o&italned the foLlowing: At the feshionable re -z -ort cf 11omsar Invaded England In the year emser. 1111 A.D. "Be sharp" said the, knife. in Florida, a negro employed in Va. ani�,,,nd Qd, and ship for "He leaded at Runcorn and bravely Never lase your head" staid tile, hotel stole a very valuable di defended the bridge with HGratius 'barrel, , brooch, decamp "Strive to make a good imprez.-Ion," I Bermuda. Detectiveh wer42 soon rut against the German Fleet. upon h -a track, and by ­­,an6 of w.'re­ "He then went to Goodison Park) said the, se -al. goo, I -was fcand that lie wa� o:board where he made arrangements for the "Make. the most of your � d t less it football matchon the foilowing day, pclntz," sall the comp2,62. a steamer whi6h hai 'atelly left. It -was also ascert�ined thai the ves6cl was "Turn ail things. to your advantage,": 110n, the morrow the teams, charged I , delay --d by unfav,;rable weatlif r on to the field, In tile first stages of said the lathe. the game, Cmsar made a splendid run "Oh, shut up, ycu re-ople!" cried the! pciut about IT-,-crty rnE�F�i 6Y th;� 0,-ast. on the right wing, but finding that Ad- door petulantly. AnJ then theire wa.� Eiectioneering by AeropZane. t miral Jellicoo, the back, was charging, silence. It was de,,irled to -,y te bring back I i bali)ng-ng him, he passed to his inside -right -An- A the negro, In a hy;`11 selm, who In turn passed to i� yd Color C.m bln21 Ions. to Mr. %Tccorm;�k' r� �: fb for- Rockefeller, the 't, George, a brilliant young centre � The llowing colo- combinations ward, who scored a aplendid goal. harmonize: Blue and white. Blue and t undertaking to act k',.j a-zid to SIzi-ic. tie water "The next ball Charles, 11. sent! go4d. Blue and orange. Blue and sal- carr-% detective " down the pitch, Cmsar hit for six over men. Blue and maize. Blue arld to the shu's side. Frc�� the grand stand. to aiighting cn the wat f -r "Iengside the brown. Blue and black. Blue, goar- "The Britons ompletely lost their lot and lilac, Blue, brown, crimscn outward -bound stcunic'r w.,� under ten. tempers, and pinning the umpire and and! minutes - and gold, Red and gold. Red I the ref,�ree to the ground with the black, Scarlet and purple. Black with, The negra Nvas bu-rprl,ed and ar- balls B31zed the stumps and charged se , restia-i, with the d-anio;-.�! jjrnach iA white or yellow and crimson. arle, dorw� upon the Romans, who, forming b1sek - the pocket of his pants. He was Y a testudo, were lucky to escape with and orange. lowered Into the hydreplane. which their lives. 44 then rose from the water and flew "A few days later Ceesar happened The Silent N2vy." back with the priscaer. Throughout to rneet an old friend in Jack Sharp, I A captain of a British cruise'r Onit"herLItumiourr�,-,YtbLIzi2gi3�y�-z-,ina n when he was buying a cricket but, landing at a certain Irish port stele of abject fear, and srent most of Afer the usual greetings-, Cwsar asked ly, was, ezoosted by an old Irish wo- his time muttering prayk�rs. - William if there were any fresh news, man, who said to him: M. Vedrines, the famou;,� aviator, re. and was told that the Armada had just ,Excuse me, but have You got ently put up for the French Chamber. left Constantinople. CEesar rushed Michael O'Connell on board?" Hia would-be constituency was Ih. down io Dover and made Eaxl Haig No, my good women, I have not" moux, very wide, and (11rilcult to can - sign the Magna ChartiL" replied the captain. vase. However, M. Vedrines was quite a- "Shure, but ye must hev," retorted equal to the occasion, for he visited If you don�t think co_cperation is the old woman; "ter didnft the darlint the elector& in an aeroplane, and necessary, watch what qmPPem to 6 himself tell Me he had Joined the Bil- thereby got more notice than he other - wagon if one Wheel OwneS Off. l tish. Navy." wise would have done. His object in standing for election was to forwarcl the cause of milditary aviation, so that Graham B Latest Invention there could not be a more uppropriat# r object lesson on. his side then his hie brow, For no matter how you shout It, In recent TVDuths a weirdlooking unique Van of canvascin.g. the glider mustgain a speed- of a -bout A very exciting story comes from He wont really care about it; fglideT, tearing %about the Peacdul'Bras lakes in- Nova Sr at seventy twerity miles an hour. the States. An aviator, in flying - is oix c -W U The hull torpedo-shalled, tY a rose u try after a very severe He won1t know -how many teardiops dOr ,otia an hour, has excited no little X0't long, With' two oatrigzw Pon- storm accompanied by torrential wain, you have shed; If you think some praise is due him nii-Tes attention arid even am*nishment- It is the latest inv6ntion of Prof. toons, each sixty feet In, length, con- saw on the mapped -out country be.! poeted to it by a deck. The dock sup- neath him a gap in .1 g7eat railway Nowlt the time to slip It to him, Alexander Graham Bell, and the idea ports twx) Liberty motora, which are bridge crossing a wide river. With For he cannot read his toral'—stone dead. it represents is that of lifting a cigRr- ieither side, just nbaft the his bird's-eye view of Me landscape, mounted or when he'a shaped boat hull clear of the water bY Ocockp`it- he could see the great east -bound ex, More than fame and. more than money subraerged planes, which are not part the The hull, covered with -canvas, has la press speeding tovMrds the bridge, fuel tank in the istern. It has addition- but still many miles, distant. He had� Is the comment kind and sunny And the hearty warm approval of of the hall itself. The crod-t uses a denser Medium (Water) to obtain the al room enough -to acconiraodate twen- tened to land In a field near a signal. friend: 111ft, while taking advantage of the to offered by tY Persons. station, and Inform the man of the The tail hydrofoil oet sets as a ru& broken bridge, and the e%press was, For it gives to life a savor, low resistenee propulsion der, and, is Operated by taler, 34nes stopped. And makes yon stronger, braver, And It givep. you heart and spirit to the air. prof. Bell Ims allowed a description tumling to the AvOring whesl in the Me the end; If he our bestow It; of the boat, which he calls the H.D.-4, be In the forthcoming cockpit. tiotors are provided With compressed -air stawters, and QU A Vanishing Mountain. earns- pnise. It You like.him. let him know it; to published Smitbgc1lian Annual. It gives the fol- contrals an led to the cockpit. The The extraordinary spectacle of a hiel Is lorced fx*m the tank in the Let the words of true encourage- ment be mid; lowing detaile: steel -planes are a=angea in sets mountain disintregatlug so fast that hull to Vao level, of theoarburetor-a the decrease ID discorniblo, (lay by dir-4pTessure maintairwd by a h r Do not wait till life 10 over like rungs of a ladder, and graduated, day hso been going on for nearly a And he's undomeath. the clover, fmm large oneo at the top to small Pulnp`� year in the mouritwaous xetiou neay-L Seventy miles am hour ia the glidor V�v he cannot road, hiv tombstone when he's dead. ones at the bottom. The faster the craft traveig, the more of the planes I Vienne. The Tame San4aling, more maximum, speed. Plying Lo a dall bus- 1 thian five thousand feet in beight, is lise out of the water, until, Only Suffi- iness compared with akimming over, c ilapsing. Great canes� ard piuracles surface to carry the lead re=ins the vurface of water at that terrific- of rock crash and tumble, the for -09% Just So. cient submergt& In other ivords ' them is rate. lie flat or move SIOV13P do*&Wad, Pll� Tomirtyle uncle Asked him the nanw, a7l jLutomatie roefing of the supporting The glider staxts off with. a roar i Ing into the vallleM and M6 turl car- ot may'$ young mail, surface. (its moters; ure not muflied), and at i pot moves with them, Nearly totur "I call h1m. AprU Showers," mj&od At fl%%t gq=,�e tho p1411o3 seeln fLftxen knots one feels; the muchine I miles of territory are involved in the Tommy. 14dimfously SM11 to gupport so laxge rising bodily out of the Uater. Once movemenk whielt continues with, "April Showfte?" cried- his aston. a (hull, But it 13hould b,0 rem",,ht._,%d up ana clear of the drag on the hull,; gradually increasing acccleratioiL WW tr�do. ,WhatAW mal" you him that water L9 WTI; 800 times as the site <h4vto ahead with aft, cele tion I�tat nialcm you grip your zezt ZTf-V) I call M6 1, �idi,,Ulolls MIM as ;"t?), heavy aa airl eo tba t the aron', Cj submerged 11hydrofoUs" need liave but - lett bEhind. photograTrhy froei -Vao ni? is now �rorA beirl, nr "Pecauso 1w brings May flowen , -1-800 of tho wing area of an, air0anb. HD . ko the pT�__ poasUle by mcnn:4 4-,14 a AIX'Clal Your fLze 's 11 ite � n 'a oaw 911111t I 1_a�, MItl tal c.2, rn-rigTinoTt of ki IL 1 zt' Tw=7 expkfired, The hyarofoilgarfatt of the -4 eapport 2,000 lbo. to t1le t-VITO �obt fir"a SPrZLY ttinga lilw by a Fr6,161nizu. tlic hitO r�tv!ivg rbY11XXA1,"1 Thegroatest,dtpth 7et fow�d In any at OWY railes an lioul—T, Iliell is 200 foct thtre is 110 pounding, or joltivg. A triv0s uP sLj�,.Iht U111111ation like, Mat felt in, a I n fr 1, 1 CL114�'s , %'V'h 1,40 t��l V, ato V , ocean is 82,088 feeti, 19 qt a lioint times the load eal-ried. Pin equ Lave ear is the culy si�matlom. Sbe 141,16, t-Inliv9 t��tmA T�Ivtwep OR about fo�Ay rAiles tfotth of -the island of Wing w,ca bY an ah1plaw. To lift its hull cloar of the Ivith IffiG C_�El Of en &Ut"molbile. of XindAlA% It the phiumne Illauds. ___�Ficexs