Loading...
The Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-08-21, Page 63, • .-• • .4 t •. • 114 44°4,a iLQr Forsees Iliihen Leisure Time W'fl Be Wor ro ,ern Colemhus, fehloe-JO$.', *telex* Mor,-. •iler. %liter a the jotirnal Of the *nal 4ducet1on ASSeCiatitetkeadVisee 'Vetted' StOtei educatore ,' to ' prepare tbe peblie•fer the time when; the Ayer - age workieg day will he 1111t----feur Imers long. 7 In lecenteaddresi• to e department- • al .meeting ef the affseieletion'S aOtwal convention, Morgansaid the 'rapid rate Of replicemera of men • bl.r. #18.?1‘ planes maltes"it, reatenahle to believe Beef 'ravy, (for,FOultry, daMe, eec.), ,• • that thtug week gradeallY Will ShO HY I ea ,and weMee prOhablY Ite,%Vt*It'Ing the equivaleat of live few ,h§t*ilaysi he said. He belied this stateMeet on the assumption that 7Machine replacement of men will al) anetoer,off, the working der each year: The ProMero: or the educator: he said. in to teeeh:the Public how to use all the leisure tirue it Will have on ita hands, Iiigeetlieets; 1 pint et e)Idwater, 1h...'‘it 'tette beef, . „salt and . • Method f., Cut the beef bate einall 'epit it With the tya4ii. into. aetewilen, • :or • etiralpiware. ' .stiodaiV. and -Cook slowly foe' about or 4 hours. • Strain, • seaSoie aid rate as reettired...'Ttrne •' About, e Or 4, hours. Altera' % pint. •, • i!rown Gravy (for Roast Meat, ate.) •, "Iegrediente: i pints .of water, lb. of neck .orshin of beef, 1/2 6s.' butter,1% oz. qz sweet dripping, 14, • Of, 110,ur,, raediunesized onion, 1 ; Very stria slice of lean' bacon; or a few trimminget leau ham or bacon, Salt and.•Pepper,' 1 Clove, if ...liked. , Methode-Cut the Meat and baton into , entail pieces, elite; the Onio4, Melt the ' 'dripping' in a etew-pan, put le the meat, baCcin; and (mien, and fry. • till. ' bresie., Add the water, !Salt' and Pep- per, ..and clove.cok slowly for ,ahput . '3 or 4 hpurseand strain. the.bat- ter in a stewpan, stir in the' near, and cook far. a few minutes. ' Ad4 the gravy;Stir until it boils, skim, 'simmer e. or about 10 ,Minittes,-itiel nee as re- ' :quireil. Time: From .334 hours to 434 ' hours. Quantity: Altera ,1,-/„i pint , , • , . - Paste with, liver Stock. The4fyer.May ave been boiled ot• fried, aceording to 'whetbeiyyeii are..using lefeeters,from hreakfast onnew'Meat • ,IP you. bave •„eo atoek,, ."ekien, the ereant from the milk .and Use that, 'Add pepper and salt fie tas•teand.spread between slices c.tebtittered tbrewn bread. ,Sardine and,'ApPlee Another tasty filling is etardine'and ,Butter the reqrasite.number. of elites .of bread••Mid. •on half of them place a 'split, boned sardine. Covee with a phin slice of Taw apple dipped iu mayounaisedieseing,' and close the eandwich. Bread tor sandwichee that are,..to be really appetiiing simeld be cut thin And' evenly, . 'and have the create removed .befetebeing buttered: These can ;then be, need for soup 'ere,- :quettes, . pastry weights.., and •other •tooking.perposea. Cut the eandwiehes into smell squares' or triangles: If green ..greee 'salad Is being Used as' a filliege It should he Well .dried first, otherwise 'the water will !oak haft the bread and rainthe eindwiche • ° ' Braised Orions 4 Iegredienta: 4 mediumesiaed, Span- ish ,onions, 2 ei. butter or fat, about • % pint of4stocle and e good seatianing of-sat.and pepper, -Method; Peei the onions. hera the fat in a saue-enan,„ put in the Ofemeaii.d .fr eeeteej.e.egraden- broten without • burning, • pour off, the fat, add, stock and seeker to -taste. Cover with a greased paper and place • on a tight-fittinglid.' Cook gently ,for about 3 :hours 'either over a fire qr • else In a moderately heated oven until •, quite tender. Serekein tie hot yege- table dish with the stock in whieli the (miens were ceokeereduced a little., This,should be free 'fronvfate Time: About 3 hours. Sufficient lot 3 or 4 • persons. • . • Ord Onions Ingredients; . Spanish onions, cook - !fig fat and' seasenieg. Method: Peel and since the onions, heat a little t in a fryieg pan and when quite hot put in the mane and fry them until they 'acqnire a pile brown color, stir or shake the onions occasionally whilst tryieg. Add seasohing to tate- Pti!-- ileient fat must be used to preient the onions tram burning. Cook slowly un- til quite tender for about 45 or 20• min- utes . Serve on a hot dish. • Favorite Broth: Ingredients: .1 small tablespoonful of -sego; 1 teaspoonful of good meat or vegetable extract, yolk of an egg • (optionalLboiling water, pepper and • sale. Method: Boil the sage in a very tittle water till clehr. .Dissolve the • meat of yegetable extract in a ,cup of • belle* water. Strain the ceolted sago • into the made broth, season to taste • and, if liked, stir in the yolk of an egg.' Time: About 10 minutes. - Suffirieht for one person. • ' Altnorid Paste Ingredients:, ••41 oz. of ground al- monds, 6 oz. of loaf stigar, 1 white of ' egg, lemon -juice. Method: , gut the ' sugar, with 1. tablespoonful ot water, and a teaspootahl of lemon-julce into • ,a •stewpatre bring to the'boil, skim well, and boil to 237 degrees Fahren- heit. pour the syrup on the ground al - mends, add abont lialf the white of egg'enele well together and 'use as re- ' mitred. Time; About 10 minutes, Suf- ficient for one sniall cake. Future generation Willi -Jive Longer ITAN 3.3 i1;;13 .11t; "k1 Keel. fteee, e• .:31N ^23 • • ..fi,1.01).: the-..warld's greateet„rarahleit'' itassee . oyer the' Quebec Bridge, •on .., • , . . ite way rehe lettoric St. Law'rettee to Mentretti. The,dering imagination and ekill..of Mae his. coitedied nothing , mightier than these eerce featti,„ the. gigantic ',dirigible Ate .oni. et the' largest and -Moat apettacuter pieces'. of etigieeeritig In the world.- Transatlantic• line's,pass easily Imamthe llage,, which links- the CanadianeNetional RallWays,itnee on the, setith. shore of 'the St. Lawrence With. those on the no.rth'.shore, but the R-100 wee: rale. that went Overhead. • ' '• • , ..• '' • ,,•• .. • e...., .. .DiikH es'idiiii. * ' • . .. - • , .. ..sni:' for .the experinient. •. ' ' ' . 'Visitors have been filled with :enthrall- British Excav4 on M*y Throw Light On Roman London History 14,0eden.'.--Au IMPOrtant Pieee"Of OA, cavalion will he, stilted shortly. when the ancient Roman city of Verulaniiran • adjacent to S. •Albenis, is to.be uu- • 'covered. At present the ,anly Roman emfitts ahove , ground are the walls, ,and'iteis with these that e start will 'he made. . • • it is •expected Mgt the excavatiPn will have - the Additional interest of , throwing light en. the hiStote. of • Ro- mge Lendon,e for . the walls° Veru' lamium and of I..,onden are of the Seine Ake,' Paying been rebuilt by the Ro. than London, raid it ,continued te be - ' • * . elVe• liave never. attempt& serious - 3 . . Of Camp Realized - - - T, ly to, answer the questiense Do they ,--,--- . e I mix?! and !What are .the results?' for BroughtTogether on Terms -, ; . • . ' CemP itaelt is• the only reply. To - • of •Equality arid Si•mple • a:.ealyze, tabulate, sift, investigate • would be too bidoonsly' arttficialb'and Comradeship , ' would but land Us on a slippery slope; Nearly four thousand boys has When the aualytieal Motive doni14.: taken Peet in it; many hundreds er. „etes,' it is almost impossible, to avoid 'Weeks! lefe at New Romney; hardly 4 ki"...0.'Y efferewould be Strained, to pro - mane. after' thee, 'destructipti of • both. 'cities in the insurrection by the Bri- tish •,, Queen eleudicea .(Boadicea) ip 111) to the Present it Itas-'hot, eeir'paseible aeenrately „to t :Leiden .• , •VerelaMitan is helleyed, to oc the satile.-WO' as :hie Piehiatorie ,tal of Cease:440mi. the British King, winek. 'in All Probabdity , eras elder 'au importrait 1tentrat ee.14!..ietneOt tUl the sevetance from Rome •took• placo in the fifth centtu•y. The :rad site has . tiever • beeit built' 'eince, and ,Cort, sista .torday of mailing MeadoWe by• • the. River Yee so that there is -good hope , of treeing Ihe history .0f. the town from'Celtie times, three& the Roman period, hit° Da,rk,Ages. Many buildings are heown to bave ,heee•destroyed be pious Saxon abhota, in the eleventh century, the: tantoue, ,Abhey Mete having been built largely•... .of matdial looted trent the Roman ruins.. But. nevertheless, t bili ..• feeiluAle dleCoVeries are:almost •tiellteited,. •'Already in -1.847' the buried ruine Of a''Itonee. theatre were foetid, ta'believed-eliatetliereeire, Male in Ors in!the of temples, • maneiotesi publie. ;In... particular; it is hoped that qe a. site ch verulannutai ,sente'discoVeties II:be-Made' that . will throi; light ou :scat e the difficrat • problenta lof ...Chris lenity: Bohlen, lintate. •• • -•-• upy, firma bay& been associated with the l ' the temptation to play . for results. . . a ,m .T' d • m.a.te0a end Camp wouldMidc1e-age. 4n c, •O, ay•:patine school remains'. enrepreSented ki ' • • d throtigh the Publicity•given to the; szrnply develop; into au orgy .ot gla venture by • the and the .Press, many millions are aware of the: fact Itif the Carap; but many:Still ask the ,question; 'What is its , Purpose?' • Or that far more coneilex.qttery: .`Do they thert _Rene in The Camp Book (Bemi).e in fehieli he tells' the story ef•theeeamp suggest- • ed- by H.R.IL the Duke of York. _. It le' nearly -tee' years"' says MT. .• • Tiede, "tsince the .Duke of York. cee/4d theideceef bringing together on terms of' equality. and in simple 'com- radeship•hoys from ' the•pliblic sChools .and workshops of . the 'country: . •. "The sections are composed of an equal number et Public school and in- dustrial boys, butli'eyond that division no attempt '•is ,naade • either to ,segree, gate or Mix the two elements. "Personal invitatiens were sent from the Drate:Of York to theschools. and firms 'coucerited, •aed 'withie a few' Clays the hazardPus 'adventure Xfi,S well Under, way." A to wbat the camp does Mr. Hyde says: . e'.0n the return of 'the industrial boys. to one of the storei centres of the country they were asked to meet a • greeir of extremists. They said to the beYsf 'We want to know all about.thut Camp, ,Whetlectureh' did you have?'' ."The heys, ,somewhet taken aback, replied: 'We had ne lectures.' " 'Didn't they talk to you about economics and things like that?' . '"Noe said the 'boys, 'we' had no lectures at tine • • 'Then what did you do all day?' said theli questioner's. • e 'lye played end ate and bathed.' Has Less Chance of Sur- viving Dipease • • New Yorke -The middle-ageil men who sits' backele his easy chair With the satisfying thought , thaascience 'neetwent-y-more-years-ecif life than It did two generations ago to his grandparents was warned • by the Milbank Memorial peed recentlY, .flait .-iii*.a sense' of security hi un- warranted,: as the increased. Span ap- plies not to himself but to his child-: t ren: ,• ' 4 baby born now may exPett to live two decades longer than if he had been born in 1870, but his father to -day hdsn't even as good a chance bellying to three Score and ten as'he had only ten years ago, in' 1920. The Milba•nk .organization for the first 'thee has based its work on the death registra- tion figures Obtained • from the 1920 and 1930 censuses. • AO• after Anishing its studies, the Melbraik unit labels the inceease in death rate among the middle-aged of this machine age as !`alainting." 'Be- tween 1921 and 1927 the passiiignn of men between thirty-five and forty-four increased 12.5 per cent.; of men be- tween forty-five and. fifty-four, 135 per cent. The mortality among women of the , first -ages decreased 4 Per cent. during the period, but among the lat- ter ages it increased materially. - , Bothlrien and women of middle age today have lees chance' to survive at - ti lucks f the heart and t� escape Peel: dents, nd they are now making a poor • showing against against ,eancer, nep- hritis and diabetes at the older ages, • Giblet Soup Ingtedientc• The giblets of a goose. turkey, duelts. er ebiekenS;• to 1 ,set frotn which are on the decrease. Many allow 1 lb. of lean beef and 3 ,pmts of the midelle-aged person's troubles of stock or 21., pints of water. 12 •ear- are constitutional and are not diag- nosed hi time. and a$ a result the Mil- bank,Fund ' reports .hat its studies.: tend to give support to the advocates of periodic health examirtati - • while men are less , able pnetifrionia. . , .to "n11/1't "This is all we do at Camp, and . .. . these'boys foetid it as hard ttt describe its real significance as any other of us. .0"Cattip. as we knovv it," adds Mr.1 Hyde, ".i.s even more a- Will-o'-the-wisfi than the 'Public -Strobl Spirit.' • The result has always been the same, the Betweenthe ages c,f twenty-five end thirty-four, from 1921 to 1927, ,the in- crease of death from heart disease in- crea.sed 15 per cent.; for Meri between thirty-five and, forty-four it jumped 40 Per event:. for women the increases were 5.3 per cent. •and 10.6 per cent. The cancer rate increased th per cent. among men during the Period and 11 per cent. aniong the women. • The most significant Unfavorable ehange was in the age groupbetween sixty-flve and seventy-four, which. rose needy 20 per cent. Or men and nearly ID per cent. for women. Aboat the only .eitcoitraging facts found by the report were in the eases 6! tuberculosis and apoplexy, deaths .1'11'4. 1 ittnall• onion. 1 Strip cif celery, a • bouquet-garni (Parsley, thyme; bay-. leaft: I oz.. of butter or 'good tat, 1 dessert-apoonfui of flour, li glass of • sherry 4OptiQtrall. salt. pep/Mr, 1 table= 'spoonful of macaroni -cooked and rat , . across into tiny tipgs. • Niethed: Skin ", the, atzlarti.I•icalt1 and skin- the feet.. waeh 'the neck and liver. dry and cut. Int o small p1.4..ces. Melt the batter or , fat and try the giblets.; heat:and aliced vegetables until brown. Olen add the • • stock. herbs, 'alt arel pepper,, and when boiling skim well. Cnok gently , for altoot .2 biters. than etraie and re - tern to'thestw-pan. :When boiling add the ..-herry 1 if .114ed v. and Imix the \I fleet stinyehlY,,tegether with •a little ee e s-. ale •e the 54311.1) and toil for about 5 minet.es, Then add'the Meek • . reel and any neeessary seaSon- g, sim- • mer for a few neouteS long v. •atid , eel -ye, Tinte:' Front .2%- to %pure. •eSuftleient for five er sit person . Minced Liver These sandwic es Make an U '• Mg addition to the picnic basit terest, et, and 'this it how you Make theta'Int, half: • Doliad of cooked liver (sheeti's liver s best) through a Mincing inat.bine. ti it With half, a teaenpful of grated ta _carrot, and knead 10 a smooth • • 4*.Wher6 are you going ttt spend palm. vacation?"* "Oil a farm." • `IVIos:qtriteeel hell beflr•ootti, skita- tiled milk and all that sort' of thing, stIPPoeer -No, this farm isn't a contic week- ly farm; it is away out it the coun- t ry." "Are the fish biting'!" "If fh.y are" replied the weary angler, "they're Itit- ing each Other!' . • The Pi-Mr:Ile.' Gates at the Canadian Nati mei leeitlivelott, Toronto,. coat handIng„ "And so it has always proved; ,the Camp tells its own story." Million. Word's Aliout..R-106 words t� tell .n-0 -world' at • large 'of the arrival Of the 11-100. e • Officials of the telegre•ple sandecable penePaitiee 'eitiniate-cl-flial-ainde July 31st until 'noon Aug. 2nd, ionieWhere in. the 'vicinity of 850,000 words sent out froni • the typewritera and pencile verities Parts, especialle the steeripg of .the army of newspapermen. here wheel wobble, and in several cases to "Cover" the history making filet .consumption.• Methods of mea - and 'the "story'!. waSetashed to , every •suremene .were, not .the. ihost exacting .possible, but in'each case the' results Civilized country in the world. • • • Telegraph operators worked • alt are approximately •aceurate. night under% driving ..pressure and • Car number oee. Was a •1926..inodel cables to the • Old World were also kept humming' with the news sent opt by seme 200 newspaperbaen and Fyridi- catelvvritera. • Length Feet -7. .strange little error regarding the • length of the 'British dirigible R-100 came' to light 'recently. • mires'on its sneedonieter had not ef- • Newspaper and other reports' have fected the hill climbing ability for constantly given thelength Melt the car always had e good Teen - 709' feet. This is •not so, the Cana- w ta t ion. dian Press 'learned. Th t R.100's tall Never particula. rly fast in high .eear Was a trifle ton long when she was • acceleration. the car nevertheless first constructed, and nine feet. were could get away with moat modern cars amputated. This makes the ship's at traffic lights going throtigh all the oierall length exactly 700 feet. How GOod Are' The car Was 'a foadster, with, rum. . • • •ble seat. Its two -trine itt4lAnish Was' • 6' ever, was ,discelored, and, the fenders Good' Used Cars?. •perfeete The khe -1 tole • Speed, Power, Safety and Ap- pearance 0.X. -Brakes , 'Vary :Precisely 'hoitr good .are these '"gbod- usedOara?", •• • Thousands of: potential'.bukers...of sack eptortiobiles,Are'askiiik.this !wee - tion COnstrattly.: The deswers the re- ceive are couched iirgeneral trains, in most instances. at least.:, „ It v•AS With a eiew toward •develoti- . . lug smite specific hiforrnatiOn that a qualified group recently undertoolt.the• actual: 'testing cif a number Of Used • cars selected at rraidote , trent the. stock Qf Several dealers: • (Eisr,g, in vir- . , Wally all. price clesies .were tested, iti no case was the dealer fro/if:Whom the•ea.r. was borrowed . for test purposes inform d in • advance. In all except . Ire-cerTlearTir:f en,„ca conditien", it :Would haire been :had . seem :average buyer 'walked •in and paid tor it. . • Characteristice derisidered • appearance, brake 'performance.' speed, power, acceleration,, noise, wear ,in . • roadster of a 'Mein the popular price •Class. As e.used cat it was pricedeat $75. • ineippearance thecar was onle fair. The lacquer had chalked at the back ef the hood and the wheels need- ed In performance the car was surprising. • 'As against top speed Of 42 milet ap hour when, new,it still would' travel at 93. The 23,000 • Shirrtk the Cotton . When making.voile frocks wash -the material through clear water before the dress is ,ctit, and hang out to drY, wringing wet. BY so doing you will avoid -lite disappointment of finding a pretty frock spoiled by shrinking after the first tubbing. John --"Do you play golf?" Joan: 'Oh dear, no! I don't even know how to bold the caddie."--Atiswere. Ouch! gears. Us two -wheel brakes would stop it from 20 miles an hour within 40 feet, 10 feet under the legal limit. The emergency brake, however, need- ed, service attenticin. . which had been.:enamelled 'obvtously needed it, %gap. Theee‘two appear- ance defects remedied,the ear woutd have -been e beatity..: Its lines, thcnigh • obsolete, always were •popular. • •As to perforinthice, the car still ,was • capable of more than 60 milekan On hillS,, Its over4usad valve engine.. was a marvel.; lu acceleration, it. weat • for 5-0.25' miles an hour. in ,top gear, in. 0:4-5'seconds. Its four-wheel brakes stopped it froni'20 miles an; hour in. 31 feet. This, too, despite the fact' that,• the brakei'requireti equalizing. . •Although the top being. down .dixiing • tke .actual teat Mai'. Partially aecomet. for it, ,there ,,waS aliPsolutelY 'no noise in the car save a slight' valve soup. The. big •six-cylinder.epgine, gaye 13 •• miles. tO the gallon of gasdline The - ' design of the Water -Pump, of the , car, • Was one of its weaknesses ivb.en new. 441--this--p5;rt4etel1r .fitode-1-71t--gavele-nee--;'-- sign of 'trouble.- The tires shelved •nn tread wear. tending :to. bear out. the statement that none had seen 'more •, than -5,-0.0.e trtile-S,Cf serviee' -• • • coach model of popttiar light eis. It 1 The: third car tested ,was a 1929 was 'offered for $490., • The speedom• eter showed .10,970 .'milee. • The cat had ben beautifully kept -from aii ap. Peerence standpoint, The, maroon • fin- ish had A high lustre 'and the-Chrone'l him parts were as,bright•as when new. 'The car, when new., had a top 'speed of approximat'ely 65 miles • an hour. Its acceleration, always good, was utt, changed from the day it came out as new :ear.' The four-wheel brakes stopped the car from20 .m.P.h: In 2, feet- 'The. small, highspeed. engine • was silent and showed pulling per- formance •of merit. The ouly noises , in the car werein a door and the right front seat Which had worked loose froth the floor. , C'omfort, one of the strongest clainis of. the 'car's maker, was off color • be- cause the hydraulic shock absorbers needed fluid. .1; All c.ars tested were 'typical. The reitilt.S.of the 'tests throw somesped- tic ligirton hew goad Le •a good -used car. • • Deep Feeling Deep feeling is contagious. Words At certain engine speeds* there were poured forth feom burning hearts are • two rather annoying, noises due tit Vi-, sure to kindlethe hearts of others. bratiOn. One of thee was in the steer -Hearts that can stand everythirig else : ing Wheel, the other in elle valance' are often melted by a tear'. If the .• above the running board from which , heart, Iptipitate,iti every line, and burn. It had separated. The latter ceuld itt every aord.---Anortyinoue.• . easily here been eliminated, at least....-...-..• .....e-__, M........_.e teporarily; the former d , isaPpearedl Difficulties . . . except at ono spot in the ,speod range: li Practice. the: art of Minimising difli- A, slight plaY in the, steering, which. „dues; and do ttot look at obstacle! •' was not dangerous, was. due i•,-0 king with a magnifying glass.--4.1fol1ander. pin Welting wear. _ . . .......-.......-. ......t. .. The second car, also a 1326 retilei:• the fest group put down as one of the Friendship's Road finest bargains of 'the lot. It rost, $1,350 originally. 'It was offered at the bargain -price. of $225. The speed:. otneter showed 26,377 miles. , • 'Wes intisi not let.the graaa grow .on the road of friendship. -Mile. Cla•iron. Opinion is a medium between Wine,. • ledge and ignoretice.--Plato., ' "Reds" Usurp Fields - Poor Crops . • Of White Clover - Honey Scarcity A shortage of raw material in the, thia season of the Year; and we've I 'clover fields ' of MaSsachusetts has barely half that. 'Sterrible! "Sawfull prodeted a situation in the apiaries, suntmer?" •• Itrherehe• the average honey hoe is Reporter: "Rut etonnier is, still here. jest barely making a hiring with nol There must be •plenty of other blooms surplue fel* the liftman consumer. ac -1 besides .clover to .work on." cercling to Dr. Durtott N. Gates, bee- Mr.. ileezum (scornfully) • "Ileht keeping specialist of the Stale Itepart./Thaes all you. knew Sheet It This -mein of Agriculture. • • . honey businese is highly organized, ' • Pee owner's ,are reporting. loi say, I young feller. Iii eller to attpple •dur ' that, save in exceptiottal cases, Wherel enstentere arid lia'Ve Sobte left for our - k special floral CO14100118 1111V0 el1Aled . ScliteR,' our honey gatherers have, to ' the bees 10 wok tiormany, there Will stoee up gonds greetly 111 excese Of our be fro Profit iti bee -keeping 11,!s year., needs, during the fteason of the clover ff it were possible to interview the: tloom. This is our product de luxe efficiency expert . in 'a rPili'PR,eillifiyel tral gar.% lly oue .heet costornere ' • 1 What aoWiag might be exoected: matitifact had 5, 0131 -0 surplute• honey faetnry sottie Fetch conceeeal!ett , lleportet : "Rift lyon must have a the ToIl Reporter: "Alt, Went morning. Mr. have ,yottr kaqierers been doing' all IlItsy 11. Ileetiante I jest CrAW10:1 In te cummee!!' . •• .but a bit eboin the honey crop thiS Mr. rxezutn tpoitshrog his autenna regt--", Ileeznin tscrn(eitiog Itis‘sleaul: "Hee-till ' I Agree 'with YOU': It lotika . and loeking about AnysteritorslyIt• tier blade just natter his 16ft wing): bad, looks had. Iluz-Z-8-24.. Feller :••• -Well, young Matt, there's plenty 'of (confldentiailyi, I !etspect the iteds;" bute• about. Looklt them shelves, Ilteorter: "Tke Redsl Mee they fireetiCally empty; and my Men report. get M here, too?'" , - that Whet little clover there was has • Mr. Ileeitalt: '"Vealt;• the Red sii,,;s male 0.c,...ttnot of Noe ceoek erneet set meet§ 'en earl? 111611%1U blossoined arid gone. Why, sir, this (:ityvete., yet) kaowittet userped the problerta. at: NewPort, Xel. he is tot eure whether to lowee bey i'06. VIA plant should have produced from 50 Reidnidn't giee tit•vhlteclever a honer, or just honer. • • . to 100 pounds of higb grade goods ty thatfee. Propoganda. Ilut-z-z-t-x." - • ekeel , 115 9 44