The Lucknow Sentinel, 1920-01-08, Page 6•
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Music at the Bird ,House
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By EDITH J. CI:AINE.
I. ! the rooms, exhibiting each piece of
Clang! Clang! Clang! The noon fur::iture and bit of nicknack. Last ,
of t=11 he took her to the wee music
whistle at the saw mill announced the rocs that was to be all her own'and
t hour an shrill, metallic tones. k`it t as wit a cry of delight that she
' Dr'ng -a-ling-a-ling! Ding -a -ling -at- ' bel::!d the baby grand piano opened
ling ,Muted the merrier school bells invitingly for her.
and almost instantly the air was filled."Ohs John," Mahe cried, burying her
with the patter of a hundred children'sface in has coat, "ids just lovely . of
feet and their gay laughter. yo u, just lovely!" and John stroked
Ding, long, ding! Dong ding dong! her head gelatly, saying never a word
the deep throated kindly voice of the about its costing him . nearly all of
church bell took up the refrain. , his savings.
Peggy Macon, listening intently, In those first happy months Peggy
poured corn syrup over a , dish of found time for her beloved music and
salad, did not notice the blunder and finisIigd a few truly fine compositions.
before the last notes of • the bells died But household cares became 'more and
away, was at the piano. Touching the more exacting; little Thomas came,
keys tenderly, her head bending a` ,and with his coming all thought of
/tile to one side, her eyes dreamy.' fame , disappeared. Peggy was con -
she began to play. Ding, dong, dong! tented with. her husbend, her home
she imitated. It was a beautiful and her baby. Janice, Gordon and
melody she improvised, .through -which the twins came in 'quick succession.
the bacon -time bells of the village.. John was not very successful in busi-
tliimed sweetly. I ness. Money was scarce, alarmingly
-----t---- , "I have it, oh, I have it!" she Whis-',searce sometimes, so Peggy's thoughts
pered breathlessly -and-lest the blessed turned back to hermusic.
use e for hero
not
theme be forgotten, she snatched up turn her gift to_pra ti
some blank music sheets and return-; dear ones. So every dartshe` strug-
tng to the piano played rand wrote geed •at the piano, trying vainly to
alternat ''��rgetting exitireiy 'the write c^:teething that would .be worth.
•- i I+r=n
'+ :stnf ti,i,lg that '0.0ua
ttaii.t' . . ,,,,,. 1tiltJiE, a
"WOoo! Oh, Ilenia, Mama! Oh,' them`•luxulics, or eteta a. few uecesett'
oh -000!" ties. '
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The air was rent with • shrill : To -day she seemed to have reached
frightened screams. Fqr ' a moment the very limit of. hope. She felt as if
Mrs. Macon did not move, her hands she were trying to tunnel a range of
poised over the keyboard, as if wak- mountains, the future loomed- ahead
ened suddenly from a irivid dream. Be- with nothing more promising than the
fore she could move from the piano daily round of cleaning; cooking, bot -
stool, two frightened children burst tomless baskets of mending and a real
into' the room. money problem.
"I've killed him! I know I've killed The arrival of • the mailmanwith .a
him, Mama!" {the little girl cried, letter from her college roommate only
weeping and half carrying, half drag-' added to Peggy's heartache' and de-,
ging her yeunger brother, who was pression. Dorothy also had majored
kicking' and yelling lustily. .- in music. As she gazed at the envie-
Was it a dream? Mrs. Macon gated lope, a picture of her. friend's laugh -
at her small son.., An ` hour ago she ing face rose up out, of the mist that
had bathed and dressed him and 'now gathered in Peggy's eYes, and Dors
• his clean white suit was rumpled and othy's clear, sweet voice sounded in.
The essential Cu for worms the greater
soaking wet, great streaks of green; Viler ears. What wonderful times they the precipitation of gelatine by the
red,and orange dripped from his lit- had ha�i planning the future! Dorothy chemical substance to which the gen-
day in order that she might be able
tle tow -Tread over his clothes, and as was to' sing Peggy's compositions. �, lied, as'the ; to lay eggs for the suburbanite. But
he bored his fists ,into his eyes heworked! eras term .tannin is app at night her rest was disturbed by,
Howr they had laughed and I result of. which hides become leather.'
mixed the colors wathr his • tears so Dorothy had gone on with her music• the lusty crowing of her lord and mos -
that only his -own could have known three or four times a year Peggy hal* The tannins are of very wide occur-; 'ter. She stood it for a while and then
him. Mrs. 1Viacon caught him in her; a letter from her and the dear friend rens, 'in the vegetable kingdom and I forsook him and took up her roost
arms. I had made her debut—she was reaping i occur in almost all parts of the plant; in a tree. —•�— -
'"What has happened? silt gasped. the harvest of her years of tail. but not always in sufficient quantity'
"Why did you scare me?" he askednownw nted to help.
washet
when you was playing," sobbed out the lets heart when at last she opened the plant known. as Canaigre (RumexI i g "Perhaps the greatest obstacle to we gi'ow timid and are afraid to �'Q1t-
the frightened little daughter. `•I the letter, but, as she read the frown into running to him by chuckling and +lure, or we become perfectly soli=fled
so's you could play. vanished' and a great hopeful light hymenosepalus), which is really a acting as though he. had. found some-busi-
success is fear. Many a yl)ung with ourselves and when we are
�no�n- Gordy wax there. shone in her eyes. If she. only could—! ,species of dock occurring in Texas, it ;thin to eat. •ness girl fears ridicule • of her ossa- thrown with others we fail to grow be -
THE: NEW VANCOUVER STATION
7 a onew llars`�and wi. ch istlouo etltheyb stnequippedNational
up to-tocost
e s atiopain the
n; aio.,,,d
I;� con. It is esuur
generally uf bwith
-stone Ief
. dh hact►venePobaby7 lesn 4ssimplicityt d gu. t has arontageneral `uf,
eetit th nthe hrttoor
are
iierthe ls a
room eadaSut and opening Iron) which sepparatewaingoomafomn and me
dining and lunch counter. barber shop, ticket office
for
mill andpatea sad , emu r��c►lsln
telegraphs. hand baggage, getter$l baggage. governmentWith
d
dining car departments. The Two upper doors accommodate the geneeal awn,
entraucce distinct from the station proper, with elevator service. On the reg gored
t:e station, directly opposite the tonin entrance, are situated doors leading ttl this
coursse are 50 in
various tridth, ain platforthe ms, which ath re f also building.
Inallthere sasgo�
16 tracks • leading into the itttion, the average length of each platform being aboWt
1.200 feet.
Plants Used For Tanning.. ' Ruling the Roost -a Fable.
x- z,..,, hustled for bugs and-`sfiPatf
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HUMAN NATURE
IN EATING-HOUSFS
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TEA - ROOM ROMANCE i
AND TRAGEDY.
London Waitress Describes
the Various Characters of
• Her Customers.
Human nature? Well, I think I can
tell popular novelists some things they
don't know about human nature. 1
haven't been a waitress iu, one of the
busiest restaurants in een3tkl London
without learning a little about man-
kind and wonienkind in general. We
get all sorts In here, fr'om-brewers to'*
bishops, girl flower -sellers to College
loris. . •
If a man dciesn't, glo! all over with'
geniality when he has had a good,
hearty meal, he's hopelee's, and the
one who do' Th't show his true .charas-
ter when he is' hungry 'hasn't been
born yet.
'You can size people up by tne,very
way in which they give their orders.
Tllef e- is the woman who takes five
n1inuttees- while 1'ni standing by, pa-
tiently waiting- to decide she is going
to have a cup of tea and a scone; and
rtiia nit"n�:. �ho ordons ateak,;pie and 1 by ,
frit= ttiite uti I t in it lt:, • 1:.,:=t�+_:...3s
. 1ittditto caausagetian i atu.li)
in life, both of them.
Again, there is, the pompons 'old toff
who rings a corilete peal on the bell
if you are not -waiting on the doorstep .
to take his order, and complains that
the rolls remind him of the British
\Il unr. You can afford to sinilo at _
hiu . You know he's hen-pecked at
home'.
I don't know which I hate most. wo-
men who grumble at everything I
bring them, or men who try to be un-
pleasantly. familiar with, me and call
me "dear,'' just because I'in 0 wait.
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I wan to help.. Dorothy's letter nas an
er.. She is overwhelmed by a thousand sion not only destroys her efficiency,. you're a victim. of terroi itm begie
nameless terrors. Constant apprehen- If
but creates an atmosphere that reacts' your fight against it to -day. Haven't
*to her detriment. When I find a girl' you watched many men 34d women of
water out the window. I didn't know sitions out of your system. - Peggy of reasoneble ability beld back for your acquaintance who "do things,"
Gordy was there, Mama, oh -000!" i read the words aloud. t "How perfect- some unaccountable reason, ten head committeet, managet clubs and
Then Mrs. Macon. remembered that iy lovely!" she exclaimtd, but at that chlinces to one investigation proves fairs and granges, and wondered how
the inefficient helper, Caroline, they could do it when you, better edu
wh°1moment the dock on the mantle ada which contain tannin in copsider-1 -
came in twice a week to clean, had struck four and the twins upstairs ..ahle quantities are the following 1 morning at seven o'clock. Since you that it has its root in groundless an -1 cated perhaps, c mid never do it? It
asked perrnision to dye some stock- began to whimper for Mother. The species: The bark of hemlock (Tsuga doriot appreciate it, you may herafter prehension."
ings and had left several pans of dye, •
. imposiibility of such a vacation rose canadensis) yields nearly 14 per cent. do the erowing yourself." This remarkable statement by
- the! fidence, while you are •fearfel. Per-
in her desire to "help Mother" hell 1
------ . pation. died out of Peggy's eYes. ini We. -you .have even greater ability,
in the kitchen. Fsive-year-old Janice,I up before her and all the glad antici- • The hen tried and tried to crow, but
highest salaried woman executive
poured the brilliant mixture out of 1 (T____„o be *continued.) and are simply afrail to use it.
the window over little Gordy, who was i
playing in the grass. . ,tig Will Buy Ingredients of
The next two hours were busy ones
for Mrs. Macon.• During that time!
"Yes, dear," Mrs:14.'44ton answered, for Peggy to spend a month with heri such as HemlOck it oecurs in the bark;
but tp to tell ane just what you did, soul to b ther us, nothing to do but • • • • • I "Very well, teplied the rooster.
ke Cawake all night by your foolish
- patiently, "Mother knows you want tell in the Bungalow in the Pines: "'Not in the Sumacs it is abundant in the P
help and you do help lots and lotsd a neighbo: for miles, Peggy, not a _leaves; while in still other plants crowing." •
dear. la and sin You'll ha l is found in the fruits or in certain
Our position in society' is maintained
"I—oh I poured Caroline's 61
-Ye PporYtunity togg.et some of ;el amp
y y fat ow ng. When
"galls," sach as those on various •
I Lift up my voice an answer comes
species of oak. from all the roosts in the neighboa-
Among plants growing wild in Can-
• • hood and I wake bp our master every
of tennin; the bark of white spruce
namea), contains 7 per cent to 14 per
cent.; the bark of chestnut oak (Quer-
cus Prinus), white oak (Quercus alba),
and red oak (Quercus rubra) yields
12 to 16 per cent.; the wood of -Am-
erican chestnut (Castanea dentate)
difficult. The human body, it is figur- yields 8 to 10 per cent. of tannin,
ed, including akin, bones, flesh, nerves,1 while the steins and leaves of different
, fat -andscaetillage, is redueihle species_ of sumac contain 16 to 24
by analysis to iron, selt, sugar, lime, per cent.
Phosphorus, magnesia, albumen, fatty The horse chestnut (Aesculus Hip-
substanees are: retidue that can be pocastanum) although not a native of
used. Canada is fairly hardy at Ottawa. Its
1/ thit, body weighs 150 pounds, an bark yields a considerable quantity of
tannin, while analysis of the leaves
made in different months of the year
showed a percentage varying from 2
While the barks cellected in May
and Jun4 are said to contain the
largest ainount of tannin, further in -
foie the 'point can be regarded a's
finally settled, as the enalyses that
-have been made of sonic species ,do
not seem to bear out the above state -
Increased attention is being devoted
at present to the sumacs as a source ' Recent studies of children in Ger-
of tanning materials; in this group mine and Austrie by physicians and
clothes grew with amazing rapidity, persent whoz would fall far short, o
as the leaves and not the bark are teachers in their Public schools inform
us that is early as the severe Winter
wheeze pile of stockings and lit. e e it is not necessary to destroy the tree
As she worked. her mind went back the mark. . I ilanusgehhednni.at,Ithewlui'll tphrensbenbcihyild re n back
over the pad seven 'yeart to her -- 4-- used. There are three Canadian spec- of 19,16 children were apt tcr sit indo- hold thern the better seaPpje with Witter below , thought, for Ithad re:inited hatband
happy college - days. ' How full itif , -Remarkable Telephone: . ies whose leaves furnish taenin in lently gazing in front of them, to be' back through life unless they make a the. boiling point. You may be si-71-1 and wife! , s
remite those days had been! The clue.)ii of Spain possesses what considerable euantitien Dwe .
rf sumac roused only by some strong stimulus dete ined fight to overcome it. Those prised at the result..b.ut the taste w. I Then there was a shy young fellow,
(Rhus corallina) occurs in Southern and soon relapsing into inattention. "thousand nameless terrors," how well
. convince you that boiling water drawn one of our "regulares' ,. Ile, rarely
off cheap tea makes a better drink spoke to me, but when I brought any. -
a shrill cackle was all she could pro- .
America, Miss Henrietta F. H. Reid,I
duce. Being a bright hen she quirkly
assistant to the president of the Bush, We had a copy in sthool, usually
decided on a course to pursue. Terminal Company, appeared in a re-. ,, ,•
. once a month, vailich may help you:
come near enough to the rooster to be
an article addressed to girls. It seemed ,
inI Vte lose the good we oft might wie
—' by failing to attempt." If you hate
A day or so -later, when she had -
cent issue of a woman's magazine,
heard she said:. "The corn and scratch; tob good to confine to youlig laisiness I been loning out through -this failare.
1 w.omen who are consumed With the begin, your reform to -day.
feed are given to us solely because of i -
My ability to lay an egg a day, hut
desire to 'make good" In fact it —......... •
hereafter do the.egg-laying yourself. Bre" ing Tea. '
since you don't appreciate it you may • • -
e seemed to me that it belonged more .
to the farm boy and girl thap to the All that one Leeds to make good
The rooster tried with all his might
young woman in business, for it haa tea is an earthenware pot, some tea
to get into the habit of laying an egg
b.eens_my eaperience that the people and water that is boilipg at.the time
most,liable to underrate themselves in' it is poured on tthn leaves, w ii. wh _ii thereittrw-x,-atne to -r, it.r.w.,1.,
After a ten-day separation and deep
this world are the boys and girls wile' should then•be allowed to 3nfuse for a be had just. tlireelia'pence left. He
thinking for the same length of time, couldn't -give any addrettS, not eten
have been bred .on the farms, kept few moments, when the liquor must
a reconciliation took place and the hen
through force of circumstances from be peered off. That .sounds easy and that of a common lodging-licin:e. A
and rooster are again occupying the •
rubbing up continually against their it is all there is to it; it is astonithingi eolicemaii took him away, and I didn't
same roost ,in contentment and affec-
fellows. him* whether' to laugh or 'cry. ,
Con— • . . , how seldom this simple formula is'
Yes, lots of romances beret I often
Or, thei kept up the fight, the hen Looking - back tO school teaching ,
housewife's most' commen migtake is: say marriages aro made 'hi heaven --
followed out in actual practice. The:
striving to learn to crow, and the days in the old country school, • it.
below 1. and eating•houset. One gni mine in
rooster straining every nerve and seems ,to me now that the majority of ! to use water at a temperature
niter day. alikays contriving
_ poor marks the boys. and girls got,i, the, boiling point. No matter how hem. day
if the Water is not at te •get a particular seat where she
muscle to pi•Oduce an egg.
were given them, not because they choice the tea,
You May take your choice. boiling ten.peratare tete important, enuld see ta Certa,n big, blick•haired
46 didn't know the lesson. but because'
Child Mirth.
babies and to getyoung.T_homas batki
I. is the human body Worth?, The answer
to school for the afternoon session;
Gordy was again bathed and tucked - is, about $8, and the calculation is not
in, as were the twins, for a noon nap;
JaAlce was consoled and set to making
sad iiiesithelunch-rilisbez- were clear-
ed away and the kitchen put iii prder.
All this accomplished, with a sigh
___t taseteattness and relief, the mt.tsician-
,!%.0...m.r7. mother went back to the piano. She
•----- struck the keys firmly and played over
a part of the morning Composition.
Ding, ding,- dong! e mane imi-laverage weight, there would'be enough
tated the bells but the . V:ai some-!iJy-prCfducts to make an ordinary iron
thing lacking in the rnutict, Mrs.! null, .eeough salt to fill a ' table salt -
•Macon hid difficulty makieg, her; allar, enough sugar to fill. a small
fingers respond to• her . will; they, ttntar bowl, enough lime to whitewash
wandered clumsily over the keyboard I . - ,
la emu:en coop, enough phosphorus to
and there was- no sweetness in the , , , t
zen matches enough meg-
" tone's. The- inspiration of the• morn- i ma" a "a ,
nesitt .to afford one dose, medicivally
ing was Completely gone and -ith a I
boneless sob Mrs. Maeon let her head! sitealane. ,The albunaenoids obtained
t fall -on her arm and hot tears of ,ine- , could be used by a tricky letker to re-
appointment trickled' down upon the t place:the whites nf a hundred eggs
Silent keV. . • i and there would be enough iat-to fill
e The mother of five children .cannot a, ten pound pot.
indulge in tears for any great length'', Fight dollars,. then,, is man s real
ef time, so Mrs. Macon dried her eyea ..- ,•. .
worm to . commerce, and there ere
and turned to the mend.'ng basket,' - -
. many undersized and ill -nourished
Human Body.
she managed to feed her brood of I -
How much, commercially speaking,
fhttructors beamed with delight and ntario, white or smooth sumac? (Rhin, Dr. Hilda Clark wrote last une t a
Peggy majored in music and ncr it, -claimed to he the most reniarkable 0 ,
satisfaction over her accomplishment. -"I'Ph"e in ill°. world. It is nt solid
silver with a gold iracismitter, and is glabra). extends from Nova Scotia to. she had been in Vienna' four days be-
' which a 'boy leaning aginst a sumac (Rhue hirta) is ' found from' Dr. .A. thi
• fore she saw a child play.
ele, of. Dortmund, says
posed a• march that VMS played by ow pported `by - four bronze figures, •
She wrote that,elass music and, com- British Columbia, while fitaghorn,
h t though the nervous system re -
the sensitive person knows them. n thing wrong for nnutlier customer, he
than is possible •to brow with weter
would alen. -5 say, "I'll take that,
no one but the sensitive person knows which is _not boiling even when the,
what untold bravery it takes to ever -
What happened then?
,nlisa. It r. ii, save you the trouble of
come them. Going over the top re- tea itself _is of good quality.
Tea is often served in a china tea- teeing it, baci .•,
quires no greater courage than charg- pot containing the tea leaves. and a Oh, I'm going to marry the fellow.
larger pot, supposedly filled with boil- What else could .14......do." , ....... .
ing water. Tea made by pouring -the
water into the smell pot through the
Wettest Spot on Earth.
tea is often uneatiafactory because of
POT a little archipelago, the lia-•
the difficulty of keeping the, Water up
'Wallan, Islands offer.remarkable vat -
to the boiling point. It mitt have been
ietles of climate. Partis of them have
boiling when pourecl, but the cold pot •
chilled it just enou to make it too much lees annual _raipfall than out
cold to drala go cup of tea. 7
waste as uteaten bread, or fat thrown,
abroad. How bright the future look- telephone -ea ;olden Wires -with ari
ed! She was to. study two yeart in Engliah lion. 'The work of airt stands
Paris—she was . to—huts—she met .
is during the months of July, August,' of certain important 'universal salts
and September. The branch of tha", soon ro. duced in the children -
The best time to gather the leaves. sists deprivation of fitod well, the lack
a ten- fear of failure, fear of maki4i,fig a mis-
ing the enemy—fear. Fear of ridicule,
take, as Miss Reid puts' it, keeps More
John Macon and 'his love seeincel to renneett with the Royal nurser; nt 'current year should be cut or broken' d P 'd tail f '
1 ency to rapt men atigue, associ- people back than any other thing.
hold the greatett promise of happ;- .......,_____.0.--. in such a way as to leave a few buds: ated with excitablay. toss of energy
And the country -bred person, I be -
improved • MiSoroscope. - ' ht. the base to continue the growth! and initiative speedily -followed; final-
lieve, is more liable to those fears'than
• said she was miss:ng a brilliant car- next season. , The leaves contain. a; ly all desire for hiirth and sport died
eer; others- said most • emPhatically To (liable two persPns to examine " -.
much greater aroount of tannin than I the. city -bred. The boy in the oity is
that she was throwing herself away. an object at the same tinie a Freneh the stems. Green sumac loses 50 to' began to weft themselves.
, away, and coarse, primitive instincts
early accustomed to measuring him -
A very few i(i she was *tist right- optician has invented a enicroscope "
t 60 per cent. of its weight itedrning. Of a total population of 300,000 'in sepialfybynitil:led,fettllowws.wiThe ;ot street is Is.
Tips? They are always acceptable,
of course. All the •same, I'd rather
have the cheerful person who treats
me as one who is. hnman. and no
money, than the impolite "grouser"
and his twopence. Some. People think
a copper or• two .will. cover pp, all the
rudenet-,s they have burled at ire.• 'A
bailer. lid woaldn't.,
Our re-„ditr vustomers .aro the hest.
1 reiner.:1cr one old chap wc11. He
dirtY. starched euffs, and never
had i:nything but roll and a 'cup ot
tea for. his lunch. He ,eatheAlve, days •
every week for years. never eurnbled
once, and aim-ays had a -smile for me.
The.ta 'suddenly lie stepped coming,
andssI enilld shed ah honest tear over
that old man's grave.
'oee little drama recollect. for 1 •
suppose you'd call it that.. A young
fellow came in. He was iiimbst tob
ragged and down at ;ieel to he ad- '
His foOd 'dispppeared..as:thotigh it was
before a hulig.,:y wolf.' Just by him
iu a. city office --and WI•en hii•e came to
pay her bill she discotered- that she
had left eer purse al home.. We hate
to be very ,.strict -in sect' .cates.
cause there ate so miler tforgenee
.my money, but send tt-
distressed. In a moment, up jumped
thetragged boy and paid her bill, and
off she went blushing. but happy.
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dis-; fellow, though he would never look at
they were afraid to recite. I can recall: constituents of the leaf are not
. many a ,student 4vhom I knew mtist be solved. Note that everybody is talk.:
, tier. 13ut you could tell they' had been
Mirth seems to be a result bf good able to answer every question I asked,: ing economy it is a good time to calll.frientli once. So I interfered. Cheek,
feeding. The underfed cannot play. but who • only dumbly shoon his heikl,1 attention to the waste caused by using; was it? Well, all wcmcn like to try
They have not the power of spontane- while some more self-confident class- water below the boiling point. To: to put matters right after Dan Cupid
ous expression Of happiness. mate arose and rattled the lesson off, prove that one can waffle in making,
, has sometimes made such a mOss of
There was nothing to do but put down tea get two gredes, one a very cheap I them. A little manoeuvring and l' got
a .bad mark, though. tea and the other a tea of •the same, both at one table. That daysthey
kind but double the price. Draw al;
Amked out trethen. I found out at-
- Fear of Making a mistake, of being]
echeapest tea with boiling water an '
, terwards l' had done better' 'than. 1
won a scholarshin and wast•to go Spanish. coat -of -arms is conversing by •
She hugged this comfort c ote. -1 with two eye pieces, bet only. one ob.
guished music from a mere noise but,
_., Iron Framei Best. World's Simplest Poet Office.
time to a classic; he hail never heard, • ,, ,
im opera in his life. w ...I _After testing steel underframes on The world's simplestipost office is
"She will regret it," was the eon- its cars for several yea.rs'an English -ifi South Ameries. , Front a high,
era' Tr°Phecy, bItt-Peggy-14"ochinglY'iiiiiroad hae returned to iron ones, es—rocky cliff over1.0cing the Strait of
refused 0 he convinced and climbed. they are said to tin less liable to cor- Magellan is suspended by a long chain
hired, and together they_ted away • a barred which receives mail. It,has
contentedly into the auto that John Tosion
to the village church, and thence -aer ,*-•‘- ---r— — stnts. — no-postraaster,.nor is there any retro-
-- co y'-'-'14F-thir-littb.--valit.",' —Busaea_of_Londan.. lar letter carrier or collector. Every
cottage "among the hills thet was toi The London busses run over a quai•--7-shilt-thil ge."1"401---tInt Fitralt
be their home; hers and John's.
Dortmund,. Prof. Engel found 5,000
of age who were unable to walk. at least it .afforda him an opportunity
desirable from -many points view,
children between two and seven years
The Lancet (London) -predicts that to. rfiinngd holimgehuilt
the majority of children in Vienne will aR
each fear -producing stunt, and learns
grow up witk stunted bodies and ques-
in timeithat one failure isn't going to
tions whether their mental life will
ever again overflow intO mirth and wr4" his life- •
• The farm child hasn't this °ppm -
the exuberance of animal spirits.
tunity. Ile has *MY thy 'bort recall
Moat Beautiful Women. • 5 and noon hour -at school 0 raeet
Itrevetersr laymates, end then hurries home. As
a -result to grow shy and-
distrustfel of hito ability, to be -
Come a victim drapprehensions which
keep him back irorn sueoess. The beq
cure for this le titleep him, as much
with other childr as is poseible.;
Isolat'on is bad everyone. It al I
1 ' ter of a million rnilttionery day. This stops and sends a boat to this curious the mott beautfful women in the world
Slipping the darning egg into a ery day the'y cemplete little post office, looks over the lettere I are the Indian women' of the Tehuan-.
worn sock, Mrs. Macont lin quivered Means that ev_ , . ..
as Phe reeatild that first day. Jahn 'ourney al far R9 from the earth
that are in ict to see if there ate any tepee district of MPTICO.
leitatliSSIV . carried her' ever the co) tht rato,n. mid cvery year the Jour- , , , • , . _ No, we do not know What the car-
' tArr,,1,1161,1. rieenirinv OW nothine*; -.11(71Cemal tir -1;0,-t e to Ole sun. ship, and places there.n letters\ co,. its ,,, ,„ Taett„',.,,,, •
Wasted leairell are Just as real
eastern provsnces,evhereas on some of,
the lofty mountains there is an Amos!
continuous dewnpour through the
Into the geirbage ean. It is not net- yeaerrh.0
teem-, to economise to the extent of
cutting out your eup of tea, but whim a peak nearly a mile high (inacceSeible
got* draw it see that you get all the except to experience:I moontain climb -
,Virtue there de in the leaves. Use ors), and upoe itit lofty slopes there, ,
boiling water and 'practice real fell during -five recent years an anntsal
'average of 476 'nches of-rsin--nearlY
This, however, is not a maximum
fcrrty feet, that is to say!
for that wettest spot on earth. he
"in kiltheptet brat wauterrainfelgilifurgoem., tlfifteYskiim
upon that ltne mountakn
3.1 frill& little tar rte.%