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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1935-07-11, Page 7. Mine. Flammaribn, aside from h’er work on mars, edits the Flammarion. Annual, and .help publish the month-, ly; Astronomical. Society Bulletin. 1st Troop for - .their'. was told how .the boy. Anthonjy 'rdficjency Badge. Babingtbn of Dethick, having once - \> A « tl)G -p-r-acTtee- runs' -was- the- ^s-pot-oU-'mo-re. father bash- rounc ram- t-hat-. ioth-er says if (•iarn bashful' 'x-\ “firemen' on onff-’ of "TKeTr ’weekly —Smil&rr-.an4—the^-su-i-^ . shadows', ■ •'.- Niagara Falls and Hamilton' ‘re--’.- , Trust,, and the mikts wjll roll away; Giv.e,. and the heaven's will shine with glory; . ■ ' • ■ ■'• Tj’ovb,""and your life xvill be one glad * , .day, ' In Yarmouth, ■'N.’Si, the 'co.mmitt.ee I stabbdd' her 'forthwith, "but she, see- era-oof/" p i o ne er ar locked gale.)-'Gosh, ; .man!' Why.. ..jlctnlL One little boy' Avas asking -what „ headstrong, megnt: ‘‘That’s when ma ■ makes, up her min.d jtp .have, a hew ■ hat,” -he replied 'm^elly. i to umidy ■ premises./ In ITruroJ-N:S,,! to safetv,'too late. Hd|r' finger-prints SBftSttT .................................................... ‘ A -X. Al „ best future life of ; citizenship. ' . Considering how many opportumt- • les we have or* making mistakes, even the wprst-'bf us do fairly well. A First Friend: —FJear .about the Scotchman who went insane? ... c Second Friend—-Ne, what was the,- V- --.ihatter,?.^ .- ; \" .Fir#-ffHend-’-He bought’- a score card . at rthe ball' game and neither '- ' plde scored*! \ . !' When we get wisdom teeth it dops ,not- mean > we are rwholly, wise, but ■ just learning a little more about teeth; \ . . . ,- Short,engagements are better, T.he • bride hasn’t time to wear out'her fin­ ery showing. it- to her. friends. 1 ■ . ' ' * • . Kelfey and Ccihefi. were'having' din- . ner together. Ctyhen helped himself- to the larger'fish and Kelley ka-id:-. , Kelley—Fine manners .ye .have, Co-. ■ hen. If. LUifcd reached .o.u.t first I’U have taken .the smaller . fish. ■ Cohen—Veit, -you’ve got, -it,- haven’t \you? '■'-I'..' ..v7.r;=^.__._..._vd..... ' One .of -the-.most sens’ei-'ess things imaginable is. crTficisin when" alTfacts" and factors are unknown.-; ■ '■' '.- * - -------—---------- ’ \ ■. Angry Wife—h£o'w that I have. an electric refrigerator, see - what .jffiu- ---•-cam 'do-”ab'O’ut~-5g-e-tt-i-ng-”T7-a^ , “stenographer. , ' . ! . . Passenger (to captain of .sinking ship)—Captain, as .there are no more lifeboats andf all the boats , are full, will yotf”tba<ih me tb- swtirir? ------ Pretty .Girl-^My, hb'w veiry bashful you" are!, ■ . . Young Man—Yes,’I take after my .father, in that respect, I guess. x Pretty Girl—Was yd ful? Young “Man-. WasM-rm - Father- hadd’-t-rbeen s<l ''" I’d be four year? olde- ■ ./ Man-F-vjB;. just. - been reading gome; ;'''"',U,'!LrnKirr,'di'es.' ",s= ....— Frien'dL:- y\- \ Marriage' hasn't failed. It isn't the school's’ fault if a lot of pupils ex­ pect. to-pass-without working at it- Ragson Tatters:—(What’s the news, .Windy?- Windy Wolf:T-l’m .not. reading the. news. I'm looking for a job. . . ■ ‘ Ragson:—It appears to me that ar© ; reading the. ‘’Female help, wanted” column. Windy:—Well,' ain’t iny wife a fe- .. /male? . , ’ The man who always,, “says what, he thinks,” says it down town. At . ..home. he’a. _careIuL .to Siink^-whatAhe-- ' Bay% Junior:—What’s a. debtor. Daddy? Father:—A man who owes'money. Junior:-—An'S . what is; a creditor? Father:—The man' who 'thinks he is going to get it . ! 1 VPRIZE CONTESTS : for Artists) and Authors ------/'.n..!....nA ‘ I’ '--------------—------------ ' AUTHORITATIVE . COUN­ SEL WINNING PRIZE CONTESTS «is the title, of • an, article .by one who is, a consistent winner.- This article and monthly, listings of Prize Contests, Syndicate .Markets ’arid. .Mar- • kets for Illustrations fov De­ signs, Greeting "Card. De- . signs-and Verses, Stories and ' Poems, supplied .for a yearly subscription qf. $2.00. GIFF BAKER 39 LEE AVENUE TORONTO /'a W i X K te.r ..-'n ' An Indian Village \was an interest­ ing feature of the ^cout Forestry Demonstration .Camp at Angus over the 24th-of-May week-end,. The vil­ lage wag made quite picturesque, with a .couple pi.painted tepe.es,, a rustic cabin and \ decorated Indian war shields; A •cowdj‘ring* w jtbrlog seats-~ and' central fireplace completed the scene. Th§ village .was in charge of .Basil Pa'rtridge,' an Algonquin Park. ■ Indian. -.A ■ - ! - ' ♦ ♦ . \ Ottawa Scpiits. interested in stamp collecting have organized' a* Scout stamp club to foste^',their hobby. The club /meets on mornings.' . alternate Saturday. * * * Over 300 Cubs, Scouts, Rover's and .Scoutqrs gathered -.at ‘Nassau,, Park 'for Peterboro’s ThiTd Annual Scout’ Field-' Day. 'Together \viih eight Petcrboro' Scout Groups there were present Scouts from Frankford, Co- •bourg, Lindsay, Osha-wa and. Can­ nington. The. well . diversified pro­ gramme was in charge, of- District Commissioner .John. T. 'Hornsby. \ ' . ■ ' * *. * " V ". When Scouts, 'of the -1st.. Arvida ■'TrS'S'jT:vlsnteir’QWtec for'"th;e''BhdenU Powell' , rally,, -'they.' w.ere '• shown' through, the'various departments ■ of th o' '“’Ch fon i el'e-Tcl eg A ph” newspaper plant,. • ,... ■ . ' ' ( - y ■ =, r ... •. • ,x Simcoe;' 'O.nt..,' Sc-outs. were guests '•"0T'”t'hlf71CTtWtfr6TF''Cl®U^'t~W“® at which the guest. speaker was Joe.. Primeau, of the fa mo us''1 “kid line” of -Toronto’s “Maple.; Leafs”. ' . .The. fun mf .accompanying th^- local’ weekly- Here E v e I A brother to every other Spout, without'regard to race or creed ( th?, training k>f Scouts of - the Beamsville, Ont.j '______ Scout' Fit.eman’s ..Prdficjency . Badge. The briys tested-hydrants and "coupL ed hose, iri/most efficient style,-« ac­ cording to th'e .firemen; \ , . ■ " - ....._._a. _■ ■ ■ Y The inclusion- of- ^twelve 'Kfijgf-s ' Scouts -jn the troop! membership 13 -a- claim for/distinction, of the- .’49th /Toronto■ Troop,.■ It .is believed tq. be a Yecord in Toronto 'Scouting.- . ■/•• '■>*! *,;* ■■’■•:.- rAn increasing dumber of. fraternal Lodges..arg' ba'ckirig; B.oy. S,co'ut. troops,. or helping thenf in various ways. The -problem of an .adequate headquarters for the 1st Montague Troop, P.-E<i., was recently solved ,by the. placing at their \ disposal of a large' room in Oddfellow’s Hall by the I.O.OJf', ■ - * * * - . v; -'" ■ Over 2,000. trees planted was1 the record of thi’S' year’s week-end . re­ forestation camp at Mi]lerts Lake by' Scouts of Halifax- and' ■ Dartmouth,' N.'S. A number of. district Scout-, troops have .'permanent cabins in the Miller’s Lake reforestation and -wild life conservation area;] >' ' * *- . * .....-The initi-a-l-.-hike-'-of--'-t-tae- new 141st Toronto Scout troop, composed ' of coloured boys5"from a dowxni^*'n sec­ tion ’.of the city, was'a huge^success’ and created great enthusiasm. '. The boy.s •weriE'To^iTinQuE'^'Hei^Cs* • -for instruction in camp fire.. , making, „,.co-oking™.an.d7xam.ping..-,„.„j._.„_ •During a hike early., in MaV a Scout patrol of. Medicine ; Hat, ATt'a'.!, found a gull with a- broken .wing.' They -place’d the wing in : splints - in. best first -aid style, and the-bird' will soor. Ue-'aljle to take .t'He $ir.. -once unsung, but in hex-lifetime she was a.s fiercely wdeSjred and as passion­ ately^ loved as Mary Fytton. Another Mary usually dogs my p^th as J wander- to and^fro over th'e face* of Britain, also fiercely loved, and in her latter, life most unhappy. I came upon Mary Queen of Scots- first in ..Derbyshire.; As I was walking over, thehills near Crich I came td a tiny hamlet with a large and ancient oa'k outside a medieval churfch, a.nd in le’ inn I • ■ c -' ■ V. '' Canada ■ Passing ■ in A ' CtiHtirtil Progress Viewed By ; ’ : ; i, • _wbrk—lias .. prarticaBy—for. Canada,” said'.the report, of - Miss Elizabeth S. Nutt; Halifax, .conven-. er of the arts ,and letter's'com.mjttee, to the’ National Council of Wdmen recently.'. “Canada' is also so far ad­ vanced in/liep industrial and manu­ facturing' life ex|.)cricnce that 'the .cultural ere lias naturally risen well above tlie"horizbn.”'- . Tlio ■ fii's’t".art exhibit' in -British North-’ Ainerica - was 'held/'more than 100 years ago-in. Halifax. .Art ex- ha^ fouiS Jiy place among Canadians^ abd, tinctive national 'note“‘‘is now found in both the prose and verse of Can­ adian ■ writers.” ; '/ •' . “Growth in every department and an increasing- interest in . fine arts- (and letters'is. the chief good which ■has come Out of. the depression,” said the' report of the Vancouver convener, . For Manitoba “reports show ’ the development of . practical trends.” , ' SixteenCjiatiohalities ‘are represented at the Winnipeg.Handi­ craft #Aiirch S -The largest; musical ■festival in -the Empire was held in April, with 1350 entries. An arts and “crafts exhibition and han d'i era f ts h 0 b b j) ' sh 0w were N ew Westminsterr’s . features of tlje ..year, “Moose" Javv held . an .exhibition ' of Indihp art. Saskatoon Local Coun­ cil “are to. be congr'atulated on their activity in cultural lines; valuable In’diaii research has been continued/’ home grown flax 'is being woven in­ to home made linens. Interest Is •increasing in the trvas- ures of'the Ontario. Museum,- Miss Nutt’s import. said. Toronto was particularly active in art, litcratm0, drama and music. Kingston “reports an .tever increasing • art conscious-, .ness?’ ■ '.•.,' The Maritime^ provinces ' havg. formed an .association .’for educating the public by tegular exhibitions and lectures.' • A summer school in ijpnint- ing is an extension of the N*S. Col­ lege of Art. West'Algoma Council reports “the .little theatre movement has been mo'st active.”.’ • '■ ' \ TN* CIVIC LIFE ' ■Need oF a dignified, and cpl.o/f^l ceremO-ny each year for the young mon and women coming, of age, to make them “realize their d'ut£ and', gesponihllity to their immunity and country” was recommended in a re­ port on citizenship by Mrs. A. J. Holman, convenor, Niagara . Falls. From all parts of Canada, Mrs. Hdl- W ........................ Ednidnton, .with, a. woman elected to, the. school Lboar'H, had a forking committee of seven keeping in |ou?c'h" with .civic . affairs. Two.v.c. members forth , the' citizenship com­ mittee in Moose J'a\v and* a study formed. Women are on . puttee, in J group was J . J gazed- on the face, of the hapless .queen as "she was brought to Biber Manor on uh.er way to Wingfield; thought of ‘'nothing, else, than ways -4ind- means -tov rescue -her, ■■ and- z ,ac«- tually started^to dig .a tunnel from De-thick to the, manor in., which; she -was imprisbned.' • J He w.as. caught and' .hah.g.ed^ ' and. ... Mafy once'more amoved on.' This •time., to 'hd? .fi-nal prison „at ’.Fother- ’in:gay'.., '• ". ■ -. : It whs through 'hiking" that I .came by Occident on the birthplace of 'the ..fair Rosamond,^ mistreks of Henry II, a remote twelfth-century manor house in the tiny, village of Fram'y-, ton-oh-Severn. 1 ■ Lancashire is am-ideal laiid foiv the hik,e’r in quest of the mysterious. I came upon the place- where • the Lancashire witches - used to perform ■ their unhallowed &ites • arid’ where ’they are' ultimately^burnt at the' stake\for their sorceries. ' \ Cl also saw Bashall !EavfeS where Kirig Arthur ..fought\a‘ battle and the fairies huil.t a stone bridge in a .single night to help an aged wood-. ’ cutter -to-escape -from . the •. broom-, stick-riding’•witches. •••. ' Only" by walking ■ through ,'Lanca- shijc.e„.d.Q__y.o.u_ realize jhdw.' little ..it has changed through, the centuries in spite of the. great industrial - de- “vWipm'IFn^ -y ■i~“: r De-'-Hoghtons. still live \at ■. Hogh- ■ton Towers, and Townleys\still hold ' swhy'in'th.e Brough of Bpwmn.d,. one of tfie finest mountain pas-s walks.- in England, just’ ■ as. They” did in the ' days /M-the', Wars' of the "Roses', . h «_The.... phasing of. /' Bonni.e .' Frinee •Charlie seems only ..yesterday to ■rural Lancashire. In the house where I spent the night on.my way through. Wigan I was*, shown a ■ claymore 'bearing Ferrara’s ' own in-' s&ription' that had been dug up . 'in. the garden, a relic of the Jacobite, advance...ox ..retreat... During my... | walks- L am ' always coming, ‘ across . traces of. thisLjrqmantic Prince-. __L '■v * I' :—4-^m~y-us-t-^hmHe---f¥6m^-^a-^ ing/excursion into the unknown. I went—out wifh-t-he idea . of\w-andh^“' ing along that ’pi^ce of the\, Fosse Way., south-west 0^' Cifencester,' that\ is 'just : a wide gree’h .1frax£™headTr^ ported increasing, number of women j straight for Bath. I passed at- in. civic positions/while for the' first! Pinkney a glorious ^gabled., manor time a, woman was 'elected to the house that I was, told was haunted. Ottawa Qollegiate board.- At thej In the- seventeen . hundreds .two* Halifax meetings /'discussion ^as, disinterested, . brothers camp , knock-* •heard^ on'1 a proposed civic ceremony ing at the great door and when their for those reaching their majority., j heiress sister, opened to them’ they -v.V of' tessellated; pavement, she ran to\he-great Flammarion and , tool?, asked for a. job xin his observatory. I know three I.He. made her his secretaryyrind ... shfe. the school board, and city council.- In New Westminster an unemploy­ ment office dganiz,ed\ by'.the citizen- ehip committee fourih positions fori .170' person^. . ■ ■ • ■. ■ ' |- '—Women have 'been - elected'-to' ^h-l number of . civic boclies in Regina, I -wh-ik^-in—Baska-toem—pl-a-ns -are" being-1' made for a committee' to v arrange “fjtrbTic“A cere,m'0rii'es~?f^i;..reception’:'b£‘ naturalization papers. ..In. Victoria and' Vancouver, the latterV With a ■ study ^g'roup forming, women, are serving on municipal .bodies. ,’ pottery, coins, carved-altars, dagg'ers, and, bones. I know three- “of^tes-e“"R'o'irffi'n“vtlTas^^ have discovered each of- ’ them.'Ty. ■hiking. - ■ < • I once-took a. walk dver-'-- the smooth chalk, down to Dorset • past 'that queer mtone'known ■ as Cross- ..in--H.£nd ■ 9b ' Batc.om.b.e D„Qyz.ij.,.a__vyh£x.e_ Alec D’Urber.yil'le: made., Te.s.s. .of .the. 'D|UrberviiTe's place hfer”' hand and. swear rifever-to' tempt him, toi Dor­ chester, where there is. a vast Roman amphitheatre- known as Maumbury Rih$s where-the Roman Gladiators held their'games,. And it Wa\ while. I was doi-^g this walk;’'".that I\ dis-' covered . tlie ' enormous. . Earthworks known as,\Maiden . Castle where . there- are .ditches and..rampart'^...469 feet, .high,, and the .\u'tside triple Ud-n-e^TO-f— m-i-l-e-s- dV Tri. places thereyare five or ■six- ■ 0f\-t-h.ese-™r-ampar-t-s--AoverI'apping. And -covering' each other,. ' , It ns -the ,m.ost stupendous^. British "e af flfw or k~in~e xlsfen ce .and....'covers 115 acres. •■ ' Hbw -it ever .carhe -to- be. built' by- men -of .the stone age' is" beyond, our' po.wor of conjecture,-but it must have given.'even-the Romans- .pause to see „how gifted’Jn the art of'defence were these barbaric is- ■ -landers. " It' is not necessary to‘ 'hike, far . to ;fgptof . years < into' -learned, so rapi5diy; he 'sobir came- ti depend , on; her in his calculations" in mathematics and / .other phases „of. ’ astronomy. ■ .. ' ■ \ ..When he became a\widower- in 1919, she ■ inarrieck him, although he JL'ia.s._QlcL_.en.o.ugh_to..._be_.her-^x-a-nd---T- father. ", .••01(1. Me.t'ql Tes-ted--A-DTl--B-a.ici ; For According To The U.S. government, pays $35 an 'ounce for gold under 'the Gold Re­ serve'Act' of Jan.',20, 1934. But the, gold must be of the 24-carat kind. A ' piece of jewelry made of 14-carat •gold is valued at only 14-24 of $35, or\$20.41:. i - Tikis not. exactly •easy . -o'" sell old’ “ Il'Cv'V5* j ,— —•—1 mke '‘i,r *' ' ■' a*J- ' can only fie' -shared girl sfuUent who gave' promise o? the !, peab'after two hundred-^Aar?.' I- en-feere’d- the tall iron gates led' -into- Cirencester; Park. •' For .the first three .miles I had the forest smiling' old lady curtsied -past me and. I came to two temples, then Hiking Trips Info . ! . . Historic Places a clearing , with, a . _____ ’ ' Queen Annd,'and, on the right, (By S. P/B. Mais. Condensed'..' frpm j stonf, 'g”1111;01’ h^se.' wjth - ■ Passing Show, London,, for The words /dope’s: Seat ’ . inscribed ' . on • Magazine Digest.) " ......^^^^nd^-castellated house covered Almost the only way to • come into. contact, with things past'is to walk- back into them. For instance. I Should never have met the Dark .Lady of the Sonnets, you remember, yQu.ee.n~—El-izabet-h-’-s—-proudT^lmtr-’^Tsy solute Maid of Honor; Shakespeare’s unfaithful Mary,* ’the wanton Mary- Fytton,. had I not been hiking through Cheshire. „ ' In a lovely-village called, Gaws- worth I came' across' a medieval rec­ tory, the great hall of which is- °Pe) to the-public at.a charge ’ a s ing* , • , . The rector’s daughter Showed over the house and paused befdre a carved ■ oak mantlepicce ■ containing the mottdr. of the ■, Fytton “Fitonus'leve.” / .*■ y ‘‘‘The same,” replied the girl. “She jZi was born. here, "shur-up in this hoitse for kicking over /the traces, -went to court and'-—-’’ ,/she; shrugged! her shoulders. / • - ' Mary-FyTtoi/ is' npt a,a. .easy" wo-’ man to visualize.- And yet, of- |a-ll, Women.,■ this', dark, cold beauty who tore Shakespeare’s heart in two/ is surely one of the most interesting. But. I' should never, have associated- her 'with a remote, almost unknown village in' Cheshire. ' * if,- In the . village of N'estdn in the same country ■ I qanie across ’ the •birthplace of another famous- Eng; lishman’s famous mistress — the lovely• ; biacTsmi 'Eniy” Lyon, later as Emmaf J-Iart,. famous mistress r£’d-h|iired. daughter ■ of a ith who was known firstx as “Emy” Lyon, 1 ' ” ” ' who then, married a Hamilton, was f, and ’ ‘sar'y to, hike. < VChfetle’s spirit _ "15y~flio s'e!-'''wlib' have stb.rmed“hW • parts in person .’and on font. to monument to. •a the i i.wi-th ivy*. * ' ' . • ! Pope wrote most of-his -poems’ ' iir the houses or parks, of rfch friends.' And he always seemed to. make "his .friends build quite retreats for him ■in the loveliest pla’c.es’. . Cirencester—...was-—-ofA- i-m-por-ta-nce-‘ long' before the 'Romans turned- it into one of their great strategic cen­ tres. It. was known to the Britons ' as0 the'“town at the head of t«he ^waters,”' and if you''don’t feel like following any of the Great Roman roads out' of it, t'he Fosse Wa.y o.r Ermine Strest, try -the much less* well-known track-ms the White Way. which leads- t'6 thbv /grand Roman' v-illa at C'hedwort.h. ■ It was in 18G4 while a rabbiting ' party was digging for a lost ferret j.. in..the woods On theJoairks of the Colne that this villa was acciden­ tally discovered. It dates back to.- tho second century A.D.,' - and' you can now see ,in addition to the -baths, kitchens, .and .• other' rooms/ a fine Astronomical . Work Being , : ’Completed'. By Mme.' • Flammarion • ■ -V-’ Paris—The” monumental" work of canal-streaked .more. ■ -than- . _Jhe .late :poet of’ the’ * his mapping the .’ ruddy; . planet of mars,started, half, a century " ago . by Camille' Flammarion, “pueu 01 skies,” is being completed by second wife. ' .' Mme. Gabrielle- Flammarion.' fore­ most woman, astronomer .of Europe, 'is,' workifig J3 hours a day on • tkl. , gigantic task. in. accordance, with the! tronx O(tv a. iockcci gate.' A opens it,, lets vdu in and locks _ga.te.™^£tej^-lyo.u_Bahmd—a-—vrtndovv-d s----- a man to whoni.you offer your gold., ’ “Show’ me yotir affidavit” is shot at you.. You must have one which .declares * that . you' acquired, and transported the'gold'legally.' . ’ MELTING AND WEIGHING ■ . The-affidavit, proving to'be . in or­ der,. the work of appraisal -begins. Any article that contains ' less- than '200 p.arts of gold is 1,000 is re-, . jccted at'once. . Then come tests1 witlr'the file, and With acid.. If these. ’ ’■'are. satisfactory the heap is weighed. A receipt is Handed out. Yofir lot of gold is me'lted ■ d'own....F separately, . just as 'If the-assay of- . fice had jiothing else to. do but ,at-rf ■’ 'tend ’to you, and poured into' an .in- . got half an inch, thick,, three inches wide. and-M six < inchc-s - long. after melting. snipped from ' • about the size I' > • loved and painted by Romney "lived! 'wi'tlv Lord Nelson.. • Emhfa Hamilton-, like S-hakd-1 spcaije’s Mary, died unhonofed and 0 ’ c- A**. Small Tin 35a, Lafge Tin 60c, Extra Largo Bottle 7Bo ■ ■■ 8oott & Turner Ltd., NewCastle-upon-Tyno, Eng. Distributed in Canada by McGillivray Bros. Limited; Toronto. ■ 84- HOT? Cool off with. Bubbling Refreshing i 'ini^» this cokb ingot,*'each j of a . 45-ca.libre. bullet. Three ■ assay ia^wishcs’of berhusband/His'bod'yi^-'‘tp?A thC'" ^r-.^ieir "oW‘ ■.'lies buried in flip .garden beneath the , have made their repoi observatory, bo/ide -that of his first! r?eeiV() a lctt^r te1ll'ng ?0U, ■ v,-ife. '■ ' ” . ' '' ’ Hor y°m' check.- 10-u look ■ ' . ' ’ . ■ ■ ■ 'check. Too little, you thinly ' Nightly,,, conditions' permitting, ’ Mme. Flammarion mounts to- "her I powerful. fclcs-cnpQ overlooking 'tie two- graves''and focusses it on.. the ] red planet,-that.. is mars, studying! and photographing'the- planet, that, hch husband loved more (ham any I t other'hoa'venry'body. . “* ■! In rainy 'weather, .she, charts' and i computes -her vital ’ findings, ' filling! in the hitherto unknown spaces "of I ■mars for science She knows .the-. canals, better than she 'knows the Streets of Ju^sy,.'fhe .Paris suburb in which1 she lives and works. . ,111 an interview, Mme. Flammarion said she"t'ook• up-astronomy because as a girl she, had. a'passion for stars and admired a bearded ' astronomer who lived next to her school. He was t her rela- pro- Camille Flainma.riqrp ■ . ■Left an orphan while’s!ill'in ’teens, she.'wont.'to live with . fives. A wealthy young .man posed marriage and th'ey advised her to. accept. She wept,and'said f j had rather be an astronomer. —'■ ' The next 'morning — according 46 this tale of romance and science v .Aftc-r ~ vou. ) call t the • Their '■ made a * : .has Classified Advertisirig BOND? AIM'D ’ CUSBEHCIES, WAJSTlDD • ' ...- . -------a----- -------- *• •' i.Tii'iurrviT^rFSTAN;'ch-tItxian; ANtr Ai't-ui.i.n ■go’> I'i'iiini’n.t ’ bonds,' cir-b rein us v.mtvd. lliglu-st prices /paid., I'nxid 'Davis, Qucr.n and York, Toronto. BITES IOutthe Insect,, sn.ikc, or nnima! . „ the rbest’ trenttnOnt is plenty of Minard’s at once, it '30 soothes, licnls and cleanses. Draws bites -v. Insect,, snake, or animal . „ the rbest’ treatment is plenty of Minard’s at once. It '30 soothes, licnls and cleanses.It ! <- ■> * I*F 9 ■ ■ K